The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1917, Page 3

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‘ sot nin al oy SUP IN ROCKAWAY am FORT SITE STARTS FRESH TROUBLE —_~—. Bill Pushed Through U. S. Senate Provides for Transfer of Part of Plumb Island. OFFER BY GREVE’S CO. will be read.” ING THE TRANSFER. The Secretary read the bill, as follow: “Be it enacted, &c., that the Secretary of War be, and he is hereby, authorized to transfer to the City of New York in partial consideration for the transfer to the United States of the city’s right and title to certain lands on Rockaway Point, the title of the United States to the reservation on Plumb Island, in the town of. Gravesend, In Kings County, State of New York, and containing an area of approximately fifty acres. Mr, Overman: “I desire to ask the Senator from New York is there any reason why the bill should be passed to-day?” Mr, Calder: “The War Depart- ment has requested that it be passed. It has to do with the exchange of some property that the city owns on the site of the Great Fort Rockaway, which pro- tects New York Harbor.” Mr, Overman: “Is it an emer- gency measure?” Mr. Calder: “I think it 1s, The Federal Government is trying to perfect its title to the property in Rockaway, and this ts part of the property involved in the trans- action.” The Vice President: “Is there objection to the present consider- ation of the bill?” There being no objection, the | Senate, as in Committee of the Whole, proceeded to consider the bin, Tho bill was reported to the Senate without amendment, or- dered to be engrossed for a third reading, read the third time, and passed. Congressman Fitzgerald Op- poses Scheme and Will Block Passage of Bill in House. (@pecial From Hreitttt Cerremcedent of The yrening World.) WASHINGTON, June 27.—Senate Bill No. 1862, which gumshoed {ts way through the Upper House of Congress on June 8, under the guidance of Senators Calder and Wadsworth of New York, brings into the proposal of the United States Government to es- tablish a fort and battery at Rock- away Point a further complication, Senator Calder is sponsor of the bill, which provides that the United States Government shall transfer to the City of New York, as partial consideration, fifty acres of land on Plumb Island in Jamaica Bay in return for the city’s | right to lands needed for fortification Purposes on Rockaway Point. Sena- tor Calder was once a member of the Realty Associates, of which William Greve is Vice President, although he ia no longer associated with the cor- Doration, Representative John J. @f Brooklyn has been looking into Benate Bill No. 1,852 and he will block its passage through the House of Representatives. Mr, Fitzgerpld wants to know why the city, through Mayor Mitchel, after promising to presemsito the Government, without charge, lands to which the city claims to hold title on Rockaway Point, sud- denly appears, asking that fifty acres of land on Plum Island which Atrectly adjoins extensive property holdings of the Harkness Estate, of which Mr. Greve is understood to be the lessee, be transferred to city. SOME THINGS MR. FITZGERALD) WANTS TO KNOW. Mr, Fitzgerald wants to know if the City of New York contemplates Plumb Isiand | BRB ie ia’ warkiess propert ‘| York pop# out in the Senate. as hal he wants to know why,|¢™mergency war measure and slip fgasmuch as the State of New York| through noisclessly as has seized the Rockaway Point prop- | through an hour glass. ; erty needed by the Government and CONGRESSMAN FITZGERALD'S appropriated $2,500,000 to jnsure the STATEMENT OF HIS STAND. Prop! | alleged rights of claimants to ttle, | Fitzgerald City of New York by the ears foi months; ¢t Is brought about the controversy be tween Mayor Mitchel and Senato: Robert F. a legislative Investigation, United States Government, the Stat: | Probably tt 4s a good thing that the| United States was prepared, the city finds itself in need of the | question has come before the Con- Rai hah ACR Alaa and sub- Atty acres to which the United) po. Mr, Fitzgerald's statement to y . } sae ip Btates Government claims title on) The Evening World of his stand and Plumb Island. | what he intends to do is as follows: 2 ee “Fortunately the city has been etlm- Mr, Fitageraid outlines his position | “st arm familiar with the bill known! inated as a negotiator in this matter, huly in the statement which appears | 4 gonate 185%, which passed the Sen-| ‘The State officially, under lexislation, TEER sailed eats is ate on the eighth of this month. It] will take the property required at mean time a record in the 2 : “| Rockaway Point, 5 pe onal Record of the proceed. | Vill never paag the House of Repre-| determine is just and transfer the @engressional syecore. 