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yaya Araceae NEW TRAFIC BLL NOT TO OPEN DOOR rer neon Welch Bill Amended So as No } to Supersede Section 444, Penal Code. “By Sophie Irene Loeb. Ppertar Stat Corrmsondent of ‘The Evening | World.) ALBANY, March 27.—The Welch IM was advanced to third reading In the Assembly last night, and it is) now In its final form Many amendments have | been one of the last and most import- ant provides that this new legisla. the sta = pass a ed through the @fforts of The Evening World. By the enactment of that law the Private hackstand monopoly was wiped out, a monopoly which netted the police and restaurants Non dollars annually by thelr mak. ing contracts with favorite taxicab fompanies for the exclusive use of the streets in front of their premises as hackstands The new city ordinance put into effect al paign of The fo private and creates publi places as hotels, &eo. The State law further enforces this use of public streets and puts teeth into the ordinance by making tt a misdemeanor for any one to the streets of the city. As the Welch bill was originally @rawn it would have been possible to @o back to the old system of creating private hackstands. Assemblyman Welch, father of the Rew measure, sald: “1 am glad this matter was brought to my attention s s World and the traffic nded accordingly so be no misunderstand- which was o through the cam- ing World, ab tand — privil hackstands at such railroad stations, hack so rent Ms about it, Section 444 is a wise measure, as there should be no monopoly, of public Dill gives authority to the city to makg its own speed of vehicles, etc. FORUM BILL OF THE EVENING WORLD IS UP TO-DAY. The Aimericanization Forum Bill dvocated by The bvening World geome up in both Houses to-day @s the measure has won the ac- tve interest both poli tleal parties i anced Without & disse The b shall be used nting vote. est iblic schools mmunity and civic forums vith t n purpose of making Americar Such forums will at all times t under the jurisdiction of the Board h will presertbe tions for their conduct, Wherever such forums are estab- Ushed the Bourd of Education shall Provide janitor service and mainten- ance, but au y is & to make such centres self-supporting wherever possible, The measure kely be passed {n the House first Assemblyman Goodman, who tntro- ne measure In the House, said As a teacher n the that My experience Public seh nothing the question. creates one's se inderstand!ing | 1y be subject ues ind has opportunity alue, In a sure, it will potent facto forum ic not yet been given to der trat very be rec in the d f knowledge to the people tand ing of 1 tter n matters dire than by the carried on at th feel assured t State will hear sion of the for discussion lature of the ove the exten- Chicago Alde Favor of Clty Sale of te a CHICAGO, Mareh A mas of the City Council wants the « ° Chie! age in buying and selling ice, oa ‘and fc warn 5 of B? Right. dex ded ments t the rest operitio municip HOT SPRINGS ENTRIES. HOT SPRINGS, Ark., March 27.—'Th entries for to-morrow's races” are as follow FIRST RACE Selling: f FOR OLD GRAFT made, and] tlon shall not in} any Way supers sede Section 444 the Penal Code,! nances relative to ns, I] “tone nner HILAR INQUEST i — ‘DELAYED BY HUNT FOR EVIDENCE | Nothing So Far Hy Par Produced to | Connect “Benny” With | Hotel Murder. With indications that new develop- ments are about to be sprung, the Hilair murder case inquest will be! |resumed to-morrow afternoon, Coun- |sel for Benjamin Sternberg, the pris- loner, wanted to go on to-day, but or the District Attorney's office got @ |delay of forty-eight hours to follow) jnew trails. | “EVENING WORLD FORUM TO HAVE “AMERIGAN WER), awersct | with the murder, Five employees of It Will Begin April 9 and There} the Hotel Martinique who testified to/ | Will Be 100 Rallies in School having seen Mra. Hilair before and | after her death also swore that they Centres. had never seen Sternberg in or about/ The police are receiving scores of undertaken in meetings of The Eve-| letters on the case, One woman says |ning World's American Forum, is to} the day after the murder Jewelry re- be observed in public schools of the|sembling Mrs. Hilair's was offered for Borough of Manhattan during the]sale to her employer, a jeweller. week of Mon April 9 ‘This has} “You've got the right man,” the let- been determined as a result of reso-|ter e “d jlutions adopted last night