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cHE “mvENiNG | WORLD, AUSTRIANS HERE |Orely 200 Six-Footere i in 1,200 New Yorkers Who Are Candidates for Traffic Squad TO SAIL SATURDAY ~TOJOIN REGIMENTS ‘Only fit Cor Corps Being ‘'Mobilized at Present, but Soldiers Are Ready. WILL ‘PAY PASSAGE. Government Will Provide for Families of Reservists Called to the Colors. At the Austro-Hungarian consulate to-day it was announced that wh! RO general mobilization of troops had been ordered, calls have been sent out from Vienna to reservists in this country who are members of the eight corps now being mobilized in Austria. ‘These calls should reach the United Btates this week and it is expected that those reservists who live near New York will leave on the steamer Martha Washington of the Austro- American line, sailing Saturday for Trieste. Others will sail on the Va- terland. Many who are not under call have reported to the Consulate that they Intend to sail. A definite figure as to the number of men who would respond to the call immediately could not be furnished at the Consulate. Dr. Fritz Fischer- auer, Vice-Consul, made this state- ment: “This office has received informa- tion from Vienna and the Austro- | Hungarian “imbassy at Washington | which is summering at Manchester- by-the-Sea, Mass., that no xeneral mobilization hi been ordered and that only certain army corps, eight, will be put on a war footing. The Government in Vienna has therefor sent out’/individual calls to reservists in this country who | slong to these| corps. In case of a general mobiliza- tion, every man in this country who is still in the reserves will be notified by the Consulate.” ‘\ general amnesty has also been ordered by the Austrian Emperor, pro- viding that every one who deserted or did not serve the required term in the army or as @ reservist will be exempt from prosecution if he returns at once to Austria and offers his services. The Government at Vienna also communicated to the consulate the wording of the new law which gives support to the wives and children of reservists while they are serving. All expenses of returning reservists will be paid by the Austrian Government. No confirmation of reports of figit- ing has been received at the consul- ate, but Dr. Fischerauer said the Gov- ernment’s action in ling the men means more than mere preparation. Last night the editors of the Sla- vonic publications in New York City met in the Bohemian Athletic Club's hall at No, 424 East Seventy-first atreef and adopted resolutionn declar- ing their sympathy for the Servians. Plans to hold a public mass meeting later on this week were also dis- cussed, While last night's meeting of the editors was peaceful, an incident oc- curred which shows how the various factions are lining up their followers. Present at the meeting were editors of the Croatian World, a pro-Servian organ, and the Narodni List, a pro- Austrian publication edited by Stephen Brozovich. Before the conference began one of the editors asked if there was any editor present whose paper took @ pro-Austrian attitude. Brozovich an- nounced that his paper had adopted that Vite He was asked to leave and The conference then Pea ‘There are 250,000 Croatians in this country, most of whom are employed in the mines of Pennsylvania and Iilt- nots. Servian Consulate to- day it was said that most of these men sympathize with the Servian cause, In ita issue this morning the Hun- Ses paper Forward advises the) langarians or “Magyar” against tak- ine sides with Austria. ‘o official advices on the situation in Servia have been received at the consulate, but patriotic Serb reser- vists continue to flock to the office to offer their service Outing for Ballding The elevator operators of the Munic- {pal Building will hold thetr first an- nual outing and games at William T, Kedaing’s Oakwood Inn Park, Onkwood, Bieten and, on Sunday, Sept. 6. Charles Tema, the Chairman, is work- ing very hard to’ make thi sitar a Buce cess. The committee in charge is com- posed of Operators O'Hara, Mealit, ‘Tazo and Gills. — READER: | mos MR cl a Where are the six-foot heroes of That's what Police Commissioner not the only anxious inquirer, Out aquad, only 200, feet tall. The ot old romantic alti Some one ha time in her life, ably less; But her fairy commodating novell ‘They never with the correct longitudinal dimens! SEEKING INFORMATION FROM AN EXPERT. So it was with real concern that 1 sought Dr. J. Gardner Smith of No. 21 West One Hundred and Twenty- second street to learn if he'd noted uny undue increase in “shorts” among the men of the present day. Dr. Smith {s in a position to speak with spectal authority, for he ls the