The evening world. Newspaper, July 24, 1919, Page 3

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NES MAKE NOW STOP FLIGHT “FOLATO ALBANY One Sets heat of 70 Minutes| for 140 Miles—Tenth Machine Descends, «Nine of ten airplanes which teft! Haselhurst’ Field at Mineola early Mo-Gay for Albany arrived there safely within two hours after their! @eparture. The de Haviland, which carried Col, Archie Miller, Comman- der of the Air Service on Long Island, made a record of 1 hour and 19 minutes for the 140 miles. One plane was forced to descend because of engine trouble at Castle- | ton. The machine overturned as it landed but the occupants were not burt. It had been planned that the smalier planes of the detachment should stop at Poughkeepsie but this arrangement was not followed. The e©D alivHnad plane which made the record flight arrived in a damaged cyndition and spare parts were hur ried to Albany from Hazelhurst field. Col, Miller and his pilots called on Gov. smith and laid before him Photographs and maps showing the advantages to be gained bv the es- tablishment by cities of landing fields service stations for airplanes. Dianes were manned as follows: First detachment—Four Curtiss H planes: 1—Major Edward D. Lyon, pitot, Chauffeur Frederick W. Brown, passenger;\2—Capt. Harry M. Smith, pilot, M. 8. Electrician W. A. Moore, passenger; 3—Second Lieut. Donald E. Martin, pilot, Sergt. Arthur A. Caffery, passenger; 4—Liout. Homer D. Chandler, pilot, Sergt. Charles L- Anderson, passenger. Second Detachment—Four De Havi- land planes: i—Second Lieut. Ross C. Kirkpatrick, pilot, Col. Archie Miller, passenger; 2—First Lieut. John PF. Roullot, pilot, Capt. Gordon Reel, pus- senger; 3—Second Lieut, William C. Coates, pilot, M. S. Electrician Ardile W. Haydes, passenger; 4—Second Lieut. Howard D. Norris, pilot, M. 8. Electrician Henry J. Myer, passenger. Third Detachment—Two Curtiss H planes: 1—Capt. Morris D. Clear adjutant of Air Service activities on Long Island, pilot, Major H, J. F. Miller, in charge of flying, passenger: 2—Lieut, John E. Geer, pilot, and Lieut. John W. Frewer, passenger, Se CAUGHT DRIVING OFF WAGON WITH $15,000 IN WOOLENS Police Say Man Arrested Was Im- plicated Recently in Death of a Soldier. Frank Solano, twenty, a printer, Iv ing at No. 212 Bast 105th Street, was held in $3,000 bail to-day by Magis- trate Cobb in. Yorkville Court, charged with grand larceny, Solano waived examination and will await the Grand Jury. Albert Winters, Nu. 105 West Thira Street, accuses Solano with attempting to steal $15,000 worth of woolens, owned by C. Bahnsen & Co, No, 257 Fourth Avenue, which were in an expreas wagon driven by Winters. The driver left the wagon for a moment and re- turning left the vehicle a block away. A boy helper, still on tne tallboard, thought Winters was driving. Winters blew a police whistle and gave chase. Near Gramercy Park two men leaped from the Wagon and De- teotive’ James Donlin caught Solano. ‘The other escaped. Solano was implicated, the police say, im the death of a Canadian soldier in the Waiters’ Club, No. 787 Fifth Ave- nue, Oct. 10 last. He turned evidence and Richard in the death house in Sig Sing for the killing. ‘ —— ooo J. F. CLARK’S FUNERAL PLANS Brother Brings Back Body of Brook- lyn's Ex-Prosecator, The body of John F. Clark, former District Attorney in Kings, who died on the xolf links at Rangeley Lakes, Me, Monday last, reached his late home, No. 603 Second Street, Brooklyn, at noon to-day. Joseph Clark, his brother, who is an official in the, Brook- lyn Borough President's oflice, brought the body back Bervices wil! be held in St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Church, Sixth Avenue and Carroll Street, Saturday, at 11 o'clock, Interment will be Cavalry Cemetery On motion of Distric Judge May in Bre journed the County lo the memory of Mr Attorney Lewin, aklyn to-da purt out of fF Clark Sock Clearing Boar as Been Incorporated The Stock Clearing Corporation, which is the néw adjunct of the } York Stock Exchange, designed to tend large cerdits to’ the brokers on stock collateral, has received and ace cepted its certificate of incorporation. It is expected that the operation of the new corporation will be of sub- antial benefit to the banking com- munity and Stock Exchange houses in cutting down the physical work settlements and in materially ing the credit situation. The authors of the