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dens Kore Ajax Rabver BY § dllie-Obademern 33% am Ag Chem, oh Am Boot Suss/ 28% am Can . am Can of am One & + dm Drug Synd. Am EBxoren Am Hie & 10% Am Ice 50% Am Ice vf. co Am Internat um Am Locomot! ‘89 Allied Chew 40% Am Safety hid Am Ship & su Am Smelt & 21% Am Smelt& RP. Soult 101 Steel ss ‘Sagar ‘Sugar ipeee rece PERERERSESEE 4 Tobacca, Iz Woot 5 ‘woot 90% Zine . 10 Zine vt aB% yaaconda 38% cee oP FREERTETEREE] ee ty i eel Hh ie tte fi Aig 5 FE te eek: Acme Lead ..e+ ‘Natipnal : New York Central, To NINH AH. UK NY Ont & Wen 2% Norther Pacific... 77% Nove Gootia Steel. 23% Wat BR Mex 2a pt 4% Oksboms P&R.. 1% Orpheum Circult Otie Bhovator Pacific O8 Peanimer Pot. PanAmer Pot Pen RR... Penn Beab'd People's Gee .. Pere Margucte, Philede ompany. Peds Petroleum Place Arrow....., 12 Pierce Arrow P Piewoe Ol . 6% Pitibarsh Oy Pitts & Pullman Punta Aleg Pure Ot Perih & ati Bread my Ne 3 lon. Last, hte am% +1 x 9 a=! 23% + S| Sear Rostock . or 82% — 1% | Seneca Comper. 18% — 4 33% — % Shattonk Arizona oy + | 8% + Wi Shell T & T., 80% - 1 + 1 We + ‘ 20% -- Me ; som 46% — 1% 10% Stand Ol of NJ.. 197% ce 20% + % [Stand O of NJ pf 107% 107% ry Stowart-Warer™ .. 30% — S| Stodetaker 00... 58% — 0 + % 16% — % “4 + he hae Z ‘mal basis, according to Henry Ford. 2 “Business will get back to normal 51% — % | only when prices are cut sufficiently. oy — | After the war we found loafers and Helene | non-producers in our Detroit plant. 1% We weeded them out and now are 4% + %| able to sell cars cheaper than before % % {| Oharles Florvante and his brother i) Anthony of No. 3914 Fort Hamliton | Parkway, Brooklyn, - ere held !n $20,- 4% {000 ball each yesterday in Flatbush | Court on charges of robbery and as- i +1 sault. 4% + %| Mrs. Rachel Aronson, thirty-five years *lold, of No. 4204 14th Avenue, charges | they attacked her on the third floor of 43% — 4 Public School No. 164 at 43d Street and —ay:4th Avenue, Monday night, and that = while one held her the other took $24 100% » » —1% | from her bag. %| Mrs. Aronson and her son, who ts 100% + 1% | sixteen, attend the class in English in the night school. She says she left the |” %*| fourth floor and started for the third. On the latter floor, she says, she was| attacked, She returned to the class- y | 700M and told her son, and the police % |#00n arrested the brothers, who, they 70% say, have prison records, 1 = 1% ——_—_— 6 — % F ux + %|COUPLE HELD AS BIGAMISTS. mh — % M%— %| Joseph Kuntz, twenty-two, an exe! 2% + % | soldier, of No, 500 West 58th Street, and | ™% — % | Miss Marie Anna Davis, twenty-one, | “ — ® | were locked up at the Elizabeth Street - Police Station last night, charged with 19% bigamy. Kuntz married Irene Heery,| 92 — 14 | twenty-three, in France, 26% + %| They disagreed and later, Kuntz told | 46% — % | tho police, he believed they were divorced 42% — % | because he “went to the Domestic Rela- , 31) — %| tons Court and was ordered to her 10% $10 a week.” Sept. 3 he married at the 6 Municipal Botiding Marlo Anna Davis. w — | Mrs. Kuntz No. 1 lives at No. S54 West wx — | Pid, Street with, her baby. | ‘unts is a, indexer for the Consoll- | 2% —1%| dated Gas Com any, and wife No, 2 Is a! 12 . Last night saw Kuntz witn | %% —1%| No.2 There Was an argument and the| rie arrest followed, | 0% + 1% Serena: | 20% — y| FREE OF BROTHER’s CHARGE. | %1% — %| George Miller, forty-two, of North-| 2% port, L. 1, sald to be « farmer, was MN — \ ed yesterday in West Bide | ig —1 "| Gourt by" mdetsernes Sweotser after «| #@% — | hearing on the charge of assault made + %|BY his brother Charles Miller of Hunt- = ,*| ington, L. 1. Miller was arrested in hia office at No, 1947 Broadway la — “Aug, 2. Tiere were fifteen adjour —1%| ments, Insufficient evidence caused the -— %|@ismissal of +8 Sa oll SE TM VASHINGTON.