The evening world. Newspaper, May 28, 1920, Page 21

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THE EVENING WOLD, FRIDAY, 5B MORE ARRESTED moval of the flodk fom’ the Wp inee Water Waaierea,™ House law’ Sas conse \dered the -| Prince Michel Murat, who marrled FOR BASEBAL' te far | stien Helen Stallo, dauahter, of Edmund | ASEBALL BETS ii Sc aaa eo i 5 Tomulty P r jeted yehtord a aioby in Evening World’s Expose of Gam.-| moval 4 EK Othe wont ta] Meet dearee, andMt is likely that a) bling at Polo Grounds Leads i ation itt trom th tive will be jto Francesto UF j toRound-Up. | 4 @ |e . here for trig ith Five more men arrested at the Polo |i Grounds yesterday, following The Eve- ning World's expose of gambling at Daseball. games, will appear to-day be- , fore Magistrate Francis 8. McQuade. All were arraigned lest night and heid tn $500 ball each, charged with diror- derly conduct in making and accepting Wagers. The men described them- selves as: Milton Staunton, Leo Friedman, John Kelly, Theodore Kieloff and Leo Sauer. Kleloff offered real estate as ball, but it was refused by the court and friends furnished cash bonds. The others were Unable to furnish bail, se: ke GET WHITE HOUSE WOOL. Recent Clip From Flock There Pre- Priges very reasonable to mo ppportunity to get a good used 1 mein «13 Many, THIS SALE IS BOR Aj » 1670 Broadway sented to Salvation Army, Wool sheared several days ago the White House sheep hag been ri sented by President Wilson to the Sal- vation Army, News of the gift was.fe- cetved at the headquarters of the Sal- vation Army here yesterday im a letter from Joseph P. Tumulty, the Presi dent's secretary, After the sheep ‘were sheared, res = Today ‘and * Tokers w (May Wap ter soekauns aie tots Bee m ye to pte al New York and UNEEDA for : down, withheld stock relossed pad (a canes Today and Tomorrow (May 20¢h) macs the doe of our eemapaigat coming the LAST DAY will be well salespeople have been procured; ¢: clerks installed and Rew STOCK added to fill the TREMENDOUS LINE. _ Brag 7st sh ie this time, we are we fo afer One-Fifth Off!| in everything. lentil) » more wae @ ‘‘sale’’—because, gar, COaTE pitce ee.wey | meni tne a BEEN REDUCED, and less TWENTY, down. We have COATS make bargains of « rare sort. TWENTY ‘OF F makes amer Savings! them $12 ~ An UN- PRECEDENTED price for lovely garments, ‘For the Magn ican we bate creat pet can make by pure! asing all‘you n ef Dept. surts worth SUITS AND DRESSES emesers 1s cao Manta Less 0, $50 have been going at $40. And $40 Suits for a% $9, A CLEAN TWENTY OFF EVERYTHING. Women have —— . been bringing away $16 DRESSES for $12.80; fine $32 SUITS di le Sor of Serge for $25.60. The chances Tape theneatere NOW My esr may not appear again. at |lf@l REDIT! | CLOTHES The GENEROUS TERMS we offer on WEEKLY SU ITS PAYMENTS add flavor to a sensational offer we he fon M-E-N are _benefiti: THOUSANDS to mean nothing. It has introduced us to many NEW friends who, Fing ALL-WOOL SUITS 1 under the spoll of UNEEDA’S attractive Service, are bound to Smart Values at Big || become steady visitors, For thesg CLOSING DAYS, Terms will Savings! be made as EASY for everybody as we can make them. $34.50 » | OPEN SAT. TILL 10 P. M. _With 20% Of This Tonight Till 9 (Closed "All Day Ménday) Convisers’ 'UNEED ) pet: CLOTHING CO. have directed our Vice-President and General Manager, Mr, liquidate our entire domestic business. . informed, we have the lar: bought’ This stock was le we aes hee att Lockhart i au te ha ent it Bs oa TO THE PUBLIC: © seeds of economy, that will bear good fi men’ ’8, Women’s, boys’, girls’ and children’s ea ‘or the Nemours ‘Trading Cor- HIGH GRADE ~} 1 BOOTS OXFORDS , The, Nemours Trading Corporati Ri my aia daar shoes that they m . cars of several trainioads to"move. It is beyond _ occasion. It he seem that not since the dawn of the shoe atuiteslitolees output of four large factories, besides purchasing large ron from nearly every kné _ > faeturer. hee | HIGH SHOES] OXFORDS) way Avenue “L” to 47th Street, the Sixth Avenuh “L" to 50th Street, Lexington a seen among the women on Fifth Avenue come from this sale. “White Shoes, nothing in the shoe world would seem to hee been omitted for dress, street, or house wear. milk of human kindness is not dried up entirely in this good old world; The men’s shoes are here in such profusion from the loud, noisy types to the conservative every-day kinds, and the prices will convince the “Doubting ‘Thomases” among the-men, that at last they have the pleasing privilege of satisfying their appetites for. shoes, through, this event, unlike anything you have ever expected could or would occur, WIDTHS A to E | MEADES Brooklyn's Best Known Shoe House 102-104 Myrtle Ave,, Cor. Bridge St. BROOKLYN - | FIFTY