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} ound to fake care of the city’s trans- } “DRIVEN OUT BY Deputy Fire Chief Haim and His Men Overcome by Noxious Fumes. Firemen Throw Cylinder Into River After Fight to Reach It In Broome Street. About ® thousand families in the block bounded by (hompson, Watt driven from thelr homes early to-day by chlorine gas. Deputy Fire Chief Henry B, Helm and several firemen got a bad dose and are under treat- ment. The gas came from a leaky tank. Police Sergeant McKay of the Beach Street Station, located the trouble in the warehouse of J. M. Thompson & Co, at Nos, 621-523 Broome Street. Rescue Squad No, 1 was sum- moned, Protected with gas masks and finding their way by means of tlectric torches, the firemen entered the warehouse and found fourteen tank ‘abelled chlorine, J.eride wet his hand and when he @aine to a cylinder that dried it he knew they had found the leak. By this time people were fleeing the Beighborhood, and Deputy Helm ar- rived to take charge. He called the police reserves from the Beach Street Station and Hook and Ladder Com- panies Nos. 6 and 20. Every house in the neighborhood was searched for ‘ptreons who might have been over- come. Tho leaking cylinder was taken to @ vacant lot, but when “Smoky Joe” Martin arrived the decided it must be removed from the neighborhood. The firemen who took off their masks got ® bad dose of the gas from their clothes, and for a time Lamb, Hovack, Clrrk and Kistenberg were in St. Vin- * cent's Hospital. + Dr. Harry M. Archer, Honorary Surgeon of the department, was sum- moned from his home, No. 72 West 824 Street. Robert Mainzer, Hon- orary Deputy, who was visiting him, accompanied him, They rigged up a spirit lamp In the street and com- pelled the men to inhale a vaporized antidote. By thie time-—3 A. M— Deputy Helm, who had worn no mask, was getting “groggy ~The leak in the cylinder was “plugged with a piece of wood and Helm, Clark and Rogenskamp of the Rescue Squad wrapped it in a rubber coat, put it in Helm’s automobile and started to the Street Cleaning dock at the foot of Canal Street. The yvi- * bration shook out the plug and Helm got another “gassing,” but they man- aged to reach the dock and throw the cylinder into the North River, Deputy Helm was in such condition when they returned that Dr. Archer insisted on taking him to the Archer home to remain under observation. _Y. WILL RECEIVE SUFFICIENT COAL Pledge Given by Commerce Com- mission After P. S, C, Offi- cials Tell of Danger. Morgan Donnelly,, Deputy Public ice Commissioner, ana James B. Nvalker, Secretary ‘of the commission, nave laid before the Interstate Com- merce Commission at Washington the danger to public utilities In New York City because of shortage of bituminous coal. ‘They were told that coal would be CHLORINE GAS LEAK FROM WAREHOUSE, | Whe Pleads ' [HE, EVENING WORLD, Ohio Women Thank You: \ For Seats In Street Car; | Even Men Are Courteous mbus* Runs To Thatched-Roof Haircuts and Marion To Suspender and Ear- Puff Displays, Observer Finds. | By George Buchana’ Sketches. COLUMBUS, 0., June 24.—Nobody asked me*to write anything about Ohio, but I have spent nearly a week and most of an expense allowance among the natives, and now it's my turn, In going into, through and out of sundry communities, large and small, I have learnéd one astounding thing? Broome and Sullivan Streets were) the people a Ohio are so far behind the times that they are actually cour- teous to utter strangers. Ohjo women say “Thank you” for a seat in uw street car; Ohio men walk’ half a lock with you to oug—, a corner in order to point out your way, and the Ohio girls at the soda fountains say, “Now, if that jen't ‘just right, tell me and I'l fix it to sult —and the check is only 11 cent For another thing, the people have none of that chilling reserve which ‘one encounters London, for instance, you stand still for look confused or lonesome, which isn't unlikely, some one is sure to come up and cheer your drooping spirits, Of course, the ing varies with the commuhity. If Marion, for example, from eariy June until fate September the welcoming prelude is *“Hotternhell, ain't iqy In Dayton it's “Hev ye seen the cash register fact'ry yet?” And just now in Co- lumbus ‘it's “Think Jim Cox'll get it?" followed by half an hour or ao of reasons why he can't fail But whatever the accosting remaric, it’s a pleasant interlude and generally suffices you for the remainder of the day, Sometimes it makes you think in, in old If a moment and well, Styles of Wative Ny Meade reas that