Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
16 PRENDERG LASTIES GAYNOR AND NEW CHARTER DIES OF INIURIES —_ o— Comptroller Severely Criticises the Measure as He Prepares to Sail. MAYOR FOR | Declares It Is the Work of City Executive and | VAINLY VICTIM OF BOMB, WHO SAVED SAGE, ae Se Blown Full of Wounds, Laid- | law Suffered Twenty Years | | in Incurables’ Home. | Million tire Who Used Clerk as Shield From Assassin Fought His Lackeys. $50,000 Claim. | a Befor esaiiing for Europe to-day on| William PR. Laldiaw, who was ertnpled the steamship Rotterdam to join hia | When Russell Sage used him as a shield family abroad, Comptroller Prenderenst |ff0M the bomb of the crazy assnasin, pald his respects to the framers of the |Noreross, tn 1801, died to-day at the proposed new charter and denounced | Home Tncurabl rd avenue and Mes. kiteniSie to push _ the ire [Oe Hundred and Highty+third stre through the Legisiature His death ras a (5 the Injuries asl We man responsible for this char-| cise Goaved behind. sim ae Norcross ter is William J. Gaynor.’ says Mr 4 He borne. bs aera a hin desl AW repeatedly sued Mr. Sage for ie aes ot cas des a mages. oe LiloL ally, af: R ; Pa Pde anche al “ 4 the notion that he was legally Set lon oth, irodued about [Soca te par anptnng or Laid’ the Corporation Counsel unde. the dj. |PUrelY accidental usefulness to hin and rection of the Mayor. Kverybody now |{2¢ Htigation, which was conducted by reallzoe what an absolute atrocity this [JOMeP H. Choate on Laidlaw's side, Stibbipt Gta charter wus Veloped such bitterness that Mre. “The present draft i a much better (S#8¢. With all her philanthropic enter- instrument. As far as {ts workmanship Fee WHE IE. Wonhe be dimoyel ( {8 concerned, it has been fairly well | mory: of her evcentric husband to | Gone. This is due to the fact that the |M#Ke amends, After Landiaw # resources City Committecs of the Senate and the | 4" Mr. Choate's patience had been used | Assembly called to thelr help a man who [UP by the prolonged battle—which coat understood how to draw bills and frame | Mr Sa nd his estate more than the | charters. While the literary construc- 6.000 Laldlaw asked, the sult were tion of this charter ts better, it is fil dropped. with the same glaring attempts to grasp | LAIDLAW USED AS SHIELD FOR power and to conduct this clty govern: SAGE. on @ personal basis, as were evident In| Qatdiaw was a clerk for John HW the first Gaynor chat “If Mr. Gaynor and his lackeys were imposed to frame a good charter for this city, every one would welcome it, but they have done exactly the “What could be worse than the attempt to concentrate in the hands of the Mayor the absolute direction and super- vision of all subway development, Un- der this new charter he would have « veto power over all plans, routes and contracts. Who on earth but himself ever suggested that he should pave this power? Who wants him to have It but some of his interested friends? ‘He Is t jay in the position of being: @ rank obstructionist, and in the face of this palpable fact it ix proposed to let him hereafter what rosites shall be built, what company shall operate them and what con! ‘tors will get awards. This is power that should be left to any one man—I don't care who he is—and certainly {t should not he left to the present Mayor.” JUDGE CLIMBS OUT OF SUBWAY WHEN opposite. | Bh at Sag good & Co, bankers and brokers, th Mr. time s life, He pf the attempt on was delivering ra to Mr, Sa In Mr. Sage's office Henry W. Norcross, a Boston was haggling with Mr. Sage for $2,000,000 as the price of refraining from blowing the millionaire — into eternity. . Mr. Sage was putting Norcross off with postponements, saying that if he back later in the afternoon, ything would be all right.” diaw entered, ignorant