YEARS AGO. Who among us would say to-day, I Reyer use # Dentifrice, | never have ta?” ‘Yet Fifty years ago, odd as it may seem, not one persov in 1,000 used a} var tts even & téoth brush hands of the consumers—that they do not expect any profit—and, in addition to this, this beautiful Grand Central Palace is.to be turned over to me to direct this wonderful sale entirely rent free and back the curtain and spread out forthe buying public in the different cities a brilliant conception of the advantages to be obtained in the special’sales that I have organized. I can truthfully assert that this closing-out sale for Mr. du Pont will measure up to these statements as truly as my human hands know how to make it. This great opportunity should turn the Grand Central Palace into the favorite parade ground of this City for weeks to come. “TWENTY OFF Movemont’’ would’ tiie otherwise, Footie, eat Pe cm Saturday morning, May 29th, at nine o'clock, ‘and will be open until ten o'clock at night so as to give the working class the same attention as everyone else, and will continue day after day until this have to use a P owder for the ret, more than One on thousand pounds of Powder| ior the Feet were used by our Army| r. countless thousands of the devoted, economical, prudent men and: women to the Grand Central have it, who tabi oun ad ff east, and Found” advertioemonta Jott at any of The World's Cal) 4000 Beekman, New York,’@@ Brooklyn Office, 4100 Main, MAY’ 28, 1920, TO THE PUBLIC: As President and principal owner ion the' Nemours Tradi A large of our domestic merchandise con 1 ctifiesea Nit York aa.» friendly sth T am here to direct and manage the closin Veale of the entire stock &t poration, a corporation owned by Mr. Alfred 1 dtu ‘Pont: | To make thege seeds produce a super-crop, e thrifty ‘people of this city pee helpby, ‘watering the seed and letting int the sunshine thet con! oo and Pe nage. ” Mr, ‘Alfred I. Gu Pont is the President and prineipal owner of the Senbis ‘Trading: Corpora- tions Mx. Charles + Mills is the Vice-President and General yee been. instructed . dipove of these gentiéindn, whose business integrity yaaa it question, that I am to of the entire. stock of shoes—the largest in the Un tate public. No-rent will charged for the use “yey the building in which \ i lejand profits from the a éred together a shoe transaction on a scale so pep tena one | radin ion marie Jobbers or even wholesalers of shoes. They contracted fa verona remus d When’ thé Nenjiours Trading . Corporation came to me and: ay ganizing this closing-out sale dlineet to the consumer, I at once. New Norl can you procure a store-toom of in ready with their reply—for they own the Grand entral” Automobile Shows, Flower Shows, etc, are. held. In to in mind as to prices, I was told by Mr. Mills that-there would be. no rent. building and that they expected no profit. On dccount: of these” add o28, statements, I have accepted this gigantic task. * The main entrance to the Grand Central Palace is on i! Avenue, ; ’ 47th Streets. This building is reached by the sub to the Grand i cars to 46th Street, and erosstown cars on 42d Street. This huge stock of shoes is in this building in such ’ barllce varieties, fee all widths, that a detailed deseription is je. Some of the smartest. Mothers will find all kinds of boys’ and girls’ shoes, and the prites jill make them feel that the Mr. duPont and Mr, Mills have both assured’ me ‘that these shoes are to go direct into the if in the end, the ultimate result of this sale of these shoes shows a loss, there will be no complaint. In.my regular business—The Lockhart ‘“Mill-End” Sale—it is always necessary that I draw I have dictated this—my first public announcement—in feverish haste, for the sale starts mountain of shoes has been distributed into the hands of the consumer, not only in this city where I expect New Yorkers will buy shoes to last a couple of years, but also the consumer residing in the adjacent suburbs, as they will be more than’ repaid for making the journey to New York during the continuance of this sale. I know this great and generous, act—eminently important, at this critical time—will bring almost Palace, where this sale starts on Saturday morning; May: bh at nine o'clock. i i ~ Shoe merchants, wholesale shoe merchants, department! store buyers, are all welcome to buy side by side with the men, women and children. Be it understood, the closing-out prices that are marked in plain figures will apply to all alike—no favorites. It is a wide-open field, glorious in opportunity, and immense beyond my ahility to picture. THERE WILL BE,NO ACCOUNTS CHARGED. THERE WILL BE NO. DELIVERIES, THERE WILL BE NO EXCHANGES. Cc, A. LOCKHART.

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