The evening world. Newspaper, July 19, 1919, Page 2

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train, including ~ children, were * He 2 } ii it : ’ i ii k I going south, e 2 Ae & 5 second train. persons aided in straightening the tangle of twisted iron and ‘Acetyline torches were used weperate the fused iron. Ninth Street and then the trains to the north bound the glevated was resumed at 3 o'clock. to make their along surface re-routed a down town for ¢rains that come. cers and Men of A. E. F. to New York. ther side of Pier 14, officers and 136 enlisted! pation to be provided by each of the] statement it agrees to the plan. in on the South Dakota tong to the Ist and 24 the 1ith Infantry and made up the vanguard of the 6th Di- re of whom will be in later } vision, m : ‘tora on the Aquitania. These “in ¢ it over in March, 1918 and @i¥é ished themselves in th el and in the Mouse-Argon ve. The detachment was com- of Terra Haute. Among them were «fifteen D. S. C's and Croix de Guor.p. Major Vardy M. Williams of Gr the Panaman, which left 8t. Nasa! om duly 9 with 2,206 officers and o: Usted mon including two service bat- listed men on the Panaman were and this aft Nr tt Goce eral and Others, @upreme Court Justice McAvo: ‘dey vacated the temporary writ issued =Thureday restraining Attorney General of the fitate, the fx Legislative Committee and others y to of pre- yee! H el i | late. yesterday afternoon to temporary officials and ce of the paper as they may in Fort Prison, whose was @iscovered at 9:30 o'clock. “who was under « six-yoar’ after thirtytwo court-martial convictions, dncluding theft and escap- eehfinement, hed served two sentence and his behavior he was detailed as an guard over working bg. ud in Quartermas- 1M Bight: r cent. of th - | over, it is held, tallons, Bighty pei of the on- 9 md CA EME COUNCIL IS DETERMINED 10 Other War Criminals Cannot Be Tried Unless That Is Done, Official Opinion. PARIS, July 19 (Associated Prens), ~The Supreme Council of the Peace Conference has taken no action con- cerning the punishment of the former. German Emperor and has not even red the report from the com- for the former monarch. The Council appears to be fipm in the conviction which is hela by mill- tary cireles of the Entente wers punished, as it would be impossible to secure the punishment in Germany of former Emperor is exempted. A list of these officials and officers is to be The Council's appointment of Gen. in Asia Minor is regarded as the best means of disposing of friction there, the Allies: It is hoped the Greeks lines which Gen, Allenby will outline and that the Turks will cease hostili- ties when they realize that the ciples involved hag been settled and the proportion of the force of oecu- Allies. Marshal Foch's plan may. serve as @ basis for the settlement of this question. The Council also discussed the dis- of 240,000. Ruawian prisoners pati@elly who areistitin Germany. , Bh | These prisoners were held by Ger-| cock when he was at the Capitol late ofv{many at the reques? of the Allies} in the afternoon. Senators went over after the armistic® and have been manded by Major Benjamin ¥, Wimer| fed at the expense of the Entente| chemselves, Powers, sot As inany of themeare badly infected with Bolshevism, Poland and other countries through,which they would AN. vi 4 to Russia es ject v: om. ¢ fear ee ae y would be either he Bolshevik army or killed if sent The expense of val in Germany, ho becoming burdensome. T' to-day Wes unabss to reach a decision without. durthey ‘aformation concerning the ‘military phases of | the ty referreG the ques- tion So i iv port. ‘The Council received @ protest from the Sheik of Aidin, Asia Minor, con- cern atrocities which the Greeks are to have committed upon Turks in the neighborbood of that city when they landed there, It was decided to send a mission ** military gate the ances CHICAGO FIREMEN STRIKE, Are Refused, CHICAGO, July 10.—Every engineer and his aasistant in the Chicago Fire Departmant walked out at 8 o'clock this reached yesterday after the city had Ye- clined to meet the demands of the men ‘Two hundred and fifty city employees were: affected’ by the, walkout. The walkout, creates a grave situation in the matter of protection from fire throughout the city. All the men who left their posts ten+ dered thelr resignations to their su- perior officers before walkin, t The five fre ae stationed in the tiver are not affected. iret Assistant Fire Chiet Buckley said substitute engineers could be obtained without diMculty from the O'Connor predicted disaster if big fires should break out simultaneously In dif- ferent parts of the sity. oe 800 MORE ITALIANS SAIL. #ail for their homes to-day on the French liner Wepagne. Hundreds of other applicants for passage have v ed the MMizes of the line. Other pai sengers on the Kspagne are seventy-f collect the Parsiah spring styles in wns and millinery. Miss Marle reasler, the actress, and