new system bel that the present daily extension of credits by the banks will be reduced by about 66 per cent of rellev- HEN you goon your vaea- tior!this Summer have your favorite paper mailed to you every day. Evening World, 19¢ per week Dally World, —19¢ per week Sunday World, 6¢ per Sunday You oy tertewate ase at ||| aie fe ng a Son hele, re. ‘Bewaivalst where i ae, ‘will arrabes you tes ei New i action of |; Couple Who Will Be Wed in Airplane 1,000 Feet in Air, and Bridesmaid JSS-Mibiy K ‘S A real “made in heaven mar- riage” will be performed Satur- day at the Police Field Day at Sheepshead Bay Speedway, when Lieut, George H. Burgess, U. 8. Air Service, and’ Miss Milly K. Schafer of Brooklyn are married while fying in an army biplane a thou nd feet above the earth. The aviator and his bride-elect will go up in one plane, while the minister will be taken aloft in another plane piloted by Lieut. Win ee On RE SMO LIRUTBURGESS Styek H. Barksdale, the best man. Miss Doris K. Schob, the bridesmaid, will go up in a ma- chine piloted by Col. Archie Mil- ler. The couple will be joined by radio telephony,” and loud speaking telephones installed in the grandstand’ below will mag- nify the words spoken in the air so that the audience will be able to hear the ceremony. ‘Thirty airplanes will then join the wed- ding procession in the clouds. ON CHARGE MADE BY GIRL in $25,000 When Back After Jumping His Bail, “Twenty-five thousand doll: This judgment by Judge John 8. Me- Intyre, in General Sessions to-day, sent “Doc Waterbury to his old cell in the Tombs. He is facing a fight to avoid a pe as for attacking Waterbury Wash., by trailed him after he bail bond calling for here on a grand lar Society for the Pre to Children and the ¢ back of his prosecution It is alleged he lured a girl to a room near 31th Street and Broadway last February. Subsequently he disap- peared after he had heard that the al- leged victim had picked his picture {rom the Rogues Gallery ———— SUDDENLY RECALLS NAME BUT REFUSES 10 TELL IT Gassed Soldier's Mental Lapse Baffles Science and the Police for Nine Hours, Held 8 bail.” nder if convicted en-year-old girl. arrested at Seattle, Detective a second ¢ a nite was jumped a $2,500. his appearance eny charge. The rry Society are For nine houra.to-day medical scl and the police force tried to help a young man remember his last name. He fir: appealed to Brooklyn, saying that he as angex-soldier, had been in battle, had in gassed, and had reached Brooklyn He also knew his first name was Frank. So the police sent him to Ki County Hospital, where the first di nosis was aphasia. A second examina- tion by Dr. Hiram Elliot led to a ver dict of poat-epileptic confusion. All of 4 sudden the young man's mind cleared up. I remember my last name now," he sald. What is it? the doctor asked “I'd rather not tell,” was the reply And there you are LEGION CHARTER FOR BRONX. Granted to the John Purrey Mitchel Post, Announcement is made by the American Legion that a charter has been granted for John Purroy Mitchel Post comprising Veterans from t ubane Bronx, | Secretary of ngton Heights Post veterans et in the Public Library, u 145th Street, — to-n ‘ook will be Miller, dent of This’ Past > among a lawyer, the is Pr | | Faneral of ©, Te: The funeral of former Charles E. Teale, of Brooklyn, who died jat Frankl k, N. J. on Sunday, was from thhome of his daughter, Mrs, . at No, 124 Hilton’ Ave- ‘ity, last night, The cere- was conducted by the Rev. Dr. Reed of Dickinson College, who was assisted by John Cuniff, who | Magistrate Brought | ‘DOG’ WATERBURY IN TOMBS | BUYS 3,805,500 POUNDS OFU.S.MEAT; CAN'TSELLIT O'Malley Tells of Activities of walty of forty years in Sing} the |, Packers’ Agents—Orders Can- celled on Short Notice. Commissioner of punced that he ividual who has purchased Deputy O'Malley ows an from the W stocks of food 0,000 pounds of bacon. 