0 PEDORS sentatives, It is impossible to under-| property to. the United States for the ings in the United States Senate on). .n4 tts passage in the Senate at! price so rmined June 8 attending the passage of Bil) fi sin. the bill authorizes the} _,“How is it under such cireum- No, 1852 is of interest. It follows: . : : stances, and in view of Mayor Li el AR Ae et (follows: | Secretary of War to transfer to the| Mitchel's “statement under oath, Mr. Wadsworth From | the City of New York the property of the) that the city was to make a gift Committee on Military Affairs T | 1 hitea states in Plumb Island as par-| of its property at Rockey report back without | fiir consideration for the transfer of[' Point, and that a law hae been amendment the bill (8 ) au- | : ty| gnacted top aift, xr pegernneepaoieo Reape pes the city's rights to certain property! that two months later, in Jun thorixing the Secretary of War to | 1) Rockaway Point, the Senate of the United States transfer to the City of New York |" wpne report of the Endicott Board emergency matter a bill the title of the United States to certain lands In Kings County, State of New York, and I submit a report thereon, “The Will was introduced by my tin 1886 contemplated a mortar bat tery for the defense City at Plumb Island. ot Rockaway end of Coney Island by ident So pa oe rope nn cretions shut Plumb Island from the! “What connection Is there between MOVING 148 8 LOvtaY Fr0) i vate d the endous in- anxiety to transfer Plum! Boctetary of War transmitting in | open Water: and the tremendous !n-} nd property to the City of New turn a letter from the Chief of | crease in the range of big guns neces-| York and the extraordinary provision sol wee cinitad States Army | sitated a change in the plans for the |in the option to sell the Rockaway Engineers, United 8 At defense of New York City. Among, Property to the United States that Task unanimous « tfor the | Serene fn’ wan tha{the Rockaway Pacific Corporation tion of the bili” | the changes decided upon was the! .ouq purchase the Plumb Island Ment. “In these erection of certain xuns at Rockaway for $40,000, if the United States See ec eclontt é Point instead of Plumb Island, In I it to do so? ii ny objection? Rei BC FTP apredoaeh: “there should be an explanation o} Mr, Cummins: “I ask that the | 18%! the oe rae posure ty hese extraordinary facts. The people p read before the request BOXSR OR RD ARNE condemna- | oy New York are entitled to it, They ou ideale al ‘* | ton proceedings at an expense of know the relations of those pass pene ‘$09,500, The authorization to acc ure |! 1 in the ‘Rockaway Pacific Tho Vice President: “The pill | $9600. ‘The au iH ls ae : a ‘orporation to the City of New York -|tho necessary site for the fortitiea-|i¢ the transaction Is proper turn on tions at Rockaway Point was con-| the light. tained in the Fortificatigns Act which Ppt. aa States had title to the land to be a DELICLOUS quired, and also that attempts wou’ MAL ‘EXT CT be made to compel the United Sta to pay an exorbitant price for th lands. Taken With Meals Adds an indescribable flavor to food, makes strength, flesh and blood. Refuse Substitutes. jaemics Should Take Freely. TION GIVES AN OPTION, away Point is claimed-py the Rock-|Metal Mine Workers’ Industrial For Sale Everywhere away pacitic Corporation, and part|was involved when « atrike order went| by the City of New York. On Jan. 6|into effect today. Five thousand men| are employed, Operators announced WEEP YOUNG AND ATTRACTIVE tiveness—bring youth and charm to DR. JAS. P. CAMPBELL'S ARSENIC COMPLEXION WAFERS ete. ‘They build up the system Convince yourself of their beauty and ‘They are guaranteed safe eri and nun habit forming Huniled tn plain cov ing £2.20 trom rd Fink z ay York ‘City, Campbell's Waters for you EXT OF THE BILL AUTHORIZ- Here is a matter that has had the the question which! Wagner which resulted in And on; June 8 a very vital feature in the | transaction, which was supposed to be settled to the satisfaction of the of New York and the City of New an sand sifting of New York The extension Point and the easterly natural ac. | was approved July 6, 1916. Statements g Tl UIP OFC PPER claiming to know that the United] ROCKAWAY PACIFIC CORPORA- “Part of the land required at Rock 1916, an option was given by the Rockaway Pacific Corporation to the ‘United States on the property to whioh it claimed title, and that option coritained the very remarkable pro- vision that the Rockaway Pacific Corporation, if the United States so desired, would purchase from the United States the fifty acres on Plumb Island for $40,000. ‘Although this property was ob- tained in condemnation proceedin: it 1s claimed that the title is defect- ive, although the Department of Jus- tice has rendered an opinion that the United States cannot be disturbed in ita possession. It is said that if the title were not defective the property would be worth $150,000, but that be- cause of the defect it is worth only $75,000. The Rockaway Pacific Cor- Rover was willing to relieve the lovernment of this property for i idayor Mitchel insisted that the fifty acres of land be transferred to the City of New York im partial con- sideration of the transfer of the city’s property at Rockaway Point. MAYOR MITCHEL SAYS ARMY OFFICERS FAVORED PLANS, “In a letter written by the Mayor is the following provision: “In consiueration of this ces- sion by the City of New York to the United States it is further un- derstood that Col. Frederic V. Ab- bot, in local charge of the con- struction and establishment of fortifications for