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Deputies noiiv Assail Briand For Rhiue Levy Crueial Debate on London Rcparations Decisious Be gun in Cliamber; Vote Is Probable Late To-day Penalties Trrmrd Futilc* Communists and 3 Groups of Socialists Critical; One Finds Britain the Gainrr PARIS, March 15.(By The Vasociated Press).- -The Chamber of Deputies to day ordered immediate discussion of interpcllaticns on the rccent rcpara? tions negotiations in London. The Chamber rejected Premier Briand'a proposal for a postponement of the de? bate until there was . ? imerous attendanci of i Spokesmen for the Communists, So cialists, Republican Socialist and Radi cal Socialists attacki i the decisions of the London Conference for the applica tion cf the enal s Particularly sirong was th ;"vr. of Vin Auriol Social t that the penalties would be ineffective because, accbtd ng t-j the most rel stics, France'a parJ of the d w uld be pcagible to !"vy, would, after payment of ihe expeni < on, show a deficit francs annually instoa.l of fui h for repara tion. Urges International Office Asl l b; si veral Deputies wh it he would proposi of the l.a decision . .". ... ... internal hould be institut d In whi >, Great Britain, Germ i nati> na I . s for the le conatruc tion of the d tated and a revival of "Amcrica," said ' iol, "would finance such an rganizati an." This tioi was reci ived with general sk< pl ici: m bj of the Chamb >r. The proposil ion i ' VI. \u bul little from that m; e by 1 Loue; . ..', [in ter of icrated Rc gions, to aid Austria. Jean Hennessey, Re; Social? ist, declared tl ilties weri inoperative. Her-,, i , g ment for not i , >posi tion of Dr. Wi Itei . the Ger man Foreign Mini ter, Gerrminy collaborate in the restoration of the devastate ? ; Geri dustry and Gernii ior. Terms Simons's Offer Vague Premier Briand repli ' that if he had opened his ea I he termed the vague and 'ragile made by Dr. Simons he wou d have started a di v <?< yet havi beei Both M. 11 ? and M. Auriol asked Pri or Bi 1 collectio: ?, ? ? ? would u ' havi for l al e'ffecl \ the protectioi h trad German c upel ion. T Premier to inform the Ch imbei whether each t levies on German goodi for ?? : own account. and if so whether the parl of the b vy going to Gr< at Bi itain would not he imm supcrior to thrit going to France. M. Briand plied 1h tt the ? ums col lected v n i com nvdn fund, concerning which he would furnisl the details at the per ti The i: ons will conl inu morrov and pi obal ';. will end in a vote late ning Allies Demand Gold Payment Germa i upon by the ration Commi to carry out Artic Ver saillea Troaty, whii Ger muny must pay bi 1 1921, the equi\ dc it i.i 10,000 gold marks. The troaty pi >vi : s thal I paym< i I l e made in gold, com moditii s, hi] ( ec iril:' or other valuables, and that oul of this sum the expi the armies of occupa tion are : ! u bc met. The commi k stcps to carry out Artw ? ol the treaty, which pro idi ? it Gi rn i ; m ;t '<??< notififed before May ! nex* as to the total anibunt of war damage imposed upon her by the 1 reaty. "If Germany persjsts in refusing to make payment," Bays the Pe'tit Parisien, "she will force ua to impose upon her the integral execution of the treaty, That waa tne significance of yest . day's meeting." Dcnby Approves Plans For Naval Airplanes Thirtv Designers Participate in Competition; Five Win Place in the Final Test From Th. '/ ???,?,'. Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Vlarch 15.?Secre? tary of the Navy Qenby to-day ap proved thi I i | the special board of naval officera in the recent navy Bhipboard airplane design competition and authorized fivo , rplane maki n to complete their drau - of machines for^ tne Navy Depa rtnn I . Thirty airpl me de i ? ts submitted [orty-tv o di -??? i f a . nccial type of two-passenger airplanes for sn'otting and control of gun I re of batth a' 8ea- For this e the present types OI naval a rj factory The designs of the following com petitors vyere acceptcd: Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Cor poration> Garden City, L, 1 ; Dayton. \Vright Airplanc Company (throc <!