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—_— er eee mt object. Kotn be ible’to bid the Haps- bye,” said Herbert uch im as he "now undér negotiation with Bulgaria and Turkey. taking up ag other Labs amendments to treaty wi coaunittes adjourned Monday rohan, and Pittman Democrats, were not present, votes were recorded in the tive on the Shantung Amend- niet fhe mesehns: thao! 2,000 delegaten at Yorkville ‘$8th Biecet and ‘Dhird Avenue, EAPOR are holding the firgt con~ DOZEN FOOD HOARDERS PROMISE TO DISPOSE OF STOGKS AT ONGE ty United States Attorney Ben jatthews in the Federal Bullding| ‘Their ownership of food had been traced warehouse records. Mr. them that their put on the market at of prices obtained. to wel! thele Btocks with- out ‘Brooklyn retal! butohers have an- ing the Mounded the formation of p new| ae etniong $600,000 independent corporation to for three years. | deat direct ‘with cattle raisers and met meats to the public without a halt doen Middlemen intervening, ‘The new Organization, which has been grantéd @ chatter, ts kni as the Brooklyn Retali Butchers ™As- sociation. The officers aret Charles Griamer, No. 44 Fifth Ave- nue, President; Nathan Strauss, No, $19 Pacific Street, and Albert Rosen, No, 416 Park Place, Vice Presidents, and Freak P. Burek, No. Street, Treasurer. Accofding to Mr, Strauss, who 1» one of the largest retail meat dealer: of Brooklyn, the organization will @ 4 large modern plant.at No, 631 Yantic Avenue, Where all facititics pertaining ta the handling, shipping 149 @mitb and selling of meats will be at the dis- | im posal of the members: Washington déapatohen to-day state that ‘Attorney Gedernl Palmer an- Bounges a thorough investigation by the Department of Juatice of the milk situation in the New York City district, If. profiteering is found, and Fed- eral Jaws can be applied, Mr. Palmer says prompt action will be taken. Gov, Smith bad asked the Attorney | | nomination to- ‘but it district ongani- | ¥ to Mominate labor candl- aldermen, the central body ‘was permanent chair- Me "rom [the “Obntrat: Gounell of Brook- Lehig acummow $ BY GERMANY. reaching the ni Francs. 47,000 tons of ee p i gh el leet aa iv been "dentine tn Defenses Algo Dentroyed eh har jarships. ree 23 (Hiaves).—The Gulf of Finland, ~Pennsyivanta Ol Co., sear | Bene aptred "ank. exectted | gees sera ey Srfletals General's aid, and United States At- torney Cafféy has assigned Special Danan Henry A. Guilar to the In- estigation. Mrs, Charfes C, Ramsey to-day ox- Plained her housewives’ campaign against the high cost df Mying, Her alda-on @ sub-committee of the, Fair tee are Mra. Henry Mos- kowit®, “Mrs. William Randolph Hearst, Mre, Sarah Conboy and Hugh ree, ‘the Inbor leader, Ri plans to send to 000 women ni Labor Day on which will be printed « list of Necessities, The recipients will be asked to note against each article the amount she pays for it, at @ cash and carry Btore. Ali suspicious canes go reported will be sent to the Borough Chairman, where they will be ex. amined, Where iw proved, the case will be sent to, the Fair Price Committee, and, by It, to the United States Attorney's oMoe, Solh Seined Sugar at Govers- _ ments Price, CHICAGO, Aug. 29.—Distriet Attorney Clyne announced to-day he wil sell at the Government's price @ ¢ariead of sugar be selsed yesterday, pias =~ cote bel GIRL OF FOUR TO FLY AGAIN. Little Virginia Watbel and Mother Going Up To-Morrew, Virginia Marie Waibel, four years old, wid to be the youngest person who ever went up In an aeroplane, Is going to make gnother fight to-morrow aft- ernopn from the Queens aerdrome, When she made her first Might earlier in the month sho was. accompanied py her father, John J. Watbel, of No. 379 = Py) Street, Brooklyn. peer will go up accom mote The machine by Dana Debart. ted Food is the Best Medicine Most of the ills of life SEASON OF PLENTY IN VEGETABLES AND FRUITS HAS ARRIVED There Is an n Abundant Supply of Both and the Prices Are Low, | P. Q. Foy. (Bpecie! p.. ca eth Evening Wordd.) Fresh neafby vegetables are in wrest abundance on the wholesale market, and prices are lower than In many chses after the farmer furnishes the ‘produce, | labor and container he is called upon to pay part of the freight. House- wives should get the advantage of these low prices, as if this surplus is not consumed promptly they wiil be wasted, Some dealers only buy small quantities in order to maintain profits, Finest Jersey tomatoes are selling &t 1 to? cents a pou jettuce, two dozen crate, 26 to 75 cents or 1 to 8 cents a head! cabbages. 