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THE EVENING WORLD, WSU weSVAY, OCTOBER 4%, i¥i¥. (MURPHY'S DEAL IN GLUCOSE POVERTY PREVENTS ARMY FOOD PRICES | ONE MEANING OF “SNACK.” O14 Word Siguifies to Quis or | ‘Clothes Elihu Root Demands Reform of Abuses Disclosed by Car- something; it is a jibe, an innuendo, — | To “snack” a person is to quiz or) fidicule him, to “roast” him, as we used | to say 200 years ago and us the Amer- | jeans say to-day. | OF FRIEND MCARTHY | Consumers, as Supplies | } ( || | menace | Supe ee ‘ i q Continue Short. Open Monday ond Saturday Even’ | | of fellow to be a business man; he was| Negie Foundation Survey. shel ye ™® 1) Refused 15 Per Cent. Interest | decked with ‘diamonds, like you soe oe MICHIGAN | e Gi +4 gag |Saratoga? had on fnshy” clothes, His! Tnequalities of Justice to the poor By P. Q. Foy. as Gift, Paid $250,000 | genera Appearance didn't look good to are described in a report Issued yee! (Special Food Expert of The Eve- FURNITURE for 25 Per Cent. | OWhen did you see Mr. Murphy? terday by the Carnegio Foundation ning World.) ' A. Within a night or two, Q. Did you explain to him what you had observed? A. Yes. Q. Just tell us what you said to Mr. | TOLD IT WAS “FAKE.” | , for the Advancement of Teaching.! Another deep cut in the prices of Three years have been spent in the! army surplus foods will result from preparation of the report, the facts!the order of Col. John M. Carson, Duaibess why told nim 1 thought the saving been obtained by study at| Chief Officer of this sone. The Colonel M4 | first hand of courts throughout the, has applied himself energetically to S. Fhat wane cf ndreatent fake: | country. Elihu Root has written a| the solution of the problem of getting interview? A. Yes. | foreword, admitting that justice has| the surplus army foods to the con- | pnioCarthy told Murphy, he. said : he | by th t direct route and Q '/ been put beyond the reach of the; sumers by the most direct r that ther - | e tog's proves, inak he sensi Te poor, and declaring it is time to put! at the same time give them the bene- glucose, reduced the moisture in it| the house in order. fit of the low prices fixed by the Gov- | Contractor Who Investigated | OCTOBER BRIDES’ SPE- |) “Race! alk CIALS AND OUTFITS AT|| £0" “Boss” Tells of Talk With Hartog. LOW PRICES. SOLD ON EASY TERMS.BIG VALUES. | | | | OCTOBER BRIDES’ SALE OF Further light on the manner in| Paparted i ate cans. top os he| Henry S. Pritchett, President of the |¢fmment. No dealer will be permitted z os Lt ed the as i ° | . . 3-Piece White Enam. or Ivory Bed & Spring }| which Charles F. Murphy of Tam-| amination continced: oe © eX"! Carnegie Foundation, in the intro-'to charge the consumers more than many Hall does business {s shown by| Q. Did you ask him what volume of' duction, says the existence of 5 cents a pound over the prico re- business was being done? ’ " ALT asked * . 0 ceived by the Government oa pork records of the proceedings before) iim ‘what ho sold the goods at, and in fee government depends upon making shoulders, pork loins and roasting trial of thé suit of Louis N. Hartog| told me 9, 10 and 11 cents the machinery of justice #0 effective ulderss po a against Murphy, the Corn Products| ,.2P!4 you do anything to verify that? | that the citizens shall belleve in its, chicken: A. No, but [I took a pen il and 1 fig: Company, John A. McCarthy and| ured tp If'he paid'4% cents and reduce | impartiality and fairness, ‘The body Hoasting chickens will now biel rd the atu ) per cent. and sold for ¥ and por’ consumers 36 cents a pound; should- Arthur J,.Baldwin, 10 a pound he was making about 10) jur|Of the report ts fgom the pen of ow pork loins, 80 cents, A Hartog has sued for $10,000,000, cent. And I said: “Really, the way| Reginald Heber Smith of Boston. the U ” y