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i I | of 10.40 rn CENT IN-TEXTILE MILL Per” Cee Big Dividends by Fall River Concerns Show Why Cot- ton Cloths Are High. ra ONE PAYS 50 PER CENT. Thirty-eight Concerns Pay Out | $2,325,338 in Dividends | for Quarter of Year \ (Special to The Drening World.) | BOSTON, Mass, Feb. 13.—In the| rand national hunt for the profiteers | who have made the cost of living! high and kept it high in the United States you can spend an enlightening | half-hour considering | mills, | Feots and figures revealed this! week show that the canny and con-| forvative folk who own the big mills} of New England have been “getting theirs.” They also explain, in part, the high prices of cottons and ging- hams, print goods, shirts and the Uke. .-What do you think—for example— of quarterly dividends of 10 per cent., or 40 per cent. in a single year?| Nine mills in Fall River have just announced a dividend of that size for} the first quarter of 1920. Boston folk rubbed their eyes and| began looking into “textiles” a day or ‘two ago when the newspapers printed & brief despatch from Fail River, reading as follows: FALL RIVER, Mass., Feb. 11.— The directors of the King Philip Mills have declared an extra divi- dend of 50 per cent. The total amount of the dividends to be paid to the stockholders is $750,- 000. The payment will be made some time this month in $50 Lib- erty bonds. Readers still were wondering how soon the Government's profiteer- hunters would begin an investigation of the “King Philip" when one Fall River mill after another began the quarterly tipping of its golden corn- ucopla, Such dividends! , FALL RIVER MILLS BREAK ALL RECORDS. The fact is that the mills of Fall River have broken all records for a quarter, and this at the end of four or five years of such prosperity as textiles have not known since the Civil War. The gigantic melon sliced this week by thirty-eight Fall River corpora- tions, In dividends for one-fourth of the cotton the year, amounts to $: 338.50. Pleyen concerns paid 6 per cent. for the quarter, the rat 24 per cent. per annum. Nine paid ‘fwo paid more than 10. 10 per cent. Nobody wus more interested in the nt revelation than the retail merch “If it wasn't for the greatly iner volume of business,” one said, y retzilers would be bankrupt. When the Government tackles the retailer it attacks protiteering at the wrong end. This ts a ‘seller's market,’ and to-day We approach Mr. Manufac- turer with our hats in our hands." But the biggest impression was made upon Mr, Ultiate Consumer. who is going to feel, until the facts are uncovered, that the story told by these cotton mill dividends could be repeated by the shoe shops, manufac- turers of clothing and all the other “makers,” up and down the line. The average Fall River dividend was 7.001 per cent. fyr the quarter. Tho best previous rate was | 6.196 per cent. for the third quarter of 1918. A big total of dividends for the second quarter of this year is rate of y assured, reports say, Ad- vance sales of goods are heavy and have been made at high prices. ‘The 12% per cent. advance in wag the last advance granted, was in force one month of the last quarter. THE MILLIONS MADE BY ONE TEXTILE CITY, ‘The report for the first quarter in 1920 in this one textile city is as follows, the par value of shares being $100 for eqeh corporation except the Troy, whose par is $500 DIVIDENDS FOR FIRST QUARTER, 1920, ‘of corporations— 100,000 1% 10 10 00.00 bis King Ph Vineotn Sita. ¢ Tater Mt Vaurel ako, Milla stg. Gas: Pugrin Pocaswt Mfg Te Borden Mf, C9 againor \ Beaconnct 3 ‘ ) hawinut Sta. 0.0519 ' rfrted, $173,000 News of similar rt © nes from other centr the m ¢ fon duck av 0 well, ‘Ve Mant Company hus ‘declared |semi-annual dividend of 4 per cent | laminating This is a picture of a charming littic Paris hat of rough straw trimmed