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?fMggsr? The advantages of bigness Imagine a city as large as Cin? cinnati, Newark or New Orleans, where every man, woman and child wears eyeglasses. Then you will realize what it means when we say there are more than 300,000 wearers of M. II. Harris eyeglasses. But the really interesting thing about that fact is not the large number itself, but what it i enables us to do for you who may not be a M. H. Harris pa iron. It enables ua absolutely with? out charge to provide for the examination of your eyes the most thoroughly capable eye specialists we can find. It enables us to have our own lens grinding plants, where we can watch each detail and as? sume responsibility for correct results. It enables us to purchase all our materials in enormous quan? tities at lower prices and give you the benefit of our savings. * It gives us a wider experience in examining eyes and fitting "them with proper lenses than any small organization could . possibly have. We do not have to experiment?we know. It places the entire responsi? bility for pleasing you upon one i centralized organization. We , ' have no one but ourselves to blame, so we have to make ' good. And in the final analysis "Big? ness" never just happens. It is the result of giving satisfaction, which is the BIG thing after all. , M?.y we serve you? S4W125thSlreet 1007 Broadway nearLenox AVe. \nrM!}ou?hby AvoMlyn 442 C'l'bus Av. ?469 Fulton btri ?Aer.8ls;fid2n?Sts Of>?. A.$S.3'kJyn _ "(383 Broad St- next toltolelll'ffcmrk winter underwear, tan lisle seeks, a Tu hat and a collar, the laundry mark pf which may furnish an important clew. . He carried two pistols. The man's hat remained intact. On the sweatband was inscribed the name of "De Luca Brothers, Hatters, 919 ! South Eighth Street, Philadelphia." He Stubbed His Toe The police are confident that the ?plans of the anarchist to blew up the ?hpuse of the Attorney General and kill its occupa'-.;: would not have miscar? ried had he not stubbed hi:- toe on a low coping six feet from the front door. The coping tripped the anarch? ist, and when he fell the concussion apparently caused the explosion. - I", was at first thought that two men I had been killed. Later, however, the -.police definitely established that only "cr-.e man had been killed. Dr. C. E. Monroe, government ex? plosive expert, said after an examina? tion of the fragments gathered by the - police and an inspection of the scene > of the explosion that the anarchist had two bombs with him when he ap i proached the home of the Attorney General. It is believed that the man set down one of the infernal machines, -tarted forward with the other, then tripped. The explosion of the first bomb get off the second almost s'mul taneously. The expert estimated that in all the man had ?with him the equivalent of six. sticks of dynamite. The police are uncertain whether the anarchist intended to piace both bombs under the Palmer residence or whether one of them was intended for the home ? of another public official, but they - -rned inclined toward the lattor view. The neighborhood in which the ex? plosion occurred is one of the most fashionable in Washington. Two doors way liven Senator Swanson, of Vir [ nia. Directly opposite lives Rear Ad n ral Theodore F. Jewell. The homo of Relmei H. Bryn, Norwegian Min? ister, adjoins that of Admiral Jewell, j and Assistant Secretary of the Navy ] ranklin D. Roosevelt lives a short J distance away. Thrown From Their Beds Residences in the entire block were * damaged by the explosion. Windows - - ??? battered and the fronts of some ot the houses were nicked by pieces of ng concrete. Several occupants of the nearby houses, including the son -.' the Norwegian Minister, were thrown rom tl eir beds by the force of the ex ... Ion Government experts are making ? careful analynis of the clothing and other fragments gathered by the police in an effort to determine the nature of Ik? bomb and the explosive. Among thojse axKigned te the inquiry v/?-re Dr. * Charles E. Monroe, government ex - plouives expert; Clarence Hall, of the bureau of mines; Captain h. D. Trounce, of the War Department, and ?.. Priest, special representative of the Department of Justice in the bureau * of r/iiri?;?. Additional precaution? were taken ? by the police to-day to safeguard pub? lic men in Washington. Many homes * end public buildings wore being g'iardcd. At the Capitol extra police >:<-!