Mrs, A, K, Macomber also sailed. ee 282,000 STILL ABROAD, WASHINGTON, July 19 strength of the army July 14 was 182,000, PUNISH EXKAISER buyers and designers going abroad to| d ¢ é aS ah Thi LAO LA WORLD, #41 UE TO D ‘Photograph Taken by an Climbing to Wrecked Cars on Ladders To Rescue Injured in “L’’ Tr Evening World Photographer feos CONFERENCES ON THE TREATY HY ~~ PIEASE PRESEN (Continued from First Page.) campaign to bring about ratificatiol is his inquiry of the Entente Powers ‘cars. Btrect |. H. H. Allenby of the British Army |i¢ they will accept “interpretations,” and Bore to the duty of adjusting differences | instead of “reservations,” as indicat- A) subway, ¢ |between the Greek and Italian forces | ing the attitude of the Senate when ratifying the treaty, This is the most discussed topic in Moran lives at No. 2426 | because it is believed the Turks Will] connection with the treaty to-day, for Avenue, The Bronx, and 18 ly impressed by the united action of/i¢ the Allies agree it may mean a compromise between the President It is the impression of some of the Senators who have conferred with the President that he contemplates a Further to clarify the situation, it is understood that Japan and China have been urged to make announce- at is afternoon with a total/all that remains to be decided upon| ments abeut Shantung, the former leave the provines and the other a The President commented at length on the “interpretations” plan to Sen- ators Capper, Kellogg, Kenyon and ‘MeNary when they called at the White House yesterday, and also took the subject up with Senator Hitch. all phases of the proposition among Three clagses of modifications of the treaty have been suggested: Amendments, reseryationg and inter- pretationa, i Amendments would change the meaning as well as the language and would have to be accepted by the other parties of the treaty, Reservations, while leaving the language of the document unaltered, would add to it provisions that would ullify certain sections, These would also have to be agreed to by the other treaty powers. Interpretations, on the other hand, standing of provisio: As they would be in the nature of empfiasis of such points as the in- violability of the Monroe Doctrine, re~ tention of the power of Congress to say when the war forces of the United States should be employed, &c,, it might be that the other treaty powers tacitly recognize them without having to reconsider the treaty. The President will not accept any change or qualification that will necessitate the return ef the treaty to the Peace Conference or the signa tory powers.’ If interpretations are accepted by the powers it is possible the Presl- dent,may accept some kind of com- promise involving interpretation of various fegtares in the treaty, It ts said that he does not desire that Article X, be included in these, Sen- timent of the Senate is being tested on this point, It is assumed that of- ground greement as between the Democrats and Republicans. As an offset to Republican insist- ence on reservations, the President is endeavoring to win over those who most strongly favor a League of Na- ons and to meet their objections by explanations and arguments, In addition to argument, the Presi- for the League of Nations, As a long step in the direction of es up the Shantung trouble, sident has requ permis- from the other Allied Powers te all the discussions and eonnected with the grant tt is way to- calming those who most bitterly denounce the loot- jloournen' ing of Shantun; thought this will ward pacifying o to Japan. go « lonj and ing of China, . who was forts may be made to reach some dent is hoping to be able within a ranks of the Department, but Fire Chiet| few days to make such statements ed reganiing Shantung and possibly other features of the treaty as will remove a large proportion of the ex- isting antagonism. Every availabla —__ fact will be brought to the assistance Bight tupdred Italians were booked to| of the President in making his fight Boy's Body Recovered From Water Tow body of twelve-year-old David — The| Kat, Mo. 175 Beach 44th Street, Edge- At ign, ee, Hund tle awn geal Wer rent si ed to-day, NEW PACIFIC FLEET STARTS ITS CRUISE TO WESTERN COAST Six Super-Dreadnoughts and 200 Smaller Ships Leave Old Point Comfort. OLD POINT COMFORT, Va., July 19.