The evening world. Newspaper, May 27, 1921, Page 2

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= ‘be Sinn Felner was expected to tead the poll ‘The ballots were counted In sealed tooms, with police armed with rifles st the doors to prevent any attempt to destroy the ballot boxes. en NO QUESTIONS ABOUT . ARMS FOR IRELAND Jf England Doesn’t Ask, We Shall Take No Notice of Tratlic in Arms. WASHINGTON, May 27—Great Britain has made no representations ) the United States regarding the re- ported shipment of American arms to Ireland and the raising of funds in ihe Tnited States by the sale of the ponas of the “Irish Republic,” officials waid to-day after their attention had been directed to press despatch .s telling of interpellations made in the British Parliament on these subjects. It was indicated that unless repre- entations were made, official higance of the alleged trac in arms would not be taken, Old Bay Horse, Now River Mare, Saved by Donkey Two Cops and Launch Help Get Animal From East River. mecceadeacaions Banker’s Wall Street Enemi id to Have Underwritten Divorce Struggle. NO CHANGE Wife Rejects | Alter Her Conditions for Settlement. cog- In apite of definite information that | the heavy expenses of Mrs. Anne U. ' Potter man in fighting her hus- band’s divorce action have been un- derwritten by persons opposed to his financial policies and associates—information that has an- all the herited fighting obstinacy ho from father—It in- his Is be | the All Pleas to those of his Press).—W. I gered James A, Stillman and aroused |teur golf championship | THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAY 27 STILLMAN EXPECTED TO SIGN SURRENDER 10 WIFE TO-DAY: AIS FOES BACK HER FIGHT HUNTER 1S WINNER BTS OL Defeats Allan Graham in a One-Sided Match, 12 Up and 11 to Play. HOYLAK (Associated May 2 Hunter the Brit am Kingsdown won to-day, In the 36-hole finals Hunter def Royal Livert Allan Graham, ) in |lieved the banker to-day will signa one-sided mateh by 12 up and 1 to of Walmer and ated RETAILERS MUST ~CUTDOWN PRICES Some Manufacturers, Also, Will Have to Reduce to Reach Normal Conditions. PEOPLE CURB BUYING. | | |Denying Themselves Things | They Need, He Tefls tron | and Steel Institute, Ke will normal business conditions can be restored, Judge Elbert H. Gary, President of the American Iron and * and some manufacturers have to reduce prices before | Commodore He also de- governmental to-day. ‘ared himself personally in favor of supervision over or- ganized industry, if such supervision |should apply to organized labor as ,| Well as to organized capital. “In th richest of all nations,” sad The auctioneer who sold a horse, | stipulation ending his suit. play. |dudge Gary, “our people are not Ly a éplrited, bang tatied horse to Jamen ee « eet which re ba i In the first round of the match|ing enough to supply themselves wit ' view of the resources now be- rét. Giva| thie: Ondioary, Bonita te Goldberg, a Harlem peddler, declared {| nef his wife, aie yeceas the ote oh) TOMS OU SHR Tat The i mi a Mu Baer ean a he was a thoroughbred broken to shall bind herself to “keep the peace | Noles” Graham was oft in his}though they h TIE Geet SG arness. after he has made peace” as one of | Putt at the first, the ball hitting the|means to do so. They are denying to Why," said he. at he called for ‘the lawyers put it. He wants a guar-| back of the hole and jumping out,|'temselves many of the things they another bid, “in his day this bird Was antee that Mrs. Stillman will not per-| Hunter won the hole, 4 to 6. At the! Would gener: ly buy and utilize and & starter in the Metropolitan Handl- mit herself and per domestic rela-|gecond Hunter's tee shot fell in «| Mey are right im their attitude up to ¢4P, and on @ couple of occawony tions to be used in keeping up @ pre-| puddle of water, He lifted the bal) Corain Timi he would have won classic turf gramme of publicity hurtful to Mr.