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s) eemenen CANCERS RETURN ~ AFTER OPERATION Rockefeller Institute Surgeon Believes the Light Will Im- \Ms.. munize Patients. rs RATS PROVE THEORY. Rodents Also Used to Disprove Belief in Inherited Alco- holic Taint. | ‘That the X-ray apparently has no effect on cancer itself, but that it will etimulate the growth of lymphocytes, ® sort of white corpuscte, and thus | Prevent a recurrence of growth, wae stated in a pap Dr. James B. Murphy of the Rocke- feller Institute to the members of the National Academy of Sciences at the American Museum of Natural His- tory. Dr. Marphy reached his conclusions after many experiments with rats. ‘The treatment, he hopes, will be ee Seay mere sr oe | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOWEMBER 17,' CHILOREN ARE HEALTHIER ANO PRETTIER THAN WEST SIDE CHILDREN" found of value when applied to hu-| Ammerican Mother Not a Failure, Is Dr. Elizabeth mans from whom cancerous growths have been removed. Dr. BE. C. MacDowell told the Sotentists of some other interesting and valuable experiments with rate. The experiments were made during seventy-five days at the Carnegie In- stitute Station for Experimental Evo- fution at Cold Spring Harbor, L. 1. If @ fair deduction can be drawn from the offspring of tipsy and abstemious Teta, the ohildren of human alcoholic parents do not labor under any men- tal handicap. But Dr. MacDowell did not go so far as to say that. ‘The scientists had many rats under observation; some they made tipsy, ome they kept strictly sober. The offspring of all these rate were taught @ complex trick, and the time they took to perform it was carefully noted. At first the female offspring ef alcoholics appeared slow and the males fast in learning, but soon both the male and fomale offspring of coholics displayed as much rat sense as the offspring of normal parents. ‘Why this was the scientists could not determine, but they are certain the offspring of alcoholic parents did mot lack mentality. They are going to make the experiments all over again. ‘The visiting scientists caw that re- markable phenomenon—the growth of living celle outside the vodies in which they originated. Dr. Alexis Carr now serving France, per- formed this experiment with cold- blooded creatures like the frog; yes- was done with @ warm- tiooaea ‘chicklet not yet hatched. ‘The public will be permitted to look at the beating heart cells. No euch exhibit has ever been made in public, the museum officials assorted, Prof. B. B. Boltwood of Y. paper, “The Life of Radium,’ duration of radium's activity at about 1,650 years. GLASS OF WATER BEFORE YOU EAT ANY BREAKFAST Wash poison from system each morning and feel fresh as a daisy. day you clean the house im ee rid of the dust dirt which collected through the vious day. Your body, the house soul lives in, also becomes filled up each twenty-four hours with all man- ner of filth and poison. If only man and woman could realize the wonders of drinking phosphated hot water, . at a gratifying change would take place. Instead a the thousands of sickly, you and your anaemic-looking men, women and girls with pasty or muddy compiex- jons; instead of the multitudes of | “ner "“rundowns,” “brain fags’ e should see a virile, optteais ic throng of rosy- eked people «everywhere. ee eats ack or well, each morning before a glass of real hot water ¥ aspoonful «f limestone phos- hate in it to wash from the stomach, | iver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels | the previous day's indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, swectening and freshening! the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bil- | fousness, nasty breath rheumatism, | colds; and pa larly those who have a pallid, sallow complexion and | who ure constipated very often, are urged to obtain # quarter pound of | limestone phosphate at the rug store, | is which will cost but a trifle but sufficient to demonsirate the quick and remarkable change in both health | ance awaiting those who| practice internal sanitation, We must remeinber that inside cleanliness is portant than outside, because! does net absorb ‘impurities | iiamina’e the blood, while the ores in the thirty fect of bowels do,—| avi. Jarrett’s Opinion—New York’s East Side Chil- dren Superior to Those of the West ' Side, Another View. ws By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Is the American mother a success? t Ta she a failure? Already I have recelved some interesting answers to these questions from Evening World readers, and I hope to hear from many more of you. If you are a mother, do you be- Meve tht you have made or are making your children into the sort