The evening world. Newspaper, July 18, 1919, Page 9

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} | a + ) STATIONS. OSS CONTINENT WILL AD FLYERS rican Flying Cl Club Estab. lishes Aero-Radio Flying Service, ¢ American Flying Club has es ished @ service of acro radio sta- ‘across the continent; the serv- Will first be used in reporting the Hse ah store: And | nestaents of Oyater Bay Observe Hieatenant’s Death Anniversary, | “ecramble two ons,” or the wahoo- wahoo bird from the summit of the R velt, who ras killed a year ago snow-capped Andes, he could not tell. fattling a German |H@ called them products of the bird Pian Seen ice mses jpoinding the| of paradise, but the milliner said own flag in Townsen ar} ster , Bay, flew at half mast yesterday. y' He that they were aigrettes or something was’ the first Oyster Bay youth to! f the sort. And then came the question for His @ great favorite among the village, Honor to solve: “If a customer came progress across the country of the United States Army trangcontinental flight. Reports Will be made every half hour and will be available at any of the stations in the chain. The American Flying Club some time since determined that a chain of stations capable of communicat- ing with veroplanes in flight was neo- essary to the safety of the fiyers as well as a general means of stimulat- ing public interest in air navigation. It was pointed out that Capt. Boston to Atlantic City, would not have been in peril had he been equipped to give and take wireiess messages. It will be possible for an aviator to get help promptly when he ig in trouble at a distance from, ines of land communication, The publicity feature of the enter- when persons living in small cities, away from main channels of news dissemination, can have plenty of notice that an airplane in « flight in which the interest is Nation-wide is likely to pass in sight of them at a ‘definite time. < re are over a thousand @mateur redio stations in the network now under control of the Flying Club, In the radius of each station the gaso- leno service, repair shops and most advisable landing places are plotted so that no flyer need come down at haphazard, SEAS ed eee HONOR ROOSEVELT’S MEMORY In memory of Lieut. Quentin yesterday while meet death in the great war, and was people. prise, it is belleved, will show resul F the decorations in question were the foliage of the bird of paradise, the barnyard cuckoo that produces Not Birds ry a Feather” * ure oh a then em Jacob. |B, RT, GAR JUMPS TMG, - ‘SERMAN WANTS 10 auy Barca a _ But All F lock Together , eee “Tide opm tf | Sixty Passengers in Perit ant Trust Company Here W Here Willing to Go tut tor Madea phn se rennin _ In Essex Market Court, "ir. oei'th leks tik ihe ere, mamma Seas ole wei oul penn NR RAAnAARAQAAAAL James, who was lost on his way trom| Magistrate Takes a Day Off Whether Feathers in Question Are Those pala. of the Bird of Paradise or the Farmyard Driver Was “tying to Avoitl Crash: Cuckoo’s — But. Fannie Insists:She’s No} Bum or Even a “Dirty, Mean Thing.” EATHERS may be feathers all) feathers, we hire ews: e right, bit it takes more than ¢ mere man to understand them. phone. roy pe, Eyen one of the veteran lawyers of} “I think it wor to know all about: } everything, was +; stumped when he came yesterday to) deli don’t know me. Plead a feather tiso a bad actor. id be nice for every tomobile’ collided witn a pillar of the the Essex Market| body to make up,” suggested the at- ‘elevated subway tracks at Broadway and torney for the complainant. 22d Street. MBERS’ “ARRESTS. “SOON. Bar Assoclation,| '°E50y ‘Gilet doesn't want to," de 80 | who is supposed elared the the sppposing attorney, as Asourned for further'| They were taken to Fordham, Hospital Essex case beration, of Naticns is, Essex Market yesterday, but he W4S| according to a cable message received | obtained,’ the $00 Lge 200 ager bes through closer Coffee Prices ying. chstllenitt Shana haa bebepes gl aky effectively wheal yaly ae paelartad Coffee. tesh roasted and fresh ground—week-ends only ene = Renate Stores purchasing power of Stores we effect econ- into your store to buy a hat on Sat- urday afternoon, would you wallop her with a stick and call her a bum?" Judge Blau had never had the ex-| reason at all than ever. “Look ak th Fannie Fiegenstah! was the com-| Judge Bla jhat or two to look it over, and she says, ‘You dirty thing, you dirty] times she has me names and then hits me higese! Siegal. What is your version of the af- fair’ di “phe came in and took two hats| man glass. We kicked, and then asked her to get out." “And she broke several paradise “That is all wrong,” protested Mrs. ant these write-ups,” cried Jacob. What is the troubl mio re jn your house,” said Fan thin t MAL ae Ras ca eh wona| INURING TWO ON SIDEWALK COPPER FROM AMERICA| ccn” 5 ‘Si ose oe “Get put,” Beconded the stantorian | Into $200,000,000 Syndicate ties an well, THE bai cm vice, ° of Jerry Creedan. Women Aré” it $ yndica inking | to Advance Credits, Traictines nae ° imo 0) t “ type operated by the B. RT. Burface | unt of copper to Germany are io to adopt some teat fo MAN lines left (hd tracks ‘gding aduth “on | progreas, and it i# expected that they | change if wo ea aa retain Columbia Street, Brodklyn, at 10 customers and to gain , to Decide WHEN AUTO HITS “1 POST! cctscie tiie morsings ance wien sixty |"! Be Concluded in a few days through] Shroea. Roreign exchanges men and women passengers scram. | representatives of Germaa bankers iy demoralized. At one time bling over each over and yelling for|,an@ the Copper Export Association.