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-_n.. 22 NEW LINGS DELAYED IF HVLAN OBSTRUCTS Board of Estimate Must Indorse Plans Before Be/ lief Can Come. MA YOB NOT JUBILANT O'Brien Asks Transit Body Look Into B. TL T. Strike Charges. QUEENS SHUNTING LIKELY Grand Central Congestion and Double Fare May Be Averted by Shuttle Service. TYom sources close to the Hylan administration the intimation came yesterday that the Mayor and other nicmners or the Board of Estimate had not received with enthusiasm the subway construction program made public by the Transit Commission and Involving an expenditure of $218,000,000. It was suggested that the Mayor already had declared that any future subway lines must be both owned and operated by the municipality, and thnt under no other conditions would further funds be voted for new construction by the Board of Estimate. Not Only does the Board of Estimate hold the city's purse strings but its approval is essential to the official ratification of all the routes recommended through the city streets. Should it assume an obstructive attitude, therefore, it could block or seriously delay ac'ion for new transit facilities. The plan for reorganization and unification of the city's lines, which the Transit Commission has adopted as Its policy, assumes city ownership but not municipal operation. B. It. T. Inquiry Finished. The Transit Commission yesterday finished its inquiry into inadequate service, on the subway ar>d elevated lines of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company. Orders for specific betterments, as in the case of the Jnterborough, may be expected within a week or two. Before the case was closed John I*. O'Brien, Corporation Counsel, filed a formal request that the commission specially investigate Ills allegation that the B. R. T. had spervt $2,500,000 for the suppression of the 1920 strike and also his charge that in both the B. R. T. and the Intcrborough there is an annual wastage of $1,500,000 in the management of their power plants. C'n. John F. O'Ryan, who was presiding, assured the Corporation Counsel that he would refer the matter to his colleagues of the commission. Concerning the proposed inquiry into strike expenditures Mr. O'Brien's request was seconded by Charles B. Buchner. counsel for the Amalgamated Association of Railway Kmployecs. William S. Mcnden, general manager of the B. R. T., commended the commission's plans for new subway con ...m-u' i., uin nupcu inai noimng would be permitt d to Interfere with the completion of 'he long standing project for the Nassau street tube, which he regarded as vital to the expansion of the Brooklyn system. "Po?t? >'ot Propasindn." +hcre was much sparring between Mr. Menden and the Corporation Counsel over the declaration by the operating manager that conditions showing 100 standees in the average car In ru.'h hours in the B. Ft. T. service were not at all unreasonable since additional track facilities were not forthcoming from the city. Mr. Menden denied thai the big steel cars used by his line had been designed and built with their tutright enamelled posts especially to encourage standing rather than sitting. Temporary relief for 60 per cent, of Ihe 18,000.000 passengers annually who travel Dciwf-cn rimes tsquare and the Corona and Astoria extensions from the Queensboro Bridge Plaza in Long Island City was foreshadowed. Under cross-examination by Clarence J. Shearn, chief counsel for the commission, Mr. Menden said he would recommend to I.lndley J. Garrison, receiver, If the commission should so direct. that his company employ In a shuttle service Its narrow cars to run over the Corona and Astoria extensions, iIiuh furnishing free transfer privileges to B. ft. T. passengers who now have to pay an extra fare and change at the Plaza Into lnterborough cars. Wonld Cat t-<t Street Jam. This plan. It was said, would shift into the wide, steel under-river cars of the B. R. T. for their ride to and from the West Side of Manhattan more than 11,000,000 Queens passengers a year who now arrive at the Grand Central terminus of the Queens extension and add greatly to the congestion of the Forty-second street shuttle. Until now ihe lnterborough has enjoyed a monopnl of the Corona and Astoria service, because the steel cars which the B. R. T. uses In Its tube service are twelve Inches too wide to 'be accommodated at I he station platforms of the Queens extensions. ' The Transit Commission next Monday v 111 begin Investigation of service on the 'levated lines of the Manhattan Railway Company. 