The evening world. Newspaper, April 21, 1920, Page 2

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)

iy pi * freight train in ervis to-day and teh to Port from Jersey terminalis; freight 70 per cent of ‘normal; h passenger service normal; ‘Contra|—Passenger service, nd commutation, normal; i; great improvement in term|- freight yards; many new men ap- for jobs and being put to work fast as they Qualify; increasing of freight cars by float to Moves of Himself and Fol- , lowers in Washington. af | Now York; fifty-three treigh: cars} ORATORS IN TRAINING. floated to New York yesterd we emont limess bo OGr aad. et naeviass pacsens Preparing to Tell Country service normal; many strikers! Vote Against Candidate Is men have been hired. Vote Against Peace. _ Ferrics—All operating on normal mecnienenih By David Lawrence. York Central—Passenger ser- Evening World.) oe New Haven—Service lacks only frre, trains daily of being normal. | 1ent Wilson pla norma’ ® Lehigh Valley—Handied 184 cars of | freight In New York harbor yester- Staten Island Rapid Transit Com- ‘\-.Peny—Normal passenger service in _ “riish hours en Tottenville Division, | gion, hourly trains by day, no night | the treaty. A vote for the Democratic ‘to run one train to-day, the first] Treaty; a vote for the Republican ‘Bitte the strike. ticket will be a voto against the Pewee Baltimore & Ohio on Staten Island | Treaty. That is the Democratic strato- Fourteen frfight trains bandled| cy. That is what the Democracic pesterday, the best récord sipoe| campaign orators are going to say, strike began. notwithstanding: the protosts of Ke- , The only violence reported to-day] publican speltbinders that they Was an assault on Henry Bogardus| wanted the treaty with reservations wor West Ney York, quartermaster on and Mr. Wilson blocked the way. wukers at Park Avenue and Jeffer-| Democratic Party on that issue, the jon Street, Union Hill. His face and | President's next move. will unques- hands were bruised and Me right leg) tionatty be to withiraw American cut. He was taken to the North] participation from Burope, and from ‘Hudson Hospital. that would logically follow another New York markets still reflect the| peace negotiation by the next Presi- serious situation created by the! dent, either a separate peace or an en- strike, dut their present troubles are | trance into the Jueague with reserva- traceable to the carly day# of the| tions, strike, not to present conditions, The) PLAN TO PUT BLAME FOR ‘situation is improved, however, No| TROUBLES ON REPUBLICANS. _ new increases of prices were reported. |- But while it will be the aim of the _ Betimat'ng the cost of the outlaw | Republican Party to keep the Amer:- to the merchants of the city at] can peopleyconcentrated on domestic ($1,009,000 a day, the Merchants’ As-| issues, the Democrats, led by the _ sociation announced to-day the form-/ President, will ‘blame all the eco- ‘align of a dofensive comunittee t|‘nomic and business ills of the coun- the city from the effect of|try on the failure of the Senate to Ge Mush. gerikes in the future. e ratify the treaty. ee - THUG GRABS WOMAN > ON ELEVATED STEPS) joiicy and American Ambassadors af abroad have been instructed to act et ’ as “observers” at all international Mrs,'Le Bourveay, Gy Employee, | oo erences, Foreign Governments Attacked by Masked Manin | wit) know that this is merely a tem- ari, té Daylight. porary, expedient while fhe American Mra, Veronic Bourveau, inspector people thresh out the differences be- ine otter ‘under Manhattan tween two branches of the Govern- yh President Curran, was hol@|ment which bave co-ordinate Juri the folewntod ntafion at Ninth Avenue] treatjes. This decision and Fiftieth: Street, at 4:80 tt p the rail. She has sinor boen eon! to her home. of the Cabinet, Senate for ther consideration— ‘employee in miele uae be- there is nothing now"before the Sen- Tenth and Eleventh Avenues,| ate?” was the query which. the writer ‘and on her way back noticed three| darected to a member of the Cabinet young men loitering on the corner of r this week's