5 to 7 cents for fargo head; peppers by the bushel. it 1 cent each on good sizes: turnips, 1% cents a pound; ear corn, finest, 3 to 4 cents; onions, 2 to 4 cents; cucymbers, 1 to 2 cents each. Jersey Elverta peaches in bushels contaim 5 to 800 fancy peaches are sel!~ in the wholesale market at $1.00 to $1.60 or about %-cent each. Delicious § California cantaloupes | are selling at $1.9 for crates con-! taining 45 to 64 fancy melons, or to [oad which is much less than cost | and package, while juicy Jermy and: Delaware cantaloupes are «#0 plentiful selling at @ Pippins or If the green gro- Sereves cae teeters ost Se 2 hae ag ire fe Sk wed ree is selling JONES AND HERRON TIEIN THE FIRST HALF OF LAST GOLF PLAY _ (Continued from Fins Page.) began to outdistance Jones from the t amd this above all thingy ‘onded to make the Atlanta player poeved. On mth the Home Club favorite, putting hin second shot dead to the pin, won the hole 3 to4. At the ninth Herron increased lead when Jones walloped u maeshie shot into a trap near the «reen, This put Herron two holes to the good. James came back and took the poset pli Apt heal Herron's second shot m 9 green and landin; in a diteh onthe right, a Bobby took three putts on the twelfth green when Herren was home in 5 Bo bitter was the competition that few holes were being halved. On the short thirteenth Herron's tee shot found a trap near the green, the mashio costing him the hole. Jones was nicely on and home in three, Herron wag 8 little unsteady at the point, but every ounce of his great strength on the next drive, The ball, hooked, sailed over the heads of the scurrying gallery an dianded in a sand trap near the twelfth fairaway. Herron 3o) 4 much foree into the re- covery 6) that he broke his heaviest niblick, Jones Won these holes, leaving his opponent only one hole tn the lead. Horron, ever anxious, drove neat woods on the short sixteenth, Jones putt, This victory squared the score, The remaining two holes were halved and the end of the first 18 oles re- sulted in a deadlock. Jones and Her- ro neach won five holes, the remain- ing 8 being halved. ‘The cards int #4, 54-40, 38—18. b4—4; o er CUMMINGS 5 STAYS IN MEXICO. Relents tn Case ef Briton, WASHINGTON, Aug, 23,—After hav- ing told William Cummings, the British cares @’Arohives in Mexico City, that presence in Mexico was deemed “i eeabetiele with the state in which rol tlona between thie Government and that | of Great Britain stood and stand,” the Mexican Foreign Office is understood to have relented, and M t! Cummings expects to remain in Mexican capita Newport's “| ieeent Ol Cherchpan” Dies, NEWPORT, R. I, Aug. 23.—The Rev, Charles Frederick Beattie, rector of Bt, John's Mpiscopal Church here (or twenty-(wo years, died to-day, Ho was gix feet four inches in height and wi eauently called fhe, “biggest ‘Ghurehe in Rhode Island. ‘Workers Strike tm italy. | aa fo now | | | | .; broken open and the pieces weighed | indefinitely, ouplibons at Rest Camp Find Crutch Fishing Lively finort Shades of Izaak Walton! ae. ey 3 A pads CHARGES FORGERY |2-CENT TRANSFER (Us ariMTINE, INPROPAGANDA TO ‘DECLARED ILLEGAL et | Increased Pay and. Recognition of Union to Be Asked—Managers . - Say They Will Stand Firm, the big hotels Were ~ ABSOLVE PE PACKERS INBURR'S OPINION 2.2: ws | Senator Harris arid dees Nao Sys Nixott Had} Had No Power What would that piscatorie! cenius exclaim if he should emerge suddenly from the herbiage along thi tertaining many soldiers near the others simply tie a string to one of SMALL PROFITEERS TRYING = 10 BU (Continued from Firm Page.) every employee in almost every store of a chain df retail markets had pur- “chased a case of all thy, varieties of canned goods offered,.og peveral hun- dred cases in all, Mrs, Saunders at once asked the Proprietors of the stores for apex, planation, They told her their. ome Ployees were buying for their own Mrs, Saunders’ did not dispute the statement, but made arrangements among her own forces to have évery store of the combination watched to make sure that no Government supplies Hought at school sales were sold over the counter with= out her Knowledge. She waid she would name the stores | publicly at the first sign of bad faith, Commissioner Day announced day that three lighters had been se- cured ‘by the Bureau of Markets to convey surplus army stores trom Port Newark to New York, The supplies are to be landed at covered recreation piers and thus will be convenient tor rapid delivery to