The evening world. Newspaper, October 16, 1919, Page 8

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ee me + se ey eee a: 0 a a aS é ey THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBE selves as Ray Bro: lof No. 1 Bast i11th stro Rrook'y4 t MILLINERY FOREWOMAN 1S BEATEN BY STRIKERS Because She Refused to Join Walk- oul Four Women and Man Tear Her Clothing to Bits Because she refused to join the ste | Tt nen ‘Ihe neriie Mast ented fing auilliners of the Liberty Hat Com: | shout 1 week ago ahr refumd to Join apany, at No. 662 Broadway, Mira Sno enld she was nrrarened. but fad Hack, thirty, of No. 17 Weat 111th | Pa, ered ‘with scratenes and | the south it has forced its way far reet, forewomar 1 ayla 14 | brutses. | a » down along the Dvina River. Polish | ¢s ” Niveslon eigen at ante Na ast Se No vias te viwentag, | DOlSheviki Retreating Before] rorees nave captures. Kovno, on the Comptroller Repeats Stories of har clothing torn to ribbons, Bhe was| Resseve ax in Finshinw, ; rae hiaaet i Athen thrown down the stairway to the Vuewday. Kolchak’s Forces and De- |¢streme northern end of the tine.) Profiteering on Leases and cellar of No. 21 West Lith Street Patrolman Steinback of the West 123d Btrect Station, attracted by her screams, went to her ald ip young women and a man, whom | Lack alleges beat he t the West 1234 Street Police Station, where Miss Lack appoured as com- The Rooseveit M Roy Scouts are ¢ y Ovater Ba plane |from_ the Tuesday will be taken by air time to arrest four | next on. The atarte tx star in sewn through which it passes ar, the 48th, will be af. Ray. «sie, AN’ ARTISTIC: BOOT * Patent Leather Vamp Field Mouse Top ‘We introduce another Cammeyer Masterpiece A shoe, developed in the finest quality leather, at a most nominal price, carved out with that touch of individuality so characleristic of Cammeyer Shoes, A woman can always use another pair of shoes, and this is one opportunity that Milady should not over- look to secure a “real, honest-to-goodness” Dress Shoe, 11.00 CAMMEYER | Stamped on a Shoe Means Standaru of Merit 34" St. New York % wth New York Boston Brooklyn Newark Syracuse Rochester Philadelphia Every Coat Richly Silk Lined 3 Involving 432 ultra-fashionable fur-trimmed or tailored Winter coats. A fortunate purchase—-now a wonderful opportunity for tomorrow's shoppers, High-quality coats ~distinctive in style—of superb materials and tailoring. Silvertone, Broadcloth, Wool ™ of No, a5 West was Her rial Mag which ng from Buffalo | to Flushing | Wout a star in| These Sales at New York & Brooklyn Neamt \ West Thirty-Fourth Street—New York NewYork’sGreatestSale of FurCollarCoats Phenomenal Special Offering of $45, $55 & $65 Values used are Fine Skunk, French Sealine and Skunk Opossum. between the upper and nether mill- stones, Petrograd is doomed to capture, in 7 [the opinion of observers, Gen. Yuge- tussian Army has broken the resist- z ince of the Bolsheviki, according to reports, and are pursuing the enemy | toward Onega, a village about 150 miles west of Archangel. Further to ‘i Denikine’s men have driven a giant porting All Between Ages — | wedge into Central Russia as far as 5 | Orel and 4 yught to be on their _ - 6 and 5 | | of 16 and 50. way toward Tula, an important rail The ill-fecling which has been grow: | t is considered the key Starts Row. Brit ats Aaaben that 4 ing between Mayor Hylan and Comp- it: |to Moscow. Kast of the Urals, is | than | Admiral Kolchak’s army, but it is seemingly too far away to enter into consideration as a vital factor in the situation which is developing In Rus- in proper. Gens, Denikine and Yude- niteh and Admiral Kolchak are said the | to be operating in close co-ordination West of General Denikine’s army are forces of Ukrainians, who, while COPENHAGEN, Oct. 16.—A ish-French squadron of more open warfare at to-day’s meeting of twenty warships has arrived at Riga pen warfare at to-day's meeting of | the Sinking Fund Commissio ne 1ceording to a Lettish private report | BRIG FURS Coyne (Wier the Comptroller charged that the city | ¢ is filled with gossip of dock leases be- | recelved here LONDON, Oct. 14.