The evening world. Newspaper, March 3, 1920, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

AS BETTERPRO | AMERICAN CAPITAL AT HOME ‘Boast of a iNew You York Corpor- _, ation Is Made Good by Our Marines, YANKEES GETTING RICH. Protectorate So Effective It Expels All German _ Business Rivals. By Lindsay Denison. {Staff Co: indent of York Evening W Wortaye hae! beter 34 A? Evening eaing wet waders SEVENTH ARTIOLE OF A SHRIRS. PORT AU_PRINCE, Hayti, Feb, B0.—Aside from the American occu- Sation of Hayti by United States Marines to, enforce the regulations of the treaty of 1915 establishing a Untted States protegtorate there is else a Business Occupation. Its ad- vance guard is well estabiished in the republic, Its retnforcements are being planned in Wall Street and in Washington and have already begun fo arrive in force, + welt, will by ite good offices aid the The real salvation of Hayti from @he barbarism into which she was felapsing is commercial and agricul- fural development. It cannot be @harged against the United States Dusiness men whp had an oppor- tunity to know the resources of the fand that they have been backward fm undertaking this unofficial . task; they will not themselves deny that hey seek a profitable return in due ime. The conditions under which the Protectorate is being enforced are en- @ouraging to “The treaty of 1916 (19157) between ‘the Republic of Hayti and the United tates, which gives an investment of capital in that republic at the present ‘time better protection than a similar investment in the United States it- Haytian Government in the proper and officient development of its agriquitural, mineral and commercic! Fesources and in the establishment ef Hayti on a firm and solid basi: ‘The quotation jis from a t ‘elt prospectus of the Haytin an Corporation, incorpomt he laws of the Btate of © id which is noW,in activ ent af the protection then «i: 4 This protection has not becn fimited to placing the Marine outposts in the interior conven iently near to American planta- tions and plants, but, as has been told in The Evening World, has gone so far as to cause the ex- “pulsion from Hayti of all German citizens because their competition threatened American success. ‘THE “RURAL CODE” THAT AMER- ICANS ARE ENFORCING. In broad interpretation of the pense of the treaty the authorities at | ‘Washington shave used the Marine (Corps not orfly to protect the officials ef the American occupation and en- force their decrees but to protect at ali times the lives and properties of Americans and to direct the native Gendarmerie in dutics in wich it might be embarrassing to have the Marine Corps act as a purely American force—such, for instance, as enforc- ing the strike-proof Haytian “rural eode,” which eatedlishes as “work days” all we $ opt Saturdays nd the fele days of the Roman Catholic Church is the hours of abor at from 6 o'clock to 11 o'clock A. M. and from 2 o'clock to 6 o'clock P. M.; forbids “parties” during work- Sng hours and stops native gquneine at midnight; forbids a laborerto go out of his district for more than twenty four hours without permission, and ways that “a laborer having under- taken work must finish it"—all these mder penalty of fines and imprison- ment. AS a road-building @e Gendarmerie, missioned officers drawn from the enlisted men of the Marine Corps, enforced the levy of labor from citi- fens who were put to work to pay organization with their com- eff their assessments, The simple Haytian did not understand this procedure in many instances; he re- @crded it as peonage and sad he s kept at work until the job was finished rather than for the length of time required by his tax indebt- edness. No proofs of such assertions wre offered and lacking them, the grumbling must be set down to the ‘unpopularity of all tax collections even in more enlightened. lands. The complaint is mentioned here because it affects the native feel ng toward the Occupation. The new roads are not yet appreciated by the everage Haytian as the basis for the future salvation of his country; the sees in them merely means of traffic between new American enter- prises which are being established throughout the republic. Under the Ghd, corrupt dayy of wildcat finan- olering, such wid to business was groft. The educated Haytian oan gee the difference and" acknowl- edges it, but without enthusiasm; his illiterate brother, who cor- responds to the Southern “fleld_ne- gro,” just naturally feels “something is being put over "and usu- ally dumbly epts the situation his mind creates. ‘Three or four out of every 10,009 | sten to the Caco rev- otutionary chiefs and “go bad." They make up the tiny active unite of the revolutionary party. REVOLUTIONARY