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J.E. Widener’s Battersea, Who Covered Six-Furlong Distance in Watch-Breaking ial Has Never Been to the Post, but Clockers Have Him jabbed as Real Runner—23 May Go in Rich Stake. is 1,08 made by four-year-old in 1908 rarely been even approached since, Battersea has other k Atkin as a By Vincent Treanor. $50,000 Futurity, the biggest r-old race of the year, will be Belniont to-morrow. It is ajthe clockers’ books, but none quite for which every trainer and |S? fast as the one refered to, On strives, and tho winner is usu-| Vou in commen wide Willers garded as the champion of the/and Hell Gate six furlopgs in 1.1 . There are so many good two- |All three were under restraint, but Folds among the eligibles, with no | Battersea never Kot out of a pull A canvass of the Futurity situa- lar one standing out on pro tion in so far as riders are concern performances, that interest in vovealed yesterday that Sande wou! with newal is considerably, greater | !« on Zev, Fator piloting faa Been for 7 Satelit a tho \ ul ering ‘ z ne ow. It ikely that the the present writing a field of |wWritney Stable Will have several in “three will go to post, but}the race, but the only riders men- s between now and race time | tiv! rday were Schuttin, tov e the number, Twenty- ; lagstaft ii Pe te an ane Pic 1. x Keoxl will have the mount on Gos~ faced in the event when Marti- hawk Turner is coming from Can- on it, and the largest field of all jturity history was twenty-four, 1 to take the r-olds seen in Beall 1 urn that th the t Funning two-y« to i s for with n by ‘Thor Victory of Bluemont over Whit )Picketer on Wednesday has the Futurity hopes of Jimm mons am the Quincy Stable {11 also be represented by t Greentree may be Pandow candidate naqui ride AS, eo] R. C bred in Wyoming, wi Opking Caveat Emptor. There} pe ridden by Fairbrother. The Jef faster colts than Bluemont as|fords filly, Miss Smith, is to be rid he will go. A glance at the {den by Morris. It is likely that Mack le entries leaves one all at sea. |Garner will come on to ride Donges Process of elimination it is hard }for John Ward. Marinelli has be ider any one horse out of it asked to ride Amor Patrias. {mpe Futurity is a time honor stake for which colts and fillies are omp home a winner. named before they are foaled. Tie non-starters, J. EK. Widener has | produce of the mares are entered, and ikerjack in Battersea, one which }in addition to the big money prizes rr Tom Welsh put away earl for the first, second and third hon ear as his candidate, and wholors there are money awards for ordingly escaped all penalties. }nominator of the mares which pro- sea is a fine looking chestnut|quced the winner, It is a subscrip- ont d'Or and Sunflower. Al-|tion event with various stages set well engaged at Saratoga, he}aside for declarations, The race at- Praced a wonderful entry, but this is he clockers haye him tabbed as a |p reduced by owners believing fear on a recent six-furlong work- | their chares have little chance with the Futurity chute in better | dr fg and saving further subscrip- Golf Ball. ® Anna Dulman of No. 64 Buena ? until about pl ‘The Indian chief pac lock this morning, possessed} t ue n thirty ath tes her om ty diam: a sd at $400, a} now, and more coming 1en Bue: 1@ six) pda ness s eli Ait ‘lclanton reported yesterday, Speake @ worth $350, a watch valued nd $15 in cash. has been a good deal of tall Mike Rabbitt, into the grand stand. burglars in Yonkers and the|(lanton and Rabbitt wer » reeutd Ages a.bit nervous, Mrs, Dul-| {tom the Muskogee, Okla., 5 back Wrapped her gold and precious WESTERN CONFERENCE as ev fm a handkerchief and placed © eigh je baby's crib. This mornin ELEVENS IN WORKOUTS rae Book the bed-clothes out the} crcaqo, sent. 15.