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4 > 4 ' Money to Loan 1 EN DING money on imj proved New York City realty is an important part of our business. Making and keeping friends is a more important part. We do both because our charges are fair and we don't deal in red tape. You are cordially invited to consult 160 Broadway Saw York ibb Strmst . . . Brooklyn 161-i'l Jamaica Ave. Jamaica, N. Y. 383 E. 149th Street . New York Lawyers Title ? and Trust Company OurStoresAreQuality Stores Our GoodsAreQualityGoods In line with our policy we now supply our trade with ROGERS RICHEST MILK Fresh Packed In Glau This milk HHinnmnnui costs no more SmmSSSS than milk less rich, packed in less sanitary form. We Recommend Rogers Richest MinnnnnmiliH At all stores of DANIEL REEVES, Inc. /gs I British I I Beef-Steak Dinner j | Demonstrating that I I "real food" is still to be had! ! rtu c?i?p. c c? I Im viw uii^iaiiu ^ tame iui line m j beef gains added lustre with g ^ theservingofthisheartydish. g fl ?A thick slice carved from a juicy ? |l round of roasted beef; a tender lamb ? II chop; half of a fresh ripe tomato | t| lightly broiled; a big generous potato. g . g baked to fluffy mealiness, split and g g crowned with a serving of the finest 9 I | fresh dairy butter. I a I 5 On an<l?"money g I V/Vy back if you're A | JL nor satisfied!" g SERVED TODAY I g As a feature of the luncheon and din' I g ner menus at both LONGCHAMPS g and ANDRE, where you will learn J I mat all restaurant food doesn't "taste I a the darnel" f 1 -y^ a Today's ! i wmmvo \ i \ > Ig????1?"" The Milk of Today the first great step in milk packing in a generation. ROGERS RICHEST MILK Packed to Order In Glass Much heavier in butter fat |F2iSES4| j and other I II milk solids || than any II milk sold. II II Vacuum || || Sealed !|tTT7TTTTTTTTTff 11 Save the jars. BLOOMINGDALE BROS., 59th St. and 3rd Ave. Cuticura Soap Imparts The Velvet Touch So#p.Ofntm#f?*.T?!emn 2fc<* everyForaairplea iddreii: Ontleora Labor at orlei .Dept X. Ma14?i,Ium I MIGHTY HANDY The milk you long have wanted. Freth Packed in Glaat ROGERS RICHEST MILK True to name the richest milk |flf|ttUllUUiJUUi|l sold. Vacuum II aealed in steril- || ieed glass jars II || that you will II || keep for your |Ih|B9|^V |! jams and jellies. Ill II Easily opened. Ill Ij : No messy tin to HI |J fuss with. Use III I direct from the |||h|||ll|l||l|fl |l neat glass jar. - PAPE BROS., . | KLAN RULES REVISED AS LYNCHINGS GROW Nine Negroes Were Killed in Texas Within Last Three Weeks. WHIPPING JS STOPPED I Practice No Longer Is Sane* tioned by Ku Klux Members. ANTIS' NOW ORGANIZE!) Former Attorney-General of State Is Head of the New Association. \ Special Dispatch to Tub N'bw Vo?k Hhbai.d. Ai'itw, Tex., May 28.?Since May 6 nine negroes have been burned, shot or hanged by unmasked bands of white men in Texas. A tenth wa* accused of the murder of R. C. Choate, a policeman of Texarkana, Ark., just across _the State line. He was captured by a mob from the two States and, after his body had been riddled with bullets, it was publicly burned. Although there is no evidence that the Ku Klux Klan had any part in the recent lynchinge there has been a marked revision of the rules governing the operations of the Klan and whipping of offenders no longer is sanctioned. In Dallas an anti-Kn Klux organiJ zatlon was formed recently with M. M. ! Crane, former Attorney-General of the State, as chairman. This outbreak of lynchings had its ; beginning on the night of May 6, when three negroes were burned to death In j the town of Kirvin for murdering Mise j Eula Awsley, 17, a school girl. At inJ tervals of every few days there have ! been mob unrisines. Girl's Fatbrr Kill* Xrero. The latest of the manifestations of lawlessness occurred on the night of May 26, when Jesse Thomas, a twenty-threeyear-old negro of Waco, was taken in charge by a mob and accused of murdering Harry Bolton and then attacking Mrs. Margaret Hays, who was riding with Bolton in an automobile near Waco. Thomas was confronted by the young j woman in the presence of the mob, and I she identified him as the man who attacked her. Then Sam Harris, her father, shot and killed Thomas. The negro's body was taken to an undertaker's establishment, but the mob recovered and burned it upon the public square in the presence of several thousand persons. When the mob had dispersed it was declared the negro was not guilty. His I relatives insist he was at home on the | night of the crime. It is stated that | Waco is inclined to accept the proof