CACOS AN A8-|4ay they have SET TO THE WISE AMERICAN. While revolutions are a men- ace to government finds in 1 Mayti that many live TECTED THAN (panagers: regard the revolution- on The “plantation the confidential ance of a Caco “Gen- can always raise an emer- geney labor force of a thousand men or more within three days’ time. It is a hopeful sign that the Caco Private in the ranks responds with more alacrity and in larger numbers | to call to work than to a call to a fighting raid. Even the minor raiding is not feared by experienced managers. F. EB. Baker, formerly a Gendarmerie Captain and a road builder, was con- fronted on one of the so-called “Davis properties” at Morales by a raiding party of 300 Cacos. He had a rifle With three cartridges in its magazine and one negro with a revolver as his supporting force. He walked up to the Caco General and ordered him to “Allez! Allez the hell out! Vit’! The column halted and then_hesi- tated; Baker threw down his rifle and dared the (General to come up and fight and “bring along as many of his gang as he liked.” They con- eRe bebenenen nee terdenebong ines FR Seetetetttae eset ey CRSIROTED MLR. sulted, shook their heads sadly and went away, Later they joined the band which raided Port ‘au Prince, and it took machine guns and rifle fire to turn them back. To the newcomer to Port au Prince the Haytian-American Corporation is the most conspicuous exhibit of the American Business Occupation. It owns the wharf at which he land: with a concession for collecting $1 a’ ton on all exports and imports of the port, whether they are landed at the wharf or not. If he lands at night the incandescent lights of the Hay- tian-American Sugar plant, north of the city, is the most conspicuous fea- ture of the water front; the corpora- tion owns the city tramway, a cum- berous Hine of cars drawn by steam locomotives and carrying, passengers in cross seated box cars; it owns th gleotric lighting system (as well as at at Cap Haltien), it owns all the railroad Hnes which enter Port au Prince from the surrounding country. Here is a list of the directors: W. D. Breed, Chicago, banker and bro- Y well of Sp Hutchinson, New. Yor Le Se Chapma: brokers, of Chicago and New Yorl Willia K. Dick, Long Island capitalist; Duer of @Baltimore, Reginald Lanier of Wins- low, Lanier & Co. bankers, New S. Mallet-Prevost, lawyer, William Seba, -banke: York; O. Tobey, Lawrence; Tur. Co. bankers, New York; Harris, American Foreien poration (a combination ional banks), New York; k, Philadelphia; G. A. Casa- New York, and C. Edgar El- President, now resident in Port ince, RISKED ALL THEY HAD ON AN AMERICAN PROTECTORATE. In general the properties represent the working out of the commercial and financial programme ‘of Henry B. Tippenhauer, an American citizen born in Hayti, and his associates, years before ‘the Occupation. Mr. !'Tippenhauer, his brother and his as- sociates, made no secret, when they | were forming and putting in opera- | tion the separate compantes, of their confidence that an American protec- rate must come, in time, to save Hayti from roing back to jungle and savagery. They risked ali they had and all they could get from friends in their faith that sooner or later the | United States must insure order in |Hayti. ‘They won, In addition to |the properties they have concessions | running for twenty and thirty years, jand subsidies, for which part of the Custom House duties are pledged and on which lange sums are | claimed in arrears from the Haytian Governrhent, They control thousands of acres of sugar lands along the lines of their railroads, And only a few days ago a well, experimentally sunk on their land in Cul du Sac, dry for centuries, spouted a six-foot fountain, = ‘Their next plans—when the pres- ent small mill is working to its ca- pacity of 2,000 tons of cane a day— is to go to the San Michel Valley, seventy miles of six-foot deep loam, and start cultivated plantations and a much bigger mill, One of the newest buildings in Port au Prince is the general American eelling agency of E. P. Pawley and his sons and associates, trading as the West Imiles Trading Company Pawley was the general supply con. tractor to the navy and the Marines at Guantanamo Bay. He followed the marines to Hayti; he speculated in derelict hulks in Port au Prince Harbor, and in junk until he was as- sured the occupation was going to “stick.” ‘To-day he has the agency for the best known automobiles, talk- ing machines, sewing machines, type- writers and other patent named goods the United States manufactures. His business had overflowed into ware- thouses in this and other cities, He is about to add another story to his office building and