jclaiming his business was ruined | ou do business every time you sell «| Many persons co-operated in the gen-| Price of 15 cents a pound has been i} " dollar's worth of goods you make eral undertaking, fixed by th Sales Committee on through the terms that Murphy and| cents." He said, “That's a good way -f| r | " 2 a " ? i “ ; The first part of the report por-| trogen veef carcasses, but us the beot ij It Ithe others forced on him; the fact/ getting at lt, had three or four meet-| save the denial of justice, national compunies aru sulling trogen tnvat at nh} that they got out of the business| Q. At the end of the first interview | in scope, which exists to-day, Causes a muco iower price the movement Wy Jt! after his refusal to meet their terms, | YoU, Were very much averse to Har-|of the denial are found in delays, of the army beef will be limited tur which handicap the poor litigant; in | court costs and fees charged by the | State, which often prohibit access to the courts by the poor, and by the expense of lawyers’ services. This expense is a fundamental difficulty because lawyers are essential and many persons nnot pay their charges. Remedial some wo loins was deliv yesterday, but ours, The strike of the express drivers and helpers bas paralyzed the trafic in the shipment of farmers’ products to New Xork, while the merchants here were unable to ship perishable foods out of the city, Most of the tom? A. I didn't like the man . M Rat u and, so he alleges, stopped his supply of glucose. | Murphy has responded with a Jcounter sult, alleging he never re- |ceived the sucurities that should have |come to him because of his financial | ald, given that the Hartog concern |might take and fill a large contract | ne. A car of army ed to August Bile it only lasted a tew P. Q. And you didn't like the business? A. I thought it Was @ grand business if he could get away with it Q. You mean that there was some- thing crooked about it, don't you? A. No, 1 thought that it couldn't last; a man getting 100 per cent. profit. i had never heard of it before. Q. You told Mr. Murphy it was a fake business? A. i told him it was 3-Piece Boston Leather Living Room Suite Massive Frames,FinelyUpholstered agencies ure considered the greatest money-making fake I| which can be employed to make the| merchants in West Washington Mar- M rT Cl Ss | |with the British Government for a - 5 position of the poor more equal, such| ket have had empty status since the < yn < T= < yt he glucose product. ‘The taking of state- fad sald: Well get treo Ay | A# small claims courts with informal | Strike comimenced, v e ° j # 8 cond @ deepe e procedure, domestic relations courts, The parce: post has not functioned ments before trial was epeipeerred oy Tt Jou can tea sun eet 484] Using probation officers; Industrial |perfectly during this strike, although ominate in ew or 1 |various times in the office of Max accident commissions administering | moderate amount of eggs, chestnuts Steuer, counsel for Hartog, Mr,, BOUGHT SHARE HE HAD RE- and other nearby have been brought that method. But outgoing shipments of dressed poultry, butter and eggs from New York City were quite cun- siderable, and were it not for the parcel post thousands of families who still remain in their country bom would be without thetr usual food supply. Some of the merchants that received eggs by mail, said that most of the shipments e roughly and carelessly handled. Eggs, expecially, ‘@ generally broken. Thus the com- plaint against the parcel post sim- mers down to the fact that the ce tainers were at fault and not the sys- tem. A desirable type of containers , Would make the parcel post a blessing workmen's compensation acts, These are only beginnings, which should be widely extended, the report says, For the multitude of cases beyond the jurisdiction