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hi AT vl eames al 5 RUEENS WIL GET BOOSTOF 471871 ~ IN IY’ BUDGE FOR DEAD BIRD THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1922. wun wean OFFICERS RESIN **) BECAUSE COLONEL 7] BNTALEE MAN Company EL, 106th Infantry, National Juard of New York. Their resignations which are ten- dered to Col. Thomas Fairservis, com- mander of the regiment, were the re- sult of their contention thut the Colonel should be a man who saw service overseas, Capt. Evans said: “My resignation represents a differ- ence of opinion in the matter of run- ning the regiment. Col. Fairservis ts not an overseas officer, and the over- seas officers feel than an overs man should be Colonel. We desire to keep Politics out of the regiment and to Arms apartment hotel in the Columbia Heights section of Brooklyn, wus out of town last night. He was appointed Colonel of the 106th Regiment (the old Brooklyn twenty-third) after the war JACK JOHNSON FINED FOR SPEEDING HIS AUTO on Boxing With Be Lifted Soon. Jack Johnson may ndt be as fast In the ring as when he beat Jim Jeffries, but he atill can make an auto go, Jack was before Magistrate House tn Traffic Hopes Bi MACY REPLACES COAL WITH OIL FOR FUEL. Hoge Engines to Furnt Meht and Pew The coal will worry to R. H. Macy & Co., Inc., this winter, They have just finished in- stalling oll-burning appezatus which will provide all heat. ilent for the store. So large are the hew engines that no entrance in the build- rituation cause no and power DYE FADED CURTAINS, SKIRT SWEATER, DRESS OR COAT IN “DIAMOND DYES” ing would accommodate even the sep- arate pleces keep it on military basis. Other of- ficers probably will resign."* When a vacancy in the Court to-day charged with driving hin automobile at thirty miles an hour on list of | St. Nicholns Avenue, Oct. 8 Old Brooklyn Twenty-Third Highway, Street Cleanin ighway reel 8 Infantry {fs Disrupted by Large holes had to be ildin, ureaus > Je sk oad : " and Building B Strife Majors occured last week, Col. Fuir-] "I didn't know { waa going that }OPened In the sidewalk to admit them. Each package of “Diamond Dyes" |ings, everything! Buy Diamond to Get Most of It. A servis Ignored Capt. Kvans, the tunk-| fast” Jack sald. | t've been driving & Tho oll-burning engines just in-| contains directions x0, simple “any | Dyes—no other. kind—then perfect pearass a ake Jour for twenty years and thin fied now require a daily average | WO vA € 0 o ” a i P See: Sia Se Bets ing Klett of ee neeirent and ADs Feat’ cline tive aoer bean eutaeneal feel ome on Row require a daily average | eee ees ee be her F us earns home dyeing is guaranteed. Just tell tah ‘ap am J. Evans, First 1ieu-| pointed Capt. John Kochendorter to] {' | ve ever heen, summoned for tof 6,000 gallons of oll. They will need Ake Hew ven if she has) your druggist whether the material The Budget Committee of th tenant Edward F. Davis and Second] ll the vacancy. Capt. Evans sald} ijy paid his fine. announcing he wW 8,000 when the new building is com. [Meyer dyed before, she can put a) you wish to ‘dye is wool or silk, or Board of Estimate has agreed to al- Lieutenant Thomas M. Allison, ail off last night that this action of the} popetully waits ‘or the boxing ban ons| pleted e principal saving in the | Shy fadeless color into shabby skirts,| whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed Borougt President Conhclly of whom were in action in France, re-| Colonel's was the ‘climax.’ Col.] him to be lifted in thie State ao hefOll-burning machinery ia not in tuer| {Teese Waists, coats, —stockings,| goods, Diamond Dyes never streak, signed *alrserv! Gould: earn: tha: money ‘baCK sweaters, coverings, draperies, hang- sngts fade, or run, yesterday as ABRAHAM &STRAUS uc the officers of who lives at the Standish ‘cost but In human labor jens an increase of $471,871 over o budget for last year for main- enance purposes. few Increases have been provided for in the Ad- ministration Department but practl- ly all of the increase will go to the ighway, Street Cleaning and Build- Ing Bureaus. This increase has been owed because of the phenomenal owth in the borough during the year, The committee has not yet taken up Mr. Connolly's applice tion for an increase of salary for all of his bureau heads. In the Highway Bureav have been allowed to provide salaries for superintendents of garages, for additional truck drivers and a few ad- ditions to the clerical force. The big item of increase in this bureau has been for thy employment of laborers and skilled mechanics. A total of 16,500 additional days for laborers and 10,100 additional days for skilled mechanics was allowed. The laborers will be put to work upon the repair pf the borough highways and also to Miss Lillian Gatlin, founder of the National Association of Aviation Gold Star Mothers, completed her trans- continental flight in air mat] planes Francisco at 6.45 o'clock he landed Air Mail Service station, at Curtiss Field, Mineola, L. I, She made the trip in actual flying time of 27 hours, 11 minutes. The flight was under the auspices 4f the Air Mail Service, to express she service's endorsement of a move- ment to set aside March 2, 1923, as a day for national remem'1ancs of dead aviators. BROOKLYN Store Hours: 9 to 5:30 Telephone: Main 6100 increases Sale of Women’s and Misses’ Fur-Trimmed COATS FOR THIS. $69. 