Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
the by-laws, have no say Oscar W, Mapes, who ment in part faljows: CTIEAPER MILK KK DUE NOW into se: Present system of fixing prices, wnich | BOY! PAGE W. J. BRYAN! 4t Chicago in 1996. Silver yesterday is an arrangement between the deal- sold ut $130 an ounce. At thd coinage ers and the Dairymen's League Ex- | to 1 the sliver metal in 0 ecutive Board, by which “the rank aver eee ee Daan oy worth B1iz82, 80 that at proe- and file of the farmer cording to $1.20, ent prices the silver in a dollar is at was one of THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1919. a very slight premium. | | Silver bullion In New York yesterday | sold at a price which rehabijitates the | r to do this we will call | Atlantic City Lads dty Lads Pevished | in the originators of the Dairymen's League, presented a pan to the com- ( ot, haute Klingman to Ask Recount. educing the price of mil. aiiver Market, making Assemblyman Benjamin C, Kling- * according to the Mapes tent worth more than the fa | man, Democrat, of the 19th District, | proposition, the system would be re-! the money, Stver bullion in the igre Kings, refuses to concede defeat by | versed. Instead of the prices being has paased the 16 to 1 ratio, which was “8 ‘ 2 lower at the stores than at the con- the original coinage value of the dollar. | John Damico, Republiean. He served Lainatll door, the delivery of milk to} Demanding that this ratio be arbi- on the Board icf Blections that the consumers’ door would be cheaper “ ed in the face of the|he proposed to apply to the Supreme | than at the stores. ee a tant: ectiee Court for an order to show cause why | depreciation that existed, Willlam J Bryan made his famous cross of gold speech at the Democratig Convention the ec Damico's majority over Kilngmen on nt should not be ordered. | faco of the returns was 391. ator chr. Instead of transporting the mille in forty-quart cans or bottles as now, I would equip these refrigerator cars with larger cans, or tanks of the same type, holding say 1,000 quarts each, Titese would be permanent fix- County, and a member of the Dairy- men's ‘League. He denounced the officers of the Dairymen’s League, and insisted on calling them “Cooper & Co.", instead of the Dairyman's aagllgeenioa : perated Public Tired of Present Intolerable Con- i tures In the cars and provided with ditions. Langue, Mr. Cooper and the execus| Meco ‘at the bettoas and p. neck for no small denunciation by Mr,| Md cover large enough for convenient : filling and cleaning. phie Loe! le Strom By So, Irene b: * “The milk can,be drawn from the Fils chief attack was to the e! that 90 per cent of the dairym: would prefer to be freed from thi Dairymen’s League under its pres- ent management, but the group run- ning the organization was powerful enough to stop any attempt to change the state of irs; that even tho! farmers who had the courage of their convictions were practically’ at the merey of the Dairymen’ aes 4, be- cause they could make it dificult if not impossible for farmers to sell milk independently, He gave it as his opinion that the farmers could sell milk much cheaper in New York than it ts sold to-day if Fp were itted to sell at a lower figure than the prices agreed upon between the dealers and the Dairy- men's Leaguo officers, He said that the Qountry Milk Company, which rep ted a num- ber of farmors, sold mtik last June in New York City at 7 cents a quart when dealers were selling at 14 cents, ond that no money was lost in tho process, Ho said that individual farmers could not continue to sell milk at a lower price because of the arrangement the Dalrymen’s League pn RS with the buyers of milk—the “Why do you stay in the peagne bine ‘der those circumstances?” he “There have been investigations and investigations in the milk industry, Uis committee is going to come {gome conclusion so that the price o¢ milk can be "The public will not be satisfied ‘this state of affairs any longer. fre living in a new age and gen- ” these words, Dr. Copeland, Chair- of the. Fair Price ‘Milk Commit- us ents 1. Buin. to0 representa- five of the Now York Milk Confer- Board, representing the dealers, Gelays in getting answers to im- portant questions will make the com- ‘mittee all the more insistent in secur- ing the imformation and in solving . the question at issue. ) ‘The cominittes hag asked the deal- ere to submit plans or suggestions by which the milk price could be re- and some of these are expected presented at the next meeting Hall. cooling tank in the pasteurizing sta- tlon directly into these permanent | tanks in the cars by means of a pipe or hose equipped with a non-foaming faucet. “When these cars of milk reach the city they would be run upon an ele- vated switch and kept well iced until the milk is wanted for distribution “My next step would be to call into have in mind a@ delivery truck on the order of @ moving van, except that the entrance would