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\ HIRSHFIELD TRIED TO“FRAMERIM UP,” et to Use Baff Check _as Pasis of Graft Charge, He Says. GRAND VISITS JURY, ‘Ousted Markets Chief Asserts O’Mally Statement Amounts btu, to Confession, Dr. Jonathan C. Day, deposed Com- missioner of Markets, again appeared before tho Extraordinary Grand Jury ‘thie afternoow and resumed his nar- Fative of the inside workings of the Hylan administration as observed by ‘htm. Dr. Day said he was prepared to give the jurots an account of one transaction in which le alleges Com- miésioner of Accounts Hirshfield tried to “frame” him. “Last June Harry Baff, a poultry dealer of West Washington Market, came to me and told me Commis- sioner Hirshfield was trying to frame mé on a charge of tuking graft for fu¥ors to stand owners in West Washington Market,” Dr. Day said. ‘Baff told jne that Barnet Cohen and William Jacobs had told Hirsh- field that among the-checks of the firm of Baff & Cohen there was a check for $600 payable to cash and that that check was given or was intende for me for favors { am al- Jeged to nave given Batt. “Hirshfield subpoenaed the check and Baff. On the back of the check were the letters D. D.. which Hirgh- field immediately interpreted as meaning ‘Dr. Day,’ though it just as well might have meant ‘Dirty Davy.’ ‘When Baft refused to testify as Hifshfield wanted him to, Hirshfield locked Baff !n a room in his office for several ‘hours. “After Baff got out he came up to v MISS PRISCILLA TAYLOR BRIDE OF LIEUT. LANIER AT ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S ‘WRITS TO EXILE. GOLDMAN AND BERKMAN HERE Government Finds a Way to Deport Anarchists to Russia at Once. Warants for the deportation of Alexander Berkman and Emma Gold- man were delivered this afternoon to Byron H. Uhl, of Immigration Acting Commissioner at Ellis Island. The warrants. came from the Bureau of Immigration, Department of Labor at Washington. Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman are required to be at Bllis Island by noon to-mor- row Advices from Washington to-day were that Immigration Commissioner Caminetti, had ordered the couple deported to Russia. Harry Weinberger, attorney for cmma Goldman and Alexander Berk- n, whose deportation to Russia has been ordered, said that Berkman was in this ety to-day and was expected to be at Weinberger’s office before nicht. Emma Goldman, who spoke at a Chicago meeting of radicals last night, is expected at the lawyer's of- fice before noon to-morrow, when Weinberger said he would have both R €laborate Wedding of Society Girl. In St. Bartholomew's Church, yes-| terday afternoon at 4 o'clock, Miss Priscilla Thorne Taylor, daughter of his clients ready to turn over to the Mr, and Mrs. James Blackstone Taylor | immigration officers for deportation, of No. 903 Park Avenue, was married! ‘The authorities of the Department to Lieut. Berwick Bruce Lanier, U. S| of Labor announced in Washington N., of Baltimore. The ceremony, which} jast night that alt technical difficul- was performed by the Rev. Dr. Leigh-| ties in the way of sending Emma ton Parks, rector of the church, was| Goldman and Berkman back to Eu- followed by a reception at the Colony) rone had been cleared away. There could be no opposition to the Club. | A feature of the bride's costume was! deportation order by the woman, , provided she was al- the veil of old family lace, which had) Weinberger said belonged to her great-great-grand- | jowed to cl the port at which she mother. Her gown was of white satin| was to land on the other side and was with a court train, She carried orchids | fies to pay tier own Way ‘ and white roses. >, : Emma Goldman in her Chicago Mise Mildred Taylor, a younger s18-) syocch said that she felt sure of being ter, who served as maid of honor, was! 11,15 to prove that she became a citl- in pale blue silk and brown tulle, with! zen thirty-five years ago, when she a hat to match. The bridesmaids, all) married an id that she would return to this country before | Reception