6TH AV. LINE IN RECEIVERSHIP The Sixth Avenue Railroad Company surface line, which heretofore has not been Included in the receivership of the New Tork Railways Company, was Included yesterday when an order was signed by Judge Julius M. Mayer In the United States District Court which extended the power of the receiver. Job K. Hedges, to cover the Sixth avenue lino. The road hBd asked that It be made a Party defendant In the equity proceedings brought hy the American Brake Shoe und Foundry Company. The petition alleged that at least $21)0,010 will be needed to take care of Improvements and that the petitioner tas heavy claims maturing, including more than lioo.ooo In tax<s due tin city, Henry V. Poor, attorney for tin road, snld the action was taken for "technical and financial icasons" and would not affect operation. TE.V A N T tlKTU roil COLD. Joseph Gropper. an Insurance agent of 418 rroapoet avenue. The Bronx, who sumI the Milan Estate, Inc., for $5,0n? dg"hages. alleging that ho had caught cold because the company had not properly heated his apartment, yesterday received an award of $2fid from a Jury in th? Supreme Court, Th? Bronx. 1 v ) ! r?. . N Pigeon Race From Ship At Sea Stirs Betting 1 BETTING oil the flight of carrier pigeons is not prohibited by land or sea laws, and sporting folK aboard the White Star liner Baltic, which sails today for Liverpool, will put up some of their spare change on six birds that will be released by Purser Palmer, who owns them, when the ship is live hours out, or about 75 mile3 east of Sandy Hook. The goal of the racers is their home cote in Newark. A committee of passengers will handle the details of the contest, give the birds names to supplement their numbers on their leg rings, printing the names on the wings. Cash prizes for the | benefit of the seamen's charities I will oc awurucu in ine naiuca ui i the winners. I BRICK MEN RESENT UNTERMYER ATTACK Dec I n re He Is Alisinformcd and That Shortage Will Knd Within '6 Weeks. Resentment against Samuel Unter- j | myer for accusing them of combining to 1 restrict production and increase prices j | was expressed yesterday by brick manu- i facturers and dealers all over New York. The leaders of the business presented their side of the controversy, one which is particularly interesting to New York ' because of the building ahottage. They | said that not only docs no combination ; exist in tile brick industry, but that | thnro ia nnt rvpn an association, and I that the brick men scarcely sec one an- ' other from one year's end to the next, j They countered again when they said j that prices are not fixed by the brick ! manufacturers or dealers but by the : consumers. They asserted that an ex- i ceptional scarcity, due to readily ob- ! vioUs causes, and an exceptional de- | mand. due to the revival in building. | have caused prices to go up, and that j this situation will be corrected naturally I and normally by a large flow of new I brick into the market within three j weeks. An executive of the Greater New Vork Brick Company put tlje situation thus: "Here's the situation, thoroughly understood by every brick man. We are | between old and new brick, in other | words, the reserve supply of old brick, considered months ago as probably ample, has been exhausted by the ex; traordinary demand this spring. The | yards are cleaned out of old ftcck. Then, too. there has been less manufacture I than usual, not due, as Mr. Untermyer I seems to think, to some criminal or near criminal plot on the part of greedy brick I makers, but to perfectly natural and : ! nerctntible causes. "The weather has been very unfavor- I j able this spring. The first week work ; was started up State there were frosts j ! on three nights. That was back In I i April. There has been an exceptional i ! amount of rain. There have been con- | tinual strikes, some serious, other Just nnnoylng and time wasting. It was the ! combination of these unfavorable far- < tors that slowed up production at a time ' j when the demand had leaped far above : 'the lcrjuircments of the last seven or! I eight years. "That was what attracted so much j attention." the informant of The New j i York Herald continued, "this amazing i demand which caught the brlckmakers ! j virtually unprepared. The reserve stock < melted like snowballs. But we are working double time to