of the pur+ |pose of the argument, and Mr, Sage grabbed him cordially by both hands and swung him between the crazy man nd himself just as Norcross shouted: “Then you refuse! All right!" “That's all right, Mr. Sage sata. Now you just be a nice man and come back at 4 o'clock” — ‘And the bomb went off and Norcross was blown to bits and Laidlaw received the Injuries from which, after almost a generation of lingering torture, he died to-day. He left a wife and four chil- dren, who are dependent for support upon his sisiers, Misses Harriet and Louise Laidlaw. SAGE APPEALED FROM EACH JURY'S VERDICT. Mr. Sage always held when lunatte, | while he THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, | Woman Annoyed in Denmark | k FEARING THE KNIFE, RICH SILK BUYER DROWNS IN SOUND Flanders, With Second Opera- tion Pending, Vanishes Oddly , and Is Found Dead. Although the widow and the brother of Frank Fianders, the wealthy silk buyer who was found drowned yester- day afternoon near his handsome home at Whitestone, insist that his death was due to an accidental fall, an Eve- ning World reporter learned to-day of circumstances which lead te the sus- THREE HEROES DIVE INTO THE HARLEM TO SAVE ONE BOY Ten-year-old Matthew Carlyle Plunges First for His Little Chum. ‘To the ¢act that Stephen Mosher, @ night watchman, buried his wife yet terday Matthew Carlyle of No. 72 East One Hundred and Twentieth street and Arthur Olcloth of No, 110 East One Hundred and Twentieth street, each ten years old, probably owe their lives. By Arrests for Running Auto BIG LINER ESCAPES ICEBERG CRASH BY DODGE INTO LANE} Hellig Olav Ran to Safety, Between Two Sections of Giant Cake. SAME ONE COLUMBIA H'!T Came Out of Mist Suddenly | and It Took Quick Work to Save Ship. The big iceberg with which the Anchor Mner Columbia collided last Wednesday | off Cape Race came mighty near causing 4 lot of trouble for the Scandanavian- Amerika liner Hellig Olav, {n this morn- ing from Copenhagen. Capt. Holst says the Hellig Olav nearly collided with the berg last Friday afternoon and tt was with difficulty that she was dex-| trously steered through a lane which! had opened up between two of the three sections into which the mountain of ice had been split, presumably by tmpact with the Columbia. The incident occured at five o'clock in the afternoon. The haze which hung over the water prevented the lookout from making out the berg untll the ship was within a short distance of tt. Cap- | tain Holst saw {t almost at the same time from the bridge. He noticad the lane which had opened up and he gave hurried orders to have the ship's course marked out through this. This was the only course in which safety lay. ‘The watery lane was about two city blocks wide and the passengers had a| splendid view of the iceberg. Its near- | ness rendered the alr unusually cool. None of the polar bears or walruses al- leged to have been seen | some of the imaginative passengers on the Colum- bia were visible. First Lieut. Johann Becker, Chamber- lain to His Majesty, the King of Den- mark and an officer of the King's Guard, was on board. He !s here for @ nine-day view of America. He will ve on board the ship. Mr. and Mrs, George Rasmussen of g0, Were among the other passen- They brought, with them strange stories of the amazing number of fines which are imposed by the petty magis- trates in Denmark for infractions of the innumerable laws governing the conduct of automobiles in the streets of Copenhagen. Mre. Rasmussen is an enthusiastic motorist and drives own car, “We were there for thirty days,” sald she, “and I was fined exactly thirty times. They don't arrest you. They just call you up on the telephone and politely inform you that you have been fined and won't you please come down and settle. They