Cabinet meeting. . Tenth Avenue. . cause the Senate sent it back he had ascended but four stops of to the White House without action the olov: station when tho masked and with the statement that the ice: H ated Na treaty could not pass,” was the reply. ‘Mra. ; “Now it is futile to think of negotiat- . ‘Le Bourveau broke away and/ing a new treaty with powers who yelled for the police. “The tobber tried] already have ratified it and have put $0 allenae Dire. Le Rourveau with one|it into operation. The President with the other tore the straps/ worked out @ treaty which embodied of is ohn carried. to her| MS Concept of American ideals, It + Pidiae tafant’s companions | W88 approved by representatives of 4 9 foreign governments after many of them thad made concessions to the American viewpoint. Some of them would be quite willing to recall those concessions in a new negotiation. _, $8,000 Theft Revealed Hol AMERICAN VOTERS ARE COURT 08 of Suspect Here. OF LAST RESORT. Isaac Anderson—his address and the} “But the Ameridan people constitute circumstances of his arrest being kept | the court of last resort. They will de- @eret by the district atorney's oftice—| cide Whose cone of American- held in $1,500 bail on a charge of | !8™ is correct. If they do not sustain Trand larceny to-day by Judge Mul- {the President or the Democratic plat Fquren in the Court of General Seasions. | so tai anpten Engh epee 9 Aaatniant District attorney Ryttenierg |Germany “and making a separate e “-elear Sp thetts amounting to '4200-000 | Peace, a8 Woll ax straightening out the % iro mplere and trucks, mixup in foreign relations brought "The specific case has to do with| about by the failure of the treaty .000 worth of velvet which was found | negotiated at Versailles to be ap- tho for sale in New York at the time | proved by the Senate.” t Pete Wisen’ the “ rain bound ‘Therefore the White House wili Tee eee It was found to voniain | tive to #ee that the Damocratic Na~ Licks, stones and waste paper. "tional Convention adopts a platform tne Velvet was shipped from South | embodying the President's ideas. The Manchester, Conn. and was in aj latest returns from Nebraska whivh Street warehouse one day wouk! éeem to indicate the defeat of oe Witiam Jennings Bryan as a delegate se Due To-Night. meant the vindication of Senator ‘Phe following advisory message from| Hitchcock, who has reflected the Washington was received by the loot] President's viewpoint in the contests. WWonther Bureau to-day: “Indicatea| Moreover, the reporte frem Georgia Bisturburce over Lower, Lake reion | indicating, the succes of | Attorney i eastward; will se ane! Pern foath shiting to west winds ig,| White House as another sign of the « Eternoon and to-night, with squsila | continued supremacy of the Wilson ideais in the ranks of the Democratic voters. to Advertisers; Id 4s obliged to omit 1 A omit 11 Meee “4, caattt aft ||| petition the White House for another ) Executive while hi at the spoils : Resaee bs nok aM, Tharadny || |the issues on do iu jention, ‘and. ralansn. || | ep od PemnE he-8. 2. 0b. Oetdes |] | were ce the Cobine mi Ft Binniay adivortininn Art eM ibence Y Mi |the result will be accepted as Y and rel Hy struction or mandate from th | H on the pact itself, the foreizn relations of service normal west of Bltx- | President’s Strategy Shown by Mike worma!; freight about 60 per (Special Correspondent of The WASHINGTON, April 21.—Presi- to make the Pennsylvania — Passenger service! Treaty of Peace the dominant issue freight 50 per cent. of the campaign. Whether @ candi- date or not, Mr. Wilson will make a # ‘moved 133 care west fromJerscy | fight to have the American people City; reports a shortage of men at| indorse his stand. For the present, Jersey City and Perth Amboy, bit therefore, the treaty will not go back vacancies aro being filled rapidly. | to the Senate unless, of course, there is some change of heart in the Sen- ate or some situation in Europe horsiy at non-rush hours, no trains! Which alters the whole face of things *vatter 645 P, M.; North Sbore.Divi-| But the