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: i from 1897 to 1905—since that year it has doubled again. / be si THE KVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY. 21, 1920, the val 14 BOATMEN’S ONION “BIRTHDAY JOKE” vf CALLED AN OUTLAW!) LANDS HIM IN CELL "0 | ee rT Deck-Hand Arrested = After Girl A YER us ties, headed by | Alderman will Jor the Arran he Ar y to Mr. | applications rand march. armory will be Med CROSS” ON Harbor Workers Decline to Go Out on Sympathy Strike —No Fires Glass and Halts Saloon : 4 0 A ent Yet Reached. = jd-Us Po glare 3 Sl GENUINE ASPIRIN 3 , , E Committes of the Larbor Boatmen's|over his face and a gun jn his hand i ' ‘ - . eee eo lea ak cn urniture at Clearance Prices contains safe directions for Pain, Neuralgia, Toothache, Headache, Colds. and ordered the occupants to throw up| thelr handa, | ‘The proprietor, Jacob Bender, and tia daughter, Margaret, twenty-one yeare old, were in the place, The daughter | threw a glass of noda at the man, who |@ropped the gun and drew the hand-| kerohlet from iis face. He said he wan | ony fooling and that this was hie birth day | He is Harry Van Keuren, a deckhand | on the tug Comfort. He was ar A} and held in $5,000 ball to«lay for the row night, no attempt will be made! to enter into arbitration negotiations with the tow boat owners, Olsen said about 8,600 deck hands, engineers and other workers ape out, tying up 500 tuge. An investigation disclosed that less than a keore of tuys are affected. OM- clals of the Moran Towing and Trans- portation Company and the Fred B Dale) Towing Company, thé principal concerns affected, said illness of em- Ployees was causing worse interruption ’ .A Special Sale to keep our large stocks fresh. All discontinued patterns and odd pieces in every line of furniture at both stores are reduced. _It’s the smallest amount of furniture ever offered in a Spear Clearance Sale. Shop early in the day if possible, to avoid the afternoon rush. Louis KVL Site Birdseye Maple 4-Piece Mahogany Bed Room Suite — the big For Bedrooms gest money's worth you ever saw. Dining Room William and Mary Style, piece | 79 rh Grand Jury on’ a charge of attemptes Dressers, Chiffoniers, Chifforobes, ite in Jacobean Oak of their business than the strike. tobbery vf 7 P 1 7 ‘ suite in Jacobear Other —shipworkers’ organizations| Weapon, “") CAIF¥ing & concealed | special tor 199,50, Vanity Dressers, Toilet Tables, Beds, have notified the Bontmen's Union > a | Chairs, Rockers, Benches; Suites or oer i hate that se is an “outlaw” and that no/ COLLEENS IN GAELIC DRESS, | Mahogany Library, Tables. . $29.75 | single pieces in Queen Anne style or | 3-Piece Davenette Suite, Mahogany or me 804.75 sympathetic strike will be called L > | Mahogany 4-Post Bed, 4 foot 6 inch only... $29.75 | Colonial at Special Clearance Prices: | $29.75 weuiie Wak Pc re m ¥ othitty-owo fair Irish girls in ancient Mahogany Gate Leg Table $24.75 | A rare opportunity pH peand o x. athe $29 8 toad Strike On, Gaclic costumes, each ° ‘ ronier, ot Tvery. i TRINGTH, Jan, H1.—The stein of the | tative county, wih wie toon crac», You want rellef-—quickly and safe-) For a few cents you can get e handy | Mahogany Poor Lamp with sille shade $19.75 Mi Wikdier Chae $13.50 raliroad unions here, authorized by a|to the reception and ball at the ‘oun 4 ! Then insist on “Bayer Tablets ofl tin box of genuine “Bayer Tablets of Fra, cineca nereertt(ch Courrier ane Ru S Berar chide cal $29.75 vote last Saturday, became effective | Rewiment Armory on Saturday night in| Aspirin,” stamped with the “Bayer AsiiHh” CMStel re A edi Golden Oak Buffet, 44 inch $29.75 g 6 Dining Chairs, oak, 1 arm, 5 side . this morning. ‘The men aay 85,000 or | "rhe Ganen Iria’ Cennttea Associa Th Pp je Hie Wa dal claveee “ato 6-Ft. Extension Dining Table, 44 inch top. $19.75 | A few patterns, Jess than 500 Rugs 100,000 railroad workers will join their|tion ie atrancing the affair, Th edilnny ee Bayer” means you are} Drugaists also sell larger “Bayer Mahogany Wardrobe.......... $39.75 | in all, in Brussels, Velvet and Ax- : demand for an eight-hour day and al Valera will be omcorted trom: the Wale | 8ttting genuine Aspirin prescribed by| packages. Aspirin is the trade mark oe t material savings. * Ont eds ots ons week, with a minimum wage dort by an Irish pipers bang and |Physicians for over eighteen years,Jof Bayer Manufactute of Monoacetic- M minster, a’ gs. y , d_by and proved safe hy millions of people. facidester of salicylicncid,-Advt attresses | One of two of e-Kind) When these Ivory or Brass in all sizes. ee : = = A number of