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Lincoln Road, Brooklyn, In Long Island] this morning and suffered only some outiok! Soa THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1922. City Polloe Court to-day on a charge of] cuts and bruises. Sho'll be all right dn O'MALLEY MAY BAR| 710 Battleships and Flock of Destroyers |"™tsahst't Sons) igsasei. assis 2 JERSEY FARMERS Give Color and Life to the Hudson River Two-Mile Section of Vacant Land|$5 each, The property, whloh je sur T fire escapo landing forms a Made Menace te Heatth. rounded and crossed by unpaved streets, [bridge between two apartment houm Benak hia by Bereih Cdaadl Cle | Et been used ax a dumping grown and the little girl was going across to a Will Shut Them Out if They Keep — . Criticising re and has become a menace to ' nolly that police negligence Is responsi- visit a m¥ighbor, She paused at the ble for the use of a two-mile square edgo of the ladder ole, looked down, Him. xection of vacant land in Astoria as « became diazy, sho says, and fol, She Brooklyn and Nassau County led Capt. Stewart of the Astoria Precinct to as- at first it was foared she would die. y took her to Methodist Episeo: ited policeman to kee} Matos on the property. ‘The cop a] Margaret Higgins, thirteen years old,| pal Hospital, and after she had been raigned Frank Mone of No. 617 Lorimer| No. 388 14th Street, Brooklyn, fell four} there an hour ther mother took her a3 her home | hom Street and Salvatore ano of Commissioner of Markets O'Malley threatens to bar New Jersey farmers from Wallabout and G kets if they continue to expre - satisfaction with market conditions svoort Mar- here. He made this threat yesterday in the course of a reply to the charge by William L. Hundertmark, Execu tive Secretary of the New York Mar ket Gardeners’ Associatio: that farmers were compelled ‘ade with buyers under an antiqu sys tem that reeks with graft exploit- ation of the farmer-producer and puts an unnecessary economic burden upon the consumer. Although the gardeners’ association { has members in Long Isl : Staten Island, as well as in New Jer sey, Commissioner O'Malley asserted | the majority were from New Jersey The Commissioner said the attack on him was political and in the interest of the Port Authority, “and we are . mot interested in that,"’ he added. Commissioner O'Malley said that three weeks ago 600 farmers, meeting fn the open space at Wallabout Mar- ket, Brooklyn, adopted a resolution expressing thelr appreciation for nis services in thelr behalf. This resolu-| “TGR Ae KANSAS RECEWING tion Mr, Hundertmark had intimated rH SRS. ANS CREW OF ‘was fictitious and that the Commis DtSeee MING GOIns sioner refused to show It to him. “Whenever he wants to see it, he ; has my permission,’’ said the Com Thousands of Men of North missioner, ‘But Mr. Hundertmark| Atlantic Fleet Get Much doesn't care to see me. 1 asked him, ? over the telephone, recently to attend Needed Shore Leave. @ meeting at which I was to be pres- —_——_ ent. plik ri ae ie agi fn-] Two battleships of the North At- gagement for that evening, but wh baer I described the occasion ho im- eat Fleet are at anchor off 96th mediately recalled other business, and Street in the Hudson River, They are did not atténd.”’ the Arkansas and Wyoming. The In reply to the gardeners’ associa-| Maryland, Uncle Sam's most power- tion’s charge that the presence of speculators in the New York market|’™ “shter, cane in with ‘them, but places increased the cost of fruits and] @t 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon she vegetables for the consumer, the Com-| sailed for Rio Janeiro, With two missioner said the majority of farmers] other ships she will represent tho tray are coolidered an asmt in the] DEUe ADd power of your Uncle Sam markets, be said. Only last week, |#t the International exhibition to be Mr. O'Malley added, the price of new] opened there, 1,000 melons were brought aboard the|deck with his wife and baby (the] ‘There were more than 1,260 men at - Wyoming and it is estimated they/ baby was a year old when he saw it , rae: t Ibert sm bot 8 round Potatoes would have crashed to almost) Further up the river, off 1724) will last for three meals for officers] last). Pca ae ea anes a Puade dig purchases. ‘They were sell. | Steet 18 @ flock of destroyers, ac-|and men. The Wyoming was so denuded of | * O'Clock yesterday afternoon the 96th ing, he said, for as low as $2.25 a companied by more than a dozen| Young women by the score swarmed|men yesterday they couldn’t muster] “tect station of the subway was SAILORS FROM THE ARKANSAS LANDING -| Pay tor 1: get 2!. —A custom-tailored Palm Beach to the dock yesterday afternoon Jook-|enough musicians to form a band to] Jammed with the jackies off for a arrel and would have gone lower,| scouting hydroplanes, anchored near}... ¢o, thence awasthearta, and. tues| play Warswell for this Maryland as she|lark, On the arms of some of them e but speculators pulled them up to|the Jersey shore. Ke etal bare Ai ficere could find] were sweethearts and wives who had “4 s | $2.60. Tt is the first time the fleet nas|D&84s: Many of them with their/siid past. All the officers could find| were s t 8 —_ t ee- 1 Ney, Ae , ban rw Now cies Ge babies in arms went out to the ship|Wwas a trombone, bass horn and flute.