school centres where supplies are running low, By desperate efforts, the Commin- sioner said, the demand for bacon was partially met yesterday by a mup-| ply of 24,000 pounds In Hariem and the} | Bronx. Fifty thousand pounds were peady at the city warehouses, weighed and ticketed, for del!yery to Brooklyn | and Manhattan gales stations before | it. All school stations wi ol next Tuesday and on nd. succeeding weeks while the army food sales last for stock taking and rearrangement. ‘The total sales yenterday in Greater Now York were $60,062. The largest sales were at Bryant High School in Long Island City, $2,654.98, Erasmus High Schodl, Brooklyn, $1,998, P. 8. No. 159, Brooklyn, $1,915, P. 8. No, 7, Brooklyn, $1,596, and St. Paul's Sohool Bronx, $1,808, Commissioner Day was notified to- day 4n response to his application for unlimited quantities of Government surplus foodstuffs for sale in New York that all of the thirteen zone supply depots of the Quartermaster Corps had been ordered hereafter to allot to New York all supplies not consumed in ‘thelr territory. He was inclined to believe that under those conditions the sales of food at Gov- ernment cost prices might last even more than a month, as predicted yesterday, Bacon at 34 cents a pound was om sale at nearly all of the schools: to- day. The hacon, in 100-pound boxes, is carried fromt the Bush Terminal warehouses, to the Queensboro Pub- Nc Market at Hifty-ninth Street and First Avenue. There the boxes are ed and labelled, only the largest chunks Deing cut, Then the supplies are trucked to the various schools, YORKVILLE DESERTS OTHER FOODS TO PURCHASE BACON. ‘There was a rush of thousands to buy bacon in the Yorkville section. A ton of bacon reached the sale room ROME, Aug. %—Geventy thousand | pork and beans and other victuals [Rakes ss bere enh on, sities. St Mor wee in Public School No, 82, First Avenue and 70th Street, and proved so popu- lar that the sale of tomatoes, cereals, peraonal use on @ co-operative plan. © jtoes and cabbages, e° Hudson and see 9 sight like thist Mrs, James Madigon Bass, for the War Camp Commuinty Service, is en- Palisades. Those who can, dance; the crutches and doze until a nics, plump fish takes a nibble and gets jerked out so quickly it makes. bim digsy. Mrs. Bass has arranged many dances and other entertainments. . \ ¥ FOOD AT SCHOOLS fore the appointed hour of ten o'clock. The bacon arrived in cases and varied in strips from nine to eighteen pounds, So eager were the purchasers that it wag impossible to pick out strips of a certain wéight. The com- mittee members picked up the nearest strip, agnounced the weight and sold it to the first person within reach, at 34 vorts & pound. ‘The Public Natio Bank of New York, with its main at Delancey idiow Streets, has been desi; nated by City, Chaniberiain Borol: boimer as the bank at which all money received In connection with the army tood sales will be deposited. COMMUNITY GOUNCIL SELLS FOOD AT BIG REDUCTION Truck Load of Vegetabes and Frult Quicky Disposed of in Wash- ington Heights. Washington Heights got a strangle hold on the high cost of living this |merning and went to the mat with it for the first fall. The Audubon Com- munity Councll, which has 150 members took a truckload of fruit and vegetables to Public School No. $2 at 160th Street | and St. Nicholas Avenue from the | ‘allabout Market, Brooklyn and the! lond went like marbles down a tin roof. Housewives lusciow. feasted fruit a thelr eyes on} fresh corn, toma- | Bananas sold by rotallars.at 6 cents a doxen were dis-| ponsed at 30 cents, Peaches sold two for five against the price of five and six cents, California cantaloupe, sell- ing for 15 cents was handed out two for fifteen; corn selling at 75 cents a doken went for 45 cents; tomatoes, 8| conts instead of 16 cents; oranges 48 cents a dozen against 70 cents. The Council ts going to get together {00 members, each to put up $2 and| community store. ‘They have six of these stores and th nm branch out throughout the entire olt; the result of Be » experiment was that of every item of th treet, whore 4500 plies were jold ‘in two cers of the council said ald open Oct. 1, hours, ‘The o the permanent stores wor FAIR PRICE COMMITTEES = URGED BY SENATORS oat ee Amendment to Food Control Act) Recommended by Sub- | Committee. WASHINGTON, Aug. 23, — amendment to the Fodd Control pod defining “unjust and unreasonable prices,” was tentatively agreed upon | to-day by the Senate Agricultural | Sub-Committee, appointed to consider