Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ee eee eee OLN Oct ~ $700,000 N OPW, AREST FE MEN Huge Smuggling Plot Charged After Capture of Prison- ers in Taxi. Opium for smoking and cocaine valued at more than $100,000 geized shortly before noon to-day by Internal Revenue agents, who they have smuggling plot that ..s come to I in this city in twenty years, Five arrests were made, two of them at the point of revolvers, in a taxicab in lower Broadway. revenue agents say they have oc! which lead to the men higher up in the alleged plot, and promise more rests in a few hours. furnished by the agent uncovered the biggest ‘The seizure of the drugs and the arrests came through information down- der bond and consigned to the tional Drug and Chemical Company, Limited, of Winnipeg, n, Yeater- day, on orders of one of the men ‘under arrest, the drugs were with- drawn from the United States bonded warehouse and taken to the express office for shipment to Canada. When the man appeared at the express office to deliver the package he asked the clerk for a receipt, which was given, The man is then said to have handed the clerk $500 surreptitiously and attempted to ar- range to have the package returned to him to-day, Instead of falling in with the plan, the clerk reported to his superior, who in turn informed Daniel I. Porter, Supervising Inspector of In- ternal Revenue at the Custom House, When the man returned to the ex- Presa office to-day in a taxicab to get the package there were waiting for him Mr, Porter and two cher revenue agents. : The man was allowed=to get the package from the clerk and enter h cab, At that instant the revenue agents sprang on the running board with drawn revolvers. Both the mon with the package of drugs and @ companion who had remained inside the taxicab wore placed under arrest, By this time the machine had got under way and there was conside: ight The Hues ar- “OH, BOY!” STYLE 6212 Very Conservative, Medium Toe, 39 Stores in Greater New York? See Telephone Directory for Addresses Not A Fad TOASTIES There's big. satisfying | nourishment in them, Yet Stylish and Comfortable, Mahogany Shade Genuine Russia Calf. Rubber Heels all attached. there from England un-| Where the incide ¢ c Both the arrested men were takeh nstom House and from in formation given by them three other arrests were, ‘Tho reven| out the na of the men or of the express agent and clerk The prisoners are said to be French Canadians. aren aw MANAGERS’ OFFER TO EQUITY LIKELY 1 END STRIKE TO-DAY (Continued from First Page.) talk about opening their theatres with non-union help, which would involve defying the American Fed eration of Labor and running the risk of having pickets posted in front of their houses carrying signs denounc- Ing the theatre as “unfair.” Man- | agers catering to @ diversified public | have never been anxious to openly antagonize union labor, | “The managers who may have an idea that they can run shows with non-union help are apparently glut- tons for punishment,” said Grant | Stewart, Secretary of the Equity, to-day,’ “We shall try to oblige them.” Tho vaudeville managers profess to be culm in the face of the mass meeting of the Actors and Artists’ Association of America at the New Amsterdam Opera House to-morrow night. E. F, Albee said to-day that the managers recently signed a new agreement with the stage hands and mutcians carrying increased wages, which runs for two years and that the present vaudeville contract is the most liberal ever offered to perfo: ers and has been so acknowledged by many of them, i -_ Hl FLOWER OF CANADIAN ARMY HERE ON HER WAY HOME « Mrs, Shaw, Cited for Valor, Returns on Celtic in Charge of Eighty- four Nurses. The White Star liner Celtic arrived from Liverpool and docked at Pier No. 60. She had on board 231 first cabin Passengers, 92 in the second cabin and 82 steerage. Among the passengers were 97 Aus- tralian soldiers, in charge of Captain FE. H. Davids, who with forty of his men wore the Miltary Cross, There were also 186 Canadian aoldiers and 84 nurses from Canada. The latter were in charge of Matron Mra. A. C. Shaw, who went to the war with the first ‘Canadian contingent. Mrs, Shaw was cited for valor and 1s known as “the flower of the Ca’ my." Sir Ellis Hume Wil MP, K C., was another passenger. He intends to lecture In thif*country on the inter- national relations of the United States and Britain. George Perry Fiske, of Morristown, N, J., returned from France after visiting his daught) Ruth, who went abroad