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ire surgeon, who eald Leslie CONVERSE ESTATE _ | Pittbure, surgeon. | whe PAYS $400,000 TAX! two AWNINGS ABLAZE onnecticut Receives Larg- OPPOSITE AMBASSADOR st Inheritance Assessment | Few tm 12-story Apartment Mouse Avare of Fire. of Many Years. Porebns . passing. the | twelve-story HARTFORD, Conn., June 7.—Con- | apartment house, No. 340 Park Avenue, necticut has received an initial pay- at Sist Street, opposite the Hotel Am- bassador, early to-day saw two awning: ment of $400,000 as inheritance taxes on the estate of EB. C. Converse of at the fifth and sixth floors burnin, sparks evidently having dropped from Greenwich, Conn. Mr. Converse was formerly President of the Bankers’ one to the other on the Bist Street si At the sixth floor the awning was Trust Company and the Astor Trust Company of New York City. afire outside the window of the suite occupied by Dr. William Bradley Coley, Further payments are due, the amount not being ascertained, the while the other was outside the apart: ment of James R. Richards. The firemen extinguished the fires with trifling damage. Few in the house State Tax Commission's office an-| knew of the blaze. nounced. The State Treasurer's of- fice said the $400,000 payment was the largest inheritance tam received by the State in many yéars. plese be whats COLLEGE MATES KEEP HURT STUDENT ALIVE THEIR HOME amet ine ces Houses Belong to Mill Own- ers—Thousands of Evic- tions Expected, (Special to The Evening World.) NATICK, R. 1, June 7.—The fam- Sites of ton Pawtuxét Valley textile mill rikers, occupying houses in Natick nd Pontiac, owned by B. B. & Ri Knight, have been ordered by attor- neys for the corporation to vacate the houses by to-day, Among those ordered out is thy fam- ily of John R. Cusson, Financial Sec- rtary of the Pawtuxet Valley local of the Amalgamated Textile Workers » oe America, with®whom Organizers James M, Dick and William H. Der- riek of the amalgamated have board- et most of the time since they came Into the district to direct the strike that started twenty weeks ago. Mr. Cusson declared to-day that h went to Harry P. Sisson, Superin- fendent of the Royal Mill at River- point, who as charge of the com- pany’s houses in both Riverpoint and Westcott, and tendered to him the money fof the rent of the house he occupies. Mr. Sisson, Mr. Cusson as- sorted, refused to accept the money, saying that it was not the rent but the house that the corporation wanted. Notices sent by Comstock & Can- ning, attorneys for B. B. & R. Knight, Inc., in which the tenants were ordered out, warned the families J if they have not vacated the uses by to-day legal proceedings to evict them will be started. This {s thought to be only a starter, as hundreds on hundreds of tene- ment houses occupied by strikers are owned by the B. B. & R. Knight and other corporations operating the mills. Practically tho entire villages of Pontiac, Natick, Riverpoint, Arctic, ‘rompton, Centreville and the Hope villages, where 10,000 strikers reside, are owned—stores and all— by the mills companies, and prospects mew to-day point to thousands in- stead of ten families facing eviction. ‘UNION CHIEFS HELP POLICE KEEP ORDER Keep Strikerg Moving Near New Hampshire Cotton Mill. MANCHESTER, N. H., June 7.— Strike leaders to-day took over the duty of preserving order in the cot- ton mill strike by agreement with Chief of Police M. J. Healy. When the gates of the Amoskeag Manufacturing Conrbany’s mill ned a crowd of 1,000 was walking adjoining streets, with Vice President James Starr of the United Textile Workers of America and Or- ganizer Horace Rivicre personally keeping the strikers and sympathizers movi Disorders followed arrests last night and when four strike leaders, includ- ing Riviere, went to Chief Healy they were arrested, although without for- mal charg @ew YORK ISN'T SAE W YORK ISN'T SAFE, SAYS MAN WITH PISTOL Don't Jump te Conclusions, Telly Police. William Colletti, twenty-five, of No. 410 East 13th Street, was arrested at the corner of that thoroughfare and First Avenue late yesterday by Detec- tives Murray and Quinn of the Fifth Street Police Station at the request of Probation officer Abe Fuer, who said he had been trailing the young man for some time, Sent to the Island on an inddtermin- ate sentence, Fuer said, Colletti was aan, Sm ce See “The Race Course of incompar- able beauty, picturesqueness, magnitude and 4 BELMONT PARK TOMORROW (THUNS.) ATTRACTION 214-MILE STEEPLECHASE BELDAME HANDICAP THE GRACEFUL PURSE And 3 Other Brilliant Contests, BEGINNING AT 3.15 P. M. SPECIAL RACE TRAINS leave Penna, Station, 334 St. and tth AV. iso from Fiatbus Av., Brooklyn, at 12.15 and at intervals up to 1.40 P.M. Special Cars Keserved for Ladies. Dislocated Neck in Swimming, | ficial Respiration May Same Lim, GROVE CITY, Pa., June 7.