overshadowing tseue wil! be pexviest South Beach Division, expect | ticket will be a vote for the Peace ‘a Lackawanna ferry, attacked by] If the Ameriéan people defeat the In the meantime the President 1s taking upon his own shoulders the determination Of “American foreign ‘al Palmer is viewed by the ‘The treaty may seem a dead issue but it is to be revived by the Demo- crats ax the paramount question of | the campaign, Unles the Senate shall rportunity to vote on the treaty, it wil remain in the hands of the awaits the wish of the American people as expressed ‘To the argument that it will be dif-| ficult to tell what the people are vot- S2r% for tne Sup: |) ling on because of the complexity of I's estic affairs, mem- ople | an “|Royalty Attends Wedding — SMITH ODE Of Lady Dorothy Cavendish Daughter of Governor Gen- eral of Canada.Marries a Commoner, “f eaten LONDON, April 21.—Capt. Haroid MacMillan and Lady Dorothy Caven- dish, daughter of the Duke of Devon- shire, Governor General of Canada, were married at St. Margaret's, A ON ALIBI OFFERED (Continued From First Page.) bree! ap tate in 1817 to early in 1019. It was day, a grandson of Henry B. Hyde. more than §2. ‘The cross-examination was sus- who were waiting could be heard and, Mets, former Congressman and (of the Board of Education and State was former Police Commissioner | Porter nine years. Then and veracity and that it was good. Smith did not question any of them. 1919, were you, as Executive Officer, | chang in charge of conditions in New York | cent. City? A. Not of physic=| conditions; leave applications; [ signed expense checks, ' Q. Those of the men of the Special , Porter went on enumerating his Bishop of Derby, the Rev. William! oo ‘Guseg, including those of Sec- Templé, a cousin of the bride and son forary, House Committee Chairman, | Watson Runs Second in Primary of the late Archbishop of Canterbury, | Member of Board of Directors of the and the Rev. John MacMillan, a/ Police Club at No. 146 Riverside | With Hoke Smith jcousin of the bridegroom, officiated. | DEY Sian you signed checks for por] ji Queen Mother Alexandra, Princess 9g expenses you examined the VOUCN-| ATLANTA, Ga, Victoria, Prince Albert and the Duke | ers from Feb. 7, 1919, to this year?) 2 of Connaught attended the wedding. | A. Yes. ccratle Prasidaniia) Profersnc ‘The Duke of Devonshire gave the| Q How often do you inspect sta- bride ayay. Lat Sc et (Continued From First Page.) the way as to information on the state of the finances of the country, for they have repeatedly been told that the Congress was not working to the end of decreasing taxes and reducing the high cost of living. This newspaper has said that if the esti- mates of expenditures furnished by heads of Government depertments could not be cut $1,750,000,000 and the up by 2 maskod youth on the steps of diction over the making ae Led Govel erit could nob reafise’at leant ; etn gon Mts, Le ourreau. waa] telat family and is reflected in théfarmy and other branches, tne people a by the throat and forced) point of view expressed by members} would have to buy another bond isdue or stand for another ‘increase in : taxes, Mrn. Ia Bourveau had visited a city] «,, Why, Not vend the treaty back 0 Tt looks like another bond issue. (Just a moment—we are getting down to the proposition of passing the buck to the soldiers). The Government to-day is pay- ing 5 and 6& 1-2 per cent. for money. Corporations needing vast per cent. Liberty bonds are shrinking in ya 1 value, | in valu val represented to the holders of Liberty bonds who cannot keep them until they ma- fure but must sell them in order to obtain money for current high operas, in the face of all this Congress has been drifting along without singl tructi reven: sure or a sing ture to join with the p made by the Republican leade @ year ago when they, ol coring for President Wil an extra session of Congregs. It was announced nearly a month ago that Senator Boles Penrose, the Republican leader on fiscal matters, who mised in April, 1919, that the new Congress would repeal the excess profits