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+ hereon ser ewns cemntre es: eemmevatemess rons eel wee nanewnee ree +: “aat Tent ee ewe ee Ode E Ee FREE OR asinine: tabbenterieie pseeenmasee _Dearess see aren esNe me oa eetetierssetenese. et ee WOW! FIND SECRET OF HOW TO GET UP AFTER BREAKFAST! ALLIES DRAW UP NEW TRADE CODE Economic Commission Ap- proves 24 Resolutions for Plenary Session. JUDGE SAYS CHAUFFEUR WRECKED AUTOMOBILE WITH RENEWED VIOLENCE SO HE IS BEATEN, UP Two Union Men Sent te Jail tor Attack on Michael Deveray. Morris Marcults and Abraham Seigel of the National Garment Workers’ Un- were sent to the County Jail of Han Him Arrested on Charme of “Joy Ridies.” Magistrate Corrigan was in Basox Market Court to-day as complainant Heat Pads, Fan, Grill At- y agninst Charles Lawier, twenty-nine, tached to Bed—-Tacks, Too, | No. 'sé8 mast 138th Street, charged with| GENOA, May 17 (Associated Prens).|Gupcr The sky over @ wide are te nond County for 20 dayn‘each after 4 + pa: Inroeny. It wae alleged that on Apri! The Koonomtc Commission lighted up nightly with varled-colored| conviction of assault in the third d Lose Their Points. 14, while employed auffeur by the] Go. Conference tovdi oe thal aye inthe Court of Spectal Session ATLANTIC CITY, May 17. Magistrate, Lawler was ordered to tak: | Genoa Conferenc -day approved of} prof. Malladra, head of the Royal ten Island, . Weare fehl his employer's $2,500 automobile to n| resolutio! be submitted at the next/opservatory of Vesuvius, has reassured complainant was Mic! here to-day, Those who hate to get out of | garage and return the next morning tc| Plenary on. The resolutions com-|the population, declaring the present | ray, foremah of a rallrond the Bashan oli Giepdny ‘ot stew bed in the morning needn't do it. | the Magistrate's home, No. 3 Bast 10th] prise twenty-four articles dealing with eruption will not endanger the sur- ton. It wes formerly a unton shop Street, customs duties, commercial arbitra- The latest thing in beds, de- The next morning, it was alleged,| tion, treatment of people trading in ——— eray and ited him to quit] Pany of West Virginia are appealing acribed here fo-day at the Na- Lawler telephoned that the automobil | foreign countries, protection of indus:| GOVERNMENT EXPENSES |! ehint nd was beaten & fives @ decision of the Okishome Dis. tional Blectric Light Association | peedd repairs. The Magistrate invest! [ trial, literary and artistic properties, CUT $1,487 U details ea + | trict Court, Hastern Division, which held convention, has attachments for (ee ee tee ee eeufteur had bean {agriculture und labor. All the resolu- 457,987,028 ERY CHARGED that the Oklahoma Natural Gas Com- heat pads, lights, a fan, and for |.’ rtaing, it was alleged, Lawler] tone are qualified by he Word "desir-| 041. womse Lemde With 4o BRIB By che wtandace On Constr toute 7 EI A. ) Ls a © Houne Leads ver . Trlal 0 @ grill to cook breakfast or heat |wus held In $1,000 ball able. Mate Vane Muka’ Laue Fake, IN DRY NAVY HAUL | the case in Oklahoma brought forth the The resolution concerning people trading In foreign countries recom- mends that they should not be obliged to pay taxes whicli would place them in a condition of Infertority with ro- pect to the nationals of the country in which they are trading. The Economic Commission also ap- baby's bottle. —_ In case baby has to be walked to sleep in the middle of the night, papa or mamma can turn on a light under the springs, Which {Iluminates only the floor, so that they can see thelr way elear of tacks and toys without WASHINGTON, May 17.—With two more months to 0, Federal Govern- ment expenditures for the present fiscal] Members of the crew of the Grace ar total but §2,819,876,158, as com-| ani Kuna, seized at sea Monday night es CEMENT MAN DENIES PRICE FIXING COMPACT In the trial of the Atlan Portland Ce- ment Company and others, under the Sherman Law, by manipulating pro- riod laxt year, The White House leads all of the|!2ve been taken to Newark for arratgn- THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 77; 1998.0 000 VESUVIUS IN ERUPTION WOULDN'T GO ON STRIKE, |GASOLINE PATENT MAJOR GEN, WILSOR. suffered a few years ago, He wad Standara on, Appealing, ST. PAUL, Minn., May 17.