50 SALE ONLY Responding to a great fashion demand A. & S. sent broad- cast to assemble the smartest ur trimmed coats obtairi- able—in fact, uxurious with furs—as furs have become such an important style factor. After viewing over one hundred coats, twenty-one of the best models were chosen by process of elimination. Here they are, ten pictured, and just as many more ascinating styles. BUNDLE OF CLOTHING SAVES WOMAN'S LIFE Overcoat Worker Struck by Trolley and Dragged Ten Feet. A bundle of overcoats she was carry- ing home to be stitched for a nearby fa aying asphaltic macadam on new] factory saved the life of Jane Beroni, ‘ ‘ , No. 140 Mulberry Street, treets. There are indications that ‘as struck by a Grand Street SMEMe Borough President will be given ‘Street. this more liberal estimate this year to jurchase materials than was given t year. In the Street Cleaning Bureau a ew assistant superintendent at 2,500, an assistant engineer at 8,000, two district superintendents t $3,200, four new section foremen nd four assistant section foremen have been allowed. The Borough President did not ask for any appre- WE abie increase in the force of street feeopers, notrithstanding a large in- crease in the area of paved streets, because he has asked for a liberal allowance for street sweeping ma- chines, which will help in keeping the streets clean, doing the work quicker and better, There were allowed also ninety-two additional laborers for manning the proposed disposal plants in Queens, who will be ut to work provided the residents of tne borough get through objecting to sites for these plants 1 time to have them erected during the coming year. ‘The most important additions have been made in the Queens Building Bureau. John W. Moore, Superin- tendent of this bureau, has been com- DA pefled to make an effort to dispose of Ii the great quantity of business com- ing into his department since the re- beaatval in building operations and since WAGE exemption went into effect, with WA practically the samg force that he had for ten years past. The result has been to crowd every one and at times has forced even the Commis- sioner himself and his inspectors to ist with the clerical work in the office. The committee has allowed wo new clerks at $ several tenographers, five additional plan examiners at $2,160, one chief In- tor at $2,760 and fifteen addi- nal inspectors at $2,160. trolley car at Mulberry morning. The overcoats caught between the fender and the girl, saving her from] the wheels, although she was pushed ten | | feet along thé track. She was taken to Bellevue Hospital with burns on her right cheek and leg caused by the cur- rent from the channel rail and with a possible fracture of the right leg. Trimmed Hats $5.98 Quite the loveliest hats imaginable at the moderate price exploited in this special offering. New and fas- cinating versions of the more exclusive modes. Included are hats of rich fabrics, hats with coquet- tish tilts and becoming angles, hats for the miss, younger woman and matron, and variety the allure of the entire collection. Panne and Lyons velvets are given preference, with trimmings of ostrich, burnt fancies, “ribbons;’ novelty ornaments, large decorate chous of velvet as pictured, and in a perfect maze of newest colorings; also all blacks and browns. Every Coat Boasts a Handsome Fur Collar All are typical winter coats, ' warmly interlined, beauti- fully hand finished and every one silk crepe or peau de cygne silk lined throughout. Women’s sizes 36-44. Misses’ sizes 14-18. | Raisin Bread Order from your grocer or \| your bake shop now. Old-fashioned, full-fruited raisin bread with at least eight luscious raisins to the slice—the kind you like, Women's Capes of Arabella cloth, black, brown, or Navy blue; sMawl collar of black fox. Misses’ Coat of Samara cloth, narrow side panels, “sorrento, brown, black; wolf collar. Central. A, & B.—Becond Floor, To get the best, in which the raisin flavor permeates the loaf, ask for bread that’s made with Sun-Maid Seeded Raisins the best raisins for bread, and all home cooking uses. A. & B.