The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1920, Page 3

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: : ‘ ca EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1980. ? 3 5 FWY COHN PRES ARE HC] WIDOW LOSE es "'SEAETts MkrSaeGReS" 9d Floor ISW. 34% TheHome «_ of ¢ " : Grants Stay. | Likely to Go to Death if pte ppaed % Judge Jacob Par ne, 3 ., * ‘ .. | dhepestig of between 400 and 300 rent HE Armenian colony In this | % val | cases this morning when a delegatign ih city, which numbers several - xppeared | of eleht tehants got Louls thousand, is doing ita ut- Ruhe, @ bird and animal merchant who most to prevent the deportation ir —habele a seis of Anna Sherbetdjian, one of the “We are ordered out of our homes, |Your Honor,” said the ‘spokesman for ‘Ww Arineni apt ed |the tenants, “by the landlord who says Cre from ey 2d last Monday after | he needs the room for his bird and ani, ‘scaping frém a Turkish harem. mal business.” Ruhe waa in court and It {a feared that if she is sent back — oo A heart-broken mother to-day | acknowledged this. she may pay for het escape with “Have « heart,” ejaculated Judge. her life. Panken, “All I ask of any landferd is ghe has been excluded from the to have a heart. Look at (Mens little! oun children. Are they not more important | © Saga hh gongs eel han Winds cs ceca thorities at Hillis Island on account Kuhe seemed doubtful and the court ‘Of her failure to read forty words granted a sixty day stay to the in any language,’ which classes tenants. her as an illiterate. She was to be Commenting upon a letter from, married to Hampirsoon Terekel- Stewart Browne, Pfesident of the yian Philadelphia merchant Gaited, Real Katate Owners Assocla-| Yee’ see ga ty mene cana ") Increased Cost Begins With CONCERNS DECLARE waits for news of-her lost fortune, | $18,500. wilich was to be the sole sup- » Sheep Herder—Continues “a ee PC. DIVIDEND port of herself and her two fatherless Till Clothes Are Made. Paige Motor, Brc Brown Shoe aid tittle cniidren in the yéers to come. Chandler to Cut Melons—Endi- | Her name ts withheld by her-lawyer, = BIG EXPENSE IS WAGES cott-Johnson 10 Per Cent. , Charles T. Lark of No. 537 Fitth Avenue, who said she was prostrated Paige Detroit Motor Company has 1. no. misfortuné Wool Co. Chief Says Public’s|@eclsred & stock dividend of 33% per “Wien her husband died recently he cent. 500, 3 } who intends to make appeal to Demand for Best Af- sanaing at olay gti aa left her the money in trust. It aor} i Rai Ly tg Pool more con-| Washington in her behalf, : stock of record May 10. The directors | OM deposit in the Lincoln Trust Com- forse mptvous thing my Hie fy We Her cousin, who escaped with fects Cloth Prices also declared a cash dividend of 8 per| pany, at 72d Street and Broadway, Now. York len: they “ate toa in| cher, was married to Harri Yaz- sent. on the common shares, payable and she decided to put it in the Har- rent cases." imajian, of Cambridge, Mass., who By Martin Green May 10 to stock of record April 30. | rjman National Bank, 44th Street and Directors of the Brown Shoe Com-| jith Avenue, .because that was (Special Staff Correspondent of The} puny, Inc., have declared a stock divi-! wearer her home. * Evertting World. dond of 33% per cemt. to common BOSTON, May 6.—It is estimated |noldens of record June 19. ‘They also| She went to the trust company 4 drew it in that in a completed suit of medium |have declared the regular quarterly yesterday afternoon an priced clothes, turned out either in a| dividend of 1% per cent’ on the com- | cash, eighteen $1,000 bilis and five #100, COURT FREES 121 JANITORS. pe ila the two women to this wets Gare Cane Uncovered” |BOLDT EXECUTORS APPEAL. bage Cana Uncev: Court in discharging twelve janitors | Pretest Property Ca Magistrate Joseph Schwab of Barlem in an envelope Here factory or in a tailor shop, 80 per; ™on stock, payable June 1 to stock | bills. The money was charged with violating the sanitary i aR ot the value can be charged to | lhpebly May 20. Hate @ rubber band apa it. big code in permitting uncovereg garbage aes ei, Boldt oy fet bong age lgdor. ‘The gther 20 per cent., accord. | ,craiset,.Moter, Car Corporation| put jt if her handbag, of cloth with cahs to overflow, to-day told Patrolman | Miles, Executors of the “estate of the . i “ out lock or catch, swung it over her ; ; Charlés Claire of the Fast 104th Street | !