tax, would be in Washington, after a long illness, on April 18 to guide the majority to paths that would give reflef to taxpayers. He came from Florida and what did his guidance amount to? It a mounted to abandonment on the part of the majority of a plan to put ‘over the boldest political trick ever essayed in this country, the passage, or the bluff at passage, of ‘a bill giving bonuses or compensation to men who gerved in the late war. Now we get back to the business of passing the buck. The stat have been unable to reach agreements on the form of bonus or compensation - tion. Their main object h: n I which would appeal voters and fool the to passa to the most treaty, ‘believing that the people hav- ing credited him with an insight into their wishes during the war would trust him still further. ‘The Senate has rejected his work at Versailles, Does the American Republican President, Mr will retire gracefully from the successor Of all the Premiers and plonipoten- tlaries who sat at Versailles. many say everything else | eT will be subordinated to ihe treaty, and, Mave been ov fe people. Prime Minister 1 the country. caneml election over there too, He was maintained throughout the war, He went ahead to negotiate a electorate side with the Senate or with the President? If they elect a son scene and hand the job of Government to a ote of the ‘d George 2 IR- and President Woodrow Wilson By next November the Amerl- ¥ y ‘ean people will have sustained or re- ectittan Fe old tacticn but they ae, Pudiated thelr representative, and, son's conception of con- ing by the growing dissatiafac- Btitutional government. He was elects | tome ie “4 ed for four years and given chargé of| of the peace treaty there may be a Te- Engiand with the character M or June, 1919? A. No; I under- | “WITH NATION FACING BiG DEFICIT ety Gas fer comeraet, CHICAGO ‘OUTLAWS | | with those mater cnnowLepae| REFUSE TO RETURN * AUTHORSHIP OF LETTER. letter of the witness of July 17, 1919, Micah PRB Taottidtrcticn of [taken from the, Police Headquarters | cause Jailed Leader Fails to the project, dem. ‘of the | files to a Mr. Maroney of No. 108 West | Address Them. 89th Street. The letter related to the} Kahn and Salle Cobin by policemen dressed as army officers. deficit up to, as Mr. Porter refused ‘to acknowledge the 000,000.’ ‘There is to be a caucus on the bonus| marked “Copy.” minutes after the meeting opened. Fall- business to-morrow night, The in-| Q.‘Copy of what? A. A copy. ure of John Grunau, Chief of the Chi- dications are that the soldiers are to| @Q. A capy of what? A. (by Mr.| cago Yardmen's Association, to appear ied tea nai a 600 men re- 1 leases, | mained in the hail. iso that the wounded and sick and|pendence, if Your Honor | pl Tonnage Wea | ene eater Oe: | Cant who desired to return to work. oT be thrown overboard, with the prom. | Littleton)—The ‘Declaration of Inde- | caused the bolt. disabled are to be munificently pro-|‘This whole business i frivolous. vided for, which they have not been | Rend the letter. provided ‘for thus fur, the policy of| ‘The letter was laid aside unread. | == the Gpvernment in that respect hav-| Q. Did you know May Owens and Img been unspeakubly rotten. Grace Buckley? A. Yes. | ere is the buck-passing proposi-| Q. Did you hot visit thom at No. 211 tion as voiced by Mr. Good on the} West 6yth Street about May 12, 1918? floor of the House with the (ap-|A. No. plause) included as taken from ti®| Q. Did you visit them at any other official transcript of his remarks: time? When? A. No. \ “There is going over the ooun- Q. How long had you known May try now a propaganda for the peo- | Owens? A. About four or five years. fle to quit buying, exeept the |} met her at the 1zth Regiment, before things that are actually necessary. | ne hecame an instructor in dancing | Joheute angt polloy quant to be | at the Grand Central Palace. | and practice: ver} body. (Applause). We ought x6 | OENIES GIRL WAS KNOWN TO economize. We ought not to buy HIM A& TOOTSIE. a thing that is not absolutely §| Q. she introduced you to Grace Keoessary these