Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WILL ASK PALMER IF PACKERS GAIN IN CHEAP MEAT FIGHT Charge Is Made That Swift & Co. Work Hand in Hand With Government. CONGRESS SEEKS LIGHT. Segregation of Side Lines Said fo Have Been Pleasing to Big Slaughter Houses, (Special From a Staff Correspondent.) “WASHINGTON, March 31.—Attor- » Mey General Palmer has been asked to “ppear before the House Committee on Agriculture Friday in connection ‘with the hearing on the pending legis- lation for control of the packing in- dustry. Among other things it is understood ~ Mr. Palmer will be questioned in re- gard to the “Save Money on Meat’ campaign, which it is alleged is being conducted jointly by the Department Weld, economist for Swift &/Co., ad- on the stand a week ago that the cam- paign will, if successful, boost meat prices, since the so-called “cheaper cuts” are three-fourths of the animal and an increased demand for them will automatically force the price up. Mr, Weld admitted that the packers f@re “co-operating” with the Depart- ment of Justice in this campaign. His testimony has aroused unusual inter- est, and members of the Agricultural Committee want to know more about the relations between the packers and the governmental agency. ‘The Attorney-General will also be asked to give further information about the ssolution” agreement . with the packers, by which the latter, «among other things, were ordered to - segregate from their food business the many other lines of business in which they are engaged. It now develops that this “dissolu- tion” arrangement was not so dis- pleasing to the packers. A letter sent out by an active dealer in the stock of the packers, A. F. Dow & Co., throws interesting light on the subject. This letter for the information of the brok- . ers’ clients, and circulated just prior * to the “dissolution” order, is in part es follows: “Swift & Co. appears to us like that Most delightful fruit, ‘a peach.’ “We might suggegs that the ‘pith’ or seed part of the fruit is the packing industry, which is represented in the public mind by the name Swift & Co, while the delightful part of the fruit is represented by the various subsidi- aries of Swift & Co, which were pri- marily entered into to dispose of the by-products of that concern, The writer confesses that he does not know how far that phase of their business has been carried, but he do know’that it has been carried sutf clently far to prove most profitab! for the company and its stockhold- ers," The letter then points out the Swift & Co. have nothing lose by the segregation of th various com- panies, and contimucs: “Therefore, wing out the simile, to fe if Swift & Co. continue their segre tions they will be disposing of the ‘meat’ of the peach and then hand ever to the Government ‘when they insist upon having it the ‘pith’ of the peach, which represents the packing interests, and whic the least profitable, which would pre- + gent a real problem for Government management to handle manner, for they could not well assure this without iranteeing to main the present $ pnt. dividend. “From the you will note it is our opinion that s h is reported to be that continue to be made by Swift s rapidly, and possibiy the present agi- tation may cause them to make Lhose distributions faster than original! planned. . “The meat of this ‘peach’ is divided into sections and cl d tn part as follows “Branch Canning Departments (new name Libby, McNeill & Libby) “RESUL' ady segregated, basis $10 to e‘ockholders, present mar- Kot $28, net profit to stockholders $18 plus dividend: “South American and Australian Departments. “SWIFT INTERNATIONAL* Al- ed b $15 to stock- , present market $58, net profit to stockhol $43 plus’ divi- dends. “Leather Departm NATIONAL L. HER COM PANY—Already ited, basis two shares at $10 to stockholder present market £18, two