make brick, and j ' I can say authoritatively that the sltua- j ; tion will be greatly eased within two 1 01 three weeks. "New York and contiguous territory? ( I mean the five boroughs. Newark and | , Hong Island?use about COO,000,000 | , brick annually. The demand has been ' , fairly consistent, but with the present [ j I building boom on the figures will go up; ' materially. This vast Quantity of brick I | I comes from relatively few districts? , | places where nature affords a certain variety of clay. ( "Along the Hudson Hirer tWse places nre Haverstraw. the New-burgh district, the Kingston Point district. Beacon. \ Athens. I oeyman s, btockport. Hudson, i ! Catskill and Croton Point. There are 1 also four plants on Hong Island and a number in South Jersev. I positively know that in all of those plants not troubled with strikes every effort is being: made to produce. If Mr. Unter- i myer says that no new brick ran be expected before September he doesn't know what he is talking: about. There wili be large supplies of new brick within three weeks." At the office of the "dean" of the brick husiness, W. K. Hammond, In West Klfty-second street, it was said ' that there was a great deal of anger in the industrv over the charges made j i before the Lockwood committee and a feeling that Mr. Untermye* itpd been badly misinformed. At Haverstraw. where l.Oon negroes are on strike In thirty-flve brickmaking plants, the State troopers took hold yesterday and brought order and a better j feeling of security out of a tiouhlesome situation. Twenty troopers rode into Haverstraw and patrolled the troubled section. The difficulty at Haverstraw has been fomented by New Tork and Southern agitators who have Tfeen there only two weeks and who have been preaching Bolshevik doctrine. The men went on strike for an Increase of pay from $3.50 to $3.50 a day. Conditions similar to those existing at Haverstraw have affected moat of the other Hudson Itlver brlcl: yards. At CAtskill and East Kings' >n troopers were on patrol last night r.nd at these places, as at Haverstraw tinuble had I been incited by foreign ar'tators. ECONOMIC MEANING IN CROMWELL PROPHECY i Exchange Does Not Think House Cleaning Considered. Members of the New York Stock Exchange were startled yesterday by publication in The New York Hehald of the statement of Seymour h. Cromwell, president of the Exchana- in a speech in Philadelphia. Thursday night. that a hundred members will d^ p out of the Exchange. A study of the situation convinced them that he had in mind more 1 h< play of natural economic forces than any contemplated eleanin ; up process. Mr. Cromwell declined .-ntr comment, j Members f< I thut he r" rred to the trend toward corncntrath . of rapttal in tlie xeeurltles business in fewir units. They believe he had In mind more a connoll latlon of brokerage houses Into fewer hut larjje units than the elimination of any of these hous-a from the field. Copies of the qucstlonnolrc whieh the Exchange will require each member to anawer at least twiea a yenr In the new plan for closer supervision of a member's financial standing are nut to be sent om for another mentb. ? THE M ARTHUR MAY FACE TRIAL ON OWN WILL Angered Over Having Name Linked With Women's Cases by Jersey Police. SUIT BEING CONSIDERED Absolved After Recent Arrest, May Clear Old Charge, Yielding Extradition. Alexander A. MacArthur, the artist arrested Thursday that Bessie Dawson of Upper Montclair might try to identify him as the man who attacked her in Mountain Side Recreation Park, near Cedar Grove, is considering suing those who caused him to spend the night in a cell after the girl failed to recognize him. His lawyer, Emil A. Fuchs. Til Chambers street, let it be known yesterday that he had no intention of leaving matters as they are. It is not impossible that MacArthur will return to New Jersey and face trial on the indictments returned against him last December on charges made by Mary Uouise Bradshaw and Mrs. Helen O'Neill. Jf he takes this course he ? Hi fcu HUH raui i. uav ncu ...... numerous witnesses who convinced Gov. Miller that he was not In New Jersey when Miss Bradshaw and Mrs. O'Neill were attacked. In so far as the alleged attack upon Miss Lawson is concerned, MacArthur has other witnesses who can prove that ho was not in New Jersey on Wednesday, the day of the incident complained of by Miss Lawson. Question of Proeednre. MacArthur and his friends have taken the stand that