first medical graduate ever to be placed in charge of a Young Men's Christian Association gymnasium. He has seen fifteen years’ service at the Young Men’s Institute branch on the east side and at the Harlem Y. M. C. A. During that time he gave physical examinations to 8,000 men. “According to my figures, the normal man is only five feet six in height," Dr. Smith told ‘But instead of men grow- ing shorter, | should say, from abactvation: that their height is The native-born American is naturally tall, and | believe that he reaches six feet in this generation even oftener than he did in the past.” “But one sees so many short men In New York,” I objected. “Of course,” said Dr, Smith, “In the first place, many of our immi- grants are from the south of Europe, where the «verage height Is below that of more northern countries, Also the tallest citizens frequently have no chance to emigrate because they are drafted in the army. The less tall are the ones who come to us. “The encouraging feature of the situation is that the children of im- migrants are usually taller and better developed physically than thelr fathers and mothers. That is a com- With mon sight on the east side. better food and more of it, with the opportunity for play and exercise given by the playgrounds and the free gymnasiums, the boys and girls shoot up rapidly. “T haven't any exact figures on which I can base a comparison, but from observation I should say that the men at Columbia University ave- rage as tall as they did when I was at college back inthe eighties, If the statistics should show a diminution in height, It must be remembered that boys enter college younger than they did once, And I feel certain that any apparent decrease in height among the freshmen is more than made up by the close ‘of the senior year because of the improved methods of physical education.” GROP OF SIX-FOOTERS ON THE INCREASE. Then Dr. Smith waxed frankly en- thusiastic, He feels that the crop of six-footers must be on the increase because of all we're-doing to culti- vate it. Of The WORLD ing ont of town for the sum ‘ears Gas oes “Children to-day have a lot better chance to grow than they had in the last generation,” he aid. “They are kept outd more. The fresh air gives them appetites, and plenty of good food gives them strength for growth, Later on, in the gymnasiums, the violent exercise continues to eharpen thelr appetites and te one, Dr. J. Gardner Smith, Who Has Measured 8,000; Men, Says That According to His Figures the Normal Man Is Five Feet Six Inche but the Height Is Increasing. presented themselves as hero of most men. Even in these feminist days, what woman, at some feet of masculinity indeed, through life with a man who is shorter than herself. HMDREN OF POREGNE! TALLER THAW eanenne . By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. 2 yesteryea: Woods would like to know, and he's of 1,200 New Yorkers who recently candidates for the traffic a@ bare 16 per cent., proved to be six her 84 per cent. were below the good tude of the Ideal Man. s said that Napoleon is the favorite He'd never win the women’s vote. has failed to dream of “a stalwart six * Often she accepts less—consider- she may even consent to walk prince, her pedestalled superman, ix feet tall, straight as a lance,” to borrow again from our ac- fail to supply their nice young men ions! make them breathe deeply. All these factors help them to grow up tall and strong.” “Perhaps the opportunities of the modern girl for outdoor athletics are Tesponaible for her sudden shooting- up," I observed. “The six-foot man may be disappearing, but with him goes the girl ‘just as high as his heart.’ a Dr. Smith Jauzhed and_ nodded. ‘My two daughters are taller than! their mother now,” he announced proudly, “and they're in thetr early ‘teens, Girls used to be kept tn the house even more than boys, and of course they didn't grow. lell-to-do CapAphT who keep their children shut up indoors out of fear that something may hap- pen to the yeungetere on the Pavement make a It's no better plan’ to send ti out with a nurse who won't them romp and race. almost “They keep a boy from srowing’ ‘ail do they not?" CIGARETTES STUNT GROWTH OF BOYS. “No one ought to smoke cigarettes until he's got his growth,” replied the Doctor, “I think the harm they do adults Is often exaggerated, but there's no question that they're bad for the young. The boy who gets the cigarette craze will absorb so much nicotine into his system that he is actually depressed, He doesn't want to eat wholesome food, and he has in- digestion and disordered nerves. His normal development is checked, Adams, a wealthy contractor, came|'? escape three to five years