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Werns, THOTEH PLENTIreL, COST MOK AN DERRINS, (From the Indianapolis News.) offer An Indiana Suffragist who isa widely| + y, they just grow along the road- known apeaker went to her door the|side so plentifully that all you have to other morning to buy some blackberries | do is to pick them,” she told the woman, of @ young country Woman, The berries! "Don't you think you are charging @ bunc' & lower price than they were] The country woman back Into her basket Digher bly. “Words blackberries, T Suffragist wished | rather exorbitant price for your Inder?” | : her boxes) “I've known ot | iced labor,” she retorted tes-/ i) are more plentiful than tes, and yet our club had ay you $25 last winter for putting a of them together.” AWAIT EVICTION CHILDREN’S KNIT UNDERWEAR Warm as fleece, light as down —And now is the time to change! VHE clothes that come closest to a little child ®] —the underthing§s—should be as fine as painstaking, fashioning, can make them. And not the tiniest fold or wrinkle should touch a baby’s skin. Franklin Simon & Co's knit under- things for children are the best the Individual ‘Shops know about, but even the best is none too Rood for little children! The Children’s Underwear Shop—Main Floor Fits Girls and Boys of 2 to 16 Years VESTS DRAWERS COMBINATIONS PANTALETS 1.10 to 4.15 1.45 to 3.50 1,35 to 8.25 110 to 4.15 Of all Wool, Wool and Cotton Mixed, Silk and Woel Mixed, or all Cetton, in Winter Weights 4 Franklin Simon 8 Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and: 38th Streets BUSINESS HOURS 9:00 A. M. to 5:30 P M. oi la Le 6\ 0 ORDER SATURDAY Citizens Seek Means to Help Bronx Tenants About to Be Dispossessed. The landlord-tenant sttuation in the Bronx is belfevell more critical to-day than ever hefore in the history of the city. The crisis will be reached Saturday when 2,000 families, after having been given liberal stays by the City Magistrate's Courts, are due to move. There also are between 1,000 and 1,600 tenants who will be brought into court early next month on holdover proceedings. Under the law the yoannot be granted a further stay of more than twenty days, Last month 700 ewcted tenants in the Bronx found no other quarters and sent their furniture into storage. All of the Justices of the Municipal Court have explained that they will give tenants all the time they can under the law. Under the amended law Justices may give an extension of twenty days in summary proceed- ings. Justice Peter A. Shiel said to-day: “I am not going to issue any war- rants for the eviction of tenants un- il I bave given them the benefit of every possible provision of the law. Where a tenant shows that he has made every effort and failed and I am convinced that the landlord is merely seeking to turn the premises over to another tenant whom he can gouge still further, { am going to uso to the fullest extent the authority vested in me and give the tenant all the time I can.” Similar views were expressed by Jusices Michael Scanlon and Harry Robizek, colleagues or Justice Shied on the Municipay Bench, who de- clared that in 9 per cent. of evic- ton cases before them the action was started becuuse tue landlord bad cewched the limit tp raising rents for his present tenants and seeks others who can meet his extortionate de- mands. Various public bodies are making efforts toward relieving the situation. State military authorities will be asked for the use of the Second Meld Artillery Armory at One Hundred and Sixty-sixth Street and Franklin Street and the Eighth Field Artillery Armory at Jerome Avenue and Kings Bridge Road fur evicted families. Richard M. Lawrence, chairman of and President of the Y. M. C. A., has York fire patrol to supply tarpaulins on request to cover tenants’ household goods, and the Bureau of Encum- brances has agreed not to enforce the forty-eight hour removal rule during the emergency. It is expected that the sidewalks of the Bronx will be literally covered with furniture and other effects while the owners seek some place to store it. It