be at the side next the curb, instead of at the rear. , T! interior should ve neat and sania with three tanks and non-foaming f: ceta, one large, one smaller one tor pure milk, which should be of the same capacity as the tanks in the cars, for skim milk, and also one for light croam such as consumers are in the habit of taking from the tops of the milk bot- tles in marty cases, “These milk and cream tanks would be well jacketed to protect the con- tents from heat and freezing, the one for puré milk ulso having an agitator to keep the cream from rising to the top. “In order to get the benefit of the lowest possible cost of delivery, con- sumers would bring their tainers to the curb, pass them in their ticket or cash, and quickly filled from the desired “For the benefit of those consum who did not care to come to the aro of the items that is assuming as the investigation pro- the matter of delivery. other helpers accompany each delivery outfit to pring empty containers from "I tt eouta have these delivery ou*. fits make one daylight round of each streat in cold weather and two rounds in hot woath ‘or whol | consumers like ho-| és regarded as one of the large | asked, 12 dott of milk was milk I must be a member of the as 4 milk producer. You must have ‘Pho suggestion generally offered ts bargain, You must hive some pro-|trade that can bost afford to pay stores, delicatessen various grocery Co. ‘There is no other co-operative The dealers now collect. 100 cents on tels and restaurants the milk can be) farmer’s bill, I want the @ first the modern refriger- |, use what I will call a rolling store. I) | pull back to sbore, I would have one or more boys or| the dbor-step or kitchen and return | Boat as They Battled to Overcome the Tide. ATLANTIC CITY, Nov. 11.—While naval and civilian seaplane , navi- gators were searching the ocean for sixteen-year-old John Ledtttter and Raymond Iszard, also sixteen, pupils at the Winchester School, who were last seen Friday when they started on @ hunt for ducks, their bodies were found three miles off Cape May in a rowboat. Exposed to the cold and drenched by the combers in the open craft, and without water or food for two days, the boys succumbed to ex- haustion, according to Coroner Fox, who took the bodies in charge. Mrs. Gertrude Ledbetter, mother of one of the boys, was in ono of the planes that searched over the ocean for thirty miles, and it is now believed the cruiser in which sho rode passed near the boys, but the navigators failed to see them. Mrs. Ledbetter once sighted what she thought to be a rowboat, but when the plane came down to the water's surface it proved to be a barrel. Fitch, a fisherman, who was returning from the banks ton miles out in a power dory. He sighted the rowboat bobbing up and down in Cold Springs Harbor. He thought it only a boat adrift, but a@ he came nearer he saw the lifeless bodies of the boys crumpled over their oars. They ap- parently had succumbed while fight- ing gamely inst a strong tide to The spot where the bodies. were re- covered’ is forty miles from the point from which the young hunters started. They had been swept, un- noticed from the shore, out of the | Ocean City inlet by the swift current. The strong winds that blew Friday and Saturday carried them to sea and down the conat. Mr. and Mra. C. 8. Iszard of No. 241 East Hainesberry Avenue, Philadel- The bodies were found by James} ly! 6 ch Sheth BROOKLY. AASIAMNOI TS thal) bAti ChB LIM AHelaly Os ja! Complete with Imperial Roll-Edge Mattress, Englander Link Spring. be comverted Sold by All Furniture and Department Stores. ENGLANDER SPRING BED CO. WRITE FOR BOOKLET OF ENGLANDER PRODUCTIONS FOR SLEEP AND fest. atti i band sierra Can from a Couch 10 a full size Bed for two. Best POWDER 10c. ia, havo returned home with the jody of their son, For Your Silver HIGHEST POLISH with LEAST EFFORT! ELECTRO-SILICON quickly cleans and imparts a beautifal and lasting lustre to Silverware, Aluminum, Nickel, Cut Glass, and all fing metals— | without scratching or marring | CREAM 10¢. and 25¢. Sold by Grocers, Druggists, and leading dealers everywhero. Keeps Your Silver At Its Best transported in this same type of de- very trucks and drawn into their and it is generally con-/ “I haven't any other thing to do,” \ 6, The agreement among tho prohibited in the city, the price ‘would | 4 the league because you must have|them filled, charging wel for this that milk in bulk, and also the bot- tection for the farmers, but . the regs that will Assure suitable di: the 4 PACs wore ite {felling agency at the present time. every 100 pounds of milk delivered to stop that immediately, bats heck cans at thelr doors. sererbena™ and it a generally on he answered. “If I want to sell my era enables them to keep me out @rop considerably. some way by which the farmers can|extra service. This is the, glass of be distributed among tho ted, shall trouble ts that the league 1s Cooper & | den You have the remedy in