in Sins| rhe emergency demands for gold|that the latter had obtained the ap- “Poor food and an insufficient quan-| ,., ni Louis last Bing, for Wie coupes ans to tak tity of food will not build six-footers, | V2" 08 the steamship am Es 1 plans to take) fyom Paris and London have depleted | pointment of many men on the jury ‘The boy or girl who Koes to work too| Satumay, the police On board | the cadet the Appellate Division. | the stock of gold bars, and asa result| jist in order to use them as his early is likely to be stunted. ‘That is] he met a nuttily dressed man, who » Hotfernan-Bllert case ereated | some of the gold ordered to-day was! pawns, why factory operatives are frequent-| catied himself “Mr. McDonald." They | furore following the charge: 2 Inite = 5 : - - , a Uy short of atasure. ‘The tarmar’s boy Sahl Meiniddgetion audsueracia(ed |/DIMCDUECA LEST GEN elth hadihas dhe [AB Maile Btehea, CORES WHIRR SDR) PHS ATTONE OF CHOI) THOR wR too, though he has the benefit of| P Me 7 n lax | Government has on hand at this time}prought about through the scrutiny splondid air and unadulterated food,|chummy "McDonald" finally told | In failing to have him Indicted, which | an amount excceding $140,000,000 at Its|of Lawyer Abe Gruber, who noticed oe, paccrnee Stoopae any npindllng Adams he was a “betting commis- ised an appeal to Gov. Glynn, by | various mints and sub-treasuries, | golomon loitering about jury rooma : Paatly ae . m atl sioner’ in New York Hie said he tion Deputy Attorney Shipments for the calendar year are|in the Supreme Court Building and “But the six-foot hero is almost] Was formerly connoctod with the race MeQuald caused | now in excess of $160,000,000. This, it| notified Mr, Whitman, certainly on the increase,” summed| ing stables of William K. Vanderbilt, | the indietmont of Heffernan and an-| jx believed, is a now bigh mark for 2 up Dr. Smith, encouragingly. On landing, Adama and his new-|other man. Tha jury disasreod cons | that period ve: . : "i . F AS PREIOG: little ceremony as it was se penx: foot heroine (0 beat him TEARS | found stiens: want to 8 (Brondwe raing th r, but Heffernan was! Money in the mass of millions stten | from the vaults, It alway ssid hotel, That evening the friend sug- | convicted moves through the streets of New| just before sailing time. ‘Ch WANTS TO SEE HER SON, | Heated that they ko to a “lcensed) Mrs. Eilert had kone to the Queans| York and has but little notice, Many | fe 1 eee da le pI e ie" ve ‘orty- t ® ta teamboat company : serine bene a * ce Ae Vounty Court House concerning the| have turned to glinée curiously at | fn pairs, tus the load, a keg at a tm Mrs, Manning Says She Is Dented| ig not doubt they had such thi conviction of her husband, shortly | hank messengers with worn stipa | up the kangplank and in the presence did not doubt they ngs ID} atior they were mar fof the captain. and the purser pile 1 r i ho married Jaxt Decem-| strapped to thelr wrists and an alect- | 0 ; Admittance to Him, New York, and went. ber, on # grand lareeny char sh in the vault, The captain, the purser . 3 pyed guard behind them. But the | ece' ; , otive rned ta said sho mot Hetfe nd the pler captain sign the receipts Mrs, Adele Taylor Manning Rowne| The room, detectives learned later, rnan and his com- |i sucks which take the gold from the| sr vold which Burope may need applied to Justice Maddox in the Brook-|had been rented by men who said | 1) Y Bat ee valliacet Wall aigese (oil 1 $s te taditien Ia on ls way. lyn Supreme Court to-day for a modif-|they Wanted It for a directors’ Inves- | |}. zs Eater eet " ane BE as lighters long | There Was no coin in the $10,000, cation of the de: f nbsolute divorce|tigation that might last a week.| euring ald for her hust NEt uf se- | Hoboken do a | whieh Wwas shipped this morning. 'T granted to her former husband, John|/Adams and his guide found eleven] attacked her fe water ont bol He Ua carl ”y likely th be pens in uw is FFG. 000 P. Manning, a wealthy Flushing man,/men making bets on the races, ‘There i —— oe pte i Be ae eRe palance welent In Queens supreme Court Inst October: |wag little teat money insight, tho| WON'T STOP FREE MOVIES, | MONEY TRUCKS ATTRACT No on the Chcnanil fh ialliil wily She asks that she be given permisston | nots being mostly by means of checks. | sone ee nls rte, / and. forth acroas th tlantic, is to see her three-year-old son, John P f at $50 01 nncmas ani ine ere oH aA ys ‘The trucks, heavy underslung carts, ted more safely in bullion. ud Manning 16) WG SHE AVEC IIVOR PIG O Een ee eee o; Hoa | Memae Not to Ne Molested jack up to the cur In front of the | furs’ |f ever. there should. be a theft hie grandparents, Mr. and Mra, M. 8.