was said this morning that the city marshals will use every avilable man to take care of the mass of evic- tions which they will have to handle. Even with increased forces( it was estimated that it would take a week to complete the evictions now ysched- uled for Nov. 1, West 42nd Street Between Fifth and Sixth Avenues $29.50 Stern Brothers A Sale of Special Importance Tomorrow of WOMEN'S SILK OR WOOL DRESSES Priced Remarkably Low for Wednesday’s Selling Regularly up to $45.00 A varied assortment of models suitable for Street or Afternoon wear; developed in all the approved Autumn and Winter Fabrics, including Serge, Tricotine, Velveteen, Satin or Georgette Crepe---the most durable as well as rich materials, some with soft draping qualities; all the fashionable colors represented. Tailored with careful attention to details. West 43rd Street the Republican County Committee|°Pe? enemy of Enver Pasha, former made arranements with the New| powerful, is expected to be one of the -| dignitics, owing to his popularity, ——— | | LOS ANGELES MAYOR'S WIFE j= SLAPPED ESCORT OF QUEEN Declares Bill edith P. Snyder, wife of the Mayor, said to-day that she slapped the |face of J. M. ("Bill") Nye, State De- ‘partment representative, in front of the Queen of Belgium. The blow was struck in front of Trinity Auditorium, when the royal party was about to cnange automo- biles for the drive through the city, according to Mrs. Snyder, She was riding with the Queen, | "Get a hustle on you and get out,” | she quotes Nye as saying fo her, emphasizing his words by grasping roughly by the arm, She then vered the slap. ye dropped her arm, she says, and ed her command to remove the lowers from the floor of the car, 60 the Queen could descend first. “He was a strange man to place in charge of a mission of the kind,” said Mayor Snyder, “IT have ever seen his equal for rudeness. He was rude | to every une with whom he came in| jcontact, rude to Chief of Police Homo, rude ty Mrs. Snyder, so much t sho had to siwp him, rude rude (o everybody, Hoe was impossible, fe got into some kind of | trouble with every one with whom he came in contact.” PARIS PRESS VIEWS STRIKE WITH ALARM One Paper There Says America Is Fast Approaching a Chaotic Condition, PARIS, Oot. 28 (Associated Press). —The labor situation in the United States received much space in the French newspapers to-day. Most of the papers adopt @ pessimistic vein in their comment. Some of the journals assert that the illness of President Wilsop and the lack of direction of political af- fairs, both internal and foreign, is the cause of the trouble, They de- clare that 4 strike of the coal miners would be Little short of a catastrophe. “America is fast approaching says the Echo de Paris. which comments on the alleged dis- covery in the United States of Bol- shevik agents who are in direct rela- tion with Moscow. —_———— RIZA BEY FOR U. S. MANDATE. Enver Pasha's 01d Foe Delegate to Peace Conference. CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 28 (As- former President of the Chamber of Deputies and of the Senate, and the Ministor of War, when the latter was Turkish delegates to the peace con- ference. It 18 said that when he reaches Paris he will work to secure an American mandate over Constan- tinople. Members of the Nationalist Party claim they will have a large majority in the new Parliament, Seventeen new daily newspapers have made their appearance recently, one being English, eight ‘Turkish, five French, two Greek and one Armenian, Mustap ‘emul Pasha, leader of Turkish allsts in Asia Minor who hi ed, 18 expected to de- clare his idacy for w seat in Par- liument, und then come hore to direct the fight for the integrity of Turkey. It is believed the Sultan will be forced to reinstate him in his former sociated Press).—Ahmed Riza Bey, |} HETTY GREEN LENT TO CITY. Owed Mer Several Millions at Her Death, Court Brief Shows, A brief attached to an order affirm. ing the transfer of Mrs. Hetty Green's estate as the estate of a non-resident, filed yesterday in the Surrogate’s office by the Deputy State Comptroller, shows that mm. Green, when she died, was a creditor of the City of New York for several millions of dollars which she lent to the city at 6 per cent. whon the United States entered the war. The loan was made, according to the brief, out of the large amount of cash which Mrs. Green kept on deposit in New York at a low rate of interest to take advantage of any unusual sttua- tion or panie that would raise the rates at which money could be lent. The brief also shows that Mrs, Green held . note of the ‘Trinity Chureh Corpora- tion for $500,000, Steals Whiskey From Train, SCHENECTADY, Oct. 28,—Whis- key valued at $10,000 was stolen from Boston and Maine freight train je passing through Glenville yes. morning. It Was destined for from Boston. ‘The thieves 1 open the door of a ear and barrels of whiskey out d, whence it was taken truck. Waterbury Dental Work ts ae good as human skill can produce, It le dur tif nd comfortable, The: 38 ive permagent eat, | as ame as with natural teeth, The WATERBURY Way Come here in the morning, have your | old teeth extra. d return home at night with a lenyed. “teoth wht oO to the guma to r ed, | ENTAL COMPANY | WATERBURY In rated Establi 1897 29 W. 34th St., New York 414-16 Fulton St., Brooklyn Houre: 8to@ Sundaye Closed i This Establishment Open Daily from 9 A. M. to 5.30 P. M. Nye Seized Her Roughly and Was Other- Ti wise Rude. | e O 2 LOS ANGELDS, Oct. 28.—Mra. Mor- ‘ IU" il =—=—— West 42nd Street West 43rd Street (Between 5th and 6th Avenues) Specially Prepared Sale of WOMEN’S FABRIC HAND BAGS At a Saving of One-third Off of Regular Prices, Wednesday Chiffon Velvet Bags xt $9.75 Our own specially designed metal frames; pouchy shape; all popular Winter colors; one piece style or with tassel; exceptional values; Regularly sold at $14.50 Silk and Velvet Combina- | Suede or Silk Velvet Bags tion Bags; Copies of high es: models; Large mirror frame; all Winter two smart styles; popular colors colors; value $3.75 $5.00 $2.95 Practical and Attractive Models in WOMEN’S SMART SPAT PUMPS Specially Priced $8.50 Patent Coltskin Spat Pumps made over a smart last, with extremely high arch; hand turned sole and Louis XV heel. Also featuring new 10-BUTTON SPATS of French Broadcloth Colors: Fawn, Beige and Taupe $4.00 A Specially Arranged Sale IMPORTED DECORATIVE LINENS Considerably Below Manufacturer’s Present Cost. Hand Scalloped and Hand Embroidered: also Lace Trimmed Linens. Appropriate for Bridal Gifts—Main Floor Tables. French Cluny Linens Mosaic Linens (Lace Trimmed) Tea Napkins..... doz. 7.50, 18.00 3.95 Tea Cloths. +--ea. 13.50, 20.00 ‘ ; ts Centerpieces. .....ea. 9.75, 15.00 Centerpieces ea. 2.50, 3.85 | Luncheon Cloths, ea, 25.00, 36.00 Tea Cloths ..........ea. 5.25, 8.50 | Round Luncheon Sets Dresser & Buffet Scarfs, 5.75, 7.50 (25 pieces)........ 40.00, 65.00 Real Madeira Hand Embroidered Linens Attractively displayed on the Main Floor. yay COVeWE) acccsacevies 25c, 35c | Luncheon Sets (13 pes) 4.75, 5.75 Napkin Pouches 65c, 85c | Tea Napkins......doz. 7.50, 9.50 Centerpieces. . . -. 1,50, 1.95 | Luncheon Cloths....... 7.50, 12.75 Guest. Towels........... 1.65, 2.25 | Lingerie Cushion Covers, 1.50, 2.25 THE SILVERWARE SECTIONS Attention is directed to an exceptionally choice assortment of Enameled Sterling Silver Articles In various colors—Toilet Sets, Perfume Bottles, Puff Boxes, Picture Frames, Vases, Atomizers, etc. Sterling Silver Articles Attractively Priced Candlesticks ...$7.25 to 41.00 Fruit or Berry Bowls 15.25 to 40.00 Bon Bon Dishes. .6.00 to 30.00 Sugar & Cream Sets16.50 to 28.95 Sandwich Trays 21.85 to 33.50 | Coffee Sets,3 pieces 48.50 to 68.50 | Flower Vases,... 21.00 to 108.00 Bread Trays....17.50 to 29.50 | Monogram of Three Script Letters Engraved Free of Charge Special for Wednesday Only JUNIOR NORFOLK SUITS Regularly $8.95 $6.95 TTRACTIVE Junior Norfolk Suits, as il- lustrated, of durable high-grade Brown or Drab Corduroy with saddle pocket; finished with smart white pique collar; sizes3to 10years, BOYS’ CLOTHING-—-THIRD FLOOR ee ) } ~ ti ‘ _ a : rome vaneless