The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1922, Page 18

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1929. isa peemenceen ce: = am } '|Winner of the Corinthian Cup And Mount at Greenwich Show i Uncle Sam to Quit as Landlord To 1,000 Women—Too Many of "Em Fight Against Management of Union Station Plaza Hotels May Cause Government to Withdraw. WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (Copyright)—Uncle Sam, disheartened and disappointed, soon {s going out of the hotel business. Under extreme difficulties he bas stuck to the task ever since the closing days of the war, but the job of keeping house for 1,000 women, all of whom have distinct housekeeping ideas of their own, is proving at last much too much i Two young ladies, leaders in . bh @ 4 ment to cust the management of the ARGONAUT YIELDED $20,000,000 GOLD kena en Governmient Hotels on the Union Sta. } tion Plaza, have themselves beon j ousted, and now they are threatening to sue somebody or anybody they can oem ie hands upon. It ts extremely dif- cult te sue Uncle Sam himself—as o matter of fact Congress has to give j asxent to that—but the Irate ladies are ' going to sue his agents if they can find * just who fs actually responsible for the Government. Byer since Production Has at Times Exceeded $1,000,000 a Year. JACKSON, Cat., Sept. 19.-—The Ar gonaut mine, where forty-seven meu met denth, was one of the first work- ings opened in the Mother Lode coun- try of Callfornia, and only slightly younger is the Kennedy, whence the rescue work inte the Argonaut was conducted. At first the Argonaut was unprofit- able, but under development it has yielded more than $20,000,000. At times its production has exceeded $1,- 000,000 annually. The working {for- merly was known as the Pioncer Claim. The mine has an inclined shaft, 4,900 feet in length and its it working is 4,060 fect below ted peter FLIES SO THICK BOSTON of that shaft. The Kennedy has a| THOUGHT ITWASSNOWING vertical shaft 4,050 feet deep. It is several hundred feet lower on the mountainside than the Argonaut, which accounts for the fact that a connection could be made between its 8,600 foot level and the 4,200 foot qwolves | !¢vel of the Argonaut. P the temporary dormi- was a xnovement on foot then by tho wiser heads of Government to But the num- ber of war workers who had to re~ main here to clear up the aftermath Miss becky Lamer, with her favorite mount Silvercrest, was the winner of the Corinthian Cup for the third successive time. Photo takeo atthe ninth annual Greenwich horse show at Port Chester, N. Y. gray up and down structures that some one said suggested examples of the very best early New England style of architecture. “ephoa g times within the past eighteen months Congress has threat- ‘ened to close the hotels. It was gaid they were not paying running ex- The “inmates” refuted this and raised the cry that landlords were at the homes. Public health offictals unable to determine what caused invasion or why the {lies left be- night fall Into wel Invasion of City jaburhs Pass zles Health Authorition, BOSTON, Sept. 19.—Boston and tts suburbs had an Invasion of millions of tiny flies which 6 thick that many thought it was inow storm. Scores of person: led the news-'tion at the State convention of the Paper offices when the insects ewarnie1 party here yesterday. BROOKLYN= CONFEDERATE VETER. ON REPUBLICAN ROANOKD, Va., Sept. 1%—J. Will- iamson McGavock of Wythe County. 2 Confederate veteran, got the Republi can Senatorial nomination by acclami- AN ene ees RUN: TICK tement board. It is @ fact that during tho war the girl Government clerks who came to Washington were forced at times to live five and six in a rdom, partly because of lack of accommo- dations and largely because of the exorbitant prices charged. The Government hotels come under the general jurisdiction of the House ‘Senate Committees on Public OPPENHEIM.GLLINS &C FULTON STREET—BROOKLYN Announce for Tomorrow a Sale of FURS Of Exceptional Quality. and Exclusive Design at Prices Most Unusually Moderate + Present squabble ts neither "* said is 35 es ites BF Natural Muskrat Coats {15.00 Regular Value 145.00 Self Collar and Cuffs, 40 in. Long Natural Raccoon Coats 185,00 Regular Value 225.00 ; Self Collar and Cuffs, 40 in. Long Genuine Mole Coats 275.00 Regular Value’ 350.00 Self Collar and Cuffs, 40 in. Long Hudson Seal Coats 275.00 Noteworthy Values in SMALL FURS at Sale Prices Derebe rs a ARR A SORA OE LOOT LE OLE OEE LOE CE ALO A SQUIRREL SCARFS One Skin 7.50 ninety olesepeaanese nine den. MINK SCARFS Regular Value 350.00 aaa ana Dyed Muskrat, 40 in. Long Generous Self Collar and Cufts 16.50 Hudson Seal Coats 325.00 Regular Value 425.00 . Dyed Muskrat, 40 in. Long Collar and Cuffs of Skunk or Squirrel Alaska Sealskin Coats 325.00 Regular Value 425.00 Guaranteed U. S. Government Skins Skunk Collar and Cuffs, 40 in. Long STONE MARTEN SCARFS One Skin 25.00 FOX SCARFS Closed Effect © 29.75 ncpienipinalia achicha! Hudson Seal Coats / 305,00 | ‘Gaertn Regular Value 525.00 89.75 Dyed Muskrat, 45 in. Long