>? I ayion, Ohio; G. Elias & Bro., lnc? Buffalo; Alexander Klemin, 22 Kast Seventeenth jStiect, New Yorki City; A. L. Mor.se, Masaachuaetta ln stituto of Technology, Cambrtdgei Mass. The spccial features of the type of planc decided on by the navy board consist in its ability to land on water i r on the (in-k of an airplanc carricr ?:d to take tho air from the dcck, oither with the aid of a catapault or Under. its .own power, ?)<i iinfll e-xamination awnrds will bo mada in order of tnerit. The awards mclude $16,000 for first, $10,000 for Becond, $5,000 for third and $3,000 for ?' mrth. Russian l.)uk<\, INow A Carpcnter, Takes Britle to IViieiiient OrlolT Hopes for Downfall of Bolshcviki to Enable I.rtun. to His 12,000 Acre Estate ns Honoymoon 1 n tho bnck room of an Kast Sido ?:'. throc flights up, Duko OrlotT and his bri.de, the Duchess Olga, last night drank a home brcw toast to the success of the new Russian revolution aries. Tl o occasion was their own wed ding feast, and one reason for the to; st was their desire for a honey : ii trip to Russia. Nobody unappr sed of tho truth have iccted OrlofF and Olga Polishewsky Orloff of being members of the Russian nobility, however. Orloff, and collarless, sat on a cliair ? own niaking, eating beefsteak .. th to ds that scarcely could be desig nate 1 the ' plate." Mrs. Orloff pouring iffee from an ordinary po't and there was no samovar in sight. The only ornament of any kind was a n ???" indmill, a speci mi n of < )r loff's carving, which graced their board as a cenl ??? ? Orlofl did nol mind I he obscurity. On his ! estate of 12,000 Russian uth Russia, v, hich he I ?p< ? to rec ?. ? ?: through the ovcrthrow of he\ , m ight have relished the ? -. i :' the Gree (Ihurch l thi ? .-.: pageant ry of a wed ling i titles. hv.'. inasmuch as ti ci i id rable proportion of the opulation ui >ui ' hip pre: ent quar ? al f>19 Kast Fifth Rtreet has been g hard f,qr Leiiine and Trotzky, e felt it might be just as wi 11 to ii lor. The oi ';. troublo was that Orloff let rriage bureau at City Hall draw from him t-ho in-formation that' he had been a Russian duko, and that, fk-oinjr : She :,'->. reVolution., he travorsed ? .. ??? opp -I in '!.:? an, crossed I he eilic Ocea'n and the United States, naljy re'aching . NVw York had mot Olga I'oKs,: 'w.-ky, whonl'nc knew ? lived ii an adjoining.^estate found her r. wjdow, West Seventy^-ejghth in Russia. Ih ;- ?:.- at .2 Str< et. Bomh in Bublin House Kills Three Durinw Raid Five Police Reciruits and Others Wounded; Four Are Slain in Irisli Clashes DUBLIN, March 16. Five police re .re v mndi d by the explosion bomb here last night while ing .; house in Great Brunswick treet. Three civil'iahs were killed and several wounded by the explosion. attack to-day pn two military ts in th'e Dolphin's Barn om ? the riders was killed isthei was perhaps mortally wounded, In an attack on military dispatch ros i i .- Rialto Bridge, Dublin, a Boldier was wounded. t ORK, March 15. Several British wearing citizens' ciothes were I eld up at Crosshaven last night. In the fightlng Thomas Hennessy and ? ; . '?;. rray were killed, John Moyastu, a farmer of West Clare, was shot and killed when he opened his door in re.sponse to a knock. Several other murderous at tacks were reported. To Be Sold at Public. Auction TO-DAY (Wednesday) March Ibth, and three follow ing days to March 19lh inclusive AT 2:30 P. M. EACH DAY IN SILO'S Fifth Ave. Art Galleries 40 East 45th St. S. W. Cor. Vanderbilt Ave/ Silo & Son, Auctloneers WlXt, SEI.L A Vaiuable Collection Antique & Modern Persian and Chinese GATHEREDi ?Y Mr. H. A. Cambere of Constantinople Thi w<?ll known Connolsspur and Rug -??? '? ' ti m? i l> Dln . lui of the l'.-r. ? ?'?? '?' :nlbil a< thi St. Loula l',i:r Collection eortsKt-, of Vcrv l{ul-? hprcimtrna ol Kcslian. K?riUan uutl ^iiniuk?ull si'.'s aaid wettves? tsi.i'i -i.iM.v I...n.-e M/j-s. ON EXHIBITION TO TIME OF SALE Tlie CHELTON-BENKERT Light weight shoes have always been a feature of ourstock; but, this Season, J we expect them to be real leaders. Ex cellent material and workmanship have j gained them inuch fravor. Lasts and Patterns exclusively our own design. '?Buiil by -??tOKwWjf/..