| Somebody then wanted him to tt This Season, Vaults. Two guards, who might be | DAr® Hf trey tines harder to use Manning, at No. & West Piftieth strect,| on a “sure thing.” Adams told them eonoy island moving picture propri-| Mdewalk loungers, stand, one at the! than coin. a , at No. ° e et, mney Island) mo yielure. prop: f o gu Manhattan, She declares shy has heard| he had left most of his money tn the] mors will nut be molvsted until after bows and the other at the ene | that thevyoungater is eritically IU, and [Rotel safe, MeDonaid vouched forltahor Day aa the remilt of on sree | tated Tash motte oe mane hang | Unsightly Hair Growths No When she sought to see hin admilttan,: | him, and the house agreed to accept! mont reached to-day by Corporation| about, Portera, two by two, each | L N was denied by the elder Mannings. his check, He wrote one for $10,000| Counsel Polk and joner of pair with a litle keg swung bey onger Necessar says ie tarmac wite in How married fs !and wagered it at long odds, winning jorge Hi The decison tween them In a rope aling hustle | g y the man who was named as co-respon-, $125,000. The man In charge of the| , nt of n that case ee AO. the eUED RDG anid their) py mado, the ‘guid Hair remover, 19 ab ddent in his divorce suit. He says they a6 guia ho didn't have muck ce at at the su ie ach—an| lage. | gs utely infulttble in ite o'fers, and Ie py child {8 not {ll and strongly opposes the | ® » by Mt The prope top and bottom fiively harmless, ‘This ia proved concin nother seeing hii stice Muddox|cash on hand, and besides, didn't Veaoe ho : with the Phe truckinan sively by the fact that many phyMolane took the papers and reserved decision, |know Adams's check wus goed, He} | Payers i gives and taken ar Ht, ' use the inure in Ki Rado for exactly st al mn las ah aval heh the wo private detectives climb aboard ‘ SRE WOULDN'T TELL, | Would ae aN cds hres Wace ARM atc Hr hon the luad is in place, One #lta uropess sits (From ths Philadelphia Record.) and convince them he was worth) ig ea hare the mnt t besido the driver and the other saniehes, tu Mr, Blank had given his neighbor's | $10,000. Adams sald he Would, ‘ iron heir bucness ‘The dangles bis legs over the tatlboard, | 0°) maid a ride to the village, On arriving| Saturday night McDonald enter-|luw in so drawn that we fe not know "he truck rambles away to the ferry eli the pr she thanked him profusely, and he pleas: | tained Adams with an unto trip to ner te Ho in respect to the men whe | with its loud of from half a million | aeetitton your a antly replied: Coney Island, and Sunday kept him im | Going. ‘They say they are noc conduct: | 00, three f a million of | wit) do everyt i “Don't mention it.” Ww, sponding monoy freely on him.| ing moving ‘pleture shows since no| dollars. the honor of | bac tad ava Lm Wa NY Yoalerday “aftornout according 8 chara af adimiolon is aged, abd, there-| ® rained eyebrow. serve, trom the ule be and McDonald went back fore, require 50 License,” = ide At the pier it to received with as Onn ty Ban Siw St, New OLD BUNCD CANE $4000; TWO HELD Mr. Adams “Won “Won” $125,000 in Imaginary Money, but His Loss Was Real. Several members of a big “wire- tapping” gang are expected to be be- hind the bars before to-night, fol- lowing the theft of more than $4,900 from Bugene Adams, forty years ol, an Englishman, living at No. 162 Portland street, London. Two of the alleged swindlers are already under arrest. Only the greed of the gang, when they saw Adama flash a roll containing 960 pounds in English money, savedabout $8,000 he carried in another wallet. The two prisoners describe them- selves as Jacob Cohe fifty-five, peddler, living at No. 416 East Four- teenth street, and Charles Carbonelll thirty-eight, a clerk, of No. 152 We: Sixty-second street. They were ar- raigned this afternoon in the West Side Court before Magistrate Murphy. NETS WIRE TAPPERS to the r BETTER PRYSICAL EDUCATION TENDS YO DEVELOP . TALL MeN ToDar ‘com in Forty-ninth street, where there were ten or a dozen men aga ets, In The seemed "! t a detect He grab! Ushman’s When th So, tody left alon: Bro ing agi of Inapes the fF street, betting. $12,000 in English money in his pock- he said to the h Columbus Ad one wallet ight io drive Cohen jumped up and cried: you're Adams and with the other pushed the Eng- ive money 8 money te called to one of the bysius rest those men,” ine 6 with A¢ either. avenue of so jams had about was £960, and, announcing that he wanted to take up his $10,000 check, he began count- ing the £980, the gang crazy. under arrest with qne hai » his confac was af dic dams, “Now you'll go to the station house," glishman and