—Litigation which will determine If processes used to produce millions of dollars’ worth of gasoline from natural gas are patent- able, is on the calendar of the United States Ciroult Court of Appeals, sitting roundnig territory ind then became an open one, The pair| JPY and the Hope Natural Gas Com- charge that the Standard Of! Company ITs STREN GTH, PURITY AND Say Prisoner on “Grace and Edna”| and the Hope Natural Gas Compa: Offered Ashburm §700, through demands for alleged excessive] FRAGRANCE ARE UNEQUALED 1 mui A with $4,277,863,186 for the same|),, the Prohibition scout boat Habn,| Which, it ts contended, is obvious, The Sealed Packet is your safeguard -_fO MONTREAL, May 17,—Major Gen.| 5), a ’ r f ‘}prominent in Canadian gilitary af- SUIT IN CouRT TO-DAY | castus William Wilson, C. M: G..} fairs for many years pri vid the® in} sixty-two, died at his home here, yes-| war commanded the Montreal dis- terday from a stroke of paralya trict. Charged With Monopoly, Remember The Name “SALADA" from other enterprises using methods of gasoline extraction creating a monopoly of a process, disturbing other sleepers or en- proved of the following resolutions ar| Government bureaus 'in setting a prac-|ment before the United States Com- duction, prices and distribution of ce- tertaining the neighbors front in the 'U. #8 District Court, Jonn| to Passports: tical example in economy. Its expendi-| missioner of that district, it was sald a R. Morron, President of the Atlas Port- F -Vises for leaving any coun-| tures were $182,183, a 40 per cent. cut. at the Custom House, land Cement Company, denied thi try should be abolished. . Og Sam rge of attempted brib may CAMPAIGN AGAINST there hed been at any time any agree-| Second—Vises for entering any|JERSEY LAWYER, STRICKEN ON Wyalnnt One 6¢ (he DRMOGa TARIFF ATTACKED} ment or understanding between his com-| country should be valid generally for STREET, DIBS. i to a story told by persons pany and any other for limitation ¢f] one year. A vise for passing through Se. "i trade, fixing of prices or controlling dis-|any country should have the sare ators Ladd and McCum-| tribution of cement. He said hie efforts] \ Asie 5 ; Ml early to-day on his way | approach Sen : had been directed toward increnaing tho] Validity as 8 Country for) i. a train for Washington aud was | Ashburn v u which the traveller is bound, ber Defend New Schedules | mies of cement and extending its use Third—The cost of a vise should taken to Bellevue Hospital, succumbed | tow line and we'll run the other w: and to do this had Incrensed the selling institution to an attack of I ot 8700 bucks here and there on Shoes. force. He aaid Atlan sells 80 to 90 per| be 10 francs gold for enfering a coun- Mr. Eberhard was sixt where that came from.’’ Accord- WASHINGTON. May 17.—Charges] cent. of its product through 1,879! try and one franc gold for passing His office was in t » the story, Lieut. Ashburn drew i dealers. through a country tional Bank Building at Hobpken. his pistol and ordered the man below. ¢ 7 e Fulton St. f Livingston St. Bond St. Ay Elm Place BROOKLYN -NEW YORK Business Hours @ to 5:30 that a large amount of ‘misleading and false’ propaganda was being cir- oulated about the pending Tariff Bill were made to-day in the Senate by Senator Ladd, Republican, North Da- kota. He said the claim had been made that as a result of the duties on hides and boots and shoes the price ef shoes would be Increased by $2 @ pair. “This is absolutely false," declared the Senator, adding that the duty on hides of 12 cents, plus 6 per cent. ad valorem, would amount to only 82 cents a pair for the shoes. Senator McCumber, Republican, North Dakota, in charge of the bill, said that cow hides were used only for the soles and heels of shoes, the other parts being made of calf- skin or other material, He. figured