high prices.” | Buckley? A. I don't remember. oe auiant te try te bein, uta | Q. You were enough Interested in condition eo that, the 106,000,000 | them to order a police investigation PA spcigsl children who jon a telephone complaint of May did not go to war can live under | Owens. A. Yes. & more normal condition and en- Didn't you. know her joy some of the benefits of life. Tostsie? Didn't she call you on the $1,000,000,009 or | wire and say: “Commissioner, this 1s Tootale?” A. No. ce | ‘objection ti Q. Didn't she call you on the tele- on the part of some on y ‘and that ce | phone in your apartment at 2 in the eon says, ‘Oh, jet us put a tax on| morning? A. No. corporations and on the earnings of| Q. From the West 47th Street Sta- production,’ tion didn’t she call you up? A. I don't | “You say that you do not want to| know. I didn’t get the message. put a tax on production or consump-| Q. Didn't you call in three police- tion because that will be paid by all,| men and notify them you were going | but the departments that have in-|to “break” them because they had vestiguted it say that it does not make | arrested May Owens—Tootsie? A. No any differerice where you put it, in the| 1 never did such a thing. I never main it is paid by the man who eats! served such notice on any policeman. food and wears clothes. (Applause).| Q. You suspended a policeman Do you really want to bring down| Brooklyn by telephone at 2 o'clock | the high cost of living? If you do, | in the morning without a hearing. A. wo will day to these men, appreci-| at the request of the secretary to the ating the magnificent service of the| Police Commissioner. 4,800,000 men who went into this war| Q. Hackett. A. Yes. and fought the battles of the repub-| Q. And wasn't the policeman rein- Ne: ‘Just as you saved the Union| stated next day on a complaint by then, you can save it now by the| his captain. A. By my suggestion he same sacrifice andi by the same de-| was ordered reinstated. termination and manhood, and place| smith got Porter to admit he had the standard of the American soldier | recommended the issuing of a license a little higher than it was ever placed | to, the St. Nicholas Skating Rink before.’ (Applause.) dancing room to the same persons | “We are at a time when every man| who had managed the Grand Central and every woman and child in Amer-| Palace establishment. ve Al AND SAVE'THE.PRICE|| OF NEW OVERALLS Erasmus High School Principal Sets | BYOL OTE "=e OLLOWING the suggestion of paign whic! the public with the view of hi the bills passett would have its lorical ending—the big manipulators wobld ri and the little fellow be Jett FARE GRAB BILLS; J, Horbert Low, the students of Erasmus Hall , Aligh School, in Brooklyn, any persons with whom the concern] began to wear old clothes. The did business; he merely munaged the| old clothes idea is to take’ the office. place'of the overall Porter said he was associated with | which was spoken of at the school ‘Thomas Hickey in the new Aquarium | to-day as a “fad.” restaurant in West 45th Street from) self was wearing old clothes to- Supporters of the Measure Busy Hunting for Rein- forcements, Dr. Low him- RE is an opportunity to By Joseph S. Jordan. avail yourself of your (8) Staff Correspondent of The Aa Evening World.) ALBANY, April 21—-There is & chance yet for the suffering public to escape the enmeshment of its nickels in the Jenks fare grab bills. The measures, which would give the trac- tion interests the privilege of ham- stringing the straphangers, did not move yesterday out of the Rules Committee, but the way out was be- ing oiled all day and last night in and out of session of the Assembly. come out when pas- All that is necessary to put them on their way to final passage is,the dictum of Speaker Whatever the Speaker says regarding any legislation in the Com- mittee on Rules is final, and imme- diate action follows his command. It requires seventy-six votes to pass the measures through the As-° sembly, and after counting noses last night the best that could be figured was sixty-eix votes. And the