The evening world. Newspaper, October 18, 1921, Page 9

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THE EVENING, WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18 COALITIONISTS PLAN TO USE MEYER COMMITTEE TESTIMONY INHGT CAMPAIGNSTARTING NOW ao i i ‘| auspices of the Honest Ballot Assocla- Their Spellbinders to Centre| eer ces on ror artery of Alte i . |John T, Pratt and Mrs, Charles L. Fire eu Schools, Taxes, Po ‘Titar Mrs. “Belden Bacon and lice and Five-Cent Fare. [Charles B. Hughes jr, will address the gathering on the necessity of an honest election. ‘ By Joseph Jordan, vith John Kirkland Clark, Coalition With Election Day just three weeks| ./naldate for District Attorney, says away the Coalition forces have Just) that the motto of the District Attor begun to fight and, according to cam-|ney's uffice as at present constituted paign managers, the city is to be|!s “Indict and Forget,” which w.ll nor 4 be his in the event’ of his election. abaken up with an intensive campalgn| yr, Wu tight against profiteerng in of education which will put the issue] rents, food, clothing and other neces- vight up to the voters, The Coalition | sities of life, and prosecute all persons orators will centre upon the disclos-| Who mulct the poor foreign-born rest- : dents. He will also work as strenu urea of the Meyer committee and) ously for the prevention of crime as hammer them into the people, telling | well as in the prosecution of it. what has been accomplished and keep on telling about the schools, the taxes, | tatald aoe Sercaeren| "So celal act 1 be ster on the Democratic the police, home rule and the five] {uct i eying to have an “irish ac cent fare, Home” in her headquarters in the The spellbinders declare that they| Vanderbilt. Pretty colleens in green will repeat the evidence against the|*"d white lace will serve and act as ushers, and there will be o ber Administration which Was brought] bf diversions. ‘The night for the fea. out by the members of it before the| ture has not yet been announced, bu: committee, the story of waste tnd|!t wiN be toward the end of the ee month. One of the Intest additions to extravagance, broken promises, the /stisa Mathews's campaign committee increased aalaries and expenses in all |jg former Col. Louls D. Conley of the ine departments, the lack of schools | old 69th. and lack of seats for pupils, methods} oe Ce Cammittes bh ae : . he Women's ‘ommittes has Of police, and the graft of the piers. |. -anged a mecting to be held at the oe Commodore Hotel Thursday evening That there is no lack of speakers} oct 20, at 880 o'clock, at which for the Coailtion side of the campaign | Comptroller Craig will be the prigel was evidenced at the Brooklyn mect-|pal_apeaker, Many school teachers ing on Siturday night, when in re- | are expected to attend and it is likely | sponse to a call for sixty volunteers | that the Comptroller will devote tor the Speakers’ Bureau, 120 turned | considerable part of his speech to the | up at the meeting. Congressman | school question. : Warren Lee is. Chairman of the bureau and Tim Shea the Secretary. | “Mo-e homes, mote schools, lower -—— taxes,” is the slogan of Senator Lock. | Mrs, Minturn Pinchot will preside} wood, Coalition candidate for Comp- @t-a luncheon to-day at the Colony’ tiviler, To-night Senator Lockwood | indorse the nomination of District Attorney Edward J. Glennon to suc- | A lyn and Manhattan, speaking at Pub- le School No, 99, at Tenth Street and Avenue K, Brooklyn, and at the club rooms of the Fourth Assembly Die- trict Republican organization at No, 30) Be ‘ford Avenue. ‘The Senator wili also address a meeting at Blghth Avenus and 23d Street (Grand Opera House building) in Manbattan, The Minute Men, inccrporated last week, inet and organized last night at Hotel Astor, “hairman Oscar erson presiding. A committee prising Walter W Watsoy, Bey- erly Sinclair and Murray Gordon was appointed to invits Mayor Hylan, mptroller Craig. Houry H, Curran, Senater Lockwood und other