—A general re treat by the Bolshevikt before and that these companic armies of Admiral Kolchak in West- | financial backing are subletting their |t porting the entire population be outbreak came when the [Joined Dentkine, having beon assured | To.day's tween the ages of 16 and 50 and | that the latter will wrest Eastern! matter of leasing a pier at the foot Galicia and the Province of Chelm | of rast Fifth Street, Manhattan, to from Poland. the Continental Freight Service, Lim- COPENHAGEN, O>t. 16.—Lettish| ited, came up for consideration. A forces have fought their way across |lease had at first been commended, the Duna River at Riga and opera-| and then, according to the calendar, an order outhwing Admiral Kolchak | tions there are now developing favor- | the recommendation had been with- | drawn Comptroller Cfaig said he under- stood one concern proposed paying the city only $30,000 for a lease and throughout all Lithuania and the then intended subletting It for $48,000 mobilization of three classes of sol-|a year, Commissioner Hulbert said a diers has been orderedy it is an-| pier could not be sublet without the nounced in a telegram received here | consent of the Dock Department and from Kovno, that, so far as he was aware, chere are likewise removing the cattle.” The message announces the receipt of advices that the council of people's commissaries in Moscow had issued | and his ministers and demanding the | ably, according to a despatch received from Libau last night by the Lettish Press Bureau here, A state of siege has been declared arrest of his agents and those of the Allies in Siberia, The message also reports that a Bol- shevik wireless dispatch had been re- ceived which admitted that in a pleb- iscite in Moscow the workmen had de- clared themselves against th and so supporting Admiral Kolchak. HELSINGFORS, Finland, Oct. Troops of General Yudenitch's North- western Russian Army have occupied | Pskov, according to a newspaper dis- patch received here, LONDON, Oct. 16.—Worced back by | | Russian troops, under command of Was no “hawking” of pier space as Col. Vierkolitch, have been concen-!the Comptroller had charged. trated in Lithuania and, with the| “It ts the duty of this Commission help of Germans, have occupied tele- | 4nd the Dock Commissioner to lea graph and telephone stations and)|the full identity, policy, converted schools into barracks, The | financial backing of} Lithuanian flag has everywhere re-| every concern that attempts to lease jthe onslaughts on four fronts, the | paced the Russian colors. city piers,” said the Comptroller. “I armies of the Soviet Government of | (ol, Vierkolitch has issued a procla-| say this be town is full of Pussia appear to be facing disaster.| mation saying if the Lithuanians! gossip of dock leases being procured Gen. Denikine's Cossacks from the} voluntarily reunite with old Russia,| by fly-by-night conterns which are South, Polish forces from the West; | self-government will be given Lithua- | profiteering at the city’s expense, Northwestern Russian legions on the| nia under Russian sovereignty. The|We had one fly-by-night a year ago Northwest, and Northern Russian | proclamation says that, on the other/and we do not want a repetition of troops from the North, have during | hand, if the Lithuanians resist the| what happened then, J, at. least, the last few days forged ahead Qutsli Russians, they will be “regarded as | won't stand for it.’t it seems the Bolshevik a are traitors.” Commissioner Hulbert denied there were any fly-by-night concerns doing business with the city now. After the discussion had progressed at some length, Hulbert said: *"I have been Dock Commissioner for two years, and during that time I have not driven a pile in plier im- n and character nuse the nies Milwaukee p Pittsburgh provements, I want to add that