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hk ee re bes Nace WU te teas, ty Seek, MhARUH 19, 1920, hong hiost tinportant){ts common stock. Yn 1916, after miral Philip Andrews, in command of Antes owned are the Hocker-| price increases began to have effect, the Américan forces operating in the panies o ; the dividend on the common stock Mastern Mediterranean Jewell Company, the North. r cent, in cash and 1 per | western Consolidated Milling Com- cent, instock. in the following year ' bi any and the Southwestern Milling | total dividends, including both stock tn] c any t fir lants|2nd cash, were raised to § per cent. i Ir has fifteen plant®| and in 1918 were again raised, this throughout the country and the daily | tine to 10 percent. viz! f these plants is abou Faron sr ary Total dividemte of coma 9 CORTON, ENTIRE NATION; FIGURES SHG W | ie'8toe seine comany another of these big concerns that! res . fails to let stockholders know through | 49 svt LEAP OF PROFITS 2 annual roports the volume of their groms business measured in terms of + | money, and Itkewise fails to divulge | The Store is closed at 5 P. M. daily GB. Altman & Cn. MADISON AVENUE-FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK any information ag to how its ex- pense accounts are made up and just | — 4 ies Accounts Are. Mads Up ass a en [JIN the hurry of Whole Blame Cannot Be Put on Increased| nome: “ime margin of prodt ou its | puor® now, Dig bread baking concern 24 ten TSccdasp. | ol " ai ousiness at the present time com-| fattened thet it account b; ges.end Taxes With Standard Milling pared’ with otnor years cannot, there: |facking up prices, oie fore, be accurately determined, but ers may overlook what Company’s Dividends Doubled. | | given fatistactory evidence that cons | OF@er to Cat mitk Supply oattea } they want. At this store } Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street = sumers, through increased flour prices, OLN iat an eee you can take all the time . vat t onl ‘tun ‘8 * . ” are! — 1e Fb -With ihe cost of thoes and other necessities mownting Moher and | hignor wages and tax bills, bat ate| ShetMeld Farma Company, in ita ordee A] YOU Want to get all you bightoen months after the armistice was declared, The Evening | poser Crd Poy ane Md [were etl to ourtall the milk supply, wus hinting need, we to-day continues a survey of the increased profits of corporations | ors and at the sume time greatly | to the dairymen to get ready for a engaged in the manufacturing and handling of clothing and food. strengthen its financial position. drop in the price of milk, in my opin- THE attention of Attorney General Palmer especially is called to In pre-wur days, from 1910 to 1914, | jon,” aaid Oscar H. Chapin, prominent An Exceptional Offering of Misses’ New Spring Suits inclusive, or before radical price rais-|'in | dai ymen's affairs i Catta fo Tye Ebening World's artictcs. ting became the voruc among pro: | gus County to-day. Milk producers ducers of food necesities, the Stand- throughout this section have taken the. STANDARD MILLING COMPANY. ard Milling Company earned a sur- same view as Chapt plus available for distriimution to| gig” ate grits conten, Onapin common | stockho! al on on) farmers with the compady will expirs annually: | April 1, the past three or four years there have been few instances Where iftreased prices for food necessities have caused more complaint ip “that im the case of bread, Not only has the size of bread loaves been |! it | ytneres is not much more milk now CHINA RAMEKIN ‘educed, led. Bread manufacturers have | ) an there was in the winter, accord- You'can take deli i Dey iad tee vise to th 2 aga ing to producers, cient from WAY koro ceemtd tastes Almost itivariably placed the blame on the higher cost of flour, and the | (0 (ai (oimanon stock og Aneel Gea Adie fireprooframekin. Durable and big Gour concerns have transferred the blame to the higher cost of grain. ! was nof only the largest in the com-| Labor Shortage Stops Farming. + ae Two sises. Prices $3.50 And both have given as additional reasons that production costs have been pany's history, but jt was more than| POUGHKBPPSIE, March 19,—Labor double that earned in the 1914 fiscal c ™ 80 expatiied by increased wages and taxes that much higher prices for | your. i. seal | shortage ‘has become sb serious in NGER Dufchess County that many farmers a; able return on their in-! And in this calculation there does their prdduets had to be established. if a reaso not enter the fact that from the end | have