shares equal Y ofit $16," $36, which cost SALOON TO BE CLUB HOUSE net pr Plans hay of Buil saloon on da, Street, Murphy is th ‘The ‘rome a general « for for The old sed for Club ts t to make th Actress Divorce. Mrs. f “The 18 West Henry ©. Brookly: pesca that since een living in Freeport with teknown, woman, There’ was “no ferme. Justice Lazansky reserved de- clslem. fo Manhat divore ‘court to-day 115 her hi an : Yep, mitted under questioning when he was', | | Passages from the THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAROH 31, 1920. a3 Changed Her Mind; So Doug ‘and Mary AreMarried! Happy ?Look BOODGODHBODOGOHODDGODGOOGGOHGOODIPOHDOHDOHDIGDHGDODOOIOGOIH) ° 8 ef Justice and the packers. L. D. MARY PICKFORD CHANGES MIND; WEDS FAIRBANKS Plan Honeymoon Tour of Europe —“I'll Say We're Happy, Declares Bridegroom. LOS ANGELES, March 31.—Mary Pickford, who a short time ago, on obtaining a divorce sobbingly declared she would “never marry again,” has demonstrated woman's privilege of changing her mind, for she is to-day Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks. The two film Stars were married here Sunday night at 10.80 by the Rev. J. Whitcomb Brougher, pastor of the Temple Baptist Church, at his resi- dence. They are understood now to be at Fairbanks’s residence in Bever- ley Hills, At the wedding were Robert Fair- banks, a brother of the bride- groom; the bride's mother, Mrs, Char- lotte Smith; the Rev. Henry Miles Cook, assistant pastor of the Temple Baptist Church, and R. S. Sparks, Deputy County Clerk, who issued the license. Mr. Fairbanks acted as groomsman and Margery Daw, a mo- tion picture actress, was bridesmaid. The bride was dressed in white. After the ceromony the minister read Epistle to the hesians, Mr. Fairbanks was divorced by his wife, Mrs, Beth Sully Fairbanks, at White Plains, N. Y., March 6, 1919. Miss Pickford was awarded a de- |eree of divorce from Owen Moore, ut Minden, Nev., on March 3 He, like Fairbanks, made no defense. According to Mrs. Fairbanks's tes- timony at the time of her suit, Fair- banks's salary was $10,000 a week. Miss Pickford’s salary is said to equal that amount Sunday's wedding sur the movie folk here. T been talk for months. Mr. and Mrs, Fairbanks sald to-day rised none of he romahce has ‘they had planned as a honeymoon a | mobile | May 19. three-months’ tour of Europe by auto- ‘They will sail from New York They expect to return Sept. !1, and make their home at Beverley in| will! a truck owner of } rear i Hills, they suid. Mr. Fairbanks's comment to tnter- viewers was: “Are we happy? I'll say we ure.” ———— INJURED RESCUING BOY. ina profitable | Youth Ran Down by Track That Swerves to Avold Hitting Children, To avoid hitting three boys playing in West 126th Street, Solomon Zlotnick, No. 209 East 120th t, today ran his truck into the walk, pinning two boys against the wall of Loew's Theatre, Robert r, 1wo years old, of No. 267 West 1foUn Street, received internal injuries nd {s in a critical condition at the Harlem Hospital. Edward Budich, cight years old, same address, received rations of ‘beth I and bruises bout the body Budich was clear of the “truck but ran in front of it to pull the smailer lov out of the way, Zlotnick was heid at the West 128d Street station. sulecs GONE 3 FLATS ROBBED; POLICE MUM. sid Pir | Jewelry Stolen From Two Apart- nts ip Bronx, ugh the pol made thelr usual ¥ to supp news, it became ‘known to-day that burglars yesterday looted two at Yo, 2028 Grand the Bronx. The places upled b. N. Mercer and F first they stole dink old watches and From Handler's re ush and jewelry was discove by Mrs another occupant of Detective John Riley ' ars had heer nanited: ustial warning f ned “say nothing about Of Girt Capt A. altached to the e of the City of New York as an instructor in military jas’ in Washington Heights Court charge