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‘y at Coney bjected to the for tickets before care Uckets =| SEND ULTIMATUM, TO TREATY VIEW OF ‘up. Hail] ROME, Sept. 1—The employers in WORKERS IN TALY HARDING LEANNG TD EMPLOYERS) TAFT AND HUGHES ’ ‘Give Them $ Days to Comply, Wickersham Speech May Indi- | With Demands—400 Big cate He Differs With John- Factories Seized. son’s Interpretation. By David Lawrence. micthl factories which have been! (Special Correspondent of The HH @eized by workmen in the present Evening World.) ‘contest over conditions in this indus- CHICAGO, sept. 1 (Copyright, 1920). He if i SHgEapere 3 i of all men who their seniority and and enjoy the inorease in @Mored the men on July 16 of 10 over the wage schedule of 18. the trolley lines to-d re. tl ja ay a . Bushwick Avenue, Avenue, Fudge- ins Avenue, : Avenue, Avenue, Meeker and Street ne « 8 qrere hurt, none wari. Street reaker ."" ran into an open JBtreet person “ j, to-day when f ‘peaiaa “by ratrtl ot| tion passed by the Socialist mem- the | Can find a settlement of this question —Two gentlamen between whom, po- Iiteally speaking, there is no love lost, are having a most uncomfortable time in this Congresg and friends of | both are wondering which shall have proved accurate in analyzing Fhe mind of Genator Harding or Presi- dent-elect Harding as the case may be after next November, Bomebody, to borrow a phrase from William Jennings Bryan, is going to! find bis heart “in the grave” when} Mr, Harding chooses between the wishes of the so-chlled {rreconcilables and the mild reservationists or friends of the treaty and League. Gome people predict that Mr. Hard- mg will make the choice before elec- tion day, others say he will wait un- tli after the polls have closed. Hiram Jobnéon is the one and Her- bert Hoover is’ the other. Mr. John-| fon is opposed to the League of Na-) tions and Is convinced by a reading of the Harding speeches that the, Obie Senator, if elected, will reject | the whole League business, while Mr, Hoover is satiafled that Mr. Harding will approximate: the posi- top which representatives like Taft, Hughes and Wickersham have ex- preteed as their understanding of | Senator Harding’s innermost thoughts. | Meanwhile, the friends of Johnson were elated by Senator Harding's Speech of Aug. 28 and now they are correspondingly dismayed by the statement issued at Marion by George W. Wickersham former Attorney General in President Taft's cabinet. ‘That statement was read and ap- wroved by Senator Harding before being desued through the atenomra- hie corps of Harding headquarters or if ds the first important statement fgsued from thé front porch tliat has try have been given five ‘days in which to comply with the working- Men's demands, according to a reso- . bere of the General Confederation of ‘Latbor. Should the employers fail to yield, ® rapkl movement toward general nationalization t9 threatened. 80 far the manufacturers are perpisting in their decision not to enter into di- rect negotiations with the workers before the latter evacuate the fac- tories. Positive contradiction of “biased | rumors spread in foreign countries reapecting the situation in Italy” is contained in a eemi-official note is- aed this morning, The note adds: “Wity the exoaption of the action of the metal workers, life is proceed- ing normally heré. It 4s hoped we and even the workers’ organizations Bre o-opermting to this end.” Jt is estimated that 400 of the larg- est metal works in Italy have been ogeupied by workers and the move- ‘ment is still expanding, threatening to extend to the extreme south. Manufacturers declare the wage in- creases demanded by the 500,000 metal workers employed by them would ada At least 1,000,000,000 tire to their pay- rol and that this burden could not be sustained. They point out that Italy pays eighteen times the pre-war prices for coal, while England pave only three times, America only three and five-tenths, France «ix, and even | Germany only eleven. As a result for- “poat was filled with persons return- eign préduction is replacing Ttaltan. 