in every community there are kind men hiding just around the corners waiting to pounce on the stranger and tell him things. Columbus is a big, busy place of oné street and one outstanding pe- culiarity. You never see a man in the streets carrying a cane, He may have a cigar or a girl with him, but never a stick, However, you do see one thing that intrigues the interest of the most jaded traveller,. This is the hair-cut of the adolescent male. It is an exaggerated variant of what has come to be known as the “dough- boy cut.” You see it in its less vio~ lent form in New York. It is the effect produced upon the coiffure when the barber runs the clippers from a point above the ears and Just back of the occipital “bone entirely around the cranium, over the spot which shélters the medulla oblon- gata, or, to be clearer, the bump of philoprogenitivenoss, to the rear of the occipital bone on the other side. In New York the remaining halr is more or less trimmed: in Ohio it is not only left in its splendid luxuri- ance but the clippers are started several degrees further north. The result of this tonsorial achievement is to leave the patron with nothing more than a skull-cay of hair. As the untouched part is then carefull “bobbed” In the back, jt gives th hair-cut also a thatched-roof effect, with decided eaves at the rear of the structure. Below this ingeniously conceived cap or thatch the region over which the hair used to be is just a nap with the white lining showing through. ,%@ oe "“voguey,” the eaves should below Coie just portation lines and lighting com~ panies. In what manner relief will be provided was not revealed, al- though the representatives of the Public Service Commission appealed tor @ priority order for rail and water transportation of coal to this city. In @ telephone message from Bec- retary Walker to commission head- quarters here he expressed himself as assured that the gravity of ¢he \' situation in this city was appreci- ated, and that the danger would be averted. es CHAIRMAN HAYS HERE. Confers With Leaders on Harding Will H. Hays, Republican National Ohairman, ‘and Harry M. Daugherty, campaign manager for Senator Har- ding, are here to-day discussing plans for the notification ceremonies, which will take plaee in Marion, 0. Daugherty arranged to leave for his home in Columbus this afternoon, Hayg will be in New York for deveral days, ~ w ted Mil t Production. MANCHESTER, N. H,, June 24,— , The worsted division of the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company will close to-morrow probably until Aug. 1, but dyeing and finishing departments will be run four days a week. The entire it will close from July, 1-to July Poor business and the coal situa- About 3,800 tion are given as reasons. hands will be affected. foorn yesterday to Mr. and Mrs. White, farmers, living in Madison ie chip, have been named Harding idge, Note from Marion gue far formal aftermesn Wear: the crown of the hat when the lat- | ter is in position and creato the im- |pression of a badly adjusted wi Those who keep abreast of Ohio modes tell me it will be only a short time before New York must 4 n Fife | this extreme style and, of course, Guilty ‘Also to the| Will take all the credit for it. \ Marion does not run so much to An Ohio Conservatory adopt | hair-cuts as it does to suspenders, hich are worn instead of coats du! ing the heated term, The first time You see them en inasse, as it were, on the main street or gathered in tiers upon the County Court House steps, you are convinced that the city is in gala attire for something or some- body, because the things aren‘t just “galluses,” they're adornment, Moss roses in crewel work clamber up them in a riot of qolor. Here and there you seo a procession of embroidered rab- bits chasing themselves over the wearer's shoulders in a flash of green of purple, Some of the daring spuls Gug house steps) to see their lawyers and | their friends, while wives and off-| spring parade the streeta to look over the latest modes from Paris as dis- played in the shop windows. And, that’s.when you see the feminine ear- puff at its puffiest. But it isn't just a puff over cach ear, it's a hairy bal-| loon, and if the girl with the biggest \, ones isn’t entitled’to a prize it's even, more of ait outrage. It wouldn't be a bad idea to have a halr section at the next county fair. The rural communities of Ohlo are | not only infested with exaggerated hair conglomerations, they are overrun with a new type of flower box. I saw scores of them in villages as I inquired my Way through, and