—There Ia, more iit- + &]eracy in the citles of New Jersey than = Q] in the rural districts, according to fi + %| Bree made public to-day by the Cena Bureau. | There are 137,661 iuite 4 -%* pesone, & ten years of over in 14) Setanarine Boat. »( ATTACK WOMAN IN SCHOOL. Suwertor Ol. ‘Texan Company . Terms & Pacific... ‘Ter & Pac Coal... 19% {qhird Avenue ‘Tetacoo Producta.. 0 Transcon Oil. \‘Pransue & Williams 35 Union’ Oi] Union Pacific Union Pacific pf. United Alloy... | United Drug . United Frait United Food Prod. Un Retail Stores... U8 C1 Vipe pt |U 8 Ind Alcohol... {US Realty & Imp U 8 Rubbor U 8 Rubber tnt pf U $ Smelter US Steel .. U 8 Steel pt 100% Utah Copper 50 Utah Securities .. b% 8% Vanadium Steel 30% 30% Va Caro Chemical. 30% 30% ot Vivaudou 4 ™% um! 20% 2a West Pacific Com. Westem Union Woutingtiowse Wheeling & L b.. White Ol . Whilye-Overland? Willys-Overland jf.. 27 26% Woolworth pf. 108% 108% Worth Pumy ...... 41 40% Worth Pump pf A.. 73 73 ‘Total wales, 473,900, a SAYS SHE WAS MADE BALD Hale Dressing Sov | #10,000 Damages. Miss Agnes Deambour of No, 412} Pacific Street, Brooklyn, asks $10,000 in a suit in the Brooklyn Supreme Court against Leon and Pipin, proprietors of a hair dressing shop at No. 28 West 46th Street, Manhattan, She charges |she has been made partly bald by burns received on Oct. 16, 1920, when she went to the shop for a permanent wave. “The plaintiff’ Ip was burned and wounded so that the tissue of roots of plaintiff's Cea yee ae according to the corn latte she | ‘manent; lacicaeed vented combing her hair in the middle in the prevailing move.” The defendants make a general denial, CUT PRICES ONLY HOPE, SAYS FORD ON SITUATION. "and pre: : Will Get Back to Normal ftficient Reductions,’ IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich., Sept. 28. —Cut prices alone can help in the matter of restoring business to a nor- ! the war,” said Mr. Ford. ae ee SEEKING PERMANENT WAVE. | * -THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1921, | COMPLETE CURB QUOTATIONS | “IZZY” TEACHES ENGLISH QUICKLY a Raid an Interested Lessee Understands Writing in Three or Four Minutes. Michael M. Naughton, No. 245 Bast fied. He called Nauthton, lL oked at the document. Al They said in that Shares, 1 Nat Leather 1 Sears Rowbuck 5 Sears Roebuck 10 Southern Ry di 8 00% 8% 99 tao thing. a door, “TL can't read it,” he said. case he would e *o break down certain Naughton still said lic could not read lazy sighcd and smashed ACER TT the manager, who apnvared to be baf- Naughton doors. See what $150 can do for you! It will contro! about $600 worth et Sharew High, Low, Last, | © Southwest Belt bekid 86th Street, Tammany leader of the| “Let's see that thing again,” said dividend paying securities — 5 Beth Steel $ + 06% y 1soNnyr? 108% .: ity It_will bring back dividends of a wal eee 16th Assembly District and lessee of |Naughton. This tine he read it easily apprasionialy tee yearend ec 2Cot Graph + La | TS ONY te the Yorkville Casino, No. 210 Bast 86th | # Ke taay. waa vearions ee bh month, ‘ 1 oe , SHON Y G . it i y anal to ah ie * 2 Cone Gas yd baked 4 Hi an Ma Street, learned how to read English took posacession of five bottles con- Lp bee te share Linden] ine dee a7 Bwitt & Co Th this afternoon—learned thoroughly in| taining something or ether, Then he et advance. 