as a war nu and became the bride of Captain worthy of the Dublin Fustlee SSO SHOES FOR SCHOOL Attractive, though sensible, styles for Growing Girls and Boys Real Serviceable Quality--Low Prices Girls’ Sizes Down to Size 21. Mannish Styles for Boys Down to Size 24/2. Prices $4.50 Rubber Dark Tan Leather, Extra Quality Seles, Medium Toe, Also Same Style in Black. SMART STYLES FOR MEN AND WOMEN Worth More, But—No Style Over $6.00 COS Ne eg TO WATCH PARADE ~ PLANNED BY CTY Moran and Hylan to Ask | Board of Estimate for $100,000 To-Morrow. j arena | Robert L, Moran, President of the Board of Aldermen, announced to- day that the Board will be asked, at the special meeting called for to- morrow, to appropriate $100,000 for the erection of grandstands with ac- commodations for 25,000 people for the parade of the First Division, headed by Gen. Wednesday. While President Moran said that Mayor Hylan would make the request Pershing next for the money from the Board to- morrow, “it was learned that Mr. Moran himself was the author of the scheme, “We are going to erect all the stands possible," said Mr. Moran, “and the Board will unquestionanly appropriate $100,000 for the purpose. I believe there will be at least 25,000 seats and perhaps more. Mr. Moran, while appreciating ihe labor difficulties involved and the need of a hasty collecting of enough lumber, was optimistic that the task can be accomplished in the record- breaking time available, President Moran said it would cost from $1.15 to $1.60 for each seat in the grandstand and that the lumber would -eout 99 cents por weat, but maferial and labor are now higher, and the Stands will not be erteted as cheaply as were the former. In explaining the need of $100,000, Mr, Moran said the sum would be used not only for the erection of stands, but to entertain Gen, Pershing and his staff at the Waldorf-Astoria The Mayor's Committee issued a statement to-day to the effect that the Mayor's Committee and not the ‘self-constituted committee at the | Hotel Biltmore” is making the ar- rangements for the parade and re- ception to Gen, Pershing. The May- or’s Committee will have sole juris- diction over the distribution of tick- ; cts but will mail grandstand tickets | to all relatives of men of the Ist Di- vision whose names shall be fur- nished by Gen, McGlachlin. Seats for 10,000 will be provided in & private stand which will be erected by Alexander Allen, This stand was used at the time of the 27th and 77th Division parades and the lumber is stored away. It will cost $2,000 to transport the lumber to the stand site and erect the stand and take it down again, and Major Paul Daly, in charge of the seating arrangements, says he expects to find no difficulty in raising that sum, Major Gen. McGlachlin, command- ing the First Divisi said to-day that all demobilized members of the First Division who desire to march with their old units must report to those units at the camps before noon on Sept. 8, to be supplied with equip- ment. The four Infantry regiments will be at Camp Merritt, The Supply, First Ammunition and Sanitary Trains will be at Pelham Bay, and the artillery regiments, machine gun pat- talions and other units will be at Camp Mills. Gens. McGlachlin, Barry and Shanks and their staffs visited Washington Square to-day and mapped it out for be turned back to the contractor, as vas the case in the other stands your health, “GROWING GIRLS’” STYLE 4206 Heels Attached. Mail Order Dept. 326 Lafayette St. Add 15 Cents to cover parcel post char Metropolitan District proves your store, NEEDS.” Copyrighted, 1919 by Lever Bree, Co. from the pores. “I THOROUGHLY ENJOY LIFE. BUOY—IT GIVES THE SKIN THE PROTECTION EVERYONE ME will ve teed for cooking ‘ which will be sérved on mess kits, as it was served :. the fleld in France. Major Gen. James M, McAndrew, formerly Chief of Staff of the A. B. Fs, will arrive in New York td-day and open Gen. Pershing's headquarters at the Waldorf. He will have ful! charge ot all details from the military side of the reception to Gen. Pershing, while Major Gen, McGlachiin con- tinues in charge of the parade ar- rangements. The War Department has added a big feature to the parade by defin- itely announcing that the composite regiment returning on the Leviathan, 3,600 picked men from the seven American Army regular divisions in France, who were loudly acclaimed in Paris, and are known as “Gen, Persh- ing’s Own,” will accompany Gen. Pershing a8 a guard of honor when he leads the 1st down the Avenue, It