#te George C." Boldt, for many years aie: i ai ois bret Mai Fe eet tas PaTamG, same 10: 0 | oe and took the subway to Times |Wercns Will Take Rlsce at St.] Station, who arrested the Janitors, that | proprietor of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel pro! and costs other than labor 6 . “ift; in future when he agw uncovered and | here and Bolevue- ; of so a here and the Jevue-Stratford Hotel costa of all-who have financed the | clang @ otcok dinidcca er coer] Square, where she changed to the Thomas’s Chureh, Fifti overflowing garbage ‘ cans he should | in Philadelphia, to-day filed in Surro- cent. on common shares, payable June| shuttle, went to the Grand Central Avenue. notify the Street Cleaning Department ate Court notice of their Intention to Suit, from its raw wool stage to the | 19 to holders of record at the close of ikea fi there to the and not summon the none to court. | appeal from the appraisal of the estate finishing touches. business May 26 next. hrs bdo Bennie: bn tenes telah bad by the State ‘Transfer Tax Appraiser Miss Barbara Baker Loew, daugh- eens . When she started hd its approval by the Surrogate 10 In the operation of sleuthing a suit | nani ihe waiter: she found it|ter of Mr, and Mrs, W. Goadby Loew (NEW AFTACK MADE i Appetfate Division ot the Supreme from the sheep to the wearer, the| public to purchase expensive goods. : ; ep Pan opeak with authority om that| Was gone. Because the bag waslof this city and Roslyn, LT, ah4/QN PROHIBITION LAW roperty of the atate amounting, to abor costs can be checked up as the baa the bank igen ee haere about. $250,000 and ‘located. In Phitad operation progresses, but the labor | Susect. Sonee: Ween iene seer ed Edwin Main Post j:. of this city, hia was included in the eppraisement figures on the initial eeobhilan nt TASTES OF THE PEOPLE AFFECT | she believes the money was stolen. elder son of Edwin Main Post, will Kas tore ovalan Chat this cannot EGA iMii-VidGK’ Getkes Wool cxtat PRICE OF CLOTH. Detective Fitspatrick of the Bast|he married this (afternoon: in Bt, 44 4 K4 pool TiRiksar inate Frome bythe | “There is an impression among | Sist Street Station has been assigned |qomas’s Church, Fifth Avenue people who know nothing aboyt our| 4, He said bhe remembered ria Will dots World and passes through the hands| business that the manufacturers of | ‘© the case He 8 and 58d Street. A receptior her trip, at @)) t Mr. and Mrs, Loew's home, ae 1 cloth can fix the grade and etyles of | Stopping only once on low at Mr. at . dal bed Ree Lapa 7: their product and thus control the| nowsstand near 724 Street. A géner-| No, 262 Madison Avenue, posstble to reach a fair average with | price of goods and the tastes of the| ous reward with “no questions asked” | wise Loew was introduced tw “Senior” The Predicted Break In Prices Has Come! Wholesalers Every- very- “where At Are Flying to Cover! ‘1 ' Sale of 4100 Suits Contention Made That It Permits Confiscation of Property in Suit Begun To-day. Determined attack upon the Prohibi- tion Law on the ground that it is re- ; refewence to woo! produced in this| people, he return of the . troactive and permits confiscation of d country. “This is far from the truth. We are|'8 offered for the years ago at her parents’ home 10\| property will be made by Attorney