*. placed on duty, and the rule ?gainiit bringing pacicagcs of any ?ort * into the Capitol and th?j5 House and j Senate office bpildmgs w|? rigidly en? forced, Th?? name rule *ac. being ap? plied in other government buildings. Attorney General Palrr< r and mem ; bers of hi* family V>ok up temporary residence with friends in the city. Mr. Palmer himself was early on the scene to-day and personally directed com? mencement of repair work. Arrest in Boston; Reward Offered Two Children of Rep? resentative Powers In? jured by Flying Glass - Special Correspondence j BOSTON, June 3.- The arrest of one] man in the bomb outrage, the offer of i a ?1,000 reward by the District At-j torney for the arrest of bomb terror- | ists and Governor Coolidge-s action for sterner penalties for armrc-iists were : (he features to-day in the two bomb outrages here. The man arrested was Ernesf Cau det, of 312 Dudley Street, I bury,! who was captured in a raid on his : home, in which a mass of anarchistic ? literature was seized by the police. \ One other man was arrested, but re? leased after he had been questioned. Agents of the Department of Justice visited C'inton, believed to be head? quarters of an anarchistic band, and where a quantity of dynamite was re? cently stolen from a contractor. District Attorney Nathan A. Tufts,, of Middlesex County, offers 81,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible for the blowing up of the home of State Rep? resentative Lcland W. Powers, at 66 Beaumont Avenue, Newtonville. Judge Hayden Tells Why Judge Albert F. Hayden, of the Rox bury Municipal Court, whose home at 11 Wayne Street, Roxbury, was wrecked, issued a statement to-day, in which he declared that revenge for the sentences he imposed on Roxbury May Day riot? ers was the motive which prompted the anarchists to single him out. Judge Hayden and his family escaped injury through the fact that they had gone to their summer home in Plymouth; Two children of Representative Powers were cut by flying glass in the explosion and more than $10,000 worth of damage caused to his residence. Representative Powers was singled out as a victim of the bomb terrorists because of his activities on the anti .inarchy bill which he had pressed in the Legislature. Governor Coolidge prepared to-day to ask the Legislature to enact an emergency statute providing for sterner penalties for bomb outrages. Under the present anti-anarchy law individ? uals convicted are subject to a fine of $1,000, three years' imprisonment or both. Attorney General Attwill said that, as no life was lost in last, night's ex? plosions, any persons arrested in con? nection with them would probably be held on the charge of the destruction of property. In that case, their maxi? mum sentence, under existing laws, would be ten years in prison. Governor Issuea Statement Governor Cooiidgc Issued a state? ment characterizing the bomb outrages as calculated to injure ultimately the wage earning class. "Kveiy effort," saiil the Governor, "should be made and will be made to apprehend the perpetrators and bring them to justice. This is not a crime against a particular individual, nor is il what the perpetrators claim, namely, that this will effect distinctively those who own property, and bring about a new order of things. It is a crime against the people of the Common? wealth, and it carried to its logical conclusion, the first sufferers would be those of slender means who live by their daily toil. .It would stop every business activity, paralyze all industry and bring to the verge of destitution, as it has done in Russia, every person without independent means. "The wage earners of Massachusetts, I know, will especially support the authorities in the effort to prevent such art ion in the future and to punish all who are guilty of the outrages of lasi night." Mayor Peters said he believed that our present social and industrial con? ditions must be improved. He ?aid there must be a more equitable dis? tribution of the results of labor, but our form of government makes it pos? sible to bring about these improved conditions in an orderly and sane man ' ner, and in accordance with the will I of the majority. Work in Vain on Philadelphia Clew Detectives Fail to Find Identity of Man Who Set the Palmer Bomb I Special Correspondfvcc PHILADELPHIA, June 3. -Despite | the report from Washington that the 1 man killed in the bomb explosion there last night had worn a hat with a Phil '? adelphia hatter's