(J7uwinft?" Whitehouse & Hardy BROADWAY at 40th STREET NEW YORK MBTWOPOUITAN OPERA HOUSfi BU UILDINC Fate of I>oIand Said to Depend On Plebiscitc Collapse of New Rcpuhlie Feared if Voting Sunday Should Reault in Award ing Silesia to Germanv Coal R<\sources Valuable Brrlin Also Covets Territory as Its Gateway to the Russian Trade Markel Bv Ralph Courtney Svrcial Cnble to The Tribuvr Copyrinht, 1921. New York Tribune lnc. DUSSELDORE, Germany, March 15. -That the Republic of Poland is like? ly to collapse unless next Sunday'fl plebir.cite givea her Uppcr Silesia is the iniormation obtained from Allied business men here who are in touch with the situation. Tho Poliah mark haa depreciate.d more than the Russian ruble, and noth? ing but somo great new influx of strength will hold the state together, it ia said. Such strength would be ndded if Silesia went to Poland, but that result of the plebiscite is by no means ceriain. Allied circlea here are somewhat pessimistic and the Germana are contident that the plebiscite will result in their favor. A large number of voters left here recently on epecial traina. They went off without the proposcd manifeata tiona in their honor because General Gaucher, French commander in the Dnsseldorf district, vetoed the arrange menta made by the German inhabi tants. Fate of Two Xations nt Stake So important is next Sundaya plebi? scite that it may be said of the two countries engaged in it that only one may survive as a strong nation. It was on the question of Silesia that the Lon? don conference broke up. ln secret convcrsations Premiers Llovd George and Briand did everythi'ng possible to meet the German objections to the Allied reparation schem'e, but they were continually opposed bv the Ger? man demand that all decisions had to be based on the hypothes.is that Silesia would go to Germany. The Germans made all their promisea on the condi tion that the plebiscite resulted in their favor, and these promisea the Al? lied leaders could not accept. The German case as represented here is that without Silesia Germany can pay a war bill to the ex^ent of only ? Par< of the comparatively small oifei that 1 he Germans made iri Londoi: The Germans are contident that they will obtaiu Silesia, despite the disad vantageous effect which the applica tion of penalties by the Allies will havo on the voting. The industries of north eastern Europe are founded on the great^Silesian coal deposits, which also <o a large extent feed the needs of the Balka,n states. All eastern Germany needs Silesian coal. but the Germans also want free passage to Russia. The Germans hold that they are the nat ural mediators between Eastern Europe and Russia, and should be permitted to develop Russia commercially. If Po? land collapscs, as is at present; antici pated when and if Silesia decides to adhera to Germany, the latter again will have frec passage eastward. Depends on Russian Trade Germany naturally thinks that her I'uturo is in the east rather than in the west, but she also looks to Rus? sian trade as the chief factor in the future in enabling her to pay her rep arations bill to the Allies. 'She holds that tSileslan coal may prove to bo a, r.e- in; throi h which Russian trade can | 1 ? ?-,' . "c : and repara i >n i m iriey madu avRilr ble, | (in ?' .- ? ? i ??:? hand, Germany will hc , deprived of ? n ? of her moat importanl ' natural roso?rce8 if S'.lesla goes to Po- j land, and it t- suggested in German i sources hero that Allf.d Inveatment : and admlmstration of the whole orea j contnlninc Gormany's coal deposits In j the Ruhr Valley will become inevitable. If the Siioaian vote favora Germany j another conference among leaders of I tnc Berlin, Pans, London and Rome | govgrnments may ait.eir.pt to take up ; thi reparations problom again where ' th? London confei-enoe dropped It and conif to aom. definite settlemcnt. BRES_.AU, Siles'ia, March 1B (By The As :iated Press). -More than 100,000 of L'pper Si'.esta's natlv<> sor.s ?nd daugh:ers from all