The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1916, Page 6

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a Re — ere LOCKED UP W JERSEY CITY VAULT R fas Rescued by Night Workers. jut Door on Berghorn, Who | y Berghorn, Deputy Treasurer ~in the vault, office, 6 o'clock. inside the vault. fom bination. Were burgiars at work. @ time they remembered tha: esterday afternoon @iling docu- Robert Quinlan, ‘Clerk, believing himself tho Inst closed the vault door ‘ed the combination. This was F. Brensinger, Commissioner nee and Revenues, and his Joseph F. Fitspatrick, after downtown, went to the offices Finance Department at 7.90 to get some papers on which trick wished to work at home. heard a faint, muffled tapping Neither knew Both were sure t A force of watchmen and nen was gathered to ove burglar. A guarded investigati and very muoh shaken and ‘ Do not ‘‘hesitate”’ 4, The young man in the ilius- * tration “besitated"—but did ‘ynot take advantage of his op- * portunity. * The successful maf‘is one of & detinite and decisive action— «che does not postpone or pro- ~ crastinate: If you have the slightest in- “dication of eve-strain or eye- » sight difticuities, do not “hesi- * tate” or “hope” that your eyes 4 wil improve—but investigate at once and learn the cause. The examination of your eyes “by one of our Ooulists (Regis- tered Poysicians) places you “funder no obligation. Their equipment, together them /Swith their years of hospital and ‘to determive the exact state “and needs of your eyes. Their methods are scientific therefore, accurate. Harris Glasses — ii required —are priced at from #2 up- a 4 Sd mt 4th Pee es vex, 947 Solualins av." bee wist aad 634 bea, Nessau Brest, ry Near Jobn | Street, | Bt. Nicholas Ave,, bet. 100tn & Lb lat, EST Re Soar LSE areata, Bt. Co., Newark STOMACH AILMENTS THE NATION'S CURSE: There is no ailment causing more woe and misery than Stomach ‘Trouble. Often Gall St c the Stomach and Intestines, Const, tion, Acute Indigestion, Auto-Int tion, Yellow Jaundice, Appendiait Other serious and fatal ailments resul 7 it. “any other remedy. It sweeps the poison bile and catarrhal aceretions fro: Tmo system, Soothes and allays Car Gnnflamnation. Many declare it has sav Abeit lives, and prevented serious sur aleohol—no min Book on Stomach Ailments FREE, idress Geo. eng Better yet lay PRlegeman or any reliable druggist, -owill refund your money if it fai eperations. ‘Try one dose to-day. fatch its marvelous results, Contains 7 habit-forming drugs. | years old, of ¥ chest, Use the reli: lable Dr. Bull quers cough and allay suller RAD Anse quickly, , 25 ota. "apd Thousands Take It, ind Ulcers of it Thousands of Stomach Suf- owe their complete recovery to | "Mayr's Wonderful Remedy, It is unlike Ad- H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist, | genatiord, will be deported by order of obtain « bottle of *s Wonderful Remedy from Riker- | 1s Cough Byrupatonce. Itcon- ‘TEST TaitestoG, tas Ss jeri Bheeaaurenibae nd brute ‘ \ SEEKTOBANSH FACTORESFROM Fifth Avenue Business Men Ask Commission to Extend | Restrictions, | WOULD RAISE HEIGHT. Larger Zone for Structures] Two Times Width of Street | Is Advocated. | ‘The Commission on Bofiding Dis. | a membership of seven hundred busl- ‘ower NAsR men and property owners be- tween Washington Square and Ono red the Deputy Treasurer, 80 ed and Tenth Street, urged, K@tion being conducted by Coinmis- from yelling he could “hardly 1undred bc diced yh ay through Robert Greer Cooke, that the |territory from which manufacturing iis to be excluded be extended to in- jelude the area bounded an follows: 4|/South on Madison Avenue from | Thirty-fourth Street to a point balf way between Twenty-second and ; Twenty-third Streets, thence west to | Broadway, thence north on Broadway to a point half way between Thirty- | nrst and Thirty-second Streets, thence west to Seventh Avenue, thence north on Seventh Avenue to Thirt yurth of beginning. The association called attention to the fact that the territory embraced | in the additional di number of the