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dtz Hubert Joushwho headed the British EnlMkry mlsalon In tho Baltic; Col P. p. Af.n.h. iirUl.h military uent In tha Iniiiriiiuii in 191S. ills, and uovornl flnan Kal advisers and experts on the various Jnllltary missions. I Tiiev contnd that -Imnle trading with She cooperative union Is not eufflctent (without trio osautance 01 mo ihtoim Government, while It f becoming clearer atally that the stability or nuropo ue Sends upon restoring tho central Euro. San States, whlcli can only bo ade quately provUloned from Itussla, and Avlthout a general pcaca nusslas re tourcei cannot be made available. URK NATIONALISTS PUBLISH PROGRAMME -JVi'Z Oppose Foreign inter ference in Internal Affairs. i - Conbtantinotus, KeD. 31 (delayed), A British squadron consisting of flvo battleships and four destroyers, under Command of Admiral Fremantle, orrlved to-day and anchored In tho Bosporus, near the Italian and French battleships, lr the waterway and within a stone's throw of Parliament Building, when ilia . 'RICfiHR TftRnFR TTTfiN Germany urged to jtMuuu luuuuk; man i a one At rrrxmo iinTiinTA Tvntinr atvI AJJ1UAT1U VmiW ccj Austria's Fate, Says Currency Commission. THE SUK 'AND NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRffABY 33, 1920. Europe Wonders How Far Senate Will Support All Wilson Settlements. WOULD AFFECT TURKEY President's Final Flume Note Still Unsent Is Not to Bo an Ultimatum. Sptdat to Ian Suw akd Kiw Yoi Hi---. Washington, Feb. t Larger issues than the settlement of the Adriatic con troversy are arising out of the discus sion which has, been revived by the ulti matum of thd allied l'remlera to Jugo- ' , . .hi . -. ifilala, and tne objections raised by peace discussions are taking place, To-' i.f6dent wton To what cxtent th0 '"newspapers arc bo Jubilant over tho an- riounrcment that the allied Supreme Council has decided upon tho retention of Constantinople by the Turks that the details of the possible peaco treaty are overshadowed. The Nationalists, who e In the ma jority In the Turkish Chamber, have drawn up a programme which Includes president's assurances may be consid ered ns binding upon tho Government of the United States and how far ho will be supported by the Senato are ques tlonB that nr. belnir raised In connec tlon w'th the Adriatic settlement, but they apply equally well to any other territorial settlements of which tha United States, through the President's Brat-W, Feb. 23. -Tho Standing Cur rency ana'isxenange commission has re quested the Government to appeal to tha Reparations Commission for funds out of the money Germany already has paid under the treaty In order to procure absolutely essential food supplies and ror economlo needs. The commission argues that Germany with tho utmost restriction of consump tion. Is becoming so Impoverished un der tho deprivation by the treaty of her Connies, territories and all wealth pro duclng means that she Is' threatened wiui lno soma rate as Austria. as Its main points refusal o' any control approval, may be expected to become a which means outside Interference In the country'" Internal affairs, the return to the Turks of ail territory not occupied at the conclusion of tho armistice nnd the acceptance of the decision the Arabs arrivo at with regard to their futura. The Nationalist manoeuvres are only a continuation of German plotting, ac cording to "lletiidnr, the organ of the Entento and the Liberal party. The newspaper asserts that Brlin, Switzer land and Russia are centres from which Young Turks, like Djavld Bey, PJemel Faaha, Tniaat rasha and Iinvcr I'asha I are directing Bolshevik negotiations for mo nationalists in an enori to eneci , Ilusslan Bolshevik cooperation In Pan ' Islamic Bolshevism. GOVERNMENT WARNS RETAIL BUTCHERS Must Reduce Prices as Whole' sale Rates Decline. 