sections of Gnr many already have roached their re spectlve votlnfe preclncta in the plcbi ncHc Eones. Their preser.ee is infecting tho home population with unbounded enthusiasm and has servrd to give Ger r.an hopes a mighty impetua. Speakers Extol Late Bishop Burch At Church Club Proniinent Visiting Episco pal Clcrgymen Join in Eulogies; Maiming Prob? ably To Bc Seated May 10 The monthly meeting of the Church i Club of New York at 53 East Fifty | sixt.h Street last night was devoted to addresses by proniinent local and visit 1 ing Episcopal clcrgymen extolling the I life, eharactor and achievements of the I late Bishop Charles Sumner Burch. ; Hehry Lee Ilobart, president of the I club, presided, and oulogics were de livered by Bishop-elect William T. I Manning, of the Diocese of New York; Bishop Thomas F. Gailor, of Tennes j see, presiding officer of the House of I Bishops; the Rev. Robert S. W. Wood, rector of St. Mary's Church, Tuxedo; j Canon Pascal Harrower, of West New |Brighton; the Rev. John R. Atkinson, 1 rector of Christ Church, this city, and i othcrs. Messages were received nnd i road at the meeting from as far west | as San Francisco. Bishop Gailor said Bishop Burch was a grqat chiirchman; that. he had given i his life to the work of the Episcopal Cnurch, and that hc gave it in splendid faith and with deep convictions. Dr. i Manning said that in 1911, three years after he became rector of Trinity parish, he had the privilege of notn inating Dr. Burch, who was at that time i archdeacon of Richmond, S. 1., tc be i suffragan bishop of the diocese. Dr. Manning said his audience probably did not know that his nomination of , Dr. Burch to be the first suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Church in America was due to a wish expressed by the then Bishop, David H. Gree*. j The most distinctive quality possessed by the late Bishop, said Dr. Manning, was his great-heartedness. Mrs. Burch, her datighter, Mrs. Ar I naldo Marson; Mrs. Manning, R. Ful ! ton Cutting, Canon E. Briggs Nash ; and numerous others close to the late j bishop attended the service. According to Canon Nash, canon ' sacrist of the Cathedral of St. .John the Divine, the diocese hopes to install its newly elected bishop early in May, by which time all formalities in conr.ee tion with the confirmation of Dr. Man | ning's election and consecration are | expected to have been completed and ; in time for him to assume the chair at : the opening of the annual diocesan | convention on May 10. First the j 8event.y-one standing committees of the country will pass on the election I result, then the bishopr, must be con I sulted and give confirmation and, final ly, tho presiding bishop of the Church in America, Bishop Tuttle of St. Louis, | will issue an announcement of the time for the consecration. Jsv; Jtanklin Simon & Co. A Store of Individual Shopr FIFTH AVE.?jft/i and 38th Sts. 7{ep/icas of Paris Hats.. HTHE actual materials * of original Paris models, all the frivolous little furbelows of milli nery purchased in Paris and fashioned by our own Fifth Avenue work room into copies and adaptations from . . . . One of the jQargest Collections of T^aris Hats ?ver Imported 22.00 to 55. 00 FRENCH MILL1NERY SHO?-Fourth F/oor Hundreds Slain In Moscow bv Bolshevik Guns Heavy Fire Is Poured Inlo Crowd of Revolutionists, Says Helsin^fors Rcport; Troublcs Orcnr Hourlv Trotzkv Sends Ultimatum Throatcns to Storm and De stroy Cronstadt Unless the Rebel Forces Submit t.ONDON, March ir> (By Tho Assoei? ated Press).?Disturbancea are report ed to be occurring hourly in Moscow. The Soviot authorities ln rounding up sympathlzcrs with the revolutionary movement. have massacred several hun? dred pcrsons with machine guns, saya n Helsingfora dispatch to tho Centrai News to-day. A majority of tho reporta regarding the situation In Moscow are most gloomy, the dispatch adda. The Soviot War Minister, Leon Trotzky, has twice delivered an ulti? matum to Cronstadt and will deliver a final ultimatum Wednesday, nccord ing to information received by the Riga correspondent of The London Times from