's Two members of the ministry will it ring Sounecn « ef No. 17 go to Milan, and it is hoped the gen- an abrasion| eral industrial conference will take Futnon, one/early action on their suggestions. from the aunt, Mra. Jennie Gabray y Street, was bruised ere have broken open the safes and taken money to pay the wages they claim are due them, says a devypatch to the Tribuna, EVANS BREAKS. COURSE RECORD +N OLF TOURNEY (Continued From First Page.) t is thought, was left and not by the otrikers. feosived by the police that liquor was being im a saloon at No, 82 eoverely penalized when numerous tee shote landed in traps and the rough. “Harmon who is only appearing In Ms stcond big tournament, was straight afl the way and showed rare ability negotiating the tricky Dn- wineer's greens. Other surprises were the ease, that Jess Sweetver of Yale, inter-colleg- fate champion, ran up a big lead on Ned Sawyer, Metropolitan title hold- er, Chick Evans’ rownd of 72 which created a new courte recund and Bob Gardner's Jarge lead ovér R. G. Griot, Canadian champton. Tommy Armour, the Scotch holder ot the French title, was the only for- eign surviver who emerged in tho lead. Armour rin up a three hole ad- yantage over George Hoffner of Phil- adelphia, Other résults of the niorning round were: Bobby Jones of Atlanta was three up on J, Simpson Dean of Atlanta Fue Bhs oval NELL BRINKLEY MARRIED. ruse MoRac, fon of Noted Actor, te the Happy Man. fot gone through that proccss. ‘been to win the friends of the treaty In aome plants near Turin the work. | and ‘League, and the writer pointed out Hughes went to seo Senator Harding feaning toward the Taft-Hughes- party end more and more away from | poused tn earlier speeches. TRIED TO WIN FRIENDS OF TREATY AND LEAGUE. But the tendency ot Mavion has at the time Charles Wvans that the Republican nominee was Wickersham-Hoover wing of the| Johnson, whose cause he had os. Moreover, Mr. Wickersham con- firms clearly a view of Senator Hard- ing’® position on the treaty which thie correspondent found on his own visit to Marion in July, namely, as Mr. Wickersham expressed it, that Mr. Harding would not “wholly and finally reject the League,” but would take the lead in‘ ing the oove- nant and putting it Into practical op- eration. ‘There 1s one portion of Mr, Wick- ersham's statement which, however, if the Republican nominee read, he could not have approved, but the sig- nificance of it as an utterance on the very threshold of the Ohio Senator's home and its resemblanee to state- ments made by Gov, Cox, the Demo- cratio nomines, is simply that after the election is over the position taken dy either of the candidates who is successful will tend toward the same goal, for the slinple reason that each would be confronted by the same set of facts and circumstances. “[ earnestly favor the League of Na- tions,” says Mr, Wickersham without referring indefinitely to a’ League of Nations, “{ recogaise the imper- fections of the Paris covenant, Yet I should have been satisfied to see it ratified aa written, believing that the power of amendment was ample to enaible it to be molded ag national interests might make necessary, Sen- ator Harding does not wholly and wre idle. finally reject the League.” He recog- apd Princeton. poss went Found ia it ib hans Gina | ad aed ls Oulmet was one up on| %RWived and interwoven in the cls peace of Hurope that its good work » pee is thé gon of Brice Mc-| Richard Hickey of Atlanta, going er) its tunotettionable eat bel leading man tn many | round in 78, must be preserved in order to stabil- ome of the t Afteeh W. C. Fownes jr, of Onkmont, ex-| !