city's principal hotels, | such as the Waldorf-Astoria, Me- Alpin, Martinique, Imperial, Walcott, Breslin, Prince George, and many others of equal standing, It was argued the best hotels must be en- couraged to remain in the vicinity of the big railroad terminals, and that it they are not protected against the factory invasion, the city will suffer through loss in property values. | It 18 algo suygested that from the southerly boundary of the above zone, the entire district to Fifty-ninth street, enlarged as suggested, bound- ed on the east above Thirty-fourta | Street by Third Avenue and on the! west above Thirty-fourth Btroet by Seventh Avenue, De restrinted amatunt manufacturing except where done in connection with @ retail business, Other recommendations were made by the association concerning the height of buildings, One was that the height limit should be two and a half times the width of the street in the following district: Bounded on the south by Forty-first Street, then north on Lexington Avenue to Fit- tieth Street, west to Madison Avenue, north to Sixtieth Street, west to Mfth Avenue, south to Fifty-ninth Street, west to Broadway, north to Sixty- thint Street, south to Fifty-elghth Street, east to Madison Avenue, south to Forty-ninth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, south on Fifth Avenue to Forty-third Street, excepting both sides of Forty-second Street. Robert Thorne of No, 868 Park Avenue, and Edward W. Harris, Sec- retary of the Park Avenue Aasecia- tion, approved the report of the Com- mission in general and its applica~ tion to Park Avenue in particujar, Louis Schrag of No, 142 West Twenty-third Street, entered protests againet the permitting of public gar- ages and livery stables in otherwise restricted areas. Edmund L. Baylies of No. 64 Wall Street, counsel for the Murray Hill Association, paid the Commission a \high compliment for its work in “planning wisely for the good of the greatest numb He entered minor | objects however, The manner in residential districts was drawn at Thirty-ffth Street and Madison Ave- nue and at Fortieth Street and Madi- trite and Restrictions held tts second head of the Hoard of Ambulance Ser other peculiarities of the con-| session in City Hall to-day and heard Vice, gavo the orders~for tho four on of the City Hall there was arguments for and against Ite reports Pamphlets printed over the name ot door into the vault from th on the territory in Manhattan be- the Rev. Father William B, Farrell, | of the Street and Water SuP- twoen Twenty-third and Fifty-ninth Destor of the Roman Catholle Church | Department, Edward B. See Was greets, Work in the Water Supply oMfce «me Fifth Avenue Association, with the testimony given to-day by Frank Sane the door of the vault from Street and thence east to the point | Plunkett. lout the pamphiet “in @ hurry, ict contains a | hi which the line between business and | FATHER FARRELL'S PAMPHLET PRINTED ONPOTTER' ORDER No “Copy” Direct From Priest for Statement Regarding Charities Inquiry. ( PLUNKETT PAID BILL. “Keep This Quiet,” Printer Says Dr. Potter Told Him When Order Was Placed. ‘That Dr. Daniel C. Potter, once of Sta. Peter and Paul, Brooklyn, was Leber, representing M. B. Brown, printer and binder, of No, 87 Cham- bers Street, at the charities invest! sioner Charles H, Strong. The proots of the pamphiets were also sent to| Dr. Potter, who returned them cor- rected, the witness said. Estimates on the first pamphlets were secured by W. FP. Plunkett, Leber |" charges, but Judge ruling served to knock out | charges also, the Court declared. said, and Dr, Potter made arrange- menta for the publication and had the bill made out to F bill was later ma ba 7" who paid it, r, Leber said that 215,000 copies of the 20-page. pamphlet, entitled aN Public Scandal,” were printed, The bill for $1,782.28 was made out to Mr. | ther Farrell, The | ut to Mr, Plun-| | Dr, Potter told the printers to get Leber! testified. This was do pamphlets were delive: office, No. 61 Chambers Street, Mr. Leber sald that he recetved no copy