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J NEW TiRITAfN DAILY HKUAU). '! lilKSDAY, MARCH 23, 1920. NEW YORK STORES LATEST STYLES DISPLAYING FOR EASTER WEAR Smart Fifth Avenue Places and More Modest Grand Street Houses Decora ting to Attract Feminine Eye. Sow Vor!:, .March Zi iffi -Sma i : ITfth iiMMiui: shops which I'iii't l') In- wealthy and C! r-;in.J street Hon s where the shop-girls Ihij-m 1 1 -r lih.-rj ire putting their finishing touch. s hi IJi great display of fashion Unit nnHKily marks New York's Kast'T pa i ado, now I'-iiH iliau two nU ..T. A Pastel This pr. IIIIJK S tU hi) 3 pfl!i' I ipniU', "Mh gowns, l.ats, sines and ic." .-.-I'l l, s drawing tln-lr i.ioi.s i roni a d.ll-Mto lluwer sp. ! rum. I'.Ol. do nw, "pa r -1 1 1 1 J "- M i till'. espi'd al'.v tbP "Lllal" Hi" .utm ' J fur tic l'ln-hoss of lurt, tans. grch Inch) Iiiik 'he "i-nr;.(!-l aii!'.'" ciot Tii-ally uanie-l l.y n I'i-'tj-Ii designer pale pinks, ami mny nuinl-or r f fond.-r sprni", - if-r Mr. will h-ad In pr.rr.-d Klia-l-t. Stjlrs 1 or ( outrii.-i 1'or cniraft ili-n- are new ri.l.u. 'muring "i'arls r"l" anil 1 la I1--, .T.-i a su! sintiti.-il u;.- of black ,i n 1 '.a-, y. particularly In coml .1 1 in t i nti vlih whit" nii-l p.'pulur 11' - sli--n. I'.i-owii alone - i n .i siiould'-r.-d out ' the spring running. l.asl'-r ko n may nilmle flowers : i rliliountc us, well al in tint, full I. Iris M-rail. N'.H- York likes the vnlttilno, pr. ! rs Its f u 1 1 1 1 -ss nln-.-ol, '!i-l lifts llr In-ins far out of hattn's I HO I .tM'S. lf Slltt.H Two up. ot Mil's vlll appear lit t'.i.! i'ii 1 1 mm im! churches on i;str. tin'.- win I'.i tin. three-piece eiisam-I.I.-, 1 1 . .-lop'-l this spring with u i it 1 1 1 -il or shirred rrope, or laffi-ta coal i-osciing a sills dross. The o'Iht "ill la' the two-ph-ec. ialll'-ur, w li i' ii v 1 urns l m ason. fitr...'i' from Cans came the maunishiv talk-nd tuxedos, the nmkiiiiis of the rat'lsi'lino, who do. i loi't. 1 !i. in In Muck broadcloth i 'i miM'i r. to match la-r i op-is 1 i r 1 1 1 . i- real. .V-w York slighl Iv all-is Hp- mode, to Its day I ii o i .in. ami .! nu i collar mid ' i - -, or ' ii y jalu'l. as thr nearer In l.'.st suited, I he I lral ' ' "ilo An-I with r t In i 1 1 .-is.. copying '.' Ho'A'-m that dioom on 1 1 iti-r day l-oii'iiniiii ii.h in tli" sanai-trst Mil's will tit of H'.; iMti-Mlf..!, av.-niKs UtU-n fti.l. In tin: . of -ln"; or I'.'lls. iii mi. i. s of l..-ir'- or rr'y " i'l tin- faction. 11;iu-m j, ,t volors. itiaii'liiiij.' I at or fliO'-f. an' a imu- mitr, ,v;,ri-,s In . J j pr li t ii'laplalloiih of tlir- j.opiil.i r llar-l, Mial.t- or alllcator, i!l foot raptor's promi-li'g lilll. i i i ; i .si,:: 1" I'l: i;l"l v. LOOT OF BILLION GANG'S OBJECTIVE Police Unearth Almost Perfect Crime System i Now Vorli, March '.'. i.T' An al moxt. !' rfoct i-riiiio nisti-ni with a liillion ilolkir loot Uiroiiuliowt tin I' nit ill States Ha Ita olijn-i. was ill - If. '1 I'V tin mi. i all- I WhiH' mm-.-u'ant! of nlk-lil chili fi-. 'ii. ti(. rs turn ill tin; ciisinily ol tin- Nun Yuri, police So V" rli' t '-'a.- tin: .'.yst.