that the duty on shoes would aggregate only 8 cents per pair. placate Aa as JURY UPHOLDS VALIDITY OF MRS. H. T. COLE’S WILL After a balf hour's deliberation a fury in Surrogate'’s Court to-day re- turned a verdict sustaining the will of Mra. Helen T. Cole, who died’ Oct. 28, 1921, at Presbyterian Hospital. Re tives of the aged widow, who lived the Biltmore Hotel prior to her fatal fliness, had charged she was unduly fenced by Dr, W. Laurence Whit F 4 r more of No. 1038 Fifth 5 } min ing the residue of her esta 3 i i $125,000, to Roosevelt Hospital, aes specific bequest of $10,000 to Dr. Whit- ot" Pay as You Can CREDIT TERMS 100 $200 $300 S500 “When I: Choose a Player é Se oh kee It Will Be a Good One® *" S” Avenue |Smith aro aro 9 Street! State Sts That Is a Wise Declaration. Stick to It! But— Did You Know That in the Years Before Player Prices Went Up, People Were Paying More for a Good Player Than They Need to Do Today? ~~ HAT is real news to many people. And Loeser’s believes that it is doing a real service in ac- quainting them with that fact. But it is not every dealer who can immediately back up such an assertion with one or more makes of Players from his own stock. That, however, is something Ben'G a ly the Loeser Piano Salon is ready to do. It is the one reason for this particular armouncement. Jor Karache Loeser’s offérs, not on special sale, but simply to show that this store’s claim to unmatched value-giving is deserved, and no myth A Delighttul Player-Piano for $360 This Player is the outcome of tremendous specialized Their tone is rich, round and full. It is no ordinary keparege Wm Mg army ae ee quality of strings that can produce such music, and the piano of some of the most costly Players on the market. action, for hand playing, is excellent. Fancy, for instance, a Player at $360, with the trang ou ; Made at Reasonable Prices, | i dee: b; which, anything Lpane may be rendered in The Player action is one of the most responsive to the BROKEN PLATES REPAIRED | ie or pelt Mg A Meader thing for singing. pedals we have ever seen, regardless of price. ag peed A recent purchaser of one of our Players costing over ¥-BLO,, $1,000 would not accept the instrument unti! this feature had And the hammers are a very fine felt that assure main- 9 if been added. Yet it is here on these 8360 Players! tenance of tonal quality to an unusual degree. - mitra fein 2 E, 128th St. | 169 E 34th Se “People waiting for prices to come down” will be surprised to learn that for Players x NLW.Cor.SdAv. * . 70 St Se like these prices never were so low before the war as they are today! May we show you these instruments? Terms may be anything you say that business reason will advise. Leseer’e—Fourth Floor. i r-tmeege Sulandnme-rincimenenes or See tineme today nilirantsitsinestrarnmnasa nodptmasinwetetiniats iranttetr wenger Soe ansinuneerennseans oo BROOKLYN== =} —_———_ Smarioas Fe, Sreeialati” OPPENHEIM.CLLINS &G FULTON STREET-BROOKLYN Tomorrow—Presenting A Most Fascinating Selection of Imported Beaded Blouses Exquisitely Designed—Modestly Priced : 15.00 Masterpieces of the art of the Parisian seamstress. Pretty designs, worked in beautiful béads of Crystal on fine Crepe de Chine and Georgette Crepe, in black, white and all the pastel shades. ROOKLY Americas Foremost Grecialists ” OPPENHEIM.CLLINS &C FULTON STREET-BROOKLYN Tomorrow—Phenomenal Values in a Remarkable Sale of Underwear Underthings of Unquestionably High Quality at ~ the Lowest Prices Ever Featured by This House Step-in drawers and vest sets, made of fine crossbar voile, daintily lace- trimmed. White, orchid, blue and pink. Regularly 1.50. Illustrated. 8 9c gotone Step-in drawers and chemise sets of shadow-batiste, trimmed with contrasting silk fagoting. Pink, blue, orchid. Value 2.50. Jilustrated. 1.35 carment Nightgowns of shadow-bat ste trimmed with contrasting silk fag- oting, matching above’set. Pink, 1.85 Double - panel Satin petticoats (shadow-proof); lace-trimmed, tai- lored or scalloped bottoms; flesh, white. Regularly 5.00. Mlustrated. 2.95