is yet to be decided whether this reg- iment will march with full equipment or will carry only rifles and sidearms, The matter of erecting stands for the parade is to be finally settled to- morrow, when the Board of Alder- men meets in special session to dis- cuss the reception to Gen. Pershing and the parade. Major Paul Daly, after discussing the. problem with | John F, Sinnott, Secretary to the Mayor, said: “Mr. Sinnott assured me that there would be twogeats in a grand stand , for every member of the division who lives in New York City or its vicin- ity, and who will file his application for tickets with me. | “The tickets for the grand stands will be issued on Saturday, so that applications, preferably by letter, | should be in my hands by Friday | noon. “Officers ‘of the division will be al- fotted seats in the official reviewing stand. | Sig | { SENATE TAKES UP DRY BILLS. | Begins Consk ft the War Time ! Prohibition Act. { WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—The Senate | to-day began considering the bill for en- | forcement of war-time and Conatitu- | tional prohibition. At the request of Senator Sterling, South Dakota, chairman of the sub-/ committee which drew he bill, the war- | mess purposes. The men of the First Division will be fe there at the con- How many a famous actress protects her skin ANY of our most beautiful actresses have found what health experts everywhere are emphasizing today—the value of preven- tion . .. Keep well, these experts urge, protect prevent sickness. Especially is this true of the skin. It is full of wide- open “mouths”—tiny openings of fat and sweat glands. Every minute of the day, they pick up particles of dust, dirt, impurities from the air. To keep your skin clear, radiant, gloriously healthy, these impurities must be properly cleansed When you wash with Lifebuoy, its big creamy lather is carried right into the “ mouths” of your skin, its wonderful antiseptic purifies them— leaves the skin antiseptically clean, and keeps it radiant with health. The “health” odor in Lifebuoy is found in no other soap. It is not a perfume—not the odor of a medicine, but a pure hygienic odor that tells you instantly why Lifebuoy purifies and protects—why it im- skin, Get Lifebuoy at any grocery, drug or department Use it for your hands, face and bath— see how it keeps your skin in perfect health, Lever Bros, Co,, Cambridge, Mass. time prohibition provision was taken up first, Pershing and the : Job He Did An Article by ' Rupert Hughes i) For Style, for Wear and for Economy Send Your Boy to School in a Triple-Service Suit Brill Brothers Triple-Service Suits are made of durable, fashionable fabrics, with reinforced fecnal wear-proof seat and knees, and inter- locking seams. Built to stand the hard knocks of boyish wear; to stand up in the most stylish erent and sold with the Brill guarantee of _ satisfaction or money refunded. Sizes 8 to 18—$16.50 Corduroy School Suits with 2 knickers Of drab colored corduroy of exceptional quality. Mohair lined Norfolk Jacket, with plain back, belt all around, and slashed pockets, the knickers lined throughout. Sizes 7 to 16—$15.00 Other School Suits, $10.00 to $32.50. Blouses, 85¢ to $1.95. Shirts, $1.25 to $2.50, Hats and caps, $1.00 to $3.00. Neckwear, 55¢ and $1.00. Holeproof Hosiery, 55¢ and 6sc. Broadway, at 49th 279Broadway 47 Cortlandt St. 44 East 14th Street 125th Street, at 3d Avenue In The New York Times Next Sunday - The inside story of how the American Com- mander imposed his military views on the other Allied leaders, and how his insistence on a separate American Army and open operations shortened the war Hitherto unpublished facts about the final , campaigns which throw new light on Persh-* ing’s leadership are fully treated in The New York Times next Sunday Stephen Leacock on “‘Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness’’ A brilliant article by a famous scholar on the intellectual development during the age of machinery and how it opened the road from social slavery toward social freedom. It is the second of the series of the economic problems of the hour. Are we in danger of drifting into a false sense of security? Will our hopes of eternal peace lead us into the delusions that came after other wars? Apropos of the famous First Division’s re- turn, Major Hughes interprets the record of the Regular Army in the light of these ques- tions, in The New York Times next Sunday Order Next Sunday’s Edition of Che New Yark Cines from your newsdealer today