#6 the of that continent.” . che : 4 Mr, Wickersham represents Gena- i rerereninecieoarenennevn champion, led Harold Weber* of | tor jfarding ws unquestionably in- — AERO MAIL TO FRISCO. | rot000 wy tour up. clined to adopt “the” League of Nas 4 of mail delegation ex tear Be Aaa Between the Philip Carter of Southampton, N.| About 20,000 Back at Work im the Fould imerease, r delegation ‘Also. Y., 1 up on Max R. Marston of Lewre! District. advocat 1 the geet ‘eng more lame on Primary Ballet.| yrcrion, LAWRENCE, Mass,, apt. 1—All 10- [POE f° the “atationing of @ ara eB Blections was ordered | ani W. Dyer of Montolair, N. J,,| os! textile plants with the exoeption of | iceman at Lenox Avenue and 18sth by Justice MeCook In the Su- . ' **""Tthe four mills here of the American | Street. tions when he is elected even though it may have to be “modified to re: up on Robert MoKee of Chicago, move wl just doubts as to its undu ‘Thomas D. Armour of Beotland, | effect upon American rights and in- French champion, led George Hoffner, Seleates Teoh cy nutshell Lad Philadelphia, by three up, ‘aft position, thé Hoover position, Roginald M, Lewin, Grenwich, was| 2nd Bow the position, too, of Gov, 1 up on Gardiner W, White of Glen-| Bomebody will have analyzed Mr. oe. Hardings Views inodr Clarke Corkran, Baltimore, led Os- . dent “predicts th wald Kirkby, Englewood, N. J. by|Sonnmon will And. hie. J 2 up. of the treaty and Leagi Maurice Risley of Atlantic City, 1|from that held by Senator Marding. up on J, Wood Platt of Philadelphia. ee M, M. Jack of Merion, § up on Rou-| TEXTILE PLANTS RESUME. ben Bush of New Orleans, BD. P. Allis of Milwaukee wae three 8 up on J. B. Rose of Allegheny, fen Compan; J. W. Gweetser of Yale, intercol-| Pint work Plant lexiate champion, 6 up on D. B. Saw-~|to-day after the annual vi yer of Giwanoy. ‘The American Woolen Compa: rectly by the tme election time has come and this Genator rpretation' different 4 the Pacific Mills med operations cation pariod, Seprettnataly 20,000 operatives starting | STOWAWAY WADE. /'80r‘nothottmas HIS GETAWAY AS. |“ scram LADY DANCED AN Protege of Col. Whittlesey of Lost Battalion Fame Escapes From Ellis Island. ‘WHE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER, fi Chatges and counter charges grow- tng out of the shooting of Peter , Baumer, 4 lawyer of No. 1 Broadway, | at the apartment of Mre. Cafrie sia- Rey, On actress, No. 300 Woat 49th Street, were dtopped to-day and Magistrate Schwab, in Tombs Court, Gieminsed the ease after reading affi- davits from all parties concerned agreeing to a withdrawal of the Although Immigration Commision. | Sune, grower # auld to be still in er Wallis refuses to credit the report, tn addition to Mrs. Sidney, Mr. and Ellis Island guatds are of the opinion Mrs. Hdward Brady, who were in the that Herman Dhrinburg, the stow- Setres#’s apartment July 26 yd away who has enilated the interest Baumer wae shot and glassware en furniture were smashed, were in court of Col. Charlts W. Whittlesey, the to-day. now?” asked hero of the “Lost Battalion” of the | “le everybody happy 71th Division, took advantage of a Magistrate Schwab in diaminsing the sensation created by a simply garbed Bradys and Mrs. Sidney. “You bet!" female interpretative dancer at an choruséd the three. entertainment given to the ‘mmi-| BOLAND APPEALS To grants last Sundoy afternoon to make his escape. Bhrinburg and two eal LEAGUE OF NATIONS allens are at large in New York. ‘The female dancer appeared on the! A Jawn in the course of the weekly en-' Asks Mediation to Avert War tertalnment which Commissioner in Dispute With Wallis furnishes to the detained Lithuania. aliens. According to the guards 6! ‘was #0 graceful and so natural that she riveted the attention of every- LONDON, Sept. 7.