of assault brought by Cora Tower, a telephone operator, sixteen | rs old, of No, 1602 Amsterdam A nue | Father Krim Sertously 0 } re Rev, George J. Krim, President of Brooklyn College, No, 1125 Carrot | Street, Brooklyn, 13 seriously il from pneumonia in St, Mary's Hospital, Brooklyn. Father Krim caught cold re- gently ang his condition was so bad on the Sunday that he was removed to ‘bowpital, Mogistrate Raph +! | |FAKE DRY AGENTS GET $10,000 LIQUOR, KIDNAP GUARDIAN Captured While Driving Loot Away in Trunk After Robbing Wi consin Summer Home. LAKE GUNEVA, Wis., March 29, IE wine cellar in the Lake Geneva summer home of Frank Rehm, son-in-law of J. B, Grommes, formerly a wealthy liquor wholesaler of Chicago, was robbed of $10,000 worth of choice whiskey to-day by three men who posed as Federal Prohibition En- forcement officers, They deluded the caretaker who was alone on the estate and he helped them load the whiskey on a motor truck. The robbers were captured as they drove through Woodstock, Hl, apparently on the road to Chicago with their loot. They had carried the caretaker out into the country and dropped him to prevent his giving the alarm. BUSINESS TENANTS TO FIGHT GOUGING Declare Excessive Store and Loft Rentals Help Increase Cost of Living. Business tenants as well as resi- dentia) tenants are organizing against profiteering landlords, Representatives of thirty associa- tions, dealing chiefly in articles of women's Wear, representing a mem- bership of 20,000, met yesterday at the headquar 's of the United Waist League of America, No. 29 Bast 32d Street, and appointed a committee tu enlist other similar organizations, with a view to going before the Li islature in favor of laws restricting unfair increases in rents, ‘Those appointed were H, Ullivor of the American Cloak and Suit Manu- facturerg’ Aasoc jon, Chairman; L. A. Shapiro of the Women's Wear Manufacturing Asgociaion, Secretary, and S. H. Lummis of the American Fur Dealers’ Association, Treasurer It was pointed out at the meeting that ever increasing rentals are par- tially responsible for the high prices of wearing There will the same place t FIREMEN INJURED IN COAL SHEDS FIRE other meeting at norrow afternoon. Tons of Fuel Destroyed at Brook- Caused ‘by Gasoline gine Explosion, : « Fire at noon to-day destroyed two three-story coal sheds In the Bush- wick yards of the A. Busch & Son Coal Company, at Metropolitan Ave- nue and Newtown Creek, Brooklyn, and burned several thousand tons of coal. ‘The loss is estimated at $75,000, ‘The fire was caused dy the ex- plosion of a gasoline engine operating the coal lift. Burning gasoline was thrown over, the sheds and ignited them. The wires and the fire signal system and it was almost twenty minutes before a cali could get in to the department, Gas formed by the burning coal ham- d the firemen. Yemen Peter Dillegard and nn-of Engine Company No.2 injured Nother firemen wert caught by the flying whieh Dil- fegard and Dionan released” when t fell fire burned out telephone | CAN'T RAISE BROOKLYN FARE! FAILED 10 EVICT TENANTS, SO HE SHUT OFF WATER —ae | Landlord of Bronx House Fined $200 for Violating Sanitary Code. Paroled on his own recognizance to appear to-day in the Municipal Term of the Magistrate's Court to pay @ fine of $200, Benjamin Waxcn- berg, a lawyer of No. 291 Broadway, who owns the two-family house at No. 1238 College Avenue, the Bronx, has threatened Chief Henlth In- spector Thomas F, MoCarthy of the 3} Bronx with injunction proceedings to stop McCarthy from serving on him an additional summonses for viola+ tion of the sanitary code. Waxenberg was found fuilty of violating the sanitary code. inspector Simowitz of the Health Department told Magistrate Harris that the law- yer deprived Mr, and Mrs, Abraham Ascher, their three children and three elder relatives, of water by turning