candi- dates to address the organization on the issues of the day. It was stated that there was already an enrolment of 500 and that ths membership is active in every district in Greater New Yerk to build up an organization which will hold the balance of power in the political situaton, ‘The slogan ef the Minute Men is “Capitalize Citi- zenship Not Partisanship.” At a mecting at Hunt's Point Pal- are, In the Bronx last night, Vincent Gilroy, Coalition candidate for Presi- dent of the Board of Aldermen, sald: “When your rents are raised In the Bronx, bear in mind the fact that this is so because of the high tax rate of, the present Administration and bear in mind the further fet that although you pay so much to your government, you are not getting the proper return, especially in the matter of schools. * * © Hylan talks a lot about the S-cent fare although you people are paying more than a 6-cent fare now, and in many places your transfers were discontinued Lewis Nixon, the Tammany man who js Public Eer- vice Commissioner. I have asked that a B-cent rate of fare be established for the school children who are com- pelled to ride to thelr schools because f overcrowded conditions, and I shall make a fight for this 3-cent fare be- fore the present Transit Commission.” Comptroller Cralg was in the Bronx ast night at the meeting of the Bar Association, ag the representative of that bod from New York County to ceed himself. Mr. Craig paid this trib- 1921. 9 ——— ™ - —ed WOMEN RESCUED !DLE SCULPTOR TRIES _ | 1st stn stroot and proceeded to his| resignation trom the Belgian Cabinet,|500 WINDSOR GUESTS Oe AT HOSPITAL FIRE TRUCKING, HITS MAN|" aco of th ness, seealilit caeent | according to an announcement by Le} FLEE MONTREAL FIRE Soir. Hin resignation ald to have) cut, sald business in his line was bad i ee cauoenial it ¢ been precipitated py the presence! ry. re TOWN, N.Y. Oct. 18— erection: ai Gul ican ent ef/and he came to New York with his| of Edouard Ansenic, the Soclalist| qe ey ana | oe cot ola MIDDLE’ NON Y, a Living and Gets Sammons. | truct to make some money. Ay he had| Minister of Public Works, at the So- ba v Nearly two hundred women patients, Douglas Brown of Dobbs Ferry, |a@ Connecticut lcense and no operator’s| clalist gathering in La Louviere yes-| MONTREAL, Oct, 1%—The Windsor some bedridden, were rescued ¢arl¥Y president of Charles Brown & Co.,| license Patrolman John Fisk gave him a| terday. Hotel, largest hotel in Canada, wa! " cot Hall, s f y aaa |damaged by fire Inst night t to-day when fire swept at veeeea linen importers, of No, 82 Enst Slat CEA RA Seca OF Whe taints erate Berlin Nowapapers Fail to Appear.|tint ot, $2,000 and” bo mucate meee the main building of the & Street, was knocked down to-day Sid peed BBRLIN, Oct 18 (Associated Press.) |Uriven to. tees Soares in, thelr it Homoeopathic Hospital. crossing Park Avenue, near sth en —Aa a result of disputes between pub- |Gire'ny firmer, “ere CMTied down Nurses and orderlies aroused MOSt Gireet, by a motor truck owned and op- Aeiginn Minteter Quite | ishers and workers, no newspapers ap- ‘The ice making plant of the hotel patients from their beds and marched crated by Leonard Dezordo, a sculpton, : | peared in Berlin tht eared In Berlin hia morning: with the | wax damaged antammonta fumes mtyed . shal. Oc ‘ ot) excep! jootallat and Communist | wit the dense amoke and floated to te | BRUSSELS, Oct, 18. Minister of} ogane and two Pan-German publica | floors, where firemen ‘were game defense Deveze has. tendered his| tons pelled to wear masks them from the building when the of No, 2451 Third Av alarm was sounded. They then car- was aitended by D ried twenty bedridden patients to safety on litters, Other buildings of the hospital were saved with the ald of fire apparatus from nearby towns, The estimated loas in $2 Chamberlain, a Deputy Public Ser- vice Commissioner, a Justice of the Supreme Court by the appointment of former Gov, Smith, District Atiorney for the Bronx and @ candidate for