from car win- days as I foitered by, They dre con- structed of old bollets, tie kind that are attached to the kitchen range to supply luke—or Wikeless—warm water to the second floor. For transforma- tion, into flower boxes they are cut abot in half lengthwise, the roynd ends being left with whatever pipe ap- pendages remain from a previous uge- fulness, for these serve quaintly as handles, Wooden feet of whatever furniture period the owner affects are fashioned from handy strips of wood, the boiler is mounted thereon on front porch or lawn, doing away, in the Jatter instance, with the bourgeois deer or dog of castiron. Earth is poured in and seeds or cuttings set, leaving it to nature to dq the rest. There-isn’t any doubt that she does her Ost, offering many brave instances Of her struggle to hide the galvanized The Hairy Skull: Cap of Chk lncder the Eaves The Stubdle. om hap But the owner generally iron horror, suspects her before she evem begitis, and so he paints the thing bright red, One last observation and I shall be Out of Ohio. It isn't so much an observation, though, as a fragment ot chronicle. f was waiting in the dim, low-celled office of a county pho- tographer while he finished ome proofs for me. Among a number of com- pleted, and mounted photographs ly- ing in a dusty basket awaiting the owner's call was one showing a child of five lying in its white, fléwer- banked coffin, The side of the recep- tacle had been let down to reveai, in all |ts lines, the sadly lean little body, ‘The young woman tending the shop caught my eye as I looked away from the unhappy memento, “It's not a bit- nice to have to take ‘pictuzes like that," she said, ‘put now and then the people around here want them. I can't see why. But that one isn't anything to one we had to take the other day: Some men came in here—they wete for- cigners, workmen hereabouts—and said they wanted a picture taken of one of their, friends, I took the ad- dress and “when the photographer went there the five men had their friend with them. He was in a cot fin, and they stood jt up, with him in it, ‘and grouped themselves about it | for the picture. And every one of th five bought a copy and had tt framed.” FIND T. N. T. ON HOUSEBOAT. m Beach to al Bane. The police boat John #. Hylan to-duy went down to Plum Beach, where it will take off about a ton of TN 'f found on a houseboat said to have been owned by a German, The explosives will be tuken to Fort Lafayette, a naval base, Dotective Sergt, Gegan of the Bomb Gauad made tho discovery yesterday. With him wre Detectives Murphy and Herman and Commissioner “Thomas J. Sheehan of the United States Int gence Department, Residents at Plum | Beach suid the TNT had been put aboard the houseboat by a ma th declared was German and who work in @ munitions factory at Bridgepo! | He made regular trips in a motorboat, jench time with TNT. they kaid. ‘The purpose for which he intende: is unknown, The man disappeared | eral months ago and no word hag, be heard of hi yt Se Dr. Morris Zucker Phrdoned, Dr, Morris Zucker, a Brooklyn dentist who, during the war, was convicted and wentenced to Atlanta Penitentiary fc i for att y ved a Dar Wilson, ting to impede the draft, fined $50 eac ion to-day from Prealdent with minor offénaes, were Oned % each, GUILTY IN KILLING OF BOY. Driv: Speeded Up Truck While Child Chang Underneath, before just a verdict of, mans | It took ‘Gener a jur Neasions find 1 Harr No. 410 Rast 100th § Ity ts fifteen kson murs was remanded stopping, Jacl crowd alk, shouttr to him to stap. Fimally the boy was |jolted under the wheels and was killed, * — Motor Cop Gets 6 4 | Motor ¢ assigned speed while a o Comvi yele Policeman’ Samuel Janet, to traM@e duty in the Bronx “TOBE PROSECUTED. | and oe next Monday ‘The Goldbeng boy, according to wit- was playing on the tracks of the | Ay street ‘ears, at 106 w Jackson's truck struck He y was not serlously for ale to cling to the | buffers of hine, Inatead of 4 ; Pa SHIPCOMPANIES INHARBOR STRIKE Morgan’ Says U, S. Attorney} Has Papers in Action for Re- fusal to Handle Goods, William Fellowes Morgan announced | this afternoon that papers have heen of two large steamship companies: for hre- fusal to handle goods delivered to by ricks of the Citizens’ ‘Transportation Committee, of which Mr. Morgan is President. “The papers are now in the haflde of the United States District Attor- ney,” Mr. business, ‘Ho was addressing the Paper As- sociation at luncheon at the Hotel Lafayette, The association passed resolutiona endorsing the principles actions of the Transportation