—The Pollsh Gov- érnmént has addressed an appeal to “the League of Nations requesting Its udience, guards, Pollce vedistion in the Pollsh-Lithuanian lactuded, Glspute, Unless an improvement o0- Breathlessly the throng watched ours in the situation Poland will be |the dancer who would have had compelled to declare war on Lithuania, on practically nothing at all if a the appeal states. single garment had beon detached! The communication declares an un- from her person by the breeze, Just Drovoked attack had been made on the prior to the appearance of the dancer Polls, troops by Lituanian forces. The League of Nations is now con- Ehrinburg was seen out on the OUt-| sidering the ‘4. skirts of the crowd, ‘The Polish demand is, the note indl- The theory ts that while the dancer cates, that the Lithuanlan troops evac- held the crowd in a state of semi Polish terfitory within a few hypnosia the astute Bhrinburg ma “en fratked aboard,” Ghonly afterward the. WOMEN ASK STRIKE FOR CORK MAYOR ing to the Latter and he is si to have walked ashore with the crowd. Commissioner Wallis doean’t agree with the dancer theory. He thinks|Urge Irish Longshorernen to Go Tn a olnteaont loniea tie attertoon| Out Thursday—Parade To- Morrow Night. he referred in an uncomplimentary | way to the vigilance of the guards, | giving the impression that it would; Miss M. A. Kenna ahd Miss Mary hot be necessary to take advantage of sinck, strike pickets, who have been the unsolicited afd of a scantily clad working among Irish longshoremen in dancer to accomplish @ getaway from an endeavor to have them go on a Elis Island. | tee sympathy Tierd Mayor | MacSwiney of Cork, called 4 meeting of |longshoremen at the Lamport & Holt plers at the foot of 14th Street, Hobo- ken, this afternoon, ‘They urged the longshoremen not to for 100,000 MINERS STILL “ON VACATION” Both Sides in Hard Coal Dispute [Pott fer work on Thursday ea tne jaet step in the protest «trike, They Now Look to Washington also announced that a meeting and for Solution. paradé will be held fh Hoboken to- (Special to The Evening World.) morrow night under the auspices off WILKDSBARRE, Pa, Sapt. 1.—10- the Hoboken branch the friends of Inte edom, for h permission surgent control of the anthracite felda |fAs,,ueen granted by Chief of Police has been challenged dut has witstood | —— the attack with the result that produc: tion was only about 30 per cent, normal AUTO OWNER FINED; Anthracite field, were almost completaly ted up. In general the “back to the Farmer Who Has Been Here for a solttion of the trouble, If Secre- Fourteen Years. taty of Labor Wilson decides that 17 to show they are entitled to more, the gay at Stapleton on a charge of violat- bilan ann e-coae da ing the traffle regulations in driving deen in this country fourteen yea! was not a citizen [Bea ales at huatntet yen P « 6 repel les of citizenship when Cop Who Arrests Them for Dis-'| ne fad taken all : land told nim the next time he would |get a Jai sentence. What Maueed Pottoenian carey to-|$100,000,000 FRENCH LOAN. ny to pay the fines of five boys ne had | Court. ‘The boys were John Wren, | Walter Wren, James Jon@® Luke Moran) 7+ to-day and about 100,000 mine workers | NOT A CITIZEN District 7 and 9 in the lower - | Magistrate Scores Staten {stand mines” movement failed to act tn. Both slaes now look to Washington out. fi t | When Frank Tinnemfido, farmer at Mat the mineeh Mhould have atchance Dongan Hills, 8. 