-m a oat. lino. from to .Miiirc s anmm; tin arri st' il nn n. that adlm,' istrn l ', At'onn-y !' cora lias ih 1 1 ti . I to ro. -i al It, as a no nao- to ojliii-.fah ty, "More harm that joii eouM Iniiiifiiio v onhl ho iloim the youth of tho country If the plans won miojo iml'li''," sai'l Mr. I'ecora, " ; liavo loannil liou- hlt;hly systi-ma I i,-. ill with Hi.- crime, orsania I inn which the kuiir iiifiiiliors form. "I Tho Whlft'iiior..' ban'l was the into-, -1 t 'i-"tin-l, I ; 111. -I,, s nho" t,. is is ti ; in? a niO'lili' 'I 'I In- Ml'M tint larc lint.-, ilnui r-t ri m rin-rl. rir I'u-i' -;v plain, will surely top much ; "f Hi.- i;nst. i- nio'l". With powiiK of paV' I '-li.'ol". ami light , -mlinf ' 't. Hi'" laru-'- .tr:nv or silk ha's will shin" to lwt .-nlvantace, Small- r lia's, ofi. n 1,. ri ts, may a"hi' w i ',iio.-m ip rcsLii-ain of two tnm,i of tin- atno C'llor, or in tuff. la. V . w ' msli". crown t !; t ni'-rils ami iiu v'n I. rim lim s play raria'ioiis on ' ll" nl'J I lieni" of the felt. Submarine Y-2 Goes Down 220 Feet in Experiment rnrt.-mo.ith, N. H., March 15 (fP Ih.o t:,o Utoft gl.-tnt of the I nit' -l S'atos' Fiihinarlne navy, in !: r- to-lay 9!tor having roadn:- ti ! cor-j Oopth for c-s'.ols of Its class in trial tofts. The ship submerged to a ijopth, of ::'' feet yesterday off t'roi incetown. Mom. It remained tln ro moro than .10 mlnutoB. inly one-, before has a VnlKd fan!.- Milimarlue roaehed a. greater I. pth. During tho v.orld war nn ac.-i'l. nf. to hillast forced the L-4 to :, I : f.-r t in the Irish P"a. The V-2 rn-.-r again will he called on to go farther down than lno l'?it. Navy regulations forbid sub marines to fink to a greater level A minor mishap, the bursting under pressure of a hm blow- line, was the only untoward occurrence yesterday. tin. other ship (,f Mie V class al-r.-.-i'ly Is In active cenioe, while four o tip r arc building. I!IM lll,i:.M,l LASSII IKIl ADh I Olt YOl It W ANTS We think a lot of Middishade Blue Serge Suits $35 m:vi:i: mji;i;; -Wc also sell a lot. It's the identical blue serge used by the finest Fifth Avenue tailors. Made into suits of the newest style and cut in models to suit all taste?, from the most English to the most conservative. And made hy Middishade "!:r;j;ical specialists, operating on Bh e Serge Suits only." That ex plains the low prrc. Guaranteed not only for color, but for everything cLc. Vd.ir ':-.!-i!i'i.!'c is incftmydpto v ithmit a MIDLU II.li; ni.t'i; Si:i: il-:. (id in lim-forthe Faster i':.:-;.-k'. Siij. into ,u,(- .f ,;.! M 1 1 H I SHADES and iIm Iif.-t tiri'-M a) I'ifih ,- I'ijiic r,c;m will have nuth inrj (n ' mi, To It i ; i 1 in Xc. Hritain unlv at TOMIKOWSKI & DAWSON The Store F::r Yt.u :)H1 Main Sircet. Opp. M; rile higlilv oi vs nio-d I mr h'-at'l of TlM-V liU'l plllllieil In op l-.lt' "II a national s. ale w pli a l.llliuu ilollal; In pi i',- p. .- as loo. " I Ic- l-Hl'l of ; i.n nn li nti'l a om an, l.inm n i-a "Tin; Ti.;' i- (in I," c osl, n -ii'ly la ii'le'l b lln-hanl I;.-. ,- Wlilli.-i i.t. ol llalniiioi. . want" I in thai i-n 'or mui'li i- ami i'l.