5 Cmc-co, Feb 22. Itetall meat dealers 'throughout tho country must reduce , their prices as the wholeK.il price of i meal declines of else submit their books ' to'Fedoml ogets fo' investigation of their profits This definition of the Oov. ornmenra altitude was announced to night by Attorney-General Palmer. Iii. ntructlons to nerve notice on all retail meat dealer havo been sent to every ' ' United Slates District Attorney, he said. ' "For three months the prico of mem j has been falling," said Mr. Palmer. "This . retail dealers have claimed that their supplies wcro old stock purchased at the higher pilces. The old stocks should i bo exhausted by this time, and unless , tho pno- to the consumer comes down we will have to look into the question ; of the dealers' profits." ! KILLS DAUGHTER AND WOMAN, THEN SELF ; npie i rageay uccurs m l Providence Rooming House. , Proyidkkce, R. I Feb. 22. ."V doublo ; murder and a suicide occurred here to- night when Sylvanus Thresher shot ami , killed Harriet Holland and his eleven. ! year-old daughter Gladys of Buzzard's JJay and then himself. t . The three had been to church early 'In J the evening and after tne services Miss Holland was Invited to 'Jtccombany ; Thresher and his daughter to the room j ing house where he lived on the third ?' floor. .1 The daughter had been visiting with J' her stater, having come here a few days, ! ago from Yarmouth, Masa, with h:r ' mother, where they had been living to J eether since the' parents separated sov j era! years ago. C. OF C. PROTEST GOES TO HOUSE MEMBERS -1 ( Declares Cut in Appropria tions Hits Foreign Trade. j "Washington, d. C, Feb. 22: Protest j against the action of the House Appro- pnauons wommittce in, cutting the loi elgn trade estimates of the Department of , Commerce from J1.65D.000 to $190,000 was eent by the acting secretary of th "S Chamber of Commerce of the United I States to-day to every member of the 1 -louse. The effect of the passage of j the appropriations bill as reported, Scc ! retary Alexander said, will bo the cllm j Ination of the commercial attache sys- tern and a curtailment of the services of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. "No more Inonnortunn lm inr ih curtailment of the service of commer j clsj information could be found," the Representatives were told In the letter, -wnicn was signea Dy jj, a. Skinner. While other countries are extending and enlarging their facilities for securing foreign trade, tho letter aaserts that (American business men apparently arc o De ninaerea in obtaining their share i .inieruauonai iraue. I 1 41 II 50,000 HOPED FOR AT JEWISH BAZAAR Many Articles Offered to Aid Relief Work in Europe. Almost everything that can bo bought In a well stocked department store Is on sale In the bazaar of the Womn' Auxiliary of the Jewish People's Relief et iAmerlca, which opened yesterday af v terhoon and closes to-night In the Sev- cnty-flrst Regiment Armory. From tho 1 sale of pins and needles to .diamond j rings and smocks made In Greenwich I VUlage and frankfurters made In Will Jarnsburg It Is expected at least $50,000 ww do reaiuea ior me relief of starv ing Jewish children in Eastern Europe. A carnival atmosphere was given to the fcajoar by fancy costumes of the young VOtaea present. There was general dMtclng. . Concerts are held twice dallv In th .I..,. . KMi.A . i . j ii cue uicairo uibiuo uic armory. Among 1 those on the programmes are Mail. j irAU&n Pilzer, violinist : Jean Barondcss. I I soprano; Vernon Stiles, tenor; Philip lMi.Gerdoa..Dlanist: Hans Kronold,. 'editor ; Ttiuxaret Namara, soprano. Mrs. Philip Xwteonn Is chairman of the bazaar's hdmlnlstratlve forces and in charge of th theatre, with Mrs. Meyer Upset as . ier assistant Others In charge of va-. . rious details are Mrs. Benjamin Fried Jam! and Mrs. Julius Halpcrn. guarantor, Tho attitude of name of the European foreign offices as reflected In Washing. ton" .embassies Is that no assurances can bo given, even If an agreement Is reached on the Adriatic question, that the Senate will accept It or act upon It so promptly that, tho countries Involved will not be subjected to further dlsas trous delay In returning to a peace basis. The objection Is also made that It Is futile to proceed upon tho assump tion that the United States Is to take an active part In carrying out the de crees of the League of Nations when tho Senate has shown itself decidedly hostile to the acceptance of such an obligation. Senate's Action I In Doubt. In support of the position taken by Great Britain, France and Italy, the ar gument is advanced that even if Premier Nittl should succeed In Inducing his Gov ernment to accept tho view of the Adriatic problem advanced by the Presi dent It is not without the realm of possl blllty that the Senate, when