the protection of New York Harbor, agrees ond does recommend to_ Brig. Gen. William M. Black, Chief of En- gineers, United States Army, that the right, title and interest of the United States Government to and in Plumb land, Jamaica Bay, N. Y., comprising about fifty acres, be conveyed to the City of New York; and it is further un- derstood that Brig. Gen. William M. Black, Chief of Engineers, United States Army, approves of theyrecommendation of Col. Abbot and will endorse his action to the Secretary of War, who will in turn urge such Congressional ac- tion as may be necen: ary to carry into effect the transfer.” “It was stated by Col. Winslow of the United States Army Engineers that the reason the city insisted lupon this transfer was to allay pub- lie resentment at the transfer of tho Rockaway Point property to the United States. “In the legislative investigation of this matter Mayor Mitchel testified as | follows: “Col. Apbot inquired of me whether tho Clty of New York would be willing to sell this land to the United States Government at a low or nominal figure in or- der to facilitate the construction of the proposed fort. I informed Col, Abbot that, as far as I was concerned, | would answer for the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund that the city would be will- ake a gift of the entire in this land to the United States Government and would ex- -| act no compensation therefor, +! provided that enabling legislation | could be secured to permit suct gift. This assura: was late confirmed by the members of the Sinking Fufid Commission, s* @ reiterated to Col, Abbot my offer on behalf of the cit gift to the United city's interest in all lands lying within the lines of th r proposed Government Reserva- tion, 8 I thereupon gave directions that legislation to enable the city to make ft of the lands within the Government Reservation to the United States be prepared and transmitted to Albany, * © ¢ ‘The bill to permit a gift to the CITY ELIMINATED AS A NEGO. TIATOR IN MATTER. the United St transfer property which cost $99, 500, and is stated to be worth at least $75,000, to the City of New York in partial consideration of | the gift the city is to make for | its own protection? AS 5,000 MINERS STRIKE A ——_ Properties Affected Produce 190,-! 000,000 Pounds of Metal An- | nually. BISBER, Ariz, —A of the strength of the recently organized union | June test |they would close the mines before ae- | ceding to the new union's demands. The | principal demand {s for an increase in| Wages, but the miners also ask improved | | working conditions and the right to or. | wanize. The operators assert that the officers and a majority of the members of the union are affiliated with the Industrial Workers of th The properties affected produce about 108,00,00 pounds | annually. of copper BUTTE, Mont., June 2.—Mining com- | panies were unable to state to-da Whether the copper and zinc mines will continue operations in the Butte dis- trict more than two dare becw of turbed labor conditions, W Rod. Federal Mediator, to-day con- Yass his conferences with the labor | oon eoenet aontomatdetdaame | .Province of Auvergne, Now She Plans Uniqué War Relief Here, Which Purposes to Eliminate the Middleman. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. A unique war relief, which pur poses to eliminate the middleman from the road of the wounded soldier and of war's al termath of needy and dependent women, is being organized in New York by Countess de Bois Hebert- Gust de Tilly, yl founder and Pres- wager ee ol the Al ed Exchanges for Arts and Crafts. Fifty-eight male relatives of the Countess entered the war, Of the fifty-eight only two are now alive. One of the survivors is blind; the other has lost an arm. In her own where her family has lived since the days of Charlemagne, there are many fami- Hes of which every man has been killed. There are other households to which the bread-winner has re- turned a physical wreck, utterly in- capacitated for the work he per- formed prior to 1914, ‘What I want to do,” the Countess told me when I talked with her at the Hotel Martha Washington, where she is stopping,~“ts to establish, a world-wide system/of free exchanges where wag veterans and the wives and daugMers and mothers of sol- diers can sell, free of commission, the products of thelr hands and brains. “I want to open such an exchange in New York, in Boston, in Wash- ington, in Philadelphia, in Chicago, in every large town in your count and I want to see similar exchanges established In France, Italy and Eng- land, to which war victlins can send their wares, Please understand the thought back of this, I do not wish to tell America how 16 take care of {ts soldiers’ widows, but we all are lies now and it is in the spirit of fellowship that 1 offer this sugges- tion. WANTS THE EXCHANGES TO BE SELF-SUPPORTING. “, want my exchanges to de self- supporting from the first. I do not ask subscriptions from any one for them, We French do not like to put out our hands and beg; we would rather suffer. [am going to raise the money for the opening of the ex- changes by a series of concerts, con- ferences and other affairs, at which