of men and women whom you consider desirable? If you are a man, do you think that the mothers of to-day compare favorably with the mother you remember? If you are a young person, are you satisfied with the mothers of your friends—do you want to be like these women when you marry and have chil dren of your own? Is the modern mother a success in herself, and is she making good with her children? I MARSHALL should like your candid opinions on this subject. Dr. Elizabeth Jarrett, professor of clinical obstetrics in the New York Medical College and Hospital for Women, who has had more than twenty years’ experience in practical obstetrics, thinks that Dr, William H. Gullfoy is somewhat severe in his indictment of the American mother. He sald, you may remember, that American women do not make as good mothers a: foreign-born women, and he quoted statistics gathered by the Board of Health which show that in New York City the child of a foreign-born HE AMERICAN MOTKER If WILSON AGAIN PLEADS FOR LIFE mother has a better chance of life than the child of native parents. “The Health Board statistics on {infant mortality are tremendously said Dr. Jarrett, “but I imagine their adequate interpreta- tion would involve a detatied knowl- edge of many facts not touched upoo in the discussion which I have seen. ‘Women of many nationalities have been patients in our maternity wards, and the cases of Americans are mucb less difficult than those of FUahenh| Poles, Swedes or Austrians. | “We are constantly hearing about) the open air life led in their own) countries by the foreign-born women now living in New York City, but I have often had my doubts as to whether the proportion of peasants among our immigrants is quite s0 large as it is popularly supposed to be, If, however, we are to assume that practically all the foreign-born mothers in New York have passed their early years in rural communt- ties and that practically all the American mothers were born and bred right here, any comparison of the two groups would be not only a comparison of the with the foreign-born, but comparison of the country with the city woman. Statistics are not so obvious as they look “It is true that the American mother has been more inclined than the foreign-born mother to resort to artificial feeding for the baby, but the American woman's attitude on this subject is rapidly changing. One of the points | emphasize most strongly in the clinic for prospective mothers, which | conduct at the New York Medical College and Hospital for Wom that nursing is not only an essenti. factor in the proper nourishment of the infant, but also of vital importatnce in restoring the number to a normal physical condition, | find the American woman just ger to learn everything that will be con- ducive to her own health and to that of her baby as is the foreign woman. “Variation in the matter of mater- also a woman vidual rather than racial, and at certainly could not be expressed in [the form of statistics. There is no doubt, however, that through the influence of various educational forces now im operation, mothers, both foreign-born and native, are de- veloping an intelligent comprehension of thelr duties to their children.” SUPERIORITY OF NEW YORK’S EAST SIDE CHILD. Now here's an interesting letter which champions the east side mother and her child “Dear Madam; Out of curiosity, for many years, [ have at different times! walked along the avenues of the east side to look specially at the children, of all ages and sizes, I have also watched the children going to and returniyg. frou I—children of Amerioan-bora |. Rebrew, Armenian, Ita sores Origina~in order to tian and other compare them with the children of richer Parents, living on finer avenues and on the west side, “| have never children of ¢! poor physical condition as Y say, or that they were half have always found children had healthier and more substantial bodies, pret- tier and more sweetly smiling faces, brighter eyes and finer heade of hair, than the children you see on the avenues of the rich and on the west side, “No wonder the poor children of the east side take the first prises in baby contest , a8 to why. I believe the rea- son why the children of the east side are so happy, strong and contented is because their parents work, eat and have plenty of sleep—sleep 43 the electrical storage battery—in place of destroying their systems by attend- ing all sorts of midnight amusements and becoming nighthawks, “The mothers have plenty of exer- ¢ise before and after the children are born, and take good care of them in place of trusting the lives of their little ones to servants and bottled milk, as many of the wealthy do, It Is a question of bottled