Committee. He devoted a part of ‘his address to the threats that have been heard drawn for the prosecution them (Morgan said, “and we mean j frequently that if-the Transportation Committee continued along its pres- ent line of action there would be a weneral strike along the water front in the near future, ' wear bright red ones, just as it they| “Gentlemen,” he said,/ “the move didn’t care who saw them, From & for an open shop is coming. If there belie peed Court nae ere ee | ae be a genera} strike, let dt come a ; er ' Ma Lie ee And let us get it over with and Saturday afternoon is the time when pyiaed once and for all.” all the farmers drive into the county| He said that the names of con- seat (which seems to be on the Court tuputors to the huge fund of the Committee were being kept secret #0 that contribuors should no be made the victims of revengeful actions, “My firm haS contributed $50,00 openly,” he said, “and efforts are be- Ing made to punish us for it. ‘The tom fund already pledged is close to 31,000,000. It may reach $2,000,000, : cia” asa a Brookl Dorothy and Blanche, .twin daug! Avenue, Brooklyn, ar thriving triplets, two of them girls. rs Re shown holding the latest oi} ‘ wy 4 : 3 . THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1920. ara ’s Full House; iplets Are Added to Twins | | | ters of Morris Chernoff, New Lots additions to the fantily, SAILOR DANCED | ON COP’S PORCH Vie im of City Island Brand of Prohibition Clears Himself of Burglary Charge. * A .Nouwegian suilor, one of thors hardy seatgrers reputed to have cop- per riveted interiors phat can with- stand any Hquid to be found in any port of the Seven Seas, appeared in Morrisanfa Police Court to-day, the vic~ tim of prohibition as practived at City Island. He was (Frederick Peterson of the and it will if we need that muoh, The dry goods heath oh last few days has pledged $200, A survey of the freight situation as affected by the coastwise longshore- men's strike and by the atrike of railroad switchmen in various parts of the country sshowed distinct im- Provement to-day. Without exception the railroad heads in,New York declared that this district has not yet been affected by the switchmen’s strike, and reports from other cities told of smal! num- bers of the éutlaw strikers returning to work. W. N. Doak, vice president of the Brotherhood of Trainmen, did not claim important gains in the ranks of the strikers, but described the situ- atlon as virtually the same as yester- day. He started for Chicago to-day 16 confer with other Brotherhood of- ficials, and he said “he did not believe the men would return to work until the Railroad Labor Board hands down its avage decision. President Wilson has urged the board to act quickly, Doak said the situation would be “much worse” if the decis- jon were not handed down this week; At the general headquarters of the atrikers in Jers City, it was an- nounced this afternoon that “one hun- dred per cent.” of the yard@men in the day shift at the Mott Haven yards of the ..ew Haven had struck K that al the yardmen hag struck at Mechanicsville, and that gill the road pienat &New Haven wire out, No confirmation could he obtained The Pennsylvania received a report that all the yardmen on the Western Maryland at Hagerstown had qnit work, cutting off the delivery of large quantities of bituminous coal, Announcement by Mr. Morgan that the longshoremen's strike is (broke was contradicted by 'T. V. O'Connor, international President of tife Long- shoremen, who said the strike wag “just starting.” O'Connor denied, however, the pre- diction made by other leaders (ha the deep sea longshoremen would to-d Lady Mary, a yacht owned by Frank Strong, President of the Strong Ship- building Company, which put into) Jacabs's dry dock for repairs and pro-| vision Peterson was given shore | leave, He viaited a few saloons. | Soon after midnight Policeman Hee- tor W, Hemingway of City Inland Sta- tion, was awakened in his home, No. 492 City Island Avenue, by an Intruder stumbling about on the porch outside his window, He was sleepy and hoped the Intruder would go without belng shooed away, A moment later he heard some one dancing on @ }ittle table on the porch, and Peterson tumbled through the wine dow screen into the policeman'’s arms, Hemingway charged Peterson with at- tempted burglary. ’ Peterson assured Magistrate Marsh he .could remember nothing of the at- {alr He was sure of only one thing— he was not a burglar, . That tharge was dismissed. Peterson was convicted of intoxication and disorerly conduct and