Natural Skunk Collar and Cuffs - cat ik pa BAUM MARTEN Hudson Seal Capes 395.00 boa Pit Regular Value 525.00 55.00 Dyed Muskrat, 45 in. Long Graceful Collar of Kolinsky PLATINUM AND Alaska Sealskin Coats 525.00 | BEIGE Fox scarrs | Regular Value 675.00 . ry Guaranteed U. S. Government Skins Deep Self Collar, 45 in. Long ‘ i LL. yar Sues Rich Widow Who Jilted Him Woman Turned Him Down, He Says, Just as He Was ants here and in northern New York, has ®uought suit for $30,000 for! breach of promise against Mrs. Soptiia Carool, widow of George Carcol, Utica millionatre. Herbst says bis proposal was ac. cepted and they planned a wedding trip to Burope. ports and pledged the officials necrecy, wishes. The wedding date was eet _——— res ing of what was to have been his wed- ding day, when, as he wes starting for the ehurch, he reovived a note As He Was Starting For Church): RACING AQUEDUCT RAC! SPECIAL RACE TRAI lenve Penn. Station, 334 St. and 7th Ave. trom’ Fi: 12.13 and at Tr: Mrs, Carool over the telephone in- timated that a settlement would be made, sceneratnnaileeaainene ABANDONS CHANNW! swim, DOVER, England, Sept. 19 (Associated Press).—The Russian swimmer Indrit- panov, who has been waiting here’ nome days for a favorable opportunity to ewim the Engiiah Channel, started his attempt at midnight last night. He was Fre] Oblised to abandon It at 6 o'clock this received no information of Mrs. Ca. | morning, bowever, owing to unfavorable rool's chante of heart until the morn- éonditions, Setting Out for Wedding. SYRACUSE, Sept. 19.—Framk Herbst, formerly proprietor of restaur- MUSSTAN iatbusy Ave. ¥ interveys 3p te Pr. for on Also via Fulton Bt. “1 y STAND, $9.08 | and he made elaborate preparations for this trip, even arranging for He obtained pass- and in accordance with her er f ko 2 gga ° The Musio < \ Musie Conter Center of ‘ of i Brooklyn Brooklyn 7 BROOKLYN=-NEW YORK A Startling Low Price for Emerson Phonographs_—- Exquisite Sheraton 88 $225 Console Model A Sale’ goes That Presents a Truly Astounding Opportunity Inva Truly Lovely Instrument for the Large Size benef 1 Coc An instrument of famousmake, whose musical quality is as sat- isfying to the ear as the case that houses it is to the eye! A feast for both! A price that almost challenges your cre- dence! Wl The $225 Size--- The $225 Quality! Le: » 38 Inch Henn 404 Toches Depth, 2134 Inches Of such an instrument as the Emerson $225 Console we can- not say too much. Nor can any- one come to a sale in which the Emerson $225 Console is going to be sold for $88 with expectations too high for fulfilment. Nor leave here feeling otherwise than that to have bought one at such a low figure is almost too good to seem possible. For this large model of the Emerson means the very finest music as well as a handsome addition to the home. You Will Agree That This Is the Greatest Opportunity by Far That Any Lover of Fine Music Who Has Coveted an Equally Fine Instrum«\ j» Ever Had or Can Reasonably Hope to Have. RUE, Loeser’s has, once or twice before, held sales of other well-known makes of Phonographs. We have at times sold such makes at prices that ° created a decided sensation. But none more famous than the Emerson— none more magnificent in tone, none even quite so elegant in design and cabinet work, nor so fine in finish as the Emerson $2@5 Sheraton model has ever been offered by us, nor any store anywhere that we know of, at 50 low a price. A short time ago the Emerson Company failed. Their machines were too expensively Luilt, too finely _ finished, it seems, to be sold profitably at the prices competition made it imperative to sell them, So Loeser’s was offered a number of the beautiful Sheraton Mode} Consoles at a figure that has made it possible to mark them at an unheard of figure—883. They are of elegant appearance—inside and out. Finer matoehay then is used, or ever has been used, in many other mekes. steal eas metal parts. Plush-covered turntables. ins of the more .com- monly used felt or other cloth, And so on. ‘ 10 Fine Records With Every Instrument Nothing extra to pay for theset They are all excel- Jently played and sung by good artists, and include about 100 different titles. Some of them: Three o'Clock in the Morning Swanee River Moon The Among the Songs: Mister Gallagher and Mister Shean My Rambler Rose Sweat Indiana Homes intments than is the But no finer are the *p ts onographs,, heart and the soul of these : The motor—extra heavy—steady and ‘absolutely true—as silent almost as your watch'!—one of the strongest and most serviceable ever made. * And the tone—the soul of a Phonograph—is bril- . liant without harsh—sweet and full and.clear without being muffled or sounding too loud, Raa anaes It js model with which you cannot fail to be Melody in F as delighted as you will be astonished. Spring Song ‘ ; ‘ Come see it and hear it tomorrow. Terms: Anything You Say, Within Reason Losser's—Fourth Floor. Stumbling Hot Lips Dancing Foot Honolulu Honeymoon Howaiian Nightingale Medley Old-time Songs

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