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month Siaheniaoe sw Nee os eee Brooklyn Fornitare Plant Biase ? Canses $10,000 Damage. ; Sev five persons living in nearby j houses were driven to the street by , smoke that drifted into their open win- . dows during a furniture factory fire at No. 49-63 Walton Street, Brooklyn, ) early to-day. i e diaze did $19,000 damage tn the bi three-story factory, which is lan by Ki 4 —~— rabe & Spulmi A ‘on jarm was sent in as a precai Will Meet in Albany To-Mor- row — Follows Evening World’s Revelations, HLANKOW, China, June 14 (delayed). —W, A. Reimert, American missionary the Reformed’ Church at Yo Chow, lunan Province, was shot and killed when forces under Gon, Chang Chin Yao, Governor of Hunan Province, at- ALBANY, June 16—Lieut. Gov.| tacked the mission, according to Infor- mation reaching the American Consul- ‘Walker yesterday appointed the mem- | ate here. bers of the Farm Labor Committee feelded on at the conference last qwoek called by Gov. Smith to meet OVERSTOCKED the farm labor and threatened food shortage situation. It will hold its MANUFACTURER Mois action wee tenon tovowing {| WILL SELL SILK AND |}, the revelations made by The Evening World of the critical conditions in the farming industry of the State. COTTON DRESSES RETAIL + The members of the committee are Samuel Hessberg of Albany, John Knickerbocker of Troy, Chairman E@- ward F. Boyle of the State Industrial BAYS ONLV Commission, William H. Giles of} || Voile Dresses, $3.75, worth $7.00 Skaneateles, Master of the State ind! $12 Grange; State Commissioner of Edu- cation Finley, Warner Bates of Buf- falo, Frank EB Rexford of the state|]| np orien idrenheagh Sidney Dress House, Inc. Se re, Se rceuk aka muaey By 4. 35th St.. Bet. 5th h & 6th Av. Winters, Deputy Commissioner of|f/ comm eanty TO AVOID THE RUSH. Closing-Out Sale 7 Art Needlework Dep't At 25% Discount The entire stock of our Art Needlework is now on sale at a discount The attractive prices and ample variety of stamped goods, working materials and knitting yarns, of all weights and colors, afford an unusually good opportunity to supply your present and future needs, We are also featuring an assortment of embroidered and finished models con- siderably reduced in prices—in addition to being subject to the 25% discount. No C. O. D.’s No Returns * riten Avenue New York 34th and 33d Streets MTN NIN NTT TN rermemes, THE KUPPENHEIMER HOUSE IN NEW YORK Begin Now to Wear Athletic Union Suits for Men Even if two-piece undergar- ments were custom-made— designed according to your own specifications — you could not begin to get one- half the cool comfort and freedom of movement found in every Imperial Union Suit. Madras, Nainsook, Silk and Silk - and - Cotton $1.50 to $7.50 279 Brondway 2Flatinah Ave.,B'klyn 47. Cortlandt Broadwayat@hSt, {Zh Steet ot Sed Avenue 44 Ease 1ich S¢ THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1920. Fifteen Minutes at Madison Square Garden. at Made with ® AND Cra Sas There fs an Active Odea \ for Better “Grades, — mete, pr corte miecG athe, Moral Smashing the High Cost of - Clothing at the Madison Square Garden $5,000,000 Clothing Sale WARN Square Garden has been turned into a gigantic Men’s and Boys’ Clothing Store. Every foot of floor space in this great full block building has been used to house the $5,000,000 stock of twenty-seven wholesale manufacturers who are selling the public their new, seasonable merchandise at wholesale and less. Never before in the history of retail merchand- ising has such an enormous project been under- taken. Never but in such unusual times as these could an event of this kind come to the public. No doubt never again in our lives will conditions. that made this sale necessary face the whole- sale clothing industry. The twenty-seven manufacturers identified with this event, like concerns in other lines, must turn their merchandise into cash to prepare for the Fall season. They could not sell through their regular channels because the retailer today is not in the market to re-order, since he has not sold the supply he has on hand. So they are selling direct to the public, at whole- sale and less—without a ‘penny of profit—and glad of it. They simply must turn their reserve stocks into cash, so they adopted this unusual method of doing so. The manufacturers wanted a retailer in whom the public has confidence and who has served them long and well to conduct this Sale for them. They approached the firm of Moe Levy © Son with the proposition. No Exchanges No Refunds Moe Levy © Son consented. They saw the merchandise that the manufacturers were will- ing to sell at wholesale and less and immediately rented Madison Square Garden, realizing that no building smaller would be able to hold thecrowds that would come to buy at suchsensationally low prices. They hired over 1000 people to serve you. Moe Levy @Son passeduponevery dollar’s worth of merchandise to be sold, rejecting all that did not come up to their standard of all-wool quality and fine tailoring. They adopted a policy of no alterations, no ex- changes, no refunds and no deliveries in order to keep overhead costs down to the absolute min- imum. We knew that the public would approve of this—knew that they would be glad to do with- out fussy service in order to buy good clothing at prices that never before and perhaps never again will be seen. Every Man and every Mother owes it to him- self and herself to visit the Garden, for in all likelihood an opportunity like this will never comeagain. Tomissachance like this,in times like these, is like throwing so much moneyaway. No Alterations No Deliveries MADISON SQUARE GARDEN CO-OPERATIVE CLOTHING SALE Conducted By MOE LEVY @ SON MADISON SQUARE GARDEN---Madison Avenue, Between 26th and 27th Streets Open 9 A. M. Entrance Madison Avenue Side Close 10 P. M.