mark, and the fact ' that two men known to the police as ?anarchists are said to be absent from this city, the authorities are not pre ! pared to accept the theory that the ! wholesale bomb outrages were plannet ' here. "'If we knew the terrorists usec Philadelphia as a base of operations it 1 would be a comparatively easy mattet i to apprehend the guilty ones," sait Police Superintendent Robinson. After twenty hours of untiring in ' vestigation the police have only meagn j clews upon which to work?the ha found in Washington and the missinj ! anarchists. The latter is regarded by 1 the police as the more important, bu' ? it is admitted that up to the presen | there is nothing tangible upon whicl ! to base a theory in regard to th( two bornb outrages here. In both case! , it is believed the Reds used swif j automobiles, driving away at higl i speed as soon as the bombs wer? ? planted. Search Italian Quarter Detectives came from Washington to j day and searched through the Italian | section in thr hope of establishing the j identity of the man who was blown to j bit? in the explosion at the home of A. j Mitchell Palmer. It is believed that ' he boarded a train leaving the Balti 1 more & Ohio station here at 7:1C ' p. m., Monday, to go to Washington. A thorough seurch of all garage? in the city is being made in an attempt to find the black touring car with yel | low wheels, believed to havo been used ! by the ?red?.' The theory of the police 1 is that the homo of Louis Jagiclky wan Circular Left by Bomb Plotters PLAIN WORDS. The powers that be make no secret of their will to stop, here (n America, the world-wide spread o? revolution. The powers that must be reckon that they will have to accept the fight they have provoked. A tirns his cOTie when the social question's solution can be delayer! no longer; c!a?ss war is onind cannot cea.se tut with a complete victory for the international proletariat. T.ie chilleigs is an old on?, oh "democratic" lords of the autocrat;: republic. We have ben dreaming of freedom, we have talked of liberty., we have aspired to a hetter world, and you jailed us, you clubbed us, you de ported us, ycu murdeied l? whenever you could. Now that the great war. waged to rep enlsh your purses cr,d build a piedistal to yriMr? sarv.8, is over, nothing better can you d^ to protect your stolen milliors, and your usurped fame, than to direct all the power of the murderous Institutions you created for your exclusive defence, against the wcrking multitud?? ruing to a more human conception of life. The jaiis, the dungeons you reared to i ury all protesting voices, are now replenished with languishing consciencioug worki-rs, ard never satisfied. yYii increase their ?-umber every day. It is history of yesterday that your gunmen were shooting and murdenrg unarmed masses.liy the wholesale; it has been the history of every day in your regime; and now all prospects are even worse. Do not expect U3 to sjt down and pray and cry. We accept your challenge and mean to stick to our war duties. We know that all you do is for your defence as a class, we know also that the proletariat hi>s the same right to proiei t It ^e|f, since their pi As liar, been suffocated, their mouths muzzled, we mean to spi?k for them the \oe-a of dynamite, ihrough the mouth of guns. Do not say we are acting cowardly te-a i&e we keep in hiding, do net say ft is abominable, it is war. class war. and you were the first 10 wage it under cover of tho powerful institutions you call order, in the darkness of >our Ibm.,1, behind the guns of your bor-.eheaded slave-, ? No liberty ta you accept but yourJ; the working people also have a right to freedom, and their rights, our own rights we have set our nurds tu protect at ary price We are not many, perhaps mote than you drea?i of. though but are all determined to fight t> the last, till a man remains buried in your bastiles. till a hestege of the working class is left to the tortures of your police ? y t-m. und will nt ver rest till your fill is complete, and the laboring masses have taken pc9*t?9icn of all that rightly belongs to them. There will have to be bloodshed; we will not dodge, there will have to le murder : we will kill, because tt is necessary, there will have to be destruction, we will destroy m rid the world of your tyrannical institu?a n*. We arc ready to do anything and everything lo supnrf? the capitalist. e:ass. jus |is you are doing anything and everything to suppress the proletarian levolution. Oilr"m'.i(uaT""p<}?ltlon"'is pretty clear. What has been done by us so for is only a warning that there nre friends of popular liberties rtill living. Only now we are getting into the fight; and you win have a change to see what liberty-loving people can do. Do not seek to believe that we arc the Germans' or the devil's raid agents: you know well we are fias* conscious men with strong determinatmn. and no vulgar liability. And never hope that your cops, and yours hounds wdl c\ er succeed in ridding the country of th?