from Father Farrell and gent no proofs to him for correction. In beginning his negotiations, Dr, Potter, according to the witness, said: “Keep this printing matter quiet, will you?” “I will, in eo far as I can,” Mr, Leber replied W. F. Plunkett, who assumed the expense of publishing the pamphlets, js from the Chancellor's office of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York. Of the “Public Scandal" pam- phiet, 4,600 copies were sent to East Firty-firat Street. Tho offices of the Chancellery of the Roman Catholic diocese of New York are at No. 23 East Fifty-first Street. Of the pam- phiet “Charity for Revenue,” 200,000 coples were printed and 6,100 copies were sent to East Fifty-first Street, Leber testified that Dr. Potter vis- ed hin @ couple of daye attor Vather Farrell testified at the Charities In- vestigation and again instructed him to “keep quiet” about the printing of the pamphiets. the| A report which Raymond D. Fosdick, when Commissioner of Accounts, made to the Mayor in 1910 on Dr. Pot- ter was offered in evidence. ‘The re- port set forth the evidence taken in the Investigation that followed the discovery that the Catholics were raising a fund for Dr. Potter. ‘The Rev. Dr, BE. 8. Holloway, pastor of the Hope Baptist Church, Broad- way and One Hundred and Fourth Street, told about the church inves- tigation that preceded Dr. Potter's withdrawal from the Baptist min- istry. He was not removed from the pastorate of the Tabernacle, but ho had no church and his congregation gradually fell away to nothing. John McCormick, Superintendent of the printing plant that got out the pamphlets, testified that some one called him on the telephone this morning. “Thin is Father Farrel," said the voice, “Haye you any proofs there?” replied the Superintendent, ‘have, will you have them “If yo destroye Tube Company, |that there is THE ZVENING WORLD, TUEPDAY, MARCH 28, 1918, QUASH CONSPIRACY DIEDLING UNFIT COUNTS AGAINST FOR OFFICE, FISH STEEL CONCERNS, TELLS ASSEMBLY aary and Corp Heads Are Included in Action Taken at Youngstown, O. YOUNGSTOWN, 0., Judge W. 8. Anderson to-day granted | the motion to quash the indictments | recently returned here against five | Alludes steel companies, charging them with | conspiring to fix the price of labor} and st The Steel company attorney's at- tucked the indictments as being too | indefinite and wnecertain, pao of their constitutional | to act upon hts bill 1 produ The concerns freed Judge Anderson In announcing his ¢ Anderson held that the wording of the indictments ig too uncertain and obvious conflict of State and Federal authority in the Valentine Law and the Trust Law, a Federal The indictments were returned as result of the investigation into the! strike which four lives were lost, eight injured and $1,000,000 property | damage sustained. fancier | PASS ‘SUSPENDER JACK’ BILL | Youngstown Steel Measure Gt Rehearing to-day, by MeGee (“Suspender patrolman Was iam Devery, ‘The C, a wi partment, Senate. ee ee “UNDERWORLD BILLS” DIE. ALBANY, March 28.—The three bills Promoted by the “underworld lobby” | and designed to stop police surveilianc . leged divordert: Pork CHEF we yated | et Codes Committee last night, by ‘The three Assembl; 8 to 3. yoted fo Buffalo, Chase Soap should be used very carefully if | you want to keep your best. dries the scalp, makes 9 it, is pure and grea thing else you can use. One or two and excessive “Oh, yeu,” said the Superintendent, “Did you mean It?" asked Mr, the Hotchkies. t soft and ths “I was busy at the witness, “and 1 forgot | Do you know Father Farrell?” But that sounded to me as though some one was trying to talk out of their natural voice.” Wew Yorks Leadin son Avenue, Mr, Baylies argued, seriously In explanation he said that plan of the commission a ould be established at the northeast corner of Thirty-fitth Street and Madison Avenuo, for instance, and thereby encroach on the entire block of residences, He also asked that the restriction line be pushed south to the southerly side of Thirty- fourth Btreet. If buildings 200 feet