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‘ proximately 100 per cent. in the lo est cases, and far more than -that—in some instanc cases, ‘The THE OUTLOOK FOR FALL > SIOOOUTET This the Dire Prediction Responsible Leaders in PROFITEERING DENIED. » Increase ing Wool, Labor and the By Frederick Lawrence. ‘The cost of popular priced men's clothing will be increased from 25 to 240 pér cent. next fall. will be effective all over the United States. The authorities for this information are Max Friedman, President of tho American Association,*No. 708 Broadway; J. J. Nevins, Secretary of the American Association of Woollen and Worsted Manufacturers, No, Street; Leon Mann, Exeotftive Man- ager of th facturery’ President of the National Association of Clothiers, and representatives of Brokaw, Bros. Rogers, Peet & Co, . and Stein, Bloch & Co. ‘A summary of the information re- ceived from these men is as follows: A ready to wear standard suit of clothes consisting of coat, Seer and vest that the wearer paid $25 for last fall will cost $31.25 next fall. A suit for which $50 was paid in the fall of 1918 will cost $62.50 this fall. Clothing costing above $60 to suit Brill Bros. in the fall 0 great Such suits will be retailed at from 15 to 20 per Nevertheless, the day of the $100 suit is near at in the past figured on making him- self look stylish for $80 to $35. The reasons: @AN authorities attribute the forth- éoming increases to— 1. A shortage of cloth. 2. The increased cost of labor. , SHORTAGE PRICE For instance: Max Friedman, American » Association: , turers have faced a shortage of raw material. price of cloth. The big item is the increased cost of labor to the manu- facturer and the duction due to labor's shorter hours. Formerly week, now week. Formerly we had a seasonal arrangement have a fifty to fifty-two-week year. The cost complain have enough pay to live on. state the fact as the principal reason for the higher prices the public must pay for its clothes, importance is the decreased produc- tion. “The increased wages and reduced hours of the wage ing trade der all th breed and wool comes, to shear the wool from the animal, to bale it and transport it, to warehouse it, to dye and scour it, to ship it to the mills, to carry it from’ trains to factories, to weave it into ecloth—all have , increased probably than ‘a fraction of a cent here and there, but in the total the consumer must eventually pay increases figur- ing ‘into dollars, hag suffered rents, creased wages, in| from the taxes. (] DOORS REMOVED: TO GET MAN INTO HOSPITAL 650-Pound Patient, Stricken Goney Island Too karge for Regular Bed, John Wilson, twenty-six, visiting here from Chicago, was stricken ith heart disease at Coney Island last it. weighs 60 pounds and it took eight men to carry him into Holy Family Hos- pifal, Dean and Hoyt Streets, Brooklyn, of the Trade. Due to Cost of Rais- “Overhead.” the Island in the Nevins private am- bulance. He was unconscious this morn- ing. Upon arrival at the héspital it was Aecessary to take off both doors to ad- mit the patient.s ‘The door of the pri- vate room he occupies had to be taken oft, The usual hospital bed was farr too frail to hold him so mattresses were piled on the floor to make a bed for him. He is likely to die. He is a private pa- Ment of Dr, Darwin Waugh STEEL STRIKE SETTLED. . Agreement at Wharton Plant in, Dover. The strike at the Wharton Steel Company's plant at Dover, N. J., was declared settled to-day. The award as & basis for resuming work was made by an arbitration committee of which President W. H. Brevoort of the com- pany, Sheriff Orr of Morris County, Marshal, MoDonough of the Town of Wharton and a committee of strikers were members, The agreement provides for an open shop, collective bargaining without dis- crimination and priority of employment to residents of Wharton. The plant The inerease Clothing Manufacturers’ 46 East 17th American Clothing Manu- Association; Ludwig Stein.) open si of last year will not suffer @ percentage of increase. has been shut down since April, cent. above former priges. it one way or another for years to come—and grin while doing it.” Figures prepared by the American Clothing Manufacturers’ Association show that the average price of men's wool clothing has advaaced from as low as 73 cents per pound in 1907, to 74 cents in 1915, to $1.05 in 1918, to $1.82 in 1917, to $1.90 in 1918, and has receded from the 1918 high figure to approximately $1.66, according to the last published figures in 1919, The cost of plece goods