- anarchistic germ that pulses in our veins. We know .how we stand with you stand with you and know how to take care of ourselves. Besides, you will never get all of U9... and we multiply nowadsys. Just wait and resign to your fate, since privilege and riches have turned your hrads. Long live social revolution ! down with tyranny. THE ANARCHIST FIGHTERS. wrecked by a bomb thrown from an au- i tomobile to prevent its exploding pre- | maturely in the car itself. Concerning j the blast at the rectory of the Church j of Our Lady of Victory, it is tho opin- '' ion of the authorities that the bomb ! had been planted. The police have been unable to de- j termine definitely the composition of ' the infernal machines U3ed by the bombers. Neither have they been able to ascertain whether they were time ! bombs or whether they were of the character that could be set off by the hurling of the contrivance and the set? ting off of the detonating cap. Bits of cotton containing minute crystals were found at the Church of Our Lady of Victory, together with what appeared to be parts of a receptacle, cither zinc or steel. These are being analyzed. Go Over Old Evidence Superintendent of Police Robinson was in conference several times during the day with Captain of Detectives Souder, and the evidence gathered by the local police in their investigation of the bomb outrages of last Decem? ber was gone over. Immediately ?fter the explosion Monday night Superintendent Robin? son issued orders stationing a police? man in front of the homo of every judge, prominent citizen and official of the city and county government. A similar order was issued by Assistant Superintendent Mills after last De? cember's explosions. In a number of instances the guards were never re? moved from the homes. "We have been in communication with the police of the cities where bombs were exploded last night," Su? perintendent Robinson said, "and we are cooperating with each other. Wc will run down every clew we have. "To-morrow we will attempt to de? termine the character of the explosive used. We have found some metal? which we believe, were parts of the machine. These will be examined bj an explosives expert of the United States army." Strike Notices Posted The Police Department to-day issucc orders for tho arrest of persons post ing red-lettered notices of a genera strike on poles and other placei throughout the city. The call is for i "general strike to free all pol?tica prisoners," and it is the opinion o the police that the agitators aim t? inaugurate here a strike similar to th? one in Canada. Anarchists Fail InDeporta tionPlea Boston Judge Denies Ha beas Corpus Petition o the Philosophic Grou? BOSTON, June 3.?Habeas corpus p< titions of nine, alleged anarchists oi dercd deported by the immigration ai thorities were denied by Judge Edg; Aldrich in the Federal District Coui to-day. Counsel for the petitioners had coi tended that tho acts of Congress ? February 6, 1917, and October 1?, 191 empowering the Secretary of Labor i deport undesirable aliens, did not cover "philosophical" anarchists who did not believe in acts of violence. "Supreme Court decisions," said Judge Aldrich, "fully support the idea of the constitutional power of Congress to confer upon the executive branch of the government authority to deport aliens whose teachings or doings aro dangerous to our government and to our institutions. Congress, through '.he act approved October 16, 1918, having clearly declared against all aliens who are anarchists, the declaration must be accepted as meaning that Congress was of the opinion that the presence of alien anarchists is offensive to our so? ciety and dangerous to the govern? ment." Three Men Held by Cleveland Police One of Them Alleged to Have Attended "Red" Convention in Chicago Special Correspondence I CLEVELAND, June 3.?Mayor and Mrs. Davis this afternoon failed to identify two foreigners