ofI fered of Thomas's innocence. At any j rate five ohtcr negro suspects have been arrested and are In Jail there with proof 1 of guilt pointing to one of them. Harris, who Killed Thomas, offered to give himself up, but was told that no warrant had been issued for him. Snap Curry, Mose Jones and John Cornish, negroes who were burned alive at Kirvln, were employed as farm hands on the plantation of the girl's grandfather. It is asserted that Curry confessed and Implicated the other two negroes In the crime. Curry s body was mutilated before it was burned. His death was witnessed by the other two negroes who soon were to share a similar fate. In the outskirts of th'e crowd that witnessed the burning of the negroes stood Shardlch Green, a negro farmer of the community. He was heard to condemn the action of the I mob. A day later Green's body was j found hanging to the limb of a tree I near Kirvln. Two Others Hanged. On May 17 a young white woman of j FlantorsvtUe was attacked. The suthor| Itles arrested a negro, Tom Early, for | the crime. As soon as the news spread i a mob of 300 white men was formed { and Early was taken out of Jail and ! hanged. Three days after the lynching of | Early another mob hanged Mose Brozier at Alleyton, accused of attacking a twelve-year-old white girl. At Conroe a negro named Joe Winters was arrested on the charge of at? tacking a white woman. He was cap tured by a mob, taken to the court house yard, chained to the Iron fence, a funeral pyre built around him. and burned to death on May 19 in the presence of hundreds. It la aaaerted he confessed. Fanners near Bryan accused a ncgre of having: poisoned their cattle. Or May 23 a mob tied the negro, named Hoysen, to the end of a rope and dragged him to death. Wot a member of the various mobs ha: been arrested. Oov. Neff sent Ranged to Kirvln and Waco, but they did not reach the town until after the excitement was over. At Waco the Ranger! still are guarding the Jail. The citizenship of the .State Is aroused over the unprecedented outbreaks nl mobs and Oov. Neff has been ur?jod tr take action. He has Issued a. statemeni In which he deplores the mob spirit. Hi points out that good would be accomplished If tlie Legislature would pass * law providing for tho trial of person! accused of mob violence In a countj other than the one In which the lynching occurred. It Is regarded as uselesi to arrest or attempt to convict a member of a mob in his own community. r H ill I Tu / jmI \ THE SAYS GIRL OFFERED $500 FOR MURDER ( ontlnued from First Page. j woman. They advised him not to meet her, but to go instead lo the West I Sixty-eighth street station and tell the | police. Ryan did this. He related what had happened to Detective Sergeant Daly, who notified the police of New Rochelle and the Westchester county Sheriff's office. Lieut. McGowan of the New Roj chelle force and other detectives canie ! down to Manhattan Immediately, and : Ryan told his story again. Then he was taken to the Hanover Lunch, where he again repeated what had happened I and parts of his story were corroborated. Information which has reached West| Chester county turned the investigation j of the murder of Clarence Peters last 1 night to a series of incidents alleged | to have taken place in Boston three ! weeks ago, when, acocrding to this report. Walter S. Ward, confessed slayer | of Peters, was observed acting as host ! to Peter, and other men at a party in a Boston hotel. | The party, it is said, was attended by men only. The proprietor of the j ton is said to have made statements re| garding this function. Besides Peters, | another guest was a sailor who was absent without leave from the 17. S. S. Utah, then in ^oston harbor. It is reported, that after the party Ward drove about with Peters and other guests. Denial of Story by Ward, Another development in the. Ward case was the fact that District Attorney Weeks of Westchester county has obtained information which tends to deny I the story told by Ward of his move' ments on the nigbt of May 15 and the morning of May 16. when Peters was shot as the result of an alleged blackmail plot. Ward has declared that he did not leave home on the night of the 15th until midnight, but a person who was at the Ward house that night, attending a bridge party given by Mrs. Ward and her mother, Mrs. Curtis, is said to have told the authorities that this is not true. This person ia said to have declared that on that'night Ward did not come home until 5 o'clock in the morning, and that when he did come In he