Jenks grab bills are not coming out of the Rules Committee until enough votes are assured on the floor to put them through the Lower House, no matter a losing venture; he received no aal- He potted out that old clothes skins suitable for. ‘ary. The venture was financed by} cost nothing, whereas to buy the Mrs. Porter and Henry D. H. Ripley,| overalls means an investment of Genuine Russian Fox. $23.50 Stone Marten. Russian Fitch ! ‘ ae pended while several business men NO SETTLEMENT released. ‘The first was Herman A. | IN STUTZ STOCK Comptroller, and a former memtber Price Expected to Be Decided on Board of Charities, He said he had To-Day—Oud-Lots Sell known Porter ten years The next at $700. With th son- Rhbinelandet Waldo, He bad ktown troversy emsected te afteroon there came Chief was more activity in sales Justice Frederic. Kernochan, of Spe- stocks to-day on the curb. A few odd cial Sessions. He had known Porter lots were bought at §700. ®@ twelve years. 4 The Committee on Mediation, com- ‘All three declared they knew Por- | Posed of bankers holding the confidence ; of both sides in the Stock Exehi tl i , truth sored ‘er’s reputation for integrity, fight, is expected to make a eettlement price thig afternoon. Allen A. Ryail, chairman af the Board of Directors of sage Is certain. Cobinast ald Skins, $25 STOLES NECKPIECE Genuine Scotch Mole, $18.50 up. ; 6th Ave. Cor. 41st St. Smith then resumed his cross-| the Stutz’Motor Company, said to-day examination of Porter, that suspension of his “buy in” order PORTER NOT IN CHARGE OF! would apply to all shorts who sub- PHYSICAL CONDITIONS. scribed to the resolution adopted . Und bircular March 13,|™eeting between representatives bas hocindet cag be Ryan interests and fifty-six Stock Ex- Ys against them. There is a fine struggle going on for the missing ten votes, and never was there seen so busy a lobby in Albany over any measure. lobbyists are having the hardest fight that they have ever gone up against in getting votes to carry the bill through, and if they succeed in the Lower House they have another fight before them in the Senate. ‘The declaration of Chairman Mar- tin in the Assembly Monday night that the hearing was merely a farcial proceeding, and not intended to carry any weight in the consideration of the Jenks measures, did not sit well on many members. ; They are asking why the public was put to the expense’ of coming from their homies to the Capi- tol to voice their sentiments against the fare grab bills, if the conclusion had been already reachede that the bills, willy nilly, must go through both recent order calling f I was in charge of trials; I signed | ing In or return of all borrowed st trae Bie sae PALMER IS AHEAD Church, Westminster, to-day. ‘The Service Squad? A. Yes. IN GEORGIA VOTE Use the Milk That Saves the Sugar You get immediate relief from _ Sugar shortage by laying in a Borden EAGLE BRAND CONDENSED MILK unofficial returns from the State Dem- tion houses? A. I tried to see two a| Save Attorney General Palmer 48 countie: 2) 7 ‘Q. Your only authority for saying | the State Convention; Thomas that you were not in gontrol of the| son 60 counties with 120 votes, B actions of the uniforméd force as to |women and gambling 18 a conversa-| 109 yotes, ‘The: tion with Commissioner Enright In| 94 votes yet tibeleaptetnes with with 140 vot Senator Hoke Smith 42 counties with milk and sugar are used together, So the traction Interests, with only four or five days of the session left, shy ten votes of enough t¢ put the obnoxious meas- ures through the Assembly. But, with the additional ten votes, it will be no trick at all to put the bills through the Lower House and rush them over night to the Senate. Jt may be merely a coincidence that tips have reached Albany that th: traction securities are good in the market, but in the absence of stocks which ean be picked up for a few cents and dis- gorged on a rising market will do very well as a substitute. this comes only as a suggestion, but | one may read as he runs that if the Jenks bills were to pass the price of the traction securities would be ad vanced many points beyond present BORDEN COMPANY 108 Hudson ona Smith showed Porter copies of ® Tecline to Take Strike Vote Be- scandal over the arrest of Lillian) opmcaGo, April 21.