off the supply at the feed pipe in tho cellar, Waxenherg, it was testified, was defeated in the Bronx Municipal Court, in ejectment proceedings against the Ascher family, so in omer to get rid of the tenant, he turned off the water. He ts said to have declared he regarded his house as untenated. Each time Health In- spectors called and found the water shut off they gave another summons | to Waxenberg. i} He was served with the thin one outside court in the Municipal Building yesterday by Inspector Mc-| Carthy. The first one having been disposed of by Magistrate Harris, the second one is returnable before the Bronx Court of Special Sessions to- morrow and the third one is return- able before the municipal term of, a Magistrate's Court next Tues- "The water was shut off this mom- ing to the Ascher family, according | to report. | ————— LANDLORD LIABLE FOR EVICTION IN Dr. Copeland Gives Opinion’ in « Cases Where Bfectment Is Sought on an Excuse. A landlord who secks the eviction of a tenant on the excuse that the tenant complained to the Board of Health concerning the landlord's prop- erty is guilty of violating Section A of the Penal Code, according to Health Commissioner Copeland, who was a witness before Magisirate Harris against Mark W. Brenen of No. 19 West 102d street. The defendant admitted writing to one of his oldest tenants, Charles A. Coleman, a writer of No. 54 Manhat- tan Avenue, where he has lived for twenty-four years, that “some of old tenants lave become so unrea- sonably discontented, and so many complaints have been sent to the Board of Health, that I think you had better seek more agrecable quarters." Dr, Copeland testified the records of his d: partment did not show that any complaints were made by Coloman against Brenen. In conceding the letter was written and delivered by the defendant, coun- sel for the accused stated that it was purely a question of law and an ad jJournment was taken until next ‘Pu day. HAFFEN TENANTS WARNED OF BOOST Former Bronx _ President When Told of Notice Gi by His Son. Louis I’, Haffen, former Borough President of the Bronx, who was re- moved by Gov. Hughes in 1909 and is now consulting engineer for Bronx Borough, owns two large apartment houses, housing forty families at Nos. 200 and 804 East 162d Street, In spite of the fact that Mayor Hy- jan and his Administration have come ut in favor of lower rents the tenants of these houses have been notified by Mr. Hartfen's son, acting as his agent, that their rent will be increased from $9 to $16 a month when lease next October. The increases will raise the four-room [and of tiv @ month Harry that Angry yen expire rent of apartments to §45 a m¢ -roomn apartments to $60 L. Haffen of No. 307 I increasing cost of | 162d Street guve as the reason for advance the ev iver'n Petition for Boost te| labor, materials, taxes, coal, &c,, en- Se Canis’ DE hy Nixea, into the maintenance of’ real Conta’ Di a by Aizen, and gave notice that “no | Pub rvice Comm Nixon | renovating will be done," | 1 the application to-day of the| Louis }. Haffen, who lives at No. ver of Nassau Rail-| 308 East 162d Street, became highiy | sf ry oa oklyn (indignant when asked to tell his rea- gad Corman Pala did >okly"| pons for raising the rents. “The man and @ the Ratiroud | whe says 1 did is a ilar and a loafer’ Company, and of the, sland and) he shouted. “I dafy him to appear Brooklyn Railroad ¢ ude Lares {| before me. I can still Heck any of Micncit Goecahoia’ seein, | eae n calming down a bit, ne| eo on to increase fares from| “had nothing to say | to eight cen | His son Harry said he alone The Interboro: ordered to im-| responsable for the inore | prove i Queensborough he defended as reasonal tune Central Station to > ale Averndaitional cans which will Neco. Child Ie Killed by Test, (eaata 0 additios passengers,| Anna Gold, five, of No, 225 