fine you for passing @ street car at a speed of more than a mile an hour, for crossing in front of an omnibus, for being on certain streets, | for having an automobile horn which AUGUST 8, 1911. EIGHT DIPLOMATS GAYNOR ORDERS ‘GET NEW POSTS BY | DOWN BUNTING TAFTAPPOINTMENT) IN ITY HALL on Ambassador Leishman Goes to| But Decorations Go Up Just the Same for Loving Cup Berlin, O’Brien to Rome and Bryan to Tokio. Presentation To-morrow. ASHINGTON, Aug. &—The lohk ex- 1 reorganization of the Amertéan diplomatic corps Involved In appointing Dr. David Jayne Hill as Ambassador to Germany and to Charles MH. Sherrill as Minister to Argentina, both of whom resigned, was announced to-day when the nominations of three Ambassadors and five Ministers were sent to the Senate. John GA. Leishman of Baltimore, now Ambassador to Italy, 1s transferred as Ambassador to Germany. Elaborate decorations—flags, bunting, flowers and palms—were being put up Inside City Hall to-day when Mayor Gaynor left his office to go to lunch. TAeut. Kennel followed. Noticing the decorations, the Mayor turned to Kennel and demanded as he swept both arm! “What is all this for? “For the presentation tomorrow," an- swered the lieutenant. “What presentation—what does It all mean?" again demanded the Mayor. Kennel was non-plussed. He knew that successors to Thomas J. O'Brien of Grand Rapids, Mich., at present Ambassador to Japan, ts transferred a number of citizens were going to pre- sent to the Mayor a large Tiffany-bullt loving cup on the anniversary of his as Ambassador to Italy. Charles Page Bryan of Chicago, now Minister to Belgium, is promoted to be Ambassador to Japan. Larg Anderson of the District of Co- lumbia, who has previously been in the diplomatic service, fe appointed Minister to Belgium. John Ridgely Carter of Baltimore, Minister to the Balkan States, Is trans- shooting by Gallagher, But the lieuten- ant thought It was a secret, so he could give no intelligible explanation. Getting no answer, the Mayor dressed the decorators and Kennel. et that work be stopped,” he said. “Take down those decorations and take them out of here.” But the workmen went ad- right along ferred as Minister to the Argentine| With thelr work. They said they were Republic. taking orders only from thelr “boss, John B. Jackson of New: and could not recognize the Mayor's now Minister to Cuba, succees command, even if he is bose of the ter as Minister to the Balkan States, Arthur M. Beaupre of Auro now Minister to the Netherlands, comes Minister to Cuba, Bryce of New York, the only of tho Rees who {s not now or has not been previously in the diplo- matle service, is appointed Minister to the Netherlands, Secretary of State Knox announced, city. Upon his return from lunch at the the resignation of Charles H. Sherrill as Minister to the Argentine Republic, 23rd Street after today's Cabinet. meeting, Mr. Sherrill was asked by President Taft to remain In the service, and It ls sald was offered an Embassy. ‘He declined on the ground t he had been in the service @ long time and wished to retire, with the Idea of going in busines: penis Found Dying Beside Ratlroad, Cornelius Reilly, aged thirty-eight, of North Hempstead road, Douglaston, L. 1, was found unconscious and with many cuts and brulses on the B. R. T, tracks at Hempstead Turnplke, Douglas- ton, early to-day. He was taken to Flushing Hospital, where he died with- out regaining consciousness. It 1s aup- posed he was struck by @ train. On Wednesday, SHIRTWAIST DEP’TS. From N.Y. World, June 988. LITTLE MISS DODS AT PIANO CHARMS COUR Lingerie Dresses, offends the ear and for a thousand and | one other things. I offered to put up| $50 or*$100 and have my fines taken out | of that without bothering about the| with lace. oAMES McGREERY & CO. An