—Athletes of nd pr the Ws Conference to-day trot- d tol tigation showed that the ten-]ioq forth in their moleskins to pre Par 1H tho ower floor for a few brief | jars for championship contests and - tes this morning had Mrs, Nellie) -riqivon honors of the season, Jonn MEMEBKy of No. 106 Vark Street 9#| «rhe majority of the squads have a ht we Then Mrs. Sudensky. | yucieus @ veterans arouna which the ark, t ty-seven and comely.}yarious machines will be built, Among no day those reqniring extensive reconstrue- i he Iowa outfit, which lose do a day's washing, and lett,}"! HIERN OY DE eee lice found her at her home|!" ' ono of the rings, valued at} “Me lye eae nae Shp pi fand the $15 had come to her, but} : pal j bere utly denied finding the remainde m, el Ap i al We 7 ue Sho was held in $1,000 he stuff. for examination coachi lich ries Wildey of No, 20 Yonkers} {rit vii. 1 Bue reported that yesterday white] Pl4y Chicago at Sta and ho were out some ono]? effort to gain revenge and stole a diameont urprise defent of Inst at The potice | West Virginia will play at ed that Harold Wildey, twelve, ton dur ne Indian home home from school and founni] The initial contests are Raat lock: mer Klieska, | 2¥®Y: e mh living ucross the street, fv F Indiana has replaced Pa key. On the bureau 11 Stichin with Pat Herron, first discovered the ring. Young | *itant to Glenn Wa LO ae is keen on merchandising and THUR OR EG MRC Lnieoe ute sed to sell it. He did, ax rt Mentors’ line-up includ: ce, to Walter Wart utd ce ee fo, 3 Yonkers Avenuc hist Nocihweaiein, ana n at ¢] Jim hat Purdue dee had been —_ INTERNATIONAL FOURS peg and would have sold it to (eorre Pfor 25 cents by saying Your { expluined ¢ Th nd it, Wildes Be PHILADELPHIA, Sept ELAND TEAM et Ha Country Chi NS OUT OF UNIFORMS}: ° ie 1 lve det ' Mee i ‘© 1 . y om Welsh Has “‘Sleeper’’ || (Al FLEVENS Which Has Worked in 1.10 . r a eae The arrow was adopted as the New ~York University, CO*Jetandarized symbol for tra Mc algna lumbia, Fordham and Stev- Jana the Executive Committee of the The mark has x0d works on HILF several hundred collegiate Apollos in the vicinity of Man-| [of the conference at the Waldort- hattan Island are now aay “J Astoria. The police officials of this ing their stomachs against tron-tight} ointry adopted a resolution to he pigskins, plunging heads into elusive tackling dummies and fac ground, and portions of old Alma Muter's athletic fleld queries begin to trouble the mind of the local college football bug. what chances has who, and why? over the mount on Battersea, the cundidate of his former employer, } when John A. Drake's Savable | Josep 1. Widener., Unsor will be up on Wilderness. MeKee is to have the talk at the track for the past} Butwell up, and Bluemont, the new- has been about Futurity candi-}est sensation, will have Mooney, with Several have had public trials} Ponce on Caveat Emptor, the other 8 and others have had watch]|starter in the colors of the Quincy ng trials, so that on such gossip} Stable. Sally's Alley will have the hears the race is most open. benefit of the guidance of Johnsoa, Whitney candidates have alljand C, Kummer will be up on Mar p so well that Trainer Jimmy |tingale. The Gerry establishment must be at his wits’ end trying |will run both Cyclops and Wil le which is his best. The Ran-| Teil, and McAtee says he pair, Zev and Satelli are}for the former. Carroll will Rand if mud p Is Zev may be Jon William in all probability, Wo beat. Ho's one of the best has a claim on Lyke up and the candidate of William ells $250 Ring for Ten Cents‘and a Second Hand ed him in one the team’s travel- ling uniforms and sent his companion, HAVE DAY OF REST MR yFRT SII! Puce KLE, ONLY ONE SLAYER HAS PAID PENALTY HAVE HARD CANES OR 1922 SEASON Enright Says Only 5 Per Cent. of These Murderers Have Been Executed. World's Police standardized officers