101% «101% 3 Swit & Co Te, three or four minutes. served summonses 01 Naughton and are now sefling at bargain sriten, 0244 102 108 5 Texas Co His teacher was Izzy Einstein, the] Stromberg. tive market In getting str T Galena 8 0 Tew 97% «OT oOTty | z aie. . Sac ane th Goodrich Tite Te os yma | rohitiition sleuth. Hariler in the d&Y | wae tas Lest a Boy With Sailing ed in price during the 1 Shares Hig, Low. Laat. INDUSTRIALS 1000 Acme Coal 100800 2500 Acine Parklug « in 03 OR 100 Am Mach & Fay....... 160 190 480 | 500 Kirlt Am Tob reg ny 1% 1% aM Ww tt ‘ a 20 Celluloid Co 102% 10214 102% 100 Colwmbla fn it ee) 109 Cont Mytors ci ae 190 Hmplre Food ..csecceee 17 AIT 3800 Farrell Cont * 1% 16 Oy Alden Coal 1 0% 0% son 8 Ce Se a ee) Trans er ee 30 Met Stores... won 4 80 Met Stores pf. % 88S 2700 National Leather oc... 6M 0% OMG 100 Peerless Motors ccc BTM ARAL 7M 400 Ver i 63 0) GO 1900 Philip Mortin ..csseeee 5 4M Ta 1700 Htadlo com a8 100 Reading Coal tte 10% 800 Southern Coal & tron, 2 2 8 1000 Sweets f tM 6300 Tex uit Pr 1400 Tob Products 5 200U SL & tt 1 4000-0 8 Steam 20 2000 U 8 Ship Corp... ..-s 0 6000 United Profit Sharing.. ie Ty IY 5% Ne Sot Seen ay 200 Willys Corp... Bo 8S STANDARD OLS 200 Anglo-Am, OU MK Mm eT 700 Atlantis Lobos so 50 Ohio OW ais as 10 Prairle O & G 480 480 10 Prairle Pipe. iad 183 309 $ Oll of Ind., 0% 10 8 Ol of N Y.. INDI 20 0 Atlantic Pete 2% 0 Arkansas Nat Gay 4 0 Boone OL 4 a 1500 Boston Wyoming . 70 200 Carib Synd 4 4% 1000 Cities Service etfs, 19K IR 13% 100 Cltles Service pt. Me Ae ABN 400 Cltles Service old. iy MT% 00 Cushing Pete 9 o 1100 Elk Basin Pe. 3 5% 1000 Empire Ky Ot; ... 6 1200 Engines Petroleu a 500 Glenrock O11 80 2000 Hudson Ou 13 | 170 Ant Petrol , 10 900 Lyons Peto 100 ibo OF 20 on 2% a out 66 300 Midwest Ol pt . 3% 1300 Mountain Prod. ) 1% WON ONG. 2 5000 Noble Oi. 15 200 Omar O11 .... 5 85 1300 Producer & Refiners ‘ 4 700 Salt Creek Prod 10% 10% 100 Sapulpa eet 8 3 1(0 Simms Pet 0% 6% 5200 Skelly Ol. “% 200 80 P&R 2% he 6°00 Texon O & Le .. cr 68 100 United Royalty. Ms 2% 100 Wilcox Ott 1% 1% 100 Woodburn 70 70 16800 Y Ol .. ueceind CO 60 ‘MINING. 27000 Big Ledge so 87 30300 Bost & Mont. 1600 Canada Cop . 400 Carson River . 2 2 a 100 Cons Cop M. m% 1% 1% 1100 Copper Canyon 18 78 8300 Cortez Bllver 80 «79. 70 600 Cresson Gold We 1M Ye 100 Crown Tes Bm 1 It 16500 El Salvador ww 1515 18000 Eureka Croesus 1000 49 Mining... 12500 Goldfield Florence 3000 Gold States. 1000 Gold Zone ... 5000 Harmell D w ow Ww 500 Hela Mining (tet Ae 100 Hollinger O% 6% Oy 100 Howe Sound . % %% 2 200 Hull Copper . 1000 Jerome Verde 1000 La Rose Minti 300 Melntyre 1% 1% 5600 MeKin Da ST a Ca 4500 McNama: Ce ee 1400 Mother! 4% 4 4 3600 National Tin , 8ST 1000 Opair 393988 3000 Nev Si! Hom > «¢ 8 900 Nipissing aL | 1000 Red Hills. a- 3 3 300 Tintio . ie 1M ae 300 Touopah Belm Me 1% ame 6800 Tono Divide . oy Gr 100 Tonopah Ext . 1% 1% 1% 200 U 8 Continental, a at an 300 United Eastern .. % fh om 2000 White Caps .. 4 4 4 50 Yukon Alaaks, 5 Allied Packer 63 . 