assortment of Shirtwaists of various materials, trimmed with laces and embroid- eries. At greatly reduced prices............. WOMEN’S SUIT DEP’TS. I Both Stores, Gingham and Lawn One-Piece Dresses, Hardware Club the Mayor demanded to know of Kennel “who is responsible for Putting up these flags and things?” “Mbhy, Mr. Mayor,” Kennel ventured, ‘I guess the committee did I “What right has any committee to do such @ thing at the expense of the city?" asked the Mayor. That was too much of @ quisser for Kennel. He dropped astern as the Mayor went into his private office. A few minutes later the Mayor called the LaAeutenant and said: “IL want you to find out who fe re- sponsible for this display.” Then he went back to his inner office. OfMfictaily Mayor Gaynor has no jur- iediction over City Hall, Supervision 1a reposed absolutely in the Borough President and it remains with hig to give permission for deosrations, with, the approval of the Munictpa! Art Com. mission, Such permission was ob- tained, it is stated, without the Mayor being told. Had the Mayor gone up to the Alder- manic Chamber, wherein the ceremonies are to be held, he might have even greater cause for indignation in the atil more lavish hangings and festoons, In @ corner of the chamber is a beat tiful bronge tablet bearing the coat of arms and staff of the City of New York with this Insert; To commemorate care and tendernese of the Sisters of 8t Mary's Hospital to the Hon. Willtam J. Gaynor, Mayor of New York, whom they received Aug. 9, 1919, after the felonious attack upon iis life and tenderly nursed until his return, to his family Aug. 28, 1910, tablet is to be presented to s:, va Hospital. a ey hining Kills Workman, OSWEGO, Y., Aug. &—A bolt fightning, striking where @ ‘gang workmen were repairing the track « the New York Central Ratiroad here t day, instantly killed one of them Ba toleme Potenza, and severely injur. | four others. Several buildings in ¢ wego were also struck by lightning. 34th Street August the oth. In Both Stores, 75¢, 1.25 and 2.95 3-75 and 6.50 value 5.50 to 11.50 elaborately trimmed 10.00 and 18.50 value 16.75 to 27.50 hat, picton of guicide. ‘They were sinking in the Harlem River | formality of Levon gard Bd ant oe | . might owe Tadaw w debt of spontane: | ny Snug eily, whotn saloon ts about| to-day when Moshor Jumped of « pier| Magistrate refused to consider the| ART NEEDLEWORK DEP’TS. Im Both Stores, NATE Stata we can ed the obligation | block from the Flanders villa, sald|and held them up until a big, stout)” Mr, Rasmussen ts a wealthy coffee completely when he sued for 5,00 dam-| that a week ago Mrs, Flanders called | Harlem boy, “Red” Murphy, Joined aim | porter. He has purchased an old ca teas cen, Laidlaw. was wounded in 180| on him in great distress and asked him| and helped him get them ashore, near Copenhagen and he and his wife | Remaining stock of Stamped Patterns i na vill live there a part of each year. | . place 4 cor a long © wan /to come up to the house and turn off| Young Carlyle came out of the ad-|*h! Lye ete & part of each year. at reduced prices. dof, He was thirty-five years) the gas. She appeared fear-stricken,| venture a hero of the most deserving | sentative for the Shuberts, was alsa on | jold at the time and an athlete, Jand told Reilly that her husband had | tyy He al lo: r | i | | had | type, le almost lost his life trying | boa: He was returning from @ vaci ain: oc _—sS— " ve e ee ee ed Fe see lalaw's cease gad | treatened to commit suicide and that|to save Arthur Olcloth, his playmate. | tion spent In his native country, De Gowns, ee nied i k 5 . 