a will devise traffic action Conference and signals for ens Announce Schedules, A vehicle drivers in taken to-day at the business session Legis- ates with the ex- Ohio, which Has the law, Inte. the| Presented to Congress and the nto the} iatures of all the otherwise accumulating ception of asking that the killing of a policeman or @ peace officer in the discharge of his duties punished as murder in the first degree And] police Commissioner Enright, I dent of the under t several r eyelids, be rt Who plays who, and when? si conference, said eleven heen killed in Ww York City alone this year and that at ‘The latter questions will be more or a while, But looking ‘on's game schedules of policemen had iddles for the half dozen. local. colleges now] the trials of the accused so far only training football teams one learns,Jone, Luther Boddy, a Harlem Negro with a start, that only two weeks} poy, who killed two dectives in Har- from to-morrow five referees’ whistles will sound that shrill, thrilling, well- remembered note simultaneously from lem, had been the first degree. convicted of murder in In the past six y us on stadiums within subway-]the Commissioner said, less than 6 per Re weneroR tn sy Buteeecetea: cent, of those accused of killing po- ham and Stevens on that day, Sept. HCCHSS had been convicted of first 30, launch their first attack in the}|degree murder, initial battf® of the season's gridiron] he executive committee of the ouenaC ee ieee opening games| °oMference was authorized by resolu- tions to fe thal cod! mulate a secret confiden- is played tive home on field the college's respec- And, of course, the for the use of police depart- contests are not likely to prove much} monts, Commissioner Enright 1 more important than an ordinary] the Legislature will be asked (o stan- day's stiff workout and an oppor-|dardize a certain wave length for ti tunity for each coach to hold his team | uge of police departments and a law off at arm's length and study it in] 41) ked to make it a penalty action, so to speak t, besides} ror anyone else to use that wave stirring these volunteer young war-|iength tiors to energy by their first smell of] ¢ i 7 Commissioner enright invited the noke and blood, the preliminary : : visiting delegates morning to an e: hibition of a novel moving picture target for pistol or small arms prac- He said the machine is a me- ames will give the New York ‘sport in who can keep his mind off the World's Series for a minute, a hint af what Hes in store for the zippy Oc- ieber ace Mow tay dee nical marve land that the scenes ober and November days ahead, displayed on the target are moving NEW YORK UNIVERSITY |erowds in a street scene, He ex- Sept. 30—New York Agricultural|Plained that when a shot is fired into College, Ohio Field. the ta that some individual is Oct. 7—Syracuse, at S selected as the objective. If the bul- let strikes that figure, the whole pic- ture will continue to move except the one struck and a light will flash from the rear indicating the bullet mark. FOUR SEEK TO HEAD LEGION IN JERSEY Adopt Resolution of Sympa- Oct. 14—Hobart, Ohio Oct. 21—Columbia, South Field. Oct. 28—-Rhode Island State College, Ohio Field. Nov. 4—Trinity College of Hartford, Ohio Field. Nov. 11—City College, Ohio Field. Noy. 18—Rutgers, at East Orange. The coaches of all the colleges claim to have hard schedules, not only as a natter of policy, but because they aes eally are pretty hard as schedules} thy for Mrs. Harding's £0. w New York University 5 ll is ed to sail into such a formid- 2 ese able adversary as Syracuse after no] A jively contest for State Com- chance to sharpen teeth on anybody but the New York Aggies, and then|™@nder developed at to-day's session almost immediately thereafter carry}f the annual convention of the New on against Hob; by no means a|Jersey