1, wae arraigned to- his automoblte tn the Wrong direction POLICEMAN PAYS yin» one-way stroct, ne admitted ne ad ’ FIVE BOYS! FINES ri ort i cStteon severely repr in this ‘county, ft esidence in country, turbance Produces $25 With [fs a Grin, : arrested, and what he arrested them worgan @ Oo. Offer 8 Per Cont. for, remained a mystery in West Side | P. Morgan and Company an- t of Mrs, M) heads, ‘The bonds will be dated Sept. 15, hey pagel ary all that ‘490, end will mature in twonty-five the five were disturbing the neighbor- 1920, 4 Pi vp fe 8 |hood by thelr behavior ta a taxteab— [ON sorelMand ooamany St eer 6x | ie by Morgan and Company at par and jand they were, the policeman sald with accrued interest The interest rate ts per cent & Brin. |* Fife Wrench Government makes. the They were sentenced to pay finns of iogn at this time ta order to mest Its ———- FOUNTAIN OPENED IN BRONX. GREETING BY PILSUDSKI. — ted Cablegram From Poltah mam Reaches Weat Po! Structure Moved From City Hall Installed in Victory Garden, Park Commissioner Joseph B. Hen- nessy turned the valves that set water ‘The cablegram sent by Marshal | pigying in the fountain fn the Victory Jonoph, Pilaudak!, commander of the!Garaen at Bronx Borough Hall to-day Polish armies, to be read at West Point “tie presence of several hundred elty yesterday at the Lafayette-Marne ce) employees and others. ebration, was delayed in transmission, |“"yhe fountain a fow arriving to-day, It was a messary of removed greeting “in the name of the Poilsh where, wi from in the sacred cause of liberty.” Ata banguet given later at the! Sleepy Hollow Country Club there were representatives of France, Great Brit- ain, Belgium, Poland and Russla. —_ PLEAD FOR POLICE STATION. Newrees Ask Baright Not ‘Abolish 195th Street House. A delegation of prominent Harlem negroes to-~ay called on Polles Com- missioner Enright to urge hinf not to abolish the 135th Street Police Station, in the heart of the negro section. The Commissioner Li intended to r {ts work into the adjoining preckrc! reas od erime Commissioner Enright promised to consider their requests, NO BANG! paw renime In part Ye mae | Pacific Print Works Will run’ in fall on | eat! "hate ie Sica” seth | hat day. Ram setter NRA Ia y ny will next Monday and the ISENATORS NOT SEEKING THE BEST EVDENGE OF. 0. FUND, SAS MOORE “rained §8,800 in twenty-four houra.” “There wan nothing secret about Cox's charges in forty-eight hours?” ™ was there?” Senator Kenyon ed. aaked Senator Kenyon, * A “walt, if I did not say It then I say ‘Not then, but there is now,” an- swered Mr, Moore, ‘That was be- it now," responded Mr. Moore. Moore said he was sure that Pred |f0F@ you bad started your investiga: W. Upham, Treasurer of the Repbii-| “02 And Gov. Cox had made his can National Committee, would not|° f testify to untruths but he was equally sure that the Reptiblican official was a victim of either mistakes or bad (Continued From First Page.) “What is your un this Ohio quota?” C! asked. ding about rman Kenyon “THOTEL REGISTER bookkeeping when he testified con- “My understanding {# that Cincin- % cash or go to jail for three days f the maturing Anglo-French war ‘The policeman paid the $26 fines, still bora Uawue. the Governor's Wheeling, W. Va, grinning, “Navody could got him to tell eo address. why. 4 cerning the quotas assigned various Btates. Senator Reod protested that Sena-) tor Kenyon was seeking what the witness did not know rather than wi he knew. “You can question him in your own way when your turn comes,” retorted | the Iowa Senator, and he then read charges from Gov. Cox's Wheeling | speech to the effect that “powerful interésts” were scheming to buy Government control and from the Boutti-Bend speech that so far as Re- publican contributions were con- corned “the sky !s the limit.’ He also tend a Cox statement that $500,000 h&d@ beon raised in Ohio “in the twinkling of an eye.” 7% Was to raise $200,000, Cleveland $400,000, Youngstown $80,000"—— A complete list of the witnesses subpoenaed for to-day, besides Mr. Moore, wag announced this morning as follows: Cc. We. MoeClure, Atlanta, Ga. Charles MoNider, Mason City, Iowa; H. C, McBldowney, Union ‘Trust Com- pany, Pittsburgh; A. D, Paxton, Wheellng, W. Va.; Charles, Mavity, First National Bank, Mason ity, fowa; Frank A. Refley, Columbus, ;Ohlo; Carl Fritecher,. Republican Headquarters, Detroit; Reeve Schley, Chaep National Bank, New Yorks C. C. Brainerd, Washington newspap@ correspondent; Mrs, Jacob Bauer, Chicago; J, G. Bryson, Brazil, Ind.; — | Fred A. Miller, Columbus, Ohio; W. EXPLAINS HIS UNDERSTANDING) a. woodford,Cleveland; Dudley & OF REPUBLICAN FUND. Blossom, Cleveland; G. F, Kinny, eorla; H. G, Garrott, Winchester, te! Pt In anewering Senator Kenyon's) direct question for names of men| cd Wr tphads Mie anne City: who knew about the Ohio fund, Mr. | tional Treasurer, and the following Moore went into a long explanation | persons. from Upham’'s office here: G. of ‘his understanding of the Republi-| Wy. le H. HB. Owens and Marry M. can campaign fund organization, He| Upham was directed to produce all tatd it was headed by Col, Thompwon | records of pre-convention expendi and had as State Chairmen men who:n) ‘res and collections by the Repub- the: ElNSHGA Bulletin denerived (an| “A AetGtet Gossimitigy “ot commanding influence.” He de- |elared that Fred Miller of columbus WIRELESS TO CIRCLE EARTH. | was Chairman tn Ohio arfd that, like : other State chairmen, he had ap- ‘Teekerton Plant to Have Five New ss A le |pointea chairmen of local ways and | tic so Fas eiccea e | A E ening ) Risang commutes | HAMMONTON, N. J. Sept. 7—The T found that usually In Oblo these | great ‘Tuckerton wireless plant, s30| local chairmen were manufacturerg," | feet high and the tallest structure in sald Mr, Moore. » Amétion, has passed from the Marconi ‘The witness reiterated the ocharge|Company to the American, Radio Com- that specific, quotas were asscased | Peny. ie wee Sealant) Com- . ny of New Yor (i egainst local communities and sald: |fAny.o' New York will erect Ave ad- “But these local organizations were | at cost of $250,000. dargely ‘scenery.’ the real workers for funds were paid men headed by Harry M. Blair, assistant to Mr. Upham.” He asserted that Blair had under him certain “divisional directors” in plant holds sendl record, a 5,000 milte to the Teland of quam. When the additions ‘e completed, |t is ex- pected wireless pry Sav See ne ain oe a world’s HAD HER NANE BUT WIFE WASNT THERE Other Alleged Lapses of Ro H. McCarter Potter Lead te Suit for Separation, * Maibel Lawrence Potter, wife Robert H. Carter Potter, retired mai utacturer, breeder of race ho member of the Larchmont Yach' Club, and owner of a million doll worth of property in Hoboken, wi allowed $400 @ month alimony to-day. in her suit for séparation by agreement filed in the Supreme Court. In her motion, for alimony an counse! fee, Mrs, Potter asked $1,500 a month. She submitted a. lengthy aM@idavit to Justice Guy ing support of her motion, She say# therein that @#he and the defendant were married at Lake Forest, Mich,, on June 1, 1897, against the wishea of her brother and father after the family had learned that her sweet- heart was associated with one Julia Kline. . 7 Her husband, she charges, from the beginning showed a consistent disre- gard for her feelings. In 1909, she ways, he refused to authorize her visit to her dying mother’s bedside. and, whep she later went to see her’ mother if Californig and telegraphed for cartare home, he made no re- sponse, although his income then was $50,000 a year. In 1918, she says, her husband built a yacht, fyrnished in de luxe style, and upon {t entertained his friends and their women acquaintances. She says one woman was entertained aboard the yacht from Saturday until Monday, Her hushadnd neglected her, she swears, and failed to providé for her, and “A was forced to depend on ® cousin of her husband's, sho says. On one occasion, she says, her hus- band