atarted When was up against the lem of geting rid of his they got to y for him- Adams was constu antly protest- nst his arrest and not in a low voice, At the corner of Forty-eighth street and Broadway Detective Joe Dwyer’ Hshman's protests and ‘8 staff ov hs afte following the pair made a real arrest gave to the police no time was lost in finding ond arresting Carbinelll at Fifty-ninth and HEFFERNAN IS DENIED FREEDOM PENDING APPEAL Was Convicted of Attacking Young Woman in Joe Cassidy's Club ‘louse. Justies Blackmar, In Brooklyn Su- me Court, to-day plication for a certificate of reason- ably doubt in’ the of James Heffernan, convicted before Justice Seudder in Long Island City of erlm- inal assault on Mrs. Clara’ Ellert. Heffernan will not give up his fight much money “Lam ting the gang. for a moment or two, all that Adams saw was that everybody tn the place was being taken into cus- The bogus detective hustled the | gang out of the room and Cohen was “prison- S nied the ap- TUESDAY, _aULY 28, reve, $10,200,000 GOLD COLLECT OR MALONE'GUNR SHPPED ON VESSEL. HURLS HOT REPLY (WARSHIPS AND LAR TO FINANCE ANCE EUROPE AT CONGRESSMEN 0,000 MORE Insurance Companies Refuse | Wires Fitzgerald and Almost) Home saa Cad Under Glare 4 to Guarantee Larger Ship- ment of Precious Metal. es | Transfer of Fortune Creates! No Excitement in Wall Street District. Out of New York Harbor, dawn to-day, sailed a tre ro whip with a precious burden big enough to thrill the ghostly backbones of all the pirates whose wraiths hang about the coasts of the seven seas. Ten million two hundred thousand dollara the Kronprinzessin Cecilie had In her hold when she swung out Into the} North River from Hoboken—204 stout little kegs, plied layer on layer in her steel strong room, with the keys and combinations of the sealed door In the pockets of the purser and the cap- tain, Bach little keg, hardly big enough to hold a gallon of paint, has in it five gold bars, each worth $10,000, There would have been forty-eight kegs more except for a change of plans by New York brokers, due to the squeamishness of the insurance companies to guarantee the safety of such an enormous treasure on one Atlantic voyage and also due to a sudden change tn the destination of a mere trifle of $400,000, which the own- ors thought would be safer in London than on the Continent in these trou- bled days of war threats, The withholding of the other forty kegs—with their $2,000,000—was also due to the ugly growls of quarreling Europe. The Insurance companies might have taken the greater chance in time of peace, but they thought they had gone far enough just now in a pting a risk juat $200,000 greater than they had ever before considered, INSURANCE COMPANIES FEAR THE POSSIBILITY OF WAR. Afraid of pirates?) Why, certainly not. But then when all the nations of the continent are using all their policemen of men and sea against each other and are no longer thinking of the public peace, things might happen. Supose, for instance, the op- portunity should develop a great mas- ter thief with the Ingenious cunning opportunity of a Dr, Moriarity or an Arsene Lupin and the cruel reckless and seamanship of a Capt. Kidd or 0 They went to the West Sixty-eighth | | Street station, and there Adams told| Morgan of the Carlbbean? A char- his story, From the description he| tered steamer, armed with gunmen, a few small guns—no more than are lipped to South America nearly y week os “agricultural tmple- ents;" she meets the treasure ahip in mid-ocean, apparently a harmless tramp; a shot through the bows and a threat to sink the ship, passengers and all, unless the gold is sent up and overboard—and out it would me, But it fa not dreams such an this which halt the insurance men just now. Their risks are greater all over the world: They cannot carry more than so much at one time, ‘They must, for the safety of their patrons, scatter their eggs among many bas- kots. A torrent of gold has poured out of sw York to Europe since the begin- ning of the war, Since last Thursda | shipments have amounted to $22,330,- 000, a | snort and | denial of the charges of Congressman Uses the “Short and Ugly” Word. | | MILLIONS MORE GOING. | ‘The wires between New York and |GET AWAY IN A Washington sizzied this afternoon with a red hot telogram from Col-j) lector Dudley Field Malone, In which practically used the ugly word In a general | the collector John J. Fitzgerald and other mem- bers of the House that Malone's back- ing of Independent candidates for Federal jobs was likely to wreck tho | Democratic party in the State. | Malone referred to the proposed) ( conference between the President and the thirty-one Democratic Congress- men