will put in an ele- vator! Tt will be the first in the isiand, and the Gendarmerie expect to put « guard around the block for at least a month so that business may | go on as usual in the rest of the city. Pawley’s is not the orly automo- bile agency or garage. There is one O'Keefe, who came to Hayti as a roving adventurer a year ago, was awakened by H. W. Shea of the Hotel Montagne to what was going on com- mercially, dnd established himsetf in @ bnainess which is growing faster than hs facilities, ea himself, with the former palace of Simon Sam for his prin- cipal hotel building, bought his sec- ond annex, a big mansion across the road, this week, to take care of the | American business which is even now | crowding him LOOKED FOR THE CASTOR OIL BEAN AND FOUND FORTUNE, Everywhe-e one goes in Hayti he hears of the “Davis properties.” They fre actually inoorporated as the Untted West Indies Corporation, To- big tractors |ploughing for cotton cultivation. | Outsiders estimate their present in- vestment at $800,000, They have cot- ton tracts at St, Michel and ura gene and poffee lands | WOMEN’S SKIRTS THIS SPRING TWO INCHES SHORTER New Style Can Be Worn Front in Back and Be Put on From Top or Bottom. CHICAGO, March 3. OMEN won't know whether they are coming or going when they get into their new spring skirts this year. They can get into them from the top or bottom and wear the front in back and still be stylish. Two inches will be clipped off the bottom this year, making them 10 inches from the ground and tickling the shoe tops. and say they intend to turn back their profits for improvements for several years to come. H. P. Davis is founder of the company, of which RF. Forrest is President. Davis came to Hayti trom the United States to find castor oil beans for war feroplane oil. The castor oil plant, kn@ée high in New York, is a forty-foot tree in Hayti. Davis dis- covered the commercial possibilities of Hayti for himself and he found the occupation. He has a small army of young Americans, some of them former Marines, working for him. He has- perfect confidence in the safety of the American in Hayti; he has brought out his youngsters ‘and lets them run wild around the plan- tations. Andrew A. D. Rahn, Vice President of the Shevlin-Carpenter-Clark Lum- ber Company of Minneapolis and Pro- gressive and Republican leader in Minnesota, has been for two weeks looking over investments in the Ar- ‘onite Valley for himself and somo associates. They plan an agricultural development and possibly cattle ranching on a big scitle in the upper cool reaches of the valley. Mr, Rahn’s interest in polities takes him to Wash- ington a great deal and keeps him in touch with Congress and the deyart-| ments. He is supremely confident that no change of Administration will af- | fect the present programme of the United States in Hayti except to strengthen it. A NEW YORKER WHO TREATS THE NEGROES FAIRLY. Of the list of notable United States pioneers in Haytian business, in the | sight of the casual visitor to Port-au- | Prince nearly the only exception to the rule that all have gained their opportunity here by acquaintance with Washington, and especially with the Bureau of Insular Affairs and its agencies, is the great cotton house of George H. McFadden & Co, of New York. Some of the wild cotton now being picked in Hayti requires spe- cial machinery, but there are tracts which have not been cultivated for a hundred years, where bolls are picked with centres half as big as your fist and fibres to equal the very finest Sea Island cotton. The McFaddens are the leacters in the belief that it Is not good economy to exploit the crowded population, 2,500,000 (or as great as that of Cuba in less than one-fourth the space) by forcing native labor to take what it can get or 20 cents a day. They |¢; believe it better to furnish a sub- stantial daily ration, pay a gourde and a half (80 cents) or more and provide a few free dances, thereby getting full measure of a. happy, heaalthy man's day's worq from each employee. ‘As to the cost to the United States of its guidance, instruction and aid to the private development of Hayti, the salaries and the expense of the Occupation come out of Haytian revenues except tor the maintenance of the Marine Provisional Brigade, The Gendarmerie officers, receiving their Haytian pay (the same as that cf corresponding officers in the United States Army from Hayti), are still under full United States Marine pay for thely non-commissioned rank in the Marine Corps. The total cost of this service is not available here but is to be found at Washington. pels ala etal LINER MALLORY HERE Restnes?