—Edwin Leslie, a student at Grove City Col- lege, Is being kept alive by rela: his fellow students, respiration. Leslie su cated neck from striking his head on the bottom of the college pool, while swimming, The, injured vertebrae cut off the air from his lungs and it is said he would have died but for the continuous ef- forts of his companions, An ape was performed by D: oO. Wi ‘Course ‘ars also reached by Trolleys. GRAND STAND AND PADDOCK, $3.85, Including Tax. It doesn’t crumble when you divide it, because it splits-in-two. It doesn’t crumble when you eat it, because it is the é right size to bite off clean, Sold only in packages. Jgpse-Wues Biscurr @mrany ° Branches in Over 100 Cittes Sunshine Biscuits He ONE SINGLE DOLLAR puts this handsome thin model, high-grade gold filled watch into 70 enfO RED TAPE. NO. DE- te dollar NOIS 30 Days If entirely satisfied, pay at the rate seleased on parole last: Febrdary at the of $1,00 a week. Otherwise, return end of eighteen months, According to BX and we will return your de the Probation 6Mcer, he had violated the immediately, 21-Jewel, 1 Dilnols, adjusted to po temperature and isochron- ism, in 20-year plain-poly ish gold-filled case. Our Introductory Offer _ terms of the parole. When s hed Colletti was carrying a loaded 38-callbre revolver and a cigarette box containing twenty-five shells “Don't Jump to conclusions,"’ warned prisoner. “New York {an't safe and be 7inow it. I've been carrying this Only $42.50 it for my own protection. Can't be duplicated anywhere for | in $60.90 ca The Biggest WatchValue in All America Knife and Chain FREE i Into Your | Pocket. | FREE, filled Knife and fine demar Chain, regulation H ivngtt When you buy from FINLAY. New" York's” Greatest Credit Establishment, you are sure of getting exactly in you pay else~ what you wai trictly confidential, 5 0 " a clear skin and good hair what yOu Wiransacte Fora skin that is excessively oily, and bhas coarse, clogged pores, or one that fs disfigured by an annoying eruption, . there is nothing betterthan RESINOL. Bathe first with RESINOL SOAP then apply RESINOL OINTMENT and oH can be reasonably sure of a speedy and remarkable improvement. | a peri the sham; : the Bar pin med > until the total of $ ia Merion €50-1660 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 18 Pome di rub Between Sivt and Gad Sts, Diamonds and Jewelry, Ask for Diamonds From $25 to $1,000 Store Open Evenings Until 9 Name. yoy into ahe seal 8 wel scalp some time “At all dene tat THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, CAMEE : Finest candy in the world An Old, Intimate London Friend, Newman Hall in whose home I tarried, quoted this: “Work for some good, be it ever so slowly. « Cherish some flower, be it ever so lowly. Labor! All labor is noble holy.” To have something to do ir worth while, even if there be no necessity dfiving us to it, Occupation drives ‘away care and the small troubles of life. The busy man or woman has no time to fret or worry. There is ajoy in being useful that no idle’ man knows, any more than the mole in the ground, June 7, 1922. Liszt as Teacher Thursday, at 2.30 In the Auditorium Personal recollections of the master, by CARL V, LACH- MUND, pianist-composer, with recital by his artist pupils. First Gallery, New Building. Exquisite Frocks for Miss 2 to 6 For Summer afternoons Sheer voile, brilliantly hand em- broidered. Some hand smocked in color after the manner of English frocks for little girls. $2.95 to $6.50. **# « Frocks of organdie in fasci nating and delicate summer colorings—China blue, orchid, peach, green, rose and yellow. Gaily colored hand smocking or embroidery, saucy ruffles or quaint decorative motifs vie with one another in adding charm to the various models. $3.95 to $6.98, Third Floor, Old Building. Silver Fox FURS Of great beauty —$325 to $850 The accepted favorites of smart women for afternoon wear. “© «© Handsome Bay Sable Neckpieces, , $75 The slender one-piece scarfs that give a t finish to the tailleur. dark and rich and marked. ‘Third Floor, Old Bullding. Silks for tub dresses and shirts Fresh, cool, delightful 1! silks at very reasonable prices. At $1.55 yard White shirtings with perfect Skins well satin stripes in pin and fancy hair- line combinations and with wider ape in gay, crisp summer colors; and navy blue and black. At $1.35 yard Plain colors— pinks, blues, lavenders—striped with white. Plain white broadcloth shirting. All 81 in. wide. Street Floor, Old Building Prize Lot of onal and herringbones. | patterns. silk | DOWN-STAIR All Untrimmed Spring Hats, Thursday, at $2.75 The smart shapes of the season in many variations— off-the-face hats, turbans, tricornes, mushrooms and picture hats. . leghorns, horsehair and others too numerous to mention... Plenty of black hats. French Fruit and —Reduced $1.65—for $2.25 to, $2.76 fruit wreaths. $1.25—for $2.50 flower wreaths. 