2 Allted Packer 65 ct 10 Aluminum 11 66 Anaconda 7s, ‘29 84% 04% 6 Anglo Amer OU THs... 101% 101% 101% 9 Armour & Co 1 100% 100% 100% 10 Barnadall 8» 4 mM OF 1 Beaver Board 1% 12h oT 2 Beth Steel 100% 100% 100% BANKING AND FINANCIAL, | ‘The railroad group has finally as- sumed the most prominent place in the market. Heavy buying in the leading issues has been influenced by favorable statements of earnings and by the great demand indicated for railway equip- ment netes. These obligations have long been regarded as the prime invest- ments of the financial world and have position from a yield of approximately 7% to a yield below 6%, This is practically an improvement of about 15 points in the market price. We anticipate continued activity on an advancing scale for the rails, espe- cially the dividend-payers, such as Reading. Pennsylvania, Southern Pa- cific, Northern Pacific, Great Northern Pfd,, Union Pacific and the reorgan- ized rails such as the Kock Island and Missouri Pacific issues. Our latest issue of the Weekly Market Digest contains an especially ootable article on the rails. Copy free upon request. sheCal, Riley & Co. dated » New York 101. Members Consol SSS SS SS SS DSSS Ser Izzy went to United States Commis- sioner Hitchcock and got a search warrant by saying that the posed as n Blue Eyes! ‘nox This afternoon he and some others went to the Casino with their warrant and showed ito to Harry Stormberg, 199 100109 1 om On i (FOR OTHER MARKET NEWS, 10i% 101% 101% SEE PAGE 1 shoes and white stockinj A lost boy about three years old, with amiling blue eyes end light hair, ts at i | | musician on Saturday, carried a cor-|the Children's Society in Brooklyn to- Hib {inet s arm day. He was found at Bedford and ‘ a Maia arm and bought a drink |d4y; ing Avenues, Brockisn, Tast niet 05% | 10 Vienna LI oH PEAS Nee aay ing and was ‘taken to the Clymar ry Street. Station, where he entertained ths Meemen off duty by drawing pictures, Re boy wore blue rompers, with white 12 Price $865 (September 28) EUROPEAN BONDS Government and Municipal Par $16,303 (at PRE-WAR rates of exchange) At pre-war rates of exchange these bonds would have a par value of $16,303. | the daily analyzing of investment securities by our Statistical Department, a vast amount of interesting data has been collected and compiled for our various other departments. Among this data has been found information setting forth some extraordinary profit possibilities, with good present-day yields, in some European Internal Bonds which we have grouped, with relation to the World War, as to Allies, Neutrals and Central Powers. In the belief that the purchase of these bonds, grouped as we have them, may be timely ito former citizens of these countries, now residing here, or to:others seeking speculative opportunities combined with reasonable protection of principal, we suggest an interesting and diversified grouping of the bonds of 12 European countries. A profit of $15,438 could be realized if these bonds were to sell at par and should exchange rates return to pre-war levels. Bonds of the Allies alone afford a possible speculative profit of $1,481.33, so that the total investment of $865 should be well protected from this single séurce. Also the group of four Neutrals, by themselves, shows a possible speculative profit of $1,050.60, thus affording from this single source, also, an additional protection to the original investment of $865, on the entire group. The great speculative opportunity lies in the municipal bonds of the Central Powers. Disregarding these issues, however, of which but three are included on our list, there remain the bonds of five Allied and four Neutral nations and cities. If these nine issues sold at par at pre-war exchange rates, a profit of more than $2,500 over to-day’s prices could be realized—almost three times the