they have come to the point when they refuse to tolerate any longer the situation that causes the Essex county authorities to think of his name whenever they receive a complaint from a woman. MacArthur declined to talk yesterday and his attorney declared that he was not ready to make any statement regarding the future. What MacArthur and Mr. Fuchs have in their minds was set forth by persons having full knowledge of the facts. The question is one of procedure. In the first place. It was said, MacArthur has a clear case against the police of both Essex county and New York, it was pointed out that the contention will be that there was no evidence to warrant the arrest. It was learned that Miss Lawson. shown pic tures of MacArthur in Montclair, declared that they resembled the man who attacked her, but she wasn't sure. When she returned to Montclair with Detective Sergeant Riley, the latter declared that the girl was certain that MacArthur. whom she had seen In Police Headquarters In Manhattan, was not her assailant. Evidence of Peraeentlon, Mac Arthur'a friends are urging him to act at once. They declare that he can have himself declared innocent -n court in New Jersey and thus clear his name. One of those associated with the young man's case declared his attorneys had ample evidence of persecution in which MacArthur is the victim. It was said that the latter's story, or a part of it, might be made public within a few days. There Is ample reason to predict that an announcement will be made of MacArthur's decision to go Into Court on the indictments charging him with attacking Miss Bradshaw and Mrs. O'Neill. MacArthur, who spent Thursday night in a cell at Police Head farters, was taken before Chief City Magistrate MeAdoo yesterday by Detect.ve Sergeant Ba-th and Detective Cspt. Godfrey, shief of the Essex county detectives. On moiion by Assistant District Attorney Morgan Jones, who explained to the :ourt that Miss Dawson had not identified MacArthur. the tatter was released. One of the extraordinary features of the arrest of MacArthur, his friends say. enters around the failure of the New Jersey police to bring' th three boys and Mrs. Walter O. Graham to New York to look at him. Mrs Graham and tlie three boys were on the scene in Mountain Side Recreation * ark 'en minutes after Miss L?nwson vas attacked. They saw a man rise out of the shrubbery at the same spot on-, appeared to Miss Lawson. The description of the man they saw. tullies in every respect with the nisi who attacked Miss L<awRon. Their recollection of the man must be clearer than Miss I-.awson'3, inasmuch as her mind had suffered the shock resulting from his attack. But. say MacArthur's associates, the police did not take advantage of this obvious opportunity to prove whether MacArthur was in New Jersey Wednesday. COLUMBIA ATHLETE MARRIES SECRETLY J. M. Thornton to Continue at University. it became known yesterday that John William Thornton, the son of J. Ft. Thornton of Rutherford, N J, a manufacturer, married Miss Valerie Lamb of Clinton, Iowa, on April 7, but they did not announce the fact to their friends until a few days ago, when Mrs. Thornton visited her son and his bride In their apartment at 652 West 153d street and gave them her blessing. Thornton, who Is 34, is a student at Columbia University, where he expects to be graduated next year with the degree of bachelor of science. He has played on the football team for three years and has been a member of the baseball team and the track team. His wife is the daughter of Mrs. K. A. young, who owns a large tract of timber land near Clinton. The ceremony was per'formerd In the Port Washington Collegiate Church by Dr. Berg. GIT LOW, OUT OF PRISON, GETS GREAT RECEPTION Other 'Political Prisoners' at Socialistic Mass Meeting. Benjamin Gltlow. a former Assemblyman. who recently was released from Ming Wing Prison on a court order after serving pari Oi a icrm 101 criminal nnarehy. received an ovation that ln*trd eighteen minutes last night when hp rose to apeak at a inns* meeting In the Central Opera House at 2'l"> Kant e'lxtjseventh street. Men hi> I women ot' foreign htrth formed moat of the audience. Other so-called "political prisoners" who were present were O. H. Ruthenberg of Cleveland, former executive seeretary of the Communist Party: Henry VVInltsky and f. K. ?rguson, a Chicago lawyer. All of them denounced capitalism and everything else but flovlet Russia. and a. resolution