The evening world. Newspaper, October 7, 1921, Page 28

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U. S. SUFFERING THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1921. FROM AN ORGY, ASSERTS SCHWAB MRS. O'GRADY SAYS THAT ENRIGHT 1S | the Chamber of Commerce ast night, expressed the opinion that depression in Amertca is the natural sequence of an orgy and recommended strict economy as the quickest cure. He said present conditions “Ask Mayor Hylan, he knows"| Would bear beneficial fruits in says Mrs. Ellen O'Grady, and the| tat they would teach business “Akh be! sbbeics Vibe had men prosperity is not to be ob- Mayor may bo asked to-day'to give} tained through high prices, While the correct vereton of the little flare-| he asserted wages must come Up which led Mrs. O'Grady, Deputy} down, the speaker sald merchants Police Commissioner, to, figuratively} could not expect the working man speaking, throw her brand-new shield age cut while the in the fate of Richard E. Enright, Aries were still be- ; Police Commissioner, and waik out of her $6,500 job. She explained her reasons to the | Meyer committee, and denying her charges ‘of “interference” by higher officials in her work, the Commis- Sioner said she quit because she wasn't given “a high-priced limou- gine automobile to make social and shopping calls in a style she thought | befitting to her high office.” | . Now she comes back at him. “I wasn't born with a silver spoon in my mouth, nor was Dick Enrig she is quoted to-day. “I'd have been satisfied with a Ford, though he goes riding through the streets in a richly * & upholstered sedan. He wasn't prowght | up in luxury, but he seems to have Prosperity Not to Be Obtained Through High Prices, He Declares, Never Wanted High Priced] Auto, but Only Wanted a Flivver That Would Run. Lower frelght rates would be | step toward normalcy, he President Inv oD eateges me sop te! i had litle trouble getting used to it. | } “All I asked for was a car that i would run, ‘The one I had was in the | i shop three months and the cy it | » came out broke down again. ‘The : tectives had been using it, and they're ) t “pretty hard on automobiles. i : “I guess the real reason he didn't ; . + Want me to have a car that would ‘ t fun was that he didn’t want me to| } ee what was going on. : “Commissioner Enright is an un- ‘truthful man. Does it seem reason- | ble that I would walk out of a $6,500 Position merely because I was dented | what I wanted tn the way of an auto- mobile? I could have bought if I'd bad to. He's befogging t sue. The real reason for my re: f tion is exactly what 1 told the Meyer eomiittee—and I stand by every | HERMAN | U.S. Navy Shoe it and | U.S. ArmyShoe Mrs. O'Grady said she didn’t need the car for shopping and social en gagements, though she sometimes used for that purpose the one fur- Mished for her use by the city. “But they all do that,” she said. “Many a departmental automobile Sees more social than business ser- yice. And that's one reason I'm in favor of Fords for city officials, Maybe if they had to ride around in them all the time they wouldn't be seen so often on the streets during business hours, Besides, they're good for anybody.” O'Grady said she had tn her fon a.clipping from the city in which Commissioner En- ignified his intention of buyin automobile for his Fourth Linings, facings and fittings accord- ig to Government specifications for Navy Shoes and Army Shoes. Widths B to EE; sizes 5 to 13. MEADES Brooklyn's Best Known Shoe House he said, he intend to give to the Fifth Deputy, who 102-104 Myrtle Ave., Cor. Bridge St. BROOKLYN President the Eastern ce of the Methodist Protestant which is in convention here. FALL SALE The Largest Assortment in Rebuilt PIANOS Under One Roof in Greater New York In our big six-story warerooms are over three hundred pianos of well- keritwn makes that have been rebuilt in our own factory and they look like*new. This is an