American Legion at Lake Ho- negligible quantity, and finally, before! patcong with four candidates in the w York University can wipe the fleld to succeed Joseph D, Sears of ood awa , stick a twisted ear back n shape and shove the shirt-tail back | Bloomfield. where it belongs, to have big brother] The candidates are Thomas F. Columbia University come aleh Sito laeanesdofidarwey. Gitw, A. Bruce Con- inish what is left—or be finished—one 5 can understand why Coach Tom|!!n of Westfeld, Eugene Pattison Ridgewood, and Thon ewark, Goldingay of Indications are that the race will narrow down to Meaney an‘ Conlin, with the strength of the other candidates divided between these two. +A resolution extending the sympathy of the Legion to Presient Harding for Mrs. Harding's illness and expressing hope for her speedy recovery passed. The Resolutions Committe: also has before it a proposal to reduce 1orp is so earnestly bent on making 4 real fighting machine out of the ma- terial now perspiring on Ohio Field. But times won't be so hard for the Violet team in subsequent days until the Rutgers game. FORDHAM Sept. 80—Canisius College, ham Field. Oct, 7—Rutgers, New Brunswick Oct. 14—HBoston College, Boston. Oct. — Georgetown Unt Polo Grounds. Oct. 28—Westminster College, Ford- was ity. Ford-|the assessment of New Jersey posts by the State Department of Legion as soon as practicable, ‘Two hundred members of the Wom en's Auxiliary of the State Depart ment are in session at the Lake View House, ham F Noy ham Ford Springfield College, Field. 11—Colby, 18—Holy Fortham Fic Wwe 1d. vester, Cross, Muhlenberg College, Al- own, Pa, face of this evidence, though the sus rding to Coach Gargon, picion comes that an ‘over-confidence imes with Rutgers, Boston College |). ahoo!? is merely being fenced off. and Georgetown coming one on top| P48 Ly esos STEVENS 20—Pract , Castle Polnt Kiel 1—Haverford, Pa., of the other makes this year’s sche je the meanest one they have had at ‘ordhum in the three years football has been played since the war began. Castle Point Then this difficulty is onsiderabl ‘ugmented by the contest, two weeks] Oct. 14 — Hamilton Universit fter rgetown, with Springfleld, [Castle Point Field. and then, after another fortnight of Oct. pringfleld, at Springfleld comparative repose, in the big meet-| Oct, Svarthmore, at Swarth ing with Holy Cross, th important | more battle of the year Nov. 4—Delaware, Castle Point Field COLUMBIA ae Nov. 11—Massachusetts Ags Sept. 30—Ursinus, South Vield Castle Point Oct. 7—Amherst, South Field ‘ov. 18 Polytec Oct, 14—Wesleyan, South Vield Castle Point Field Oot piomnlew Tarik University; aus cept for the combination of West Wield, Ponca CaN oa Virginia with Lafayette the chief con Deh Re Winnie, Beaune test for Rutgers, with only a gume No A ine ; intermission, and the — subsequent Pov. Adlebury, South Field. | nesting with York University Noy, 18—Dartmout, Polo Grounds. line schedule is not so uncomfortably Nov, a0 (Bhanksgiving Day)—Col- | arranged, according to the coach RUTGERS Columbia coaches point out that Amherst, the second opponent, was] Rutgers's schedule is as follows Victorioue lust year egainst them,] Sept, 30—Pennsylvapia Military that Wesieyan proved a tough battle}College, Neilson Field, New Bruns- last year, that Tom Thorp, New York | wick University couch this year, because} Oct. 7—Fordham, Neilson Field he came from Columbia University is] Oct. 14—Lehight at Lehis hound to turn out a good team over} Oct, 21—Bethany, Neilson I here htt ind that V Oot, West Virginia, Moors ham’ omes next o won last{town, W. Va f prac th am No oes ‘ pack hen eeull that | Groun Cornell heat t too 1 that No. Lif r 1 believe in gluomy outl EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1922. ae S 20 Pastoral Cop on Bike Herds | Mountain Goats of