answering the I descriptions of the two men seen loit? ering in the vicinity of the Davis home shortly before the house was wrecked by the explosion of a bomb last night. Three other men, one believed to have been present at the Chicago anarchistic convention where the death list, in? cluding tho name of Mayor Davis, is thought to have been compiled, were picked up later by detectives and held for questioning. The police have information that , i two nationally known I. W. W. agita? tors, one from Philadelphia and the other two from New York, arrived in Cleveland on Monday. A thorough search is being made for them. The police have asked that a reward large enough to tempt some Bolshevist to disclose the authors and tools in ; the plot be offered. A reward as high as 850,000 has been suggested and an appeal is to bo made to the Chamber : of Commerce to-morrow, either to offer some such bait or to take the initiative in raising a reward fund. A conference of the mayors of the largest cities in the country, especially those cities known as the hotbeds of radicalism, was suggested to Mayor Davis to-day as a means of concerted action to rid the United States of avowed anarchists and suspects. The Mayor said he was in favor of such a conference, but did not care to take the initiative. "I think such a conference might well be called by Mayor Thompson of? Chicago, especially as Chicago ha3 been mentioned as the city in which the plot was hatched," Mayor Davis said. "While Cleveland feels that it can take carp of' this pestilence of an? archy without any outside help, such a conference might result in represen? tations being made, to the Federal gov? ernment insisting that national action be taken to curb the menace." Deportation of all known alien radicals to the countries from whence they came was said by the Mayor, Chief 1?H1B CRINKLED CREPE SHIRTS $3.50 Comfortable?ideal for warm weather. Requires no starch, stays crinkled after washing and yet imparts a touch of distinction to the wearer. Neat hairline stripes; Blue, Black, Tan, Green and Lavender. FOULARD ARDEN ROCKENCHAIR NECKWEAR SOFT COLLAR UNDERWEAR 42ND STREET AT JMADISON AVENUE of Police Smith and Detective In? spector Charles N. Sterling to be the only real remedy for the present situa? tion.. "We will get them out of Cleveland," the Mayor said, "but we want to see the country rid of them. Such things as happened last night and the send-. ing of bombs by post must waken the Federal government to the necessity also for tightening up on immigration. This country cannot be made the dumping ground for the radical pvopa gandists of Europe." Detectives to-night raided an Ea3t Side hall and took a dozen men to po? lice headquarters for examination. A red banner found in the hall and forty five pictures of Russian Bolshevik leaders were also seized. The men represented themselves as students of an automobile school. Detectives found part of an automobile engine in the building. Chicago Radicals Were Safe in Jail That Believed To Be Reason !\o Bombs Were Exploded in That City; 8 To Be Deported CHICAGO, June 3.?Possibility that some of the alleged radicals taken in a raid here several days ago were con? cerned in the widespread bomb plot was advanced to-day by detectives as the reason no explosions took place here last night. Of the score arrested eight arc awaiting deportation. Following warning last night from Federal officials Chief of Police Gar rity remained in his office until early this morning directing tho work of warning public men to be on guard at their homes and also in receiving mail. Among the first public men to receive warning were Federal Judge K. M. Lan dis and United States District Attorney Charles F. Clyne. W. T. Brown, assist? ant postmaster, said that since the previous bomb outrages the postal au? thorities had not relaxed vigilance in scrutinizing all mail. Boy Scouts Summoned In War Against Reds Bolshevism Can Be Beaten by Proper Training of Youth, J. E. West Tells Bankers Bolshevism will be the next target for attack by the Boy Scouts of Amer? ica. The boys, who have been called upon by William G. McAdoo to Ameri? canize America, now Tiave been asked to combat the tendency toward Bol? shevism because of the latest bomb outrages here and elsewheie. James E. West, speaking at a meet? ing at the Bankers' Club yesterday, said the Roy Scout organization was a weapon that could and should be used against dangerous radicals here. "We