called upon to approve the settlement, might either decline to do so, cither because of spe clue objections or upon the ground that It Is unwise to be drawn Into under standings or agreements In which the interests of the United States are not directly involved. Becnu.su the Adriatic settlement Is to be Incorporatd In the Hungarian treaty It must go to the Senate for ratification. The same condition will apply to the Turkish treaty. In which tha Senate has shown much Interest. If President Wll- Bon decides, ns he has intimated, to send a representative to the forthcoming con ference at Paris In the caBe of Hun gary, However, uie united states is a party to the negotiations because they Involve the disposal of the territory of uie rormer Austro-Hungarlan Empire, with which this country was at war. The American note, on the Adriatic situation still awaits its Anal dressing before transmission. It is understood now that the note will review at great length and exhaustively the whole course of the negotiations, which have continued for nearly a year, with final control of the port of Flume as the real question at Issue regardless of the numerous collateral questions which from time to time have been Intruded for one reason or another. Wilson Reiterate Position, The arrangement proposed In the Joint proposals of tho United States. Great Britain and Franco on December 9, and which was acceptable to President Wil son, will be reiterated as the -American position on the question and set 'over against them will be the modifications which the action of the Powers at tempted to present In their conference of January 9 of this year. The differences between the two pro posals. In the opinion of President Wil son, arc vital In the last degree. The American note will take up the various differences seriatim and suggest to the Powers which of. them the American Government accepts as not In conflict with the American principles previously enunciated. But also It will point out which of the proposed changes are In vasive of the rights of self-determination and of abstract Justice as between nations, and reiterate that on these points the United States Is not prepared to recede from the position heretofore assumed. While tho noto Is not expected to as sume the force of an ultimatum It Is known that It will Indicate 'with great clarity the American position on the question and to assure the negotiators that changes in principle will not be supported by the American Government. a ITALIANS CALMER . BUT RESENTFUL i D'eprecato Wilson's Move and Pnt Faith in tho American People. Special Cable Detpatc to TBI Strx axd New Yok IlnuiD. Copyright, 1M0. by Tni Bra AND Nlir YOSK HtliLD. Romb, Feb. 22. Calm .'a returning to Italy, he steel workers' strike Is be ing settled and tho people are recover ing from the unexpected and stunning blow dealt by President Wilson. Tho newspapers still resent and deprecate the President's move, but the general public is regaining faith In the nation's destiny. The Italian people could not be con vinced that America Is against Italy, Jney trust the American people too much foe that The Italian press haa been unable to suggest a policy for the Government to follow except to wait Some of the papers declare that Presi dent Wilson has made Flume a per sonal question slnco his message to the Italian people which! made ex-Premler OUando leave the Paris conference last spring. They think therefore, that the President Is not likely to recede from hla stand. This being the unfortunate case, Italy must wait and sea what the President's next move will be. Most papers consider the latest ills. senslon as not between President Wil son and Italy, but between President Wlleon on the one hand and Great iirltain and Franco on the other. The President- they say, demands that Yance and England not only abjure the London pact but also their honor In the word they nave given to Italy In recent aays. 'Can Europe abdicate her sovereign power ( one paper asKs. The demand that the text of the notes that have passed betwoen the White House and the allied conference be pub lished Is increasing here. The people are utterly tired of secret diplomacy, tew men, they say, have no rl-rht to play with the destinies of hundreds of millions of people. Americans and Ital- lans as well as other peoples must know wnai xneir representatives are doing. rney cannot permit four or five covcrn ment heads to endanger their lives and interests. AMERICA NEEDED IN ADRIATIC SOLUTION Both Italians and Jugo-Slavs Admit Wilson Is Bight, i , London Poports. BUT FEAR PACE FEELING Count on Nitti and Near East Question to Turn Minds Away From Fiume. 