/ to Visit Bulgarte. ‘The Henry R. Mallory of the Mattory | line, which left Constantinople on Jan. 2%, making stops in Greece and Italy, to-day docked at Pler 45, North River, Among her passengers were Capt, J./ W. Greenslade and Lieut, G. B, Dry den, both of the United States pod nid who bave been stationed yf Seman pople, Another was J. eames, importer, with affices ae Bigultebie Bullding, who finding it Impossible to fee uigaria asm passenger had done it by shipping aa fourth engineer on a steamship, ‘Tho ship also brought home $81 Teallana who eft here to serve, in ome army wi are now ete sea Pearl String Worth $7,500 Baby’s Toy Postman Finds Jewels in Street and Gives Them to His Child to Play With—Gets $100 Reward. John C. Carson, a postman, was making his round this morning when “a bright trinket” on the pavement in front of the Hotel Ma- jestic, Central Park West and 724 Street. b “Something for the baby to play with,” said the postman, He picked {t-up and went on delivering mail. Shortly before this a woman had called at the hotel with a package addressed to Mrs. L, T. Lazard, one of the guests, and “insisted upon getting a receipt for a necitlace valued at $7,600. Mrs, Lazard was out at the time and when she came in was notified of the package and cepted it. Taking it with her unopened, she left the hotel, but returned in a fow moments highly efcited, declaring that the necklace was fot in the package, he saw House detectives got busy | Map does not show mountain ranges. Sugar and cotton grow on plains. Rice in swamps; cof- fee on hills’ from 1,600 to 4,000 feet up; heavy amber on lower moun- tains; short leaf yellow pines above coffee line. NO STREET CARS ON S. I. TO-NIGHT IS FEAR Richmond Light and Power Co. Has Coal Enough Only for To-Day as Result of $50,000 Blaze. Staten Island, which was dark and without trolley service for five hours last night, will have a worse experience coal can be obtained at once for the Richmond Light and Raliroad Company Fire started in the company’s coal supply at 7 o'clock last night and burned until after midnight. Almost ah the coal supply was destroyed, the re- mainder will be consumed“In running cars to-day, While all the fire companies on the island, aided by the fire boat Mayor Gaynor, were fighting the blaze, there were no street lights, no electric lights in homes and shops and theatres, and no cars running. ‘The total damage was about $60,000. Another fire started in the projection room of the Park Theatre, Stapleton, when a reel af films was ignited. ‘The rbom was instantly closed and the aadi- ence of about 200 left the theatre in an orderly manner, ‘The fire caused art $1,000 loss. hindi ES BUTTER AND EGG PRICES AGAIN FALL and soon found a passerby who said! he saw a postman pick up something from the sidewalk. Trailing the mail his | carrier the detectives went to home at No. 566 Amsterdam Avenue. Carson, bright trinket. | kitchen now.” Detectives found the baby playing “I thought {t was just some Th baby hag it in the j with the necklace, which was Promptly returned to its owner. Mrs, Lazard at once sent Carson a check for $100 as reward. ALDERMEN ADOPT NEW TAX RATES Manhattan to Pay $2.48, Brooklyn $2.54, Bronx $2.53 on Each $100 of Valuation. ‘The Board of Aldermen in special ses- sion to-day adopted the 1920 tax rate, According to @ report of the Finance Committee the tax rate Manhattan 1s $2.48, for the Bronx $2 for Brooklyn $2.54, for Queens $2.54, and for Richmond $2.53 on each $100 of valuation, ‘The ‘amount of the this year, according t mittee’s report, 1s $5,639,158.27. ‘The tal amount of ‘the city’s budget ts §273,. 689,485.18. City department appropria- tions amount to ‘aasessed valuation’ of real estate in the five boroughs is $5,5: ‘The assessed valuations of pers: tate 1s $296,606,185, ‘The real and per. sonal wealth by boroughs ts as follows board's for direct State tax the Finance Com 3) Wife's Diary Mictent for DI Harry C. Pierce, a stenographers on the Twentieth Century Limited, living in Newark, lost his ‘suit there to-day for a diyorce from Mra. Ruth Pie: His evidence consisted’ chiefly of diary which his ‘wife's dresser, contained entries showing appoint- ments with various men, The book was ruled to be insuMcient evidence by Vice Chancellor Backes: a he said he had found in He said the diary || See the New Ticking Designs Ostermoor Mattresses are | offered in a complete size range and a wide variety of ticking designs. OSTERMOOR Bee the combiete ime in our ‘Dig, modern jera showroome, Ostermoor & Co. 114 Elizabeth Se “Sure, I picked up something,” said | Heavy Shipments Arrive From the West—“Western Firsts” Down to 53 Cents. Prices for butter and eggs fell again to-day. “Fresh gathered firsts" sold jfor 58 cents a dozen, or