at Colony Club Follows | Bee me, and he and I weit to the of- fice of. my attorney, Mayer C. Gold- man, where he set forth all these oc- currences in an affidavit, which I have and whieh I am very willing shall be brought to the attention of the Grand Jury. “The facts in the case are that ‘Wiliam Jacobs sold out stands in ‘West Washington Market to Baff for $1,850 without first obtaining the ap- proval of the'Commissioner of Mar- kets, For that transaction, I kicked Jacobs out of the market. Afterward Baff went into business with Barnet Cohen, The busines failed, and Cohen claimed that Baff trimmed him, It was then that Cohen and Jacobs went to Hirshfield with the story of the oheck with which Hirshfeld tried to frame me “When I got wind of how Hirsch- field tried to frame me I went to Mayor Hylan and told him my griev- ances. He seemed to be absolutely diginterested, but his interest may be nroused now, because I intend to get this affidavit, which was verified on , 1919, before the powers that we r, Day said he also wishes to tell jrand more in detail about e Jury the $260,000 surplus fund from. the sale of army food. ‘He said the state~ ment made by Mr. O'Malley in an- swer to his charges concerning the fund amounted to @ “confession.” —————— No Southern Trip Planned for Wilson. WASHINGTON, Dec. 4,-—Pr Wilson will spend Christmas at the White House, officials there said to-day, following reports that a Southern trip was being planned for him, “LQVE CONQUERS ALL,” NEW GRAND JURY MOTTO, CAUSES “A SENSATION Reporters Excited Until They Learn Placards Belonged to Matri- | monial News Publisher, EPORTERS in the Criminal Courts Building who peeked into ths a Jury Room R this afternoon, rushed breathless to the telephones toitip their offi- oes to be ready for the biggest story of the year The young men were not sure whether Almirall and Swann had buried chet, Hylan and Hedley had come together, of Hearst and Gov i had called it off, but they Something Big im 1 All four y Grand Jury Roam were « with striking the bigge f which we and most ONQUPRS ALL THING er motto was “Don't borrow — trouble—get married and have trouble of your own;" and then there was a pretty poem If } marry & man of fifty To love him I should strive; But woul t be more thrifty yet V\VO, of twenty-five? ished to Assist~ ' t A‘tormey Kilroe about it w uid M Kilroe “4 wiorday in presente ee Aagaiiet Johann Ale Devt Div ioneral of the New bop 2] » and publisher of the Matrimonial News and Cupid's Advertiser, who has been indicted for obtaining money wader false prevensé,” motets! i of whom wore peach colored silk and) } x Sei ong. brown tulle and caried chrysanthe-| ‘ja session of the Congressional mums, were Miss Katharine Ww Committee investigating the conduct Knapp, Miss Ellen Swann De Ford, of the Department of Labor with re- Miss Myra T. Fraser, Miss Elizabeth ate 1a, Ah dicala ordered by gaps catharine and Udesirable was not held at Bilis weet and ve peer a tele and to-day. Committeeman Isaac yee . | el went to Ellis Island and ob- Ovieut. J. D. H. Kane, U. 8. N. was! tinted from Abraham Shell of the best man, and the ushers were James Logal Depar t the full records of Blackstone Taylor jr, William R. Is.| the 607 radicals sent there pending de- "Taylor jr. and Lieuts, Fraser, Keleher, portation proceedings, which he said and be would take to Washington to be hie Davidson, Holloway and) iia "before tho full committee, Others on the committee were at Washington prepared to examine Sec- PHONE GIRLS DEFY SMOKE ret 1 Wilson, Assistant Secretaries Abercrombie and Post ex- back in New York Mon- mination of Deputy AND STICK TO POSTS 3s"*%.;°."" as | Commissioner Frederic C. Howe. ‘ : Intimations that surprise is In Gas Held Firemen at Bay When) «tore for the couple when they are " oS ° surrendered to-morrow were given Small Blaze Started Under to-day by Byron H. Uhl, Acting Com- Movie. missioner of Immigration at the Island, Billy Gibson, the fight promoter, dis- I understand the Department has covered @ blaze in the cellar