--The vanguard of the Pacific Fleet sailed from its anchorage here at 8.30 o'clock this morning, bound for the Western coast via the Pan- ama Canal, No unusual ceremonies marked the departure of the six superdread- noughts and thirty destroyers and tenders which are leading the way for the 200 naval craft now assigned to Pacific waters, Admiral Hugh Rodman, command- ing the fleet, was with the flagship New Mexico. With the New Mexico were the battleships Wyoming, Ar- kansas, New York, Texas, Arizona, Idaho and Mississippi. ‘The fleet will make for the Panama Canal. It will be the greatest that bas passed through the canal. When it is assembled on the Pacific it will comprise 200 ships, with 2,000 officers and 33,000 men. It will be more than twice the tonnage of the “huge” fleet which sailed round the world in 1908. From the time the fleet reaches the open sea it will begin to increase. Six more battleships, the Virginia, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Georgia, Ne- braska and Vermont, will join it, as will all of the cruisers now on the Pacific coast. The Vrginia is the flagship of Vice Admiral Clarence 3. ‘Williams, second in command, po sean. onc POLIGE TO USE X-RAYS ON ALL BOMBS THEY FIND Believe Important Evidence Often Is Destroyed by Soaking and Dissecting. All the unexploded bombs that the police get hold of hereafter are to be X-rayed before they are ingesti- gated in any other way. This was an- nounced to-day after a conference of 4 municipal officiais, investigating bomb revolutionary move- believes that the X-ray may reveal clews which would be destroyed by soaking and dissecting. It was also said by persons present at the conference that arre ably will be made in a few connection with recent bomb out- reges, William J, Flynn, in charge of the Federal inv: othfeegeet, invewtiwation, ts at NEUTRAL CONSULS TO ACT IN GERMANY FOR U, S, Government to Arrange for Clear- ance of Ships Until Senate Acts on Treaty, July PARIS, 1%.-—The American 8 for their consuls to clear American ships at German ports until the United states Senate acts upon the peace treaty, —o———— FIRST STRONG ARM COP OUT. MeAuliffe Quits Arter 25 Years to Join U, 5. Service, Lieut. Timothy McAuliffe of the East Bist Street station, was retired by Com- migsioner Pnright at hls own requeat after twentydive years’ service. Me- Aullffe entered the department in 1894 and, became @ leutenant in November, 19) He was the organizer ‘of the first “BU Arm Sau 1908 and had many in all five bor- or He is going into the Fede 5 1 service. His former comrad lan- ning to give a dinner in his ner —_—————— MILLION LEFT HODCARRIER. is Windfall LAKE CHARLES, La, July 19,—~ Joe McDonald, # hod carrier, has just notified that his unele, living in re, Taiz pad died and bi Guna) equeathed HOUSE DRYS BLOCK ALL BUSINESS TO. PASS BLL TG (Continued From First Page.) ation of the drys to shut off debate. After speaking five minutes without time to explain fully what he wanted to say, he failed to get consent: for three minutes more, Membersof the minority announced too that they would refuse hereatier to give the drys additional speaking time. Radical prohibition members were ready to fight for chan in that part of the bill which would permit « sick man, with the aid of a physician, to get as much as one quart of liquor a@ month. ‘They said it was too much. Chairman Volstead, however, was pre- pared to resist any attempt to cut down the sick man's share, The use of sacramental wine will be absolutely prohibited under the Prohibition enforcement Law-as it is now before the House, Represent - ote) Igoe, Missour,; d om! i e a Few Minutes After " the Collision. fan give away - men: except is. protided in this bill,”" Igoe: said, “and the~bill contains no exceptions.” . Representative Fitzgerald, Massa- chusetts, offered an amendment to the enforcemént bill to exempt the home manufacture of ber, wine and cider, Provided it, is for home use; but the prohibitionists prevented consideration on @ point of order. An amendment to. strike out the , requirement’ that all non-potable preparations containing alcohol have the amount ited on the container was defeated. The amendment was offered by Representative Husted, New York, on the ground that the requirement would point out e rations that might be consumed se ¢ a substitute for liquor. Repreesentative Barr, Republican, Montana, who sald he would not raise his boys in a State where liquor was sold, declared agitators who were try- ing to do away with cigarettes, tobacco, pickled peachees and the like were go- ing too far, “Out west,” he said, “there ts a firm manufacturing near-beer which prints on the label of each bottle the warn- ing not to mix yeast with the contents because that would make tt intoxicat- ing. Pretty soon these agitators wil try to have Congress prohibit the sale Se and then we will have no —o—— WILL ARREST ALL WHO SELL 2.75 BEER IN REW JERSEY Department of Justice Agents Will Handle Prosecutions Under New Order. United States Marshal Albert Bo!l- schweiler of New Jersey, said this morning that he had learned that [orders had been received by agents of the Department of Justice in New Jersey from A, Mitchell Palmer, United States Attorney Gener: arrest all pei selling 2.75 b The Marshal said that the inve: tion of the evidence under which warrants will be issued will be done entirely by the Department of Justice agents and that the warrants wil {irned over to the Marshal, etd pol AS Ni GEN. PERSHING LEADS 19,00 RODS MARS (Continued from First Page.) tachment was collected, and tt took ‘part in the parade, While the great London parade @was the most spectacular event of the day, peace was celebrat throughout the British Empire, ‘In England every city, town and hamlet held a peace carnival. Religious #er- up the programme in nearly every place. In some places, particularly the seaside resorts, battles of flow- ers featured the day. — Policemen Killed in Auto Chase, BUFFALA, July 19.