500,000 pounds of canned bacon, 000,000 pounds of oleomargarine, 500 cases of roast beef. his man told me,” said O'Malley, “that he was being trailed by agents of the Packers’ Trust who seek to prevent an | him from disposing of the meats he has ntion of Cruelty | bought. He said that yesterday morn- ing he obtained orders from butchers who in the afternoon cancelled their orders.” A conference was held to-day between O'Malley and Mayor Hylan, after which O'Malley said the city, which cannot at present buy food from the War Depart- ment on its own account, will offer to help the Government dispose of the woods by acting as a distributing agent, but without accepting responsi- bility. si aiemaeelieeae VATICAN CHOIR COMING FOR VISIT TO NEW YORK First Time It Has Been Heard Outside Rome in 1,600 Years of Its Existence, r the first time since organized, 1,600 years ago, the Vatican choir will be heard outside the Roman Basilicas. ‘The choir will come direct to New York and then tour this country and Canada, There will be nty yoloes in the choir Aniouncement of this was made by Theodore Mitchell of the Longacre Building. The arrangements were com- pleted by James Slevin of this city, who has been in Rome working on the project The choir will me under the direction of the Right Rev, Mgr. Maestre Raef- He Casimire, canon of St. John. ran, director of the Pontifical ¢ dhe sition of WIDOWER, 60, ASKS $25,000 FOR GIRL’S REFUSAL TO WED nd director of compo- Cantorum, After He Spent $1,214 for Furniture and Rings. Complaining that she backed out of an agreement to wed after he had spent $1,214 for household furniture and bought the rings, Peter Meehan, sixty years old, a widower of Ho- boken, N, J., brought suit to-day against Miss Bridget Hangley of No. 95 Columbia Avenue, Jersey City, $25,000 damages. Notice by Sheriff John Hagner. According to Meehan's for was served complaint were to have been married last | August in tha Church of os. Peter Paul. Faho bee. 4 “And I am atill ready to marry hor, enya Mechan, ‘ ‘ Markets r Department the following} Meehan Declares She Backed Out | SeRIOESMaIO. RE-HEARING ASKED BY CITY TO SAVE FREE TRANSFERS Burr Contends Commission Has No Right to Impose Extra Charge. Asserting that the Public Service Commission had no right to order two-cent ‘transfers in this city, Cor- poration Counsel William P, Burr to- day filed with the Commission an ap- plication for a rehearing in the mat- ter. The city, in its application, de- clares the Legislature has not vested the power with the Commission to fix transfer charges, which have been free by statute, that joint rates could have been fixed and that no adequate proot has been mbmitted showing ;the necessity for the charged trans- tors, “The commission,” says the appli- | cation, “has no power to increase the | rate for any separate line of a sys- tem of which it is a part on the ground that the system, as a whole, is alleged to be operating at a loss. The commission cannot treat this ap- plication to abolish free transfers as an application of a railway system, while the companies jn the system ;remain separate entities.” Corporation Counsel Burr insists that the order from the commission was under a threat from the United | States District Court that 5 cents would be the charge for every ride on every car, and through coercion, in that disintegration was threatened by the company involved. In the appli- cation Mr. Burr specifically cites thirty-six transfer points, where charter provisions compel the rail- road to give free transfers and where, under the Public Service order, a charge of 2 cents is contemplated. In summing up the application, ‘orporation Counsel Burr states: “That the new matter referred to herein shows conclusively that the sole purpose for which said order was made, i, e., the prevention of disin- tegration of the New York Railway system, has already been frustrated and defeated in part in that one of the principal lines of the system has been separated therefrom and turned to its original owners.” —_——.—- - POLICE FORGE AND HIS CHIEF BOTH QUIT; TOWN UNGUARDED |Latter Finds H. surate With P: re- Incommen- y, Public Finds Merriam? Ditto With | The police force at Newton, N. J, quit to-day, The calamity ts attributed to the high cost hand and public other. Chiet Arthur 7. | being unive: of living on the one dissatisfaction on the Bryan, who besides y popular is 40 big he be se 1) over town when he is standing, ous correspondent sserts, found that the mounting cost of living made his $900 a year look like & green carline transfer. The Town Committee decided last night tt couldn't afford a larger salary, 6 foot 6 inch Chief handed in his tin star and resigned, ‘Phe rest of the force, Charles Mer- |riam on the payroll, was asked by the town officials to quit because the people had grown tired a A him, WORKERS FEAST ON MELONS. Peddlers Wag Wrecked Renaway Strikes Auto. Street cleaners at 65th Stregt and When Park Avenue had watermelon for luncheon to-day. A horse driven by Anthony Como of No, 408 East 74th! Street shied at 67th Street and ran away, The wagon struck a motor truck at 65th Street and was wrecked. The melong were scattered over the street and © was taken to the Presby- terlan a * MUCH WORSE THAN CAGES OF GERMANS Gen. March Reads. Reads O'Ryan’s | Report to House War 9 Investigators, WASHINGTON, July 24.