of the five somethin, up its sleeve,” ‘he said, story building No. 368 East 149th Street at 4A. M. to-day, A moving picture 1 dor disagree t know, just what it 4 with the contention theatre is on the ground floor of the of Harry Weinberger, Attorney for building. the two defendants, that they must . be deported to Soviet Russia and that ‘The firemen could not get into the A ch action cannot be taken untit the cellar because of smoke, and when they | {Hh acuon can isen the’ bolshes through the theatre finally chopped floor of two layers of wood with con- deere Topi Gaps ACIOSL crete between, escaping gas camo UP iy the co whence the, aliens {n euch volume they stil! could not go came,” he s They can be de- into the basement, and Deputy Chief ported to ussia regardless of Hayes, after gas company employees Chunges gove enme nt failed, ec a the Rescue Squad. je num oF Lhe now at the ‘The helmeted boys made a recort |*!4nd ra Feet renan being tiid pul out the fire. The damage DY und silence “strikes, while was $200. Sim filled the Me Ah nan may have to join (clephone exchange nearby, but nota Ethel Bernstein and Dora Lipkin, wir deserted her posts Who also were on strike, ‘DR. ELIOT’S UNREST REMEDY: PROFIT -SHARING, SOCIAL AID, CO-OPERATIVE MANAGEMENT Only Peace That Can Come Out of Organized Labor’s Struggle One of ‘Abso- lute Domination.” World.) CAMBRIL R. CHARLES W. ELIOT, President Emeritus D iisretnins the Economic Club of Boston to-day, the dustrial ( his opitfon, the recent ‘onference | (Special to Dec, 4, Harvard, declared that, at Washington Mass., of and its lack of resuits ought to satisfy every student of profit-sharing that nothing in he way of good industrial relations is to be expected from organized labor epre vd by the American Federation of Labor and the Four Brotherho “The only peace that can come out of their struggle,” he con- tinued, “is the peace of an elaborate domination, not only of American industries, but of the Government itself Presiden Eliot stated that he had spent an unhappy three weeks in Washington at the Industrial Conference It was a waste of ume from the beginning,” he said, “and the conclusions I arrived at was that we shall never get to any satisfactory solution of the in- dustrial relations which have been going on for so many rs be tween organized labor and aassociated capital.” Dr, Eliot said among other things “Take co-operative management and protit-sbaring together and apply both to any one of your works, and you will not be sure of success unless you have another element of social regard for industrial workere, Unless you put in every sible contrivance for promoting the health, the sense of responsibility and agreeable residence for your worke you will net be sure to win a favorable result—the result you hope for, The number of employers in this country who are now studying all these topics together is encouragingly 1a but ihe wise ones mean to use all th and they will be much 4 result.” of theese methods simultaneously, surer by so doing In getting a satisfactory ' Martha Gauthier, months’ hospital work and was struck in the thigh during a German which lett her helpiess enemy lines. While she was convalescing German hospital she defiled a man major who paid unwelcome at- tentions to her. In answer to his sneer that she had no choice ‘but to listen to him she slashed both her wrists and was very near death be- advance, inside ina Ger- No Man's Land, whither she had gone without orders. When the| wound healed she returned to field ) Four times wounded, with a five- year record of service in the afmies of France and the United States, and eight imprisonment in a German camp, Mile. Mattha Gauthier is resting in New York from her journey from France on the Steam- ship Niagara. She will go to Phila- delphia to begin life over again after @ course of treatment in Philadelphia hospitals, the ward of two adopted war brothers, Leon J. Warner of Camden, N. J. and M. H. Harrigon of Philadelphia. Mile, Gauthier, very much alive in spite of her narrow