Brooklyn Strategy Worthy of a Foch Gets Them Back to “Pig- town” From Crown Heights. When @ man buys a house with a first and second mortgage and some taxes and assessments in a fashionable section of Brooklyn Magistrate Dodd SMG POLE DOF HOLD-P V ALERT ATION in Gates Avenue Court decided this morning he should have the privilege | See Noted Criminal Loiter- of cutting his own lawn, trimming his own hedges and landscaping the place to suit himself, The residents of Crown Height agree with him. In connection with the decision Pat-0—————————————— rick Coycle of No. 874 Lefferts Ave-| FORD COLLIDED nue and M M, Milidantri of the \eceived suspended sen-| WITH A FORD; FINE tences ’ PAID BY HENRY FORD The trouble is that Crown Heights is very close to that section of Brook-] Accused of Reckless Driving lyn known as Pig Town. Years ego! Fis Father (of Ridgewood) 1 to keep pigs and hence smite . the section from which Rescues Him. same street it was le the name of have come wuch well known politicians! _ When Charles Ford of No. $309 as the late “Liney"' Tracey, Now tho| Putnam Avenue, Ridgewood, Queens, was fined $26 in the residents keep goat The pickings on have been much better and Milidantri billys and n Ridgewood Court by Magistrate Conway to-day for reckless driv- collided with a Heights the Coyle annies'and Crown ing, by which h a few of the kids of the Ea oes Hold driven by Acthur Newent, pigtown. Grass is grass, bt ; ; ‘ hedee and the succulent leaf of tho] the fine was paid by Ford's Rose of Sharon and the edible] father, Henry Ford. The elder shoot of the young hydrangea are] jrord is a well-known resident of not to be found in pigtwon. Even a} Ridgewood. goat gets tired of a diet of tin cans Nyltoim, who lives at No, 1669 and cotton stockings und yearns at{ Afadison Street, Ridgewood, said times for the damask tablecloth afd] the accident occurred in Myrtle silk hosiery that may be had for the} Avenue, Ridgewood, at Fresh taking on Crown Heights’ washlines Bieyelo Patrolman Cook of the At- Pond Road. 1 motor truck rd was driving a lantic Avenue station was told to a0 alco sispaa Pirie eriee’ tie ala jintroduers twa] PRAYERS STOPPED Moights bad registered tet tne| BY SMOKE IN CHURCH reporters he told the stery Short Circuit Cuts Off patrolman, “fT knew,” said “these goats never found their way we vide th “ there witout & lenders and:-ad) when Lights in St. Francis Xavier. prayer in the Church of glanced over I reached the place I the fiften or twenty that were making] yy. ay ie la ag and shrubbery look like it ne e 7 asshe i rs made the | St. Francis Navier, Sixth Avenue and Wheat ficlds of Kansas look like years}i7th Street, wery driven to the street ind legs, eating the elimbin dlors : ne _ ili eee Ta feed wire burned the insulatton, ose bush off a stucco chimne rONDid you ever hear a goat swear? }cut off the lights and filled tho Never did. Well ,that bird can. I just |onurch with smoke and fumes, parked my wheel and went up behi®! | 7 Fee -acnartinenttew ea called ee ait aah ee Be ad eat but, because the short cireult took across the hindquarters. He ac be aio 08 te eo Around And etanding ub. dh hashing |pioce Ind Areproot’yaulew here. tt = Mo eee rand {feed wire connects with the main EE eee ots ie youco,’ T aatd, [Edison wires, beneath the pavement, se a ae rar atime’ and knowing [Had dimiculty in extinguishing the on’t you swear at me,’ and kno es Baty ts : he was the boss of the whole buneh 1 |!" An emergency wagon of the just cornered him and the he started Edison Company was called and its home on the run, I didn’t know wher bale oO the feed eed hieaa eee he lived but [chased him and all the ne dan was stig others followe On the waylwe pick shipers soon were able to resume up about nine more. ‘Then when they {thelr places. turned into Milldante AendiandiCoyle |WUN hee mean aN served the summons. ‘ The residents of Crown Helghts} |, Aeacanaavine Vaan were loud in their praise of Patr Tyo) windredi salons ohol, man Cook's work and if he keeps the quattity of mash and a quantity of goats away for week many of them] “home bre together with a large will get a chance to. cut. their own] atill, was found by the Hoboken police ihe ty when they raided the candy shbp |B dased trles Van Cf, No. 359 Fourth pos Hoboken, to-day, the pollee say MUST KEEP CLEAN L Clif was arrested, charged with I SE luting the Vol Not. DELICETESSEN STORES|'! '"» ! ing With Others and Save Payroll. What police are convinced was to have been a daring hold-up of a pay- master carrying a payroll to an of- fice near Tenth Avenue and 24th Street was frustrated shortly after noon to-day when Detectives Finn, Mugege and Rafters of the pickpocket squad discovered a man they recog- nized as a criminal while cruising tn a police automobile and kept him under surveillance for half an hour, ‘The man, known to the “Klondike? Charles Leonard, of Mills Hotel No by the detectives to have hunded a re police forty- was said as two, volver to one of two other men he met and the three lottered in hallways un til a man carrying a satchel alighted from a taxicab and entered an office nearby. Meanwhile a fourth man ap proached ‘Klondike’ and whispered to him, whereupon the quartette started to escape, Two were caught by the detectives. Police believe the fourth man wes tipped off that the detectives were watching Taken to Police Headquarters, “Klondike? was found to have a 38- calibre revolver up his right sleeve, attached to the shoulder of his by a rubber band. the revolver to ont This band caused snap back into his sleeve after he had taken it out. The other prisoner, Morris Berger, twen- ty-cight, of No. 846 East Houston Street, also had a revolver, his being found in his belt, cowboy fashion Both men denied they plunned a hold-up and were held on charges of ,violation of the Sullivan Law Chey wouid not divulge the ngmos of thelr companions BRITAIN WILL BEGIN PAYING DEBT OCT. 15 WASHINGTON, Britain's Intention #5,000,000,000 war Sept. 15.—Grenr to settle fn full her debt to the United States, regardless of the Kuropean n- nancial situation, has been offictaily communteated to the American Debt Funding Commission, it was said at the ‘Treasury Department to-day. The Amertean Commission atso has been offictally informed, through the Nritish Ambassador here, that the pay- inent of {nterest on the British obit- gation will be October 15 next, waen the semi-annual Interest amounting to about $125,000,000 falls due, It ts not expected that the funding operations will be far advaneed by thit time. GRAPES COST FIVE TIMES MORE THAN ERE PROHIBITION Shipment of Alicante Fetch $120 a Ton; Destined for New York. SANTA ROSA, Cal., Sept. 15. Alicante grapes sold here to-day for $120 a ton for New York ship- ment. This is five times the price before Prohibition. CITIZEN’S LIBERTY SHARPLY DEFINED WITH A $2 FINE Sometimes, Magistrate Says. Ilis Rights Must Be Curbed in Own Interest. ‘The right of a free and independent Amert “Jaywalk" or of traffic to-day by a decision Magistrate McQuade in the Tombs Court in the ar Washburn, a mechant- er of No. 39 West 39th The Magistrate enforced the with a $2 fine which Mr. id. Policeman average citizen to cross streets in deflance gulations was denied handed down by Street. opinion Colgan said Mr. Washburn refused to stay on the side= walk at Broadway and Canal Street yesterday the signal had been th and south traffie sing. At Colgan's second tay on the sidewalk, the id Mr. Washburn be- erous on the subject of his given to s at the ei direction t policeman came bot “rights."" “Sometimes,” said Magistrate Me- Quade, "it is necessary to take drastic action in