milk and die and they do dle C,H," AMERICAN FAMILY 18 SMALL FOR ECONOMIC REASONS, Here's a defense of the small fam- ily. How does The Evening World reader who believes in “a houseful of children” answer this correspondent? “Dear Madam: Being a constant reader of your articles | wish to state my opinion on the subject of the American mother being a failure. That is an absolute untruth. The average American mother is opposed to having a large family, not be cause she wishes to attend partie or dances, hut because she is aware of the fact that she cannot give many children the proper care and educa. tion. “If a mother has a large family she will soon find it an utter im~ possibility to give them all good care without having some one to help her, and, as you know, the average mother cannot afford this. When the boys and girls get to the age of fifteen th usually forced to leave acho: go to work, in order to help port the family, and thi them of a proper education, “This proves that American mothers are thoughtful and do not wish to Jbring children into this world to be | nal devotion is, in my opinion, indi-| ynhealthful and ignorant, while the majorty of foreign mothers do not look into the matter thus far, | AMERICAN MOTHER A FAILURE, CHILDREN PERT AND SAUCY, “Dear Madam: The American hi a dead failure, absolutely no control over children, and as a re- sult they are the sau: disobedient youngsters world. §he is idle, pl loving, ieak. She boxes by's cars, if she happens to f then stuffs it with chocolate drops to make it stop crying. She allows her chil- dren to ‘talk back’ to her, and when they are out of the hou she never knows where they or what they are doing. Sh not honor daughters, fi of honoi the biggest mod- ke, DIGNANT FATHER," OF HLLSTROM President Asks Utah Governor to Stay Execution of Slayer Once Reprieved. WASHINGTON, Nov. 11.—Presi- dent Wilson to-day for the second time wired Gov. Spry of Utah, asking him to stay the sentence of execution passed on Joseph Hilistrom, sen- tenced to be shot to death next Fri- day, The President's telegram read as follows: “With unaffected hesitation but with a very earnest conviction of the importance of the case, I again ven- ture to urge upon Your Excellency the justice and advisability, if it be possible, of a thorough reconsidera- tlon of the case of Joseph Hillstrom. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Noy. 17 ~President Wilson's telegram re- questing a reconstderation of the case of Joseph Hullstrom had not been re- ceived by Gov. Spry up to noon to- day, and his information regarding the matter was obtained from the As- sociated Press. The Governor would make no comment regarding his attt- tude in advance of recetpt of the mes- sage. The riflemen selected to shoot Jon Hillstrom for the State on Friday practiced to-day at a target about the size of a human heart, "Good," exclaimed Sheriff John Corless as the death missiles struck almost in the centre of the imaginary heart, “Aim @o death will be in- stantancous,” he instructed the five riflemen, Tho squad fired many volleys, Two extra crack @hots took their turns. They will replace any of the reg- ular paid executioners who may weaken at the last moment, A secret meeting was held late last night between Gov. Spry, Warden Barnes and two Justices of the State Supreme Court. The significance of the three-hour meeting was not re- vealed, but that it concerned a poss!- ble reprieve or commutation, as de- manded in numerous telegrams and | letters arriving dally, was believed ‘Ten gunmen, alleged to be I. W. W members, were known to be in Salt | Lake to-day, according to the polter ‘They were being shadowed constantly As the time set for the execution ap proaches the guards around the public buildings and bodyguards of officials have increased their vigilance, Hillatrom talked incessantly to the death watch to-day. The condemned man cannot sleep and he gave other signs of breaking down under tho strain Indicted for Stabbing tm Refor: ory. RALY HYGIENE AS QTE PORGIGNER tay Pratt of the prison, Attorney General | | XR MAY STOP FARE FOREIGNBORN MOTHERS BETTER THAN AMERICAN MOTHERS? i WEST SIDE (cht 22), Susr As €AGeR To Coan OR. CUASETH: JARRETT MELLEN TURNED DOWN CHANCE 10 WIN MORSE BOATS New Haven Directors Try to Justify Transfer of Sound Steamers to Pacific. Capt. Harry W. Goodat Francisco, President of the Pacific Navigation Company, plying {ts steamers between San Francisco, San Pedro and San Diogo, was the first witness to-day in the trial of the eleven formor directors of the New Haven road charged with having monopolized the transportation trade of New England. Former President Charles 8. Metien, who had been the