remanded for sentence. | MORSE DENIES SON | MADE BIG PROFITS| Says Younger Man Built, Up Clique Which V Freezing Him Out of Business. took the wit defense of the air Company, | Morse ar., to-day in Edward P. ness stann Morse Dry Dock and Re of which he is the head, and dented | that his son, Edward P. Morse jr., was | responsible for $23,000,000 profits which accrued to the company in three years | during the war. The #on'a suit for | $427,000, which he olaims is a bainnee due him on a contract, is on trial before Justice Faber and a jury jn Supreme Court, Brookiyn. J While testifying the elder Morse did not once look at his son Referring to the discharge by 1918 of his son, Mr. Morse sald: “My sox had built around himself a him in clique. | found 4 wall between me and the business. Ut was virtually « total stranger there.’ | Court Honse Bidw Rejected. | The Board Estimate in special meeting to-day threw out as excessive | ali but two bids for the new $7,000,000 | ourt house, The ‘bide not rejected, those for plumbing and foundation work, were laid over until to-morrow’s regular meeting. soon walk out and Mike the strike “general.” Some of the leaders had said that this Would happen not later than next Monday. “The deep sea longshoremen have n agreement that expires on Sept 30." he said. “They will live up to se? O'Connor Washington and prediction that increase of just returned from ue brought back the there would freight rates on the ships until the rail | have gained permission to raise their rates, When that has come id, the steamship ec ble to raise their king crease In freight rates is admitted to be no constwine npanies will rates without permission. The’ in special | be the only basis on which wages can | be increased. Tn regard to tic ¢ litera Jture which has tributed among = thie wat workers, O'Connor suid he 4 anybody else was Just as anxious to suppress it, and he aa ne invited the co-operation of |the Merchants’ Apsociation to thts end. The Citizens’ Transportation Com mittee moved 241,000 pounds of coast- wise freight in trucks yesterday and had the usual aumber of trucks at work to-day. . claimed the record thix morning when he mppeared against thirty-six automo- bilists he had summoned and secured a conviction In each case, ‘Thirty speed- ra, first offenders, were fined $25 each ; @\three speeders, second offenders, were three drivers, charged 1) @ total of $215, A fow fist Mable were reported near |the warehouse of the Merchants’ Re jfrigerating, Company at 17th str and 11th Avenue. where the ch have struck rather than handie @ brought in by the Tr oF mmittee’s trucks, No arrests we inade, ads | about, he | Me CAN And Now the Will be opened The Public Has High Quality an | Our Candies and within one year we have opened six stores to cater to their requirements, | . Extra Specials for To-day Peppermint Drope—Lordy! olden. sont Molas |] lasens matio peppermint to p Yer Pound |] Drops of inimitable goodnes: Net Welalit Assorted Milk Chocolates | MILLER’S | Mi!k Chocolate Nutted Aud aavorted they ar ZSTORES | Virginia Belis—"I'd go a Every fresh fruit Savor | 424 groadway | Mile out of my way to get that comes to crown the] | At Canal st th yeinties.” mid ove hummer orchard has been | 538 Broadway | woman, You'll say the extracted , from sun-ripe | G40 Broadway | san 6 when you have fruits and, imprisoned jin | 9 At Blescker tasted the dojicious cocoa these cases of iut, molasses, Miller's for 44 ate and Milk 54 famed Milk c Chocolate tha Cc Chipoulate Pound Box 60 to make Pound Bey Net Weight them Net Wor | Liner Sails With $00 First Class and ILLER etter Chocolates aka Lower Price” to help supply’the demand for MILLER ‘CANDIES Every Pound Box Contains 16 Ounces of Candy, FRANCE HAS RECORD PASSENGER LIST 450 in Second Cabin—Officers Give Up Rooms. The France of the French Jing sails to-day with 500 first cabin, 450 second cabin and 100 steerage passongers, the largest number aho ever carrléd., She was completely sold out and tt was un- derstood some of the officers gave up thelr quarters to passongers. On her passenger list were: Vincente Bt) ‘0 Ibanez, the Spanish author; Mra. | William K, Vanderbilt jr, and Miss Muriel and Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt; Armande Schmoll, Importer, and family ; | Mrs, Romolo Tritonj, wite of the Italian Consul General in New York; Paul Brunet of Pathe Freres and wife; . Kietnberger, art dealer; Maurice Leon, lawyer; Mrs, Lichard Stevens and daughter; M. de St, Phalle, Vice Pres- Ident Baldwm Locomotive Works, and wife; Col, Kasparek, head