—Meszanine, Hast, _ Everfast Bloomers Every Pair $1.94 Guaranteed It is seldom that anything as thoroughly practical as these new bloomers succeeds in being so good-lucking and at the same time so moderate in price. Everfast is a sateen that looks just like satin, Had Yeur Iron Today? oo 400 THEATRE PATRONS IN PANIC OVER CHILD GRAND RAPIDS Mother's Shrieks Cause Uproar When She Misses Infant. A woman sitting near the rear of the Windsor ‘Thentre, a ploture house in Grand Street, near Clinton, became so engrossed In the film yea- if terday afternoon that she did not no- Vii tice that her child had crawled from her lap and disappeared in the dark- motion When the picture came to an end the woman discavered her child was gone and burst into shrill screams, The woman sitting next to her did like- wise. In a moment the house was in ‘an uproar, Jacob Forman, manager of the house, dered the lights turned on and has- ened to the panic-stricken mothe Boon women were shrieking all house, some yelling “which was being echoed Yh Most of the 400 or more persons In he house surged out, many of them JH with torn clothing and bruised Mmbs. PBome one turned in a fire alarm. Some Ufpre else called for the police. Within Rve minutes the reserves from the Clin- fon Street Police Station and half a EBosen companies of firemen were on Meee scene. By that time the excite- ent was over and people were has- nening back to the theatre in search Wot articles they had dropped in thelr pay > HBISHOP ANNOUNCES IRANSFER OF RECTORS Changes Made Recently Among Churchmen, €hbishop Hayes has transferred the . John F, Curran from the Church of Sacred Heart, Highland Falls, to St sedict the Moor, West 53d St ; the /, Matthias J. Daly, from St. Joseph's arch, Tremont, to the Church of the phany, Second Avenue and 2ist t, and the Rev. Joh M. Fraons, . Columba’s Church, West brie!’s, New Roche Joseph O'Connor goes from Christopher reet, to Bt s, East 96th Street: the Bernard Reardon, from St, Peter's h, Monticello, to St, Peter's » Richmond, Staten Island, and v, Jeremiah Toomey, from the th of the Epiphany to St, Charles eo, West 142d Street, | FURNITURE OUR NEW CREDIT TERMS $3.00 Delivers $50 5. ‘ss $100 4-Piece Dining Room 4-Plece Bedroom: Suite . 3-Plece Living Room 8 Daven-O Sofa Bed . FOR ETHING SATURDAY r Toth St. L" Station, 103d St, Subway Station 2 blocks away, FisHER Bros COLUMBUS AVE BET. 103" & 104" ST Teeth Without Plates I Save Decayed Teeth, Tighten Loose Teeth, Treat Diseased Gums, Badly Decayed Teeth and Roots Care- fully Extracted, Teeth ly SETS_ OF TEET! Brus eee, Titsus snd tntors of Gold,” Siiver and "Porcela Made at Re: ble Prices. BROKEN PLATES REPAIRED WHILB YOU WAIT o#BL00 hy 103 E, 125th St., cor, Park Av. (Over Loft's Candy Store.) 740 Lexington Av.,cor.59th St. (Over Liggett's ig Store.) 169 E. 34th St,, cor, 3d Av. Women's coat of Samara cloth, black,Navy blue, or brown, blacls caracul collar, cuffs and pockets. Misses’ cape of black Arabella cloth, black fox collar, and side pieces, stunning panel effect. Women's Lustrosa Coat grey, taupe or black fox coll Misses’ Coat of Arabeila cl in black, brown, or navy, col ed with beaver or wolf. brown, Navy blue, or kit fox in Women’s Lustrosa Cloth Wrap, brown with beaver collar; black ar, or Navy blue with squirrel. joth lar- cioth Misses’ Coat of Lustross graceful sleeve beaver collar on brown, squirrel on navy or black Women’s Arabella cloth wrap; black with squirrel collar, Navy or brown with beaver or squirrel. Misses’ Wrap of Arabella H cloth, in black, deep collar and cuffs of squirrel or victka, A & B.—Becond 0) Centra the same lustre and sheen, and is guaranteed to be fade proof against everything! Of course, the garments launder wonderfully, and they wear almost forever. Hemstitched ruffles make aclever finish, and they are cut full and reinforced, in most attract- ive shades of honeydew, orchid, pink, Copenhagen, grey and black. Extra sizes at 82.94. A. & 6.—Becond floor, Hast. More Matchless Values in the Annual Sale of Gloves For Men, Women and Children For the third day of this great sale, six splendid items have been selected as examples of the extraordinary values that prevail. Hurry here with your gift list, and consider carefully your own glove needs as this oppor- tunity is one of rare occurrence. Women's French 2-Clasp | Men's All- Leather Auto Gloves, §1,14 Gloves Glace kidskin gloves; over- Black, all-leather, gauntlet seam sewn and Paris point | style wth strap at wrist; fleece backs. All black, white, brown, ined, beaver, tan or grey; also white with black or black with white Women's French Gaunilet stitching, Gloves, §1.95 Women's ag 9 Lisle 1Six-button glace, lambskin Gloves, 59¢ gloves; pique sewn, Paris point Imported 12-button fabric | Peer backs. Black, white, gloves. Mastic, mode or beaver. Children’s One-Clasp Gloves, 79¢ Suede or capesk n gloves; fle lined. Tan or brown capeskin or grey or beaver suede. white with black or black with white stitching. Women's Mousquelaire Gloves, $1.95 16-button white gloves. >» lamb A. & B.—Stroet floor, Central