hurried to the telephone and called a New Rochelle police official und held an extended conversation with him. The District Attorney said that he did not know the nature of this talk, but that he would summon the telephone company to produce records of the call, so that he could find out the name of the official called by Ward. Still another mysterious report to the . e/Tect that l'eters had been robbed of i two $500 bills after he was shot came to | the District Attorney yesterday In an ! anonymous letter written by a woman. No such amount was found on the body by the authorities, but the woman insists In the letter that Peters had the two bills in his pocket. Mr. Weeks said that he was much disappointed yesterday when Attorney William J. Fallon failed to bring: Charley Ross to White Plains for questioning:. Mr. Weeks said that the coroner's inquest into the death of Peters has again I been delayed pending further Investiga| tion. Asked if the Ward bank account | showed any trace of the $30,000 that : the young man alleged he paid in blackmail to Peters and Ross and Jack, Mr. \ Weeks said that there was no means of tracing this money. Ward could not be seen yesterday I for any comment on the effort of the young woman to induce Hie bus boy 1 Ryan to kill some one in his home. He ; remained at home all during the mornj ing and afternoon, playing for some time on the norch with hi* nhllHi-^n At 8 :30 last night lie and Mrs. Ward want for an automobile ride, heading toward New York. ^ NhlpmntF Telia of Peters. James C. Clarke, v.-ho Is known among frequenters of Bryant Park aa "Skipper" and who said lie served with Clarence Peters on the navy training ehip C. W. Morse at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, told of his relations with Peters yesterday. After the training period at the navy yard, Clarke said, he did not j sec Peters again until last summer, when they met one day In Bryant Park. 1 The old acquaintance was renewed, and j some time ago they went to the Hotel | Majestic, on the Bowery, where they j roomed together for some time. I "We had been there for two weeks," j said Clarke, "when Peters came In one night and said : 'I've got a lot of gentlemen 'friends, but there's one guy I like best of all. He's on the police force at New Rochelle, and I'm going to shake all the others for him.' " "If he's such a great man, why don't you shako him down?" Clarke said he suggested to Peters. "Not me." Peters Is quoted as having 1 replied ; "I'm getting enough as it Is." ' Clarke said that one day three months ago he and Peters were sitting in Bryant Park when a Peerless coupe was driven uy>. jx inn, wru uressou ana prosperous looking man got out of the ear. he continued. atid had a private conversation with Peters In the park. He Joined them as they were leaving tho park and > they went to a restaurant In Sixth avenut, near Forty-second street, where he and Peters had rolls and coffee. The stranger paid the bill and they separated. "When we got hack to our room nt the Majestic," said Clarke. "Peters handed , me some money, saying 'There's $2 for you from my friend from Mew Rochell;. He wants to see you privately,' "i didn't pro to see him," Clarke continued, "and I thought nothing morn about the incident until I saw Ward's picture In a newspaper-. That's tho fellow." ' Ed. Malone.v. a former member ot the Fifty-second Bnttallon. Signal Corps, ' U. S. Army, he said, and who Is now \ out of work, also was questioned con* cernlng the case. He knew both Peter* and Ward, he snld, and hnd seen them ? together in Bryant Park twice within 1 the last three months, I Mrs. Pepperdork. who said she waf I the owner of the Little Paris Cafe, on Forty-eighth street, east of Broadway ? told of Ward's visits to her plnce Inst ? summer. "Each time he came with -i t different woman," she said, "and hi HI ICM irir|;iiwiirii lu I unuiiuunrfl 111 nr."'