of the Ser- dian Mission; Col. S, 8. Lesley, United States Raflroad Commission, and wife. | $500,000 | yHalf a million dollars in United States gold coin made up the principal cargo of the) United Fruit steamer Santa Marta which arrived to-day trom Kingston, Jamaica, and Central Amer- joan porta. The gold was taken aboard at Cartagene and Santa Marta, Colom- bla, and 4 being sent vy Colombian bankers to various American bankers In an attempt to atabllize the rate of exchange between Colombia and the United states, | One Colombian dollar now ia wortn ninety cents in American gold. One year ago the balance’ of trade was re- versed and Colombla was the only coun- try tn the world where an American lar was noticeably velow 4 belmg: equal to only eighty-five © in Co- lpMablan money, = SAW PARENTS MASSACRED. American Woman Br: men ian ‘Two Ar-| Orphan Boys Here, Two Armenian orphan boys, who were brought here from Smyrna by Mrs. Clara Van Etten, .of Olympia, | Wash, are awaiting hearing at Ellis Island relative to thelr status in. th country. Mrs. Van Etten tells a story | of the massacre of 800 Armenians by} the Turka on the day before she left, within « day's ride from Smyrnh, and| awid she had been told by Greek sold-| ore that th r preparing tor| ing, Mu DIES Eighth Store! in @ few days Recognized the - id Low Prices of and To-morrow But the with o 29c SILENT MACHINE GUN FIRES 11,000 SHOTS A MINUTE U.S. Experts Experiment with Weapon Which Uses No /E xplosives. WASHINGTON, .June @—A hew model of machiie gun, oper- | ating by centrifagal force and using no explosive is being secret~ ly tested by army officials and other governmental experts at the Bureau of. Standards, The weap- on is said to have a capacity of 11,000 shots a minute against the 600 or 600 of the present types of explosive gun. The great advantage of the cen- trifugal gua, army experts say, will be in its noiseless operation, The gun consists of a rotating barrel, approximately one-half inch in diameter, attached to mo- tor-driven shafts, the speed of which is under instant control, By varying the speed of the driv- ing shaft the operator controls the range. At @ distance of six inches from the muzzle of the gun the pro- Jectiies have penetrated seven inches of pine wood. a te DEGREES CONFERRED ON 312 jleae Honor Goes to . X. Fim At, the seventy-fourth ‘annual mencement exercises of the Coll the City of New York this morning, de- grees were conferred on 312 graduates, ‘The college's highest honor thls year went to John F, X. Finn, who waa wwarded the summa cum laude for ex- ceptional gradés in his studies, It was the first time this honor -had been be- ered the address to ther class, He made no direct the a hd of Nations, but. ex) the opinion that = better understan of the Workl aad itt conditions wun rewult fro among the lWeved the Our beautiful Cordovan shoes are made possible by using only the best leathers, being treated by the Hur- leyized secret process, which increases the life of the leather, retaining its rich lustre to the end. HURLEY ma lh Made over special lasts in one hundred dif- ferent combinations of - widths and sizes. For example—C forepart, B instep and A heel. Grips the foot firmly, Cannot ap at ankle or slip at heel. orset fitting at instep. Absolute comfort in forepart. CLEARANCE SALE Substantial Reductions HURLEY SHOES 1434 Broadway ° 1957 Broadway 1177 Broadway 315 Broadway 41 Cortlandt St. 254 Fifth Ave. stowed on a graduate in three years George McAneny, Chajrman of the Board of Trustees of the college, delfy- ¥actory—Rockland, Mas, Store will be closed all d Dest of the Be! { 1.50 & 2.00 FOULARD 5.00 KNITTED TIES. (Tax Not and every Saturday until after Labor Day. Sth Ave., at 35th St. New York City ° To-Day and F riday Seasoniable Specials MEN'S HABERDASHERY 4.00 & 4.50 FANCY MADRAS SHIRTS3,30_ 5.50 UNION SUITS (silk mixture).....4.20 You Never Pay More at Best’ ay Saturday, June 26th, a & Co. tter Grade 3.50 to 4.00 KNITTED TIES. .°..777..2.60 4.50 GRENADINE TIES. ....77-77...3.30. (Hand loomed, Italian importations) Included) . 32-34 West 34th St. : BOOT at unusual values. . The trade mark, known in purchase. O86. 6. & FAT. OT. WHITE SALE PUMPS° OXFORDS In Reign Cloth, Canvas and Pro-Buck with Walking or Louis XV. Heels, at 8 BF oer pour The assortment offers an opportune occasion to pur- chase needed Summer footwear for sports and general use and comfort in lasts, case in wearing and entire satisfaction | QUEEN QUALITY BOOT SHOP 32-34 West 34th St. SHOP ‘\ the country over, spells style PA Se a oe A A war ee =