Government's star witr was given a brief respite. Owing to the death of the mother of a juror, James H, Carton, Judge Hunt of San announced that the case would go at the end of the day until jonday. apt. Goodall was Ssrought here to aid the Government, if possible, In tracing the handiwork of the New Haven company in the dismember- ment of Charles W. Morse’sa Metro- politan Steamship Company, Goodall company having taken over the Yale and the Harvard, the big boats of the line. e witness said that he had come Kast in 1907 to acquire the steamers, but was unable to do so without tak- ing care of the rest of the line, He said he went to Mr, Mellen to ask him to take over the Metropolitan, with the assurance that the Pacifle Navigation Company would take the Yale and Harvard off his hands, Mr, Mellen told him that he would have nothing to do with Morse’s line, Two years later Capt, Goodall again sure where the rest of the stock was held, but thought that E. D. Robbins, of the defandants, had $850,000 om of it. |} ‘The contention of the defense is Jtnat this transaction Justified financially, and on ero examination | Mr. Choate asked Capt, Goodall what returns the steamers were bringing to |the lessor. About $396,900 a year." “Do you think they could have made money on the Atlantic Coast?" “| know they couldn't,” replied the witness, ‘They were not good boats for the Atlantic trade y made monay here for about three months in the year and for two montis in the| broke even. The re of th re laid up, and thi ove After an inquiry of several days into.» acs must have been heavy conditions at the New York City Re-!Gn the coast We run t amers all formatory on Hart's Island and two the year around, W 1,000 bar affrays that occurred there the Bronx jreix of oil a day our oil for Grand Jury to-day indicted Ashley |anout 67 venta i inst 81 Lewis, an inmate, on a charge of ag. (boul Bt cenis sault in the second degree, He» is al- Cents leged to have stabbed Robert Sherlock, |San Pedro we inmate, ulno in @ general fight on Ost $10 to Ban Diego, From Ne ‘Boston they only got $3,85, came Bast, and this time obtained a long lease on the Yale and the Har- vard, through the Assets Heallzation Company, which bad taken over the affairs of the Metropolitan s hip | Company. This w omplished through @ subsidiary line known as the Pact Company, of which hia} company held $250,000 common and $150,000 preferred stock, He wasn't BROADWAY SPORT OF PAST DAYS HAS BRIDE IN ENGLAND a Ralph Brandreth Is Wed Again, | but None Here Know | Who Wife Is. Forsmaee thn a year Raiph Brand. | roth, whe Inherited a militia dollars from his uncle, the late Renjamin Brandreth, the “pill lemme." aot spent a large cpart of tt on Broatway, has been seoretly married ‘0 9 second wife, But no one on this side of the | water—not even his close calatives know who the young woman is. ‘The only announcetaent made by Rrand- reth's friends ts that he had wedded lin Tendon a eharming, rich and w- Enadesn- Join the |elally promiwent woman and was British Army. Brandreth, who was known as one lof the most careless sponders Broad- | way ever Saw, Is anid to have wettled |down to the simple life while court- young going to filing his latest bride, in the hope of! giving the venture @ ancret test be- fore he returned to America to pre- sent himself and his wife to the mombers of his family. Although an attempt wam made to keep the fact of his second marri- age from the public by sealing the divoree papers in the suit brought joy Mrs. Edythe C. Armstrong Bran- dreth against the former Broadway spender, it nevertheless developed to- day that Supreme Court Justios Gleg erich had cut off the first wife's all- mony of $100 a month becanse Bran- |dreth had not only remarried, but because the first Mrs, Brandreth had |chosen a second mate in Leonard Keb- ler, son of a rich electric engineer of Bronxville, | Mrs. Kebler did not oppose the cut- ting off her monthty allowance since Mr. Kebler is rated/a rich young man, Soon after the divarce was granted she had a recetver appointed for Bran- dreth’s property, as he had gone to Furope with the expectation of never returning In the divorce sult the first Mrs. Brandreth accused her husband of friendship with Dolly Ellis, member of a London variety hall company. When an attorney who appeared in the court Proceedings in the Interest of Bran- dreth was asked to-day if Brandreth had married Misa Ellis he declared that no one knew exactly who the present Mrs. Brandreth is, but assur- ances had been received from London that she fs not a woman of the stage but @ member of a highly respected English family. “No one has heard directly from Mr. Brandreth since he went to the other