East 106th The new edule will go into effect) Street, died last night from a fracture |May 1 i | of the skull received when che was run — taxicab driven by John | Soft Coal P © to Rise, nty-two, of No. | ast The action of President Wilson's und owned by Siege « coal commission in granting bituini- Lederer of No. 1856 Third Avenue. ‘Th fous \mine “workers & ‘wage incressn pecident occurred in front of the ehitd's of per ce means the price of home. Whalen was arrested on a coal at the mines will advance 68 technical charge of homicide when wit- cents to $1.25 a ton, bituminous coal operators announced here yesterday, nesses told conflicting stories aa to how the accident happened. HEALTH COMPLAINT | NAVY NOT READY: DANIELS 70 BLAME, FISKE ASSERTS, | Admiral Declares Fleet Now | ‘Cannot Duplicate German | Maneuvers of 1914, ‘WASHINGTON, March 31.—The navy Was unprepared for war in 1917 because of the “mental and temper- amenta] characteristicss of the man \ “Spending” Daylight Saving Is the Password and Congress Decided Nothing Is Worth Saving From Doughnuts to Day-| * light—-When It’ 's 9 P. M. on Broadway Now, the| Folks in New Jersey Are Going to Bed. Copyright, N an epidemic of ecot ‘That was when the armistice ended ev I everything, including war-time economy. By Neal R. O'Hara. 1920, by ‘The Trees Publishing Company (The New York Rvening World’ nomy, Congress once gave us daylight saving. war was still on tho pay roll. But when the erything except Prohibition Congress ended The boys that vote under the hollow dome of the Capitol and think under other hollow domes TOO OOO ORO) GIRL WHO ROUTED 3 ip | But When One Tried «to Search “Bank” She Fofé got His Revolver. “They gave me'a stitt tite while it lasted, and F shudder wheméVer f jthink of that loaded revolver stuok [in my mouth, but the meanest part of it all was when that nasty meh ” b) nt at its head and of the policy he pur- 3 sookiogs. 1 cooled havik GIN x sued as the result of those character- 3) for taking such a moan advantagetes om istics,” Rear Admiral Bradley Fiske, 3| Mie Lena Granbow thus Stemaminn retired, declared to-day before the 3) up her impressions of the. SMe Senate Committee investigating the ‘staged in her conéectionery store at navy’s conduct of the war, No. 91 Wallace Street, Newark, yas “To prevent unpreparednoss in the terday, in which she ‘wrenohedt with future” Admiral Fiske said, “The her teeth a loaded .32 revolver Sport most important step is for the public one of three gunmen, and beat ml to insist that the man at the head 3 scratched the three until ‘they-eul of the navy shall be imbued with the © for lite. spirit of the navy, highly educated, % “L wasn't at all suspicious when open-minded and acquainted with the © they ordered cigars and chonglate principles on which naval prapared- a OOOO and gave me a $10 bill in payment.” ness is based and by following which SSSOO@S2OO® she waid, “though I did notice: they preparedness can be secured.’ decided they'd saved Europe and that was plenty. No need of saving jlecked ‘around a good deal. While T Admiral Fiske wns aide for opers-| anything else. Spending was the password, and Congress decided [was handing a second bar of chéee. tions and senior advisor to the Sec-| nothing was worth saving from dollaw® to doughnut: to daylight.. To | /1te one stuck his revolyer undet, my retary of the Navy for several years) compensate the farmers for the hard&hip of $2.20 wheat, they*voted [nse tse gem pe prec pd Letavotletig eedhcaioat | He ‘em an extra hour's sleep by vetoing daylight saving. An extra hour's | ° Whit —" geuaet, ana te war, but resigned as aide after! dit-| sieap is nothing to @ Congressman that can snore in six languages, 4 priv aay ferneas with th Secretary regarding | Congress decided, that war nena ———-— | mduth and held it open a second then the abolition of wine