of these agencies, the report urges that the only solution is to supply the services of lawyers gratuitously to the poor, through pub- Ne defenders in criminal cases apd legal aid organizations in civil cases. The rapid development of such alds 1s advocated, There are forty-one legal ald organi- zations in the country, organized to make more equal the position of the poor before the law. They have pro-| vided attorneys for 1,133,700, havo collected for their clients $3,590,681, and in this work they have expended $1,573,733. These are minimum figures, grown foodstufts into the city by FUSED AS GIFT. So McCarthy went about and learned @ lot about Hartog’s financial stand- and from Hartog about the pros- of the business. Hartog heard he was being looked up and became alarmed. He suggested to McCarthy that they get rid of Baldwin and straighten out the business Lhemselyes, | Mr. McCarthy continued IT asked him how he got Mr, Mur- phy into the thing. I brought up the subject that Mr. Radt had told me. I said: ‘Was Mr. Steuer going to |finance your operation at one time? He kind of quibbled and said—well, ne had talked to you about it. “IT said: ‘All right; let's hear how you got Murphy in.’ Steuer doing the examining. ‘There have been made public pre- viously the aMfdavit of district leader | (}, “Jimmy” Hines, telling tp substance | py the connection of Hartog and Mur- phy, which he was largely instrumen- tal in bringing about, and the stat ments of Baldwin, who was Murphy's lawyer, and as such not only carried on the negotiations with Hartog, but uw the Corn Products people; that | concern being subsidiary to the Stand- ard Oil Company and got the glucose that the company refused to deliver |to Hartog. It has also been shown, | according to the statement published, ‘that Baldwin got a percentage on this sose and that his “legal” activities We apologize most humbly to the hundreds of men who so patiently waited Saturday until our sales- men could serve them—and altho everybody was finally taken care of we regret the occurrence and have remedied the defect in our service by ad- ditions to our sales force. However, it’s considerable of acom- pliment to Monroe Clothes when one thinks it over—that so many folks should so good naturedly glu red a very wide field. WHY MURPHY DECIDED TO GET ouT. Buldwin told how Murphy reached “He started off to tell me there was 4 man named Jim Hines, whom I knew quite well for a long time, and that Jim Hines had been a great friend of his; that he had always been Claims for wages and domestic diffi- culties outnumber all other classes. There are many suits for separation and proceedings to enforce support. Other cases range widely over the to both the producer and the con- sumer, The average quality of the fresn | beef coming to New York grades is as low, if not lower, than for several seasons, the supply being confined either help themselves (as many of them did) or just bided a little extra time for sure enough extra value. a point at which he declared he could | ®ing up Jim when he was short of| Whole field of civii law, except corpora- largely to ordinary grass-fed beef, SN De nak ee en ee it atora "to have Huartog, boating | {unas nd Jim know no ould eal] UR IAW astm may. be. acelineamgfane ia butchers in Worn Of course we know how superior in of his connection wit he leader o! a “ i t 4 c ¢ fo sue peat Teen M, SE In con neaten) with toe eter | noha Aaked Mr. Hines could he | ceasibte to, every’ person, no matter] good boot until after Thanksi4 ving, value Monroe Clothes are—but rea bd dra artog d d and there | 20 verbs 2 ie. a ° -fed cattle com.nence Py A oath, ET a? ee Grntucenveetemae | nis business; "that he offered Mr, Bore of the ‘Tegal ald organizations to come here in quantities, ne it boergey as es pr aneted York just Geld