side,” the lawyer said, “for none of his relatives or acquaintances on this side know just where he can be found. He can only be reached through a local banking house whick handles his estate, and mail for him ts for. jod by the bank to his London address.” Brandreth started on his money burning career when he was just turned twenty, At that time he had hot come into his full inheritance, but he had enough to make a big tm- pression. He spont $15,000, tt is said, on a member of the famous Florodora Sextette, and another 00 on the bigwest and fastest racing car then in the market. Finally his 1 other thought to check his meteoric career by sending wim around the world on a@ personally conducted tour. fate MAKES IDENTIFICATION, t Poks Out 4 Rol Art He Nayn Frederick Schweikert of No. 1222 Boynton Avenue was picked out of a Kroup of fiftecen men to-day betore| Magistrate Levy by William coverhart of N Bryant Avenue, an illustrator Tho artist sald Bchwelkert was one of three men who robbed him at the Rolnt of a revolver his home on Nov. 9 Abraham Graff of No. 916 Bryant Aveny in Morrisan Court 908 fied Schweikert as one men who robbed him at the place three days earlter. Sch was 000 bail for the Grand Jury ohn Wendling of No, 900 Forest Av with Schweikert, waa| but Waa held on ae Mf having @ revolver in hin a HOLLINS CREDITORS PAID. | Final Settlement Is Made for All Creditors of the failed banking firm of H. B, Hollins & Company and of Harry B. Hollins individually, have re- ceived final checks in settlement of all claims made On Nov. 13, 1918, an involuntary pett- tion In bankruptcy was brought againat the frm of HB. Hollins & Company and | Harry B. Hollins, individually n a Jresult of this action A. Leo iverett of | }} ST Wall Street was appointed as cel On June 1914, the firm and Harry |B. Holling offered a compensation of 100] cents on the dollar in payment of the! firm's Mabilit an to bout $11,000,000, and the in Utlow of Harry BY an SLiit,- D8, One of the p iF reditors against Harry B. Hollins personally was the Dowager Duchess of Manchester. se Se Father Reaney Sinking. Although he had passed a fatrly table night, 1t was said at the Pol clinte Hospital today that Father Wil Ham Honry Ironsides Reaney, chaplain is Kradually | Weaker tnun ympia at » Was removed to t spital a month ago from the Arm: York ole a Neng club suffering trom acute \GOVERNMENT READ | CONSPIRACY CASES, half of Germany to Face | Charges on Monday. The Government started to-day to} | clear its decks for action for the trials of alleged conspirators, spies) and general violators of American laws and statutes on behalf of the rman Government In tha United States District Court Judge Harland 4. Howe set for next Monday the trial of Karl Buenz and (bis alleged co-conspirators of the jt nbuirg-American Line, ‘These men and their company are accused of having furnished coal to the German warships off the harbor and in South | American waters in violati Customs laws, It is @ecured the clearance of their coal [8nd provinion-laden steamers by false jManifests submitted to the Custom House at this port The trial of Andrew. D. aiding Franz Rintelen Me for to secure al said to be an intimate fri Henry of Prussia, Meloy is a real agent at No, 56 Liberty Street and has mining interests in Mexico. He is accused of attempting to get a ort for Rintelen under the name Gates. cted that Dr, Gorrica, the Austrian Consular has recently made what are to ba startling dis closures regarding the activities of the Austrian Government, through their Consuls in this country, would be at the office of the United States Attorney, but failed to put in appear- ance, Il arrived In thin city last night and was in conference with William Offley, Superintendent of the Investigation Division of the Depart- ment of Justico in this city, and William J. Flynn, Chief of the Secret Service. The trial of Fay will not take p unul after tho other casca are posed of, al POLICE IN BOLD RAID ON SALOON CAPTURE 13 SUSPECTED “DIPS” Detectives Draw Guns and Free Fight Follows Round-up of Alleged Bridge Crooks. Thirteen men, ‘al of them with eriminal records, were made prisoners early to-day when detectives raided a saloon in Williamsburg as part of a campaign to drive pickpockets from burg Bridge. There were fifty men in the place when detectives rushed in with drawn revolvers, Bot general fight that followed Some of the men taken were rec- ognized by detectives as pickpockets who were driven out of Manhattan Detectives with a good Rogues’ Gal- lery knowledge had hounded them from the street curs in Manhattan, and with the falling off of complaints from that source it was noticed the complaints of pickpockets at