gross cost of the whole group of 12 bonds. Some of the Neutral countries were not subjected to the financial strains of war, but, on the other hand, many of them grew remarkably rich in liquid resources and increased bank deposits, through selling the warring nations home products at tremendously inflated values. It is due to the present dislocation of all foreign exchange that Internal Bonds of these Neutral countries can be purchased at so large a discount. A study of the comparative values afforded by this group of International Bonds can hardly fail to be of great interest to any investor. These securities have a ready market in the United States. Circular “H-865" free on request. Established 1884 Melhuish & Company 43 Exch ange Place or 41 Wall Street New York Branches and Correspondents in Principal Cities BANKING AND FINANCIAL, eee ee 5 Rl Coe eae Tew ‘The time to buy for profite i Evo mocks arelow. Wil yeu ¢ of this opportunity? $150 Initial Payment 10% rer A diversified list of reasoned dividend yorewith » ‘ecord of earnings and ample security ere featured in our Special Investment Letter Ne. 110 I's Free and will be sent without obligation. Write TODAY HamntonB. Witts&Co. uurrap Founded 1904 Investment Securities Mambers Terente Standard Stock Exchange 40 Exchange Place, New York Telephone: BROAD on16 Mime Branch Offices Direst Private Wires Do you know * the dividend records" of many stocks trad- i ed on America’s Sec.’ {ond Largest StSek i j Market f —what companies | have greatest earn, i ings ? | —what stocks have shown great profit evidences 2 You can secure a fund of worth-while information from a 40-page illustrated book just published by the New York Curb Marker. We will give you a copy on request. Ask for E.W.494 Three NewYork Offices 50 Broad Street_ Tel. Broad 7150 225 Fifth Ave. Tel. Mad. Sq. 1377 505 Fifth Ave. Tel. Mur. Hill 7120 Free to Investoi How to Figure Margin Fully explains marginal trading, equities, short saleg, odd lots, ete, Write for B-2 or call Whitehall 263 EDWIN E. KOHN & Co. Members of Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York, 55 Broadway, N. Y. |TRADE SAFELY. IN THE STOCK MARKET Hoar or. $B ES Untimited TION FoR Profits Any Stock Exchange Issue PUTS & $] O ‘catis *20, Write for Booklet Ne, 87—Free jC. Goldhur rst & Be 50 BRO $0 BEOAD SE: SAFETY and PROFITS IN STOCK MARKET TRADING, to combine these in your tradiug by the usd of PUTS and CALLS With only $40 you control 100 shares of any Rock. Write for expianatory booklet 11—no obitgation. Paul Kaye 111 Broadway New York SAVINGS BANKS, __ |rving Savings Bank CHARTERED 1851, 115 Chambers St., N. Y. City. | ASSETS ENCEED $20,080,000 139 Consecutive Dividends have been paid to depositors since 1852, Deposits 4th will draw interest from October Ist. | OIED. | HEALY—Suddenly, at his summer home, Cold Spring on Hudson, on Sept, 28; 1921, A. AUGUSTUS HBALY, age 71 ‘otice of funeral later. | LINCKER.—WILLIAM, beloved William Lincker and Margaret Lincker 1915, | Funerat trom his Inte home, No, 199% Albany av., Brooklyn, on Thursday, 10. A. M.i thence to St. Thomas Aquinas | Church, Flatbush cnd Flatlands avs, Ins | terment Calvary Cemetery, i FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Call Columbus 6200 A Complete Funeral Service ip an atmosphere of refinement “The best costs mo more.” FRANK E. CAMPB “THE FUNERAL CHURCH” Inc, (Nou-Sectarian) Broadway at 66th St. made on or before October son of (nee Dillon); kilied in service Oct, 14,+ BANKING AND FINANCIAL.”