—-Mombers of the House special committee inves- tigating j comaidering to-day the admissions ot Gen. Peyton C. March, Chief of Staff, of, frightfully brutal treatment of ) American soldiers, including men of | confined in American military prisons in France. Verification of brutal treatment at Paris was made in a report from, headquarters of the 27th Division by| Lieut. Col. J. Leslie Kinkaid, Judi | Advocate, and J. Mayhew Wain- wright, Inspector General, which was read by Gen. March, Hostility was shown by Regular Army officers to the National Guard at the prisons, said the report, which added also that violent epithets were applied to men of the 27th. “It was out of harmony with the spirit of the Ambérican expeditionary force,” said the inspecting officer. Conditions were described as worse than those in Siberian camps or Ger- man cages. Trivial personal prop- erty such as crucifixes and photo- @raphs of mothers and sweethearts were taken from the men, the reports showed, and they were forced to drill in front of machine guns and rifles. Similar bad treatment was reported by men of the 30th Division. ‘The sentence imposed on Lieut. Frank H. (“Hardboiled") Smith by an. army court martial upon conviction of brutal treatment of soldiers tmprisoned under him at Farm No. 2 and the stockade near Paris is one instance where military justice: was too light. Gen. March read a repor: to the committee from Gen, John J. Per- shing, dated July 19, summarizing the trials of the officers in charge of the prison. It showed that Smith was tried on twenty-four charges, and found guilty of ten, for which he wag dismissed from the ser- vide and sentenced to three years’ imprisonment, This was reduced to eighteen months. COURT AIDS ELOPER TO WIN BRIDE’S FATHER’S BLESSING 17-Year-Old Girl's Angry Parent Withdraws Abduction Charge Against Youth, Magistrate Harris in Yorkville Court and Fransesco Borgia of No. 329 Bast 48th Street, transformed from an aveng- ing parent into a beaming father-in- law, joined to-day in bestowing blessings on Vincenzo Attardo, a youthful me- ehanic, and bis seventeen-year-old bride, Constantina, The couple had been brought from Gloversville by Detective Hooker of the East 5ist Street Station on a warrant in which Borgia charged the bride- groom with abduction and the bride with being incorrigible after they dis- appeared July 9 last. Detective Hooker learned in Gloversville that they had been married there, Father Borgia, glowering and mutter- ing, became all smiles when this was explained’ to him and at once asked leave to withdraw tho complaint and take the pair home to tne’ bride's mother, TWO HELD AS BURGLARS, ~ONE SHOT IN CHIN Youth Wounded as He Fled Over Fence From Amsterdam Avenue Store, Three policemen were sent early to- day from*the West 100th Street Sta- tion on a telephone message that burglars were in the 5 and 10-oent store at No. 772 Amsterdam Avenue, They saw two men climbing a fence in the rear and siz shots were fired at them, One man shouted and fell and was found to be shot in the chin, He described himself as Thon Gowan, seventeen years old, West Street, his wound had been dressed he was charged with burglary describing nineteen, Later a man himself as Frank Walsh, a driver, of No. 140 Weat E rested, with being McGowan's accomplice, SUICIDE ON TRAIN THROWS PASSENGERS INTO PANIC: Women Hysterical as Man Leaps Out of Window Near Atlantic Avenue Tunnel, Two trainioads of Long Island pas- sengers were panic-stricken this morning for an hour because of a sucide, Traffic through the “Atlantic | Avenue Cut” from Vanderbilt Avenue was suspended and a score of women were treated for hysterics after police reserves drove 200 curiosity seekers |from the line. A negro thought to be Randolph Paton jof No, 16 Carlisle Place, Yonkers, was a passenger on gn east: bound train from Atlant Avenul As the train reached the end of the tunnel he opened a wi; dow and began to climb out Pp sengers caught him, but he tore