was found entertaining a woman at tire Waldorf, and on another octa- sion @ho discovered A bill for the hotel expenses of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Mc~ Carter Potter at the Lexington Hotel, Lakewood, N. J., she says, althongh she had never been there, Mrs, Potier fmines several womem in her affidavit, and instances the discovery of a woman at one time in her home in extreme dtshabilie. The Potters have two children. charge of sections of the country and that two of tiem were ©. W. Lee and Henry E. Owens. “These are the professional money raisers,” said Mr. Moore. “In Iowa the paid director is Irving Norwood of » Davenport,” said Mr. Moore. | “That 1s not the man,” interjected Mr, Upham. } “Well, Mr. Upham can give you the name of the Iowa director,” said Mr. Moore, He then named John Kelley, Ohio; Carl ‘Fritsche, Michigan, and Charles K. Mavity, West Virginia, os other paid directors. CAMOUFLAGED AS EXECUTIVE | SECRETARIES, SAYS MOORE. | “To the public these paid ditectors are camouflaged as ‘executive secre- taries of the Ways and Means Com- miftes,’” said the witness. A “battalion of moppers up" is also | a part of the Republican finance or- fanization, according to Mr. Moore. | He aald these men went in after the | organization headed by Col. Thomp- von had collected from “the cream | list.”” Moore said that one of these ‘mop- | pers wp" was A. A. Protaman of | Cleveland and that another, Edmund Silverbrand of Youngstown hed left edly of tasty N medley of tast eharm, i! Ore mettle ree of richty Tuesday BUTTER, PHANUT LE—Big crackly Mr. Moore said that Chester C./ Hamlin of Colorado had raised §103,- 000 in that State “Gov, Cox says that $600,000 was raised in ‘the twinkle of an eye,’" ’ , Our Dacky Special For To-Morrow, Wednesday, Sept. 8th EMOCOLATE ROYAL NUT KIBSKs—Th: 5 fie Tavoreds hicaiea Withee pital For Tuesday, Sept. 7th CHOCOLATE COYERE IT PATTIES—Thi Koedieg have Mi oC i fi ft ao Coa RAP A Wa ets Sncktls are of our unexcelled, fraerayt, For exact tocntion see telephone directory. The specified weight includes the wesae naan thouth weet of ‘lstinetive SPECIAL, POUND BOX 34c ate. 1 aren oh WAL PUNE BOR Features ae shove.’ bination of . . nounced to-day the terms of the Hety nnd ait and Misting! Mocarthy end Shey wore /temeee ay Just made to the|town after he had heard that a re- candy “eacelfences atm Pollcoman Carey ald tie hag beea |French Government by .an Ameriean| quest hod been filed for a subpoena Ticeekivgs Neng: wailed to Noe 414 Went 49th Mivest on jayndicate which tho Morgan house/ealling him before the Committes, | moboken, Baleted sind container. Senator Kenyon sald, quoting from “Yos, and I have heard it was more than that," Mr. Moore retorted “In my own town of Youngstown / $72,000 was raised more than a month ago.” He, suggested that the committee call C. H. Booth of Youngstown; George M. Jones, Toledo; John Kirby, ecks ago was front of Ch Hatt Dayton; Frank Knuse, Portsmouth; John A. Kelly, Columbus, and Dudley Half Yearly Sale of Hosiery, Sweaters and Scarves it was erected Ih 1873 at a coat or ‘The marble and granite in army which is fighting continually for ft, ‘structure are now appraived at Blossom and W. A. Woodford, Cleve land. jie oa “Mr, Knuse," Mr. Moore continued, "Tee half yearly sale ides an opportunity to pu: stock- ings, 80x, sweaters, etc.of the greatest Dandy tor Iced Tea ( WhuteSiose CEYLON TEA New. 14 Ib. Size for Convenience lower prices, For Lot No. @—Silk 20% DISCOUNT distinction at 20% discount. Many specials will be closed out at much with cotton t ao Si They wer. #5.90—rchey crs now $2.72 « pair. Mail Orders Filled Promptly. PECK & PECK 586 FIFTH AVENUE 50] Fifth Ave. - 4 No Michigan Ave, New York Chicago Av Palm Beach th winter, at Newport tt surimer example: wow. Hose for Street These hose