the anti-profiteering amefdments suggested by Attorney General Palmer, Under the Committee amendment Federal attorneys would be author- ixe4 to appoint fair price committees by the committee would be regarded as unreasonable, ‘The amendments as adoptSd yester- day by the House, extending Food Control Act to Include clothing and other necessities and providing penalty of $5,000 fine or two years’ | imprisonment, were recelyed to-day by the Senate and referred to the Agricultural Committee, which plans suspended by mutual ae sonnet Traltetas’ a John M. Coogan ora i on 6 ioe mi 9s action, | against the Kenyon, seventeen other bills to regulate the and all prices in excess of those fixed | the; Wide Effort to, Kill Reg-, ulation Bills. wt ‘I packers. According to documentary evidence, Pressure is deing brought to Bear on Congress in opposition to these meas~ ‘ares in the following forma: 1. Sending telegrams to Con- gressmen and Senators signed with the names of residents of tor’s districts, without, ged, the constituents’ knowledge, in many instances. 2. Agents appearing before commercial clubs, farmers’ con ventions and other organizationsy and persuading them to send telegrams to their national repre- sentatives opposing the proposéd legislation, Many such telegrams are repudiated, by independent notion of the organizations, 3. Following by p detailed sye- tem of assembling newspaper clippings every article that may be derogatory to the packers, and sending the magazine or newapa- per editor fl of the jokers’ jon. ore Distribution of booklets and pamphlets, and paid proronms the kndéwledge of Willcox. ‘The tele- gram protested against the Kenyon Kendrick bills. an letters received by Ben ator Harris, including a letter written ‘py the manager of the Western Union at Fitzgerald, and a copy of a letter from Willcox to one of the packing companies, brought out that previous to the filing of a book of night letters, includifig one to Willcox, the Western Union manager at Fitegerald had “pandied a number of books from various packing house representatives) n on this same bill,” ‘The Western Union manager gould not recall th of the man filing | the message: x, but he “made out Gyaldet —= and company,” which the ‘representative paid. Later Willcox had a conversation with the packer’s representative men- tioned, and the agent admitted he nent the telegram, “giving as his ¢x~ couse that he did not think it would make any difference to Willooggf he sent them.” Harris rece!yed three or four hun- dred such telegrams from Georgia. A letter acknowledging the receipt of the various messages was sent out a reply from Willcox, declaring he had never sent such a telegram as the Senator referred to. According to the letters forwarded by Willcox, B. F. Ragsdale, the dis- } trict commercial superintendent Atlanta, replied that he did not be- eve there was anything the Western Union could do about the matter, as it did not attempt to identify the nender of every telegram. The correspondence. shows that Willeox on Aug, 6 wrote a packing company in Chieago, other than that named in his original letter to Sena- torHarris, informing them that he did not approve of such action as had been taken, The correspondence docs not show why he wrote this company instead of the company named in the Congressional Record. Under date of Aug. 9, however, he wrote naming the man alleged to haye filed the telegram, This packing company wired and wrote to Will- o had such & man in | iar employ, and disclalming such ac- | tion as Willcox outlined, patente eS Spartacam Outbreaks tm German ‘Towas. BERLIN, Aug. @ (Haves)—Spartacan outbreaks bave ooourred -in several large towns, seagrting to reports Ca jcelved here. poses. te the malcontents. | Maegmptine rein i 24.—fienator by Senator Harris. Harris received | day Government Ske, vigorous stone” nantes? to Order a Charge and Violates Contract. | a ‘Midsion @ brief wetting forth the city’s Rallways Company, The Corporation statute to order a two-cent transfor ae ¢ and that he is violating the % provinions contained in the} ernqehio’ #ranted by the city to the railways company. | Mr. Burr further. contends that the jorder of the Public Service Commin- Seboration Gounctt Burr to-day | weeping | submitted to the Pubtic Servicé Com- [front the ae gee of other ass be ‘astouniding propagahda is being promulated 'n | opposition’ fothétwo-cent tare trans | Congress and throughout the country [Pdr “ranted py Public Service Kendrick and| Commissioner, Nixon to the New