was adopted praising the Amalgamated Garment Workers Union for offering the ftovlft Oovernment H.oon.ono to rehabilitate the garmeat Industry In Russia. ? NEW YORK HERALD, $6 BOY'S BANKROLL REVEALS FORGERIES I George Morris, Canada's 'Master Penman,' and Two Pals lndieted on Confession. r $100,000 IN BAP CHECKS N. V. I . Student, Who Clerks in Father's Insurance Office, Turns Light ou Gang. The confession of Xsadore Gross, a student at New York University, led to the arrest and indictment yesterday of George Morris Sohatzburg, interna tlonally known as George Morris, master penman. Morris completed a three years' prison term in Canada last year and since then, the police said, has been the directing genius of a gang that has I cleaned up about $100,uOO forging i cheeks. Salo Gross, Iaadore's brother, 227 | West Ki'iy-ftfth street, and George Wll! Hams, 100 West Sixty-first street, also 'were arrested and indicted. All three ; will be arraigned before Judge Nott in General Sessions Monday, Too much display of wealth on an income of $6 a week caused young Isadore's exposure. He worked part time I as a clerk in the Insurance office of his father. S. A. Gross, 200 Broadway. His salary was $20 a week, from which was deducted $14 for sioard. Gross, senior, was one of the many victims of the Morris gang. Student Carries Bank Roll. Detectives learned from other students at the university that Isadore carried a bank roll as big as a bootlegger's. When they questioned him he broke down, according to Assistant District Attorney Richard C. Murphy. His part In the seehcme, Mr. Murphy said, was to get genuine checks from his father's office and turn them over to his brother, Salo, who, in turn, gave them to Morris. Morris copied them carefully and raised the amount from $500 to $1,000, returning the original to Isadore. Then two members of the gang, impersonating the payee and payer, would take the forgtd check to the bank and cash It. If any question was raised the supposed payer would step up and identify the payee. This process worked smoothly until the Fidelity and Deposit Company, protecting the banks from forgery, as- j signed Detectives Barrett, Hastings and Kllroy to Investigate. When they questioned Isadore he had $160 in his pockets. Because he promised to tell everything he knew he was not arrested, but detained as a witness. Some of the Bad Checks Listed. Specific allegations Include two forged checks on the Irving National Bank, Eighth Street Branch, one for $305 and the other for $350; one on the Commonwealth Bank for $600, two on the Columbia Bank, Canal street and Broadway, for $300 and $350 respectively; one for $200 on the Fifth Avenue Branch, Bankers Trust Company, and three on the Chatham and Phenix Bank, Eighth Street Branch, for $400, $525 and $700.25 respectively. Morris, in the Tombs, has refused to talk. He has been living at the St. James Hotel, but his home is Montreal. Mr. Murphy said he is so skillful a copyist that he did not trace signatures, but duplicated them in free hand with such exactitude that the most expert eye could not detect the forgery. POLICE PARADE TO-DAY WITH 6,000 IN LINE March Starts Up Broadway From Battery at 11:30. The parade of the New York Police Department takes place to-day. The procession will start from the Battery at 11:30 o'clock and go up Broadway to Twelfth street, west to Seventh avenue and north on Seventh avenue to Fortieth street, east on Fortieth street to Fifth avenue and south on Fifth avenue past the reviewing stand at Worth monument, between Twentyfifth and Twenty-fourth streets. Wiliam J. Lahey. Chief Inspector, will head the .parade and Mayor Hylan and his cabinet and Commissioner Enrlght will be In line. The procession will Include 5,000 policemen who have been drilling In armories in preparation for the parade for several weeks, 1,000 police reserves, the civilian contingent ol the Police Department, 100 patrolmen forty Yonkers policemen. There will be an honors squad of eight members of the force who have earned medals during the last year. Representatives of the French Government will review the parade and will present medals to several officers of the force for their courtesy to representatives of the French Government visiting i In Xew York. ' ELUSIVE BURGLAR ROBS 35 HOMES IN RICHMOND Police of Many Towns Seek Second Story Worker. Th police of Staten Island are searching for a man who they admit Is the cleverest and most expert