| and played a good second to halve in| "The Teagun Is that the great par- events if it hadn't been for his being Stillman and his friends by engaging | 4, At the third he took an iron for|°?4s!n& public has formed the opinion hear-sighted and thinking the head in any moving picture enterprise or! pie second shot. He was well up, but| {tt there have not been consum- of the stretch was the wi writing a book or publishing a diary It was this guarantee that Gold-/ yf, Stillman is said to feel that witn- berg bought him and hitched him to such @ guarantee a bis fruit wagon, To-day he was left of the controversy would be no s Standing at 10rd Street and the Bast tjement at all iver, It may have nb eply 4° He has had before him since lust | eaincidence, but a marine policeman | night the typewritten form of sur- says when the animal, whose since Goldberg obtained it, has b Jerry, heard a couple of fellows talk ing about Belmont Park and th Faces he bolted and ran south render of the civocce sult and with- awal of the charge that two-y’ cid Guy Stiliman js not his son. ument puts no restrictions th At 102d Street he left the wagon on! she pleases or to bring a sult for the dock and jumped into the Hast! divorce against Mr, Stillman. River with what remained of the} John F. Brennan, who has charge harness, If the horse had any inten-/of the legal proceedings for Mrs. tion of trying to swim to Long Island he gave it up, and in four feet of water at low tide walked under the! Stillman in Westchester County, was to be in readiness to take the stipu- pier. There he sank in mud. |lations directly to Justice Mor- Patrolmen Gicester and Sheehan | Schauser as soon as Mr, Stillman with @ police launch went under after | Should have signed them., This was him, With the launch pulling they | regarded as significant of the expec- finally managed to free his feet, They | tation by the lawyers on both sides towed him 150 feet to the tugbogi, tat he would give over his resent- Enterprise, which dredging ent over the turn the case had outfit attached {taken within the last few days “What have you got there?" asked} Mrs. Stillman joined Mr, Brennan La Aa eee cane ins i ceatnes | in the offices of Stanchfield & Levy at noon for consultation. All “No, he's a bay horse,” declared Carlson who set a donkey engine to information as*to the object of the meeting Was refused. work and rigged a derrick so that a has tug. “He was led over to the pier Moon Cornelius J. Sullivan, in char where his owner hitched him to what was left of a load of fruit with which of Mr, Stidman's legal interests, ar- gued over the document with Joun he had atarted he heranawoy. (5; stanchficld in the offices of COURT BARS RETURN) ( euntinuea on Ninth Pase) ——_— STATE INTRODUCES CONFESSION AT MRS. NOTT'S TRIAL Widow Accused of Husband's Murder Weeps at Blood- Stained Evidence. OF SEIZED LIQUOR Justice Tierney Denies Petitions in First Interpretation of Mullan- Gage Law. Justice Tierney to-day denied the ap- Plications of @ight petitioners for the return of liquor seized by the Police Department. He held the proper pro cedure to regain the liquor is by re plevin or suits for damages, Justice Tierney’s decision is the first Supremo Court interpretation of the Mullan- Gage la ‘The cases panved upon are thove of Ogden Reid, publisher, of No. 35 West G3d Street, who lost fifty-one cases of whiskey and wine; James Shea, whose home in Harlem was raided when a bottle of whisek ywas found in a su toon adjoining; Lucien Constantine, (Servint to The Byening Wort!) whose 227 barrels und 211 cases of} BRIDGEPORT, Conn, May 27,— Nquor were removed from No. 131 West| Mrs, Ethel Hutchins Nott, on trial for a6th Btreet; Harry Kuchinsky, No. West 115th Street, who lost sixty 46) the murder of her husband, George, for which crime Elwood Wade was bottles. of homemade wine; Exporters’ |,., Warehouse Company, No. 370 Washing- |N@nxed & week ago, appeared to be ton Street, where $100,000 of sucra- on the border of collapse when she entered court to-day. ‘Tears were streaming down her cheeks and she mental wine was removed, and