.' I otirster county." Mrs. Pepperdock's husband Ik a chstif i frur. lie worked for Ward as chailffeui r fur .1 vuek, hit- wife said, but r|lllt "he> cause lie couldn't stand prosperity." t The addresses given by Clarke, Ma? loney and Mrs. Fepperdock, all In New York city, could not be Cerlfled wher l the houses were visited and canvasse 1 i last night. Policemen who have patrolled r the Ttrvant Park section during rocen' . months could not recall ever having seer ? men answering the descrtplon ol Clarke and Moloney loitering abou i th< park. 52E5J ) NEW YORK HERAL I ^ > First British Warship at Washington Since 1814 WASHINGTON, May 28.?The British cruiser Raleigh, with Admiral Sir William Pakenham, Commander-in-Chief of the British naval forces on the North Atlantic station, atVbard, arrived at the Washington Navy Yard this afternoon. The Kaleigh was the first British naval vessel of her class which has come to Washington since 1814, when marines were landed here, and was the largest ship ever to attempt the passage of the channel up the Potomac. She displaces : 9,750 tons. 18 KILLED, MANY HIT j IN MOTOR WRECKS Continued from First Page. I control of the steering mechanism and I the car mounted a walkway, tore down an electric light pole and crashed against I the guard rail of the bridge. Had the rail given away the car would have dropped into Pelham Bay, forty feet I below. Galone wag not hurt, but four young persons who were riding with him were Injured. Katherine Velt. 6, of 439 East Eighty-fourth street, was taken to Fordham Hospital suffering from a compound fracture of the leg. Her sister, Emma. 20, and Kudoif Gualtritl, 9, and his brother, Salvatore, 2, of 28 Bedford street, received slight Injuries and left for home after being attended. Galone was arrested on u charge of reckless driving. He said the car ran on the walkway when he attempted to avoid running down several children who had stepped Into its path. : The automobile of George Cummlngs 1 of 558 Argyle avenue. Orange. N. J., ! overturned In a gutter on Llewellyn road, Montelair. yesterday and Cummlngs, his wife and their daughter, Joyce, and two sons, George and Raymond, were injured. They were taken to Mountainside Hospital, but the condl| lion of none was considered to bo serl j ous. xne auiomoDiie capsized atier one I of its wjieels had been struck by another ! motor, driven by Mrs. Kile;. J. O'Brien j of 29 Chelsea place, East Orange, i Two motor cars were In collision at ! Olonmoro avenue and Aahforti street, i Brooklyn, yesterday and two women and la thild wer" Injured. Mrs. Khoda. SetI man, 2fi, of 2738 Atlantic avenue, reI ceivad injuries of the right arm; Mrs. I Gizella Blott. 50, of 395 Ash ford street, | was injured about the head and body, and Jennie Jacobs, lu. of the same adI dress, suffered a fracture, of the right arm. All .went home after they had been attended by an ambulance surgeon. ('mslies Into Telegraph Pole. Michael J. Devaney, 19, of 111 West >Sixty-e.ghth street, lost control of an automobile In Ounhill road. The Bronx, yesterday and it dashed against a telegraph pole. Devaney sustained injuries i to the head and body and was sent to i Fordham Hospital. Two companions rei celved only slight injuries and went i home. Patrolman Charles Carroll of Traffic j Squad B was riding in an automobile j with George Anderson of 417 West Forty-ninth street, when the car was | in collision with a motor truck of Hank | A Schmidt of 3fiS East 118th street. Car, roll was thrown from the automobile , and received lacerations of the head, j He was removed to Harlem Hospital. I Tlje accident occured at 125th street j and Seventh avenue. | An automobile that was being driven i in First avenue ran against an "L." pillar near Fifth street early In the morning and its three occupants were Injured. John Gllmore, 36, of 527 East Seventy-eighth street, the chauffeur, received a fractured skull; James Shahlt. 39, of 186 East Third street, received lacerations of the head, and George J Shick, 23, of 406 Sixth street, sustained I contusions of the right foot. All were i sent to Bellevue Hospital, but Shirk ! later went home. A tnxicab that was being driven south in the Bowery ran against an , l," pll| lar at Prince street, and a passenger. Mack Park, 19. of 1227 Herkimer street. Brooklyn, sustained lacerations of the head and face and a fracture of the ankle. He was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital. The chauffeur escaped injury Thomas Collins, 19, of 123 East 126th street, was struck by an automobile at Madison avenue and 131st street and sustained lacerations of the scalp. He was attended al Harlem Hospital. Morris Irvine, 6. when crossing Houston street at Avenue A. was struck by an automobile. His right foot was fractured. He was taken to Bellevue Hospital. An unidentified boy was taken to Gouverneur Hospital suffering from a rrarrureo skuii micr ne into urrn run down by an automobile at Orchard and Delance.v street*. Morton Doversh of 208 West 119th street was struck by a motor car at Seventh avenue and 115th street and rejcelved contusions of the body. He Is In I Harlem Hospital. [ Patrolman William E. McAvoy. 