8pctal CabU Deipateh to Tn Set and Nw Yotr nxuLB. Copyright, itx.by Tns to and Nxir Yoik Ribald. London, Feb. 22. President Wilson has the whlphand in the Adriatic situa tion. Even the Italians admit no set tlement Is possible without the Unttod States. It Is learned from authorlta-. tlve quarters that tho question wIl bo' allowed to rcmalntat a deadlock pend- Mng tho scttlemenfNof tho Internal prob lems of both Italy end Jugo-Biatia. probably will not b,e discussed at the current meetings of the Allied diplo mats exceDt to continue. tho argument with President Wilson, hoping that be fore the next session It will havo been straightened out In quarters close to the peaco conference tho situation 'is described ns follows : Essentially, President Wilson Is ad mitted to be right It Is recognized that compromise on his lines is the only permanent possibility. Both tho Italian and the Jugo-Slav Governments admit this privately, but they have s(atcd at the conferences that they havp gone so far Itf bolstering up the national spirit In their resDectlvo countries to demand all each. can get that neither tho Italian no.r the Jugo-Slav Government Is strong enough at present to accept a compro mise and faco the wrath of thoso at hom. JUgo-Binvia is aamitteaiy m.timun in ternallv. but Nlttl Is undoubtedly grow ing stronger all the time In Italy. Des- URGES FIRM STAND ON GERMAN PACT Tardieu Refutes tho Legend of a Few Men Making tho . Treaty. " WARNING ON EVASIONS Says Germans Will Yield if Al f-'lies Insist and Cites K ; 'Instances. of the German fleet, the return of nearly nine billion francs In pillaged ma terials and the turning over td Belgium In conclusion, Capt Tardieu recalls Germany's refusal to elgn the Treaty of T Tr:r 1 11 ... In., T.. . .1 4 1. . Jl .1 - w 1 IMMtlllw tfUIIU HUH VIIO OUUUQII Hl- rlval of the German emissaries signed when the Allies stood firm. ADVEirnsmirxT. who iTauib, Feb. 31 (delayed). Capt 'Andre Tardieu, former head of the Gen eral Commission for Franco-American War Matters, under tho heading "On the Brink of Error," refutes in the third of his articles In the Illustration to-day what ho describes as tho legend tl tho German treaty was mado by "four fallible, badly loformod men; shut up In dark room. Imposing upon the world the law of their fantasy." Against this' "legend" ho -cites, atatls tics on the work of the treaty makers to show tho long and laborious study given to tho terms of tho treaty' and argues for Its strict execution before Judgment, Is passed as to whether it Is capable of being executed. During- six months, Capt Tardlflif pays, the treaty material was studied and discussed by fifty-two technical commissions composed of' spe cialists from all countries, who held 1,6(6 sessions. Tbetr conclusions, he assorts, were checked by twenty?slx In vcstlgntlons and were discussed from January 10 to June 2S by three bodies the Council of Foreign Ministers, which held thirty-nine eesslona; tho Council of Ten; which held seventy-two sessions. and the Council of Four, which met 145 NO "FLU" EPIDEMIC IN FLEET AT PANAMA Only One Death Since Ships Left U. S, on January 8. Panama. Feb. 2L No further coses OTfluejttaihave been reported here, but tha, flAgihlp Pennsylvania of the Unlfecf 'Elites Atlantic Set still is quarantined, at Crlatontu because of in- uuenza among the, .crew. Surgeon-Commander Oman or the Medical Corps of the Navy In an Inter view to-day denied that Innuenia was prevalent on the ships. Since January J. when the fleet left the United States, there has been only xme death that irom pneumonia. among the 18,000 men on uie warsnips. TRIBUTE IN PARIS AND ROME. HARDING GIVES UP MICHIGAN. Early Primary Prevent Ohloan Fjpm Slaking a Contest. Washington,, Feb. 22. Owing to the early date or the Michigan Presidential preference primary, Senator Harding tunio;, canaiaaie ior me Kepubllcan nomination for President "will not enter the contest for that State's delegation to the Chicago convention, was the