The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1919, Page 16

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eee es. ee ees eee HIINGER STRIKES WON'T WIN. |STOCKER KILLED IN FLIGHT. If Irish Prisoners Won't Bat, They May Starve. rv DUBLIN, Nov. 25.=No more prison- @re will be liberated, nditionally or un- conditionally, for hunger striking, it & @Mcially announced. Hunger strikers must be responsible for the consequences of their acts. Notice was also given that there will be no further amelioration of the treatment of prisoners convicted un-| the Delaware River, six miles below er the Defense of the Realm Act. here. ‘This notice Is regarded very seriously | The cause of the accident has not tn _Irieh political circler, for it le ex-|/benn determined, but officials at the Elerous and that deaths will follow. The [Philadelphia Navy Yard sald it prob- Gtect on irish fecling, now awaiting the |ably was due to bad air currents. The eduction a) Home Rate Bilt woald |men were testing the machine. , a vi e Thomas Ashe, Sinn Fein leader, who| tion and Repair, Navy Depa Wewtenant Who Saw Service Over North Sea and an Inspector Die. PHILADBLPHIA, Nov. %. Robert Stocker of Washington, D. C., and Fred Thompson of Dover, Me. a civilian aeronautic inspector, lost their lives yesterday when a naval airplane of the “NE” type piloted by the Lieu- tenant dropped several hundred feet into tment, and died in May, 1916, as the result of a|was noted for his daring flights during hunger strike and whose fate power- the war over the North Sea in search fully affected the Irish Convention. of U boats. | Kid /othes Manly boys want mannish styles—Kid Klothes are styled just like our men’s clothe'—no wonder they’re popular with the youngsters! Mothers want fabrics that will last—Kid Klothes are made of sturdy all-wool fabrics, That’s why Mothers like them. Kid Klothes sell for one-third less because we make them ourselves—our store is on low-rent Walker Street—we sell to more boys than any other store. $2.95 to SPF Moe & Son | && 9-125 Walker'Street 32% Every Subway or ‘'Elevated”’ (req Broek, nm and New m York transfers tt to Canal Street Station, within sight of our store. STORE OPEN 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.° REA WEDNESDAY R West of Fifth Avenue * Women’sImported Kid Gloves 2.45 Our regular $2.87 This exceptional opportunity to buy Hearn’s Special- ized Vassar gloves below to-day’s wholesale cost will appeal most particularly to gift buyers, for there is really nothing nicer to send as your Christmas remembrance than these lovely gloves. Imported French Kid Gloves—*‘Vassar” brand made only for Hearn—2-clasp—over-seam and pique — black, black with white stitching, all white, or white with black stitching—tan, gray, beaver and navy. See page 27 for our 3-column advt. MARCH FOR 500,000 ARMY. — Lieut. | ‘THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBE R 26, 1919. skeletonized to 60 per cont. of its |eantzoa to fight any crusade against to- Corrects Mistaken Deduction Prom | W0Uld show about 0 men, which {nd started @ campaign by tobacco users skeletonized to 60 Hin Annoal Report. make 260,000 men. Gen. March said to-day he was bas- WASHINGTON, Nov, %.—The optn-|ing his estimate on the army corps Jon of the Army General Staff and|4@s a practical unit completely or ° an@|ganiaed. Five auch corps on. that the Administration is that @ peace / basis would mean an army in excess time army of 600,000 men is the mini-| of 1,000,000 men. mum necessary to care for the na ali - tional interest, Gen. March, Chief of| BEGINS FIGHT FOR TOBACCO. Staff, declared to-day, correcting an Defender.” In its first issue the Defender charges Dr, Clarence True Wilson, Secretary of Episcopal Church, with slandering Amer- {can soldiers when he asserted that “young mon trained at great expenae by interpretation of his annual report, | |the Government had to be led out of the published Sunday, which placed thé| New League Aims to Combat All fighting rank to have cigarettes stuffed mintmum at 260,000. Gen. March sald he never had changed hin estimate of Adverse Legintiation. 600,000 ax the smallost advisable. , j + wee: eb In. his report the General. recom-| WASHINGTON, Nov. 25. mended one field army of five corps tional Tobacco oi | This is, says The Na-|itbel an ever tradi League of America.” or-' courage of an Ame OWEN DAVEN-O The Great New York Idea Complete Living Quarters cent.” would |to combat anti-tobacco legislation, It publishes an official organ called “The the Temperance Board of the Methodist Combined in. One Room {This bachelor, who dines at The Club, Schenleys, or The Automat, as the time or occasion requires, has solved his Living Quarters problem in a very delightful and really sensible manner. ; 1 He has but one Living Room. Here he may entertain his friends. It is beautifully furnishéd—and having fewer rooms than before, he can well afford to have better living room furniture. The great surprise in this room is the Bed. TIt is a full size, dee ringed, highly comfortable bed—just as com- fortable as any bed for w ab one would pay $100. ; {1 The bed folds into the Davenport—absolutely out of sight. It does not make the Davenport look any different than Gites fins Davenports. {| Here is the Great New York Idea. A space saving—help saving— Furaiture saving—each item a money saving. Every New York home that hasn’t an Owen Daven-o is wasting money. The more in the family—the more need for one or more Owen Daven-os. Prices Begin at $49.50 You may pay for an Owen Daven-o while it earns for you. DTOwm@ 66 West 45th Street 34 East 23d St., Manhattan 63 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn Our Sathple Floor at the 23d St. S tore can save you money on Amer- ican Walnut and Mahogany Period Bed Room aad Dining Room Suites. We own our own factory and save you the retailer’s profit. | OPPENHEIM.GLLINS & C Fulton Street, Brooklyn 3 Daven-o Stores Visit the nearest ono— a fine new one at 66 West 45th St. To-morrow Wednesday A SALE OF COATS 24.00 Regular Values to 45.00 Women’s and Misses’ Fur Collar Coats Exceedingly handsome and becoming models, fash- ioned of Silvertone and Velour Cloth, Can be selected in the season's smartest colorings; lined and interlined, Due to Extreme Reductions—All Sales Must Be Final. 4 ‘ aaaaeaeaeaeaeaeaSSSS0°0—SsSsSsSs eee Prince aboard t ~ Thanksgiving Means so much to us all this year. There are so many things to be thankful for. We are thankful tor all the good things which this great country provides—food, shelter, safety, lib- erty and opportunity—in greater measure than any other country on earth. We are thankful because we have been able to provide, so fully and so efficiently, good things for men to wear, good values and fine*service. We are thankful for the contidence which our patrons have reposed in us and we hope to continue to merit that confidence. We are thankful we’re living in these mo- mentous days—and we're sure you are, too. Kuppenheimer and Brill Suits & Overcoats, $40 to $100 Evening Clothes for Men New and Absolutely Correct in Every Re-pect, Town and Country Coats The most swagger Overcoats shown this season, English Raglans, with belt or without, just the thing for motoring, driving or walking, in town or out—*60 to’ $165, 5} 8 2 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn 125th St, at 3d Avo. 47 Cortlandt Street 279 Broadway 44 East Mth St. Broadway, at 49th St. 1456 B’way, at 42d St. ASK. FOR THE NEW KUPPENHEIMER STYLE BOOK -peresnee — - : A Prince of Wales Portrait ree With Next Sunday’s World will be distributed a fine 10x13 photograph of the Prince. separately printed on high grade paper, as a souvenir for those who saw him on his recent visit to New York and who may wish to keep it as a memento of that | occasion. . N. B.—This photograph was especially autographed for this purpose by the e Renown on Friday morning, 24 hours before he sailed.

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