Hen S oO Ss. ‘Wool growers say that their apres | subject to the demands and tastes of | money. Newport and has been prominent nett F. Slegelstein of No. 99 Nassau the people. We haye absolutely no control over them. sentation in a $75 sult of clothes Street in @ sult begun in Gupreme Court “NONE 80 GOOD.” HELD FOR MURDER =| foe ceo Tuxeao Park 'ahe le'6 : r to-day to recover $% 500 worth of amounts to not more than $7.50—| ‘We tried an experiment in educa- pa whist Hurley Shoes are Hurle: 2 tion, We made up a sample of cloth AR GARDEN |cranddaughter of the Inte George F.| Whiskey sold before the passage of ths ley y : } Soest a nid, i sate nutes aianie et eatanitig| OVER WAR G Ske ane pao ohm oar] Wt! ey ant oa |] made, “When the’ name’ gps pg ia : P warp only, It was of smooth, soft TURE + 1. nd Mrs. Robert C. Law- ‘orney Slegelstein represents the|| in them it stands for principles 4 : | Quantity of wool that goes into a yard | texture and, as cloth, was strong.and|Man-Arrested in Niles, Ohio, On|©: Brokaw = iy Oriental Reconstruction and Trading|] and ctice that Eiow''n6 At Nearl 40% From Re lar Prices of cloth of the quality used in making | serviceable.’ In appearatice it was but Hing Mother of Fence, rrloe | COMPOFAtion, which 18 bringing sult gg ; SAE Nearly WA ftom N¢gular tices up a $65 suit. Wool cloth of that | slightly different from the fine: sam- Charge of Killing Mother Mr. Post's mother is Mrs. Price) vgainst Frank O'Neil, an officer of tic || better in shoe-making history. anality would be sold by the ototh | Pics but ite cost was considerably Ten Children Here, Post, with whom he lives at No. 90] Greater New York Liquor Dealers’ A. sociation, with offices at No. 269: Hu Eighth Avenue, to reecvee the value of three carloads of ts €om, Tt inined ‘that ‘O'Nell ‘order But has failed to yar tered, a whisker, mygnufacturer for about $5 a yard. In| “Do you think we could sell it? No,| Dotective Caputo of the Hunters| Park Avenue. He ie graduate i the process of passing from the raw |sir, we could not. We had more than| point Precinct, arrested in Niles, 0.,| Harvard, class of 1916, and,serv Wool stage to the stage of manufac- | passing interest in the matter and| to-day, Samuel Pelusa, forty, of No.| during the war in the American Air tured cloth the original value of the thie, good, plo tea cheater eich 268 Hancock Street, Long Island City, | Force, with the rank of Captain, and sed 16 . De |had eighteen months’ service over- pi ch A wool is increased 160 per cent, and: we failed to put it on the mar-|Sharged with killing Mrs, Mary WHERE THE HIGH COSTS BEGIN | ket. Our selling agencies reported | Sane last Friday night at the corner | 6eas. CHURCH FUND $144,176.000. r that manufacturers of clothing would|ot Washington Avenue and Sherman will, THE WOOL INDUSTRY. [not buy it because they would not be | Street. $10,000 BAIL IN CHECK CASE. BRUNER oc mre Sowers ip. tls caAtty OF baile to sell. it. Peluso and Mrs. De Sane quarrelled pitchoath tet rpcent years have been devoting thelr | LOWER GRADES & DRUG ON| over the war garden Mrs. De Sane|aceused of Passing Worthless Interchurch. World Movement cam- Se rgrapahkiy 5 oie Sa paigners have collected or obtained he lorepa: step an pledges for a total of $144,176,000, ac-|| Aheel. Grips the foot firmly. attention to raising sheep which THE MARKET. cultivated with great success on a Peper in Buyin Would be profitable whep sold for! ‘phe result of this demand for the | Plot near her home at No. 70Sherman| yoann Howe, sixty-five, of No. 145 food; the wool became somewhat of finest cloth has, of course, run up the| Street. The woman was forty-eight. | piegyer Street, was arrested this morn- ; the Oak Street Station and held by Mag-|yman L. Pierce, director general of|| heel. Corset fitting at instep. and the reiurn from its sale went |mediuin