per yard has far outstripped the price of wool until to-day it stands at the record high price except for a short time in 1918, MANUFACTURER DECLARES IT NO PROFITEERING SCHEME. Mr. Nevins of the American Association of Woolen and, Worsted Manufacturers furnishes this ex- ution of the situation: ‘yom the time war was declared by the United States all firms” put their efforts and machinery at the disposal of the Governfhent to outfit the army and navy. The enterprises engaged in the manufacture of civil- jan.clothing turned to the production of equip ent for soldiers and sailors. The whole country is undergoing « metamorphosis from a war to a peace basis, All production and all industry is dislocated. We are now a nation of guessers, Nobody's guess is ins fallible. hand ‘for the man who has IN WOOL AT ANY AND LABOR HIGHER. President of the Clothing Manufacturers’ “The cloth manufac- That has increased the decrease of pro- we had a forty-elght-hour we have a forty-four-hour with labor, now we of labor has gone up ap- 150 per cent.—in other manufacturets do not | fal about that. Labor must In the mgan time we must all be I merely |FUlded by conditions and circum- stances as they present themselves. All we can promise is that we will not take advantage of the chance to profiteer. ‘Trade conditions, the present high price of material, the lack of labor, the lack of ocean ship- ping tonnage, the eager demand for cloth from Europe, many other con- siderations must be taken into account. “The public should be- assured that nobody is profiteering, This is true from producer of raw material to manufacturer of finished suits clothe: Nobody would dare profiteer. The natural cos$ of ma- terials and labor is so high that the masses are irritated almost beyond forbearance. He who would seek to make unusual profits would do so at his perti, The price of food, rent: clothing, of everything that isc sidered necessary to modern stand- ards of living has increased, The greater proportion of the increase is due to the increased pay to the wage learners. 1 do not wish to stake my And of even more arners in the cloth must n however, shoul 6 blame. It costs more to raise the sheep frqm which along the line not sosts more Even increases, the ‘retailer such as in- lighting,@ insurance, terest on borrowed money banks, luxury and other “We must all pay for the war, ahd ‘reputation as a prophet on a predic- make up our minds to continue LOND do tion as to where it will end.” McGibbon & Co. 3 WEST 37TH ST. § DOOR FROM FIFTH AVENUE, THE QUALITY LINEN SHOP FOR MORE THAN SIXTY-SIX YEARS ‘McGIBBON HOUSEHOLD LINENS HAVE BEEN USED BY THE MOST REPRE- SENTATIVE FAMILIES IN AMERICA, THEIR SUPERFINE QUALITY AND Ex- CLUSIVENESS OF DESIGN UNITED WITH THE EXCEPTIONAL HELPFUL- NESS OF McGIBBON SERVICE IS AL- WAYS APPRECIATED BY A SELECT CLIENTELE, STORE OPEN 9 A. M. TO 5.00 P. M. NEAR AT. HAND at! last night after he was rethoved from| to -Aeropl > Lo John E. Longenecker of Lititz, Pa., believes’ the future air machine will be a combination GANT GEM THEF CLIMBS 0 HOME N VERSE DRIVE Smallest Policeman Nabs Six- Foot Thief With $3,000 Loot. Julian Johnson, colored, twenty- three years old, 6 fect 2 inches tall and weighing 210 pounds, who escaped from Sing Sing Prison Inst November while serving sentence for burglary, was arrested in Riverside Drive at 2.30 o'clock this morhing for breaking and entering the apartment of Julian Ulmer at No, 362 in that thoroughfare. and stealing Jewelry valued at $3,000, He had stolen goods on him and did not deny the break. Johnson, an athlete of better than Jack Dempsey proportions, was brought in by one of the smaller men of the Police Department, Patrolman Mark Cannon of the West 123d Strect it o Aeroplane, Which Inventor Says Is at Home in Air or on Land ' | of automobile and aeroplane, and his model'here: shows the shape of a Curtiss plang’ slipped urs sere over the. body of an automobile Toadeter. The wings fold back over the plane GUN FIGHT WITH POLICE ENDS IN ARREST OF DAIRY ROBBER IN THE BRONX Duel in Street When Burglar Hides Behind Subway Pillar. Julius Glassberg, ownor of a dairy at No, 912 Freeman Street, Bronx, looked up while counting his eggs at 1 A. M, to-day and saw a strange man with a revolver, and yelled. He was strack down with the butt end of the weapon. ‘ David Reich ‘of No, 1300 Hoe Ave- Aue saw tlie man with a revolver and shouted for a policeman, The rob- ber ran, pursued by Policeman Witz- man. The fugitive ignored a com- mand to halt until he reached a pil- lar of