protecting a free and inde- pendent American citizen from the results of an abuse of his rights. The policeman did right in making the ar- rest.” esr $270,000,000 DUE + GOVERNMENT TO-DAY WASHING'TO pt. receivable by the Government to-day as the third instalment of the 1922 income and profits taxes will amount to about $270,000,000, it was extimated by the ‘Treasury 4 Receipts from this source In March aggregated —$393,000,000 and dn» Juno $295,000,000, while the eollections for Dec. 16 ure expected to reach $250,000, - 000, making the total from income and profits taxes for 1922 about $1,196,000, - 000, Aw againat 15.—Revenues the amounts due to-day the Treasury pas ‘outstanding about $260,000.00 of Treaury certificates: ma- tured yesterday which will ba reeelvablo in payment of taxes as well as victory notes of the 4% per cent. series, DMES RAIDED BY DRY AGENT CAMDEN, Sept. 15,—ixty-eight re: the southemm section of the raided ‘o-day in search for liquor Inw violations. Many kinds of stills were found and several hundred kallons of Hauor wes conflecated donces ti ty wer Magistrates Fnforce Sanitary Law in Brook! Dale in New Brooklyn, to-d Jersey Ave- gnified Magistrate S nue Court Gey: | Advance Sale! Tall Winter Yabries of puntshin ens intention § proprietors of delicate unsanitary conditions obtain na Joyce, Health Department moned Herman Newman, dun room at No. 17 Johna Miss Joyee said she found gar floor sof the place and that prepared amid 1 his lunchrooms where Miss An- inspector owne of and on the food was dirt and filth Newman 8 n't had time had id he was so busy he o clean the place. trate Dale fined him $25 with the ternative of ten days in Jail, He taken to Jail. al was Abraham Osipowitz, owner of a lunch- room at No. 471 Ralph Avenue, Brook- lyn, against whom Miss Joyce made similar charges, was fined §25, which he paid. ee FIFTY FOOTBALL MEN REPORT AT WILLIAMS WILLIAMSTOWN, Sept. 15.—Will- {amy football practice started Here yea- terday with a squad of fifty men report- ing to Perey Wendell, It was the largest per of candidates on hand for tho yuNe Light work was In order, although a \ tentative varsity was selected for al Oso few plays. Capt. Boynton was tried out at halfback He has played centre & for two yenrs. Another shift showed gh Robinson going from guard to tackle ¢ ‘Ten 1 men were includ Mondo, tou and Richmond ti ¢ erana, Pease, who } | position last year, ts expected to- day a = BRASS INSTEAD OF NICKEL IN PHONE COSTS HIM $50 1,500 Combinations ‘ Jardy, No. 306 Lioyd Sireer rount_ by Justices Herbert, Voorhe fashions for your 1 Moss in Sr sions, Bros choice at hen Ae egnuink cant tromts suit or overcoat Bor A EInant Teoh mea melons le roncande him and made the arrent. 4 OTHERS AT sae > USES GASOLINE TO CLEAN °3@and°42 BED—NOW IN HOSPITAL ) M \usuetn Karp, fifty, of No. 9 ¢ a 1 treet, started cleaning her i f gasoline w Soe ni Just to get you startle S 4 [IN Most men are “slow starters” in order- ing Fall clothes. They wait for cold 3 weather to crank them into action. But here’s a primer for early buying that no smart trader can resist. 23 selections from our $36 and $42 grades—in new Fall suitings and over- coatings—specially priced at $30—to get things going briskly in our tailor shops in advance of the Fall rush. The equal of $60 quality elsewhere! Whether now or later, this is the thrifty trip to make for your Fall clothes. 8) For only here, can you get a retail ser- vice at a wholesale price. But you'll get an extra saving for your promptness if you'll order now! THE ROYAL TAILORS Order direct from any of our # *45th and Broadway [2% 42nd and Fifth Ave. ©) of & wes Jew York salesrooms (upstairs) — mes} *Columbus Circle [ureivay] S Park Row and Beekman oTimes Square and Columbus Circle Stores open evenings. Others 8.00 to 6 every day FOR OPENING