—While chasing a \epeeder in a police automobile to-day, Patrolman H. A. Rade! and Fred J. Pauley, instantly kilted and sane tit A” atl tied when the aul le went Into @ stone dite at the base of @ bill, | vices, processions and sports made | gai ES 40 NW PREDICTE HES SCARE Shoes That Now Cost $12 Will Soon Be Sold for $20 and $22. LEATHER FAMINE HERE. Demand for It Is World-Wide —Raw Material and Labor Non-Existent, ' By Fréderick Lawrence. The man or woman who buys & pair of shoes around the first of next October must be prépared to pay from 30 to 40 per cent. more than the present prices, This warning 1s Volced by retailers, wholesalers and tannerg through their trade organi- zations, by individuals engaged in the shoe and’ leather business, and by the well informed trade papers. Th are two paramount reasons for this situation. Phey are: 1. The cost of raw materials, pria- clpally hides, has advanced to un- precedented prices. 2, The wages paid to labor in all branches of the shoe making industry have advanced from 100 to 250 per cent. From the retailers’ point of view this prediction was made by Henry W. Cook in an address before the New York State Retall Shoe Dealers’ Association and indorsed by the con- vention Which was held at Rochester last week: “Il think prices are going higher, and materially so; and the principal reasons are perfectly obvious—scar- city of raw materials, coupled with an unprecedented demand for both leather and shoes at home and abroad, and the foreign demand is probably the greater factor.” There is no relief in sight, accord- ing to John Slater of No. 415 5th Ave- nue,’ Chairman of the association's Committee on) Resolutions. “Prices of shoes are bound to go on increasing,” Mr. Slater said, “and no man can forecast when the upward tendency will stop.” ARE THE STOCK RAISERS AND WORKINGMEN PROFITEERS? “Who is profiteering?” Mr. Slater was asked. “The retail dealers, the wholesalers, the manufacturers and the tanners are positively .not profiteering,” Mr. Slater answered. “The retailers in normal times figured on 80 to 40 per cent. profit. Some, not many, whose risks are greater than others have been compelled to allow themselves at present a 50 per cent. margin for profit. The wholesalers, manufac- turers and tanners are figuring on no higher per cent. of profit than they earned before the war. The increased cost of hides and increased wages to employees is the rockbottom cause of high shoe prices.” “What will be the cost next fal) @ pair of shoes which now costs /the Public $127” Mr, Slater was asked, “Anywhere from $16 to $20, and the same ratio of increase will apply to all grades of footwear,” was the an- swer, E. A. Brand, Executive Secretary of the Tanners’ Council of the United States, exhibited étatistics indicating that the tanners'have added to the price of Jeather not more than the {n- creased cost of hides and labor, and that tanners’ profits have reached no higher percentage. John Coward of the James Coward Company, manufacturers as well os retailers of popular price shoes, said that dealers usually fi; on from 40 to 60 per cent. margin of profit and that the higher prices will not mean increased profits. From tanners to retailers, all laid the blame primarily on the great packers and other dis- tributers of raw hidess Speaking for Armour & Co, and the packers’ side of the case, A. H. Van Pelt, general superintendent of the New York of- floes of Armour & Co,, said: prices and the indications are that still higher prices will be at- tained. The whole world is in the market for leather and hides and the supply cannot possibly be made to equal the demand, Busope is bidding unprecedented high prices and the United States is competing against the Europeans. There will be no sub- stantial relief until animal produc- tion in all the hide producing coun- tries becomes normal and shipping tonnage to regularly move the im- port and export of hides is provided.” ARMOUR TELLS WHY .8HOE PRICES ARE GOING UP, J. Ogden Armour, in a statement given to the publig in Chicago, made reference to conditions existing in the cattle raising and packing in- dustries which had bearing on the soaring values of hides. Mr, Armour * id “Bighty to 85 per cent. of the total amount which the packers get from the sale of live stock and the by products 1s paid back to the producer of the live animal, That makes the cost of the raw material the over- whelming factor in determining the cost the consumer must pay. Since the outbreak ofthe war the cost of hide animals bi advanced greatly and the cattle