porch climber that has operated on the Island for many years. He has entered at least thirty-five houses In various sections of the borough In the last eleven toys. Although several ersons have seen him their glimpses have been fleeting and they did not get good enough looks at him to describe him. The thief seems to fancy only cash and men's watches, which he takes from trousers pockets and from beneath pillows, nearly always operating In a bedroom which opens on a t>orch. lie works between 1 and 6 In the morn- ' ing. when a man's sleep is supposed to be soundest, and has been seen In Rosebank, West Brighton. New Brighton, Stapleton, Fort Wadsworth and Sound Beach. The entire detective force of Riohmond borough has been put to work trying to find him. His latest theft was early yesterday, when he broke into a house at Stapleton and stole $27.50. FINDS DEATHS SIMULTANEOUS. Ily In Train Crash. Kurrognte Wlngate In Brooklyn yes1 tor day ruled that Robert O. Holla well, hi* wife, t'atlierlne, and their six year old daughter, Marie, wore killed slmuh tanooualy 011 August 1920. when their i utomobilc was struck by a ti-Hln nrnr Hingha mton. "The duration whs deelded In consequence of a suit Instituted j by Mrs. Rllsabcth Walsh of 104ft tft. Mnrk's place, Brooklyn, a sister of Mrs. Mellawell, In which she sought, to show that the Infant survived her parents. Ha. the contention of the plaintiff been upheld the ostatea of Mr. and Mrs. Hellawell, after passing to the daughter, would have been divided among her kin. As It Is the estates of Mr. and Mrs. Hellawell will go to their reapeotlv* families. '"V SATURDAY, MAY 13, FUR STORAGE Vaults on the premises Absolute protectioa A Mother s Heart Is a Child's Idea of Heaven It is a very old proverb that cannot be traced that "One good mother is worth a hundred schoolmasters" Even the 'wholly intellectual Napoleon is credited with having said that the future destiny of a child is always the work of the mother. Ti I ? Im fVtaf rtA influence is more powerful that the mother's in shaping the man's life. He takes her nature, manners and habits. Blessed are the mothers who give their all to their children. [S/gnedl May 13, 193a. Sheraton Tables I The slender simplicity of Sheraton tables is especially pleasing in dining or living rooms of small country houses or in apartments. Belmaison has several models, fine reproductions of old pieces, in Cuban mahogany, sometimes inlaid in light mahogany. The one illustrated is I the largest and has two pedestals, so that it may be extended with leaves, to seat ten people. Heavy beaten brass claw feet are a distinctive finish, $450. Smaller tables with single pedestals, for four or six people at $140 and $220. And a still smaller oblong table at $105, or a drop leaf table at $135 have infinite uses in a living room. Fourth Gallery, New Bldg. In the Book Store Wonderful Lovers of that venerable but ever sparkling British humorist, Mr. Punch?will welcome the publication of three new books by him. Mr. Punch's Lloyd George with Introduction by Algernon Locker, $2 The cartoons, gentle, benign, severe, and cruel which have, in the pages of Mr. Punch, reflected the prevailing state of mind of the British public concerning the leading figure at the Genoa conference. Mr. Punch's History of England? the appearance of volumes 3 and 4. With 500 cartoons and illustrations running through the pages of this droll chronicle of Nineteenth Century life in England?this witty history of the Victorians written by themselves. $10 for the 2 vols. Street Floor, Old Building, A? A New Art Wanamaker Auditorium Today at 1 :30 and 3 P. M. CLAVILUX? the Color Organ THOMAS WILFRED at the Keyboard Note: The CLAVILUX accomplishes with light what musical instruments accomplish with sound. Around the silent compositions of the CLAVILUX will be woven a texture of music by the Great Organ. Admission Free. I 1922. A U QUATRIEME ii 1/ n e nait rrice ior Tooled Leather Sets and odd pieces for the desk In order to make room for new stocks Au Quatrieme is offering a very fine group of leather pieces and a few three-piece sets for the desk, at half price. Of richly tooled and gold-decorated Florentine leather ? brown, dark green, and a few pieces in red. The Pieces and their low prices. Three-piece sets?letterpaper holder, pen-tray and portfolio, $25?were $50. Letter-trays with tooled leather lid, $10?were $20. Paper racks, $22.50? were $45. L?euer-noiaers witn iock