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f f ' ; igase PROSECUTOR SES FOWLER SERETY MATL STOR \ : Murphy’s Alleged “Sandbag », Man” Confers With Whitman : and May Be Witness, TO SURRENDER MONDAY Friends Declare He Is Being Made the “Goat” for Men Who Profited. Bverett Fowler, the Kingston lawyer, who was indicted for extortion yeater- _@ay, came down from his home to-~tay with @ dosen friends and counsel to surrender himesif to the au- thorities, but instead of going to the Court of General Sessions he Sought out District-Attorney Whitman Qt @ secret meeting place. The sup- position is that Fowler, who Is @ man of standing in his community, haa con- eluded to beoor.e an ally of the District- Attorney rather than stand trial for an offense for whioh, if convicted, he might ave to serve @ term in prison. Mr. Fowler and his friends left King- ston Gis morning. They announced that they would go to court and give bail. Mr. Fowter's friends stated that Fowler would refuse to be the “goat’’ for tran- sections in which he carried out the Gestres of politicians with no profit to bimeelt. Jeage Crain waited tm the Court of ~ THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1918 es | Women Who Visited the Mayor to Request Places Posed Especially for an Evening World i ) for Five of Their Number on Board of Educa ion AS CLUBWOMEN iletetetelotfeialatot-fotat-. Ph General Geesions for the arrival of Fowler until after noon. Then « tele- phone message reached the District- ‘@ oMce etating that Fowler ‘Mr. Whitmas would not oppose the de- lay. Upon receipt of office wae closed rent home, judge Crain TO PROCURE undoubt- Fowler either Kingvten or on ‘delegation. 4 tl dx & I 4 g : ii is EPSesbece fill & @ct ehow Hull's con- backed up his charges and the chacelled Grané Jury will take men who are alleged ie. with Fowler to extort ail ee i i i ‘ F i ; rr i 38 } & i z 'y ever filed in the il be made to ehow y Wee furthered in an intercom adjacent to the office in Al- bahy of a man in authority in the State. It to expected to involve a State off- cial, @ former Btate official, an up-State EH = Ha a “pave actet as “bagmen.” GENT TO WHITMAN BY COLLEGE CLASSMATE. Hull te one of nine contractors operat- ing in and around Sytacuse who were summoned to the office of William H. Melly, Democratic boss of Onondaga County, to meet Fowler and “come across, Mr. Whitman did not know of DELAWARE UTE Warden Who Has Whipped 100 at Post Administers Severe Punishment. ——S ee WILMINGTON, Del., Nov, 15.—Pe- cullar interest was shown to-day in the bareback whipping of two negrnes fol- lowing the recent agitation to have this form of punishment abolished. William Reason and James Bayard, convicted as burglars, were its vic- tima, Each received twenty lashes. n minutes were required ing of the two unfortun- ates. Reason was led into the yard at 10.90, At 10.27 Warten Crawford turned to the morbid bunch of specta- tors, as Bayard was led away, with a half emile and ead: “All over. ‘The flogging was strictly “for men only.” It “guaranteed bloodless, ‘The guarantee was kept by Warden Leonard Crawford, whose hand has flogged one hundred men, according to his own count, within a few years. IRST VICTIM GETS HI8 TWEN- TY LASHES, ‘When the sign was given a tunrkey walked in with Reason, the first victim, The negro's handa Were shackled. His bare back was covered with # rough blanket, With faltering, shuffling steps he was lead before the post. The negro's face blanohed visibly as he straddled the post. At an unspoken order from the turnkey he raise! his hands above his head to two tron man- acles fastened on either side of the wooden pillar. The refinement of cruelty was the pied; of two heavy woode his knuckles to keep the ya from biting in, The turnkey whisked the blanket from his shoulders, exposing his naked ody to the neck. Not until then did the negro flinch. He bowed his head and leaned heavily for support upon his fettered wrists, wile the turnkey stood off and read the sentence of the court that he be flogget, Behind his back Warden Crawford held the i" Tt had nine narrow leather thonge two feet in length attached to a slim hickory long as the thongs. “One,” the turnkey began counting and the whip whisked through the air, It landed across the email ehoulders of the negro. handle as Hull a8 @ witness, and he has a college friendship to thaak fer his sudden ap- pearance ip the John Doe investigation. Edwin Duffy, former District-Attorney of Cortiang County, was @ ciasemate of Mr. Whitman at Amherst. Duffy greatly admires the New York prosecutor and, kmowing hew Hull had been treated, he went to Hull as @ friend and weighbor and asked him to tell what he knew, Finally be convinced Hull he had o public duty te perform end they jumped aboard the Gret train aud arrived in New York at 2 o'clock yesterday mora- ing. ‘They weat straight to Mr. Wnit- man’s bome. The three men conferred umti? dayi.gmt and late yesterday Hull was taken before the Grand Jury. The imdictment of Vowler followed. plea Cece WANT FRACTIONAL CURRENCY ‘The Peopie’s Institute to-dey sent to al) Representatives and the two Sen- tere from New York State a resolution urging the Government to issue 2%, 3 and 12%-cent pieces and paper money im denominations of % and & cents. ‘The resolution was bese! on the dec- laration toat of currency of these Genominations would do much to reduce the high cost of living. GIVES A SIGH WHEN WHIPPING 18 ENDED. At count of "twenty" the prisoner hed. The blanket, replaced on nis shoulders, shut out the grim work of white lashes from the fangs of tho “eat.” with which he was covered from neck to wat, Bayard was led in immediate): showed less “sameness.” jail a . than Reason. He almost fell w ands were bi shackled to th a his pil ” Neither made an ovtery, But both were halt bent with pain as they BURNED AT STAKE. left the ockade Reason was able to| scien walk wlone, Bayard leaned upon the) Youn@eters Playing = “Indian” surakey Threw a Ma at Girl, Tooth Twelve inches Long. (Special to The Evening World) BEATTLE, Nov, U.—Tne skele of @ Mammoth was Uncovered yesterday vy Workmen elu ing tne. cccavation te, | her home, No. 1 North New road, the municipal stadium at Woet Seattle | Pleasantville, five niles from Atlantic | |The bones were found 1 feet below the | { thla tnorning from burns ree tep of the mill imbedded in a clay bank | °C!¥et While play ne a Kame of “Ine One tooth measured twelve incnes iong |‘! in @ lot near her residence, She eight Inches wide at the ba: inches | Was Captured by an attacking band ot wide at the top and three inches thicw | ‘rrdshins' led by Norris, her fve-year~ ———.»—__. Jold brother, The “Indiana” then tied PILES CURED 1) 4.10 49. DAYS, | her to. a stake and Norrie playtuly Bragaita fetid mite PURE ON Hae threw. a match at her. Tt truck and Poon “Viset apou-ation’ gree wil, SOc kde Wnited the captive'’s dresa —_——>— (Continued from Firet Page.) but Villa never really pushed his at tuk there, By pre-arrangoment trains were made ready to convey his army into Juarez last night while all federal officers In northern Mexico believed him to be exerting every energy to take Chihuahua. BROUGHT 3,000 TROOPS FOR THE ATTACK. Leaving a force of 3,000 men there he tank 3,000 of his troops on board the trains which reached Juares at the time Federal troop trains were expected. Not once was he challenged. Under cover of datkness the rebels surrounded the town save the river front, that next to the American bor- der, and a concentrated attack was made with the artillery doing much of the work, The Federals were so completely demoralized by the attack that they of- fered no serious resistance, Refugees from Juarez began to flee over the international brid much smaller than at other when the city faced an attack. Many citizens in Juares were unable to reach the safety of the American eide because of the muddenness of the attack, and bec to traverse the streets after the battle had begun would have been dangerous, The Americans in Juares were grouped at an American hotel near the Jefetura, and a rebel guard was placed to protect them, _-— CAPTURE OF JUAREZ GIVES REBELS PORT FOR RECEIVING ARMS. WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—The cap- ture of Juarem by Constitutionalists is reg: rded a# a severe blow to Huerta. It ts an important port through which munitions of war may be passed for a vigorous campaign on Chihuahua and the large cities to the south, The rebel victory Is expected to have conaider- able effect in Mexico City, The capture of Juares by Madero, tn his rebellion against Porfirio Dias, was the turning point which brought the Diag regime to terns and forced the Night of the President. President Wilson went to the golf links early to-day and Secretary Bryan ame to the State Department early to | await despatches from the Mexican capital, Urae Sending of Italian Warship. Nov, 16.—Many of the Italla: newspapers to-day point out that most of the naval powers have sent warships to Mexican waters and urge that Italy should be represented ther subjects and interests als tection, French © tA OR sh armored uiser Condo arrived | here to-day from Brest. eee | CHILD ATLANTIC CITY, N, J. Nov, 18.— Lena Hewitt, seven years old, died at TWO MEN LASHED MEXICAN REBELS CAPTURE ONBARE BACKS FOR JUAREZ IN NIGHT BATTLE CANADIAN SHIP SINKS: CREW OF FORTY MEN BELIEVED T0 BE LOST The Briigport, Sailing From Sydney, Had 10,000 Tons of Coal Aboard. MONTREAL, Nov. 16.—The eteam cel- Mer Bridgeport, sailing from Sydney, Cape Breton, with a crew of forty-two and @ cargo of 10,000 tons of coal, has been lost and probably all aboard have perished, according to an official an- nouncement made to-day by the Domin- fon Coal Company, which chartered the vessel, PORT HURON, Mich., Nov. 1.—The overturned vessel which has been lying in Lake Huron, @ few miles northeast since Sunday's great storm, was to-day definitely identified as the Charles 8. Price. ——— TWO MORE MAD DOGS ARE KILLED IN BRONX One Bites Boy on Leg Before Policemen's Bullets End Life. Two mad dogs were shot to death in the Bronx to-day. Mrs, Mary Lesko of No, 672 Tinton avenue, was at the corner of the avenue and East One Hun- dred and Fifty-necond street with hor bulldog on a leash when a Scotch ier- rier came dashing down One Hundred and Fitty-second street and bit the bull- dog. Then the terrier, foaming an4 yelping, ran down toward Concord ave- nue, with Patrolmen Nylan and Arm- | strong in pursuit, The dog scatterd a group of children at play and bit Frank LaMonte, eight cars old, In the right leg, The mad- dened animal was then driven into a ,ot and killed, The boy's wound was cautor- ised and his mother advised to have the Pasteur treatment administered, the early crowds were piling down One Hundred and Eightieth atreet| take “on memorandum," He was tried toward Park avenue, a mad bulldog| Tuesday and Magistrate Freachi re- ran {nto the middle of the thoroughfare, | #¢rved decision until to-day, Policeman Thomas Quinn fired at tho SVE esa dog but missed apd the animal sprang at him, Four shets were fired without PHYSICALLY PERFECT AN, effect. n vocks| tt Ha# Heen Found tte uh, Sergeant Byrne, nearly two blocks . away, ran toward Park avenue, revolver het Name te Withheld, in hand, He came in sight as Quinn| PITTSBURGH, Noy, 15.—Me! 1 ex fired the fourth shot. The dog sprang | aminers of the Civil service € on for the sergeant’s throat. Byrne's bul-|of this city yesterday aiaco what let caught him in the head while he| they say ix a “physically pv. tnan, was in the air. The bulldog fell back| but they decline to divulk name. dead. The young man the ten! ole —>——_ man. He ts a native of Pitt nh, wae New Head of Danghters of the |«iucated in the schools here 1 le of ‘Ganteas G parentage, NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 15—Mra, Daisy | The Young man ts twenty-tvo yeats MoLaurin Stephens of Miasissipp! was | Welxhs 170 pounds, ts 6 f 10 te4 | unanimously elected President-General | N°"es Ul and has a chest ex on of of the Unite? Daughters of the Confed- |* '? nine mate Gracy at the convention. here today (8% €Xcetional record in tho physical after the only other candidate, Mra, | ¢#* Nathan D, Ella of Virginia, had with- TT ras Mrs, Cornelia Branch stone of [SUNDAY WORLD WANTS Texas was named honorary President- General. At seven o'clock this morning, when ographer on the Steps of City Hall.) neinlnlelninlalebielalelninlaloinlalnlelalaintotelalatelnieteiaints dofeloiotl tefoletatmteimleetetnintemintatmtetetetettetat SOCIETY 10 PAMPER MAN FROM ARGENTINE Wa TANGOES DIVINELY Cassimer Ain to Dance for Women of 400—Will Shun Public Gaze. The tango tg here in all its pristine Slory, It arrived this morning on La France from the Argentine Republic, by way of naughty Paris, It is « legend of the dance that only women danced it in the Argentine, but there must be some mistake about that, for the tango arrived accompanied by men one dancer and three musicians, The vulgar public ts not to gaze upon the graceful gyrations of Cassimer Ain, who will tang to the lutes of Vi- cente Loduca, Celestino Ferrer Ed- ward Monels. Nay, nay, In aces te Miss Vivian White, the dancer and the musicians come consigned to Mrs, Will. fam Astor Chanler and Mrs, William K. Vanderbilt. They will not be ween outsled of the private functions that these soclety matrons have in prepara- tion for the winter, Cassimer Ain will also teach society how to dance, STILL HUNT DIAMONDS ‘MYSTERY WOMAN” TOOK Broker's Case Postponed, as Lieus tenant Expects Pawnshops to Yield More. Because Police Lieutenant Mar: Summers hoped to find at least worth more of Jowelry dix Miss Antoinette Bonner, of mystery" of M. appeared with more than a month ago, Frescht to-day again res his de- cision in the case against Francis E. Cocks, the diamond broker, who ob- tained gems from Maiden lane jewellers and turned them over to Mixs Ronner for private sale. During the last week Lieut, Summers id Cocka have been visiting the pawn- Shops. He has recovered more than $15,- 000 worth of the jewels which Miss Konner had when she disappeared, and Summers believes that next week his finds will be even larger, as he 1s con- vinced all the jewels were pawned in New York, Cocke was arrested on Monday on a rant sworn out by Lewis D, Folk- art, @ Jeweller, at No, 91 Maiden lane, because he could not return jewels which he had allowed Miss Bonner to of by the “woman en lane who dis- 00,000 worth of Jewels nse AYOR Tt VST HALL Federation Members Ask Him | to Put Five of Fair Sex on Education Board. giowin nnounced under control, The tene- ments and the small building, the coal company plant and the cable factory had been saved. .\ll were charred, but the water blankets which Chief Maher een them and the hay bulldings. ‘The loen was eatimated at $90,000, for the hay plant was left @ ruin. Sixteen years ago this winter @ fire that started in this building resulted in the destruction of almost the entire block and the death of seven firemen. — GUESTS ARE ROUTED FROM TWO HOTELS AT THE BATTERY. HE RUNS THE GAUNTLET. Back to Wall, and Blushing, His Honor Promises to Consider Plea. | Fifty women, representing the New | York City Federation of Women’s Clubs, ‘demcended on the City Hall during the noon hour to-iay, made Mayor Kiine ja happy prisoner in the historic public |reception room for about ten minutes, |and pleaded that the five names of wo- jmen they submitted be considered by His Honor when he makes nine appoint- ments to the Board of Education. ‘The candidates put in the fleld by the | women are: Mrs. Clarence Burns, presi- dent of the Little Mothers’ Ald Associa tion; Mrs, Simon Baruch, chairman of the Anti-Suffrage Committee of the ted- erated clubs; Mrs, Belle de Rivera, president of the New York Theatre Club; Mine Florence Guernsey, president of the New York City Federation of Women's Clubs, and Mrs, Cornelius Zabriskie, president of the Brooklyn Vromen's Clubs. Although a majority of the women had arrived before noon, they were com- pelled to wait about the reception room or saunter about the corridor until about half past twelve. Every ten minutes or #0 a messenger would hurry from the sanctum of the Chief Executive with profuse apologies and a request that the visitors would walt “Just ten minutes longer.” BLUSHING MAYOR RUNS GAUNT- LET OF THE FAIR Finally the Mayor, his face a trifle rosier than usual, made his appearance and walked rather gingerly between two files of fashion and womanly progress | and uplift. His eyes w raight ahea and he dia net flinch until he reached the centre of the dig reception room. ‘Then he turned on his heel and stood erect, Immediately there was @ series of manoeuvres and the Mayor found himself in a circle with a hundred pairs of very critical, intelligent eyes upon him. Placing ‘his right foot forward and his hands behind his back the Mayor of New York waited. Miss Guernsey spoke. She explained crisply and to the point the object of the visit. She said ahe represented between 9000 and 100,- 000 women, in the breast of every one of whom throbbed the great desire for the betterment of the rising generation. | Miss Blake was then presented. She id that during the past twelve yaacs {t seemed to be the studied policy of some one to prevent women from tak- ing their proportionate part in the public school systom, She sald mothers should have a proper share In the gov- ernment of the cnildren in echool just ae they have in the home, EVEN WOMEN PRINCIPALS ON THE DECREASE. Mies Blake sald thore wasn't a woman ‘on the Board of Superintendents. Twel years ago there were fifty-seven more women principals than there are to-day. “If the mothers of this city had more to say of the guardianship of children,” sald Miss Blake, “things here would be vastly different. The women whose names we have presented to you, Mr. Mayor, have had excellent business training in the Federation, We can vouch for every one of them Mise Strachan sald some women re- garded public school teachers as employ- ees of @ charitable Institution, That type was not wanted. Mayor Kline told the women that he would give the matter his earnest con- sideration. ————— BURNING FREEN BATE IN RUS TO SNE OTHERS (Continued trom First Page.) and there the fight was the most dif- ficult. Time and again frame bulldings close to the doomed plant caught fre only to have the firemen nip the flames Also, except for these structures, It 1» unsettled, a0 the wind had a sweep over lots. Blazing bits of timber big as a man's fist were sent ealling through the air to drop 80 near many of the other factories that these places gave the order to their em- ployees to get out. Hundreds of men and girls poured into the streets and the crowd was augmented by hundreds more who were attracted by the dis- play of smoke and flames while on thelr way to business, STREET CAR LINES TIED UP BY THE BLAZE, | by lines of hose which were stretched acroas their tracks, and the reserves o! everal police stations were turned out to handle the crowds For nearly an hour the work of the | fremen seemed ed. One by one the ‘walls of the hay plant fell in with a WORK MONDAY WONDERS, | crash, but ot inst, when the building in } A mectacular fire in the sx-story building at Nos. 2 and 3 South street, occupied by Charles D. Durkee, a ship chandler and dealer in ship hardware, enveloped the extreme lower end of Manhattan in smoke to-day and a brisk forth wind carried the thick clouds far Gown the bay, The building was almost & total loss. The fire was discovered by a gate- man in the Municipal Ferry House, who ¢urned in an alram when he saw a glare in the rear windows ef the building, Chief Binns, who came with the first complement of apparatus, took one glance at the fire and sent in a second alarm, By that time the fire had found @ flue in the elevator shaft and war spouting flame and black smoke through the roof. Three fireboate—the New Yorker, the Zophar Mills and the Strong—responded to the second alarm and quickly had ines of hose in operation. The land forces completely surrounded the butld- ing and played water from every quar- ter. Adjoining the burning building on the south stands the Eastern Hotel, where more than 100 persons were sleeping. Louis Westerveit, the night clerk, and Dollcemen got the sleepers out as quickly as possible. They took refuge in the ferry houses and firemen dragged hose pipes through and over the roof of the hotel in their fight on the fire in the ship chandiing establishment. The guests at the South Ferry Hotel, No. 7 South street, were aiso roused and Ordered out of the bdullding with all possivie bi Engine Company No. 27, manning a high pressure pump, was stationed in South street in front of the Durkee | building, As the engine was throbbing with about 200 pound eure the third Joint of @ hose line gave way ai stub end of the line * the firemen say, that writhed and twisted, lashing ‘tself out in the street with force enough to kill a man or a horse or knock over a wagon. The twisting hose came near striking the tender of the engine company and, | in an effort to get the horses out of t way, the tender was overturned. There were several narrow escapes from in- jury from the writhing nvse. The engine was shut down as quickly as possible and a new joint.@f ose put io. There was no more difficulty with the pipe. The building on fire contained lar quantities of rosin, turpentine and oth highly inflammable products. On ac- count of the heat and the ferocity of the fire, It was more than an hour after the first apparatus arrived before fire- could get into the building. No accurate estimate of the joss could be made, but it was roughly estimated at at least $2,000, possibly much more. ——S—e HOTEL GUESTS ARE ROUSED BY BLAZE IN UPTOWN STORE. Residents of the Colonial Apartments, an apartment hotel at No. 445 Columbus cott near the Colonial, were aroused this morning by fire in the delicatessen store of Samuel ‘Schnatz on the ground floor of the Colonial, The fire was discovered by William Chubluck, night clerk, who had a police. | man turn in an alarm while he teie- phoned all the peopie in the house that a small fire had broken out, but that there was no occasion for alarm. How- ever, quite a number of persons in vath robes came down to see for themselves, They returned after being convinced that the fire would not spread. Guests in the Endicott heard the en- gines and telephoned to the office of that hotel to ask where the fire was. ‘On being told it was in the Coloni: not thelr own house, none of the guests left their rooms, The fire did about $3,000 damage. comcast FIRE IN A COTTON SHIP. to javannah. SAVANNAH, Gi Nov. 15.—The Britiah steamship Ulidia, Capt. McClen- ahan, clearing yesterday for Rotter- dam with @ cargo of cotton and mer- chandise, put back to port this morn- ing on fire. The fire started in No. 3 hold. The hatches were jifted, but roaring flames drove back the crew and covers were clamped down again, while the slow and heavily laden freighter turned about and labored back to port, When sho reached here, her decks were so hot the master’s wife had been ari from the cabin, Fire tugs be- gan forcing steam into the holds and had the fire under control before noon. ‘The Ulidia is owned by Joseph Fish- er & Sone of Newry, Ireland. She had ‘8 cargo of cotton and linters val $175,000, covered by insurance, Nervous-Irritable? Do you enjoy your meals? Do things look ote niet petal rae os AN: ACK "Cees oft or and pe ea on te fend for Rooklet ea aS a ‘al go relict, oe which the blase started lay a heap of smouldering ashes, the biase ‘nue, and guests at the Hotel Endi- | “ROLL” OF $1,210 FLASHED IN COURT BY HOD CARRIER O’Keefe’s Wad, Enough to Buy 24,200 Beers, Amazes Even the Judge. BUT NOW IT’S BANKED. Magistrate Afraid Man Ac- cused by Wife Would Lose ft En Route. John O'Keete, forty-four years old, a hod cartier of No, 17 Third avenue, caused the spectators in the Harlem | Police Court to gasp to-day when he | produced a roll of bills amounting to $1,210 preparatory to furnishing @ cash | Dail of $300. There was also @ gasp | from Magistrate Schulz, | “That ts not stage money, is it?" in- quired the Court “It's the real evuff,” was answer. And where did you get | Magistrate wanted to know. “Hod carrying,” was tho reply. O'Keefe was arrested Inst night on a warrant charging disorderly conduct, {asued on the complaint of his wife, Ellen, who had been informed by ner husband, sie said, that he contemplated drawinf his money from banks and going to San Francisco. In court to-day, O'Keefe asked that hearing in hie case be adjourned until Wednesday next in order that he could produce witnesses. BESIDES BILLS HE HAS TWO BANK BOOKS. its n the production of O'Keefe’ it?” the Simulta the roll of bills, O'Keefe produced two, bank books, one on the trial Savings Bank, No. 5 street, and the other on the People's Bank of Yonkers, depcsits of $900, which had not ouched, bila from the “roll? wi Schulz held up a restraining hand “Are you going to leave court with all that money?" the Court wanted to know. O'Keefe nodded tn the affirmative. “You'll either spend it or lose ! was the Magistrate's rejoinder. “y think the best thing for you to do t* to leave the money and with the clerk of the O'Keefe shock his head | “How about depositing {t ina bank?” | Another shake of the head FINALLY DEPOSITS MONEY 8C | A8 NOT TO LOSE IT. he bank book nt | Ways and means of sa‘exuarding the $1,210 re diacusse! at length, the ‘ate, O'Keefe an the latter's wife taking active part. Mrs, O'Keefe advo cated the retention by the Court of her | wusband's money in order to guarantee | {ts safe keeping. O'Keefe thought the money should be retained by him, T_ |was finally agreed, however, tha! | O'Keefe would deposit the money, with the exception of $10), together with the two bankbooks, « ‘th the receiving jler of a banking inatitur avenue and One Hundred and Sixt street. Fifty of the $100 retained war to be turned over to O'Keefe's wife The remaining &9 was to be kept by the hod clrrier. O'Keefe peeld off a fifty-dotlar bil and gave it to his wife. He peeled oF another and thrust it into "® pocket o} als v | to the bank,” he anneunced. thrusting the remaining $1,110 carelessiy Into the pocket of his overcoat. O'Keefe was accompanied to the Third avenue bank by Detective Bermingham, who in due time reported to Maglstrat Schulz that the hod carrier had deposit- {ed the mone: THE WIFE ets the “short end” when the husbans drinks. Take inventory. Your wil is your partner and she is entitled to an even break. Weigh ber happiness Include the children. Don't’ forget your mother and her heartaches. Then spend 8 days with us and thank God for the impulse that caused you to investi- gate the Gatlin Treatment, which will save you from the paralyzing Drink Habit. GATLIN INSTITUTE, 441 West 23d St., N.