the Cleveland ees fault has not been mine.” Chicago —To pen “Why haven't you built any new Detroit \ piers during the past two ygars?” Bridgeport Jasked the City Chamberlain Berolz- St. Louis heimer, who is a member of the Sink- ing Fund Commission, a no, we don’t want the reasons now,” interrupted the Mayor. It was decided to refer the Conti nental Company's application to the committee of th8 whole after which the question of extending the lcase of Moore & McCormack at the East Eighteenth Street pler was taken up. Comptroller C wanted the jease extended to twenty years because, ex he argued, the company had made big Investments on the strength of a virtual assurance that its lease would run that period instead of the ar period granted by the city, m opposed to granting leases for a period longer than ten years un- the ircumstances warrant the extension,” replied the Mayor, “In this instance, so far as I can see, those circumstances don't exist.” Hulbert said the » policy would help carry programme of placing all missioner the out Sound steamship companies on the East River, A vote and City was then taken. Chamberlain The Mayor Berolzheimer voted against a twenty-year Moore- McCormack lease, Francis P. Kenny, Chairman of Finance Committee of the Board of Aldermen, refused to | vote and Comptroller Craig voted aye. The twenty-year lease proposal was defeated, as Was Comptroller Craig GLEMENCEAU WINS VOTE OF OONFIDENGE, 324 TO 132 Premier Defeats Bitterest Opposi- | tion Which Has Developed in | Chamber Since War. | PARIS, Oct | 16 (Associated Press).— | |The Ci sustained | in tho of Deputies late | | yesterday by a vote of 324 to 132, The| Premier thus vic emerged from the bitterest and best organized as- sault. which the Ministry had ever faced, the Chamber adopting the Cabi- | net's policy on the chronological order | of the elections, placing the leg ative | J elections first on Noy, 16, and the Sena- Fur Collars or Q.75 Tailored! varies and municipal elections in that | i | For the first time Aristide Briand, | Offered in this group are the newest style developments + oat bh Papas ley TR agli in loose belted effects, box-plaits, yoke backs, semi- |Clemenceau's majority was the largest flare effects—shawl, convertible, two-in-one and sub- ved when the question | marine collars; fancy pockets and belts—in all colors. ed ik on for months for this test of strength, the opposition awaiting the ratification of make a definite on- istry, u had a bit M. Briand. Hh makes’ it positive Velour, Bolivias—and the Furs vote that ing procured by fly-by-night concerns | Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, 1 ») au'a platform will go before the people, his opponents’ avowed tn; | tention of forcing & postponement of | uw” the end te of the Chamber havin; on failed. In his ih M. Clemenceau never was in be! form, \ a, R 16, 1919. First Congress for Consular Service, A vesolution calling upon Congress to jack up both the diplomatic and troller Craig for some time blazed into | Consular services of the United States is expected to be one of the most im- |portant acts of the tenth annual con- vention of the American Manufactur- ciation, which, open- orning at the comes to an| subjects will of fictitious | end to-morrow night with the annual rs’ Export Ass ng at 9 o'clock this banquet, WE PICTURE SIX STYLES tops. Thing Will Be Call on Better the collection includes. | All tan calfskin—Tan with fawn cloth tops i Gun metal with gray cloth tops—Brown with ’ brown cloth tops—Gun metal with black cloth sl bs the Royal ‘Typewriter Co. ‘The right man in the a critical period.” Other officers elected were: Vice presidents C. K. Anderdon, president of the American Wire and Fabric Co.; right place during Foundry Co. and J, 8, Lawrence, president of the Lawrence Co, Treasurer, William H. Ir Robert H. Ingersoll and Brothers; di- rector for the term of 19: CG. & & Co,; term of 1922: George B, Smith, Dwight Austin, managing director of Nestle'’s