| Waited all morning in the hot sun for siness Sul cri permnit, Mersey Series 0, in New York since the latter! ang spent the afternoon on deck with|A¢ter the men had assembled, saluted| their “sweet to come ashore, ome to New York and sell their pro-} part of May, and more than half the! tnetr husbands. and made ready to play, they drew] Most of them got off at Times Square. 3 yest cence ae aan ecenuees pate oer ne oe tee yer A. J. Bauer of the Wyoming bas|chuckles from their companions| For those who did not go ashore ; . soos K pon ‘ou read this.! been trying to meet his wife for more] lounging on the deck. last night there were motion pictures AS Cc lored Vi : S | creating dissatisfaction we won't let|Boatload after boatload landed at the| than a van in various ports, but tate ras men intend making the best of] on deck preceded by dinner and a mart, ‘ustom-Tai re acation Suit — them jn. The Long Island farmers] 96th Street dock, The last lberty/has always intervened to keep -hem|their stay in New York, because on] slice or hunk of Ice cold watermelon. are satisfied with the way we run our|they had was at Yorktown, but that FREE—together with a saving of $10 in cash on a Three-Piece Spring or Fall Woolen Suit H wey i apart, Yesterday he was one of|Aug. 7 they will safl for Newport,|Moug'’ did stunts for those on the ' markets and they don't want any tn-| didn't count, except for the water-|those unfortunate enough not to get] where thero is a wonderful but much] Wyoming and Mary Pickford enter- i terference melon carnival. Yesterday more thanl|iherty and spent the afternoon on the] hated drill ground. tained the men of the Arkansas. sine a a Apple Cider Now National Drink, |NOVIE PROMOTERS Beas TIME ESTENSION Uncle Sam Says, Giving Recipe t] 7 Fifty-Six-Page Booklet Tells How to Make, Without CH ci Port Authority. The graft charge “Kick,” Most Popular Beverage. Father and Two Sons, Claim- made by Mr. Hundertmark he dis- missed as ‘foolish tall." Only last week, he said, two men were discharged for dishonesty and \n Apple cider now is the American beverage. Uncle Sam says so him- ing to Be Whitman’s Kin, the last three or four years the num- self to-day in a 66-page booklet issued by the Department of Agriculture, Accused Philadelphian. ERES a tailoring sale, never halt or lessen production so big in its value-giv- —even though we'run at a loss ing, that it seems al- inslack seasons. For there's a big most too good to be cash value to us, in holding our true. So, instead of organization intact; in keeping giving you mere ex- the personnel of ourshops keyed uberant talk about it, up to full tension efficiency the let's et down to the concrete year around. . facts and figures. re To accomplish this result in July and August are “knock- Julyand August, we're going sev- off” months in the tailoring bus- eral steps further than we'veever iness — when most tailor shops gone—not only manufacturing mark time—waiting for the Fall at cost, but taking a loss on every season. Summer sale, to make our great But not the Royal Shops. We shops hum! \) ber discharged was seven. He told of the difficulty in determining crooked- ess, comparing it with “nickel ind besides tell all there is to know about apple cider, Uncle Sam snatchers" on the street cars. “If Mr. Hundertmark thinks all men are tells us how to make it, The booklet 1s Farmers’ Bullet honest,” said the Commissioner, ‘he ought to stop dreaming." No. 1264, written by Joseph 8. Cald-lods of making unfermented cider and well, plant physiologist of the depart-|the Federal regulations governing Its ment, who leads off with the state-|manufacture and sule under the ment that “unfermented apple juice | National Prohibition Act. or sweet colder may justly be called renee the American beverage. It 1s,” te BONUS UF $375,000 continues, “more generally popular and is made and consumed in much| GIVEN TO MILL WORKERS lurger quantities than any other bev- erage juice.” He states that in 1899 the produc- tion of elder amounted to 55,280,199 Hons, with an additional 1 = One Week More A!’ »wed Be- Minut AIRCRAFT YEAR BOOK our. | “*S° ef La Minute Tho Aircraft Year Book for 1922 has just been {ssued by the Aero-}| Automobile owners and chauffeur nautical Chamber of Commerce of] over ran the police stations of the five America. Its two hundred and fifty-one] boroughs in the last minute rush to Pages contain a comprehensive survey|get the new police trafic warning and analysis of aviation development in all {ts phasea throughout the world, |°&?4s, and early to-day an extension Reviewing 1921, it finds that the year|of one week was announced in the outstanding and epochal time limit, which would have expired importance.” This refers to the experi-|last midnight, ments held one hundred mites off the] Thousands of owners and drivers Virginia Capes jn the summer months, when aircraft, flying from land bases,|Were in the stations, and the Ines destroyed one after the other, a sub-lextended for a block as late as mid- marine, destroyer, light cruiser and dreadnought. The experimenta cleared |™Sht. Tho rush was partly due to the way “for a possible solution of the|!nsufficient time allotted to distribu- international competition in capital ship construction.” tion of the cards, and to the fact that Optimistic prophecy 1s made for the|™ost of the applicants appeared to future of aircraft, particuiurly in the|have delayed until the last minute. ¥ ical life, it ote Toray commerim Chicago. company, | When the cards were obtained they “Goemmerce demands speed; tying is|had to have attached the photograph A father and his two sons who sald they were relatives of former Gov. Charles 8. Whitman were arrested last night in an apartment at No. 1784 Broadway, on warrant obtained by Lincoln L, Eyre, Philadelphia at- torney Tho prisoners, locked up in the West 47th Street Station on a charg of grand larceny and as fugitives from justice, are Irvin A. Whitman, sixty, a promoter, No, 8787 Locust Street, Philadelphia; Vincent I. Whit- n, thirty, and Bernard Whitman, twenty-eight, who gave the Broad- way address ay thelr home, The father described the arrest as j-Annual Distribution’ Made, by rpet Factory in Yonkers, Thousands of employees of the Alox- ander Smith & Sons Carpet Company gallons converted into vinegar, mills in Yonkers ere to share in 1909, because of apple crop failure, | $375,000 to be distributed as a semi- the production fell to $2,688,998 gal- annual bonus, lons, with 7,346,682 gallons of vine; The bonus system was inaugurated Production of cider, according to|*leven years ago, Employees are paid the booklet, has increased consider-|# percentage of tho pay earned for the jy since Prohibition, but because} previous six months. The percentage farmers largely are ignorant of the|is determined by the length of service methods for pasteurization so that the|With the company, cider will not turn into vinegar it is] Alexander Smith Cochran fs the prin: with them a seasonal product, con.|SiPel owner of tho mills. A total of Here’s the Astounding Proposition! While this sale lasts, we'll tailor to your order at $40, the quality and calibre of a made-to-measure suit that you could not duplicate elsewhere for less than $50. That's a $10 saving right there. And on top of that, we'll include a finely tailored, built-to-measure Palm Beach suit —without a penny of extra cost. The Palm Beach comes to you with our compliments. m umed within a few days after 1 ,000 has been heretofore distribu: | * “outrage” and the sons said they ~ You get astylish, custom-made, three-piece suit selected from our best Spring and of the applicant. The crowd bogan |*¥med WII © tollow various methe ed among the } The company em-|could not understand it. ‘They said Summer fabrics, or from our advance purchases for next Fall. A genuine $50 custom- Mr. yre had been employed to tn- corporate the Animation Studios of America to handle a machine invented by Vincent to animate cartoons for motion pictures. They said he was to receive fifty ehares of stook for the work. Vincent told the police the invention Scien eens tintyed the photographs and license] chauffeur and driver must have such cards of one applicant and if thela card, photograph and cards were properly| his pos fixed, passed them on to the Captain| by @ policeman, unloss he wants to for his counter signature. TAeAVe ainimiican (copie orice This resulted in many long waits] ‘The cards carry five spaces, intend. tailor value—and a Palm Beach besides—both for $40—both failored to order! We cannot guarantee to hold this offer open for any definite length of time. We will accept only enough business on this basis to keep our shops busy. If, therefore, you want the greatest clothes value you have ever had ~at any time, before, during or after the war—get your hustle shoes on now—and place your order! THE BIG DEAL—$80 WORTH FOR $40 NOW USE FLIVVER _|yestertay and when reports to Hou TO DRIVE THE COWS Jauarters tate tast night indicated that IN FROM PASTURE|' %2u!4 b impossible to provide cards for the thousands still unsup- Honk Displaces Barks in bearing his photograph, in sion whenever he is stopped plied, it was decided to extend the time a week, A y H and added to the peevishness of those}ed to be filled out by the polte Keeping Wandering Hundreds then left for home. Others|in line. ‘The