75e—for 85c, 95c, $1, $1.26 fruit, berries and cherries. T5e—for $1, $1.15 and $1.25 flowers. Girls’ $5.75 Voile Frocks, $3.25 The collection includes sizes 6 to 16 years A leading dressmaker wanted to dispose of her odd lengths of materials, so she made ,up_ these frocks to our order and gave them to us at a con- cession. Figured, dotted and plain- colored voiles in mauve, blue, pink, rose, green and gold-and- white, Tucks—such as Rolande has used this season with marke suecess—fine laces, and flutings of white organdie, trim these frocks in an original and thor- oughly charming manner. Wide, soft sashes are of self material or of white organdie. Girls" Own Shop, Boys’ Norfolk Suits---$19.75 Two pairs of trousers with each suit So many boys prefer the more business-like suit even for formal wear that we are making a special dis every way for pafty wear or for forse oceasions—commencements, Sunday wear and school celebrations, Cashmeres, cheviots, unfinished worsteds and tweeds and diag- In smart Norfolk styles, Sizes 8 to 16 years. Khaki clothing for boys | For camp, for vaéation, for outings, for all sumfher Wear there are the khaki garments that boys want. : Sports blouses, $1.25, $1.50. Knickers, $1.35 to $1.95. Radiophone Program Thursday (W.W.Z. Wavelength 360 metres) 1.40 and 3.40—Brief Song Recital by Edna Beatrice Bloom, soprano; y. Thurston Noe, at the Plano, 2.40—Brief program by Mr. De Pool, ‘cellist, 4.40—Timely hints on Paris Cable and Fashions from _‘Vogue,”” through courtesy of the Nast Pub- Iications, 10,30 P. M.—Briet Ann ‘Thompson, pianist, rogram by Silk Frocks For Miss of 14 to 20---$10 Were. $15, $18.75 Who expected a dainty silk frock at $10? They will be here on Thursday —the same iden- tical frocks that were $15 to $18.75 in regular stock, Taffetas, crepes » de chine and knitted crepe fab- ries— Beaded, ruffled and trimmed in many lovely ways. Come early if you want the best choice. Downstairs Store, Old Bullding mportant specially arranged Sale of SKIRTS sania AA A BOOKS ’Phone for the new book. It’s here Formerly A. T. Stewart 500, of silks and flannel, picked by us from the surplus yardage of a great skirt-maker. Made our way, in a score of good styles. Priced low enough to make you happy. Everybody provided for—waistbands 28 to 42. White Flannel. Skirts; Baronette $7 | ,29 Satin Skirts in white, or black, | ee Fine strawg in. the favorite colors—Milan hemps, in distinctive straightline models Fried wie Saersitres | $10.25, $13.25 Flower Trimmings Pleated Crepe-de-chine Skits in white, sports and street colors. Heavy silk crepes in white; dark colors with con- trasting stripes ..... Inside belis fini: Mi black skirts included. Sale’ will be held in the Women’s Fashion Salon, Thursday. Ample service has been arranged for, and you é Street Floor, Old Bullding. | will find we display very conveniently done. peep a SummerAfternoon Frocks,°55 IN THE WOMEN’S FASHION SALON separ she in their ae icity, they especially 5 for ti he lunch- eon in town, . Fine, pleatings used in panels—after the dictates of Paris — emphasize the slender silhouettes in a manner that is gracious to many different types. Fashioned of canton erepe of an exquisite qual- ity in Black, white, gray, French blue. Second Floor, Old Buliding. appropriate Hems are of a depth only to be found in the better grade | frocks, Second Floor, Old Building, Paris says---Little Jackets Of quilted or embroidered fabrics B heavy fabric, cov- ered with embroi- deries, The Dress Goods Salon is featuring these very fabrics —many of them from Rodier, who first brought them out, Bargaldine, Mats- lasse, Demasse, Zena- na and embroiderizs. Dress Goods Salons, First Floor, Old Building Paris not only says it, we might almost say she shouts it, for every- where, at the races, in the Bois, at the smart tea places, we see smartly gowned women wearing these ador- able little jackets of matelasse or other, quilted ma- terials or plain lay of suits good enough in Mostly in dark Khaki jeans, $2 to $2.50. | Khaki suit, $2.35. Khaki suit with belt, $2.95, Hats, $1 and $1.50, Street Floor, New Building. | American (A.T.C.) 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