from New York, in which it ts) understood the delegation will com- plain of the activities of the Collector. | Mr. Malone charges that the lieuten- ants of Charles W. Murphy have been trying for years to find some persoaal motive for the fight he has made “for a clean house In the Democratic party” and that the grievances which Congressman Fitzgerald and his sup-| porters are about to * ‘ace before the President are merely a mubterfuge. “If you made the statement attrib- uted to you In the Washington de- spatches," Collector Malone wired to Congressman Fitzgerald to-day, “that | I have ever been a candidate for any Congressional nomination, or that I discussed such a nomination with you in 1912 or In any other year, the atate- ment is false, and you knew it to be false when you made it. “Furthermore, according to the Washington dispatches, I and my po- litten! activities are to be one of the chlef subjects of complaint by you and some of your colleagues when you meet the President, If this be #0, since there are thirty-one Democratic members on the New York delegation, it will not require supreme courage on your part to have me present at this | conference frankly to admit any statements of fact or to deny any falsehoods, “For yeara back," he adied, “Charles F. Murphy and his leu- tenants have been trying to find some personal motive for the fight I have made for a clean house in the Demo- cratic party and for clean govern- ment in the Stats of New York. Their search has been in vain and now, in desperation, they deliberately state a falsehood, which is known to be such by every friend of mine in politics. _> ‘SOLOMON, JURY FIXER, SENTENCED TO ELMIRA), Trapped by Detectives While At- tempting to Bribe a Supreme Court Juror. Milton Solomon, an electrician, of No. 73 Bank street, who was trapped by District-Attorney Whitman's de- tectives in June while attempting to bribe George Jamieson of No, 18 Dank street, a juror in # trial before Justice Donnelly in the Supreme Court, was sentenced to the Elmira Reformatory to-day by Judge Ro- sulsky in General Sessions. Jamieson got his freedom under a suspended senten | Both men pléaded guilty to bribery. Jamieson became « State's witness against Solomon, unfolding the fact | of 4,000 rif_es for the Irish Ni Flashlights Receive Arms - on Wicklow Coast.” Inquest on Dublin Riot tims Delayed on Plea of Lawyers for Troops, DUBILAN, July 2%.—A co Volunteers was landed during night at New Castle on the const: ty Wicklow. The gum led the coast guards and and conveyed the weapons to D | in motor cars, Two gunboats were! tho bay at tho time flashing: | lights. Another batch of 1,000 rifles landed near Kilcoot, also in The Coroner’s inquest on the tims of Sunday's fighting between King's Own Scottish Borderers the crowd was adjourned till day at the request Sf the nwyert Tepe oh resenting the soldiers, who asked time to prepare their evidence, NOTEHOLDERS’ ESTIMATE CUTS CLAFLIN’S A Valuation of Various Items Is R duced More Than Half! in Many Cases, A tentative estimate of H, B. C lin Company assets, about $21 under the book valu foe: made by the notehold of the creditors. The ectieante been laid before Morgan J. personal counsel for John Clafiia, 2 Joseph M. Hartfleld, counsel for committee, Mr, O'Brien insists the actual value of the compasy sets will be approximately equal their book value. In arriving at estimates of the the creditors have scaled heavily fhe chief. items in the accounts. They cut real estate $5,419,7) 09,895. The worth of stock in the United Goods Companies they put at 500, its value under present quotations, The $6,565,402 due ‘controlled companies, cause of the notes ‘The $4,809.19 Adans Comp 16 nt. Similar action has been taken iseia of merchandise on hand, uunts receivable and similar ¢ ications of assets, becntise #0 depends upon the ability of the organizers to continue the company and tts controlled stores as 4 Ing concerns, Nothing definite, however, will known for nearly a fortnight. that time the accountants will a preliminary report on the co of the individual retail stores, will make possible an estimate should come close to the eventual velopmen ——— CASHIER HELD FOR THEFT. © book Fro: Although he had several beso | In his pocket describing him Columbus avenue, Wi ontalning $46 and off with It ful and conscientious ¢ the Gasser, ni n years oa § of a ] bail for trial, charged w te pocketbook = Miss Catherine yf was t . $0 West pat dre ‘ath Natreet ‘ame on the F He pursued the runners and caught him pocketbook, He was Gasser, Is a preventative of the effects of heat WHITE 100 Bi MINERAL: ma BA WAY NY oo & Fo PADS. My, Gt fclacu crm The Bor ld THAN IF se a