can nip this thing in the bud." paid Mr. West, "if we give our boys the proper training. The forces of un? rest that are at work in the world to? day to destroy property and human life, to tear down existing forms of government and to plunge us into the state of anarchy and bloodshed that is now active in countries in the. Old World must bo dealt with (irmly. Our organization has a wonderful record for service built up during hostilities. This latest outrage is a challenge to organized society -it ?3 also a chal? lenge to every patriotic movement like our own. "It is our duty as American citizens to send back the proper answer and let it be measured in terms of undivided service to this organization of Ameri? can youths." 44June 11th, PrepareT' Warning Received by Cincinnati Company S per ial Co rrc* pondenct CINCINNATI, June 3.?Tho acci? dental discovery of a letter addressed to a man in Cincinnati suspected of be? ing a pro-German and an anarchist started an inquiry late to-day. The letter was addressed to a former em- ! plover of the writer. It contained a single sheet of paper,j on which was printed the calendar for j ; June. A red line was drawn around i Wednesday, the 11th, and extended to ! the margin, where the word "Prepare" was written. The suspect left the firm some time \ ago. The belief was expressed that the ? bomb plot may have been arranged in j weekly cycles, with the first series this week; the second, in the Middle West, next week, and a third, in the Far ' West, the following week. They be- j lieve that the day June 11, indicated ? on the calendar, is to be of some spe? cial significance in Cincinnati. Bombs Charged To Immigration _ Morrison Blames ISational Policy for Opening Doors to Anarchists WASHINGTON*, June 3.?Secretary Morrison, of the American Federation of Labor,-in a statement on the bomb outrages, to-day declared tho country was reaping the result of its immi? gration policy. "The attempted destruction of life and property should cause calm re? flection, rather than hysteria, on the part of every American," said he. "I can understand why the Nihilist of Russia used bombs, bat this metiiod can have no place in American insti? tutions. And when they are used it is our patriotic duty to inquire why. "For years the trade union move? ment has urged restriction of immigra? tion, but the workers were opposed by steamship companies, the steel trust and other employers of labor who stimulated immigration at the rate I of 1,00(1,000 persons a year. Many of these immigrants were herded in large ? cities or other industrial centers. They | were encouraged to use their own language and to perpetuate traditions of their mother country. At election time, in innumerable instances, they were voted en bloc, and if they would I organize a trade union or suspended i work to stop exploitation, they were enjoined, clubbed and jailed. ! "Bomb throwing is always a chal? lenge to organized society, and should be met in that spirit. But the ques? tion must be traced back to its rool and treated accordingly. Americanisn must be more than a shibboleth. It must mean education, opportunity a: i social justice for all. We must vital i/.e our declarations and our belief! that injustice has no place on Ameri can soil. In this soil, bomb throw ing will wither and die." \Burleson Denies Story He Fears Anarchists rVric York Tribun? Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, June 3.?-Postmastei General Burleson has received manj threats, some from women, but h? never gave any interviews about then nor is ho afraid of their authors. The Postmaster General said this ii a statement to-night, denying he eve had said the, things quoted in a lat' edition of an afternoon newspaper. After turning the denial over to hi; publicity department the Postmaste General ordered his carriage and wen to A. Mitchell Palmer's house to in spect the ruins. Pa ter son Police Seek Two Suspects PATERSON, N. J., June 3. -City an, ! county police officers, with the c-. eperation of detectives from New Yor City, are following two leads develope to-day following the explosion of bomb last night at 33i East Thirh first Street. They are convinced th explosion was part .?i a widi sprea anarchist plot, and the purpose of th element in the recent silk strike. Th< LIU m ? m m e do not seek to exercise any jurisdic? tion over the silver? ware we sell, but we want you to get the full benefit of the silverware you buy. And the only