applicants varied trom| observing such mince eerie had been patented and the patent Animals Moving. remained, with hope of being able to] 4 stylishly gowned woman to a dust-|defective lights, driving on tho wrong | 2**!sned to Willlam G. Hires of Philadelphia as security for $5,000. The brothers asserted that none of the stock has been sold, although vered truck chauffeur, side of the strect, obstructing trame During the day photographers with} and the like. When the fiye spaces portable developing tents did uw rush-|have been filled the driver will be BURLINGTON, Vermont, |&*t thelr papers before the work aS ‘Aug. 1 (Copyright)—Tho honk |St0PPed for the night, Several cases of the flivver ts rapidly supplant. | °f haustion due to waiting were re-| ng business making Photographs of} handed a summons and must answer | $500,000 worth had been issued, Our $30 Feature Suit—to order ¢ tng the bark of the dog in driv. |P9Fted. ‘The persons overcome wer: | Jelinquent erivals, | | for the varlous infringements of the PA0Q 000" OF HOR OIA Bey fe regular retail value fou get both fer . id z = ¢ e Ow et, reet and] law. the market, ‘They eaid they came to BE ee encant gore viaioat eran a ie gd wie tercer Street Stations, in which pra- ee New York two weeks ago. Our Special Palm Beach 2-piece $30 t Most o 9 wet their cards and leave withou!! incts many motor truck chauffeurs Mr. Hyre could not be found at his suit to order—regul ibe farmasre Mave abandoned the | rurther delay. vo, had thelr share of tho rush of| MISS ARNOLD IS SET FREE. | nome In’ Philadelphia last night, lar retail vali $ ol ime meth ringing the i the da d od ails of the affair were kne = cattle in from pasture. No At s majority: st) the: precinats ete tian Ay ROA Ta ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Aue. .—|the he lau arlore ap tht in ar syed is Total retail value 80 eg! pet fonger do they walk across lots, [Women received the preference. The] Po machinery issuing the cards in| Mlas Paulino Arnold, who was taken| Bureat there, It was learned, how- OB MGR READY IN}@ DAYS accompanied by their collies. In- |largest number of applicants were at] staten Island appeared to be work-| Into custody at the request of the New}ever, that the brothers had operated siead they ride from the barns to |tho Harlem stations and the West|.ng the smoothest last night. Most] York police early ‘Thursisy an ‘ning |ihe Whitman Motion Meture Stusio \ the pasture lots. a0th and West 47th Street stations. of the applicants at the Brooklyn sta-|and has been in Jull ever since, wes refit, No 4 North Bid Street, Wear I A I I Al I @) Many of the farmers have |which handle a majority of cards ts-|\jons were car owners. 1 : um EVER since, Wa8 FT oy adelphia, \ equipped their gates with coun- |sued to taxicab and private chauf-| at several of the upper cast side{ eset Mast might unler instructions —- 5 \ tor wotehts, ‘so that they, open | feurs. auaeta it Waa aid (he last sninuth fro Prosecutor Gaskill, following HOTEL BONNY RIG BURNS. Order direct from any of our 5 New York salesrooms (upstairs—1 flight up)— gutomatically. At some of the station houses, par ush resulted from many car owners |*#!k with Capt, Malseed, head of de BECKET, Mass,, Aug. 1.—The Hetei * sCi 23 Bros = It fs @ common sight to see | ticulurly in Brooklyn and Queens, th | .nd private chauffeurs being away on |tectives Honnyrig Was burned to the ground Inte *45th and Broadway (Times Square) *Columbus Circle (182) Uroadway) \ ot i lease of th lay, _oecasto (Entrance on 45th—just off Broadway) [On the Circle and on the Square) fifty or sixty cows being driven | cards could not be obtained until Sat scations or tours when the cards release of the your nan, who | yeaterda paton! that 2 s 5 , from pasture by the farmer, or |urday. The process of tasuing th: | vere Issued fy also known as Pouline Grr, followed | nay total $5 )06 large 42ndand Fifth Ave. 14th and University Place’ Park Row and Beekman his hired man, seated in a flivver, | cards required about ten minutes. It] The cards will obviate the necessity |, (erkre™ _ m the New York police] wooden structure (N.W.cor.—Entrance on Fifth Ave.) (Entrance on University Place) (Entrance on Beekman) the machine darting from side tu | was accomplished in this way: of appearance in court for minor traf- | stolen automobile Ee I oe WED WAR *Times Square and Columbus Circle Stores open evenings, Others 8:30 to 6 every day, including Saturday 7 *, * nm automobile ad refused to prose- hixiway, was Ww y own sunong mo- side, honking warnings to the In the Captain's offices at the sta- fic violations. ‘The recently enacted cute her and th phies orisis, A faulty chime : dows, as they amble alowly along, |tions two and three patrolnien ecru- new TraMlo Law provides that every, Wom. nS Would be mo extradic Rots 4 are, “abl v ak| WORLD'S GREATEST VALUE — SOLD IN 10,000 CITIBS 3 i 5 aa le