Timothy Paddell, Nicola Della’ Vecchia and Fatto, whose barrelx of wine s walked unsteadily. Reaching her chair, she sank | it and eried for JUDGE, AS A JURY, several minutes, her body shaking ACQUITS BARTENDER convulsively:, She used her black-bordeged hand- “|the short fourth °N/bad missed a | Mrs, Stillman's freedom to live where] qt the rth ¢ summoned to this city this morning | | in using his brassie from the tee he had sliced into the long grass, He ttlement” | was short on the green, but holed a 6S ani seven-yard putt to win in 4 to became 2 up. Hunter continued to use his bras- sie for his wooden tee shots, having broken his driver two days ago, At the n ceasod. » hole after Graham and and a half putt tee shot fell Hunter became ¢ Hunter won t ham's in the rough and up. ‘The sixth was halved, Hunter conceding a half to Graham, who was nearly a yard away. ‘The seventh also was halved. H-n- ter had two perfect shots at the cighth, but his approach was short. Graham was in the ditch from the tee, and although recovering well he took thre — putts, down, At the ninth Hunter again played two wooden while Graham, requiring three.sttc kes reach the green, became 6 do The tenth was halved in fours, Hunter drove poorly in the eleventh, while Graham was on the both putted weakly, but sham won the hole. He pulled his drive at the twelfth, while Hunter hit. a good one, Both were short on the green and the halved in fives, Hunter alming to hold a three- yard putt for a win At the short fifteenth Graham nit a fine shot within four yards of the pin but fasled’ to hole out. Hunter took three putts and Graham won the hole, 3 to 4 Graham topped splendid hole was his first shot at the fourteenth, while Hunter, playing perfectly, won the hole in 6 to & hunkered on his tee shot th, while Hunter got to the green with two fine strokes, win- ning the hole in 4 to 5, jraham found the bunker off his third at the sixteenth, Hunter waa over the green with his third but won the hole In\6 to 7, Graham's game picked up here, but Hunter neverthe- less won the next two holes and atyod in an almost impregnable position the end of the first round, for this round were: Hunter: . Out ....4443 443 6 4-3 In -45 5460464 4-41-76 Graham Out 6464543 6 541 In 44568667 5 5—45—85 In the afternoon's play Hunter wor the first hole, 6 to 6. Graham at this becoming 4| The cards jmated complete and j roper readjust- |ments, of prices, And, on account of fatiure to discriminate between dif- ferent lines or departments of busi- |ness, the whole economic system has suffered, “Assuming that the steel industry has been fair and reasonable in prices up to the present time, it must be | admitted, I think, that there have been and still are charged for certain commodities unreasonable and un- fair, if not extortionate, prices. They |apply to particMlar lines and per-! | sons, not to the majority of lines or individuals, They have done them- selves great injury. This applies to sellers of products and to members of various trades. “Different products have been pur- {chased from the farmer, manufactur- er or others at low cost and p ssed Jon in one way or another and sally |sold to the consumer at out) ugeous | Retail prices for many com- es are much too high. Without | justification workmen have been clas- sified and rechas: ‘7 s to desig- nate them as skilled uicn. We have lheara of persons whoso daily wage was advanced from $3 a day to $10 or $12 a day under this practice. “The vast majority of business men land workmen are falr and sincere, but there is a minority that ignores the principles of common honesty. "They affect the whole situation and until they are aroused to the necessity of getting in line with sound stand- ards of conduct the full retura to (Continued on Ninth Page.) WOMAN PRISONER JUST WALKS AWAY Left Alone in. Disttict Attomey’s Office While Alleged Aocom- plice Is Questioned. Under arrest on a serious charge, Mrs. Helen Summers, No. 4407 Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn, was left unguarded in the outer room of Assistant District Attorney Hurley's office to-day. When the official decided to question her she was gone, The woman evidently had just walked out to freedom. The police of Brooklyn are now searching for her, Mrs, Summers was arrested with Joseph Sydney, No. 245 46th Street, Brooklyn, on a charge growing out of the illness of @ young woman now in ,| the Metropolitan Hospital, Blackwell's Island. Sydney and Mra, Summers had been taken to the office of the Kings: volnt had lost six successive hwles| County Diatriet. Attorney. Detective 4nd there seemed @ prospect of u| Honan, who made the charge, accom “ panied’ Sydney into the inner’ room to record defeat for a final In the ama ist in his examination, It was then teur championship. The second hole was halved jn fours, At Graham's ball struck a spectator, Hunter played the hole beaut.fully the third * other prisone> was left to herself. Sydney was held in $1,000 for a hear- ing Jt Yourt. DOLLAR A ROACH Coukin't Find 12 Jurors Who|kerchiet constantly as Assistant |@9d won it, 4 against 5, making him Would Convict Under Mullane | S¥Perimtendent of Police Mood toid}!1_uo FINE FOR BROOKLYN : of finding Notts body in @ trunk in} ‘The fourth hole was halved in per- RESTAURANT Gage Act. 4 Swamp the day after the murder, fect threes and the fifth was halved MAN ascong the jurore culled in Judge | the Aste the State Introduced a} bunkered off hls approach to tho | Braunstein Assessed for Skirmish- Mitchell May's part of the Kingy | *!ned confession made by Mra Nott | sixth, but Graham took three putts jaws 7 . ; county aon iemmes Es aa to the police following ca nriest In [nd ‘the hole was halved in sve ing Party of Ten Found in agree to find convictions under the| Which she admitted being in the Tate anedat Renn fae An His, Kitchen. Mullan-Gage Act providing the evi- | 0Use when the crime was committed] with It won, the match, infileting a Health Inspector John P. Foran @ence warranted. So Judge May “Md in which she placed full blame|tecord defeat on an opponent tn the) appeared in Flatbush Court to- acted ay judge and jury in the case for the actual killing upon W foal for the amateur champions? | day against Max Braunstein, of Patrick Flanigan, of No. 148 Nel. her Intim Attempts previously | were EF ‘ proprietor of a restaurant at No. son Street, and ordered Flanigun’s ade by Mrs, Nott to shicld Wade| Hunter 44355 684 Atlantic Avenue, charging @emissal, were told of by police officers, who!@rabam .,.. 84 8 ‘ 5 i‘ + violation of the Sanitary Code. Flanigan was a bartender in a cafe Visited the Nott home shortly after |g \itanam's Play was dudversely A! "| He said he had found roaches in fat No. 530 Vanderbilt Avenue, Brook. the trunk was seen ng carried! tagher, who is not expected to re-| Braunstein's kitchen, tyn, aud it was alleged that on a “WAY cover, “How many roaches did you gtairway adjoining the barroom a MM. Nott turned her head away i arn see?" inquired Magistrate O'Neill bottle of whiskey was found, ge. WNEM Prosecutor Cummings picked | Mam Accused ot Sisnneping Girt Ie “Well,” replied Foran, “the # up the revolver which she is charged - an, { Whole army wasn't out. ‘This was agp ade ee of ie eres Bont with having xiven Wade a few daya | Paul Woerle, twenty one, of No. 108] Cay. aciemahing party of ten" sight m: ve bottles were found. Judge yake bs dhipsriatonhant inapping fourteencyearold. Mary “It's a good thing this wasn't a May heid that there was not sufficient > Jentified a fourteen-inch dero, No. 312 Kast 107th Street, was| Major engagement,” commented evidence to establish Flanigan's ale teged connection with the liquor, carving nife and a hatchet found discharged in West Side Court to-day [AB the Louse the day after the crime. for lack of evidence, the court. “T'm going to fine him one dollar for each roach.” ~ SAYSYUDGEGARY. ROW WITH JUDGE Steel Institute, told the annual meet-| |ing of that organization at the Hotel} LAWYER IS JAILED |-FOR CONTEMPT IN Lieb Sent to Cell by Justic Faber When Unable to Bor- row $25 Fine. | Fonowing a stormy scene in she | Brooklyn Supreme Court to-day, Henry Lieb of No. 1878 Seventh Ave- nue, Manhattan, fice No. 12 | Manhattan, was taken to Raymond lawyer with of: at Stroct, Delancey | Street Jail, in default of a fine limposed by Justice Faber, for con- | tempt of court | Lieb is attgr for Mrs. Marie |Lugow, in heP separation act ainst Isaac Lugow, who operates th ‘Success School,” at No. 113 Rivington { Street, Manhattan, She charges crue! and inhuman treatment. Her first at torney was Herbert F. Miller of “di- vorce mili" notoriety, The case wa: adjourned yesterday because Lugow attorney was out of town, and jt was | put on the docket as No. 1 for hearing to- ‘. Lieb told the Just e that the case} It a halt] would take at least two and ‘hours, and the Justice then put two] jor three small matters ahead, As jthey were in progress Lieb jumped up suddenly and demanded that his} case be heard at once. . | “There is no reason, counsellar, for | keaping all of these people in these small matters waiting all day for| your case,” said Justice Faber, Lich replied that he was not interested in the other cases but insisted that| ne an RENT RRR 1921 BAN ONE-PIECE SUITS AT LONG BEACH Women May Blister Backs Necks but Must Wear Stock- ings, Say Police, E-PIECE bathing sults and and bald-headed “beach lizards” have been ruled off Long Beach for the coming season by Chief of Police Tracy, Women absolutely two-plege tain Babriseale said to-day, in man- ing the announcement of the Chief's new regulations, and those men who | come to the beach to stare and often | times annoy the women will find | themaclves in trouble, | Morcover, said Captain Barriscale, | women must wear stockings. They may blister their backs and necks it they wish, said the Captain, but they j must cover thejr lower extremities, | Between 20,000 and 000 persons are expected here over the week- | end and Memorial Day, and they'll have to be decorous, | panies | De FILLIPIS TAKEN OVER TO THIS CITY, “must” wear Wall Street Bomb Suspect Hand- cuffed to Secret Serviog Man on Ferryboat. { Giuseppe de Fillips, held in. con: nection with the Wall Street bomb! explosion, was taken from the Hud- son County jail in Jersey City to-day nd brought to New York to be de- vered to United States Marshal Me- | Carthy and arraigned before United | States Comm.ssioner Hitchcock, to obtain in the morn ng was the release of Newark Federal on a writ of unsuccessf al nted an or- | attorney for ourt to th the removal of the prisoner to New his cage go on ut once. The Justice ordered him to sit down, and | fused, whereupon Dan Gillespie, giant court attendant, forced him into | his seat, | Lieb from his seat said that the | cave had been six times on the calen-| dar, and that he had eight witnesses ‘present, one of them seventy-two years old, Justice Faber replied he as th small matters cleared up, | whereupon Lieb again jumped to bis} feet, and declared that he welting justice, “Now, for your impertinence, coun- | o re- would hear the case as soon w are Was not) sellor,” said Justide Faber, “1 will mark your case off for “tie 6. A new outburst from Lieb followed this announcement and ordered from the room. He seized ‘the rail and held’ fast. ‘Then the Jus- tice fined him $25, with the alterna- tive of five days in jail, Lieb at first declared that he w #0 to jail before he would pay when he saw two deputy sh coming for him, he tried to borrow | the $25 from the men th the examin- | ing room. Failing in this he asked} permission to telephdne to friends for) it’ .He was then taken to jail, until] he could raise the $ | ——_~.___ | NATALIE TALMADGE | he With Buster Keaton Tells Clerk Intinvate Secrets—Will Be | Married Tuesday. ‘The bust: | ankle of Buste> Keaton, which gave the movie actor an en- forced vacation and which he used to advantage to pursue his romance with Miss Naialie Talmadge, one of the sis- ters well known to screen fans, had knitted sufficiently to enable him to go to the Marriage License Bureau to-day. They are to be married Tuesday and wi go to Los Angeles, where Mr. Kea- ton will resume his work. Mrs. Talmadge and Constance Tal- madge, who recently became Mrs. John Lialoglou, accompanied Mr. Keaton and the bride-to-be to the bureau, where Miss Talmadge gaid she was born in Brooklyn 24 years ago and he said he made his first appearance 25 years ago in Pickaway, Kan. Four years aco Mr. Keaton began his courtship, which was interrupted by movie contracts and the war. They had not mot for two years and it was re- ported a wealthy Chicago man had be- come & cival, but the two kept up a correspondence by telegraph, The broken ankle gave the chance for Miss Talmadge to confess she had intended sto say “yes” all the time. a NO FEAR OF LACK Worth $1,500,000,000, They Could Last Till Capacity Produc- tion ls Reached. ROCK ISLAND, Ili, May 27.—The United States has on hand a reserve stock of munitions, aa a result of th World War, sufficient to supply the army in case of war until production could be resumed and brought to full capacity, Col. C. lL. H. Ruggles, Ord nance Department U, #. A. told the ordnance engineers at their meetin here to-day | Experience in the World War showed, he said, that men could be mobilized and trained faster than munitions could be procured and that it took practically twenty months for the Ordnance Department to catch up with the army in the fleld, ‘The present munitions reseryo is estimated to be worth $1,500,000,000, |Col. Ruggles sai! To” replace the Jammunition every Afteen years, as it deteriorates, and the other munitions every thirty years, would coat $56,- 000,000 annually. —_——— Badget Bill it to President, WASHINGTON, May 27,—The bill es. tablishing ® Federal budget systom was rent to the President to aten hy on | et the House to-day. Tt approved a |eonerence report on the muasure, | communication with the surrounding was | { York De Fillipis was pe on boat R noon. r —— ALL CABLE LINES TO QUEENSTOWN CUT | No Communication With Sur- rounding Districts Since Last ning. BE May 27.—Queenstown was completely cut off to-day from districts, Eyen the Admiralty’ w unable to communicate with Haul- bowling, the island oalte Queens- taining the naval dockyards, as from White Point to Haul- e cut last night. I PENNY A POUND PROFIT individual packages put up in large cardboard container, x 1 Pound Box Special Assorted 1 Pound Box Peanut Brittle, }¢ Covered Fancies, 1 Cake of Milk Chocolate. The “Big Three” Package All three Freedom lone pou Chocola.es or Bon Bons and Chocolates Put up for this occa- sion in richly deco- rated lithographed packages in beauti- ful patriotic design. POUND BOX 59c The Tourist Package For tourists, picnic partie: wrapped container, packed w choice assortment of delicious sweets. PACKAGE COMPLETE 1 2 Old Home Package An excellent collection of goodies which will appeal to ‘cst GSC One Pound Box of PACKAGE COMPLETE AND BEACH LIZARDS | bathing suits, Police Cup- | acute in the disturbed area was far coor |) despite the partial arrival of n troops from the Rhine. | Advices recelved in. official circles here report an attack by Polish insur- | Germans co Chocolat Assorted Buttercupe, jonists and A large beautifully BROKER ANDREWS HELD FOR BIGAMY | Had Two Wives in One Apartment | in Jersey Cily When | } Exposed, GREENWICH, Conn,, May 27,—Her- bert Thornton Andrgrs, New York broker, was held In $1,000 bail for the next term of the Superior Court when arraigned to-day on charges of bigamy and perjury. Andrews married. Esther Marie Tat- nall of Pittsburgh in Greenwich when he already had a wife living In Jersey City. The case attracted country- | wide attention when he took hie second | wife home to live in the same apart- ment as wife No, FIGHTING IN SILESIA STILL CONTNUES In Clash Near Grosstein There Are 100 Polish and German Casualties. LONDON, May 27 (Associated Press), -Aithough the Allied political situation with reference to