M. JofTe, head of the Rus? sian Peace Mission in Riga, who had been so informed by tho Russian For elgn Minister, M. Tehitcherin. Threatens to Raze Town Trotzy's final ultimatum will de clare: "If the town remains obdurate it will be stormed and razed." American food supplies from Finland have renchod Cronstadt. A fugitive who arrived in Reval from Moscow asserted that Soviet officers re fused to participate in the operations againat Cronstadt and that thousands of laborers have joined General Anto noff's anti-Bolshevik army in the south. It is reported the Soviet troops on the Rumanian front have been ordered to tho L'kraine to suppress extensive risinga there. The situation in Odesaa is said to be critical, the garrison, with the exception of two regimenta isolated near the harbor, having joined the rebels. The tenth All-Russian Congresa of the Bolshevik party, in session in Mos? cow, has issued an uppeal to the work? ers of Petrograd to stand "firmly to the end for what was gained four years ago," says a wireless dispatch from Losing Control of Army STOCKHOLM, March 16.?Russian Bolshevik authorities seem to be losing control of the Soviet troops, It Is said in dispatches received here from Fin? land and F.sthonia. Artillery fire from the fortresa of Cronstadt was directed yesterday along the southern coast of the Gulf of Fin? land, between Oranienbaum and Petro? grad. Bolshevik artillerymen in Kras naya Corka shelled and destroyeu the lighthouse at. Tollbaaken, off Cron? stadt, during the day. RIGA, March 15.?Tho Cronstadt au? thorities have transmitted a wireless message invtting the forcign corre spondents to come to Cronstadt and be convinced with their own eyes of the falsity of the Bolshevik accounts of the revolt. Gerinaii INobles to Snub All Friemls of Allies By Wlrc!fi?.i to Thi Tribune Copyrlght; 1921, Npw York Tribune lne. BERLIN, March L6. In ccrtain aris tocratlc and military circles In Berlin, a fiocial boycott against Germany's for mer enemies has been declarcd. The familiea of the ( ounts and Barons von der Goltz have just. voted unoni mously at a fnrnily reunion that "it inus; be regarded as undignlried for membera of the family to have socia! Ir.tercourse with a cftizen of enemy staten, or to viMt famllies having aocla! | tntercourae with citizena of hostile Btates or to receive them unless it Is j I a matter of professional or official ne- j j beasity." A number of German regimentai or- ' j ganizations recent!7 voted to expel a'.'. ; members who hold any intercourse I whatever with representativea of En I tente nations. tmle-is they aro con i nected with official negotiations. i-?_. Rose Day Attracts Throng to Flower Exhibit at Palace Adolph Lewisohn Captures Most Firsts; Two Piersons RunSecond; DisplaysAre Among Finest Seen Here Rose Day attracted thousands of flower lovers to the Grand Central Palace yesterday, where the second day of the International Flower Show was given over to the queen of the hot- . house. Never, it secmed, were j the American Beauties ao stately and never were the ramblers more picturesque. The trilogy of new roses held court. all the afternoon. They were ? "Madame Butterfly," named for Ger jaldine Farrar; "Golden Dawn" and i "Miss Florence Spendiff," the first two developed by C. H. Totty, of Madison, N. J., and the third by F. R. Pierson, of Tarrytown. Adolph Lewisohn walked off with most of the honors for the private growers, winning two firsts for roses i in pots and tubs and first in a collec tion of variety roses covering one ! hundred square feet. The two Piep | sons, F. R. Pierson, of Tarrytown, and | Cromwell Pierson, as usual divided the ' honors for the commercial growers, ! with the Duckham Pierson Company of | Madison also capturing several prizes. | Other winners in the cut rose com ; petition for private growers were | Howard Cole, Mrs. W. D. Guthrie, i Joseph E. Widener and Countess j Mildred Hohnstein, of tdge Hill, Pa. Mrs. H. McK. Twombly won first i prize in the dinner tarjle decorations, with a table set for eight, decorated with the new Golden Ophelia in tall silver vases and