at a meet- An « etter ing of local School Board Chairmen|titious name and asking that addi+ Borough President's office tional pictures of Mrs, Hilair and in @ formal statement in which the! Sternberg be published so that the} valuable work of forum meetings was | writer may be more sure of his identi- acknowledged, representatives of ap lication, reads in part: | proximately 1 chools in Manhattan |" “" | have asked permission to co-operate [ positively recognized the pic-| | woman killed in that ith the forum directors in a series of (tures of the rallieg to be held In a pol centres. /hotel and her companion, accused of © Committee appointed to co-op |)”, le. The woma: erate with the forum directors con- |Homicide. The woman came up to sists of J ‘Adams, Secretary the room where che writing tables are of the Boro 9 Chairman of |the first time about 4.15 or 4.2%, and the Borough ards; Willam was jooking around. She came up! Weiss, uel Dt } na Wil- he ' uel Roth, Mrs. Anna Jagain about an hour later, by her- maybe 6.16 Kinson and Mrs, Cora Magnes. | self It was about 6 or ame Up again, and a while | Americanization Week, planned to imax of patriotic endeavor signed with a flc- Jin the Two forum meetings will be held to- | night in Manhattan the first in Pub-| when she |lic School No. 2, at No. 116 Henry |jater tne The yi Street, and » second in Public| ‘ter the man. They lett quickly. School No. 2%, at No. 490 Fifth Streét.| 1uspector Cray says that Benjamin | Abraham Cohen and Harry dber- yerg, Who is charged with the | ger will be the speakers. Twenty | Killing, has been identified as @ man| meetings will be held under auspices | ~. ; ; ; of the forum in Manhattan to-mor-|Who walked into the Ralph Avenue |Police Station in Brooklyn at 6.15 row night ST, LUKE'S IS CHOSEN FOR GREAT WAR HOSPITAL : Plans Also Und nder Way for |? M. Sune March 18 two days after the murder | The man appeared to be on the verge of @ nervous collapse, Lieut, | Bowe turned the case over to Patrol- | Sondericher, who summoned an nbulance from the Bushwick Hos- pital, Dr. Wolf, who examined the man, said he was suffering fron Enrol-| hysteria and did not need hospital treatment, ment of 25,000 Doctors as Recovering his composure some- | Medical Reserve Corps. | what, the patient gave his name as Samuel Rosenberg, age twenty-four, The selection of St. Luke's Hos-|of No. 184 Tompkins Avenue, Brook. pital, occupying the block on Am-|1¥% Inquiry showed there was no spans Py j j one of that name living there, sterdam Avenue from One Hundred|” pr, Wolf, the police way, looked at |and Thirteenth to One Hun¢ and|the man's’ face very carefully and eut. Bowe that h was not Rosenber think I know you. I to school with me seve | Fou believed his ] pita beginning of the eenth Streets, as a bi in the event e hos- f war and the work of enrolling idn't you go ‘al years ago?” 25,000 physicie the Medical Re-|##ked| Dr. W If of the supposed | ¥ Rosenberg. ‘The man sald he had Corps were st interest. t name, given his correc The ambulance surgeon left the sta- developments to-day in the local | I dness campaign tion saying he was puzzled Temporary buildings are to be enberg” departed a few minutes | P : \ *|his condition improved. The f are pital, now filled | station is near Mertz’s cafe, where to capacity with private patients, to| Sternberg claims he spent part of | da of war time, the large | Thursday afternoon and evening the| irroun Cathedral of |day of the murder, an_alibl which, | John Divine t under con- | the police say, has been broken down t additional struc- The Rev. Dr. George R.| rintendent of the hos an active part in construction New York County Medical So- y last night laid plans for enrol ng physicians in the Med. |Corps, It was Inspector ( says Dr. Wolf saw Sternt ‘s picture in the newspapers dd identified him as the man he had | treated. | ee ESR .S0: IRISH BACK UNCLE SAM cantata “S| SAYS JUSTICE DOWLING | - —_— — { SPRING FASHIONS An enterprising concern adver tises leather suits, “suitable for | wear on ubmorine hasers.” | paysiclans the regt Ireland Never Bred | Bred a 1 America, and There itor to Is No | Divided Allegiance.” | ‘The United States ¢ support of » ‘0. OSBORNE’ ‘STILL IN COURT | emergency an count on the| Irish-Americans in any| ‘This was the assurance | Justice Victor J : THE BVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAROH 27, 1917. the girl disappear | gi to-day by stor Geta 7 Dowling, a leading Knight of Colum-| ter Case Ux- ts for New Pro pio bus, a Knight of St. Gregory and; } out thought that the explana President of the Friendly Sons of St.