four cents ‘lower than yesterday's figures, due to heavy receipts of Western eggs which had been held up by bad weather. Creamery butter also declined, West- ern extra sold at 63 cents a pound, und further declines are expected by merchants In view of the expected ar- rival to-day of 360,000 pounds of but- ter frgm Holland and Denmark. Con- sumers should get the benefit of these reductions by the end of the week, merchants declared to-day. elaibe Ae BONES FOUND INS. I. WERE BURIED IN ’80S Investigation\Reveals That Supposed Murder Spot Was Used as Cemetery in Fever Epidemic, Investigation of seven skeletons found on the beach between luguenot and Prince’s Bay, Staten Island, to-day, re- ed that they are probably those of persons buried at the spot between thirty jund Yorty years ayo, when the place was used a8 a cometery for persons who dled In the yellow fever epidemic. ‘The bones Were discovered. by Deanc P. Wood, son of Charles P. Wood, Port Richm wierday with his do e were notified in the belli channels, to-night unless an emergency supply of | who was walking |‘ find micht lead to the disclosure | rais (PRENCH REPUBLIC PROPERTY) There is now m New York an ample supply of that famous Mineral Water and it can be readily obtained through the regular HENRY E. GOURD, General Listribator 35 South William Street, New York THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAROH 8, 1920. Hayti, Where Americans Find Wealth *ANERICAN CAPITAL IN HAY] 2Zaye# Comes. Easy, Thanks to U. S. Protectorate ernment Stal tt da aS 1 HILLQUIT ATTACKS COMMITTEE POWER IN SOCIALIST TRIAL Begins Summing Up by Con- | tending Only Qualifica- tions Are in Question, | quit, chief counsel for the five Social- ist Assemblymen, to-day began sum- ming up for the suspended members of their defense, ared the resolution as the find! stage Mr. Hiliquit | passed ‘by | | } AUBANY, March 3.—Morris Ill | | the Assembly on the first day of the 1920 se#sion which unseat- the Sogiatisin and authorized the present investigation directed the Ju- | di Committee to investigate into the qualifications and eligtbility of | the five unseated members, and to re- port on them. “The committee has no other au- thority under the resolution,” Mr, Hillquit added Before Mr, Hillquit began his sum- ming up Martin Conboy of Committee counsel announced that a subpoena had been served on the Secretary of the New York Jocal of the Socialist Party for Referendums B and D, which were submitted to the mem- bers of the party in 1919 prior to the emergency conveption held at Chi- cago. Mr, Hillquit explained that it was “Impossible to comply with the sub- poena, because the documents were in possession of the National SecretaPy ang not the secretary of the New York Yocal. He declared that Refer- endum B was @ resolution for the call of the special or emergency conven- tion and that Referendum D, put ibe- fore the members of the Socialist | Party that the party “shall not take part in any international from which the Socialists of Russia are excluded.” Both were carried, said Mr, Hillquit. Mr, Conboy then read into the rec- ord an article in the New York Call of Oct. 28, 1919, referring to a letter that had been sent by the Independ- ent Social Democratic Party of Ger- many to Morris Hillquit. ‘The letter outlined the plans for the organiza- tion of workmen's councile and sovi- ets in Germany. In the’ same article was comment by Mr. Hilquit in which were coming down the fire buddied on the balconies, with amo! curling up from below. Many’ threatening to Jump when the |men shouted to the cooler ones lower the drop ladder. They" all thew |reached the street be td pons Toussient, fittees vas the! hero of a $5,000 rn in Sgr | fashioned four-story house at No, let Jghted corner of 64th M, to-day. He lives on the Vnecond floor with his srindnee | Mra, Margaret O'Donnell, ‘ The fire had cut off escape by the. stairs when it’ was discovered, i Toussient boy ran to the rear of the § | second floor and aroused Mra. Kathe ~ |erine Graham and her niece, Ellen Fae garty. Leading them to his gramds mother’s apartment, he assisted ail three women along the cornice Info the building next door, No, $26, ‘Phe others all got down the fire escapes, Including Mr. and Mrs, Witlam Ryan, their five children, from two to eleven years old, and Bob Hanley, a boarder, The children were assisted down first, the youngest In the lead, George Henry Warren, a lawyer Hw. ing in a white stone residence at Me 924 Fifth Avenue, near 74th’ Street, © was awakened at 5.30 A. M. by.