with dark green tuft and wing which delightfully frames the face, its odd shape lending individuality. ‘|Parisian Milliner’s Creation Sure to Be Popular in amare _BPERCENT BEER MAY YET BE SOLD | Amsterdam Brewery Has Per- Through Druggists. The sale of pre-war beer is possible jin New York at any time physicians jfind &@ sufficient number of patients, ;Tequiring it to make profitable the breweries’ handling of the product. | This developed today, following a despatch from Amsterdam, N. Y., jthat Bowlers Brewery had resumed operation under the provisions of the |Volstead enforcement act. ‘The first brew this brewery will put out, it | was announced, will contain eight, per cent alcohol, nearty double the |strength before the war. The output, |will be handled through pharmaciste! who will fill physicians’ presoriptions, | Witiem H. Hirst, counsel for the| New York State Brewers’ Association, | said he had not heard the Bowler Brewery was to resume or that any | other breweries in New York are oon- templating doing so. The same state- ment was made at the Brewers’ Board of Trade. Mr. Hirst said the Internal Revenue regulations that provide for the sale of whiskey on | doctors’ presoriptions, the sale of brandy and wines for culinary pur- | poses and t® sale of wine for sacra- mental purposes apply as well to beer. He expressed the belief that breweries would put old-time beer on the mar- ket whenever the demand for it for medicinal purposes became sufficient | to justify it financially. New York breweries, Mr. Hirst ex- plained, are now making beer with the old-time kick, Dut it has had its heels and with it an “extra” of 4 per cent. ‘The Boston Duck makes {t a regular semi-annual of 6 per cent. and an “extra” of 5 per cert. Six months ago the Boston declared an extra of 10 per cent. Now you have an explanation, if only partial, of the H.C. Le MUST RETURN GIFTS TO FORMER FIANCEE Court Gives Van der Burgh Alter- native of Paying $4,794 to Lucille Lu Martinieri. Supreme Court Justice McAvoy today signed two orders directing John Pos: Van der Burgh, Holland importer, to surrender to his former fiancee, Lucil’e La Martinie: former Fifth Avénue modiste, Kifts he gave her during their cngagen to her instead $4,794, % orders sct de La she Purdy, a Britis at the Hotel Plaza. | Van Der Burgh testified he bought | her a $6,500 Pierce-Arrow, a baby! ind Steinway piano and’ fitted uw} apartment” with: several thousand ars iture, rugs and paintings. instituted replevin actions for the 8 ver the ju Marti eri, was now the wife of Capt. at the trial, te fied W. J. living army officer, He Aged Court Attend Alfred Walker, sevent uge, for twenty-eight ye in Court of ¢ ant died W HIst Street o iz his long Duri Walke special term of service Mr. | never lost a day's work. His! duties were of women | d he came into contact with | us ones Nan Patterson, | r Agnes ming. = i <= | IN NEW YORK TO-DAY. | prisc such Marie Mrs. of the dents, Lexing- 11 A. M ork dane ary, York= and 83d que Jerome Catholic ption, Hunt's 187d Street and Sout hicopee Club, Floral Garden, Street. ‘The Post Parliament, meeting, McAlpin. St. Christopher League, beneftt for the "New York Nursery" and Child's Hotel Plaza, evening. Kayen Society, dance, Sonia Bedford and Putpam avenues, | klyn, evening. Club, minstr Point Palace, Hevard, dance, 146th Hotel and and recep’ Broadway Hospital, The Hall oe tor the Aged, for-| St. Valentine's Kettle- | ptel Plaza, afternoon, neeton University Triangel Club, of Surprise,” 44th Street Theatre, nee. ‘ather Knickerbocker Ball for the! benefit of the City History Club, at the home of Mrs. A. Barton Hepburn, No. | 030 Park Avenue, » New York Browning Society, meeting, Waldorf-Astoria, Tho Bachelors, supper and dance, for | benefit of home charities, Hote! Van- derbilt College of New sup) Hote William Astoria, 7 P. aut forn