and key, $22.50 and $30? were $45 and $60. Desk scrap-baskets, several sizes, $6, $6.25, $15, $17.50 and $20?were $12 to $40. Book-ends, $6 and $22.50 ?were $12 and $45. Fishing-journals, beautifully bound in dark green gold-tooled Florentine leather, $6?were $12. Note-books, $2.50?were $5. Fourth Floor, Old Building Candy Special Today Chacolate-covered nougats, 50c lb.?regularly 80c lb. Eighth Gallery, New Building Downstairs Store, New Building Street I >or, Old Building mmm IN THE SHOPS Men's Stra Varying heights of < Wanamaker oval. Cc * * American sennit hats, $2.50 Lincoln-Bennett, London, Ser REDLEAF, London, Sennits, Milan straw hats, $7. Leghor Fancy bands?wide combinat * ? 1,200 Fine SILK to wear with straw hatsput you in happy harmc striped, pin-striped, white silk broadcloth, checked, i and color, and plain tan w 17; three sleeve lengths. Men's Special $8 the same qualities could b Smooth tan calfskin with calfskin. Tan Scotch gra Men's Silk Socl Reinforced. Black, cordc Men's $2 and $2. Athletic style. White fan 3igns. And some corded comfortable and serviceal * X Special Sale of 1 $5.50?(the Spring sale for). 100 are Tilden m Church model frames, wit ing their serviceability, regut. 70 are special racl cession. 50 "Dreadnaught" 5 * X JlfEN'S SPR dfJ- excellent a young men?guar their style and go 'UM&fir Formerly A. T. Stewart Another * Passengers 01 ''Listen In" or In addition to hundre calls appreciative of oi broadcasted daily from have just received this TELE "JOHN WANAMAKER, New "Passengers on Lack York last evening reques appreciation of your vet which we enjoyed betv Greendel, Penn. J. J * Radiophone Pre (W. W. Z. Wavel 1:40 and 3:40?Brief Vi( 2:40?Program by Hack* 4:40?VOGUE Paris cab of Naat Publications. 10:30 P M.?Program of Ampico in the Chickering Rep * Headquarters of H Radio Service, Seventh We will take orders for the new Western Electric loud speaker at $161. Orders received now will -be delivered in about two weeks. Westinghouse RC sets, $132.50. Aeriola Sr., $65. Aeriola Jr., $25. De Forest Radiohome sets, $70.75. Everyman sets, $30.50. Polak Green sets, $32. Amplifying transformers Federal, $7; Amrad, $7; Thordarson, $4.50; DeForest, $7. Klosner vomer rheostats, $1.50. ? "for MEN ? S1 w Hats, $2 crown. Varying widthi >mfortable sweat-bands. * to $4; splits at $5. inits, $3.50, $5, $6. $5, $6; splits, f7 _ n straw hats, $8. J ions of colors?50c. I Shirts, at $4.50? -cool, colorful, agreeable my with summer stripes on white, white silk jerseys?with satin ith separate soft collar. * i Oxfords?now $( e made for today. Right London toe, French toe in semi-brogue. * * * cs?$2 Seconds?i >van, navy blue, gray. * * .50 Union Suits?$ cy mercerized madras ii madras. Elastic webbin ble suits. Sizes 34 to 42 * rENNIS Racketsthat tennis players wa odel frames, and 50 ar h slight defects not affec strung with new importe kets purchased at a coi Seconds?$6.50 each * ING SUITS at ssortment?mode anteed to make od service?or y( \ 555S5ESSSE5ES25E555555S553SjpS BROADWAY at Ninth Street Store Hours: 9 to S-J* 1 Marvel! * * \ moving train 1 Wanamaker'a * ids of letters and telephone it Radio concerts being the Wanamaker roof, we GRAM York. awanna train leaving New t that I acknowledge their y excellent radio concert reen Orange, N. J., and r. GRAF. RADIO OPERATOR" * * )gram for Today ength 360 meters) ctrola Recital. d-xserge instrumental Trio. le on FASHIONS by courtesy Spanish music by Victrola and roducing Piano. * * ladio Supplies and Gallery, New Building Variable condensers Chelsea, $4.50. Chelsea, $4.25. Chelsea, $5. Unmounted, $3.30, $3.75. Aerial wire, lightning arresters, ground clamps, lightning switches and a full line of mounted and unmounted variometers, variocouplers and parts. Aero accessories, equipment or material for making your own sets?a generous supply ready. + Radio Experts will be pleased to give advice, information or suggestions. Come and listen in to the daily programs. RADIO SECTION ieventh Gallery, New Building TREET FLOOR !.50 to $8 s of brim and bands 'IfaiHaBl the VERY shirts , the kind of shirts that silk broadcloth, satinfigures on white. Baby stripes of varying size BIG value. Sizes 14 to 5.75?lower than out of our own stocks, and medium toe. Black I i 'or 85c?all silk. >1.25?1,400 suits. i a choice of good deg across back. Very _ IANNIS 7^^ i ^^lil ; mm \>v $40 and $45? 'Is for men and you happy with mr money back. Street Floor, New Building ?r 1