—Striking rai- Way switchmen refused to vote an end to their “outlaw” ba . jorship of the letter. He insisted| Called to a mass-meeting by three v8: “More than $4,000, [authash> camory of it ahd it was | leaders, 4,00 men left the strike to-day. our Eyes You'll durely regret it later on. You owe it to yourself to protect your NOW with Ehrlich Reliable Eyesight Examination by Registered Eye Specialists. Correctly Fitted Glasses, $3 to $10 little chance Established 58 Years. Ou Big Maly Special Tomorrow, Thursday, April 22nd Special Extraordinary! for Wednesday and Thursday, April 21st & 22nd ANILLA CREAMED A\ in-a-while Candy loving public. Meee St rleleet |. each holding @ co ‘otter you we PRAGHDINARY SPECIA Other Wednesday Attractions: MILK ONOCOLATE ‘ttle tablet reeln DS—Here is one of t auiait asttahy “etbtebt 1503—AMoire Silk Bag $30.05 SPRING N Ovington bag will add the last graceful touch to your spring costume, for, like other Ovington things, Oving- ton bags display the same combinationof good taste, good style and fair price. OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of Fifth Avenue" SUPERFINE CREAM- ERY, CARAMELS: For exact locations see telephone directory. ‘The specified weight includes the container, ica must sacrifice, We must face this| ‘The Assistant District Attorney condition, And if you and I vote two! then began asking regarding Porter's billion or a billion dollars, I do not! story that he was with Mrs, Porter all care how you raise it, that 18 going of the evenings of Npw. 11 and 12 last to be spent in the markets of the| smith wanted to know how many Onited States, you are going to that trunks Mrs. Porter had at Greenwich. | amount increase the cost of living to Cong., Atlantic City and Morristown every man, woman and child in the| and other places during the summer. United Stites, (Applause.) Magistrate Joseph E. Corrigan was “And those of you who think ‘| interpolated as a favorable character you are catering to a demand of | witness. Mr, Smith continued the 4,800,000 men will, before you | baggage inquiry. know it, face the wrath of 100 Q. What was the business of Ber- 000 Americans. Because Amer- nard Lowenthal in 1919? A. Dry joa will not stand for goods “And one thing that is creating un-| Q. Have you ever had a business rest in America to-day, the one thing| transaction with Mr, Lowenthal up | that is causing the spread of Bolshe- |to November in 1919? A, No. | vism and all sorts of kindred ‘isms’! Q. When did Lowenthal last visit in the that the cost of living is your apartment? A. About ten day« too hig! ago. “That la what they are saying to the! ‘Smith then took up again the Ma soldiers to-day with a $4,000,000,000 roney letter. Littleton insisted’ th: deficit staring them in the face, the best evidence as to the Kahn-| “Just as you saved the Union then Cobin case was not Porte: ual you can save it now by the same sac- recollection. The Maroney letter was | rifice and by the same determination read. Ln It Porter criticised Assistant | and manhood and place the standard District Attorney Markowitz for dis of the American soldier a little higher counting the value of the Police than it was ever placed before.” Headquarters investigation of the Come. old mor! Save the sauntew Labu-Copin case. \ * ° 314 Fifth Ave. nr. 324 St. The coffee question is important! start the day and climax the inner at night with cotfee. Slorer Astor Corree is a blend of the choicest berries from the slopes of the Andes. So rich and fragrant, #0 distinctive and pure that once you try it no other coffee will You Do Not Have to Wear Overalls pre-war times, a of profit, because to figure anything READY-FOR-SERV MADE-TO.MBABUKE, The Caring Sarrow Co. LOUIS A, SARROW, Pres, Manufacturing Ketallers, 18 East 16th St. Economical too, for ‘*More cups te the pound’’ Between Union Sq.

Other pages from this issue: