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NEIGHBOR'S PIANO | PLAYING ROBS HER | ’ Of SLEEP, SH SHE SAYS) brs Well, Without | ieb'e Contnonch Pectormaneny With Pause for Suppes, Prom 7 P. M. to2.A. M. COMPLAINS OF TORTURB Seeks Refief Prom Supreme Court Justice Maddox, Who Seems Sympathetic. Fustice Maddox of the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, was cailed upon to-day to de- @ée upon the rights of the owner of jeohanical piano to torture his neigh- ers, Mrs. Frances Lawrence of No, 92-2 Stuyvesant avenue applied to Jue @ee Maddox for an injunction restrain- fig Dr. Philip Berlendach of No. 9 @tuyvesant avenue and members of the dector’a family from operating their @lano almost continuously from 7 @elock P. M. to 2 o'clock A. M. seven} Bights in the week, to the injury of} er health and the ruination of her Beaco of mind, The domicties of Mrs. Lawrence and Dr. Berlonbach are separated by a pare tition wall. Mrs. Lawrence says the @octor bought a mechanical piano @ eouple of years ago and that neither ehe Ror the plano has had any rest since. Every evening at 7 o'clock, says Mrs. Lawrence in her complaint, Dr. Ber- Jenbach's eighteen-year-old daughter, Isnbe}, sits down to the plano and be- Bins to grind out melodies. She grinds, | Socording to Mrs. Lawrence, until about 10,80 o'clock, when the doctor, frewh and vigorous, reliever her and keeps up the flood of so AL midnight, when tho Herlenbach family sits down to a merry | * supper. After the supper, Mre, Lawrence com- plains, the doctor resumes his opera: tions on the piano. playing until ik almost every morning and so} uns tion, Mrs, op in the o'clock. In consequence of Lawrence says, she must daytime If she tries w eleep Sie saya she asked the doctor lown muste and he told her 1 elr own business. sich Was represented in . who anked for a bill i Just'4e Maddox satd zt the application was specttic nl he would ‘take the papers vp decision. * remarked the Court, “ lead to Judictal regulation of all mechanical planos in Brooklyn, ———<———— OWNER DEMANDS $3,000 FOR BURNED VIOLINS e. vay |men frequently achieve commanding po- “thie! Mayor- Elect John Purroy Mitchel as a Man; Personal Traits and Red Blood Qualities Drinks and | Smokes Moderately, Likes a Good Dinner, Doesn’t Live Beyond His Means, Doesn’t Make a Practice of Swearing, Goes to Theatres, and Ie Hail Fellow Well Met. He Ie Handy With His Fists, a Baseball Fan and All Round Sports- man, Hunting Tigers in New York and Big Game in the North Woods,and Has Only One Enemy He Fears, Which Is Jun- gle Fever—Perfect Pas- sion for Efficiency and Honesty. | To be elected Mayor of New York by @n enormous popular vote as John Pur- roy Mitchel! has been at the age of thirty-four, makes him one of the spec- tacular young men in American politi- cal life. It has often been observed that in the United States, where very young sition in business, that public Itfe has been reserved, as a ruie, for those of More mature years, The law even pute in age miniinum of thirt: Presidency. In England, leaps to the front in pubilc life, as often cited jin the cases of William Pitt, who be-! came Prime Minister of England at) twenty-three, and Napoleon ruler of! France at thirty. The most n¢ politic ed example of youthful! achlevement in United States! Kovernment was that of Alexander | Hamilton. Without seeking to force @ comparison of Mitchel and Hamilton, there are several points of similarit: between the young New Yorker who has| become Chief Magistrate of the great elty at thirty-four and that other eel few Yorker who became first Secretary | {of the Treasury im 1789 at the age of thirty-two, Thetr ik as ies more in tempera- mental quailties and personal attributes than mental capacity and achter [ments in statesmanship. Hamilton was |® senlus in politics, in finance and in [constructive government, Mitchel makes no claim to being a genius, end mone would protest more quickly than he against the tulsome flattery of being placed on a plane with Hamilton, They differ in the political views jthe nan of to-day {9 a Democrat bellev- tag tn popular governinent, more direct |rule of the pecple and the power and declares His Three Beloved “Fid-jright of the Government to own and stacl® \Nare » Wortt [erate enterprises for the benefit of tiles” Were Easily Worth jthe people. Hamilton wan a Federillat, That Sum. @ bellever in centralized forins of gov- |ernmont And distrustful to a certain ox- What i* a violin worth? The Su- of the capacity of the people to) preme Court, in the person of Justt ‘6 and operate the Gov Goff, is be wsked to determine what the owner of three “tiddles” t# to be maid. The violins were a Bergonzl, « Steiner and a Camillo, In 1910 Aitred Mtesto, a Hungarian, arrived from Vienna bringing with him 4 most attractive wife and the violina, . Miesto was in court to prove the orn statemen Enter now the narcial Union Ine yurance Company with a $3,000 policy jo cover the violins, Later next a fire in the Miesto apartment, then in East Reventy-Hiith street, bit violins in sm Mieato aske the court to make the in- surance company pay him $4,000, The In- Jurance company, On the other hand, produces Miesto’s testimony before cus- loms officiais when he swore the violins were cheap and worthless, > WHAT IS WINE? Disagreeing Two Offictal Anaw Wine Men Ask for a Third, WASHINGTON, Nov. @—M Geveloped during the Senate hearings on the ‘Tariff bill that the Department of Agri- culture had given two definitions of wine one destroyed the other. Secretary Fouston, in order to up the question, “What te wine?” gave a hearing on the subject to-day, About one hundred wine men from California and Ohlo were here. The two decisions ay bo sct aside and a new one handed wn, but St will be several weeks be fore the question Is rettled, mie 2 ee HALT NEW EXPRESS RATES. WASHINGTON, Nov. ‘Te Interetate rommeree Commission's order reducing expreas rates was again extended to-day fo Feb, 1 to give the companies more lime to arrange for the change. It waa to have been effective on 1 and 1a beon postponed once before. ick Action Prescription j Quick & 2 Cures Colds in a Day NPA PPL LPP PPP PPP ELE The best and known to medical voughs is aa follow tit ger two ounces af aiyeert yea halt an ounce of Globe Pine Compound (Con contrated Pine, Take th PERSONALITIES AND RED BLOOD, QUALITIES. { But these two popular and well !!ked young New Yorkers, Itving more A century apart, were each popu.ar idols of their day because of their human side, thelr personality and their red blooded qualities. Hamilton in his twenties was a tall alendor youth, with amooth-shaven fa: boyish countenance and striking fea- tures, He had quick eyes, high nervous itps, All these characteriatics are reproduced in John Purroy Mitchel. The young politician of to~day hus a frank, engaging manner, a neatneny of & quickners of action, @ direot- neae of speech that biographers are fond of ascribing to Hamilton, Hamilton, though not born in New York, came to the city in boyhood, went to college here, studied law here and began his political career here. Mitchel was born in New York, and his whole life lias been passed within the city's boundaries. Hamilton's frat Political oMfice was an election to Con- grees from New York at the age of twenty-five. Mitchel’a first pubile place was an appointment in the Corporation Counsel's office at the age of twenty- seven. fe an interesting charactor. He w born at Fordham, in the Bronx, and he always has lived uptown, His present residence is an apartment house at Riv- eraide Drive and Ninety-elghth atreet His birthday was July 19, 1879, there- fore today he is aged thirty-four years and nearly four monthe. When he goes {ato the Mayor's office on Jan. 1 next he will be almost thirty-four and one- half. He has been seven years in polit- ical office, as follows Appointed an assistant in the Cor- poration Counsel's office in 198 by Will- fam B, Ellison, then Corporation Coun- wel under Mayor MoCleilan, Promoted to Commissioner of Accounts April 2, 19071, Elected President of the Board of Aldermen in 1908, Appointed Collector of the Port of New York by President Witson in May, 1913 Elected Mayor Nov, 4, 1918, GOME INTERESTING PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS, ‘Phia young Mayor-elect has @ lot of sides to him, not assumed aides, but natural characteriatios that show bin to be that type of man of whom New Yorkera like to say, "He is one of our ‘top | kind."" Here are some of them; but It don’t pay to experiment, tment ie certain, This has been He Greanos well, without gaudin or flash. Hig clothes seem always to fit nim, and you don't see wrinkles in his trousers or across the back of his coat, pe itililgh ier Pe emma enna ramon maaan a Mitchet ae @ man, a New York type, BOSINESS n put down @ glass of Scotch and goda with relish. He smokes ctkare, but he doe ings and av Ie 1oW to order without loo! he bill of fare to see how muc! dish costs. He rides in the subway not try to sport an auto! is beyond his in He does ne practice awearing, but mut sone phatle cuss words when occasion demands, and th hav efter and good ones, morn- ds ng at each make A ecan rip u uve explosive ehind them, He «: und enjoys @ late supper apany. He says “Hello! en he knows an! ts not too “1 to call friends by thelr fr Ye fe a tat dweiler In Now York in winter and geta out into Le Couns y in the summer time He likes an easy chair, » good bork ar in his own h cold winter night, He ts handy with his {sie and quick on his feet. He is a baseball fin and an all-round outdoor sports- man, He hunta the tiger in New York Aa business part of the year, and he hunte dix game in the North Woods ag @ recreation when on va- cation: He wears a large ring on the third finger of his left hand and « pearl acarfpin, hut no other visible Jewelry He turna up his trousers at the bottom and wears low cut shoes un- til the snow files. Hie clothes usually are af dark material, but he has a fad for fancy colored shirts and fine bordered bandkerchicfs, His two weaknessen In appearance are loone, carciesa fitting overcoats ‘and @ politician style of soft black felt hat. He wears high silk hate om ceremonial occasions, but lacks English adeptneas in their manage- ment. WONDERFUL POWER OF CON- CENTRATION, Out of town visitors say you can tell New Yorkers by their Indifference to people about them. Then Mitchel ia a New Yorker. na appearing wholly oblivious to persons and events surrounding him. He does not even seem to hear. His powor of centring on @ single sudject or onject I exceptional. President Wileon once used an apt phrase describing hia own method of thought, that he iad a one- track mind. Mitchel has many tracks in hts mind, but he runs on only one of them at w thne, He can Jump one to the other, however, with lightning rapidity. Ils whole temperament is of alert intent news, He walks with quick, short steps He speaks in sharp, enappy words, "us fla voice is very emooth and agreannie to the ear, It has a softness of the Irish in it that tones it down from rasping harvhnese that so often soe8 with thin lips and rapid fire speech, ‘The predominating anatomical com | position of Mitchel is nerves, He nas |quch @ superabundance of them th they seem to run double to every pai! jot his body, Perhaps the nerves ure meetings vows de Sienn ooemaie 400 kes a good dinner and knows | | He hae a way of con-| centrating his mind on something and | for flewh to accumulat He ts reariy | A® for Tammany Hall, this Is what} six feet tall—put it at 5 fect 11 inohas— | Mr. Mitchel said to The Evening World: and ho welghs close to 160 pounds. Life have nothing to say yet. It ts too} {insurance examiners class that as [early, Walt awh! twenty pounds under normal we'¢ht ata. aan INTERESTED IN SPORTS Mitche! goes #o fast that tissue cannot get ah on As a doy he ran ather than walked. As a man he puts nerve pressure up to the safety imtt and heeps {t there every waking ‘d on him, hour, ally unin, a lot of sinew tn them. | That » Ho Is tall and he appears exception- Iliv bands are narrow and his Angers are long and tapering, witn His nose, tov, jong. it ts very thin and sharply jited, It is the kind of @ nose thie betohens man who cuts s#tralght into thingy and asks questions that huve double edges to them Me throws his head up and slightly to one sido and looks atraight ahead. as the way Koscve Conkiing eid (s head, They called tt pride in that siatesman's day, but In reality it bes tokenod fearlessness, daring and tevipe: ament. batraordinary courage-both physical | ¢, and mental courage—this young Mayor- | “L took the Republican nomination elect has. He does not appear to 2! much against my inclination. 1 felt, afraid of anything. In polltd@ Be nowever, tt would he unfair to desert plunges ahoad with a denest Gets | tn the dark hours of the party, and that that the old guard class ag the) r6CK | sone one whould be willing to make @ lessness of youth, There are store? sacrifice, | made tio heat teht I could te Mitchel's physical courmie, 9) iduteed in no personalities and made no en tery with big ame in the 46 i esonal references, excent Where neces In the tropics He handles | gary in self-defense ee tana cane be “T had a most enjoyable campaign. 1 | prides himself on the stendineps of his aim and the atraigutness of hip shots. EMY HE FEARS, We hi only one enemy which he fears. That 19 the jungle fever con- triotest in the swamps of Brit pt nA, down near the equator, He killed jam Vary and «a great variety of game on & trip to the tropics, but the worst of all prodw of the forests tind swamps slightly tinged him with ‘Ra polsonous miagina, Once in a whilp ft catch him even here in northern climate, A and a strustyles {t mightily for @ fay. Then he ‘Travellers tn the trople know how it lingera im the system, wearing away only with lapse of time. Mitchel’ creed in politica la a fre democracy; his ¢reed in religion Roman Catholic: He was born @ Cat olic, educated in the Catholic College at Fordham. His father was born in Ireland, but emigrate) to America be- fore the civil war, serving in the Con- federate army on the staff of Gen. John B. Gordon, After the war the elder Mitchel came to New York and for a long term Of years was City Fire Marshal. Henry D. Purroy noted figure in Nw York politica uf twenty Years ago, martied a alster and theroby became the unele of the next Mayor. It was fem this fine old unc! that @ part of Tile name comes—John Purroy Mitchel. 80 much for Mitchel the man. HF activities tn office in the past indicate certain charaptoriatica that wil pre dominate during his term as mayor. Efficiency, @ perfect passion for eMciency in every department and with every emp!oy’ Honesty~not honest gratt of the olf days, but absolute moral an well as financtal honesty in all relations with throws it off. “aJjust Say” KORLICK’S'., Me eh gts aemteneis cai Bak Ghee 20 seeoa le tt Meas Original and Genuine MALTED MILK: drink for All Ages. | Richest gubed gu, pow fre, A quick lunch prepered iT misutey Tako np subetitale, Ask for HORLICK’S OU: Qthens.amsimitationn JUNGLE FEVER THE ONLY EN.! Detween individual Government. Activity that wll keep everybody on the juinp from morning until night. Direct action, cutting out all dis. sembling and evasion but meeting equarely and defantly every issue. Democratic simplicity when In pub- Ue bu often so obsorbed in work as to be Innccessible to callern The City Hall a central control ation of a great business estahlish- ment rather than @ political head- quarters. and municipal FIELDER PRAISED BY DEFEATED RIVAL Stokes Says New Jersey Will Have xcellent Chief Executive. TRENTON, N. I, Gov, B.C. Btokes Tuesday for an Nov vernor, tion, er, a most excellent 6.Former who was defeated on | made a atate- ment to-day about the result of the elem Now Jersey will have, in Gov. Miela- “hief executive of broad legislative experience and a gen | temanly broad gauged man who will deat fairly with the citizens of all par _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1918. MAGISTRATE DEPLORES 1 ! . ‘ | Eliminates the Use of Co- caine Injectionsand Their | Poticoman | tendance tn court yeuterd | he should have been present at INABILITY TO PUNISH RECKLESS MAIL DRIVERS Aldermanic Ordinance Pro- tects Them, He Says, as He Discharges One Offender. Magistrate House in the Yorkville Court declared today that the hands are tled by Alder- fante ordinance when epreding mal! wagon chauffeurn are drought before them. So he discharged Tony ot No. Patrons 9 Mott street, whom Motorcycle Moore arrested on Monday after he had sped past a halted trolie car at Seventytirat street and Th avenue “Tam powerless to do anything except Alecharge you," the Magintrate told Pa trong, “but T de #o only becaues Tam vompalied to, and To wam you now, young man, that If you over hit in your wild rides through the Tt hold you for fetonious am law allowe me to do that.” Magistrate House was incensed nt the attitude of Patrons, who entirely dis. regarded a subpoena calling for hia ef | appeared only at 10.80 ofc! | IV DENTAL § Attendant — Harmful | After-Etfects, Dr. L. A. De Rosa, with offices at 100 West 29th Street, corner of 6th Avenue, and 613! | Bth Avenue, of this city, 1 the discoverer of a | new non-poisonous annesthetic for the safe, | painless extraction of the teeth by applying the fame to the gums, | jinment of the goal which Dr. De | Rosa has reached has been atriven after by the ny pecliett Letelrreag of this country and Eu- Jor gener jt has paltled ‘the dental acientiats of all mallee he have proctuced formulas from extract teeth that ded because of their eon- ing ingredients that have needless suffe: hou " highly successful formula discovered by Dr. De Rosa is termed Quin-Aesthol and is a harmless, non-poisonous vegetable compound ‘and with absolutely no bad reactionary effects, such as is caused by the une of cocaine injectior* to Dr. De Rosa a great advance has been made in dentistry, as his Quin-Aestho will doubtless revolutionize the dental profe- sion. Quin-Aesthol is the safest and best local | anaesthetic for extracting teeth in the World and can be applied with greatest safety to any weak person, young or old. Any number of teeth may be extracted in one sitting. This is impossible when cocaine is used. Cocaine is widely used in dentistry. Its so-called pe effect is caused by cauter izing the blood vessels when injected into the mucous membranes, Usually there ita throb bing pain and swelling of the face and gums, general bad after-effects and frequently it causes clared that three boys beeime acd.) ee Je the cocaine habit that originated in | 's chair. Was treated mont kindly wherever 1 | Went by the people of the State, and I t am ready now as ever to do ttle tn the ranks when oovasion res quires, Some one had to lead a forlorn hope, or the party would have been entirely disorganized Hoans need not be dicheart have wou nd tt ts M oof t and a change organ Rint} plo ministration, * Rabb Rabbt the Temp! to Lee briel Sch. Fmanie eon Grate” 1 will lecture a, ¥ night. The lecture is the result of heated discussion participated In by nu. c was @ part ton: It prom'ses to be exe ly interesting, Shapely, stylish, snug in fit, with not a seam to stretch or split. Al- ways soft and Ius- trous —the same after washing as before. Your Liver |is Clogged up Hse) ‘Have No buyers to which the Rabbi All aro welcome. voung men, |tendance for the painl ond to the | with Quin-Aesthol. when the latter de- onkers, on the |2 P. Nt ject of “What In Graft?” to-morrow a a Why You're Tired—Owt of Appetite, Hert ois Lr ame | bonsnees, badigestion, and Sick Hesdecks, | SMOAUL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL raxe Genuine own Signature Tassanals Quin-Aesthol has two ¢ ting station Avenut itreet. and 613 8th ' Both offices have two experts in at-| extraction of tecth | They invite the most difficult cases, in- cluding those where others have failed, Consultation and exar Office heen at bath branches, 8 A, M. to 6 P.M week: On Sundays from 9 A. M, German, French, Italian, Spanish Greek spoken. UY Tubes Furriers 21 West 34th St Our Annual November Sale oi FURS Continues to-morrow with the best selected stock of the most beautiful Furs ever presented. Because—we are direct importers and manufac- turers. One profit—a modest one—enables you to buy Genuine Furs at a bie saving on account of our backward wholesale season. 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