Infor mation given to-day by Harry ST. Daugherty, 'manager of the Harding headquarters here, to Burt J3. Cadv. of I'ort Huron, cnas-man or the Michigan' Republican state central Committee. Mr. Daugherty wrote that the decision was based on "the very practical reason that It was physically impossible at the .early time. or .your primary tp engage In a campaign mere. Washington Statue In French Capital Banked With Flowers. Paris, Feb. 22. When all the bouquets had been placed around the Washington statue to-day It was literally banked with flowers. Although no formal speeches were made, Ambassador Wal lace addressed a row words to the two or three hundred persons presnt, dealing with the life an4 history of Washington. The American Ambassador tendered a luncheon to the representatives In Pans of the Latln-Amerltnn States. Those present Included the Braxlllan Ambas sador and the Ministers for Argentina, Chile, Cuba, Bolivia, Mexico, Peru, Guatemala) Uruguay and Ecuador. D yw Itaw the forlornily of a wsman . with ne picture of the man that was? TOE DANGER OF PNEUMONIA How You C?an Avoid It When you Have a cold and neglect it you are in great danger of pneumonia. 1 he pure food ele ments in Father John's Medicine build en ergy to re- sist cold and grin sertas The gentle laxative effect of Father John's Medicine helps tp drive out impurities. Father John's Medicine soothes and heals the lining of the breath. Ing piuajti. r You are safe when you taKe Father John's Medicine because It It guaranteed free from alcohol or dangerous drugs In any form, sixty Rome, Feb. 21. More than three hun dred Americans attended, a reception given' to-night In honor of Washington's Birthday by the American, Charge d'Af falres, Peter Jay. patcnes from Home reneci no sucn wnu tImes three bodIe. n8 declare8i denunciation or mm ns was nenpeu upon . . , . . Orlando when the latter reached an lm- hcard representatives of all Interested passe In Paris. The labor situation In Allied and neutral countries an finally Italy Is Improved. Growing" sentiment the Councils of Minister! of the nrln- J5!r?.!3S2f!!? I-M"y'B dependcnce upon clpal Powers considered the text It Is learned that the conference will Starting with tne recent recession of take decisions In the next ten days upon the Allies from their original demands the Russian situation which will be likely .,. nm.n .n. to strengthen tremendously NlttlV pres- c.n, Tttrd,. dlseued GermAnv. aW. tlge at home and enable him to turn mands for "revision o; the troaty" and predicts that many other attempts to Italian public opinion t away from the scntim;ntal and materially unimportant questions now summarized In tho insig nificant corridor toward Flume and pro- pare It to recelvo enthusiastically set tiements with tho United States tend change its terms will be made unless the Allies stand firm. Revisions already have been made, he declares, for begin ning on May 10 a minute study has ine to Knlv Ialv' n.n'nmlr nmMm. ueo" OI Fvery ur"c y tunica! urTrt t w im..,,; -T- commissions sitting In more than 250 and get her Industry going again. The contents ami character of the notes of the Allies to Preildent Wilson are still most closely guarded here, but mere is reason to believe all these things sessions and by tho Council of Four In seventy-six meetings. Capt Tardieu declares that the same spirit that recently became public In ...... fc. icmuii w u;ik3vc uii MivBo mines i r i,.-j .. , , " , , ", : have not been presented to him either ?naon 'xlsted e"llcr ln FMl? but na' formally or Informally. Meanwhile ?ormer iZemLer uemenceau firmly held other elements of the1 situation in the ",s gr0, He as8erta ' y to re near East and In the Balkans are press- e criticism of the treaty as Inexe Ing upon the conference and overshad- cu'awle ,br Iev'ewln U10" P"ta of It owing thev Adriatic question and possl- wnIh a'ready nave been made effective, bly ultimately will affect that question ,BUCh he occupation of German terrl In tne most favorable manner. ' Jy relurn- of Alsace-Lorraine. . , the taking over of the Saar Basin hv XAVY LEGAL AID OPENS DEIVE. !'te F?hfh,.,the fxecutlon of the sc1- ... mo uituimilllllllT VI XOrt- Increased " Sfembcrahln. Cammlin JVoto Under Wny Here. The Navy Legal Aid Association. wnicn nas temporary headquarters ln the Manhattan Navy Club, at 