escapes from death in battle, laughed aside in- quiries as to her héalth on the ar- rival of the steamship, saying that she believed the happiness of being among American friends of her home country with whom she had loved to gerve was in itself to be her cure. Her own epuntry conferred on her the Medal Militaire, the highest dec- oration given to French soldiers for gallantry in battle, after she had al- ready won the French War Cross and the Cross of the Legion of Honor Mile. Gauthier was a student nurse when the war started. She went into the French hospital servica She was wounded in the cheek by a Ger- man bullet while giving first aid in 030006-00-8-2 Polici __ THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, ‘DECEMBER i 1919. e Seek Vainly Port Chester Home. qive a dance for Miss Talbot on Dec, J ated this year (rom Columbia. Heroine Wounded 5 Times Is Welcomed Here by Her Two ‘War Brothers’ Who Escaped German Prison and Won Highest French Honors, Comes to Live in the U.S. FIND NO TRACE OF GIRL | WHO VANISHED ON NOV, 25) |: Senaetts ONceaaLL the | for Henrietta Underhill, Fifteen, Who Left The police of New York reported tast night that a search had revealed no clue to the whereabouts of fifteen-year-old SENATE tPrED BY BUSINESS MEN FORTREATY DELAY mously Calls for Burial of Differences and Ratification. In a ement issued to-day the New York State Chamber of Com- merce rapped the United States Sen- ate for de Treaty ay in ratifying the Peace Presl- their and called upon dent and the Senate to bury differences The statement was unanimously adopted at one of the biggest meet- ings ever held by the Chamber in its headquarters in Liberty Street. Ole Hanson, Seattle's former May- or, Was a spocial guest of the organi- zation, which was presided over by Alfred E. Marley, its president. A resolution was adopted after the reading of the report of the commit- tee appointed by the to cons er the treaty in all its phas The report was read by Darwin P. Kingsley, of the New York Life Insurance Company, and Chatr+ man of the committee, It reads as follows; “To the Chamber the re pesersseteres Chamber President of Commerce: | State of New York, the business men of the whole nas | tion, believes that as a people we are now confronted in the wond of mor+ ais and in the world of trade with a] crisis similar to that which we faced on the 6th of April, 1917. We then re- | in common with alized suddenly that we had well. | nigh waited too Jong, and for nine- | teen months after that date the question of what ‘the results of our delinquency might be hung in the balance “On the 11th of November, 1918 came victory w pain felt, as Ww had not for some time surely felt, that we had a right to have pride our descent from the m in who fash- our Constitution in 1787 and fone desperate pligat. PEL CONSTITUTION Chamber of ‘Comnnieres Unani-’ “The Chamber of Commerce of the} | | | | Amendments to the 4 peace in which! cigar stub in the Hall home. i Hall decided the tooth that made print belonged to Morris O'Higging eighteen, of Morris Park, Te 1, Police learned that O'Higgins was |to meet the girl last night at Broad- way and Halsey Street, the girl go- | Ing to Brooklyn from the Hotel Madi- | son, 35th Street and Seventh Avenue, | Manhattan, where she said she had | been staying at O'Higgins’s expense, O'Higgins, with Paul Frolich, of j | teen, of No. 1169 Jefferson Avonug, | and James McLaughiin, eighteen, of WANAMAKER'S DAUSHTER WHO WILL AID IN CHANGING No, 692 Greene Avenue, path Beagle lyn, drove up in a taxi and they ag the girl were arrested—Krolich apd, McLaughlin after they had ogap. chased two block The men accused of rob! Nathan K h's store at No. Broadway, Brooklyn, when eit 0 disappeared, worth $1 The Hall girl said O'Higgins lured from home with the promise @f wealth in South America uo ial 7 Threntewed to Shoot Womnn, ie ohn at Lester, No eet Lith Street, wholesale fruit dea wan held in $1,000 bail in the Coney Ie and on a charge ae elon The complaint by Kiser, N Kighteenth nue, Bath