himself loose and disappeared in front of « wast bound train. pane og and @ war zone | pass were found later, the conduct of the war are| | New York's 27th Division, whg were! charged | OTTM MEN PENS PIED BATLE _ WEARY ARTS ON FRENCH LINER Led Passengers Against Gendarmes at Havre. ¢ There was & pitched battle Detween the passengers, cabin and steerage, ‘ot the Prench liner La Touraine on the one hand and Capt. Bordeaux and twenty French gendarméy oh the {ornor, July 12, at the pier in L@ Havre, syoording to the passengers who jreached this city on the ship to-day. Louls Marshall, jurist and adyobate ;of Jewish rights before the “Peace Commission at Paris, with sixty- seven United States army officers, jled the passengers in the fighting. ‘The casuaities were limited to bibody | Noses and skinned knuckles. “The ship was advertised to sail July 12,” said Mr, Marshall, “But when the pansengers gathered in the dining saloons Capt. Bourdeaux ap- peared and said the crew had struck and had gone to Paris in a body to attend the Bastile Day celebration and would not be back until July 16. In the mean time, he said, it wus not possible’ to give service on the ship, and everybody must go ashore. “We learned the hotels were all filled, I addressed the passengers, both in the cabin and the steerage, and learned it was the sense of every- ‘ody abourd that we should stay on the ship. This I communicated to Capt. Bourdeaux. He said if we did not leave at once he would find means to eject us by force, in spite of the fact there were niany women with Little children in the steerage who had not the means to subsist ashore, even had they been able to find lodgings. “The captain went ashore and turned with twenty gendarmes who bogan dragging passengers to the gangplank. We rushed them and in tbe end the gendarmes were put ashore and seemed in no mood to come back, “There were thirty-five Salvation Army workers among the . passen- gers. Food was procured in small uantities ashore. Twelve Knig of Columbus had a considerable store of chocolate for distribution to otheers and which they immediately turned over.” Mr. Marshall said that any credit accruing from the success of the! Mission to the Peace Confer- was due to th courtesy and r nce of Presi- dent Wilson and the other members of the American Mission, “Tens of thousands of Jews have been killed,” said Mr, Marshall dis- cussing the pogroms in Poland and Ukrainia, “he pogroms were not so much the resuit of an orgunized movement as they were the out~ growth of unsettled, anarchistic ten- dencies in the countries where they occurred, ‘These conditions found ex- pression in attacks on ese, SALARY RAISES GRANTED TO GITY LAW DEPARTMENT Assistant Corporation Counsels and Deputies Receive Increases. ‘The following salary increases and promotions in the Law Department were announced to-day; Salaries Increased—Assistant Corpora- tion Counsels; William H. King, from $6.00 to per annum; John F. O'Brien, $5,900 to $6,000; William KE, C, Mayer, $4,500 to $5,000; Bugene Fay, 4,000 to $4,500; David C. Broderick, $3,780 to $4,000; John Maroney, $3,480 to $3,660. Deputy Assistants: Philip N, Harrison, $2,620 to $2,760; James D. O'Sullivan, 400 to $2.63); A. Judson Hyatt, $2,280 to 400. Junior Assistants: Jose; 1,960 to $2100; Rollin H. 60; Charles J. Mivilie, William = Flatto, $1,650 i Wiliam J. Leonard, $1,600 to $1,800, Promoted—Vincent Vietery from Dep- uty Assistant at $2,040 to Assistant Cor- poration Counsel at $3,480. TWO PRISONERS CHARGE POLICE BEAT THEM UP Magistrate Corrigan Investigates Story After Freeing Accused Men, Corrigan, Magistrate the West Side Court is investigating the claim of two prisoners that they were beaten by the police. of prisoner on a charge of intoxication George Jacobson, a mechanic, of No. suspended sen compla: > 20 SAVED FROM SCHOONER. Veanel Ashore Off Far Rockaway Be- leved to Be Doomed, There 20 feet of water in the hull of the stranded four-masted schoon- er Charles Dunlap, ashore off Far Rock- away. Little out by the coast guard. schoone is made Cap al nants, It is feared the will go to pieces if an attempt to pull her off the sand Richard Cropsie, the crew of n and two stowaways were off the craft this afternoon, A Tecking, tug brought them to New he schooner is owned in Porto Rica and the Northern Shipping Cor- poration, No. at Battery Place, is the eat EMO ee ; ef seven: we WON BY AMERICA