13 East Forty-first street, has started a cam paign ior founder memberships. The association exists ior the purpose of conducting, the defence of unlisted men or tne united states Navy before courts. martial and courts of Inquiry for a nominal fee, or gratuitously, and gen erally to render legal aid and assistance to enusiea men or tne navy who are worthy or sucn assistance. xiie iruoiei-n oi ine association nr. ttiuoi ueoevoise, y. Butler Duncan. Frederick I Eldrldge. W. B. Franklin, vice-Aomirai AiDert N. Cleaves, U. 3. N. ; Charles E. Hughes. Arthur Curtlss James, .wiiuam aicAdoo, Morgan J. O'Brien, Morgan J. O'Brien. Jr.. Roland K. Kiggs, jonn k. fciaguo, Herbert L. Sntterl.ee, John B. Stanchfleld, Emery C Weller. Clark Williams. Beekman WInthrop and William Zlegler. Jr. The New York branch wlllbo reartv on March 1 to undertake the defence of men cited to De tried by courts-martial. and Drancnes win oe opened at other naval bases as soon as sufficient funds arejrocelved to sustain them. DRY MILK BUSHED TO ITALY. Prompt Ve -ifaile of Fund liaised by St. Valentine's Ball. A large part of the 9,000 acquired bv the American Free Milk and Relief for Italy by me at. .valentine's fancy dress ball It sponsored has been Invested In dry mine ano otner supplies which are being rushed to Italy. The milk Is being sent In lots of 100,000 quarts. There is a greattneed. also, for cod liver oil, Mrs. John A. Drake, president or tne organization, said yesterday. resses In the neutral xone. the surrender (''Open Today, Washington's Birthday" ART EVENTS OF EXTRAORDINARY IMPORTANCE American Art Galleries Madison Square South, New York NOW ON FREE VIEW, 9 A. M. UNTIL 6 P. M. continuing until date of tale (Washinffton'a Birthday, Inclusive) TO BE SOLD BY DIRECTION OP THE NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY AS. ADMINISTRATOR Tomorrow (Tuesday), Wednes day, Thursday, Friday & Satur day Afternoons of This Week, , at 2:30, AT TH E American Art -Galleries Madison Square South A VERY IMPORTANT ' COLLECTION OF TO BE SOLD BY ORDER OF EXECUTORS, TRUSTEES AND PRIVATE OWNERS, Wednesday and Thursday Evenings ol This Week Feb. 25th and 26th, at 8:15 In the GraufTBallroom of the Hotel PJaza Fifth Avenue, 58 to 59 Street (Admission by Card to De Had Free of the M&wgen.) ' Valuable Paintings OF THE MODERN SCHOOLS INCLUDING THE PRIVATE COLLECTION FORMED BY THE LATE Mr. R. H. White OF BOSTON A GRAND MASTERPIECE BY 'VAN MARCKE, TWO SUPERB EXAMPLES OF COROT, A VERY IMPORTANT DE NEUVILLE, A FINE LANDSCAPE BY DIAZ And rtepresentatlTe Examples by Rout aeau (3 examples), Troyon (4 examples), Dupre (2 ex amples), Inness (4 examples), Daubigny (6 examples), Jacque (5 examples), Blakelock (4 ex amples), Ziem (3 examples), Breton, Vibert, Delacroix, Isabey, Fromentin, Jongkind, Monet, Monticelli, Murphy, Rico, Wyant, Thaulow and other Celebrated Masters. ,A Durrlntlre Catalogue, Illus trated by Halftone Reproductions, WU1 Be Mailed to Applicants on Itecelptot One Dollar. 11 Antique Chinese Porcelains IN SINGLE COLORS, BLUE AND WHITE AND DECO RATED, SPECIMENS O F HAN, TANG AND SUNG POT TERY, SNUFF BOTTLES IN JADE AND OTHER HARD STONES AND PORCELAINS, ENAMELS, FINE OLD BRONZES, IMPORTANT GILDED AND INCRUSTED BUDDHAS, CARVED STONE AND POTTERY, SCULP TURES, MANY LARGE. PLANT AND FISH JARS, ELABORATE TEMPLE FIGi URES AND LACQUERED PALACE SCREENS. "The whole forming an ex traordinary gathering and' affording an unusual oppor tunity to private buyers and dealers in Oriental Art." BEING THE PltOPKItTT OP TIIE ESTATE OF TIIE WIDELY KNOWN EXPERT, TIIE LATE Ernest A. Bischoff OF LONDON, ENGLAND, AND FEKIN, CHINA, ,An Illustrated. Catalogue Will Be Mailed on Receipt ol One Dollar. The Sales Will Be Conducted by Mr. THOMAS E. KIRBY and hU assistants, MR. OTTO BERNET and .MR. II. II. PARKE,,, of the AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, Managers Madison Sq. South. Entrance O E. 23d Street, New York. nyave made but RAMSES axe-Chosci SES CHURCHILL'S DINNER At Churchill's the cuisine, entertainment and atmos phere combine to make dinner a delightful casion., Dancing. More Than aHestaurant- ABoMdwInstitution SPRING SUITS AND OVERCOATS -FOR YOUNG MEN Qur suits, overcoats and sports clothing; for young men from' 34 to 40 chest meas ure have, been designed to meet the in creasing