0 fad x “5 {She was afraid he would attempt to] A y and Arthur aked mark, and he brought wi im for a emi ain: se eereee | aerate te abandon his. career in |the @aa and since then the 'tamlly has| where Wast One Hundred and Thirty, mee UE Rey Ueeey Amat cee in aia Corset Covers....... Aen rr iscannir (4 Krotel Jump Out and Run |tye'aw"ana us at fairs if he | used oil lamps and candies, second street crosses the river. A lttle|“*” —_—_—_ Waists, on all linen 45c¢ Was to persist, he let the last appeal of | An additional reason for the suicide} beach there {s a favorable resort for bra ne . Sey F Mr. Sage go by theory 1s that Flanders’ was in terror| boys w 0 e ¢ : i Back Along Tracks. Nifien hast given taaidiaw. from fo0W vo | Mery 8 that Flandery: was in terror| boys who like to swim or paddle aroung fine batiste...... 66.00 e sree 35C | $43,000 damages. The hearings WA to BOYS | 10 the MUIMY WALI: Mg “ sheer lawn 25c joy to the community, lor instance sheeone this mes Kk In godece el Af hos-) §$PRINGS TO RESCUE OF ‘ ere eee Magistrate Paul Krotel, in Morrisania | "I didn't hear you, lied Mr, Sage ot TOORUAN: BO. He Bin HIS DROWNING PLAY! 5 i ° Co We to-day apologized to a large to one of Mr. Choate's questions, with a complication of diseases. One LAYMATE, ems Miss Dods testified that her neriotea . : “Which 48 you best ear to-day?" | operation had been performed and the| Usually there are many swimmers on ance was the result of her Education by crowd that had waited for more than A Wichia, Ana a lke a | 4 i bs the To-day only a few Ittle| Pronounced weakness prevailed during | Correspondence, and that she had stud: ir ap hour for the arrival of the Justice |asked Mr. Choate. And a e later | prospect of another which the surgeons % ‘ " My aharneane sow t| ied f hi hah ana bad Cl C y tha lawyer ald {wid was necessary horrified him. tte} OY Were Wading around when Arthur | the earls oon, On a downpour of | ied from sheets sent to her and never bai . ofthe high, the middie and the low | th’ peak up, Mr, Sage, Just Imagine) nad taken a trip to Eur ; © foe {and Matthew arrived. Arthur, who can- | liquidation stocks were pushed to thela teacher. The audience demanded an tnd placed the subway upon the altar ire in the Stock Exehanke aciling | min ttnan & trp to Europe, hoping for] se 4m, got into the water while Mat |1oWest range reached on thia movement. | encore #0. loudly. that Justice Brady 23rd Street 34th Street of judicial wrath as a sacrificial goat. | Western Union on a rising market.” a Sey PAGEL de they was removing his clothes and |With reading at 150, Steel at 731-2, Unton | threatened toclearthe room. ‘The courtsroom was congested almost |“ Again Mr. Choate made M wel ere, fe even Wh working oD | waded out until he was up to his neck |@t 180, St. Paul below 122 and Atchison —N. Y. World, as badly as the Fourteenth street sta | soknowledge his trousers ax “I lymouth | the theory of foul play, Flanders dis-|1. water at 107 1-2, leading securities ranged from} This is only one of the many favorable tion at the evening rush hour, Thesd® pock pants,” which cost him just $3. npbeared from his home without a wort | “ane tide was running upstream. Ar-|1 to 8 points below the initial prices. | comments of the New York penn on Deivrasaren Mice it oe | ae..ammmemeend 1 Lad ath at midnight Sunday, and) ingr, paddiing vigorously with his|The slump had all the earmarks of a| the performance of pupils of the United ie @ joint complaint | hen the body was nd, near the sete r i vep! |, the volume of sales not fndi-| St School of ic in our recent * against the snali gait of the Blind | Cong Toland’ Raliroad: wer: vy’ Rotioer | BRPOH JOKE, Ne CeOsnOMA. Gnd weal omrant | VeRe Talc, (ae volume. of sales nat dndis | states Fence ch Mule Plan Any Apartment ou Please Goddess. When Magisifate Krotel did Jman Voorhces, there was money in the [ou Nene. with a Tighty Pam and |Waing Yesaned for sale Our pupils and