tall were permitted on the north side of Thirty-fourth Street between Third and Amsterdam Avenues, he sald, the residences on the south side Thirty-ffth Street would be affected, ee WILL DEPORT WOMAN. FH rad Not Allo Mre, Buger wed to Land i Platonoff, twenty-four Petrograd, who has just arrived in the first cabin of the Ber- @ Board of Special Inquiry. Kagan, a guest at the Waldorf- who! Astoria since his arrival a week ago, vt. | ig said to have told customs offic'als Dr: Bulls COUGH SYRUP <> ‘ Beware of the cough that slowly seats itself in the | that Mrs. Platonoff was his wife, This Kayan denies, and says instead that ahe je the laughter of an Itimate friend, He does not know why she came here, Mra. Platonoff's attorney saya h client will go home willingly and pi her own first-class passage. She h not been allowed to land Upnet Auto, Joseph Mayo, thirty-five years old, a salesman, of No, 84 Kent Street, Yon- kers; Anthony Vitaca, twenty-eight years old, and Rocco Vitoca, thirty-five years old, of No, 394 Lorimer 8 ar $n the Smith Infirmary |) New Brighton I, aft Ke ferr ile wcvident at St haking t t machine turned turn at the ver and pinned the are wuf- rulscm | residential | an 4 Stores For a very limited deliver to your ho 0 family oy; it Victrola Stores ay INC. Victor Factory Distributors » Telephone Murray Hill 3700 Send fi Sea tuemeeye Slit SBwearamamuss | | Determines 23 WEST 42" St. 27 WEST 34*"St. Opportunity BETWEEN 5% & 6" AVES. BETWEEN 5S!" 8, GthAVES, Why Hesitate Any Longer? time only, we will me at once, this Victrola X $75 With $5 in Records, Total $80 on a small first payment of only. $5 Down Balance in Small Monthly or Weekly Payments ts were: Youngstown Sheet and Republic Iron and Steel Company, Carnegie Steel Com- pany, Brier Hill Steel Company, and | Youngstown Iron and Steel Company. later announced that his action to-day also quashes the indictments against Judge Elbert H. Gary and the United States Steel Corporation, of which he is the head, Gary and the steel corporation were ‘not Included in the motion to dismiss Ex-Policeman a to Whitman, ALBANY, March 28.—The a vote of 82 to 55, passed Senator Bennett's bill authorizing a eed hearing by the New York City Police! Commissioner, of charges against John | Jack"), chtet of the has the measure were A. Nickerson of New York and Columbia County. Most soaps and prepared sham- | poos contain too much alkali, Thi st thing for steady use is just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oil (which ‘less), and is better than the most expensive soap or any- spoonfuls wi ip thorough lather, which rinses out easily every particle ickly and evenly, and it leaves ght, lustrous, fluffy and easy to n get mulsified cocoanut oil at y cheap, and a few upply every member of the for montns,—Advt oration He Declares Commission Shows It by His Testimony Against Osborne. | —- |TAKES RAP AT OTHERS. March 28.- to Employees Prisons Superintendent as | “Nest of Vipers.” of ALBANY, Mareh 28.~During a fu. depriving | ue attempt to force the petted | to provide for an | investigation of the entire prison sit~ from tndtet~| uation in the Btate, Assemblyman Hamilton Fish jr, to-day criticized Dr. Rudolph Diedling, the Prison Commtasioner, who testified recent trial, and some of the em- Ployees of the office of the State Bu- perintendent of Prisons. Fish said Diedling, by his testi- to be unfit holder, The employees to be public office the a ot Superin- Anderson's led every effort at prison re- these and Means Committee from furth consideration of the measure failed, 22.to 93, lecision Judge Slayton Anti- acute. | riots in thirty- | Assembly who as sed in. 1902 passed hotels in New Yio Aameistny eet hair looking its the hair brittle In combinations a tops with black, ust, dirt, The hair r fine and ivory, champagne Special always available Hundreds of vital Cablegrams and by telegraph. sharply against Thomas Mott Osborne at his mony at the trial, had shown himself tendent's Office he characterized as a est of vipers” that “consistently His motion to