und Porcelaiu Crowns. rhe SS RCRD i ; ‘ at |) er cent. of the profits o: el ’reside der of the Washing. am el Sarid jororke, Villings Bae Intave Jenn Peat i feats one the business to use his influence in > ton Market Merchants’ Association hear of it anc all c je trooping | str ola, giver wid Pore so see ciawe te ARGeahy toe mane | the. business, and that Mr. Murphy ‘ warmly praises Tho Evening World inatthe onetime. We've replen- | Made at Reasonable Pr years ®nd who supplied materials for | trned that down, but agreed to buy WOMEN’S TRADE UNION for its initiative in educating the con- ished our etocke from our ime ) Bec tile chitenied enab ther the fuitilling of subvay contracts and | 25. Per cent, of the business for } suming publ to the merits of | ished o 4 2 r iy cleaned, Broken Plate so on, should slip into the Hartog | $950,000. MED storage eggs and frozen roasting r ‘ain ebaired while vou walt concern in Murphy's place, I sald: ‘Surely he made a fine bar- chickens, "Some of my best cus- mense reserves and were ag BLOO Incidentally, in connection with this | ® ns Ren uetniae Meas him 15 per peat i tomers,” seve Mr. Minder, “who a ready for all comers. ° M case it has been brought out that last | c¢! ; and he gave you Hi ati few months ago would b 9 peas oF; orrices TARuAty Morahy eum tuted ter cine 0.000 for 30 per cent Oe : They Will Attend the International) yoy “freed ‘thom storage emus of | | Monroe Clothes are indisputably 3 A lawyers the firm of Untermyer, Gug- dhe Could se hat way. Yon, rking Women frozen roasters, are now coming and A 2 E, 125th St.|16) E, 34th St kenhelmer & Maryhall as fii "attor- | 8d. “That's the way it figures. If ee es “ asking for ther. the greatest values in America. 1B Con N. W. Gor. Sd Ave ripley 4 1 an a ‘ou were 50 give hi 5 p as ne | t will b le i i i 740 Lexington Ave, Ue tncatnven ie che heed Teen Chel cee for nothing and now he is going aera dps fee wa. | World advised the att caaealsee a 7 We are selling Upright Quality Over Lizaete's yer, now Tammany candidate for | 10 Five $260.000 for 25 per cent. he is] WASHINGTON, Oct, 22.—The Na-|oggs lagt April for family use during Suits and Overcoats at such con- S. W. Cor, 59th pret tse » Court, being a member | Pt¥ing $250,000 for the 10 per cent.’ He | tional Women's Trade Union of Amer-| the season of limited production The \ 4 ° ey, . : ; |kind of squirmed around and could |ica announced to-day the names of the | present expre toby ae siderable saving in cost to you Hours: 9 A. M. to 7 P. AL, daily ern. lnot fatvenie te u y Present express drivers’ strike has Sundays, ¥ A.M. to 1 BLM. The documents made public yester- | "% Non ae ine \ aie American delegates to the International |cut off the supply of nearby white because of our day were o amination o€| wurphy's contracts, moan time seen king Wome hich |eggs, and dealers who Pd ay were parts of the examina Murphy's contract? A. He showed |Congress of Working Women, which | egss, alers who are compelled who told Mr. Steuer he | ime the contract second time 1 met|will meet here Oct. 28. ‘They ar to furnish that quality to thelr cus-| Fy —direct from maker to you er in Lullding materts him. Mrs, Raymond Robins, Chicago, | tomers are forced to pay 95 to 98 cents | No. 243 We: Street. ot 7 d 1d age eo “| bog : We anid ere Tune Bat has ttebss- Jas cite ctaemeee iat cries Re President of the league; Miss Roso|® zeae UOLOERS, the pines Y aap —via our low rent upstairs shops asked him to Investigate Hartog and| Yes, and when he explained to me | Schneiderman, New York, Vice Presl- irike hodeawivun ees followed tk —trom America’s Largest Cloth- his concern, and that he made 4M ithat Mr, Murphy turned down a 15|dent of the league; Miss Mary Ander-| savico of The Hvening World und put appointment with Hartog SirauRn | - Proposition