Waldorf- Aste Rochelle, Tiltmore, College, dinner, dance and Wi Idorf- nm Bure 10. A. M, t- uy b York Vrod Exchange Bank, dance, Hotel McAlpin, § P.M. Baton Powell A. dance, Wai- dorf- Astoria, 4 inhow dince and supper, Hotel McAlpin, 8 P.M Welsh Terrier Chib of America, elec- tion of of! » Grand Central Palac Scottish rier Club of America, convention, 187 B. T1st Street. New York & Association of str 10 A. M. and M Hotel’ Astor W nel Clay Show, re all day, Company, ' banquet, Exhibit, Grand Central Association ‘of Master corators of t da, Hotel Ast Alumni, dance, Hotel Penn- niu, 8 PM eta Chapter, ‘Tau Hpsilon Fra- ternit cling, Tlotel Pennsylvan: Art Fall dance, Hotel Pennsyl- vania, 8.30 P.M Century, ‘Theatre Club, — meeting, “ Club, meeting, Ho ray w York dance, ‘Tam- many Hall, 140 B. 14th Stree, evening, Hiret Men in Advance of Storm, Worked Hard and Now Has Clean Thorough fares. EWARK its boasting to-day that its streets, compared with those of New York and other snow-bound cities, are “practically Raymond, Streets and Public Improvements, has received many letters of con- N Le | NEWARK POINTS WAY IN CLEARING STREETS OF SNOW dean.” Commissioner removal of snow was di Ww. rectly in charge of Joseph Costello, who said ganization.” upervisor of Engineers, is only secret was “or- He said he had ad- vance warning of the storm from > Weather Bureau and hired ex- tra men in advance, ‘Thomas The rest, he | padded before it leave8 the brewery. |The same ingredients are used, the | same process followed, but before the beverage is put on sale it has Been de- alcoholized. Any brewery that de- vires to seil the real product, there- fore, would merely have to obtain a| ernment permit, fife its bond and begin selling. ‘The tour of the beer from the brewery to the consumer would be safeguarded by the Govern- | ment as is the gale of wine and) whiskey. ENRIGHT CHIDES POLICE JUDGES Defends Gambling Raids and Asks Co-Operation at Magistrates’ Convention. Police Commissioner Enright wel- comed the Magstrates of the State of New York to-day at their annual :on- venton at the Hotel Astor. Then he gently chded them for criticizing the police, especially in gambling raid cases. | “phe police are trying to do their) duty.” he said, “and it is not their! fault if they are not always able to get of ~NEW YORK mit; Will Handle Output | “The Pretty yeep Girls, | Buds in Old College Days, Are Full Blown Roses Now POOO8H6-40H9H6-00H9O50O# “Close-up” of a living valentine d o>. PELE ADEE RDI HOO igned by the poster class at Hunter College and displayed al the fiftieth anniversary” reunion, The girls in the heart are, left, Miss Helen Lucke y; right, Miss Ise Gronau; centre, Miss Norma Bingham. a) Alumni Day at Noted Edu- cational Institution for Girls and Women Brings Them All Together and “Rah! Rah! Rahs!” That Come From the Silver Crowned Heads Prove That None of Them Has Lost the Zest of Youth or Love for Old School. By Fay Stevenson. RETTY girls have always gone to Hunter College, but the best of What ie the ud compared the rose in full bloom it is they grow prettier every ‘ IT asked my- as much evidence as could be desired. Self as I sat upon the platform of |= at the time of their graduation, upon the desk of Dr. orge 8. Davis, President of Hunter College, and while one may gaze with at beauty and youth, 1 challenge onu to say they make as sweet or as in- teresting a study as the women of to- —the full-blown roses. Both Dr. Hunter, the founder of the college, and Mr. vd, a member af the ucation, declared that girls in their teens were his “roses” and they should have the best that education could give them. But they were wrong; they were their buds, The roses appeared for the first time on Alumnae Day. Hunter College is the outgrowth of the frat free high school for women to be established in New York, LSIE FERGUSON and Helen Ware, Amelia