Cotton Felt or Hair Mattresses with | are sold there wall be no more at cut ‘ fancy ticks, Clearance Prices. prices. Special Clearance Prices SDEaAr' 6th Ave. at 16th St. |) 22-26 W. 34th St. SHEFFIELD FARMS CO. REDUCES PRICES OF MILK @ The railroads are indispen- sable to our whole economic life, and railway securities are at the very heart of most investments, large and small, public and private, by individuals and by insti- tutions. WOODROW WILSON FEBRUARY 1st, 1920 HEFFIELD FARMS wishes to thank for the fair-mindedness and co-operation shown in paying, The peak price for this winter, 18 cents a quart, was reached in December and January, and as the public expects, and have a right to expect, will now show a gradual decline as the _ cost of production and the cost of distribution becomes less. The hard traveling over icy streets will soon be over, and we are glad to offer reductions as conditions permit. its patrons i las, war could not have been won without railroads. , Transport—by rail and sea—is an indispensable arm + | of national defehse. * Carrying capacity, from the wheat fields and the mines and the steel mills to the front lines in France, was the measure of our power in war. And it is the measure of our power in peace. Industriak expansion—increasing national prosperity — greater world trade—are vitally dependent on railroad i growth. ; The limit to the productive power of this country is the } limit set by railroad capacity to haul the products of our | industry. ° The amount of freight carried on American rails doubled without complaint, .a price necessary tp enable us to maintain our high standard of quality and efficiency, On January Ist, last year, we reduced the price to our customers one cent per quart, a re- duction warranted by supply and demand at that time. This year buying milk at a price based on butter and cheese the market did not break in time for us to buy for less money. As the market is now broken, and we, on Janu- ary 20th, made our contracts with the farmers for the month of February at the butter and cheese price, we are able tc get milk at a ma- terial reduction. Consequently we reduce the price to our customers tu. ~.... us we have on our butter and eggs. No one can take any glory for reducing the price of milk. The laws of supply and demand afe the balance wheels of every industry, and particularly does this apply to the milk busi- ness, as the product is one which must be con- sumed in forty-eight hours after its arrival in the city, We.cannot resort to the storing of milk in the’ time of plenty and distribute it in the hour of need, and we hope that when the supply becomes more expensive to produce, and smaller in volume, and we come to our cus- . tomers and say that it is necessary to have another penny per quart that they will not be influenced by the hysterics of agitators, rain- bow chasers, and would-be politicians, who would have them believe that the milk dis- Milk should be sold the same as any other commodity, at its market value. The anti- quated idea, that it should be sold the whole year round at the same price, was an injustice to many and a benefit to few. It will double still again. —- To haul this rapidly growing traffic the country mist have more railroads—more cars and engines—more tracks and terminals. - Sound national legislation, broad-visioned public regula- tion, will encourage the expansion of railroads, without which the nation cannot grow. Those desiring information conremning th This advertisement is ture by tortting to The association ef Railway tescentiiee 61 Broadway, New York published by the say “axcculived. ‘ailrond situation may obtain Kiera Why should the housewife, who is obliged to live in the city for fifty-two weeks a year, pay a profit to the milkman for eight months, sufficiently large to enable him to sell milk the othet four months, at less than cost, to people who are in town only during the winter months? It is wrong in principle and wtong in practice, “‘Sealect’’ Brand, Grade A, 19c. per_quart bottle Reduction, Ic. per quart LOTON HORTON, President, Sheffield Farms Co. Inc. Florid speeches and sensational investiga- tions have never helped the milk consumer, the milk distributor, or the milk producer. What the community needs is good milk, safe milk, and geod service. It is our business to provide these. We are doing it and have done it for over fifty years. We propose to continue regardless of the shrieks of calamity howlers, Reduction, Ic. per quart Can Milk at 180 Sheffield Stores, 13c. per quart Reduction, Ic. per quart Grade B Milk, 17c. per quart bottle