those who have had arrive he made this address to ihe pockets and a d atickpin and | give, struck out after him, Beginning with the final hour a rapid| the pleasure of hearing them play have fe Assembled multitude: watch and chain were tn their places. | As the Little hero reached hie chum |Tebound developed that carried the list| long known the remarkable results ob- in your mind's eye. Then study the ‘The Magistrate feels that he has |There was an abrasion on the fore young Olcloth had just retu: nan to the | from 1 to 2 points above the bottom at/ tained for the past 18 years, but this was illustrations, floor plans, descriptions, an apology to offer to the people of this head, but the police say this wasleurtece from his firet Jmmoraion He | closing time. our first opportunity to prove the value rentals, &c., of the sourt. It is another case of the bone- caused by @ fall from the sea wall reached out and grabbed Matthew of our course publicly and in # Court of headed management of the Subway. George Flanders, a brot! al , The Closing Prices. When once you get in it you can’ | t we i aguther, ald to-Jaround the neck In such a way as to ‘Today's highest, lowest and last prices of stocks Ter il lected at random 200 Multi-! iy Uwe you © | day tha anders was a Mght| : efforts o 0 TA gl A aith’s ‘ ¢ pupils were selec it Ghee i have been just cne hour and | sleeper: that he frequently walked out |bed. ‘The hove on the boeph ole ce | Rat tices canes chocnrares MHD vewterday's| oo teatified with thelr fingers as well as Houses Presented in : : fifteen minutes in the Subway. The At night because his {Illness would not |the top of thelr voices. orally that management knew an hour ago of the let im sleep, and that he must have! Here ts where Mosher comes into the Copper... You Can Learn Music The World's a bese ans mi i Kept ua tn that fallen, Iain stunned on the sand and | story, He lives at No. d} East One wane By Home Study M. A ‘ placed us in a po- > -- ven drowned when the tide came in. | Hundred and Thirty-third street. After Can pt T . 7 e | F WR G id eres Oe walter eel Caniition of Affaire and a tursing. Min wife yeatorday: hor werd | A Gat Gos aii tle gil whe acres il be all Renting Guide nor out." s Condition of Affairs ang liast night as a watchman, but to-day OME , n at FOG ike‘ gubway trouble was that a West ut . urs: an BRONX FUGITIVE CAUGHT. |he could not sleep because of gri + aa eee ne § | details, commenced at the Be of 2 To New York City i ie ef Atlantic} Saf 2 ractioate 1]: i So, about noon, he invited “Red’’| Sugar oes U8 1 No one in her family was musical, yet a’ ; Rade ee dl © of Toledo, O. | the rive cond Minkng. | was able to give a performance in the @'olock would not operate. A se ‘ ; nee 4 Ana N 0 t . ee eee reele. 4 to Deputy Dodge. that Edward rertson, wanted here | THIRD HERO DIVES AFTER THE 4i.T, & 8, Me: 2 | Supreme Court of the tate of New | Out This Week where the pushing rain been ere. Rob wil be | TRIO, stk Ol 1*| York which brought applause from the | Train after train plied aind the ‘i nd placed trial, A| Mosher and the Murphy boy were 27 | evtire room, distribution at all The World's Branch Offic i ; : § ans / 7 * = a thousands of satisfied For FREE distri nm in PAS, Slane the vigeka aa ie ven rormar Meats Superintendent ot Bean ude i Ci ilaiadehaal hit peu eect MDa a trTe cesar Peager 1 SMe ihe hited States School of you may quickly find the very sort of an apartment you seek. © ¢ 6 an 20K ing ©. kas dy Fly undred 4 rd street when | 1 ie 4 ( i a Hiity minutes to git the trate in work: BE Os Hh © a . ry uperintendent of an|they heard shouts of the lads on 1 | Music there are thousand, of others For early copy of this comprehensive and bendeomely printed book. ing order. i ‘ore Specta puty a Nt house