@ outside his window. A vent pipe SOD ARE DRIVEN OUT BY EAST SIDE FIRE; INCENDIARY SOUT Work of Firebug § Sigpecied | in| Queer Blazes in Tenements. } A variety of early morning biases kept Now York firemen busy to-day. | Two trivial collar fires drove more | than 500 persons into Forsyth Street at 3 o'clock. Sith Street Fy 7) At Ninth Avenue and a fifteen-yeartold boy rted three women along the cornice | of a burning house to the adjoining building. Fashionable upper Fifth Avenue had plenty of excitement over & unique blaze that required no water. One of the Forsyth Stree: fires was in the eight-story tenement at Nos, 209-211, one af thy largest tenements | the kiichen was red hot. He in the city, Fifty-six families live | his Wife and son, and while in it, ready to leave, telephoned Fire % quarters. Down in the kitchen on the grownd floor Christina Ferguson, the egok, Mrs. Gussie Gluckman, who wae baking cakes for the Feast of Purim in her first fh was preparing breakfast on the com- noise {1 aac a rivabaniasel Lange bination oll and gas ae when Os nthe hallway and saw &/premen arrived. When the strange man with a bunch of keys near the elevator, She asked him what he was doing and he replied: Do you smell gmoke?” and disap- peared. Within a few minutes she did smell smoke and found the hallway filling with it, Friemen and police were called as the 400 occupants of the house poured «into the street down Stairs and fire-escapes, It was found that the elevator, u! ways at night on the ground fiénr with the operating lever locked, was in the cellar with the lock removal The fire was in a storeroom and did $200 damage. The other fire, at the same time, was in the six-story tenement at No, 7* Forsyth Gtreet, Policemen Gerlinge: and Scully heard cries of “Fire” and by the time they reached the build. ing more than one hundred tenant» ply to the stove was rhut off rine went out, not a drop of water being used, Investigation showed that over the range is a metal drum that fumes from the cooking and them up through the pipe beside Mr. Warren's window to the roof. An cumulation of inflammable stuff im the pipe had caught fire from the range without the cook's anything about It. The only y .was to the paint on the pipe. An . terested crowd from the e Jocality turned out. rt ‘ Herman Wessels. akleged German apy, who was dented release on h cor- pus, declared through his a Thomas J. O’Neill, this morn! he will appeal to the United Bt Bte preme Court. Weasels, pe poe nrockiyn Navy ard by taken to jr ne tried on the chi Cy ay the German Goretanent witty intorma- jon, he is quoted as saying that the pro- gramme of the Independent Gocial Democratic Party of Germany was similar to that of the @ocialist Party of America. For the defense, Seymour Stedman took the stand and testified that, based on the records of Attorney General Palmer, only twenty-three mombers of the Socialist Party in the United States were indicted and convicted under the Espionage Act, and five or six were still awaiting trial. The defense also introduced the official vote cast in the five Assembly Districts in which the defendants were e¢lected, and excerpts of the Army and Navy Journal and the Con- gresional Recor on the causer of the World War. ———— BLAIRS RECONCILED FOR THE THIRD TIME After Withdrawal of Separation Suit They Are Now in Florida— $500,000 Settled on Mrs. Blair, Bernard H. Sandler, of No. 261 Broad- way, counsel for Walter Blair, broker, of Mt. Kisco, N. Y., announced to-day his clien thas settled $500,000 in cash on his wife, Florence, after the with- drawal yesterday of their separation action in Supreme Court, All Mra, Blair's charges have been withdrawn said Mr. Sandler and Mr. and Mrs, Blair are now living at Palm Beach, Fla., with thelr two children, Mary ‘and Lorraine, They have been completely reconciled, he sald, they were separated last March Mrs, Blair had livd with her two children at Asbury Park, N, J. This is thelr third reconeiliatio cmenacaiess SOVIET ‘ARKS’ TOO COSTLY Foture Deportations Will Regular Pai WASHINGTON, March 3.—The high cost of deportation is responsible for the Department of Labor's decision not to send another “Rea” shipment to Europe @ Soviet “Ark,” though no in figures on what it cost to send mea Reds nidman and the, 248 other Itussla on the Buford wery Aliens are now being exiled of five and six daily on re senger in to upro McGibbon & Co. 1 AND 3 WEST 37TH ONE DOOR FROM FIFTH AVEN A? KNOWLEDGE To know an exclusive store to call upon when your home requirements need attention is to know that the MtGibbon store is stocked with dignified mer- chandise for an exclusive clientele. HOUSEHOLD LINENS SMART UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE LAMPS AND LAMPSHADES . MAHOGANY FURNITURE—FLOOR COVERINGS BEDS AND BEDDING DRAPERIES—-INTERIOR DECORATIONS UPHOLSTERY

Other pages from this issue: