The evening world. Newspaper, May 30, 1921, Page 5

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WILLS FARMT0 150 |4 Galaxy of New York’s June Brides For Whom Church Wedding: N.Y. SOCIALISTS 10 TILL AT WITH HIM —_— | Pete Green Bequeaths Hun-! dreds of Acres for Com- . munal Experiment. ie e | . | TOLLAND, May 30.—An- | other experiment in communai life is| to be undertuken by Farmer Pete Green, Conn, Who through his will just| signed places his farm of several hundred acres in the hands of a group of New York Socialists for the | Purpose, But Green wants to sec| how it works beforehand, so he will! invite 150 radicals this year to till] the lund and share with him tts products. | Unlike similar ventures, there ik nothing highbrow about it, no jaded intellectuals with theories, no wealthy men or women eager to try some- thing new. “Farmer” fuily describes | Green, a raw-boned old man, bred of| the soil and poverty, He can, read) and write, but little else, Life ta him has always consisted of fourteen hours’ work a day, three meals and} sleep. And the most important thing} in life to him has always been land. | Now he wants to give this lond| away. ‘Thirty miles from Ha-:tford lies Tolland, a sleepy sort of village. Green's land sweeps out of the vil- Jage, forming brush-dotted hills and long levels of tilled earth. Upon tre outskirts of the farm ig a one-story shack—Green's home. His other buildings all burned several months ago Green began to rebuild And then the idea came to him, an {dea he had entertained casually for many years back. i , Out of this waste he would build a| home for many, not only for himself. | So he packed his grip and went to| He yisited Miss Bertha head of the Rand School. He} he describes it, “a sort of Then he drew, up bis wil and his immediate plans and named Miss Mailley, Samuel Beardsley, So: clalist. campaigner, Albert Neu. macher, a neighbor, and Isaac Sack- in, Socialist lawyer, a8 the executors | of his will and advisers of his plan, He does not like his relatives, He! does not want them to share in his| Robert Miss Delatield to Be Married to; - McCurdy Marsh—} Miss Tiffany and Martin) Brown “f jost $3,000 in the war, what with|Presideut of the Board of Aldermen’ THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAY 30, %921, “MIss VOULETE PROCTOR OvMpaayooo CNS RRL OSD AND i Her wedding is set for June 1 in the Chureh of Heavenly Rest, where S: as @\she will b a1 3 Sainte. adiey lis iui Gena (Him tela Saportas to Be she will be married to Robert Me tives, he assured the reporter, did not) United in Matrimony Miss iy, a daughter by a respect him, as they should, And be-, peace ie former i of Mrs. Henry " ; ; | Fletcher Godfrey, will be married on bides, “1 want to do gumething f0F) ane weddings of Miss Charlotte aineeaay ino mhelGiurch of 16 Qverybody. |Delaticid, Miss Vouletti 'T, Proctor, ius Loyola to Martin Brown Green lives by himself, and has! stics Marion ‘Tiffan Aportas. j Mise Mutlon Tiffany and Mis Miss Proctor, daughte ha ta a Miss Pro} aughter of Mr. and lived so fur the last forty yeara. He! Fales Coward will tak s, William Ross Proctor, will be is fifty-s His hired help sleep elsé-| June. he ceremoay in the case of on June § in the Church of where, le does bis own cgoking,! each one will be in New York City Rest to Vernon H. Brown, washing and cleauss. He said Miss Delufeld is the daughter of | Shwe! oe this tye ware “L believe in benefiting every- and Mrs, Lewis Living: Miss Coward, daughter of Mr. and dody—humanity—not ke working| Delafleld, No. 20 West asth Stre .| Mrs. Edward Fales Coward, will be ty for yourself, There's something | Shortly after her debut she bec married on June 16 in the Church of Be alti tie WOLa, lanle there ‘8 interested in Suffrage work, and last the Epiphany to John Howard wrong he world, ts fj December she was appointed private | Matlon of Cincinnati. Mr. Mallon “Take the war,” continued Green.! secretary to F. H. La Guardia,!and his bride will make their home in Louisville. scarcity of help and such, There's something wrong in people being poor all the time, without anything to eat or a place to sleep. I'm a Socialist, and I believe in the new order. That's my idea.” Sifting its various phases, “dea” seems to be this: 1. He will provide work for those | Who want to work. | i} | Btructive contribution to the Socialist And radical movements by prov @ haven of rest and play for cals or progressives, (hey may spend the evening of théir| as lives in pe comfort, rest, or in) her ereative work. his community to sheep raising. In) tended sheep. But he is not sure of the details. That is a matter for the | future. He stepped out of the shack | and leaned against the fence. “Are you sure your people Nive In harmony? Won't one more than the other? Wouldn't vou want more, as this is your land?” “No, sir! and Everybody works, That's the idea.” everybody zis ec lio | HACKED MAN’S BODY | Was Near Spot Where Woman's Torso Was Taken Out—Double | Murder, Police Theory. The body of a man was found by! boatmen in the harbor a mile Black Tom last night. Both hands| |} ‘and the top of the head had been cut eff, and tied to the right knee was an! eight-inch iron piye three feet long. | Fragments of ary, underwear and | focks and Tusset shoes which had | | | | blacked ‘bore no identification marks. The body was taken to Pryor's Morgue. Jersey City, and Dr, Artwur Hasking will perform an autopsy this afternoon. The body had been in the ody was found is near o pee torso of a} woman was found months ago | which has not been identified, The| Police have a theory that the two| gras point to # possible double mur- | : | With 700 reay| Refloated, | BOSTON, May 30.—The United States Mail Steamship Company's steamer Sua- | ree Expert Seeks to ing | covered of radium, 4, | sorption of radium feeble and indigent Socialists, radi-|of her laboratory work, or the effects battle-scarred | of overstrain veterans of these movements, where | physique, | ward H. Rogers and Dr Practically, Green intends to dewote | ert, specialists, who have been in quehanna was floated early BP the northeastern part of the “Boston Harbor, where she went aground early this morning. Reports said. that Ee was anchored two mil sengers, tor this port MME. CURIE’S BLOOD | IS UNDER ANALYSIS, Determine if Her Condition Is Due to Radium or Strain of Overwork. on a will the result of the blood now being made, Mrs. W. the physicians, Special Sale of More Than 500 The materials $35 Silk Dresses—20} Styles—Now $16.95 HAM LTON GARMENT Co. 307 Fifth Avenue Summer Dresses due to the ab- naturally be determined to-day analysis Dr. his youth he lived in the Rockies and | attendance on her at the home of Mr. B. Meloney, No. 30 West Twelfth Street, are directing it. | On Saturday, wil) pittsburgh, want | frst ascertained that pulse and blood | pressure were normal, decided upon Everything can't be fust|the analysis, and upon the report of equal, but we can make it almost 0./the result will rest the question as ea'S./to whether Mme. Curie shall carry |out the programme laid down for the on her return from having | —As Low as $5.95 include Voiles, Organdies, Linenes, Ginghams, Dotted Sw Near 31st Street Cur Entire Fifth Avenue Building Exelustvely for Women’s Wear frail | Ed-! muel Lam ye Hie deuires to quote his wih, “to | Whether the partial physieal three-di visit to the summer home jake @ permanent, practical and con- |Preakdown and the anaemle condi~|f Mrs. Nicholas Ready at Manhasset, | tion of Mme. Marie Curie, the dis-j BARS KITCHENWORK SUNDAY, ys In the course off From! Watson Takes @ Day Judge Kochendorfer’s Sentence. | George Watson of No, 12% Fifth Street, Long Island City, who was sen- tenced by Judge Kochendorfer last Tuesday to do “Kitchen Police Duty,"') declared that yesterday was a day of rest and that No man’ was required to do_either housework or otherwise, He arose early, dressed, and went to the home of his mother, where he spent the day. of Ferry How Immediate! ‘Thomas Parker, sixty-five, of No. 222| Monticello Avenue, Jersey City, became | iN at the Christopher Street ferry house , this morning, He had crossed from Hoboken on his way to work as a} chacker for the New England Steam- | ship Company and died before medical tention could be secured. | Taken 3. Voile Dress, $8.95 next three weeks, until her return to France. Among the honors contem- plated is the conferring of the de- gree of doctor of science by Colum- bia and Yale Late erday afternuon Mme. Curie, accompanied by her daughters and Mr, Meloney, left New York on a Major Who Dinap: arcd Murdered | beara by Sinn Feiners. | Ktores DUBLIN, May 30.--It is an-| nounced from Dublin Castle that) Hf a gale turns Storm Aqeuments found during a raid Hero inside out simply of the premises in Mary Street, Dub- lin, used as offices by Michael Collins, {head of the Irish Republican Army and Finance, proved that Major Compton- | Smith, who disappeared mysteriously from Cork in April, by the Sinn Fein, Vitzgerald Brothers, named Fitzgerald, one a railwayman, and the other a former sold taken from shot, bull C. OFFICIALS | I. Cc. | TO PROBE WRECK Are Planned Engineer Blames Defective Brakes for Crash Killing Two and + Injuring Nine. BURLINGTON, N. J, May 90. Representatives the Interstate Commerce Commission are expected here to-day to make an investigation nto the wreck here, last nigh', in which two persons were killed and injured, The accident was due he third section of an excursion from Atlantic City crashing to a local of the Pennsylvania road standng at the station, The two rear coaches of thé tocal were tele | scoped. | ‘The dead are John G ‘Trenton, and W. M. Kessling of |Camden: @he injured are H. H | Kelly, Retleville; Margaret Hedingen, | Bordentown; U. G. Latt . ‘son: Viola’ Tillinger, |Gangnam, Mrs. J. G. and Nebbutt of Neiyoutt s Hedingen are in St. Francis Trento Cook, the engineer of the fe City train, say: saw the signal to stop, but the brakes refuged | to work A) — j Alleged Plek Held in $1,000 eight, sald by the Side Court in $1,000 bail. for tion on June 2 McNally was With, disorderly conduct by Laent, MeMullen of the plekp | squad, who w him Jo, persons in. the night « West 42d Stre ance. 5 Split. The Soctalist r when party dec constitute a ur Party which will Keak contact with the Third Tnter- nationale of Moscow. ‘Tho leader of the pew party will be M. Jacquemotts pull it back again. A new frame if the wind breaks it. MILLPR BROS. & CO. the DW YORK, Sinn. Fein Minister of | “was murdered None Genuine Without This Trade Mack, Ratlwaymen at Cork, Are Assassinated. | CORK, May 30.—Two brothers, ADD 23 NOTES MORE jayer Plano can now be U. S. PIANO REPAIR SHOP 2508 Amsterdam Avenue, N. Y. r were their home wo-day aud Their bodies were :iddied witt GIMBEL BROTHERS 32w» STREET - BROADWAY ~33n0 STREET NEW YORK CITY 4 Pull Details in Veatare day’s (Sunday’s) World Fur Storage Absolute Protection at moderate cost. Repair- ing at special rates during the Summer. dames McCreery & Co, Telephones Fitz Loy 3400 That all hould know about the Lower- Price Down-Stairs Store at Wanamaker’s, Everything in the world that is good and true be- gins with an idea. There must be, first of all, a de- sire to do something worth-while. That is the way ‘this Down - Stairs Store came into being. Hundreds of people in and around New York wanted Wanamaker mer- chandise; that is, they wanted merchandise that was sure to give satisfac-| tion. ‘But’ there were many times when they wanted lower-price mer- chandise than the up- stairs store could logi- cally offer. So we said to ourselves: “Why nof have a Down- Stairs Store that, will carry out the Wana- maker idea of worth- while quality at a lower price? . . . For instance: we can adapt a French frock, with a little less trimming, and sell it at a fhuch lower price than the original. And the same idea can be carried out in other ways.” And thus this Lower- Price Downy-Stairs Store became a reality... That was a little more than four years ago. To-day there is a complete under- | price store here, occupy- ing the down-stairs floors of the two Wanamaker buildings. But there is a distinc- tion that we ask you to; draw whenever you think| of under-price stores. One} kind of under-price store thinks only of the price. That, in reality, is NOT| an under-price store at all; because price alone is never a true guide to value or economy. The other kind of un- der-price store (like this) | sells standard merchan- dise only — merchandise in which the element of quality is first and fore-| most. How can it be} done? By: eliminating some of the less impor- tant features of trim- ming, and in_ various other ways that are equally logical and work- able. There | | is news in the papers almost every day|t, about the happenings in| this Down-Stairs Store. But if you take this news| and compare it with the) news of other stores you! will not get an accurate idea of the plan that we ‘are carrying out, because you cannot see QUALITY on paper, In plainer words, you must know that the Wanamaker standard is} a definite thing—valuable| to you because it protects you; and it applies to the! basic quality of all mer-| chandise that is offered) in this ~ Lower - Price Down-Stairs Store, Broadway at Ninth Street, New York. Lingerie Philippine underthings made of fine nainsook, hand-made and hand-embroidered. At $1.95—limited number of lovely matching nightgowns and chemises. At $2.95—nightgowns and en- velope chemises, elaborately em- broidered in eyelet and heavy designs. At $1.50—slip-over bodices of handkerchief batiste, hand-hem- stitched, Tinged Voile Lingerie Adaptation of French models. Adorably piped in contrasting color, bedecked with dainty clusters of French knots or boast- ing motifs in hemstitching and lace; $8.95 to $5. Crepe de chine Undies Tailored shirts, self strap, 2.60. Evening shirts—with elastic top, no straps, hemstitched, §3.50. Nightgowns, elaborately lace trimmed, $4.76 Children’s Muslin Underthings Panties, 25c; self ruffle; sizes to 10 year: Princess slips, $1—hemstitched ruffle,lace trimmed. § to 16 years. Nightgowns, 95¢; in pink ba- tiste; 2 to 12 years. 2 | | | of today-—of June-—who is home NOW, at a time when are before her. For $2,117.50 You get $4,286 of furniture DINING - ROO M— mahogany suites of 10 ; eorgian type; regular price. . JROOM — nat suite of 7 Louis XV. type; day’s regular price LIVING - ROOM divan and arm chair, covered with gold and brown Velours; today’s regular price $1,500 wal- pieces; to- $1,435 vee a For $1,747.50 You get $3,498 of furniture Store Closed All Day Today—Memorial Day LAST DAY of the WHITE SALE It will be decidedly worthwhile to avail yourself, on Tuesday, of the savings on White Sale merchandise, which, from present indications, will be difficult to duplicate. Nightdrawers, 75¢; white long- cloth; 2 to 12 years. Silk Petticoats $2.95 to $5.95 Several of the season's most successful models in ‘white satin, both tailored and lace trimmed. Breakfast Coat, $14.50 Charming beruffled model in changeable satin of fine quality. Changeable color. Smocks, $1.35 Daintily fashioned of voile—with vestee and collar with saucy little ruffles. Rose, blue, yellow. Corsets * Dancing girdle of pink satin $2.50, Femina waistline model, $3. . Redfern—excellent model, $3.45. Silphin, summer model, $4.95. Femina-very souple—no lacing, $6.95. Bungalow and Slip-on Aprons Bungalow aprons at 95¢c. Three models, in good quality figured or plaid percale—piped or trimmed in solid color. Slip-over aprons, $1.50. Three models of colored pereale with tie- back sashes. Third Floor, Old Building Happy the Bride planning to furnish her new such rare opportunities to get GOOD Furniture and save a lot of money Six typical examples: For $1,027 ee You get $2,061.50 of furniture DINING - ROO M— $1,032 of 5 suite Louis XVI. enamel | pieces; cr type; | price eae us sacs LIVING - ROO M— blue velours covered | suite of 2 pieces; to- | day's regular price.. $475 today’s regular $554.50 $2,061.50 For $873 You get $1,747 of furniture DINING - ROOM | DINING - ROO M— mahogany suite o , ‘i todays TemUlAs PEGS is today’s regular pres. % M — ivory | BEDROOM — ~ enamel suite of 10 | es a0o|hogany suite of 4 p. $475 vest Lute XVI. $1200/ today's regular price. ' | LIVING - ROO M— A tapestry covered suite LIVING - ROO M— o i As " $422 suite of 3 pieces, cov- oft p etily ‘Sob: | ered with taupe colored 5 velours; today’s regu- lar price ....ss scenes $1,747 For $751 For $1 325 You get $1,362 y a of furniture ou get $2,7. | DINING - ROO M— of furniture mahogany gulte of 10 DINING - ROO M— pieces, Lowe Aye $700 mahogany suite of 10 | ae today’s regular pieces; William nd $1,010 UNGER RA S)S® * Mary type; today’s [ | BEDROOM — wa | regular price rere jnut suite of 4 pieces, $274 BEDROOM -— ma: |Colonial types today’s | hogany suite of 7 pes.; , | temular price . Colonial type; today $916) LIVING - ROOM regular price .. regen |tapestry and velou | $338 LIVING - ROO M—- | covered suite of 2 pes.; | mulbarry7 xelowwecenyel | today’s regular price. . ered suite, of 8 pieces, | $827 today’s: regular price... $2,753 $1,362 Fifth and Sixth Galleries, New Bulid! |

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