raiser has been receiv- ing the benefit. Coupled with this is the fact that the cost of labor of every kind connected with the pack- ing industry has practically doubled we “Hides have reached ‘record break- | ier »] GREAT LONDON PARADE; DFOR AUTUMN: F LABOR COSTLY MEN'S DUDS 8 60 UP? WELL, ONLY 100 PER CENT. eee Chairman of Clothing Designers = Explains That There Is a Shortage of Labor. » “Prices of men’s clothing will.be 100 er cent. higher next summer than they are at present,” asserted Chairman H. Simons of the American Clothing De- signers’ Association at the opening ses- sion of the annual conVention of that body at the Hotel Martinique last night. “There is a 30 per cent. shortage of Jabor at present in tle garment industry, and designers are endeavoring to ovei come that handicap by simplifying mei garments for next spring and summer, said Mr. Simons. and that freight rates have advanced materially. = “Packers’ profita, per unit of *bust- ness, were smaller last year than ba before.” r. Armour was unwilling to \- der all of the fault on the live steak raiser and leaye it there. He ex- plained the cattleman’s difficulties this way: “Animals are the product of much labor and a considerable quantity of feeds, chief among which is corn. Corn figures such a large part in the moking of an animal that it is cus» tomary to figure the cost of produc- ing @ live animal in terms of bushels of corn. With corn as a measure of production cost, one has but to com- pare the value of a bushel of corn to-day to its value before the war to understand why the producers must charge more for their animals. “Corn is standing on record high levels partly because of its increased Production cost, in wages and go on, but even more because of the sym- pathetic _and competitive relation that exists between corn and wheat. Wheat is the real basis on which food values are determined, ie Government is responsible for the high cost of wheat by its guarantee of $2.26 per bushel to the farmers of the country, Congress did not think that wheat. would be worth that much in the open market, and so ap appropriation of $1,000,000,000 was passed in order to make up the dif- ference between what the Govern- ment paid for the wheat and what it expected to get for jt in the open market. The United States Grain Corporation thus far hag made no re- duction in the price, and so with wheat at its present high levels corn * up and also animals, at a record je et because prices are high certain critics of the big packers are seeking ‘to enact jaws that. will cripple packer activities, The war bas’ terminated, and the sooner the Government re- linquishes arbitrary power over all buman endeavor other than those purely governmental in function the sooner will our country be on its way back to normal conditions where the old economic law of supply and de. mand will govern and equalize to the satisfaction and contentment of our 110,000,000 people.” The Shoe Retailer, official organ of the retail shoe trade, explains the high mounting cost of shoes this way: THE SHORTAGE IN HIDES 1S WORLD-WIDE. “The European demand for hides and the world shortage of skins have ft} sent hide prices soaring. Great Brit~ ai. has lifted ber embargo against American hides and shipments to that country are enormous. Every coun- try in Europe js clamoring for hides, Now that the blockade against Ger- many bas been ended the exports to that country will be limited only oy shipping facilities, Our information is that there will be constantly in- creasing prices for footwear, This situation will apply not alone to the United States but to every country in the world where the people wear shoes. Labor is responsible for a share of the higher prices that are was coming. Since the armistice signed workers in shoe factories received three increases in wages, have been granted shorter hours, They are now agitating for additional advantages." ‘The Tanners’ Council has these fig- ures to show the range of hide prices in 1918 and 1919; city calfdiine. y : These prices have gone up an average of 1 cent a pound gincs July 1. PUBLIC WILL HAVE TO PAY MORE, SAY THE TANNERS. The Tanners’ Council presents the following summary of the situation through President Fred A, Vogel: “There is o0 question that these high prices were caused by the good old rule of supply and demand. Not only is there @ large demand for leather in this country but the Huropean countries, in their anxiety and ner- yousness to replenish their stocks, have been active and anxious buyers in this market. This European buy- ing has not been confined to our Allies but to neutrals as well, whose leather stocks were also very bare because of interrupted transportation facilities and embargoes of all kinds, “There isn’t a doubt in the minds of those who really know the shoe and leather situation but that the public will have to pay still further advances in the price of shoes. There is only one remedy for