| (ay sterling wis quoted: as help inside, bumped) déto, , if ‘ee only question is the establishment | 426% thas tae f pee srayh 's rb at the corner of here of @ sufficient credit for Germany nte to do busi | ing Into Crowd at Subway; ta make the purchase, The Vice-Pres-| Station, eng’ No. | iddnt of a prominent trust company thet yreah M. C, Mead, thirty-two years ‘old tor {he Corb Ae] suid yesterday that his institution was! Marks. These are quoted jot No, 8 Mamaroneck Road, Yonker brto: climbed the“Surb | willing to go Into a $200,000.00 ayndi- cents, whereas the ‘par in and Miss Lillian Lesser, twenty-one, No. A 10 Madleon, Avenue. wore ceriousty |" = hurt early to-day when, Meod’s au: tor adicted asked the tele- spell it.) ur pe the passengers was huty The fete on the lie was delayed ‘more than balk, 08 be an ho Thompson had turned his car to avoid ——. 8 crowd at the subway terminus when| pROVIPONCE, R. L, July 18—wh-| um out of nay the erash came, He and his passenger |iiam J. Flynn, chief of the Bureau of ant, “This 194¥lwere thrown, through the windshield, Market | Suffering from possible fractures of tho | hoping to erie skull and minor injuries. \against perpetrators of the recent bomb about a = —— ba * Lg caaaR + [plots throughout the country has now . Greeee Decorates Red Crons Officers.) reached «a point where arrests of the ACOB KOPPELMAN was not only Dr deuant ba: July 18.—THe Greek | ringleaders are expected within a few] ous jovernment has decorated thirty | gays, an ingrate of a husband, accord-|linree officers and two nurses of the|” “-rne departme will not show, tte ing to the evidence of Fannie in| American Red Cross Miasion to Greece, |hand until conclusive b And that was mo|to-day. Lieut. Col, Edward Capps of | ii00nt wy fairy tule, either;| Princeton, N. J., head of the commis-|to arrange for gr ie _ineunt miuch |sion, received the Greek Medal, second | tween Bate and a more than one eyarded medale, department Felative to t might ‘think at ined d gan Jor Henry 1. Dew lsheviki and other ta first glance. in throngh their combined agen “He beard once ‘and t i wife, “and for no Perience, but he thought he wouldn't.| ,,Jacob did wot oe eerie All of which mixed things up more mediately pressed a couskiacekargee ese,"” We urged upon Plainant against Mr. and Mr it eaten tant fo read any at ‘I went into the store,” said »{ the letters brought here there “to buy a new hat. I takes up a wouldn't be any time for the cases.” “These ain't letters,” refuted Jay cob. “These are clippings for all the had me in court. mean thing,’ Then she hits me on the| Nearly every court in town.” arm with s stick! and Mr. Siegal| ¢.ane Cundie locked like the returns comes and reaches for the hat, calls| sults of the work of a good Dress out of the window and broke the idan ae Bag got Ly clothes?" eaked It’s Cheap Food Compared with prewar price levels,’ beef is one of the cheapest of essential foods ey Other foods have advanced. to i muc igher points—and remained there! ‘A survey conducted by the Health Commissioner of Chicago showed the following price increases for the, current year over 1913-14: Flour a Sugar... Milk Round Steak Eggs... Sirloin Steak ° o> <«<e 210% os B® * e e 61% Beef is one of the best values in the food line and there is plenty of it. The need for conservation for military purposes is past. BUY BEEF— It’s Good Food — It’s Cheap American National Live Stock Association National Wool Growers’ Association Cattle Raisers’ Association of Texas Corn Belt Meat Producers’ Association of lowa Kansas Live Stock Association Southern Cattlemen's Association Indiana Cattle Feeders’ Association . West Virginia Live Stock Association ‘Wyoming Stock Growers’ Association Montana Stock Growers’ Association California Cattlemen's Association Colorado Live Stock Association Panhandle and Southwestern Stockmen's Association Idaho Cattle Growers’ Association Association Nebraska Stock Growers’ Missouri Live Stock Feeders’ Association ‘Tlinois Live Stock Association _ Arizona Cattle Growers’ Association New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association ) Cattle Raisers’ Association of Oregon The House of Incomparable Values Custom Made Clothes Ready for Service Super Value—Super Quality plus the combination of Individual Refined Style and Precise Tailoring, insuring comfort and ease of mind and body is what makes our clothes famous and demanded by the critical well dressed man. Our stock is unlimited in variety of styles,colorsand patterns. Pricing toSuit your particular pocket book. .Big variety in Blue Serges and Unfinished Worsted; also the cool comfortable “Keep Cool Suits” which spell “Style plus Comfort.” They come in dark as well as light colors. Our values cannot be equalled! Satisfaction Guaranteed—Come In! Be Convinced! SUITS FOR YOUNG MEN AND MEN $95, $97.50 $99.50 $35 mm shAO0 Palm Beach, Mohairs, Poplins & Crash Suits at $10 $1259 $15 $18 «& $1§50 NOTE OUR SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY | Tropical Worsteds, Gabardines, Silk Poplins and Shantungs OPEN SATURDAY TILL 9 P. M. The Jans gore 27 Cortlandt St., Cor. Church St, SIXTH AVE. L AT DOOR..HUDSON TUBE AT CORNER

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