boutonnicres. The I remaining places were won by Mrs. i Payne Whitnoy, Mrs. Ridley Watts and ! Mrs. Percy Chubb. It was "Authors and Journalists" day at the Bellevue Tea Garden, with Cosmo Hamilton, Laurette Taylor. Hey wood Broun and other celebrities as guests of honor. Debutantes and aub debs were flower girls in pastel j colored smocks. Mrs. Louis Living ; ston was in charge, assisted by | Katherine Emmet, Polly Lincoln, Shoil'a j Burden, Adela Hammond, Isabel Rocke j feller, .lean Fletcher and Phyllis ] Batcheller. To-day will be carnation dav. Fund for Irinb Relief Under Way To-morrow I'lans for the appei ! treater .''? w York for funda witl /hich to relieve suffering in Ireland have been :om plcted, and the campaign. which is to begin to-morrow, will contii ? March 28. It is believed I - he mai ?gers that the five boroughs sp'ond wnh tl>- .'?;!;?'? (j u 'a o Sixty thousand men and woir:'?- ???.. seek subacriptions under direction of tho Greater New York Committee foi Relief In Irelai d, of whii h Martin Con boy is chairman. Mr. Conboy warns contributora ajralnst posaible fraudul illcitation. The authorized solici! ?? : hav< Identification badgea offii ally signed and numbered, the numbers to corr^ spond w ? ?: those on Tr.e rrd, white and blue cash container?. Amorig the women wl o bi intereuted in the work are Mrs ??<&,.? E. McDonnell, Mrs. trii M r Jan< Ga rrahai ! ? i Katharine Anthony n Blatcl . Di I ii I homa i Butler, Mr? D li< Mrs. Alice I". Eii Gleni. '<' H ' Mali U ' ,:. Alden Ifopkii fiuban, Miss ' '?' . . Paula Jacobi, M :: . I Mary Shaw, M Mi . Ella O'G trmai 1 Mrs. Hei ird, M '' ? " ': a O'Bi ? 'D Mi ? :?-'.??? ' I. ? I'Leai y. Mr r~- ? Mra John lerome Ro K Roe and '?' ? ' ? M "MARK WELL" Your Safegviard is the Name on a Sealed Packet. as this is the "GENUINE ARTICLE" (UV^JnL I ? fe i \i you ion ! fynotu ' ! - tomelhing that will n . while! He's the fum hl(akie character since Dc A Floor of Complete Masculinity i&^s^^ljg&^^^^^gGSZSESaEVt Shortening the Wcnrld's Space Hour? Automobiles, Aeroplanes and the Express'Elevators toThe Man's Shop at Lord & Taylor !?J T^'tS<S&~^^--S^.&, SC_S38!Sfl-!S 'Sw ? ^^____-_--_--_-___-_-__---^-_iSSr---^---^ ---wp^?*^t *- m?l*^'*MF'?*vrA f V ?-?-? 7-??**- ?S>-^*~p-_^S^f-l.-f^L-fSgL^f^^-^^^*-^-^--_^-_rS^?^-Vrri-j?r_^'^g?^ J^a*L_*g__Z-_'1 J**!' -**_^-^____,^__fT!M-M>--^*-4 **."^^_n? H m Two Notable Specials SHIRTS and Scarfs?harbingers of Spring?-two tempting offerings which have sprouted all unexpectedly in the path to The Man's Shop at prices so special that they must be made known. Shirts at $2.45 A shirr price which in the light of the recent past seems quite inadequate. They are all of fine woven madras, corded and plain, in soft textuni and pattern rivalling the refined appearance of shirts now being ordered at the custom shops. They are particularly weli tailored, with five button soft bosoms and soft French cuffs of that narrower pattern demanded by men who have their shirts made to order. The madras is qf close, light weave, the colors being woven through?neat stripes and delicate tracings in unobtrusive shades?shirts of gen uine, simple elegance. Silk Scarfs at #1.15 To go with these shirts there is an assortment of Spring Scarfs, of that fine twilled silk which presents sufneient body to tie into an idcal knot. They are offered at $1-. 15. American of weave, but calling to mind at once those richest of English and French twilled silks which sell at a very much higher figure. In color combinations very similar to the fine English goods?greer. ngures on blue grounds, blacks and purples, browns and blues, black grounds with small white figures, blue grounds with white polka dots. Tailored to tie into the fashionable small knot, yet shaped generously?one of the best scarf offerings The Man's Shop has yet made. Lord & Taylor 38th Street The Man's Shop Tenth Floor FIFTH AVENUE Chauffeurs' Overcoats and Uniforms Complete Motor Livery Department 39th ?Street Expreis Elevators Without Stop r. ii! U : H H I. \i u R i m 1 R I u m h B ffl h H M u u. n m p _ :?: r] P H a M U -ii' H M n M n a 1 l M u