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4 2 _THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OOTOBER The Leader of the Coalitionists in Bronx County Se uae Pera oe doing nothing but providing Jobs for the Hepublican | of the T And the Candidates Giving Tammany a Hard Fight 1:0. :s: figure in the lem. He doesn’t want a job. He} y “ THE MAJOR doesn't need one. ile's got m Jobs | now than he can REPUBLICANS EDWARD inthe big sity WILL RALDIRIS of planos and {s one of the publ WIN ” ’ of Printers’ Ink, He is also a d MANAGER OF in one of the big department storos of Lockwoop the Bronx and ia Chairman of the AND KANE Committes of Management of tho Bronx branch of the Y. M.C. A., with |$.600 memberr. He has always been among the foremost citjzena Inter- ested in public affairs in the Bronx. He brought Senator Hiram Johnson up there and aiso Senator W. B. | | Borah, and gave them both a very | big reception. | 90 Mr. Jawrence, with his pianos and his standing as a fellow ¢ is some noise in the Bronx, “Wi to w ad not © los . a x 4 to lose and nothing to win just to MILLARD 7 KNOEPPEL ; , |nold on to what they have.” | the unemployed in the Bronx |Harlem on one side and the Grand | twen ‘The Coalition candidate who in giv- ing buttle to Henry Bruckner, the in- ) cumbent Borough President, is Joseph R | M. Lavine, whose advice to his con- ICHARD JoHN A. DaNAHER | stituents ts to vote for him for the | W. (Mike Donovan's 5 good of the Bronx. Mr, Bruckner's . slogan is, “A Business Man for a| LAWRENCE, Son =iN= LAW) | Husiness Office.” Mr. Levine goes FoR President Bruckner one better and RePuBLican aoe ben adds, “A Business Man Who Will! County : Stay in the Office and Work in the In- | CH ‘ terests of the People.” | AIRMAN % Wize “On Jan, 1,° says Mr. Levine, “I| | shall move my office from here to the | Horough Hall and will do all the busi- ness that I've got to do right there. | |The business of Borough President is | big enough for any one man, and 1; shall give up all my other business | | for that. I won't seil nor make water and I won't dabble in rea tate when I am the Borough Presi- | dent. I shall give all my time to the | people.” | Mr. Bruckner sella soda water and real estate. G.0.P.INTHE BRONX LAUGHS AT CLAIM OF TS,000 HYLAN LEAD Coalitionists of Borough See| Rosy Pospects, Despite Tam- Major Edward Raldiris ts the cam paign manager for Paddy, and by the same token the Major ia managing things in the Bronx for Senator Charles ©. Lockwood, who is running for Comptroller against the incum- bent, Charles L. Craig. The Major is a civil engineer, notwithstanding that he took a two years’ course in the Law School. He was active over in France, enlisted just as a soldier and came back home as a Major of the) JOSEPH M LEVINE FoR 105th Field aauilery, od upon one occasion, the Colonel of the regiment many Forecast, BoRoucy having been put out of commission, | | PRESIDENT lthe Major led the whole works nnd was cited for gallantry on the fleli “They wouldn't take Paddy for the war,” gays the Major, “because he By Joseph S. Jordan. ‘There's a well-defined branch of the | | 5 GauTie was too old, but Paddy sent his six- “conta agers . the Sree peel agonee For Ais ene teen-year-old kid in his place and the| Arthur HM. Murphy an a cohorts | g y boy came home a full-fledged soldier. | could listen to the figures that they | FoR REGISTER 31 DIST. AY Bray! Tam going to shoot that at Fiddle are throwing out lke the adding ma- Flynn, Paddy's opponent for Sheriff, ohine in Register Polak's office, they'd —= =< ce = who didn’t go to the war on account, he sald, of being too busy In the stop talking about the 75,000 majority, “What's the answer? Tammany |for tt. Patrick J. Kane his right) All charitable institutions are the| Legislature.” | which they have already given to knows that it ‘# through in thu Mame ts, but to the poor there is no|same to Paddy, be they Protestants . —— Mayor Hylan, and might hesitate Pronx. ‘There are ten City Court other Kane in the Bronx but “Paddy ‘There's a likely lad in ? Judges to be elected, and among the | = = i i _— about the other majorities that they Dinner there ix oné to represent have given to all the other candidates jyronx Coumy and Manhattan. Wi on the Tammany ticket. | have ours from the Bronx, Tammany Of course that sounds like wild talk-| has none from the Bronx. Don't you Ing, loose taliing and loose thinking, |SUPPoKe | the voters of | the | Bronx are