Louis Marshall, Back To-Day When It Isat Jazz | t Jazz It’s Rag— Thomas M, O'Rourke, a chauffeur, of No, 877 Tenth Avenue, declared he was | beaten with nightsticks in the West 68th Street Station wh he was a }215 Hast 121st Street, said Patrolman | John Rogers had blackened his eye Jacobson was accused of interfering hope of saving her is held | APPEAL TO COURT 10 SILENCE WAZZ Din Is Continuous, Rose Coghlan Says. Rose Coghlan, the actress; her daughter, Mra, Pittman; Mabel Trude, decorator; Leon De Costa, writer of light opera lyrics, and other persons literary and artistic, all dwellers : an apartment house at No, %3 West 424 Street, appeared in wild-cyed wrath before Magistrate Corrigan in Yorkville Court to-day. They de- manded the suppression of the jazz band and player piano incidental to the de Bride School of Dancing at No. 49 West Forty-second Street, the windows of which open on a eburt on which the complainants’ windows also | look out, {t's jamm for breakfast, rag for lunch and jazz, rag and song fOr all evening and lullaby,” said Mise Coghlan, as spokesman. “From the time I get out of bed in the morning until I throw myself down at night, nervously exhausted, it is pande- monium. How, would yor. like It, Your Honor, if you found yourself brushing your hair to jazz music in the morning?” The court blushed comprehensively and said he would not go into per- sonal matters, Miss Mary de “Bride and Nelson Thrysen, who is associated with her, denied they were conducting a dance hall. They denied that they made »o very much noi. They asserted’ they had a limited number of pupils who were allowed to dance after the in- struction courses were completed, but there were newr more than six per- sons on the floor at once, ‘These statements were greeted with enthusiastic dissent from Miss Cogh- jan and her friends. Justice Corrigan put the case over for a week. ‘ “Gracious! There won't be anybody here from our house,” said Miss Coghlan. “We'll all be dead or in asylums by that time.” The Court warned teachers to make possible during the CITY TURNED DOWN.OFFER | OF PELHAM BAY BUILDINGS Portable Structures Used for Etmer- gency Hospital Were Tendered i ’ Pering Sale Negoiaton, Portablt! buildings at Petharn’ Bay, fitted to'4M present city heeds, Were offeréd to the city by thy Navy ‘De- partment aid refused, acéording . to information ,.,obtainadle - to-day. ‘The buildings were used for the emergency hospital, ‘The, Petham”Bay bulldings: were of- fered to thevotty free of’ charge untit such time asa sale might be” nego- tiated betweeh’ the Navy~ Department And the city authorities, Negotiations were conducte™ but for ‘Nome reason, were dropped, Dr, Copeland, Health Commis: ha who recently Against the lusal of portable fogs at o6th | serted to have expre: day in no uricertain manner over the latest failure the municipality take advantage of a situation which will meet the as te condition: No explanatiop has been forthcoming as to the readoh for the refusal of the Pelham Bay buildings. In this ease, it e Mayor cannot decline the rH because of any Rockefeller Foundation “influence, |The | origin offer of the Pelham Bay buildings the ‘reault of the housing situation in this city. the dancing little noise os journment, tary of War Baker he had not yet had cal is tion the sugmestion that. canned meats and bacon bé { local merchants. in New City Department of acting as the Gove! aod the merchants foodstuffs at less than “That is a matter that | to consider carefully,” ald “I€ involves the qi would Government, and also ‘We hi | distribution.” Mr, Baker said he was co-operate in every seeing that the surplus stuffs reach the people, Drowned Youth Lived at Ernest Borchmann, No," Street, Fordham morgue to-day and. fied the body of hia sai nin on July 14. The boy went across ti pom he. Hurley Shoes. to rantee the eet ey Flushing, Le 1, went t4 mn years old, who was r his hore and tho body Bound to the shore ba pi Pubkard Ynatitute. “NONE 80 GOOD.” Thousands of men Those shoe Your first pair Hurley Shoes will convince you. Corset fitting at Absolute comfort in "YOU'RE | likely to be o and even tempered humid days if you Wheatsworth Whole Wh Biscuits and a bow! of m for luncheon. In Individual Service tons at restaurants, | rooms and fountains. F. H. BENNETT BISCUIT CO. My i MAYFLOWER | 3) GINGER ALE \ RK ORANGE ol

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