53, oi | 2fift West 117th street, was dlreetln* j traffic at 125th street and Madison ave nue yesterday when he was struck by sr automobile driven by Charles Besse. .Jr The policeman, who Is attached to Traf flc A. was removed to Harlem Hospita stjfferlnc from a possible fracture of th< skull. Bessc was arrested on a charRi 1 of felonious assault. ?PJM???i Did vom milk this i | A quart a i minimur for a heal not enouj who isn't, Oairymbi co-operativb utig I I?? v> D, MONDAY, MAY 29, I WARRANTS ASKED I IN BOSTON 'ORGY' Men Are Sought by Girls Who Were Thrown Down Stairs. MUST EXPLAIN PRESENCE rr _ i .1 rr .11 i! m-iir>n .minini n?iu it? i tut ,'j of Her Pnrticipation at the 'Party.* Spedat Dispatch to Tint New York Heiui n. , I Boston, May 28.?As a result of the j wild dancing and drinking orgy at 246 ) Commonwealth avenue. Back Bay, on the night of May 16. when two chorus j girls charge that they were attacked and ; I thrown down a flight of stairs, warrants ! for the arrest of all the men who at; tended the party will he asked by the j .girls. Geneva Mitchell, "Sally" principal, lost ^ 1 ! her position through the notoriety at- ; j tached to the affair. Marie L.a Von and j , meaner l-asar, former members of "The hast Waltz" company, playing at the I ( Wilbur Theater, who had hospital ! I treatment for the Injuries they are al- | leged to have received at the hands of | some of the men guests, will make application for the warrants. A prominent Back Bay physician, a dentist and two naval officers are among | the men said to have been in the party. | Mystery surrounds the other feminine members of the party. One from the "Ladles Night'" cast attended, It is said. The actresses, by advice of counsel, are not discussing the events of that night, but one guest declares the girls got "knockout drops." N "One of them was dragged to the cellar and beaten until she was unconscious," says the guest. "The other attack took place in the attic of the apartment; "The party wasn't staged by Miss Mitchell. It just happened there. We started it in a hotel, but we cbuldn't raise hell there, so we went to Geneva's place. When we got there some of the girls were dressed in fancy silk pajamas. There was plenty of drink. "Everything might have gone along all right if it hadn't been a mixed party. There were girls from 'Sally' and girls from 'The I^ast Waltz.' Soon an argument started as to which was the better show. Well, it was a hot argument and ended in a fist fight, the girls attacking one another and some of their clothes being torn off. "Vrioo la .. nl,la?la,l ? ismnrln, r, f some of the hoys and was beaten up. Then they dragged Miss I-asar away and when she- came back she was a sight. The girls were dragged to the front door and sent reeling down the steps." Geneva Mitchell, who danced Into the limelight last March when she eloped with a wealthy school boy. must explain satisfactorily her presence at a riotous party In Boston before she will be per11 titled to reappear as a principal in the musical comedy "Sally." This was the announcement yesterday j i of Florenz Ziegfold, producer of the 1 show. As soon as he lesrned of the | midnight orgy In Boston lie wired the i 17 r.nl r1 rfnnr??tr tn thp ntinw I and call upon him at his office here to,1 day. j "I took her out of the sbo- ' . prj. J day night," said Mr. ZlegfC l . > erday, "and she will not reappear t.n.il she has explained to my satisfaction that the wild party was' no affair of hers." Mr. Ziegfeld denied that Marilyn Miller, who plays the leading role In "Sally," was the girl who asked him to order Miss Mitchell to leave the show. Miss Miller, it is reported, has denied also j she refused to continue In her part j unless Miss Mitchell were removed. Soon after the marriage of Miss j Mitchell to Robert Savage, 21, son of I ; the late John \. Savage, wealthy steel j maker of Duluth, the girl left the bride- j groom and lived with he mother, Mrs. ! Verna Mitchell, at 9 I'omander Walk. [ They" have been In Boston since the musical comedy opened here. Savage, , was In the graduating class of Milton! j "Prep" School at Milford, Conn. AUDREY MUNSON SORRY SHE TRIED SUICIDE Declines to Say Why She Af-i tempted Her Life: Syracuse. May 28.?Audrey Munson, ! ' one-time noted as "Queen of the , Studios," who swallowed a powerful pol- J/ son last night with apparently suicidal i ' Intent, to-day was Improved and her physician expressed hope of recovery. The once famous artists' model and motion picture actress, whose life was saved by the nuick application of home ' remedies by neighbors at Mexico,' Os- ! wego county, where she now resides, today deeply regretted the taking of pol- ! 