going to resent that Do a maybe, because Tammany was never) think tnat the people of the Bronx kmown to give up anything that It are going to vote for everybody from had already considered Its own, and | Manhattan or elsewhere to represent the Democrats have held the Bronx | them?’ a0 long that one might as well start) su sane nomen to he tl A addy’ ws to be the new to shake down the summer plums 10 | short of the rong, T's in little, autumn as to claim any Republican! put, oh my! For many ‘8 he was votes in that Gibraltar of the metrop- |the Deimocmtic leader of the Third pom Assembly Distriot—Tammany's own of the Bronx, and he wanted to But here comes Richant W. Law- | *scend to theShrievalty and Tammany & ui4 to him nay, ‘Very well,” says THIRVY rouRTH fo renoe, long known aa “Dick” Law-|Paddy, who Is a big contractor ard STREET GROADWAY-FIFTH AVENUB rence, the Republican boss of the| builder and has many thousands of Bronx, and says that the Coalition | constitutents In his train, ‘T'll go it end of the Bronx jsn’t telling ali | @lone.” their secrets, but that an analysis of | So Paddy designated himaelf as tho the vote in the county fust above the |nominee for Sheriff before the| jis Rich Fur Collars— Harlem River shows that Tammany Liberate Pegs in os veniorratly y Ci ance te 1 deat mething | fies te through, and Mir, Lawrence ella Drmarinn, ey, deat, him porvetning Sometimes Cuffs on Mr. Liv s “we'll sf ..|Mean “preliminary” as if there had Fr. Lawrence, “we'll show the wea':-|i.en no opposition at all. He made a! |W ness of Tammany, We have on our|ciean sweep, ticket William J, Millard, candidate 4 for Judge of the City Court, Thers ian't a candidate for the same pos!- thon by Ty iy in the county, For nearly four years| | he had heen Deputy Ruperintendent of | f Public Buildings under the sway of| nimany, but right away he aent his gnation in without being asked Women’s and Misses’ Coats BONWIT TELLER & CO, an STREET Special Sale Wednesday GLOVE SILK UNDERWEAR FOR WOMEN AND THE JEUNE FILLE 2.45 Most Unusual Values The materials are + Bolivia Veldyne Panvelaine Endless variety and no end of smartness are to be found in the large groups of sumptuously furred coats offered at this price. TAILORED VESTS BLOOMERS EMBROIDERED VESTS CAMISOLES HEMSTITCHED VESTS Full-skirted and narrow-skirted, most of them—to be ‘worn either bloused or straight. The sleeves may be classified in three groups — wide—wider—widest. Real Worth. values—all. Included are extra long tatlored vests. QUALITY above the ordianry at a price esa tile at all well proportioned ano Even the linings are Worth talking about — soft, albeit, heavy crepe KNIT UNDERWEAR—Main Floor, de chine and lustrous radium silks. ) 25, 1921, | = — ' ho is running for Aldeeman’ from |stove and furnace business for him- | opponent. A ne Mth Diatrict, which embraces |self at No. $9 Beekman Street. Man-| Airs Danaher is bullt tke @ little , ighbridge and Fordham, with the|battan. He's been sailing stoves for) ack Dempsey and small wonder, for wo years and says that he is) who do you think his father-in-law cours. on the other, His name ts |carrying a red hot stove in this cam. — . A. Danaher, and he is in the! paign and burning up the tral] of his (Continued on Never Have Art and Value Been So Splendidly Combined The shoes illustrated represent two of the | many models in which I. Miller hae made an intensive effurt to demonstrate value. 10 gh; || Potent Leether Patent Leather o Black Sate TheonStrap Slipper These shoes have the character and fineness ordinarily associated with much higher priced shoes, but it has been possible for the I. Miller factories to produce them per- fectly and etill permit these shope to retail them at $10. I. MILLER Fifth Avenue at 46th Street 1554 Broadway Hudson Terminal Open extilg P. M. Entrance: Fulton 81, 15 West 42nd Street BROOKLYN SHOP 498 Fulton Street, Corner of Bond sci qe THIRTY FOURTH STREET WROADWAY-FIFTH AVENUS A Sale Group of Velveteen Frocks ey eT Offered in a number of new, color-trimmed models at this surprising price— 19-7 5 This! is one of them—all are equally smart--showing the new types of neck- line and sleeves. Black Brown Navy Volnay Color contrast—in one form or another —is the predominant ‘trimming fea- tures expressed in Braiding — Stitchery — Pipings Embroidery An important feature of this offering is the complete range of sizes for women and miss, including extra sizes for women of large proportions.