Food Co., Inc.; F. A. Seiber- ling, president of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co, and Frank H. Taylor, president of*the 9, 8. White Dental Manufacturing Co. The topic assigned this afternoon was “Our Future Trade With Russia”; for this evening the be “The Near East,” “The New’ States,” “Patents and ‘Trade-Marks” and “Foreign Adver- ern Sibe aed pais holdings and profiteering at the ex-] Following the registration ‘ this| tising.” afi Was Ha MG ated bit supposed to be hostile to the Bolehe | pense of the pacity morning of approximately fifteen] “Our Diplomatic and Commercial # viki, have declared war on Denikine| ay @ reguit of the Craig charges, | hundred exporting manufacturers! Services Under New World Condi- ernment at Omsk, dated Oct. 13. Whe) because of alleged atrocities perpe-| nock Commissioner Hulbert demanded | from all the important centres of the | tions” is down for discussion to-mor- despateh says: trated by the latter's soldiers on their! 14 investigation to clear himself of | United States. W. L. Saunders,| row, beginning at 10 A. M., with “The Bolsheviki are retreating |®@vance toward Moscow. Reports | suspicion, The Mayor promised that | chairman of the board of the Inger-| President E. M. Herr of the Westing- long the whole line. They are dt. |2AYe been recelved, however, that! Commissioner of Accounts Hirshfield | soll-Rand Company, was elected! house Electric and Manufacturing : 8 part of the Ukrainian army has) wij; immediately begin an inquiry. president to succeed George E, Smith Company in the chai Papers are for discussion| GRAIG AND HYLAN EXPORTERS OF U.S. ‘sss 58 MEET IN NEW YORK soll of] Jennings, president of C. B. Jennings! ? ! smised from the following authorl+ Dy e-vice."— Our Present Diplomatic Se | William G. Sharp, former Ambassa- ant Smith, , Vienna and Copenhagen. nh Opportunity for the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce.” Philip B, Kennedy, Director “Recommendations of the Civil Service Reform Lea q the Diplo- matic and Commercial Services.” The Rev. Kdmoud Walsh, 8. J. Dean of the Sehool of I Service, clation's Commit- W. Nichols, Allis-Chalmers ‘uring Company. the Manufacturer Alba B, Johnson. “What Should Be Done.’ Believes Maurice Casanave, French High Commissione' I unthrope of the British Embassy Admiral Count M. Lavatelli of the Italian Em- bassy, Secretary of Commerce Red field, First’ Assistant State William Frill Littleton will be ¢ morrow evening's grand ballroom. Body Identified DFTROIT, Mich., Oc! picked up yest Lake Huron, by ¢ Boat 44, has been identified at that of Observer Verhey- der, who with Capt, Dammann, been missing since their Secretary sand Martin W& speakers at to- banquet in the —>—______ Hoon Racer's, 16.—The body tcipating in the shp. Race, was found wrec Light, Oct. 4 [ STORE CLOSES AT 5.30 P. M. | 5-95 with a moire pressed design, which shows to advantage in any of these colors—Copen- hagen, cherry, coral or wist- aria. 9.98 robe, includes the tax. or low. This robe comes hagen, Established 1879 You Never Pay More at Best's Warmth and becomingness in Women's CORDUROY negligees - A FRIDAY SALE is the price of the pretty slip-over model, girdled in corduroy. The fabric is elaborated the price of the comfortable Simple and graceful in its lines, this robe is essentially practical. Long sleeves for warmth, two pockets for convenience, an adjustable collar which may be worn high wistaria, cherry, rose, or Copen- SHOE S—1o00c0 pairs for to-morrow at 9 05 pair Our regular 9.50 and 10.50 grade EVEN though we could hardly exaggerate in describing these shoes, we think that our standard of quality and the -present Wing and straight tips—Mediu m and low heels—Medium and wide toes, Not all sizes in every stvle but all sizes in the lot. | Best & Co. Fifth Avenue at 35th Street in women high cost of shoes are too well-known to make any eulogistic, de- tailed description necessary.

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