work on the Williamsburg Bridge increased After @ three-day term an the Ray- mond Street Jail, Harry Wagner, thirty years old, of 281 East One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, was released yesterday afternoon, Detec tive Conroy, who was out to find the Wilkameburg headquarters of the | pickpockets, followed him until after midnight, and saw him enter a new waloon on Rodney Street, two blocks from the Wil, roy notified t teotive Bureau and asked for Bix men were sent to | Three of the detective the rear room of the Conroy and three other windows, A wild scene entry of tho police in the saloon had tables, and tables were eacape. Some of the burg Plaza. Con- venth Branch 1% holp prisoners were cut by the flying glass before the revolvers For EXLAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regulates the stomach and bowels, stimulates the liver and promotes digestion, Good for young and old. 0c, 256 aud 50, at all druggists, ° TO BEGIN TRIAL OF ise the cars and crowds on the Williams: | t tles and glasses were thrown in the ieeeh advice, DR J. C. McCOY CandlerBuilding,220W.42dSt. i Mow PM OAM woh M It lost or found articles ade @ ® vertisod In The World wilt be | listed at The World's Informme 0 n S Ip | 0 n tion Burean, Vulitaer Building Hyman Gold, Louis Berger, Samuel j Abrams and Jullus Fra © prisoners were handeuffed and were taken the Seventh Branch Detective Mureau and later to BrooR- where several of Squad looked them D bey were taken to the Redford Avenue Court, where Court Detective Conroy told Magistrate Nash nine of the men were known to have records, They were ordered held without ball a ou persons. $1,000,090 TO YALE BY HOTCHKISS WILL Lumber Dealer Left Connecticut Half of His Fortune to the University. NEW HAV Nov. 17.-Approzi- ¥ $1,000,000 is to go to Yale Uni- versity under the will of Justua 8. Hotchkiss of this city, filed for pro- bate to-day, The will disposes of an estate appraised at about $2,000,000 Mr. Hotchkiss was a retired lumber dealer Of the estate $700,000 goes to rela- tives and friends, Several public in- stitutions receive gifts and when all are paid Yale is to have the remain. der, creating a fund the income from which Is to go equally to the aca- demic, law and theological depart- ments, meatier UPHOLDS $15,000 FEE. Court Decides North ay jfalxo passport was set to follow that| supreme Court Justice Gavegan to- of the Hamburg-American defen-| aay confirmed the report of WilHam dants. Moloy is charged with having |» siaioney referee, pinted to been mixed up in the alleged German % : ~ = endeavor to precipitate trouble be-| P&** Upen the claim for legal ser- tween this country and Mexico, in| Vices of Gifford, Hobbs & Beard as order to cripple American industries | Attorneys for the Northern Bank of furnishing supplies to the allies, Rin- | § Gosente wen tas telen was a German o who is th s Company, a Kk Demi ter an a stockholder, Justice Gavigan ordered that Qit- ford, Hobbs Beard receive pay ment pro rata with holders of other ma againat the bank SOOTHE AND HEAL YOUR ECZEMA WITH POSLAM Poslam deserves the coufideuce of aii who seek a treatmeat for Ecsema and ailing skin. Not only does it possess known merit and healing properties but it is absolutely harmless and no injury results from its use. Has been unusually satisfactory in treatment of stubborn cases of »some of them of many year’ standing and should be very Avi bed ped case, al- laying itching quickly showing im- provement every day. Use Poslai pimples or any surface disorder. A word ut soap—if ordinary toilet soap irritates, try Poslam Soap medicated with Poslam and superior for daily use, toilet and bath. For samples, send 4¢. stamps to Emer- gency Laboratories, 98 West 25th St.. New York City. Sold by all Draggiats. Advt. 8 Visits for $5 ‘The reason why many people suffering from ca Troublew. are wot cured. ts because pe altcrd “to "Tooetve ‘readment proper The offer of the nominal fee rate of & for $8. fe alee C ain Won fo Fant tit furterdte Trosh cotartheh lacs ‘mscy adload ts Y fect aa it lene atts at catia fee trouble that ‘Dec. ment wilt ee. be a, charae,¢ name nb, a A ln repel fees few doors west of Bi Hour Ay nay Welton ‘BELLANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage oroves it, 25cat all druggis' of the detectives cowed the crowd but none of the officers was injured Those kept In the saloon’ were lined up by the wall wh de a tectives picked the prisoners, Wagner was among them, and the police algo TABLE took in Isadore Laurie, Samuel Kap lan, Nathan Kata, Harry Cohen, Ab raham Lieberman, Joseph Zatman,| hillp Ackelwitz, Harry Idbaum, . ene Vark Row; World's Uptown Office, northwest core Arcade,