discharge the Ways OPPENHEIM, GLUNS & G Mih Street—New Yor Direct Particular Attention to The New “Domino’’ Boot Exclusive Oppenheim, Collins & Co. Model leather vamps and collars; white fit- tings; cut extra high; hand turned soles, Louis XV. heels; also self colors, in all white calfskin, gray suede, and WESTERN UNION Telegraph Service gains time, restores time lost, over- takes escaping opportunity. daily by timely use of Western Union Telegrams, Day Letters, Night Letters, Ful. information at any Western Union Office, THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. COLLEGE GIRLS KILLED ON GEOLOGICAL JAUNT Caroline Duror of Brooklyn and Lola Whitmore of Utica Run Down by Train. BARABOO, Wis, March 28.— Spending their spring vacation on & geological jaunt, Miss Caroline Duror of New York and Miss Lola B, Whit- more of Utica, students at the Uni- versity of Chicago, were run over and killed by a train near bere yesterday, They were walking on the Chicago ‘and Northwestern tracks at & sharp curve when trapped between a cliff and the water and buried fifteen feet into Devil's Lake, Miss Duror ex- cted to teach at Columbia next fall, 88 Whitmore had come West from Radcliffe, Miss Caroline Austin Allison-Duror lived at No. 406 Forty-eighth Street, Brooklyn, and was considered an ex- |ceptionally brilliant student. In 1911 ste was graduated with honors from the Girls’ High School. She wor a |Kuropean fellowship at Bryn Mawr, and made Phi Beta Kappa at Barnard, where she was graduated in 1914. She had gone to Chicago to specialize in geolory and was expected to join the Barnard faculty next fall For That Run-down Condition so characteristic of Sprii will be bemefited by a ( HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters | It is an excellent Tonic and Appetizer I RFI nd self colors; white brown and patent Care and gray kidskin, 8.50 almost everywhere, situations are saved money transferred ‘Franklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue . 8 West 38th St.—Store Floor Separate Shop, a Step from Fifth Avenue FOR WEDNESDAY Men’s Spring Suits For Men and Young Men—88 to 46 Chest Custom Tailored Ready to Wear The new one, two, three or four button models of finest Imported or Domestic Fabrics, including a large variety of fabrics made expressly for fined to Franklin Simon & Co. 19.00 t 45.00 Men’s Hand Tailored Suits For Men and Young Men—33 to 46 Chest Hand tailored Suits in one, two, three or four button fitted or conservative models, in the new Spring fabrics from the best American and foreign mills, including Blue Serge and many exclusive fabrics. 25.00 Men’s Spring Top-Coats For Men and Youna Men—32 to 46 Cheat CARMOOR LONDON English Overcoats (shower-proof) made in London expressly for Franklin Simon & Co. The fabrics are the product of England’s most celebrated mill, with world wide reputation for producing the finest Overcoatings—models adapted for general wear. 24.00 » 40.00 c pt NTE Tomorrow Only , Unrestricted Choice of Any Piano In Our Warerooms ¢ Selling Regularly up 390 to $550, TOMORROW ONLY .... ° 12 Rolls of Music and Fine Bench With Player Terms to suit your convenience A Limited Number of NEW PIANOS | 90 $5 Monthly Liberal allowance for Pianos taken in exchange. WAREROOMS, 5th Ave. and 39th St. Complete Stock of Victor-Victrolas and Records MAI inci ITI TITTTIITLIOTOLIILLLLLL AML World Best Medium for School Advertising! EMPIRE LINOTYPE SCHOOL, FRANK F, ARNOLD, Manager. 133-135-137 East 16th Street, New York, March 24, 1916, IEEE, New York World: We are constantly importuned by newspapers for advertis. ing and do advertise in many newspapers. é have tried them all and find The New York World brings -by far the best results. We have advertised steadily in The World for the last ten years, The World seems to reach the progressive young men who desire suitable trades, Yours very truly, F, F, ARNOLD, Manager. 10,053 WORLD “INSTRUCTION” ADS. LAST YEAR. 4,208 More Than the Herald! CLEAVE LI LLL TLL ELT TOOL ALAM LALLY LAMAN

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