way H you can do that is to use it to its full? est extent. That is what it is made for. jBujt it to use THE GORHAM CO. SILVERSMITHS & GOLDSMITHS Fifth Avenue at 36 th Street 17-19 Maiden Lane ipi ion local attack was to avenge tho radical believe the bomb was meant for John J. Fitzgerald, secretary of the Patersori Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Fitzgerald scouts the idea, be? lieving the "reds" would know he no longer lived at the Thirty-first Street address. "I am sure it was not meant for me," he seid to-day. "I am a poor man my? self. I am in bo way connected with the silk industry, and I am not a capi? talist." Two persons are being sought by the police. One is the man who called at the house which was later bombed and asked for Harry Klotz, president of the Suhuana Silk Company. He said he had come to return a railroad ticket. I Mr. Klotz knows of no one that could ! have a ticket belonging to him. Above j the floor occupied by the Klotz family lives Max Gold, of the Kingston Siik I Company. Another person the police want i. the middle-aged Italian who was seer lurking in the driveway between th< damaged house and the one next door Miss Nellie Taylor, of 455 East Thirty first Street, saw him while on her wa; home with a young woman companion ? and thought hi3 actions suspiciou: Both the suspected persons looked lik | Italians, according to reports, Man Arrested at Home Of Cardinal Gibbon Police iriiartl Placed at Man Placea in Baltimore Ajte Midnight Special Correspondente? BALTIMORE* June 3. -Chief of P< I lice Carter at 1 o'clock this mornin assigned special police details to tr. homes of persons he thought, mig! be the objects of bomb attacks. Me j were hastened to the homes of Ca dinal Gibbons, Mayor Broening, Fe< eral Judge John G. Rose, District A torney Samuel K. Dennis and Unite States Senator John Walter Smit All the public buildings are special guarded, also. A squad of police sent after mi, night to guard the residence of Ca dinal Gibbons arrested Charles Ho son. of St. Louis, who was seen i einer the vestibule of the Cardina ! home about 2 o'clock. When arrested Hobson cculd gi Minted: AREAL ESTATE BROKER? ** with an expert knowledge " of New York re?il estate values-, especially south of 59th Street? A man with real estate seas?; who can analyze a property ?n?; determine intelligently the vriue of an equity? A man who knows how to handle a sale?who knows h?. man nature well enough to hold ' him from presenting a good proposition to the wrong man? A man whose sincerity is ob vious; who has no business I tricks to unlearn? A man who dares tell ths whole truth about a property though he risk a sale, rather than make a sale by withheld, ing information. Such a man is offered his real ' opportunity?a connection that has both a present and a future. Apply by letter only. iotonH-Slawson Company I7I MADISON AVENUE -'N'EWYORK PROPERTY MANAGEMENT ENGINEERS no reasonable explanation for bcinr in the vestibule and he was taken u? the Central Police Station and locked up on a charge of vagrancy. This morning he ?as sentenced u> two months at Bayview. The man said ht; had been an orderly at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Bcmbmcikittg School Is Found in Buffalo BUFFALO, June 3.?A school for in I struction in the manufacture and ujj of bombs has been discovered hcro.the ! Buffalo police believe. No arrests hr-j been made, but a number of drawing : alleged to be designs of infernal nu 1 chines have been seized. Guards have been placed at Mayor I Buck's residence and extra detectives ? and police have been detailed to tltt ? city hall. 5T? AVE. Ar A? Vi ST? PARIS S NEW YORK;" ?The Paris 5hop or America.* *;tt of the Season Tailored Suits FT?eAy at $45?$65 ! to $125 Gowns an< resses Formerly t to $125 50?$65 Capes Fo^Iy at $50 ?75 ano -J Sports Hats Formerly to $30 at MO?$15 HE purpose of these stores isn't subject to revision. Always will we center our mer? chandising activities upon a definite policy ? that of providing Correct Apparel of Metropolitan Character. Makint; it possible for properly groomed men to place reliance on our selections. Spring Suit prices begin at $28. Weber one Heilbroner Clothiers, Haberdashers and Hatters?Eleven Stores "241 Broadway 34S Broadway 775 Broadway ?1185 Broadway ? *4-Mh and Broadway 1363 Broadway 58 Nassau' 150 Nassau J Satisfactory Wear Guaranteed 20 Cortlan.lt I.:oad *42d and Fifth Avenue k\ ?CLOTHING AT THESE STORES h