York sioner is iMegal in that it fails to specify or ¢numerate the transfer points where the receiver may chargé two cents, but imstead unlawfully | delegates to the recelver the power | to decide at what points be may) charge for, the transfers, Mr. Burr also urges thet in any event | (the two-cent transfer charge order should be modified 80 an to provide | that, each trabafer slip be #0 printed as to include a refund coupon evi- dencing the right of the passenger for the refund ft two cents in the event that Commissioner Nixon's order is eclared illegal by the courts, Corporation Counsel Burr's action is a formal notification preceding a court review of Commissioner Nixon's action. MEXICAN BANDITS BELIEVED TO HAVE ESCAPED U .TROPS (Continned trom First Page.) tests lodged.with the Mexican Govern- ment. ‘The optinidh “of all’ elaasea in Mexico, as transmitted to the State Depart- ment, Is for a prompt settlement of the petrolenm question which has been de- clared to be the key to relations be- tween the Unjted States and Mexico. Mexican newspapers and Citirens, nc- cording to reports to the State Depart- ment, urge that use of the recog- nised danger of in rention. Mexico at lenat protect foréign investments even | Mf ahe os ‘annot atop the murder of foreign | Mexico Perms & Reciprocal Border Guard tervico. MBXICO CITY, Aug. 2%—Measures tends to prevent clashes between | one the United States are | Fr ig by Luis gaprere, Secretary Mexican "ay At wg te } all a. for a border guard serv Carranaa's Troops Unable to Find Decter Held for Ransom, MEXECO CITY, Aug. 23.—Troops went to the Ajusco region to search for Dr. Gotnawe, ‘the Porto Rican, sald to be held for ransom by bandits, reporte am” gevehal aetachimenta lof nelle were = Yo. join the search ‘veveral ae Dandies were said to have Semanded $19.00 raxsom. a rock k ae Mirnpe ie. SPECIAL NOTICE! HORL Ly . ‘§ The MALTED M ILK Avoid lmitations & Substitutes itimatum before Monday Jocal organization of thé Intareatignes Federation ,of Hotel Workers, demAnd- jing Increased pay and recognition.ot the union. There are 6,000 memberay it. is claimed, in New York Re 4 Albeft Palmer, marthger ‘ ° Aster sald the hotel men wilh Bay ‘evn | they have in the past, agsinst u recognition, wigan ot statements ‘hotell, who called nttedtiod to th oo ee a eee eee than @ yéar/qgo. ——— U. S, FLEET TO VISIT JAPAN: Counsel contends that Commissioner | Wi! Be Reviewed by the Mikado, Nixon ig without power under the/ Saye Tokio Onblee © ny rt SAN FRANCISCO, Aug, 23. American fest is to visit, Japan fhie autumn to witness a review ofthe Japanese navy before the Emperor Yokohoma, according to a eable Toklo to the New World. a Japanese * daily publication in this*. olay i Strike Holds Up Pupplies for awe on 108 ANGELES, Aug. 23.--Forty, oar loads of army supplies botind for on the border wero held in Se freight yarde to-day on account of the jin ae Sarid sane Fe hee th ake ra ante 9 MLS Solos at candy wafers charm with their easly fresh crié: they deligh with their fascinating flavor, Stop at the next candy place and get a package. You'lllikethem too The veal te buy by ADVERTISEMENT. Article No. 27 Chiropractic | (Pronounced Ki-ro-prak-tik) AN EXPLANATION OF THE NEW DRUGLESS SCIENCE, THAT, PROPERLY AP- PLIED, BRINGSHEALTH, NO DRUGS, NO > SURGERY. The Chiropractor’s Creed 8 This: Living is @ Divine process, It is's or eens privilege, and the body Wwe regard as the dwelling place af the soul, . To care for the body, then, 1 the most important thing in life. When the bodily processes become rewal hen the Chiropractor sees the result, His business is to get after the cause and remove it, He finds it and fixes it, The word “Chiropractic” is derived from a Greek word, “chiro,” a hand, and “practic,” signifying to do. It is the name of a science by which bodily conditions inimical to health are dis- pelled or prevented through readjust- ment of bones of the spine. Surgeons of great repute « century ago advanced a theory that spinal deformities or abnormalities might affect organic conditions of the body, jo this theory on organs the conditions of ere feet health of the whole body: Working conscientiously along these tam, the present sepe a of Chiroprac- sig a r aver and sixteen tates have licen: it as @ science for eliminating bodily ailments. Before congulting a Chiropractor always make ‘inquiry to the Chiro- practic Bureau of Public Information, Address all inquiries to C, B, Box 50, The Evening World, New York City Chiropractors of How Vert & a