-nll. II. .1 as mi. ol III., gain; r, hlch K 111. .1 two I i 1 1 11. .hi tin n in a liol.lup r-""iitls. Tin- laying of al h at! om nn ml" r ol ll;.- I, an. I v ho ball.e-l al in .Iit.i also is .Mtril'iile.l to tin in I li i I li 1 .In nn t ir in i i " gist of tin- gaii'j'.s system was go aim. I yst'i-ilav fiDiii u page . "iil'-sslnn by Aullimn I 'n lu.l t tie. ' i -.us Wei.- a-1'l..l by ihr." witmsscs "f the liiilf.ilo rohlii-ry. In a-bliiion, William .1. I nk. IPack, -oniln r ol th" band, i imeti d on lie .- a in Ihe 1 1 I 1 i ) of two diamond pi. reliants at i-'jitii ,i, nue ,-iinl 4tli stio.i, and tin th.-ft of :MT0,'""i in '; ms, hsl .laiiuary. Tin w nrkini.' in. tlifal as p. near failun- luonf. Mr. 1', en, said Ih.il lb" t'l's. nl capture must bo at ' i i 1 1 u I "d 1 1 ioi .- In lu.-l, than anything rolioe oi u m issiou'i McLaughlin look I Ilk' ll-a.-K to the seen- of tin- I'lllh av.-nuc cr.ni", w In re he r tin c( ... it before a noon-dav crowd. wn.ch In cessital".) ic presi-IRc o( poll"'- I .-hi I'l OS. I nl.olbach raid I., on and Jacob Kr nn. r, older members of Up. gun ;, elio.'l In on tho lo gem tinrchinits iroin lln I rout . V hilli inoi-o ii'iim Ho :-i." am) "Shuffles" llnldhorg Horn the roar. His own part, m "Id, v as to riii'T ii prixatij didec. live In u nearby doorway, l'almllno. ic .'.aid. was assigned to shoot a tia'Tic polii'.inau If he ilarb d to in-I- ri. '. The )inic. man hnvipein d to ho ri prima mlliig a tasi driver, and was sin.'.l. Th" no r. hanlN lore black .iai lioil and I lu- gang gum.- before he lilriml around. Only Oiip Is I rco i'MI" mil ll stayed at tlpi wheel nf iii. car. I iik. ll-ai-k said. Ho Is bo ll"'. -.J to bu tin- only member ot the hand not captured. The Huifalo witnesses described a 'liii"r"iil method, for th.y said tho ,tj 1 1 1 1 n -ii then; opened tiro without a i word on an armored cure from the, I I'vibral Keservo bank, killed two I ui'-n in it. and c.vapod w ith about J lim'l. The witnesses Identified Whittoinorc, b'-on Krunn r and I'ala 'llno an thr.;.; of t h-'in six men who i ntiiniiit.'d the crime. The ideniiiloatinn of Whltteinorfi comiilicat.d his status as the Haltl- moro nutlioritleH want liltn rtijrned to Mar.vland to Hand trial for thu murder nf a prison guard. IVilicn mid the rmtdatlons of tho day had b.'litlln somewhat Whltto iiioi'o'h status as u lender. They were inclhioil lo credit Jacob Kin. limp, who lias un International roc. ord, hh the bruins of thu out tit. nnd hltl'-miU'c merely with the oftleu of Held general. A general alarm has bc-n broad last for a .i'-weli-r. as the. man who disposed of the loot In thu Fifth nvenu" crime. A special sipuid of d' teoiiw-s was ussigin.d lo find hint. riiilaiblphla ai'lhnrltles also be gan a s'-arch for f :Tifi,e,(iii loot be. Ili-ved hidden there. They learned Mrs. Wliiittnoro. "The Tig. r tarl," who Is under arn-st with her bus band, often deposited money nnd .I'-welH In safety deposit vaults In that city. mm Quick Relief .' A plniant dfecdve iTnip, V jscindeocti:" Aad cricrnaily, uie FISO'S Nlliroai aodl ucil Sulvt. He lAPPEAL UNLIKELY IN MARSHALL CASE Convicted Killer