and lower grades of wool|poys and girls the woman. raised bs " down the price of labor needed fot |a drug on the market. The wool|vccstenien cnough to keep the larder {strate Simpson of the Centre Street| the campaign. The total for New York|| Absolute comfort in forepart. ‘2 50 For Suits and Topcoats Originally Made to Sell at $40 i 006 bail it ti - tron 23 $6,982,986. Tt ig roduction of wool steadily went | which we could make up into cheaper ourt in $10,000 baii to awail ihe ae os oS tif 7 jeloth is declining in price, but we jor ay the winter the garden plot {iB of the Grand Jury. ern Baptist Convention already bala rachis tral oe Phe humble sheep herder whose |can't use it because we can't sell the oeee 5 1 Pk Howe, who is alleged to have served| tained _ $5,100,000 and the Reformed Pomcets Lies erecsed by the half a dozen terms in various prisons,| Church In America about 70 per cent. of yd : oar Hurleyized secret process, which ect of jest on the Western ranges to cheaper grades the price of cloth|right to it from the new owner. He |" " . | its quota of $291,000, 7 F t Hoeft is now a well paid | will come down and not before, in my | ordered Mrs, De Sane off. ‘The quarel | ¥9% Charged with having passed a bo schereadia Continues to lead the|| meteases the life of the leather, ieoee, Only a few years ago the | opinion. was resumed on the street. When | §¥8 check drawn on the Worcester Na- s\aiea’s th <s thet amount pa all retaining its rich lustre to the end. problem of feeding the sheep herders} “In our jnills we make up between | Jeluso pniled @ revolver, the police | tional Bank, upon Herman A. Groen, |§ subscriber ‘was the smallest matter of concern 5,000 and 6,000 distinctive fabrics, | say, Mrs. De Sane's twenty-year-old |N® 2 John Street, in partial payment| through the united financial campaign, HURLEY SHOES & mental equipment has been the sub-|product. When the demand shifts|Changed hands. Paluso obtained the a Pot si sher le is second, with $11,366,859, although this oe ence: nd atte the best of food. (in close touch with the pubko de-|mother and ead, ‘hoot me” Peluso] at #500, | total does not inclade New York's con.|| 2424 @reedwey 1357 Broadwe This line of labor has increased in ex- |mands or meet disaster. is alleged to have cut the youth with |, ‘A ay tribution ot $9,000,000 to the 1177 Broadway 215 Broadwa: | Dense over 100 per cent. it is esti-| “Your paper has criticised our|s razor and shot Gd mother dead. Mra. C. M. Ourtis Seeks Divorce. |i card budgets 41 Cortlandt St. 254 Fifth Ave. mated in the past five years. jearnings with relation to our capital — saneee Mrs. Peapagtrems kprieed on ie ie asd Factory--Rockland, Mass. | b vorce action a : — fi vans,- tetas bet tal wlook doeen't Gorin to. represent $75,000 BONDS LOST Ties ah Oui iaa rows inva, ieee FLORHAM PAB, Ne dy May —— beon long sifee $3 a day was con-|the money we use In, our business. ecigiy ane cisesd alowmentl HAS CN. da, May. b.- sidered u sdtisticthry wage for a|1 doubt it there are many institutions | FROM SAFETY VAULT | with ‘Sadie M. Roosevelt, the former |N: H: Fresman, of Greenwood, N. Y competent sb@arer of sheep. in the country which have to. borrow wife of James Roosevelt, a cousin of paid $7,800 for U e patter, the, Ecol i clipned it parses [aia ts &, very” consioarataa. exsent ‘on the late Theodore Roosevelt, at the Ho- |aution te through the hands of labor engag ate to a very cons! le exte: : % “4 Pe ane patation of products by |borrowed ‘money, for which we pay | OWner Offers Reward—Discovered | ter wianders on Feb. 23 lai were sold. N Fail, and jt 1s common knowledge that | interest, es | ase ineiah Gane ie Absence When He Went to pap this class has received large increases| ‘We were v x in the past four years and that|in haying anticipated the great de- Clip Coupons. NAME IN EVERY | an elasticity