Josephine Burr and Margaret W. Deland, Mrs. Grace Humiston, Mrs, Ella Titus to] Werner, the first woman to be ad- mitted to the New York bar, and Mrs. Adolph Lewisohn and Mrs, Ben- said, was nothing but work Yet some of the Magistrates frequently | Hunter's auditorium on “Old Home] jainin Guggenheim are all graduates The Public Service Railway |plame the police. I plead for a better} Day” and looked into the faces of the! vf thiv famous old school Company kept its tracks clear | spirit of co-operation alumnae from 1870 to 1920. Are, Lilian Dilly, Bresigent Of she by using brooms and ploughs as Health Commissioner Copeland asked) “fan! Rah! Rah!" came the joyous City Federation of Women's Clubs, 18 foon as the snow began to fall, | the magistrates to help stamp out the'ery as gray-haired muatrons, staid a graduate of 1885. Her speech for Saayencptsted pes $ drug by a stric cel cal tani via a . drive to erect Alumnae Hall brought The snow was gathered in trucks | "the lawa, He criticized the British pend teasers “ a eee ae forth many cheers and banknotes, and for their opium traffic and said that Os, WHlere Ang. women vesalic Loew Whitney, the B to workers sumed using the The attempt “of certain groups” to {exploit the American people for “their own exclusive cla: sponsible for the “Farm | gramme, Th the o 125 wagol declared rst Government is compelled “in self-pro- tection” to use its against the radicals who verthrow our Government by vio- President Schurman of Cor- principal speaker on pro- vents Week” in his address, advantage’ cris! “physical power” “seek to is re- in the United the United States last year imported | PRESIDENTIAL POLL of Towa newspapers. Votes were cast for Herbert Hoover, W. G. McAdoo, W. J, Bryan, James W. Gerard, Gov. James M. Cox and A. Mitchell Palmer. ‘That's a funny one,” he sald, “Whet do you think about it? he was asked. “Oh, L have no time to think about it." ‘The Governor said he had not re- celved the letter on alleged gambling conditions in Hudson and other counties , tual life, of facts, every field of feminine work shouted keener every year. the front, those mother faces, |faces of the workers of the world, lthe faces of the women who have Several times I glanced to the younger classes {in the rear of the auditorium and in the gallerios with their banners in the nineteen-teens, but while I found | the beauty and freshness of the bud or the dpening rose I looked longest and with most pleasure upon the ban- ‘achieved beld my attention. not ideals, grows Those faces up in t 1 lawyer; tof the Wow 564,000 pounds of this drug, which he, and cheered in the merrymaking of en's Medic n Gray why New York |described as ‘deadlier than whiskey.” the golden jubilee of New York's tiv, the woman ee a od the same Gov. Smith will be a speaker at the pioneer woman's institution of higher “777. or Love,” are also graduates said. He said the | banquet of the magistrates to-night. | learning. lwho have achioved nd 80 cents an hour | The convention will close to-morrow. | “Rah! Rah! Rah!" they shouted as! | 1 ne of 1878 has a record of a aeereiresee) ; ell be proud: Tho ne city to-day re- Mrs. Harriet Webb Moffett, Chairman bh cc iby i b praad 2 ‘Atty Vectinn or | EDWARDS LEADING ot the Alumnac Jubilee Committee, | yf that ‘clash have a service Zc dressed as “Folly,” in cap and bells, |r KH nd daughters see ae a charged every “girl” present to check |the war, and two gold stars, which SCHURMAN FEARS grouches and cares with her hat #28) Dis eaautlcatlOnd ‘were cartitte CLASS POLITIC |In lowa, at That, and New Jersey's | coat and be a schoolgirl for just one) o¢ joy," cried the leader of the class, Paine eae day, But the charge was not neces-| and then Folly blew her horn and t é s Wet" Governor Says Its |sary. The air was full of girlish! old building ulive with cheer 4 : % ; } " aed ool} Cheering