with no invest-|son of the Executive Board of thelaway their supply of eggs for the iers Baldwin, Murphy Battorney. MUFDHY | f nt. 1 nought that, Mr. Hartog | {nternational Boot and Shoe Workers’ |winter, to be now withdrawing them M did not tell him Baldwin was repre- | hoo jim pretty good. Jnion; ry antoul, Exec [Phils enaie anlnieed ' ; : % ¢ with nee o id McC hy, addi 3 . Fre hat you had known of | Board of ¢ Boston Womens’ Trade r Li bring housewives : = f an moment wi you n e wife don't tell Be Man erate hal MOvony fe ine eur did what Hartog Unton League, ‘member of the Federal se paying fy of more s Gosen, for method of operating that if economy 18 ° y " " art: | bor wn th 5 per loyees’ inion, eggs not quite as good as those con- oxamigation then continued, in part: wjaent. agree with what you knew | Miss ‘Teonora ” O'Reilly, Executive | served, 5 C Clothes are sure to be your Fall choice. ee eee anda the kiay|about him? A. I think Mr, Murphy |Board of the New York Women's| “the settlement of the dock ia ente) uding Mr. Baldwin to the silos. is a very simple minded man in many | Trade, Union Loague: “Miss Fannie] seniye “wilt eotret can’ aera e atest triend he had ever Met, respects. And I told him so, Cohn, New York, Vice President of the fl f a: to th a So much so that he was even buying| Q. Told Hartog 80? A. No, I told Mr.|[nternational Ladies’ Garment Work-| flow of foods into the market, and r) All assaults of disease fall Baldwin Locomotive because it was a| Murphy so. i ‘8’ Union; Mrs. Maud Swarts, New| prices will be lower on dairy products, | @ against bodily vigor. Keep imilar name; and the gentleman was!, @: But Mr, Murphy didn't know it up| York, member of the Typographical |much of which was embargoed at the A fit by using Patan PAR gi aig, baalidag baito that time? A. Well, he said he oftea| Union; Miss Julia O'Connor, Boston, | terminals. | | s 50 sweet—too sweet, to me, to bol thouwnt he v President of the Telephone Opera Pork .products are getting lower. | ‘I |wholesome, That was my first im-|"Q Simple minded, eh? A. Yes, sir. Department of the — Internat. rive hone 4 f BR lower. ew: er-oO pression of him.” Q. What else did you say? A. 4 aise Brotherhood of alectrical Worl 1a nates neve, Gronbes to S48 per Also $40 | A what part Mr. Hines e Miss Agnes Nestor, Chicago, Vice) u ugus' a of peonierd usa, || TOLD MURREY RHA MReS WAS A | pinhead bin wie . ee Meyer |B resident ot the International Glove | 18, while land has dropped nine cents ’ ’ # ” You say that Murphy is such a| Workers’ Union, iss Elizabet und, and with millions of pound + | @ You mean thal Harton. Was teo|sieele minted man? And | you have | Christman, (Chi tary OF thd | MiP cinvawnmant omeriite pork td Direct from maker to you—via the Economy Route. | sweet to be 1eso1 . Yes, yes. -known him foi rty years? A, seme organiza’ ad fea en Cremelete Tar tbe, ete niebadlin at Horton |G, Whar did you know bla business | "Bulsalss ave expected trom Melaium, | market the pricen will go still lower | i ) at the end of the first frst to be? A. When I first knew him reat Britain, Czechoslovakia,| The wholesale markets on fresh BRONX ‘ ™.V O14 lvaru adverse? A. Ohh he had @ liquor store. Switzerland, Poland,|creamery and eggs are high, owing rs HOY CW Spa (ii the man it was adverse, McCarthy said he had never known to temporary shortage, but the settle- aod 6 ° B ‘Bergen Ave. at 149th St é s Q. You made up your mind that Har-| Murphy had been a bartender, but ment of the labor troubles will bring 42nd Street cor. B’way. 138 Fulton St.. Sew York tog. was. abad tke? A.” Well that. "moRt ‘every man who ownk — |About. more abundant ‘supply and S0EAZed“ “ Madics BROOKLYN up my mind he must be a pee franc aera heasiat Buetandant ey A2ad gg ics “win a “igood. busi- BELGIUM HONORS eee vlan — i Nassaa =“ “ Frankfort Court and Montague St. \ness man” and that he had been in | 5Cortlandt* “ B’way *Fulton and Hoyt Streets the real estate business. He dian | PRESIDENT HIBBEN|A BRIDE’S USEFUL BROTHERS | «t4th st. opp. Acad. Marie °587 Fulton at. Flatbush | iknow, he said, that Murphy and J — _- a ' * —~ 151 Market Street | Sergeant Craw were partners, (1 he sich Miss Bennett Has Five of Them ana | 34th Stre t hd hie JERSEY CITY me XL) new Murpt ad a i ytate ° ' ~, \e 5 poe * Joffice. He had never asked Murphy |King Albert Makes Him Com-| rhey'tt Be Ushers at Her Wedding, | 59th « at Col, Cire! PATERSON—220 Main Street | where he accumulated his wealth, or ’ ; . 4 *125th cor. 7th Ave. | he was born, or whether he mander of the Order of ‘The five brothers of Misa Lillian Marto | Chrystie Street at Canal *YONKERS— Getty Square Jew, he replied to Mr. Steuer's ia Pana Rennett, daughter of Mr, Mrs ations. His examination con- 4 . James W. Bennett of $72 Manhattan} ded thurs thing « 14 in]. TM recognition of his services in be-! Avenue, will act as ushers this evening |inné. conversation with Harto, at_your|half of the Belgian cause, the cross |on the occasion, of thelr, slater's, mar. ~ | residenc A. Yes, I asked him where | of a Commander of the Order of the|{fonahan and Mies Charlotte Wonter Hardens Gums Mr, Ualuey Altea ip dm that tranectics;|Grown han been bestowed upon |yett will be the vriteamalds and Cornel me a per cent, of all th President Hibben of Princeton Unt ae iady wll take bi . “eps = gums put in. 1 asked mio ! arned to eh METAL Wihoiian the CHLORO? eeps gum put in, Task y yon arta | ¥ eralty ae was J ned fever [church of Bt, "moman’ the! Ap ; ery ay ee | es When he told you that, of course, | when elegram wa: ved from | St. Nicholas ae from receding—it destroys | he knew you were a close friend of line Belgian Embassy at Washingto :|(\ihtg" low at the pyorrhea germs just as |Mureby'et fy fie, should have Known | stating that King Albert had juat ba eRe ie e109 gating this for Murphy? A. Yes, conferred this honor upon Princeton’ | quickly ,as it destroys even Q, And it was after you had told him| head. UP *| PULLMAN EARNINGS GAIN. | 4 4 » parma |that, ‘that he told you about Hines? A./"A't’ the samo time another tele- Seemann more Gangerous germs. ee -¢ ae . ae |RTAM Was received from the Belgian | Operation Und ederal Contract | Q) Was anything else said? A. Yes, wae bine he maid mine «, " ” D jhe said that night that he would do spencer beth owing to| Shows Incr in Net Revenues. Sizes 8 tol8 fold Everywhere Every Drug Ne eT Hee Wee PUPS: ge [the shortnens of their etay in this| CHICAGO, Oct. 29.— According Two Pairs of Pants Store in New York Has It Dextrin business and the Murphy in-|country, would be unable to accept |the pullman Company's annual stat | eerest President Hibben's invitation to be] ont iesued to-day for the year ¢ | Q. What was there to be do A.|the guests of the university ee ae tae ant ee Nulyne Laboratories | Murphy wanted to get out of the bus- ing wie 20 e MF . |inews, cena of revenue over expe appli Jackson, Michigan Q. And {it would depend on Hines|But the object of his visit appeared tol cable to surplus account, Was $3.10 whether he let Murphy get out or nott|me to have me induce Mr, Ma stay The ¢ any'’s net 4u ar JA. According to. Hartog. in with him $20,364,5 ear the \"'Q What did he say he wanted of] GQ. What did you say? A, I told him earned under contract with jvou? A, He Wanted m to try to In-/T would report back to Mr, Murphy just tor Genera ailroads $11 juce Mr, Murphy to stay in the busl-|the conditions | found. in the pr ness, | Q. Would you advise him to stay or ing lared | Q. He said he was willing to do any-' get out? A. 1 would leave that to $0,599. thing that Mr, Hines suggested? A. Yes, bim iyear i P aie Ags ee € = . )