this and that ig to increase transportation facili- ties. There are considerable stocks ef raw material scattered all over the world that can be made available for American tanners providing the Shipping Board or some other agency of the Government sees that #ddi- tional ships are provided for South America, for India, for China, for | Viaaivostox and later for Riga. There are accumulations, at which, if made available country, no doubt would have effect on our prices here, Tho lates advices from Russia state that tl are accumulations of raw materi and the same apparently in Po condition, In fact, one sali ship- ment.which arrived at a Pacifie port a few weeks ago was found to be in very g0od condition and it is known that these skins were four years old, The rumor therefore that much of the stock has been ruined and that Russia was practically bare of all raw material is false. “The Tanners’ Council! wilt mate every effort to secure additional ships to bring in this raw material because it feels that it is its duty toward & that @ Public and the Government be done.” HEIGHTS TO WHICH SHOE HAVE SOARED, Shoe dealers prement the f as an average example of iii eaoce in price over 1915: ‘ $3,30 to make In 1915 This si hoes costti and now retalis at i The cost of producing shoes haw tn!) creased 132 per cent, since 1915, while the average increase in retail Prices has increased 105 to 110 t cent. The increased cost in the prin- cipal materials used in making shoes is shown in this table: As illustrating one reason of hides for the and skins it is out that importations HE ah £ valued at 7304405, pounds valued at $108,043,703. Ea . Salomon, New York ee, pare ab ye ied and Po ye who recently returned from a tour of seyv- eral Bi n countries, summarised his observations as follows: 4 id trade ig suffering from increased cost of living and of labor and a serious sh of leather op account of the lack of raw material and of ships transport’ raw material. In France many leath- er stores are completely bare of this commodity and the cost of shoes is very high. In Belgium, which is bare of leather,I saw travellers from France. on the trains, carrying glazed kid in wicker baskets owing to the lack of freight transportation. Ger- many’a shoe factories, which of course were not injured by enemy armies, are idle because they have no supply of raw material, Ger. rans will pay almost any price for hides. My information is that Italy, Spain and other European countries « will demand more and still moi ieather from America. This di in Europe will create a still shortage in America and will evon higher advances from present shoe prices.” LABOR’S INCREASED COST IN THE SHOE TRADE, The labor wage increases, accord- {ng to the estimates of several manu- facturers, averaged during the past two years as follows: Sewers from $32 per week to $45 and $57; machine men from $30 and $45 to $70 and $80; cutters from $80 to $45. In addition the hours of work have been reduced, which necessi- tated the employment of more mon, with @ resultant Increase of payrolls, The cost of hemp, linings, nails, twine, eyelets, sole leather, cork, felt ‘and every other article that is used in the making of shoes has increased from 100 to 300 per cent. The cost of sole Jeather, for instance, in 1910 was 83 cents a pound, while now it iu $1.05, and a further increase 1s pend- ing. “The only relief possible, in my judgment will come from the re- establishment of pre-war norma! con- ditions in Russta,” was the opinion expressed by Mr. Slater, “Russ. mabketed 60,000,000 pounds of hides annually before the war, while she now produces only 600,000 pounds.” John Coward of James 8. Coward Company, said this: “It ls true that shoe prices will be greatly Increased in the fall. It can- not be helped. For the reason look to the vastly increased scale of wages, that labor commands and to. tho army of buyers of raw material from neutral and Allied countries all ever 4 the world who are swarming the hide centres of the United States, literally paying any price that may be asked for hides that can be converted Into shoe leather.” ——SEEe eS SPECIAL NOTICES, 4 ter HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL aa OI1fo. CARRERE—HENRI. * Services at the CAMPBELL FUNBRAL CHURCH, Broadway and 66th st., on Sunday, at 2 P. M. RUSSELL,—JOHN, Lying in state at the CAMPBELL ¥U- NBRAL CHURCH, Broadway ané 66th.) WALSH. —JAMB6 R, Lying im state at the CAMPBELL, U4 NERAL CHURCH, Broadway and ca Lost, FOUND AND REWARDS, a Rg a a A | i and Seckince’ of taren Sites’ “phationm ‘Sire ‘i. his. Pa. hain: reward. Notify lansberry st., Philadel ri Tae mle; “8100 roman, i 1 ot od watch, (oltale ¥, M,W, Mowe uidwood SadicI iq PERSONALS. ‘call at Ragle ul’ call D. oth ° iets call et gan, D, Conger tion thie Summer heave your favorite paper mailed te you every day. Evening World, 18 par week Dally World, 186 per week

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