n ent were in {If Groups Insist on_ Forming Parties Funny. \giggios, titterings, satis : my 1) creased when leader of the 1885 He Believes Old Organizations Gov. Eaward I. Edwards laughed to- Songs and YOUTH. The hair may] ojass, Mrs nton, proudly an bebidas na : 1 ‘ ‘awspaper story grow white, the eyes may need) nounced that sho Is the mother of rere Jay when shown a newspape y Will Disappear, from Washington showing that he led! glasses, but the spirit—ah! the spirit} eleven children, — Henceforth who ITHACA, Feb. ~The Amer®an | al! Democratic Presidential possibilities of humor, of wit, of knowledge of ac- Chee. a ypu dre soles meee n a poll being conducted by & group ‘8? in one of the classes It was announced jthat a teacher-mother's child was he| born with a tooth, and every one wisely shook her head and whispered, “A wisdom tooth, of course ANY of the classes had not met in years, but the Class of 1896 proudly announced that it had held @ reunion every year, The Class of 1900 announced, are naughty-O, “We but far from zero in State: i ” Preside: 5, | sent to him by Samuel Wiison of the 4 wu our love for Hunter." The Class of States to-day,” Presiderft Schurman | %n! £0.00" 12%, gue ot Now Jereey. ners of 1870 and up. Eres Haale, Se We Sil ornate NLY seven “girls” represented] 1901 admitted that every larie fainily e clas: going to b 5 ibd naughty ¢ carried into politics,” he continued, | Wome= # iersele in Ghes the class of 1870 as the roll call | A. tne classes came down through “All right; only let each class stand Heme. was given by years, They Were | tne teens there was less to tell and up and be counted. Miss Juli Robels, thirty-four years | yigy pininney, a teacher at the Model | jexs to laugh about. The older grad- “The last step will be for each ot | old, hanged herself to-day in her_poom | 20°) Feooklyn; Mrs. W. Y. Jones, |uates admired the youth and vivacity these groups to get a political party | at the home of her sister, Mrs, Florida | 7 . Rigua, Mrs. Oppen.|of thelr younger sist mat Mavis to carry out its programme. ‘The Delgado, No. West. 118th Street, Prof. Emma fi Charles |the day of achievemont-—why, the American Federation of Labor ts al-| Miss Robela came to New York. about helmer, Mrs. Dont agli we aries | buds haven't unfolded yet! Pert ready in t But it does not ne months ago from her home in| yy ocuboom and Miss Ella Kissam. ech eg EAR lbed ha aA eg propoan fo have ad independent labor bck mthree. da meio bee al “[ suppose about the only upa- | Unite ne ups some of them ructe ! Sinkees =I tions open to young women during | may be the mot of ten and twelve RUM ORRE ° Ol ' and possibly | childr w nows fend) cine your day were teaching an LOWES on, bor's. intcreats sn 2. 2 CANADA TO IMPORT W little clerical work,” 1 suit to Mixx | | Durin - vitéern ne “Old Home pebes n a Eyhinney. | ere Wwe many plays ri ate tt farmere’ at 499 SCOTTISH GIRLS |" 2"c%icauy tna onty thing fora ge-| Pant. but arn te) Vinca othe ups adopt simi atios, | fined young lady,” admitted 8 our the real spirit o hood da ther grvups adopt simiar tactics! — TO LEARN NURSING |i0t.2%6 ocr iny heart good to ste | ani renowed. fricndshivy, took place io Barty loti ter ade ot _—_—_—_——— |the many opportunities now qpen to | Many enjoged a rer’s luncheon Id up at the point of class| the young woman. And it Is a bet given int n ni a few nome et. Instead we should have a! Carefully - hosen Students Will | ter for the children, becau only | w shed to rough an old waltitt Neue Gontilete| ‘ \SCuung ladies who really understand | fashioned school day, brought their Re - Later Take Up Work in land love children make teaching thelr | junches as of and talked and ‘ : ae work, where in my day many | talked and ta groups eu Institutions. bee sought the work not from love a " ‘ eb but from luck of other opportunities NO TRACE OF WIELERO