Beach 5 sald Lest eatined to #ho: in her home atrolman Carroll o with ar eamed In. He. te d that he found 1 in a door with @ revol hie hand ee —————— HURLEY © SHOES ; NONE 80 GOOD.” assurley Shoes solve the profess lem of footwear style and core fort. Hurley lasts are scientifiy. cally designed, giving correct distribution of foot space with- out sacrificing shaping. HURLEY | ‘FARE CARSLAY 8 Wat ant cones Mrs, Barclay B. Warburton Philadelphia has just been pointed by Gov, Sproul of Penn esylvanio a member of the Com Mission of Twenty-five State Const She is a daughter of John Wanamaker and Chairman of Women's State Republican ¢ mittee Cigar Stub — _ Toothprint | Saves Girl _—_—- | | Three Men Caught—Runaway on tution, Made over a special last coe Henrietta Underhill of No, 428 Orchard I Bi d fore the arteries were bound up. sd tt thy 1008, : : nas C forepart, B instep, an 3 ter Mile. Gauthier, | Street, Port Chester, who disappeared | Preserved it in Says She Had Been Prom- 4 whotvolumarily assisted ihe nurses |from ‘her home on’ the afternoons ot| REASONS WHY AMERICA TOOK ys She H id Bee A heel. Grips the foot firmly, in the German hospital, secured a| Nov. 25, supposedly because her teacher PART IN WAR. | ised Plantation, cannot slip at the heel. r- bottle of chloroform, with which she | had admonished her for being. absent “Victory not only restored our self. | - set fitting at instep. Absolute Sener Pirercan cot ean German ares lye respect; it alto brought duties and) Gertrude Hall, fifteen, was commit-|| comfort in forepart. Wide, army nurse, made her way to the| 9), enenroe (uealea tle acae Maker opportunities. Our decluation that we ted to Kings County Hospital by!| medium and narrow toes, Reo cage ore, tanee: in, shell Doles | a girl who answered the description at| “CURMt n Hts oe tee fpolls of | Judge Wilkin in the Children's Court |) Our beautiful Cordovan shades arg, French army. She was sent to Bor-|her daughter had applied for work.| BD ETEMEGT Ss) AO: RRS OR y until she has recovered her | made possible by using only the best deaux an invalid after being twice |The girl was sent to one of the aid so-] Placed us in a position of moral| yealih sufficiently to stand trial for | leathers, being treated by the Hurts more wounded by shrapnel frag- | cleties, where she found a ph Mra, | leadership. We fought not alone to) Qainquency; Morris O'Higgins, with leyized secret process, which increases: ments. | Underhill found she was another runi-| preserve our self-respect and to de- | whom she expected to sail for Brazil || the life of the leather, retaining Lt Incapacitated for active nursing, | way girk who immediately Was rest: tomtiee laaiitetions, Wat Repth {| rich lustre to the end. she joined an American Army Hospi- | to her parents te me, bu end Wil tosday to become que of a »| tai near Bonleaux as a “civilian aide”) If wan learned that Henrietta, afty In harmony with the unselfivi mO- | Hantation id in Raymond Street Jatt HURLEY sHo€s their return to this country. They | porrowed $1 from her, saying she wanted | ent yellum programme 'stiontd be | Without ball to answer to the Grand /} 1434 Broadway 1357 Broadway induced | her to come here for trent-|at achool and did not want to let her] adopted by the tree nutions of the | Jury on a robbery charge. 1177 Broadwa: 215 Broadway ane wit photie her nome in Philadel- | for New Youk ment ‘ O delogutes at Versailles |'0 a clear stub, el Ms a phia. They met her at the pier when} As he matbar said the girl ad no love f fi nd The girl was feported missing Nov, ——— - — the Niagara docked here yesterday: | Kaen in the villager but all of them are| “When we made the demand it 's/25 by her father, Willam Hall of! olde Tier tather and mother, ‘were | ae shelr home aoe Mat demand involved: It nee, |N® 919 Madison Street. Among the] AALE-FACE flour and Killed by a bomb from a rman —eagcensmner \Cumurily involved. some sacrifice of | detectives assigned to the case was| efi 1 plane while she was in service on the * WOMAN, ip, IS ACCUSED