the subway extension struc- ture at Southern Boulevard and Home Street. From behind the pillar he opened fire, and from behind a pillar a few | feet away the policeman returned shot for shot. The robber suddenly fell to the street when each ha@ fired six shots and shouted: “You've gdt me As Witzman started toward him, the man raised his revoiver and fired point blank at the policeman, but Station, ‘The bantamweight policeman, know- ing nothing about the robbery of the | Ulmer house, sighted the big negro, at 100th Street and, keeping within | the shadow of the trees on the fur- ther side of the Drive, followed him for three blocks, At 97th Street Cannon ran across | the way, gun in hand, and, jumping out in front of the big colored man, | ordered him to throw up his bards, The police call Johnston the “Smil- | ing Burglar.” With the gun pointed at him, Cannon says, his grin illum- | inated the block. “My goodness, map,” he said, “you don't need no arsénal to take me, Be careful with | that persuader.” A search of his clothing at the po- lice station revealed the stolen gems, but no weapon of any kind. He said a ladder-lke formation of the stone- work male his climb to the second | story windows of the Ulmer place | “as easy as anything.” He walked through the kitchen to the chamber in which Mr. and Mrs. Ulmer were asleep and helped himself, ROBS FIFTH AVENUE STORE DURING NIGHT, BUT POLICE SEARCH NOT STARTED YET Patrolman Chases $400 Watch Burglar, but He Gets Away. A burglar threw a brick through the window of Paul A. Meyrowitz’s store at No, 539 Fifth Avenue about 4 o'clock this morning and got away with more than $400 worth of watches and other merchandise. A policeman heard the crash of glass and spotted the burglar, who turned and sprinted down the avenue, The cop gave chase but never caught up and the thief | made a clean getaway. This is the fourth time in a year | that one or the other of the Meyro- | witz branches, where optician and | photographic supplie are handled, has been robbed, Presumably the pursuing policeman turned tn a report of the burglary, but whether he did or not Mr, Meyrowitz notified the po- lice as soon as he-reached the store. It was 1 o'clock when an Evening World reporter got on the job and the police hadn't yet arrived. ‘The burglars played no favorit far as the Meyrowit: cerned, for the store witg at No. 265 Brooklyn, was broken into and robbe d at about’ 5.30 o'clock this morning and jcameras and merchandl: stolen, THE bracing food elements a that keep up strength in hot weather are found in Wheatsworth Whole Wheat Biscuits and milk—a cooling, delicious luncheon. In Individual Service Car- tons at restaurants, lunch- rooms and fountains. F. H, BENNETT BISCUIT CO.,.N, Y. camera supplie sand other valued at $160, werd missed, The policeman ended ,the battle with a vigorous application of the nightstick. that: necessitated the service of an ambulance surgeon, The prisoner described himself as James Kelly twenty-six years old, a riveter of No, 300 East 128th Street, Kelly has no pojice record so far as} has been learned. He told the keeper | at the Simpson Street Station that he | had shot to kill and’ that he could) “do up’ any cop if left alone with | him, Witzman, who arrested him, appears to bear a charmed life when it comes to gunfights., Five years ago when he was attached to the st 104th Street Station, he stood up thrée men on suspicion and had searched two, of them when the third drew a revolver and emptied its con- tents at the policeman, The grocery store of John Wild- berger, at No. 1633 Second Avenue, was broken into shortly after 1 o'clock yesterday morning, a big safe im the rear was blown open, and about $700 in Liberty bonds and checks were taken. The grocer was told to keep quigt about the robb THROTTLED WITH NECKTIE WHEN HELD UP AT DOORWAY BY BAND OF ARMED THIEVES | Retired Hotel Keeper Loses $200 Diamond Stud and Is Beaten, At 10 o'clock this morning Hen: Gerth, a retired hotel’ keeper was held up on his own stoop at No, 4 Roberg Place, blackjacked and throttled with his own necktie, No arrests have been made, His %200 diamond stud was taken. Mr, Gerth said he was entering his | home when he was seized from be- hind’ and struck with a blackjack, A tall man d his arms, a short man twisted his tie about his neck, They wrenched the stud from his shirt and fled through Roberg Place into West) a ‘Third Street, both escaping. Lillian Hart and her husband, | Edward, neighbors, heard his cries | and assisted him into his home a called a