demand, particularly of gradu ates of our leading universities and col leges, for clothing which follows cldsely in design and fabric that worn by- the best dressed young men of England. In addition to importing, exclusively for bur young men's clothing, the choicest7 woolens produced -in England, Ireland and Scotland, we 4 have imported many accessories pf dress designed for young men: . .' s Wv 1 t K Young iiitn't 'suits fn imported 'tweeHs,' Iiomeipunt andjlannels. Young Men's top coat and motor coats in lootely draped English jnpdt !;. Full evening dress suits and dinner jackets. Golf suits of imported tweeds and Shet land?, ' . Complete assortments of furnishings, head-T.-car and faotwcir." Special $1 Tai. tHob I .JJ DE PINNA Fifth Avenue at 50th Street A Manhattanite's Experience in Try ing to Get Dinner Down-Town After 8P.M. 1 am like Thomas Alva Edison in one particular, nr least; I started my career as a worker when there was no ! Buch thinjr as an eight-hour I I TT ! J.-J.-1 . " iuw. noving Hwinea 10 work as many hours a day as was necessary to complete tho job in hand, I have kept up the habit ever since. Therefore I find myself forking very often from 8 a. m. until midnight. Twice, recently, t found it necessary to be down in News paper Row most of the even ing. The first time, around 8 p. m. I thought I would run out of the newspaper office I was in and get dinner. The first time I went to Haan's new place on Broad Way and found it closed. Then I walked over to Park Row and finally landed in a restaurant where I had to stand at the counter, order what I could get, get a ticket punched, carry the food to a table and eat it, and then go to the cashier and pay the check. It was not a comfortable way for a tired and hungry man to dine. I did not know of a down town restaurant where I could go after 8 p. m., order a satis factory meal and eat it under comfortable conditions. The second time, and again around 8 p. m. (and this time very hungry and very tired), I wondered where I could go and get a fair meal. Happily it dawned on me that the Clarendon Hotel, owned and directed by my friend John Hill, was just across the river in Brooklyn, at Washington. Johnson and Fulton streets a trinity loca- won ana a trinity hotel in re- spect of good management, home-like environment and good eating. So I went across the hrirlcm to the Clarendon, met a head waiter that I knew and who knows what Hike to eat and nact a hne dinner, ennsisfinf, of tomato SOUD. an Eno-lUli mutton chop with grilled sweet potatoes, hearts of lettuce salad with Russian dressing, rolls and butter rtfo wnu plenty of butter, too), and a pot of coffee. You see I like to eat. frnnrl and substantial things. I met Mr. Hill after rnnnnr and we had a nice visit to gether. I saw a srreat deal nf friend Hill when he managed the Claridge Hotel in New York in addition to directing the Clarendon in Brooklyn - which he himself owns, and everything in it. He did not like to divide his time between.the Claridge and the Clarendon, so he went back home to stay. The Clarendon is the kind of hotel that people like be cause they get such good ser vice, so much courtesv. and. say, folks, the.cooking is great. I told Mr Hill of my experi ence in trying to find some thing 'good to eat in Lower Manhattan after 8 p. m., and why I had run over to get a square meal at the Clarendon. I told him he ought to let me tell my experience for the bene fit of many hundreds of men detained at their offices at night in lower Manhattan men who do not know where to go for a good meal any more than I did until I hap pened to think of the many good meals I have had at the Clarendon He laughed and asked: "What was the price of your check for dinner?" "Two ninety-five," I said and I also said that I was so tickled with the good cooking and the moderate size of tho check that I cave the waiter a tip of 56 cents. "So you want me to invest several hundred dollars in newsuaper ad vertising to tell your story?" he asked. "Sirre." I said. "Won't it be cood advertising? Won't it let lower Manhattanites know where they can get good eating at night?" "Well, all right; go ahead," Mr. Hill said. So you have the story and let me add you will always be satisfied when you dine at the Clarendon. ' Sincerely yours, W-LLIAM C. FREEMAN, .511 Fifth Ave.t f. XCily,