long-cherished precedents and prac-| Alfred Farrington, who found the| pale-lace people. front. Her only brother td led in a tices ne == == ") You n’t get blood from. arms in 6 hompltaliery of gunshot wounds, 1 “it involved at least th tablish ou ca ro! . ; ibe eatablisly | we wrap ourselves in the robes of Prabeter 8° OF TAKING FRIEND AY MONEY ment of u counc iV of free nations with | Moston and self-interest would be | stone or brawn from devitalized ° D) aoe Mowe Much machinery for the {# dishonorable ws further delay) wheat. Wheatsworth Real WW antH aur Held in $500 Bail—$150 Disap. adjudication of international disputes, | Would ‘have been in ov Fag = i Whole Wheat Flour contains ° | Be al 8120 SP: Vay would xurely lennen the probability |enter the war on April 6, 1817; There-| the sixteen food substances H d | pears From Waist of Mrs, of war, The Varaaillen ‘re ut sought, Iesolved, That some form of inter-) Nature needs to build perfeet® ain ea Fishberg, 70, While 11, | Seem to some of ur ix lacing in per | atonal covenant wivet works to Bre-| bodies em ; fection, to uchieve these ends. vent war is a moral necesal . Mrs, Sarah Bleiberg, seventy-two, of hat the differences between the Let Wheatsworth Flous, ion ant Avenue, Bronx, SAYS SENATE HESITATES, DE- President and the Senate should be health d h onx, was ELAYS. build health and strengt fom ’ d by Magistrate Ten Eyck in Morri- BATES AND DELAYS. compesed without delay by such mu- yi sania Court to-day in $500 ball for ex-| "The Senate of the United |iual concessions res rding resarva-| you and yours, Bininauion AtendA “| States, faced with the specific | tions ax may be necessary : ' ; Tata Chrous (inectaken OER a8: (SOARS CoPey| provisions of a compact which | treaty to secure ratificath : Delicious natural flavor. Novel TeatMent — SPFOULS |e Mien money from the walst of her] demanded some departure from | Welding Ring, Chairman; Alfred © Tested Recipes in Kvery Bade sg ar i) Billiard Ball Lebluy ir ab hare a shberg, seventy! the well settled practices of the | Redford, Delos W. Cooke, Irving ‘I At All Good Grocers. Heavy Crop on Billiard Ba cars old, of No. 1086 Bryant Avenue,| Government, hesitated, debated, | jiuxi, Darwin P. Kingsley, Charles le 1 pevyerp piscurr co 5 > in Jerse who w tally ill at Low Ave-| delayed. And finally to the grave mer, Howard ©, Smith, Al- 1. B ‘ SCUIT CO., 3 lype in Jersey nd et yerterday ufter- nm and even tho red Marling, Philip A. 8. Frank srs ——— country at la) not the fin, Wiliam H. Porter, Bugenius H y! : f : ding to Dr. Morris Fishberg, his but no compro: | Guierridge, Kxecutt Ww Now Dr. Henry Spuulding of Na, al Mrs. Sarah Bhormas put $10 left for discus: | \Wittiam Woodward, Lait “ 12 Fulton Street, Union Hill, until) ic Mra. Mishbergtn wala. Afra Rohe mont, Otto T. Bannard, Paul M. War- . recently house physician at the North |'berg carried into. 4 drug. store hes od what we have iurg. of the Committee on Finance Hudson Hospital, does not say that When became il and Mrs, Mle pallies 9 sree, 8 and Currency. udgo . attended her ding ¢o th trade. As a consequence of this he can make hair grow on a billiard {tor of the deug Mr. Bilt unhappy condition losing |= 7 , bull painting it with jodine | Rardrattah cee ne ern. Rane moral leadership; the legitimate The baldest reporter on the staff of | Mrs. fie Working over her triend. | | commerce which victory assured ing to sion! us is slipping away. The pros- The Evening World asked for the pri- | Uor0Cling: 10 % i perity of Americ: export trade vilege of going to New Jersey to- yor ket hk A abt is largely dependent upon the ex- ‘ay, to. make inquiry about the |had turned over Live’ | tension of credits to our custom- on D. ERne ap t t Kuve hin abroa i strange case of Rudolph Thomas, | yo, yeod package whieh con pending the ratification of the | fourteen years old, who lost all his | fl ft leas t Ue umaune Auppons thus establishing a known] vandy hair eight years ago and wh seordir detert ve NAA coda Mae anmniate Cleat wivlo under treatment for