physician, CIGAR STORE BANDIT GETS MAXIMUM SENTENCE | Judge Wadhams Gives First Of-| fender 10 to 20 Years as Example to Others, Frank Donnelly, twenty-two West Gist Stre by Judge Wadhams, in General Sefsions to not leas than ten years or more than 20 in Sing Sing Priaon for participating | in, the holdup of a Ninth Avenue ¢igar store on AprM 19, Donnelly, with two} others, subdued the clerk, Emil Model, with @ revolver and robbed the Ul of | $41, The convicted man's counsel asked for clemency, saying the robbery was the first offense, To this Judge Wad- hams replied No. “Such crimes as this man was con-| | victed of are too common tn the city. | ‘An example must be made and though this defendant is a first offender 1 intend giving him the maximum sen- vance,” . “ if ; Walsh, eral, MOTHER'S LOVE WINS FREEDOM FOR SN SHE AGDUSE Mrs. Walsh Weakens and Court Is Forced to Drop Forgery Charge. When the test came to-day and her complaint against her son for forgery w in Judge May's court in Hrooklyn, mother love conquered the desire for justice in the heart of Mrs. Anna Walsh and the case of the people versus John F. Waish, thirty®hree, an ex-convict of No, 239 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, fell for lack of evidence. Mrs, Walsh had complained that on June 27 her son forged "her signature to an insurance voucher and collect- ed $150, Walsh, who has served time at Elmira and Sing Sing, was indict- ed for forgery and grand larceny, When she made the complaint Mra, she said, was determied to about be called to erateful son, she sald; heshad broken the heart In her and she woud! shield him no longer, When, to-day, she declared that she. would never take the witness stand against her own flesh and blood (“sure it was bad companions,” she said, “that brought Johnny to this") policemen said she could be “com- pelled” to testify. “Very well,” said she, “go ahoad and compel me; but if you put me on the witness stand I'll testify that the boy acted for me and is inno- cent. Then, where will you be?” The puzzle was put up to Judge May, who said “Well, gentlemen, I don't see how we can punish this woman for a display gf maternal love, The story ts as old as man,” John Walsh was permitted to plead guilty to a complaint charging him with “larceny, first offense.” Sent- ence was suspended during good be- havior. i “Walsh,” said the judge, “you owe yuor liberty to the love and affection of your old mother, L wish [ could hope that you will show yourscif worthy. If you come back Into this court I promise you the severest penalty’ the law allows.” ek ace ioe lee EES RAND SCHOOL PLEA HEARD. Justice McAvoy Rexerves Decision Affecting Selaed Papers. Argument for the writ of prohibition against the use by the Attorney Gen- the Lusk Committee and Magia- trate McAdoo of the documents setzed in the raid on the Rand School, was taken up before Justice Lace in the Supreme Court to-day, He sent the matter to Justice McAvoy, who had previously heard the case Counsel for the Rand School asked for postponement on the ground that Attorney General Newton and Chairman Lusk had not been served. Deputy At- torney General Berger offered to pt service for them, Justice McAvoy d to hear the argument and re- served decision until written waivers of service had been fled. oe Vicar General of Chi ene Den ON, 8. C., CHARL July Right Rev, Monsgnor Patrick L, Dufty, Vicar General for the diocese of Charles- ton and for many ra rector of St Joseph's Church, this city, died here to day, He was ordained a priest in 187 and invetsted with the title of Monl signor In 1917, ——_—»— hibition Will tions Amatnst Pro! Delay Action tn California, SACRAMENTO, July Referen- dums on file against ratification of the Federal Prohibition Amendment and the State act for enforcement of Prohibition are sufficient to hold up the laws until the 1920 general elec- tion, dhe Secretary of State an- nounced po-da eid ARE ES Three Held ax Auto Thieves. Mortimer Haaratick of No, 205 67th Street, Bay Rk Ra: nd J. Crow of No, 466 76th Street, and William Lohman of Mountain View, » J were arrested in Brooklyn to-day charged with stealing the automobile of Town Clerk James A. arly of Bouth ampton, L, 1.) ‘The car was taken from the strvet in Bag Harbor, scandals when the tenderly nurtured 1 malds and not be an old and made her a partner in the bus ehop with @ knife why duced amount asked, ah aa UL aay, aide HOLDS UP CELTIC ~ NEARLY AN HOUR Graf Waldersee One: of ‘Six. ‘Big Vessels Leaving for Europe.” ‘The steamships Coftic of the White Star