opportunity to buy a PIANO or PLAYER PIANO at aconsiderable reduction in price that will give a lifetime of service. REBUILT UPRIGHT PIANOS Schultz - - - $95 As Walworth Smith & Bunce 125 Low Haynes - Wissner - = - 1 - Gabler . - Wissner - - ~ 145 J Behr Bros, Richardson Co. 160 $ Haynes - - E. B. Magryatt- 165 Bradbury - Narveson ~ -- 175 Chickering - Wellington - - 180’ Monthly \ Goets & Co. ~ 220 NEW AND USED PLAYER PIANOS Chase & Baker ! Lohman ‘ Baril a | 82 si punversn le 0. f lenning B Goetz & Co. } Ney Sohmer & Co. PIANOS FOR RENT GOETZ & CC.: } 81 to 87 COURT ST., Cor. Livingston St., BROOKLYN One Block from Borough Hall Subway Station EASY TO REACH—OPEN EVENINGS 1329—1331 BROADWAY Near Gates Avenue, BROOKLYN “SALE AT THREE BROOKLYN STORE: FULTON STREET coro BRIDGE STREET at Hoyt It Subway ration Brooklyn 4810—4812 FIFTH AVE. Bet. 48th & 49th Sts., BROOKLYN \_ Tomorrow, Saturday, Will Be the Fifth of Our New Fall Costume Blouses Special for Saturday At 4% Of superior quality silk Crepe or Georgette, suitable for service with a suit or sweater. Silk embroidered or beaded trimmed. With new round necks or novelty square collar styles Blouses of remarkable style and low price appeal. * * * Exclusive Fall Hats Q:50 Our Usual Prices Would Be $12.50 to $18.00 Offers the most wonderful assortment for women and misses—in felt and velvet com- binations—Lyons and Panne Hats beau- tifully trimmed to satisfy all wants. Children’s, Junior and Flapper COATS Sizes 6 to 16. Years ‘ Girls will find every new feature. Belted and graceful straight hanging backs. Bolivias, Velours, Cheviots and various other materials. Nearly all are full silk lined. Distinctive Styles actually the wholesale cost. for Autumn and Winter are represented. FALL FROCKS —Featuring Values That Are Simply Amazing at 5 No-Profit Sale—Saturday Fashioned of the newest fabrics and enriched by clever decorations of em- broidery, braid, floss, gold thread, Oriental fringe, Spanish embroidery and Grecian sleeves. These Ultra Fashionable Models are for women and misses and offer a saving oppor- tunity unmatchable, we believe. FUR DEPARTMENT No Profit Sale Price 33° CONEY COATS French Coney, first quality. 36-inch length models. MARMOT COATS : 36-inch Kolinsky Marmot Coats. Self trimmed. BAY SEAL COATS 36-inch models, Self trimmed. ; FRENCH SEAL COATS No Profit Sale Price 45-inch models. Collar and cuffs of Natural Skunk, Beaver, Others self trimmed. HUDSON SEAL COATS No Profit Sale Price 36-inch models, in FINEST quality Hudson Seal (dyed muskrat). Taupe and Brown. Irresistible, ‘Fur Trimmed Coats Scoring a Triumph in Value-Giving THE MATERIALS are exclusive, luxurious furs enrich them and the new favored colors No Profit Sale Price q5 e No Profit Sale Price 65” For Women and Misses i THIS MARVELOUS No-Profit Sale will be of much concern Saturday to those who demand a Fashionable Coat, richly Fur Trimmed or Tailleur Model at a price that is The Height of Fashion in Women’s and Misses’ Suits In a History Making Sale for Saturday $ Clever plain tailored types, in 2 5 tricotine and duvet de laine, show the new, longer coat of the Fall mode. There are also fur trimmed suits in the fashionable new color tones. $ Yalama cloth afd duvet de 3 5 laine make these smart suits. Many are fur trimmed in squirrel, wolf, beaverette and mole, One especially smart suit model has a Tuxedo collar of wolf. $ Handsomely fur trimmed 45 suits of moussyne, mochotex and velour offer the smartest of late styles. Some have a clever applique design as trimm: and appear in burro, zanzibar, sorrento blue and other fashion favored colorings. No-Profit Sale Boys’ 2 Pants Suits g-% 12% 15° ' Sizes 8 to 18 The eturdy, heavy, «!!-wool fabrics that insure lasting satiafaction—beautiful show. ing of new patterns and novelty mixtures— brown, gray, olives and solid color, 195” 245” SALE AT THREE RBOOKLYN STORES,

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