a broken tiie Ind: (orgution| nding ‘the package) NHHOMAL, trade NO, adequate, credit} Fifth Avenue at 35th oe leg ip. the. Narkh Budwan stoapliel | a WORLD 18 ALARMED OVED PRO. | Established 1879 recently got a full shock of Jet blick | DENIES SHE CHASED HUBBY. TRACTED DELAY. hair after the nurses had rubbed his | llbdLb ipa layin Gh the whole warla orl TNI9 ~ r . dome with iodine at Dr Jing’s| Mes, Ciltan Haberly Aske Alls business over this protracted delay suggestion Vending Separation Sult. in evidenced by the continued and | ta? *| Dr, Spaulding said he noticed t » © her afMdavit that by holly upp cee th fall in the rates | applications of iodine to Rudolph’s| lam F Huberly once offered mental for us as exporters, us it tw{ Made in Our Own Shops nner Lied fees bond nd e, M W am M fo the infortunate peoples « fuzzy growth of hair Th osda praia | Can the food and materials whict bor their intrinsic value-- Best & €e. men's records of hair having been Od Taga duke wikia Whmeane led Gan wo sorely need I é ete 4 viel ‘| t tudolph's | Bending he trlal of her action for seme ce the responsibility for this con. | gment, wien: aiuto’ ee ¢ ua Bh? [ration “on grounds of ‘alleged wbardon: | dition. Ruther, our problem les in Jucgmen s @ and composition were | ine nd non-support e umstance: 1 we . Sony exclusively . Such that (ewould sprout hair when] Mrs. ituberiey. tomplaing of the aie | oueasives and in the practicay mere. |g Designed and tailored exclusively for New Anointed with joding, the muirse might | lnee (i her busband and an! ures that ought to be taken to solve | York men, they are as individual in style as well dye his head with the stuff o)| Fenton year ald. hiecs. whe denies! the problem, eS . was to be kent in the hospital for six |/piberiesi" ailegution that, abe ghee "Whatever th emoral or trade the fine tailor’s productions, months, anyway. luzunsky postponed the case until| effect of that fact may be, the | ‘ iss Loui junthe i uy reaty as presented cannot com | aust u shops, aaa tT Gunthi 1 Hl treaty as ted And because we make them in our own shops, treatment — persistently D —_—— mand the votes necessary to its | ing pains Cee 4 MRE KS. Spaulding’s term of duty was tir or Shootin: Over Pure ratification, BUC the GUAR thus our prices ar 9 the Rape turer's ished, Rudolph went to his home on JReeeprign rastad fe inthlerchias Oniecaene ratite whigh nccounia to thar ante Jerutchos ecause of the automobile] geanisiaua Por res pee ee erenevie: Waleeetie | profit, which accounts for another saving. aceldent which caused his injury. But | yyr and domeph Granatta,fruitasaer| geneeseions we shall soon stand | SUR ore Pele ei AAT ES SEERA ICU TLE Pree olvernmentaliy incampetentss Men's fine all wool overcoats that are Dr, Spaulding to-day. "And even if) 30° (14h Matton ciated ewith | OROPPING OF TREATY WOULD | mae ‘ : My goaenlts taglae AIAIaE weer OG afte) ting “guia Wildes “und IMPERIL BUSINESS. exceptional values. = > apex old them, oNounded| PO drop the treaty and | Mins Grace yor Introduced, | inet frulterers in Wallabout Market, | direct Sng gemerare pence With Ce 37 50 42 50 47.50 vie “ rc ve a recep pete on mn we would « y npe ne aie | ae Viator 2) Sumnoek ave & recep | Fung |can business interests but 1 be | , on yesterday afternoon in her apar base aby Xe Allies ment at No. 27 West 67th Street Mise Greta V er Engaged RA TOP Gh ee rel bi Nate |troduce her niece, Miss Grace H. ‘til-| Mr. and Mrs. ¢ lek Inwood. | altern s imutu oncession by ee [bow he debutante was ussisied in re: |on-Hudson have announced the engage-| both the President and tha Renate, > | Store Closes at 5:30 P. M. loeiving by Misses Margaret A. Tucker.| ment. of their dau t Miss Gretal "We want peace, We want it} | L, Remsen, Beatrice “Byrne, | Vorleker, to Herbert W. Forster, son of f - / fary I. ‘Lockwood, Susan Cee eee eT GIN Foaater ot Pagk| Mpeedily: but we want an honorable Margaret Douglas, Mrer Cumnock will Pill, “Yonkers. “Mri Forster Was gredut| peace, Many parts of Kurope are in| ce i a i en ET