been compelled to suspend opern- Vested capital was to be maintained. Tess tinea ot 1914 to the end of the 1919 fiscal | tions, while others are running their 45m STREET anv 67x AVENUE Su.deih bake Oe tis Standard Milling —————_—— year the company increased the value |{27™* On a one-man basis. In one NEW YORK “ town, within a radius of two miles, Conbpany, one of the largest’ flour | profits of preceding years are dwarfed | of -| seven, farmers either have retired oF in a number of the most approved models for the opening season, smartly tailored, and made of the fashionable materials, will take place to-morrow (Saturday) : ter millers i fhe country, this excuse | by comparison. |$91042,000" and built” on inet york are planning grewtly curtailed produc- does not seem to up under in-| The Standard Milling Company first | in capital from $3,23 to -—————— > —— "~ vestigation, “for its profits have} became a powerful factor in the flour 286,000 the Standard Milling Com-| Italy's King Sees Admiral Andrewn in the Department on the Second Floor swollen at much a rate since increased | business in 1900, when it succeeded the! pany paid 5 per cent. in dividends m,| ROME, i, March 19.—Victor Hmmanuel flour ‘prices first became effective that old United States Flour Milling Com. | its proferred stock and 3 per cent. on |received in audience yesterday Rear Ad- Eton-model Suits, in three attractive variations, some with plain and others with accordion-plaited skirt; mate- rials, serge and Poiret -twill ; ‘ ‘ : $58.00 For Other Ginibel News See Pages 11, 17 & 18 Straight-line Suits, in gabardine.. ° , 58.00 Box-coat and *Eton-model Suits, with accordion- plaited skirts; materials, serge and Poiret twill . $65.00 S BEL LL-ANS IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED—. FOR INDIGESTION A SUNDAY WORLD “WANT” WILL GO AND GET IT. j f Wes | For Other Gimbel Hours a a OY | News See [e ; ‘ 11,17 and 18. Ci abe! gardsT.~ BROADWAY-53" ST. Ce Tan Oxfords and Tan High Shoes The Phonograph Value of America! For Kiddies, Boys and Girls Gimbels Offer of New| ji = $395 $495 = g595 ~—=«:| || Conried Phonographs Selling for a Short Time $ a at the Price of 59 * Nothing new about the Conried—except the name—-and even a{i{ To this excellent high tan school shoe, which we are offering at a no-profit price ’ —as an introductory item to our great Spring j & of low shoes for boys and girls; hd cic Shiba on si standing, for Gimbels have offered them for Nie —and as an opportunity to favor old patrons y ae eens F ‘ ‘i 4 and gain new ones,’ In the list of specifications is every good thing there that any eG more widely known phonograph boasts of. tay 9 we add this tan Elk skin Oxford, to be sold too, at a no-profit figure, The a tp high shoe and the oxford are: This Machine Under a Variety of Names au 4h HE is being sold all over town at higher prices 1 *e Practical and Strong Welt Soled Good Looking H | And it is a gogd phonograph—one that under other names deal- ~ For Girls 7016" i ers have filled pages of exalted description with—only at far, far | higher prices. i UE ESTER OWN HOES I The price is lower than we have seen used and rebuilt machines r {| offered for, All Are New and Poros and We Are Prepared to Make Immediate Delivery } Eon paneretand the needs of the child’s growing foot--and made by skilled workmen, of selected leathers. | The story back of these | ti NO-PROFIT PRICES is this: : Through co-operation, We, in turn, do the same, “The Brown even Sentra Lowe are models of the manufacturer sacrificed and offer it to you at these % 4 ‘Nee irene the eli his profitsonagreat no-profit figures. Prices yurehise range according to sizes. $3.95 $4.95 $5.95 THERE IS NO BETTER SHOE MADE FOR CHIL- 'D}EN THAN BUSTER BROWNS. WE ARE HEIR SOLE NEW YORK CITY AGENT. CIMBELS CRILDREN’S AND MI | Justly famous and increasingly popular as the best shoe for children—because designed by those | | If You Cannot Call—Mail Coupon GENTLEMEN:— Kindly send me full particu- lars regarding your Conried Phonograph NAMB sci tecaicoesantiestaer ainsi cotta ‘ 7005 2. OA AA ea E. W-3-19 Pay as $ 4 Low as Month site Pa) oo 2,000 Brand New 88-Note Player Piano Rolls at 39c Specially Offered Saturday and Monday AE | Classical and Popu'ar Numbers. One Steps; Fox Trots; Marches. a ' Instrumental and Word Rolls. : "es THE GIYBEL PIANO AND PHONOGRAPH SALONS—Eighth Floor na Brooklyn, New Jersey and Long Island Cus-omers Direct to Gimbels via Tubes and Subwaysmmmmmnmanmmmemnnaanon SHOE SECTION~-Second Floor SHOE SECTION—Fourth Floor