BOAT. TORONTO, Ont, Tee, 18 to earn a livelihood.” é SHOOTS AT TARGET, HELD. NE HUNDRED carefully se- Ete the “original seven" had b All hope for Capt. MH. C. Simmons, | lected Scottish girls will | accounted for, the classes were divid- an ta Saye: Youth's his wife, two children and eight be brought here by the {ed into eu at pant ees et | Mother, bat Hails Him Out. members of the step.ner M wl Ontario Government tote trained | ¥Gir DOTY’ att OTy75. As thes | rt Bradshaw, Jamestown, N. Y. broke in half 150 qnilos eff the coast for nursing work in provincial | women, these ploneers In the educ-| 1 w of a Vice P ” a TAY the aitipia awoers, iba titutions, It was announced a world, stood up and sang thelr) Elect , \ Company of No. tam -day by H.C. Nixon, Provincial Moe ee ee ease ana | allt tee Bi ‘ On the third day after the accident Secretary. ders, white hair in many cases | Satay pingiesn pF crew werg, nicked up The first party of fifty girls artistically arranged over their caps. : x Rien maid wil hand je the | will sai! from Scotland on March — thelr faces pink with the memories of | ih 8 oF Whe tor ut ae: “ toll girlhood days, thelr voices rang out gala ine, Leave hi P's containing the his nd theothers will follow om 1) clear, sweet unison, There iy a It will teach hin # lease the eighteen men came separated. | March 19 / OS photograph of these same girls, taken But she balled him out to-day, | FOR KILLING GIRL | Widow Ac Amiration | Bi PNG BD IS DISABLED ON HER FIRST TRIP William Henry Webb, An- chored Off Jersey, Sends Call for Help, 5 if riDpe pe His Fine y By Vic Victin “My Fur’—“My Pin” Elevator Boy In Court AS iron Apartment Burglar ag When Lester Brown, seventeen, Wag brought to Washington Heights: A wireless call for assistance was received early to-day from the new United States Shipping Board steamer William Henry Webb, operated by the Barber Line, No. 17 Battery Place, which reported she was anchored six miles off Tucker's Beach N, J. be- cause of a broken engine and boiler trouble. The freighter asked that tugs be sent immediately, as the wind’! was increasing. Three were dl patched. She left Philadelphia ye terday for New York, on her first trip, under Capt. Bellock with a prew of Street Police Station he was" dressed up like a Christmas tree before Pa gives the signal and “All right! Let them come in!* The golored boy, arrested in nection with burglaries in Washington Heights ses? in the latest mode. His costly. over coat Was topped by a fur collar. « diamond pin, {ts setting sta weight tonnage of 8,880, was built at Chester, Pa, last Nocember, She was coming to New York for a cargo for China and Japan, A second radio from the ship re- ceived at No. 44 Whitehall Street, headquarters of the Naval Intelli- gence, said: “May posstly have steam in a fow hours, At present helpless. (Signed) MASTEM." Tucker's Beach is at the entrance of the inlet leading to Little Ese Harbor, and the nearest coast guard station, No. 118, is two miles south of Beachhaven, N. J. Wire trouble made it impossible to learn what action ig being taken. there. MRS. FAVRE HELD One hour later it began to look @&~ if Lester was going to be reduced fo, two days after the party. “That fur “collar,” said Mise Ruth’ Block, a public school teacher of Mo. searf that was taken from my parte, ment!" . “The diamond pin,” declared Schlessinger, silk salesman of No. 615 West 172d Street, “belongs to me, andy all told I lost property valued .a@+ $1,656, but I could forgive everything: for the return of a leather case sheathing a bottle of Scotch whiskeyT worth exactly $45." or Brown was arrested yesterday By Detectiges Murphy and Scanlan of then Pawn Ticket Squad when he offeteds to a pawnbroker at 126th Street and Eighth Avenue a ticket for which hi] had pledged a diamond ring valued at $50. According to the detectives the risoner confessed