Contented With Court's Finding Philadelphia. March 15. i-T Pavls U Miirohull, today, for tho first time In two months faced nn oNlstence nnthreatened by th menacing shadow of the electric chnlr. It was on January 23 that ho was formally i hurged with the niurder of Anna May Dietrich and tho die menil.erlng of her body and for whose death lm wus found guilty of murder In the second degree, yester day after u trial lasting 14 days. Tho penalty for this offense Is from ten to twenty ynrn imprisonment. Neither Marshall nor his counsel, Abraham Wernlok, had dechfed to day whether ii n appeal would be taken. The court allowed the usual four dujs tor filing such a. motion. The defendant himself ap- p'trtd Mtisfltd with tb verdict Wernlck said Marshall vlwa th verdict ai "Perhtpa what h la en. titled to In the light of what he did on thu day after Miss Dietrich's death. On the Mltnesi aland Mar shall testified that the woman died from a poisonous solution used la mistake for salt and, that he had cut up her body to avoid notoriety, "I aon't know w hether J will ap peal from the verdict," said Wer nlck. "Marshall left that entirely to me. He said he thought the Jury had shown him mercy. If his brother,. H. H. Marshall of New York, ts will Ing to put up the expense for an ap peal, I may try for a new trial." Wernlck said ho had PHrsonttlly spent $4,(100 In defundlng Marshall. "Hesldes that," he added, "I test fifteen pounds In weight." TO UAZIJ OtU STATU! Dublin, Ireland. March 26 .F Tho statue of N.elaon, which has I stood In Packvlllu street flnce 1801 and is a familiar feature of Dublin j us the Nelson Column Is In London, I soon will disappear. The city com i mlssloneru have decided that this U"t foot pillar Is a hlnderance to j traffic and have voted 1600 for Its j removal. As far as la known It will not be set up again. For the Four Weeks of February 1926 the Average Net Paid Circulation of The Saturday Evening Post Was More Than 2,700,000 Copieslhe Print Order for Every Issue in March Was More Than 0 ' (Net Paid Circulation Figures are not yet available "'Probably More than 2, 800,000) More than 500,000 net paid circulation increase in three years More than 500,000 new, unduplicated circulation The circulation of The Saturday Evening Post is the most complete single-handed national coverage that can be had today. . The growth of the national market is related to growth in population and wealth. The opportunity to affect that market is related to the growth of popular intelligence and periodical reading. Unerringly keeping pace with these conditions goes the growth of The Saturday Evening Post circulation. It has always been our policy and intent not only to have The Saturday Evening Post represent an adequate national market for a manufacturer, but also to have its circulation parallel his best market. This healthy expansion in circulation gives the advertiser a greater opportunity at a smaller cost than ever before. SMTUM3)MY GPOST NIN "AN AMERICAN INSTITUTION" Advertising Offices: Philadelphia, New York, Chicago, Boston, San Frandsco, Detroit, Cleveland