re- election.” PARIS. e LONDON The dropping by Street Cleaning Commissioner i of pina bela Michael Laura, Democratic candidate ‘ fei } tor Sheriff {n Kings County, will add Fifth Avenue, at 35th Street—N. Y. something to the diverting character a of the contest for that office. The Re- Established 1879 publican candidate !s Peter S. Seery, who is depending upon a large mea- sure of Irish-American support, tt is sald. Mr. Laura is very popular nmong the Italian voters of Brooklyn, now increasing in number very rap- idly, and a contest between Seery und’ Laura will be @ real straightout fight, now that Michael F. Buckley, the independent Democratic nominee, has been refused a place on the of- “cua | Do You Realize How Muc torney, who ix the Democratic candidate for that office at the election Noy. & ina letter just sent to the membgts of the bar. It concludes with the State- ment: “Lrreapective of party afiriatio 1 e e we unite fn commending Mr. ‘Banton's candidacy to the members af. bar.’ The letter js signed by Wrancis K Pendleton, Clarence J. Shearn, Jame . O'Gorman, Morgan J. 4'Brien, 1H Snowden Marshall, George fGordon Bat- ute to the candidate: "He is thirty- six years old and has been an assist- | Club, No. 7 West Sth Street, under the will divide his time between Brook- ant District Attorney, a Deputy City tle, Martin Conboy, Edmuyd L, Mooney Jouls 8. Posner, I. Maufice Wormeer. Herbert C. Smythe, Frajicis G. Caffoy, — Down Since Last October? T TOOK TWO YEARS of war and a year proapway Hake & Company at 34th STREET Are now offering on the Second Floor ‘forty distinct Styles in Women’s and Misses’ Pumps and Oxfords at 8.50 The lowest price quoted for many years for footwear of the upon a strictly cash basis. Suede in every color heel. Hand-turned and welted same high character AKS & COMPANY are amon, the largest retailers of women’s and misses’ footwear in the United States. cAt every seasonof the year you will find in our assortments a variety of styles, leathers and combinations such as few other stocks throughout America may boast. We believe in variety, plus quality and low price, and achieve this rare combination by the placing, of immense orders with America's best-known makers of quality footwear, consummatin}, every purchase The leathers and materials included in thi special presentation at $8.50 are: Patent Coltskin, Gun CMetal, Tan Russia Calfskin, now in vogue, Colored Kidskins, and Black and rich “Brown Satins Every? style of heel from the low military? to the Louis XV soles. All sizes from 212 to 8 and widths AA to D. Twelve of forty? styles pictured. and a half more torun prices up to their highest point. No one expected price de- flation to be as rapid. BUT in forward looking stores price de- flation has been accomplished. PRICES ARE LOWER. IN THIS STORE we've met every drop in wholesale prices with a corresponding one in our prices. Our new price basis is a low price basis, and if-you doubt it, read below! i THESE are typical items in regular stock. w Price Comparisons in the List of Women’s Garments also apply'to Misses’ Garments Last October Now Last Ocigher Now Women's Tweed Coats 49.00 35.00 Girls Schoo! Coats .,. 25.00 18.00 Women's Walking Suits 39.50 25.00 Girls Serge Dresses . . 22.50 15.00 5 Women's Street Dresses 55.00 39.50 Girls Flannel Middies 8.75 4.85 Women’s Sport Skirts 18.50 10.50 Children's Coats . . 14,50 9.75 Women's Oxfords . . = 12.00 8.50 Children’s Shoes. 4.75 3.70 Women’s 2 clasp glace Children’s Knit . kid gloves. F 2.50 1.65 Underwear SF 1.50 1.00 t 12 button kid gloves”. 5.95 3.95 Children’s Wool Hose . 1.50 95 Y s its with extra Wey” a . . . 1300 8.00 ee ale .. 2450 15,50 Women's Silk Hosiery 2.75 1.95 Boys’ Winter Overcoats 30.00 22.50 Women's Wool Hosiery 3,50 2.35 Boys’ Winter Sweaters 8.35 6.50 French Dot Veiling 1.25 25 Men's & Students’ Suits 45.00 35.00 Hudson SealCoats . . 395.00 275,00 Men's & Students’ O'coats 60.00 45.00 pte ie ae ne a

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