from the mess In daylight. Broadway is now | thrust in the revolver. I felt the test tine Prohibition would do very : gun barrel and tried to § on warships and over preparedness. lighted up an hour tater, but jump ‘Mie Admire well for a peace-time nation. , if but he tripped me and we both y Admiral told the committee the Broadway's been‘ lit up for its nayy wags not only unprepared for! The Government was so busy vhs lies 4 to the floor, war from 1915 to 1917 from a stand-| With moonshine that daylight ay Uascat ae nC Then the short one near the Geer, goint of material and personnel, but} took care of itself. So they let | Mmilkman now starts his route Jand the best looking of the lot. $00, lacked any well prepared war plans.| it go at that. However, there is Somewhat earlier, but there are Vaile A tenfegor: + Ap, bank It was not until-Aug. 1, 1919, that the] such a thing as State's Rights, | nO souses left to climb up tha [ane Ocied woeh dingly. But LSet Navy Department established an ar-| and it’s legal for a State to cail |, beck stalra with him. Prohibl [SVC vo toe eat bealde exieae ganization for the exclusive duty of] 6 A. M, 7 A. M,, even if it can't Hon, Has: Bibked: (Ns Yee 100 ih vege; aad the wentaiaee knew making plans for war, he sald, al-| cgi! one-half of 1 per cent..2.76 | barder than daylight saving can |1 naa twisted around and dumeml UME? though he and other officens bad been! per cent, With the result that ever soothe it, The best that D. “| iman with the revolver, I forgot all urging such an organization for sev-| New York is now an hour ahead S. can do for New York now is |apout the revolver being loaded; I) 4 betel Tea Weer ae riciee of the Nation. United we stand, to make a 9 o'clock town a 10 [didn’t really take time to think it $ a a var \pl mw 911, divided we sleep—that's the old o'clock burg. might blow my head off. All I knew when he was a member of the Ge Foie wp Bei Daylight saving as it stands |Wwas that it felt ternibie, and F eral Board, did not contain 1 per cent. dumped hh ed rae at hee é et imped him off me; 1 jerked my, of what they should have embodied,| New York has pushed the ROW NTO Eran teat weOeeee | ad Tha Gthigs whe cit iske testified, and in 1914 when war broke out in ‘Burape the Navy was clock ahead one hour. With one | G®O@O@HOGDDOGHHOOHHEGOGOOHE | revolver out of his hand, You gee, “wholly unprepared for war. stroke of the hand it eliminates |® Pidliegi tery nea “The Navy to-day could not carry a a 4 out manoeuvres such as the German| §!Xty minutes. John D. Rocke Well, didn't that guy put wp a of fleet executed in 4913," he said, “prin-| feller, who makes $200 every tight for that revolver! Haw 1 gage: cipally because of dack of atte o gel 4 cruisers and aerial forces.” time he breathes, lost $126,000 tell, but believe me I did a lot of | ‘ by the transaction, John was kicking, and punching and MILK AND MONEY hit almost as hard as the real 1 brenescie they See E sufferers who waited for the clothes were in shreds, But I ot on LATE THESE DAYS} ck to move to midnight Inst my feot with that gun in my 5 - - |and, believe me, they didn't wi 4 Jan. 16. Those were the boys “I ran after them, but I must Mixup of Clocks, Due to Daylight] that felt like a million dollars been crazy to go into the street e Savings, Interferes With every time THEY had a breath! Yim, Tt nced at ebot, but 1 at Mail Deliveries. When it's 9 A, M. on Broad- | was'on account of the exelt | Mite ana ates va way now, folks in Connecticut wiven 1 heard the report 1 was ‘ 3 and money, two of New York's te ened stiff, Then I came A chief nec je, are being delayed be-| F¢ Soing to bed. The folks in and stopped running through: ' cause of the mix-up on daylight sav-| Jersey have been in bed an S| streets looking lke a scar ia ing. hour! A Jersey commuter now KKMKONE | Anyway, maybe the police