and Carmanta of the Cunard lines sailed this afternoon for Liver- pool, the Celtic with 420 and the Car- » mania with 380 passengers, while the "Saucd transports Grat Walderses, Kaiserin uguste Victoria, Northern Pacific and Ohioan left for Brest. ‘The sailing of the Celtic wan de- layed three-quarters of an hour by the’ carelessness of a maid and the waywardness of a naughty Pekinese | from Boston. After her thirteen trunks had gone aboard, Mrs. W, G, Gorwh, her two (the: Pekinese) were held up. by the formality of jhaving their passports. signed, ‘thig orisis Mrs. Goran handed “Baby” over to Millicent, ane of the maida, who, wondering if the handsome po- liceman she saw in the offing might acquaintance, unthink- ingly put “Baby” down upon his little footsy-wootsied, and Babe beat it. When the absence of her pet was) She | declined to wet foot on the steamshi Until “ay” waa found. While une New York Girl Will Spend Time in maids sought to comfort their mis- tress the hunt for the Pekinese was taken up by business men in a hurry “Baby” discovered Mrs. Gorah cried, to get to England, custom guards, by sailorme: detectives of the most sordid and wretched Pekir fashi found cavorting around West Stre with a couple of low-life mangre! from the Hudson Duster strata Celtic pulled o'clock. Among those who left on the Cai ie, brought up in th mo: out shortly before mania was Chairman Wiliam H, Ap- pleton. of the America’s Tribute British Merchant Seamen Fu The first mail from the Inite States to Germany since the war be- gan was despatched this afternoo! the Scandinavian-American United States, which smatled Copenhagen, , There were only bags of it, ABSENCE FROM WEDDING LANDS HIM IN COURT prosecute, He was a bad and un-| Wife Angered by Hi8 Failure to Ap- pear at Daughter's Marriage, Asks for Alimony, In staying awa: wedding, Samuel Lazarus committ #0 grave an offense in his wife's eyes that she determined to conceal no longer her marital charges In fore” Justi oes, Mrs. Bortha Lazar Callaghan in foes. Mrs, Lazarus gays in the aMdavit thi Laxacus 4 cheeking account who worked in 17 Sixth Ay: feather store at The young woman drove her out 0 he called th Mrs. : Th Lazarus alleres, affidavit says Lazarus this to % a week ararua declared he couldn't pay ti mit a brief. REINSTATED IN PLAYERS. Actor's Si it Stopped by Notice § Receipt of a letter from the Board Directors of The the suspension of Robert F. Kekerric an actor, had been lifted, bul! coeding brought by K Supreme Court Justice Luce, for re ries statement as a full and active member of that club, Kexerrels was suspended a few Mr, weeks ago following receipt” by Board of Directors of letters from Sal bury Field, George K, Denny and Fra L, Warren jr charging him with diacreet. remarks in the club's room, and with offending three officers, Who were guests of Mr. ren, asking if it was “not unce by atitutional to send United States troc abroad to fight.” in’ his petition Mr, Ke remarks had been misunderstood, ~ _ COLONELS TO BE TRIED. t Ranking ¢ vened Since 1917, A general court martial, appoint by Major Thomas 1. manding the Kastern was convened here to-day to comple arrangements for the high-ranking officera recently return from France, The defendant to Include Colonels accused of be intoxicated and of conduct unbecon ing an officer. ene according to Major W Advocate of t y, Judge- jartment, Brigad) LOSES. Nor eral and ten ¢ ——— GLADYS LOFTUS Decides ¢ Wan Copied. The sult brought several years a by Miss Gladys Follies against the *Ploneer I Company and Ritchey Lithographt Company for using her picture ithograph posters for the producti to-day was d ants by Justice urt. The d on evidence that th Miss Loftus’s costum not use the picture of her fw Jithographs, Court Fe the Supreme © aed and re- porters. The thing fizzled out in one The liner f from his daughter's affidavit filed to-day be= Brooklyn, asking $100 4 week alimony and counsel ue, left his wite and their four children in 1916, and at first sent her $2 a week, later re- ond finally ceased sending her any money ‘at all He was ordered to sub- Players stating that | da pros before in trial of several Loftus of Zlegfeld's in the i England and in France, Miss Lida L. Fleitmann, society horse- woman, is sailing for Europe to-day on the Carmania, Miss Fleitmann expects to spend sometime in England ani France. She is the Gaughter of Mr. Mrs, William M."Fleitmann of No. of at ble of Back Bay circles, was Bast Tid Street. SWANN ASKS INDICTMENTS TO CURB BURGLAR ALARMS Declares Loud Gongs