at No. 1087 Woodycrest | shore a block away. The tide swept whose experiences are equally remark- at 5 cents for tage. ress: Mugistrate Krotel was in one of the ward Lane Dod nv thon Bronx. He ected the June {the drowning boys in thelr direction | oie (es we canshow you by letters on| let bY mail inclose Postag tmprisoned cars. He was half way be- lof tne defunct Union Bank of Brosulyn, eM 1 (led with $118, abandoning his {and over went Mosher, Murphy stopped | 11} | file in our offices). cies RENTING GUIDE DEPT., ween stations and he grew impati hs wife and children |to remove some of his raiment, ne | Gen. Electr ¢ i want to tall vou! more alent! the aa the time wore on and he trourn f Had sed to assume an lity = |being a stout boy and his clothes mtting | {8 Wel pe a Saath t the press said about it in Room 103, World Bldg., New York City. the Waiting crowd in his courtroom. He for the condition wh tr him snugly VW, Central “Fair Critic id Foul,” demanded to be let out of the back door. that institution o: the allered " of loans which had been made| After Mosher and Murphy got the two | [ter Pump io: % | our leaflet, r Criticism ani ‘|S —— — —_—_—_—_——Se The conductor of hia train. woulany, (at metitution le during the r¢ t Da Yn {eae moaer And Murphy, eat the two | RR clu ath. 13 | beenuso it’proves that there are many stand for it a t v vest erly lent f bank. | yolunteers set to work to revive young Youis, & Naan iy delightful hours of mu ic-making hefore Then when the Magistrate explained tlon pricr to t PASTA * was shade to 4 /Oleloth, who was unconscious and full | Mo Ki Tex 1% | you or any member of your family when DERS his official position he was allowed to Ore Contra Com: | of wa It was a job requiring near- | Nei, Pead 14 | you take up our lessons. | ; Bom et S8e, beck door and then he ence PAF neh ees sa )ly half an hour, ‘Then, when witnesses Sora, 8 inatsuaticn and Musa OF The Sunday World's mede his way to a point where he could : vn ne 1, 260, of young Carlyle's same attempt to \ 5 . aM Cost of Music i @iimb the wail of the suoWay—it Is just ' W te lrescue his chum looked around for the oy Western at the Cost of MIG PA na put mats yin D tan oat ey aU take around fOr te isrdpia sth he. irri lg one aut, come THE WORLD | | Want Directory voint--and get to the street. 1 ur tions, Ins | q aked down to” the o nned Blo spontenee suntan ie, thee? tow com Going out of town for ° Cr In the “meantime the Broadway, bee ving and oF an | hotles anid started fi (He sian! 8) shed as aay gmat (f mer inay, nave, the Wong gen: |) { makes more “Offers branch was having its own troubles. A an whom " 1 * We | wher a toh sped, he re Hit So easy You, this Little ‘and thou- ry and | ge ” blown out air hole caused the stalling imp! ‘onfid M ; Dasthe due aniaen soot IP fiers an Mehl” hae “te haa, often 4 aeree Pptea of Positions’ than of a ten-car Van Cortlandt express at jn tow ! tions why s was “Hed ‘ WH. NRlere a. mustoal ingtrumegt dn your homet Morning World, 120 per week, ee raat Mena MinLiGa, WAN ; Gate LEA ee enenty ih Pubd'quralite saucrtat atest at | \VEMEARE Wend: Senersuncas 7 |{ any other two medi- ne wrecking force tried to get the tra af a ae nad ) his al | phy, who weighs 199 pounds mention whag instrument Sou ere ine — . 5 In’chape ail the expr had ; ul ety ; fd: |Plariem at One” Humteed. ant tet Ip feat row Sealer? Oo ums in the universe tun ground the stall take the # ato , ‘ Mr bod ons | sixth tas esiday . i) Piano Solin Mavionn Comet slate ular intervals. It took twenty minutes) Dodge, was re © . : ve ed every conti John is no kin to "Red," whose | West. 1 na i ta Bet the express service reestablished | dn gla letter oe re we ulae name ie Dennis Murphy. YP adience, |S School oth sic, Box W, 226 Fifth Avo, Kew York,