to 20 Washingterty Heights robberies in the last three.or four mentits, was to take a job as elévator boy or telephone operator in a high-clagp house, wait until he knew an apartss ment was unvecupied and get in Bg, way of tho fire escape. Clothing valued at several ey hollars, the police say, was found dn Brown's room at No. 34 West 160g) Street. wie ae cused of Homicide Re fuses to Make Statement at Arraignment. Emily rested ¥ May Favre, thirty-four, ar- for the Killing of her tWelve- -old daughter, Emily Margaret, last aturday in the Hotel Ashton, 93d Street and Madison Ayenue, Was ar- raigned before Magistrate Sims to-day in Harlem Police Court and held for the Grand Jury without bail on a homicide complaint, She was taken back to Har- Prison and to-morrow will be re- moved to the Tombs. Mrs, Favre would make no statement. Her counsel, Evan L, Tambiyn of Lat- son & Tamblyn, No. 55 John Street, de- clined to say who had brought him into the case. areat leet TO-DAY NO JINX TO CUPID. HURL Suet ; “NONE 80 GOOD” Snapping their fingers at superstition, turning deaf ‘#8 to would-be wits who way the “unluaky duys” to marry are Hurley Quality is a recog- Friday, oMnday, edneWsday and Satur- ‘, shoe extel® duy—others being wday, ‘Thursday | nized standard of b lence, applying as much to making and finish as to the: 1 Sunday*-nearly one hundred you w York lovers pulled on their ru bers, abbed their umbrella arid bas | i i | trod Nforthy to "the. Marriage” Lacenae | uniformly high grade leathers. Burcauon Friday the 13th, H D ‘Tn Munbattan’ twenty-one Heenges || Our, beautiful Cordovan shades are! Were issued. Brookiyn reported twenty || - made possible by using only the Among Lian were two brothers, best leathers, being treated by thes ‘e, aid Branciaco Mannino, |! Hurleyized. secret lates Be AEOTe (hue, Dur aines DuenOge ee increases the life of the leather, -:| jaetana and Lena 10, 8: retaining its rich lustre to the end, No. THE Henry “Streets CLEARANCE SALE Now in Progress CRAIG AND CONNOLLY CLASH. Queens Prent nt Changes Vote to Dinagree With Comptrelier. HURLEY SHOES dent Connolly of Tuecha engaged in | M3 Broadway 1357 Boadway ve ively. tit o-day's meeting it Eres away. Broadway Sr tuscBosd Gt aulienin: secon tel 4) Coane 25AFilth Ave. every opportunity id M Factory—Rockiand, Maas, Chairman of the hi tes. ld vate cr ANCRE ‘With the Genuine Rogufart CHEESE Jack says the only fault he can find about Ancre Cheese is that there’s never enough in the house Made by SHARPLESS, Phtladelphia all aid in ca t vote Comptrolle Urwen Aerial Contest, im Ap President K, M. Turner of the Aer Club of Southern Califorma, Los An has asked the Aero Club of to sanction an aerial rall ays his organizat'o ie of the Pa for the * demonstration given during the rally.” Prizes offered in contests thus fa nounesd for this year amount ‘to up 00,000. AATLOLE Better Checolates ata Lower Price” es, peanut) Giittie.-vss| Cuesclete Flavor ed | Assorted "Milk Chocow Here's some of that |Nut Tablets {late Hearts of the real old= fash Alor purest m avored |mOst deliciously | awe sugary peanut br h ohoe wal Ft qitterally just brimful of | stutfe i of a variet Ny, hoteaome browne ‘ et mu Chowolate crisp: pea 1¥ {a 44¢ ge 11 ‘34e _A4e frame ofp me con dPound Box | one golden wus! Net Welaht !t Net "We nig de det Wel Fruit Ipa used Sour Milk Chocolate Mapié: Walnut CReams —con- t Cazy cream tn walnut flay 1 in a shelt 4 Lumps mA 1 with ‘ Lido Beocdway t mor le, ful melt-in- the 1 flavor 49c wcforsoung: Be dou. eee Net \ae 5 Court to-day from the Weat 136th” houses, wore a nobby greem.suit @iite on” with the letters “S. S.," sparkled fromyy a #4 te. Hat, cane, gloves, spat | forty. everything about Mr. Brown Wale— The steamer, which has a dead-| perfection. é the condition of the Christmas ‘a 46 Fort Washington Aveoue, “Is the, His method, they say, —