1 son and expressed a desire to live. [ HIGH SCHOOL TO CKLKItRATE. Morris High School In The Bronv i l will /celebrate its twenty-fifth atini- i . versary this week. Graduates will he - entertained to-morrow and Wednesday 1 and on Saturday evening a dinner will I ; be given at the Pennsylvania at which old teachers will be guests of the I alumni organisation, ~~n drink your norning? day is a safe s n amount I thy man? gh for one \ ? v9 Lbagub ? association. Inc. f a, n. y. i / 1922. HIGH TARIFF RATE PROTESTS POUR IN Cost of Living Items Indicate Hill Has -Pork Barrel' Inflation. I DEMOCRATS PLAN FIGHT Intend to Resort to Filibustering While Republican - Revolt Grows. Special Dispahh to The New Y'o*k Hmald. i New York Herald Bureau, ) Washington. I). May 2*. [ Protests arc pouring Jn upon members j of Congress In increasing number against j the high rates in the Fordney-McCumber ; tariff bill upon articles which enter into The belief that the bill will inrro?#? living costs Is causing many Republ.- : pans in the Senate, where the measure is pending, and not a few in the House, who voted for the ForUney rates, to won3er whether the bill may not have been loaded down too heavily In the effort to gain support constructed on the "pork barrel" or log rolling principle, giving rverybody what he wanted. The Democrats are claiming they will prevent the passage of the bill in Its Jresfnt form by forcing it back into the Finance Committee for revision. They ntend, if necessary, to resort to filibustering tactics, although they are not >penly using that term yet. Meantime :he symptoms of revolt in the Republisan cranks are growing. With the average of rates as reported by Senator McC'umber not only higher than the average of the Fordney rates 111 me i muse uni, uui hikiivi mo-ii 111 any tariff law ever enacted, according :o the estimates of experts, the question Is being asked by the outsider: "To what extent will these increased rates t>e added to the retail prices of the teceseities of life?" Insist 1 poii Itntes. While admitting that in some lnitanccs retail prices may be increased is a result of the bill, Senator McCumaer and hi> high tariff associates insist the rates absolutely are necessary to trevent the destruction of American inItistries through the dumping upon the American markets of cheap products nroduced by cheap labor l'rom foreign countries. They contend the post war conditions in Rurope will require a high sriff wall be maintained around the United States for many years to pre venr American wage earnpra irom ueuig reduced to the level of laborers across the Atlantic. To all protests against the high rates, ven on the necessities of life, such as food and clothing, the protection extremists reply that the ugitation comes from the Importer who wants to bring goods into this country at low rates ind sell them at an advantage. But it is becoming evident the present pro.ests arc not so much from importers is from consumers. That fact is giving the Republican leaders of the Sensite real concern. There arc Republicans In Congress who have not forgotten the insurgent movement that followed the enactment of the Payne-Aldrich tariff and the defeat of the Republican party In the subsequent Congressional elections. The right within the Republican ranks led by such men as the late Senator Jonathan P. Dollver, of Iowa, was made in the interest of the "ultimate consumer." Just as it is beginlng to be made at present. McCnmber on Defense. One of the indications that the protests against the bill are hei.ig observed by the leaders, is that they have abac doned their cocksure attitude and are admitting the need of defending the bid Senator MeCumber (X. P.) ha* been on , the defensive for aevera. weeks. Today Senator I/Odge (Mass.), the floor leader of the Republicans, put himself In an altitude of defense. The old charge that it is the Importers who are merely selfish and the J Democrats who are politically opposed ; to protection of American industries who are responsible for these protests Is relied upon bv Senator Lodge as his chief arguments. "I have been through eight tariff debates," he said, in a statement issued to-night. "The Importers and the Democrats always put up the same camouflaged attacks that we hear to-day, but the country Invariably returns and sup?. A1 . For . An E&tr SUMME i (Ready-to-weai Haitemt A Crtjirts-fimrtlj \ i | ports a Republican protective