Upper Silesia was leas to-day the re-ostablishment of gents Wednesday of Polish the Grossteln, in’ which there were 100 in neighborhood and German casualties, The captured fourteen machine guns. The Poles employed an armored train. ‘The Poles are also ‘said to have blown ub the Rosenberg ratiway station and a number of other buildings, foreing the Allied personnel to withdraw to Oppeln, ‘IN DISTRESS IN DISTRESS. osn's Pumps Ont of Order and Water Running Low. The Shipping Board vessel Oska- loosa, on her way from Mobile to Ant- werp, is in trouble at sea, according to a wireless received to-day by the » Communications Offi The despatch | said her main feed pipe and etreuluting | pumps were broken and she was short of fresh water. She sailed from Mobile on May 22, Iie’ diutvena dospaleh w U. S. SHIP Onk: at once re- | layed to sea, asking vessels to go to | her aid. The position was given as fatitude 28.50 north, longitude 79.48 west It nt thought the disablement of | the vessel ts related in any way to the | | marine strike as the Oskaloosa hi engine tr er last voyage fro} Antwerp pe towed 65 miles into Mobil die Branick"to Wed ™ leen Duggan. Thomas is Kath-| Edward wistan ary of the New and| You can always recognize beautifi Josephine ster! Pollyanna Ribbons, ‘The best b “ribbon for bobbed hair, ‘Ties be votuinied i the | Mun ‘They are to be m June 1 by Father Farley, is twenty-two years old. groom is thirty and livés at No? West 48th 453. Special Attrzctiors For Friaay and Satur- day while they last Incomparabi Choicest Sweets in Attractive Holiday Packages: Week End Combination No. 1 with handle attached. Contents are as follows: Pound Box Chocolate PAC! CHOCOLATE COVERED DATES in specially designed box Elsewhere 64c nd FRUIT AND NUT BUTTERCUPS Elsewhere 60c for OLD FASHION GUM DROPS Elsewhere S4c MilkChocolate Liberty Emblem Packed in one 29C carton. pai ang tion Milk Chocolate Maraschino Cherries Our regular 69c goods, Friday and Saturd “KELLY” A MYSTERY: w ral | holds best, looks best, is best. ‘T -|nine, forty-nine, fifty-nin cents at all dry goods store: thaler creators, 1 Pack Choco! KAGE COMPLETE, 99 Cur Flag Combination Comprised of a number of smaller boxes wrapped in red, whi r ment of sweets is both great and pleasing. PACKAGE Ct HIS WIFE RADIOS DAILY TO HUBBY FOR GROCERIES He Picks Message From Air for the Solid Things tor the Table. Every night just before Paul Godley calls it a day at the plant of Adams & Morgan, manufac turers of Wireless apparatus in Upper Monelair, N. J., he plucks & message out of the alr ordering tho groceries and supplies he 's to bring home, ‘They live far from a store and have no phone. $50,000 SUIT ENDS Settlement for $3,500 of Breach of Promise Case Brought by Ruth Stratton. ‘The breach of promise sult for $59, brought by Ruth Stratton Oliver S. Kelly was settled to-d a confession of judgment for $3,5! agains y wher wa filed. James A. Farrell, No., 350 Brondw counsel for the girl, says to a settlement because sh ready money and Wished to avold pul licity. Charles W. Stapleton, coun for Kelly, declared that his client nev had been served, but that a man wh gave the name of Christopher M. K or Christian Kelly was served neously. This Kelly said he never } heard of Ruth Stratton. Her complaint said Kelly to marry her in May, 1919, a few months later, She now enguged to another woman. promi and refus aid he w ADVERTISEMENT. HAVE YOU SEEN A GIRL ANSWERING THIS DESCRIPTION . bobbed ha ir Bow Ribbon Bright smile, livel aring Pollyanna ints sixty-n'i Franke ribbo and Frankenthaler, ew York. Paaow- MARK e Values! The return of those famous big summertime go-away packa, the Italian Creams, e 1.39 Our Vacation Package A wonderful assort~ ment of choicest sweets, attractively put upin round con- with an appealing summer scene, lith- ographed in” rich colors. PACKAGE COMPLETE nd blue anged to form a reproduc- of “Old Glory” ort- 1.19 Extra Special IMPLETE. 59c lay only, POUND

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