Keep Public Awake and Are a Public Nuisance, ‘ District. Attorney Swann went before the Grand Juny to-day and asked for in~ dictments against ¢he Metropotitan Bur- glar Alarm Company, No. 130 Weat 26th Street, and Simon UYeas, No, 26 West 17th Street. Hess has a burglar alarm installed by the defendant company, and it ls als lewed Uhat this gong, tnatead® of merthy rousing the police, rouses everybody, else for blocks around, ‘At least a thousand people are an- noyed by the thing, sometimes all night,” sald Mr. Swann. Whether or pot It also, wakes up the police and discourages burglars is a question not yet officially answered, The indictments are asked under the law against maintaining @ public nul- ot | 1M 1) re to od n r 00 ed us en ACCUSED OF ABDUCTING GIRL. ‘Two Men Arrested tn Brooklyn by Woman Deputy's Assistant, On a charge of abducting Hazel Ling, sixteen, from her home at Stowestown, Pa., Angelo Morilia, twenty-six, a miner of Roekwood, Pa., held in $1,600 bail for examination day, and Nleolt- tano Cappozza, forty-two, of No, 1482 Herkimer Street, Brooklyn, was held in 1,600 bail for the Grand’ Jury in the y Avenue Court, vat to nis he arrests were brought about by Mrs, Marguret Whitehurst and Sullivan, attached to the staff of Mr: Blien O'Grady, Fifth Deputy Police Commissioner, hey Morillo und the girt standing at Myrtle Avenue and Tillary Street ney They ne receiving them, of ne Employed U J Deputy Attorney General Samuel A. une | Berger was this morning notified that is-|the license of Dr, Clarence R. Salter, nk | dentist, with several offices in New York, Brooklyn and other boroughs, had been revoked by the Board of Regents in_ Albany, Mr, Berger acted on. charges againat fo Dy patients to the ef- had. in his employ. un- need 1 who were performing dental operations. Two of these men jumped their ball and @ third is await ing trial ope | il. he| er ee, ao im ng | in Brooklyn | fondant mixed with the juice of luscious pineapples and covered with rich, smooth chocolate—a delightful sum- mer confection—made the American way, U. S. of tion Would Add WASHINGTON, July P. Fletcher, American to Mexico, told the House: Committee to-day that sinee hi pointment three years ago | Ameficans had been killed without a single made by the Mexican Replying to questions by Cl Campbell, Ambassador * withdrawal of recognition of ranta government by i States would only increase moll in the Southern u added that he did not know of revolutionary leader capable tablishing a permanent Ambassador Pletcher also ‘had mot noticed any special American feeling tn Mexico ‘and ¢3 Plained that the presence of American citizens there : | foreigners _ probably extant for the greater number of f a Dae ene fecting Americans, The Ambassador was simmoned fore the committee in & resolution introduced by tative Gould, Republican, of York, propoxing abpointment. | Joint Congressional Committee to’| vestigate relations between this try and Megico, Mr. Fletcher repeatedly deel! express opinions upon cond} the southern repubjic, idsisting he furnish only facts. He also the committee that he had no. ment to make, but would answer question he could. “Do you regard the situat Mexico as improved in the last yeats?” asked Chairman Cai “Oh, yes,” was the answer, . “In what respect?” * “Columbus has not been the Ambassador answered, When Chairman Campbell edilé attention to the recent murder a American citizen and the maltréat. ment of his wife in Mexico, the Am=_ bassador said this’ did not dive relations between the United j: and Mexico, ‘ ‘6 R The Ambassador further sald til among other things agencies ‘| which the United States was bét ‘able to transact business with feo had been established in the last wires years, | “Are the murders of American zens a8 numerous as thoy ked Chairman Campbell, ‘The 4 bassador replied that he would : ‘the committee to the Het of Amere cana who had been killed, . “Many of these outrages,” ‘Mit. Fletcher said, “were committed: bandits, These bandits have pursued, but it was diMfeult to it they got the man who the murder.” 1 Representations in each case) | said, had been made to the Government which tn turn cated with local authorities, failed to take action, , “and you don't ‘recall cution?” was asked. “1 don't at this time,” for lack’ of arrests. “They usuall: Hal ul : murder had een costasttel bandits and that every effort. be made to run down the “ie Mia pout ors i prosecution ing comfort and we guarantee. So there's no OSTERMOOR MATTRESS Ostermoor & Co See full; BAR-« delicious cream