| mad he jurors who served a Patrick, when his attention was| Raw rjury trial that they were | ca to resolutions passed by the| unable to h a verdict because there | United Irish-American Societies pro-| had been so much false swearing in| testing “against — th further | British agents to ¢ “Oliver | into the European y Justice Dowling said he ments of the overwhe f Irish-Americans in annual banquet of the Friendly | n he sald | 14 traitor to attempt of! his country ould put # stop to d thereby end the » have had no tant United § \s nd has never bre rc 4 and there is no divided al- | James | legiance among us. However we may | differ on question f Irish policies, | e motion, Ithere is no question among us when —— the fested skin treatment If you want to experiment on your skin, there are plenty of treatments to experiment with, But if you want something the value | of which has been proven by years and years of successful use, if you want a treatment that doctors prescribe constantly, that you Anow contains nothing harsh or injurious, you will | finditin Resinol Ointment, aided | by Resinol Soap, It usually stops itching distantly, and rare ly fails to clear away all trace of ordinary skin-eruption Sold by all druggiets Ame is concerned. We have but} STORE one fing undone gouhtty, “ANa w FOR STOUT WOMEN i love and will defend both while lite endure Opens His New Home y ~ Woman 1 Wear Ob Hom hatks: Be pers yesterday (ook + 4 A» Pol IN MED! pernronts ot shoppers veeterday ook |thing GP ibe race and ya ee EDICINE Lon ANC ius March 27. tina ‘ =~ tlc jay ot Ralbh Aveniia and Madr YSTP ATH ©. Perline, and Susie, known as bis oy anit bee story DulldIng! Knocked Down by Ranaway, | 5!'c0l) Hy gl from No” #42" Madi. | Pid fourteen-year-old daughter, were held{at No. 21-28 West Thirty-eighth Street,| A horse driven by Samuel Morrison of| Ukr Mirese rushed from No. " He ithe here, to Pending Aan attempt | to| just off Fifth Avenue, constructed at al No Christog erect, Brownavitic, | ccauhe fot : she he ea ourse dent th "Once tehee oe con! 750,00 Star o1 5 d On investix O'Neill fo t Herkimer, N.Y. and his half-s Cont of $750,000, Starting in only nine} ran away early to-day, and at South| . ON Investigation ‘O'Neal tc und ONE PIT. OR MORE EACH NIGHT Helen, who disappeared in November | Y¢ars ago ax specialists in smart ready-| Third and Grand Street extension, Will-| Noman, Mrs: Minerva Wilke, th ag Mane Mang yd d hay n sought by the po-|to-wear clothes for stout women, the|/iamsburg, knocked down and injured] thirty-eight. were victima of kas polm Troubles Will Dienpsemn, Hee’ "el h denied such identity | pusiness has grown to such proportions| Leon Solomon, fifty-six years old, a Wilke Was foune ue P XATIVE Sate for Ci The pol said @ char of kidnapping that twelve floors of the new structure . pedr i was filed against W! Bh yead at the time tailor living at No, 147 ¢ They said he had| re necessary to display the vact stocks| solomon received lacerations ris and thence here, ‘and care for the constantly inc ing| head and face and Street bout the een traced to P aved Wilke Who Discovered JeICoORr “Who discovered Ricoro?” We have been asked this question a thousand times. All of the United Cigar Stores ‘original Ricoro discoverers, is still open and unsettled. boast of their But the question Every day we meet men who think they know, i and they tell us how it happened. The story is * different e We are going to publish some of the Watch for them and judge for yourself. interest you because, Sooner or later you'll discover— every time. eta 2 stories. They'll You'll discover an mellow taste and gentle mildness at less than the price domestic cigar. imported cigar of rich, tropic fragrance, sweet, of a Yow'll discover in the Ricoro a fine looking cigar—a cigar you'll hand to a friend with pride and with the assurance that he will enjoy it thoroughly. You'll discover that an imported duty-free 6c Ricoro is the equal ‘of other 15c imported cigars. You'll discover why we call Ricoro the “self-made” cigar—it made its own success On its own merit. A dozen UNITED CIGAR Saratoga Size 66 Box of 50, $3.00 Invincible Size 7c Box of 50, $3.50 Imported from Porto Rico Imported from Porto Rico Sold only in STORES sizes and shapes—6c to 2-for-25¢ — ee — - —_._F