tariff when a new foundation is needed by the business of the country to rebuild an i-ra of prosperity." Senator Lodge also sought to answer the charge that the pending bill would I cut off imports to such un extent that j American foreign commerce would be destroyed. "Our foreign trade is not suffering breause of the tariff." he said, "and we | are living now under the emergency tariff art, which has higher rates, in ! many casts, than those proiihsed In the . Finance Committee'bill. The Democrats seek to give the impression lhat the in. crease in our foreign trade and In trade j conditions throughout the country arc due to the Underwood tariff act. whereas figures quoted by Secretary Hoover showincreases in foreign trade, which have 1 developed since the emergency tariff bid j became a law. "Building tip the business of this country is not going to depress th> j business of the world. Other countries i have "-high duties new, as the flgci* presented by Senator Hooding show. ; tliink I am right in saying that in many cases their duties are higher than ours, and yet those who oppose this bill seem to think these duties will stop the trad? of other countries with us. "We are obliged to-day to meet an economic situation, such as the world has never seen, owing to the utterly distorted and dislocated conditions of exchange. In the midst of these fluctuations we must determine what duties are sufficient to protect American Industries and agriculture. Under normal conditions, when values and costs of production were practically fixed for easy determination, the rates were not as high as are those necessary to-day. But now. with the shifting: of values and costs abroad, which are admittedly abnormally low, duties must be higher, than lias been customary. The fundamental conditions of all tariff legislation to-day are entirely different from what they were prior to the war. "Nevertheless, this is not an argument for delay in tariff revision. The first essential of business is to have stability of conditions, so far as they depend upon tariff legislation. Business can adjust Itself to a discouraging tariff, or even to one badly constructed, better than it can to a condition of suspense and doubt. They are the greatest hindrances to a prosperous business or farm." APPROVE lTALO-Rl'SSl AN PACT. Rome. May 28 (Associated Press).? The Council of Ministers has approved Din Ttnln-Rlisslari i-nnininrnlnl negotiated at Genoa on May 24 between Slgnor Schnnzer. the Italian Foreign Minister, and <M. Tehltcherin, head of the Russian Soviet delegation. 1. Altttt; The Fas jMme V has been airpl} the mi The Wedding Gov* seana; Bridesmaids1 Correct Gflothes a the Bridegroom; V Dress aired Wardroi | Trunks and Rugs; ciudiireg Fitted Dire Necessaries; Honrs | many other essen the e^iaihlBshm IHabiBun Aurran 34tff snli 35tij SlrttU ttman t 4-/TK A em rx 7 ( M /0\ fV^I t \iv Willie aordinary Oft Women's R SILK D1 at $23.00 p Dresses Deparfmeo .tttttut-Jifllj Atttttttf. 0 ?' !?r * T ' '-V 'A1 - ~ 320 SULTANS! I ' I There is a national organization in Amu Minorwhich aims to make J Turkey an inviolable natu*??** J out of the hands of all European control. This organization is com- ' posed <>f three hundred andtwen- J tv Turks, with Mustapha Kemal > i ' I*asha at their head. The army { stands behind them, solidly. And 1 thepeople stand behind the army, < j solidly. This greut Nationalist ' movement is worth looking into. 1 Head "The Three Hundred and ! - Twenty Little Sultans," by Laur- | ence Shaw Moore in the June AS I A The American MAGAZINE on the Orient Richly Illustrated O J Out today?all news-stands?35 centt [ j. =33 2 f-???fi MILK THAT'S INSURED l against impurity by vacuum i packing in sterilized glass jars | ROGERS . |, I RICHEST MILK j Theveryrichest milk in 'fljj|fln|lii|Wlltf? butter fat and other "*|| milk solids II ; that you can ajOMM If buy. II No icing needed j f II > i 'til the milk is !. , j opened. |j Save the jars IhnnmiTlff I " | for jams and IIHIHlUIIIII II j jellies. * r* r<? ... 11 Arrow Lconomy oiores. f 1 =?gjK Cl-? V? =r $ T.1 ttlt & <&0. 1 J] VJH - Vi( -l:l . 4'' .hionnablle ; mi -1.1 Meddling I -v) r provided for no n ^ alter of rrta 'it, Veil and Trous' Dresses amid Hats; 32 mid Fwrnrishiinigs for j Veddimig Stationery; i 3e Trunks; Steamer Hand Luggage (in ssln.g Cases); Toilet r I eMdl Linens, and taal fynmashttPgs off meant. M I - Jiftl) Anrratr Km fork " I | feffln.ll i lay) '1 5 ferinig- of a?i M 9 * JESSES 1 Ml s : I * I t, Third Floor) New fork J unjtr^-nnn jraxo m M /(