Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WRITER, 1S DEAD Article Appeared Yesterday | Preme Court = inder A Tas Appeints, Divinon sot the, Oe hie announcement that he would con- ‘tori Judge Haskells tre Aronsed. test the ‘The offer of a $4,500 job in the, State Comptroller's office. made to ex-Sherift Alfred T. Hobiey of Brooklyn, following District, of Kare | OM nt 3 ell yesterday to criticise the Frtrenage in bolstering Guberna- booms. im the Fourth As- | mney due | / —Was Journalist for Many Years and an Author. journalist and au- Ged at ¢ o'clock last night in Motel Clendening, No. 202 West) | Btreet, after two days’ iliness| pectoris. Mr. Chambers, years old, was active until es “Walks and Talks,” his) @afiy cotumn which for sixteen years @pptared in the Brooklyn Daily ‘was published yesterday. Born at Bellefontaine, O., he was from Cornell University in He studied law with United Attorney General Brewster, after a few years of this he joined New York Tribune. A year later equipped an expedition to the ‘aters of the Mississippi River discovered Elk Lake, Minn, He joined the staff of the New York and worked as a correspond- Mt in many parts of the world. ! ‘his feats as a reporter was entrance to Bloomingdale as a patient, and writing his A great reform followed. | 1886 the was made managing editor the Herald, in which position he ued- three years. He was the editor of the Paris Herald, and Was managing oditor of The World from 1889 to 1891, Since that time he @pent much of his time in travel- in many lands, He began writing for the Eagle in 1904. pects ED COP NOT WORKMAN, , HIGH COURT RULES Compensation Law Does Not Apply to Patrolman Hurt While Work- ing in Station. A policeman is not a workman within the meaning of the Workman's Com- PEnsation Law, according to a decision of the Court of Appeals just handed down in the case of Cornelius Ryan, a Patrolman, who claimed compensation ‘ander the law for injuries which he Received when he fell from a box in @ station house. fh m was attaching an electri iB when ‘the box on wilen: he wees ding collapsed. He was injured an the Corporation Counsel, in trying The Confection of Perfection) FOR AGLE CHOCOLAT and % Pound Package to wet hi im compensation, rgued that EATING AND DRINKING Horton Says: Sheffield Quality Is a Definite, Tangible Commodity “Quality” used so loosely that it almost ceases to. mean anything fo me. And yet when I want to talk of Sheffield Milk I find that no other term so well expresses what I want to say as the word “Quality.” It is a good word. Too good to be so badly abused. So instead of discarding a good expression I am going to try to make it effective by telling you just what “Quality” means when I use it in connection with our products. ‘ I reading advertisements I see the word Sheffield Quality is a definite commodity. It is an actual tangible something that you get in every bottle of Sheffield Milk that you buy. To. define this Quality I am going some years back and tell you a story. The real founder of this Sheffield business was a man by the name of L. B. Halsey. Not many of you have ever heard of him. But it won't hurt you to know that he, was a power- ful influence in the milk business many years ago and New York never had a stancher ad- vocate of milk decency than Mr, Halsey. In the old days he was a competitor of mine. The kind of a competitor that inspired respect. He kept me on the jump to keep up with his conception of Quality. Mr. Halsey once said that he would never offer a customer milk of less than 5% butter fat content. .When you know that the legal standard is 3% you will realize what that meant. It meant that he was giving to his customers milk nearly 70% sicher than the law required his competitors to give. He carried out His resolve until competition and the growing demand made it impossible to provide milk of that grade in sufficient volume, SHEFFIELD FARMS COMPANY, New York There simply wasn’t enough 5% milk to go around. But notwithstanding the pressure of competition and constantly growing costs Mr. Halsey, and the Sheffield Company after him, always sought the richest milk available and have kept the cream content of their supply up to the highest possible point. We cannot sell 5% milk now. It is an eco- nomic impossibility. But our figures for the last four months of 1919 show that the average of the milk bought by us had a butter fat con- tent of 4.01%. And I want to register here my personal assurance that what we buy from the farmer you get without subtraction or ad- dition, This butter fat content of 4.01% is 3314% above the legal requirement. It represents a charge in our monthly milk bill of over $150,000 more than milk of legal standard would cost. It is butter fat (cream) that determines the money value of milk. It largely determines the food value as well, When our competitors are abandoning sec- tions where the Jerseys and Guernseys make milk that is high in butter fat and costs too much for them at the farm, we are constantly taking up Creameries in these sections that Sheffield customers may enjoy the delights and benefits of this rich milk, And so we get down to the real basis of “Quality”—butter fat—Cream and other solids. Sheffield Milk contains more of these, more of the things that cost us money, more of the ele- ments that make it valuable to you. I will tell you later of some other factors that enter into Sheffield Quality. LOTON HORTON, President. Choarance Gall Moe Levy & Son 2151 Suits—2882 Overcoats Before we ever reduced our prices—they were already one-third lower than other stores. These Clearance Sale reductions mean that every Suit and Overcoat in our immense stock—all-wool and smartly styled—is now priced a little over half its real value. Entire stock re- 3710. C.’s were $50 duced without reserve. Now 112 Suits were $25 $ 2 | 50 ‘63° nee nnnres ae cetewnereneetbereeyenemnssnaven tenes anes eats 281 Suits were $45 314 Suits were $50 286 O. C.’s were $45 244 Suits were $35 246 Suits were $40 185 O. C.’8 were $35 175 0. C.’s were $40 Now 4° Now 247 O. C.‘swere $30 609 0.C.’8 were $55 566 0.C.’8 were $60 Now 144 Suits were $30 296 O. C.*swere $25 245 Suits were $56 214 Suits were $60 233 0. C.’s were 885 RT re NE ee nen New ‘York Our Only City Store 119-125 Walker Street or ‘‘Elevated’’ from Brooklyn and New York transfers direct to Canal Street Station, within sight of our store Every Subway Evenings Until 7—Saturdays Until 10