that keeps them in shape—gives our MADE WUSA w to-day, "Bixty-neve: "For Suits and Topcoats Originally ’ Made to Sell at $50 $4750 For Suits and Topcoats Originally Made to, Sell at $65 It is a fact that the identical grade of Suits offered in this sale at $26.50 are quoted at $35 wholesale for Fall, and those at $41.50 are coating $50 at wholesale. This statement will stand the closest investigation. reight rates have been heavily in-|mand and laid in a stock of raw ma- ‘4 Grefiow and are ubout to be boosted |terlal at favorable. prices. We could | Between $76,000 and $100,000 in. Lib again. Before the wool is ready for |have sold ‘our material and made a|¢T\y a n reported miss the milf it must be sorted and scoured |profit on the year without manufac- | {from a vault of the Security Safe De- and otherwise treated by labor which |turing a yard of cloth. Considering | posit Company at De Kalb Avenue and is paid from 60 to 100 per cent. more |the amount ‘of money we handle our| Fulton Street, Brooklyn. A reward of than it obtained before the war. margin of profit is very small and | $5,000 is offered for their recovery. Vhert | what appear to be very heavy profits| wy aa) Hz grease, leaves, grass, twigs—even jof our business. We have kept at! bonds out on March 18 to ote eC stones, Tho wool statisticians have |the a ep ne wo cloed would be| Sons and did. not ‘know righ oad 6 ® iif we had not done #0 cloth would be gathered Agures showing that the av- |more expensive than it is to-day. gone until a week ago, when he again Platinumsmiths 30 FIFTH AVE. back of the sheep and the mills in|, Mr. Wood refused to give detailed | unlocked the box. The name ef the Oe te te conc eted ante cloth, or [figures on the output of his maills in Lov'ner was not given, 4 yarn ie 60 per cent. Shrinkage of 85 ee but 1 jesrned._ trom other ——_>—__- : Our Remounting Craftsmen are Dar cent, Is Rot uncomenon. | |Company’ protably produced $2,000 LEAVES $70,000 TO CHARITY. now prepared to transform Old Jewelry smartest and most Yards of OO A " WELL AS THE’ LEAN. oe ede MN ok Residue of August Lacderts tetate | fil into Modern Gattle Creations durable of silk “The woollen industry,” said Will-| | The American Woolen Company Goes to His Widew, , jam M. Wood, President of the Amer- | last year reduced the working hours ican Woolen Company, in explaining| in its mills from 54 to 48 a week and Bequests of $10,000 each are made Oppesite St. Patrick’s Cathedral 4 the immense profits of his corpo: raised wages 12% per cent. Those |#o the Evangelical Lutheran Church, | J ton Guring. the past six years, “is | moves were equivalent to adding 2314 / Central Park West and @th Street; a the riskiest business in the world. | per cent. to the labor cost, the Wartburg Old People’s Home, . Whtn our profits are large in bulk| By cutting down the working time 3 " we are certainly entitled to them. |the American Woolen Company cut| Mount Vernon, N. Y.; the Lutheran . FOR HEN, WOH & CHTDREN We had many lean years prior to 1914. | ou $12 hours a year. from the pro-| Hospital, No. 341 Convent Avenue; ‘There was no concerted rush to our | ductive capacity of éach of its work| the Children’s 7 Aid Society; the assistance when we were losing mill-| people. Those hours are irretrievably | 1, ji a fons of dollars every year. It is a|lost to production, because the ma-| L°20% Hill Hospital; the New York business principle that men in busi-|chinery in woollen mills can't be | 48#0clation for Improving the Con- ness must take the lean with the fat; | speeded up, and practically aH op-| ‘ition of the Poor; and the German crainly rm are entitled to some fat| erations in the mills are machine| Society of the Cit yof New York by with @ lean, erations, The employees are te “The woollen business is the most |ting ready to ask for another Wage Hie reas St: Tae: Wl ot. Ape complicated in industry and one of |inctease, although Mr. Wood claims | Leder, sugar importer, filed to-day the most important. Compared with The to bave materially cut down their| |,The rewidue of the egtate is left to “Better ec lates: ata Ts PA ede hocol ower ce” | our industry the great steel corpora-| cow: of living by opening a great co- dent's widow, Nantimide, and C2 1366-—Frénch bonbenancs $15 00 1 £35.00 gloves the reputa- tion of being the But for the moment an upheaval in the wholesale market, due to vastly decreased demand, has caused prices to drop almost 40%. Realizing that this was only a temporary condition, we seized upon the chance and purchased over 4,000 garments to sell at the above amazingly low prices. If you act quickly, you can save enormously, SR en tions are baby enterprises, Take the ry ee F M. children. United States Steel Corporation as an | Qheretive oe Learns Sak. Hiri e alae ie | instance for comparison. ELEVATOR FALL 3S HURT. | “That corporation owns its own raw product and transports it, from © have now traced the cloth ina medium priced suit—as’ prices go! machinery Gave c Wiiai'tts raw product and transports | ese daye—through the mill, It rep. Passed Secon ef tidy cost to the fraction of a penny, |Tesents @ value of $16.60, of which ; Old Fashioned ‘Gum Drops—Back comes a welcome oia- EN who abominate “[ have to go into the markets of| the rower of the wool has tayen ap-| An elevator in the Brooklyn timer! Just you watch Dad devour these pure drops of js " the world for wool—to Australth, to| Proximately $7.50. The ménufac-| Estate Exchange building, No. ai ei i Taeatea aiinY tie aa shopping for gifts buth America, to Africa, to Asta.|tUrer’s proft, ag established by Mr.| Montague Street, Brooklyn, fell from Mec : “ he a 1 other pn IO a ee cd wee find that the Ovington } WW Yool never runs the same in con- Weve, “i only 7% ponte. TACT. {5 NO | the second floor into the basement this Medan a oa th ar Be ad tables at $3.50 - $5.00 ~ | i es seeing ager eae pi ba "healed ne SN Caen | moraine ecuring the amie ott? Wported Clear Suga | MILLER'S | aworiedmilkchocotteo] A] $7s0-pio00-$i2s0end the industry. of produ: ‘woo! Bats, fifty-three, a barber of No, 617 F wool are specially trained and high langue {9} a8 crystal they are—these mouth sure does apply to T it ENTIRE 9 Outside of the actual |be described in subsequent articles, | fnjuring two other passeni easy, the tank of selecting i\ priced, Tee et aecines (naetiion i The car was in harKe ot ‘Albert Nev- f[ delicious hard candies these delicacies, A host of a wedding gift or for that i SECOND FLOOB eae ns of (No. ythe Avenue, Brook- And the flavors! Mar variegated favors — cara- ; it to the mills gre enormous, In the | Textile Emgti Strike for Raise. lyn, who said the machinery failed ; bpeted 4 peat six years wool has increased In) LAWRENCE, Mass., May 6.—Unior, Work'as he tried to top at the second aay oe ha rani eps aig elves rs Ratton, any other gift, e Over Liggett’s Drug Store Street \ In mont a eee cad it ie) up. 100 per | ensineers employed at the power plants “ST, adele sioar, No. 38 Livingston [Very final “~*tye Special, end oil ot Batya Special | OVINGTON’S jj (Between 5th Ave. and Broadway) ent af higher grades. of some of the textile mills here struck Street, Brooklyn, and an attorney who BB!» b1 Cc 9e “The Gift Shop of Fifth Avenue” 0; Waldorf Hotel : nent. here here we get ot late. one, of|terday for & forty-elght-hour week and #id not give his name, were shaken up, ae a ts ers Ki 314 Fifth Ave. nr.32d8t. i PP. | the ehlet reasons cost |* minimum wage of from 440 to $60 a tut, Yelumed, medical aitentio wera te Chocolate. wat weleshe of living. it's the tendency’ ot the ! week. to the Long Island Collens for sure. ‘treatment. i

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