the league. the station. He takes that that we will be able to clean 6 of the objections that is sure) || to be raised to my plan is that con- operate with the consumer, Ger 4 & bring milk Rzer York ‘ity as cheaply as “I would like to have the privi- lege of taking milk from the road station here and deliver it anywhere im any part of Manhattan, and put it in the store at between 10 and 11 That is loose milk. You would have to have 1% cents for bot- tled milk to make it @ paying propo- sition, You can sell bottled milk t between 12 and 13 cents in this city—not to the store but to the in- dividual” ‘The substance of Mr. Strone's state- ments was to the effect that although @ co-operative association of farmers would be beneficial both to the pro- duder and the consumer, under the 'be they elther bottles or the usual small-topped tin pall holding one, two, three or four quarts each. “My answer is that the same hot water and soap with ich the cook cleans your greasy dinner plate or — itcher will clean the milk bottle i} equally well, particularly if it in attended to as soon as the milk is cents. which I am _ proposing te much of the present ts, both In the city and country, all of the costs of duplica- tion of service a all of the enor- Hints %;...Home , x When you are shopping for laundry supplies, shop here UYING for your laun- dry is like buying for ‘your kitchen or pantries. Simplex Electric Iron—$0.50 It means remembering Q to get several articles, many eal as small as a cake of laun- § dry soap, but just as im- 2a Laundry Boap—$1.80 a dose portant as things that cost 4 ii ten times as much, Our business is to meet your household require- ments, in big items and little items, so conveniently and so well that you need never wonder about quality nor question the price. fewts & ConceR 45th Street & Sixth Avenue, New York attention. to evry tryigg times. Union Stock Yards, Address Swift & Company, Central Office, 32 Tenth Avenue G. J. Edwards, District Manager snows WHAT BECOMES OF Criticism and Citizenship It is the plain, public duty of every citizen to criticize proposed government measures believed to be harmful. . Swift & Company is in a better position perhaps, than others, to understand the meat packing business in all its relations to public and private interests, even though the others may have giving the subject a great deal of sincere Swift & Company is convinced that interference with its legitimate business function by governmental agencies, however well intentioned, would be an injury man, woman and child who wants meat to eat, as well as to the men who raise the meat and to those who dress and distribute it. Maximum service that cannot monopolize because of keen competition and lack of control over sources of supply is furnished at a minimum of profit—a frac- tion of a cent per pound from all sources. Therefore Swift & Company is taking every legit- imate step of citizenship to prevent such interference. These advertisements are intended to help you, and to help Congress decide what is best to be done. Mistakes are costly and apt to be harmful in these Let us send you a Swift “Dollar.” Chicago, Ill.” Swift & Company, U.S. A. Seventeen Wholesale Distributing Markets inGreater New York been OPEN MONDAY AND A Limited Number of Beautiful SATURDAY EVENINGS Convenient Terms if Desired Complete with a beautiful Player Bench. ——Free Twelve Rolls of Music of Your Selection, Delivery HHESE beautiful player pianos are guaranteed. Every to Your Home—— member of your family can play them perfectly with- out any previous knowledge of music. VICTROLAS a» GRAFONOLAS ALL SIZES Come in and we will gladly play for you any of The Latest Victor and Columbia Records WISSNER 55-57 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn ,2pveste 53 East 34th St., New York Wissner Factories, Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn Brooklyn’ sBiggest |~ eng rnig advert 219, 221, 223, 225, 227 eee ia Grand Street the biggest stock of m C2) | Wo shave beautiful. finely falshed Din V alte dods a New “Account. Bet. 4th and Madison Aves. OU may get het drinks and hot meals —indoors and outdoors— quickly with Theroz Fuel, _ which gives a safe, con- centrated heat and stays solid while burning. og. Nothing quite like it for every-day, practical use and for emergencies when quick heat is nec- essary. Cooks meals in a hurry, heats shaving water in a jiffy. Motor- ists and campers find it a necessity and a pleasure for the meals it pro- vides. Price 15c a can. For sale at all Liggett's Drag Stores and at other drug, de- partment, hardware, grocery and sporting goods stores, THE THEROZ COMPANY Woolworth Building’ New York Credit House “| Smith Street Cor, Driggs Av: BROOKLYN Cor, Wyckoff St, The Old Reliable House of WHALEN BROTHERS carries ium and high grade goods and gives easiest and best credit terms of any house in the city Fall Clothing So al ch as “Piece Suits wtook at a hides » 164, 166, 168 and 170