will et ‘ Witt the alngle\exception of the Bile} “gains an hour going New York since picture puzzles. We're | ‘em i the aateorniliat ateusake Searaticg on(|e. WR) 10 the girts dosen't Jose it against it in the morning and — indard Eastern time, which makes| on him. Dual timo has certain- for it at night—for it makes a Se TUES OLE SAMPLES E an hour later fore ly razzed the old railroad sched- lot of difference which end of S T E R M Oo oO. R ! ing New ules. A guy is plus an hour the elarm clock you do your || O | alan) tin coming in and minus an hour sleeping on, We also understand Mattresses and Springs ' hol, when he goes back home. the Lamplighters’ Union wants | At sharp reductions!» k who ship by the Irie have to milk the Which would make it even if he | extra pay for working overtime. Immediate calle: | SOUR 2) ar Cece Pana es “how r,| didn’t lose two hours trying to They claim they now have to |] wus pnd tate ' ie Si5 money tae gomes ¢ every figure it out. The passengers work an hour later. The guys |] an exceptionat \ Nae d, {lt wenere > num are now losing more time on the that Urn out the lamps in the opportunity ; ey irae wen aba roalroads than the Government | morning also want overtime 5 q | frat and erry. il to the Post | lost money on ‘em. juck. They claim they start OSTERMOOR & CO. - | eet antlen vere cnanated ai New York alone won its D. 8 work an hour earlier, It's a rh tet aE 18 | i enough to get them through the Clear | C.—Daylight Saving Campaign. poor scheme for saving that |] Snighs* mew eke mean H have to go over tothe next day," | And any burg that's burned up doesn’t work the other way! Phone 5 Spring 4) outils acelving in hn euernoon muon || Ate night time lke old N, Y, ( day under the old time, are now hi certainly deserves what it getu % aver until morning. 'MRS.C.BLACKWELL |PERSHING HATES St. | & ae(hibh a SUES ACTOR-HUBBY | WASTE OF WINE AT AML WK 7 ons | FOR B | SHIP CH 5 | is | _CHRISTENING 5™ AVENUE ATS6™ STREET | 5 Half Ought to Be Drink Second Floor ~Take Clevator Before the Bottle Is Smashal On Sale Tomorrow PHILADELPHIA, March 31 QN. PERSHING came here i to-day to witness the a Rae rmctiaianet NAVY BLUE TRICOTINE 4 t port Chaumont, fins Julia € inson of Washington, se- lected by Pershing, was the spon- ae she served in France as an my spattered with champagne when : i, Misy Stinson broke the For Women and Misses ing bottle on the laugh nerly us | that ught to be opened and n | $ : | i 00 plent F ’ added | | The @haumont has been 1 | | | fter the town wh Gen | ie . % | s headquarters dur Selected from regular stock of | : ufter the Chaumont, | costlier Spring Models, and no ate ; the cargo carrier Capulin wa . . aunched en, Pershing al tention paid to cost or actual values witne 7 a | ib tiacewri | BOY DIES OF HORSE'S KICK. Other Materials Included ; jCarlyle Blackwell of Movie Fame! eine, charges Carclessness tm in this Sale are ‘ | Summoned to Court on C Compulsory Military Tratning. Ph | t Charge Albert House of No. 530 66th Street, | ‘ , rf | Hyle Blackwell, a moving picture| Brooklyn, whose son George, sixteen, | Tricotine Tweeds wy stor, iw cant for the tending part in| lind In the Gwedian Hospital a the roe Gabardine Serge ‘ a Supreme Court olose-up 4 after pis Oye Be snares 9 : noon when he ts to appear before rouk camalensnese 1 Sar OAT OR fat), Velour Checks Poiret Twill j tice Hendrick to explain his failure to pay llx wife temporary al The boy wae drilling in the Je Cay mony pending the trial of h Uy Getralt wusal tookye whan ke i Embroidered ¥ mpomsation: When. sane: Gled, hen gamel ink lnemte "and ommalaad tise noite Plain Tailored, Braided or Em ei plaint about u month ago Mr. Black- | without medical attention, the father . well said her husband was $3,800 in ar- | says, and also that the drilling lastruc- \reare, tion ‘ia left to classmates, a ee ne