something will be offered in exchange for what is, received, For example, the other evening a gala concert was given,, under the auspices of the ex- changes, to welcome the Itallan Royal Commission, This summer I shall speak at Newport and Bar Harbor. “] know girls abroad, the ters of soldiers, who are making the most wonderful lace. well it daugh- If they at all th Is afterward resold for $5 1 know other families with beautiful heirlooms, Van Dyck portraits, Sevres of the seventeenth century, which they must sell if they are to live, for which they are offered sums nowhere near the true value, “It ig my plan to sell anytl offered by the relative of a dead or wounded soldier, or any work of the invalided veterans, absolutely free from commission, duties or other charges of the middleman, In that way my exchanges will serve the con sumer as well as the producer, Th latter can be gi a fair profit and the former can buy for much than he would have to pay in t ordinary course of trade, ~"My exchanges would little carvings, bits of hand-wrgught jew eiry, baskets and boxes made b hand; exquisite work that blind mutilated soldiers are teaching selves to do. In this way these men may support themselves and thelr families without feeling that they objects of charity, Women made @ success of women's ¢ changes, in which wares produced by shut-ing and other needy persons sold, and I think that changes for the victims of the pecullarly women's work." WILL BE IN CHARGE OF AN AL LIED COMMITTEE. the but en sell and are shave are a series of ex war is When exchanges are opened they will be in charge of an Allied committee, which the Queen of every allied country and the President of the United States and his wife will! be asked to join, A campaign ty enlist young women to fill up the gaps in the nursing pr fession is the newest enterprise of Mayor's Committee of Women on N | Uonal Defense, with headquarters « No, 4 East Thirty-ninth Street Accordings to the Committeo's Standing Committee on Nursing, of which Miss Anne W. Goodrich is chairman, the shortage of nurses | Greater New York is assuming palling proportions he Red Cross alone,” said M Goodrich, “is draining the country resources at the rate of 200 nurses per month, and that does not includ those nurses attached to the hospital units which are consta leaving for the front. In consequence it is extremely difficult to get a nurs on short notice, Should we be fronted with an epidemic the situa tion would be dangerous, “It is a fair estimate to say that there are Row about 900 nurses in New DNEBDAY, J 58 Male Relatives i in War, o Alive, Is Record Of This Countess’s Family O0864004 89629 38O834 CEOS6 49543400 700 27 1914. a told Berkman net te boy | in the army and two into the service In two weeks. borne that Talesman O ge Bei is your opinion Objection was interposed cutor eke ye 4 ‘Robert Emmet SUGGESTED POISON EMMA GOLDMAN FOR BAFF FAMILY, | AND BERKMAN ARE = x | CARDINALE SAYS; PLACED ON TRIAL ec | Joseph Cohen Wout Wouldn’t Stand Carrying on on Own “Defense, for That—Wanted to Get Call Case a Farce, Examine Baff Only. Jurors Under Protest. insistence in asking questions bearing on the case and within « minutes Berkman had taken # of exceptions to the Court's On two occasions Berkman { that the talesman was looking at | Sonne before answering ons. MESOPOTAMIA BLUNDER EWRAGES ALL BRITAIN Demand Made for Punishme< of f the High Officials Respon- sible for the Fiasco. LONDON, June 27.—Even the die satisfaction that was aroused by the report of the Dardanelles Commission dants and Judge Mayer finally cau-| 18 exceeded by the storm of reproaches ” tioned them not to make speeches.|!" the press over the revelations fex The determination of the Anarchistic |£*rding the Mesopotamia expedition. » twatn not to participate in the trial| pavers! high | reputations | have | beam was @ resolution soon brokes, asted by this report. Some of the ~ Glibly and cheerfully Antonio Car- dinale told on the witness stand to~ ‘day how four poultry merchants in West Washington Market conspired to ruin the business of a rival, Ba) net Baff, and finally wound up by | Paying $500 to have him murdered. The four defendants on trial are Jo- seph and Jacob Cohen, David Jacobs and Abraham Graft, Cardinale knew the Cohens and Graff and Jacobs, Joseph Cohen, he sald, first broached the project of | putting Baft out of the poultry busi- | ness, The initial plan was to terror- ize Baff, Cardinale said he hired a man to place a bomb under Baff's summor home at Arverne. Baft was | ‘deluged with Black Hand letters, But Emma Goldman and ‘Alexander Berkman, the Anarchist leaders on trial before Judge Julius M. Mayer in tho Federal Court to-day, after asking for an adjournment of their case suddenly announced that they would refuse to participate in the trial. The announcement by Miss Goldman of the decision of the two radicals came as a complete surprise to the Government, The trial began with a series of verbal wrangles by the two defen- for | York City engaged in the various si newspapers demand to be informed — forms of Public Health Work alone,” | %@ didn’t scare. when the first panel was called whether disciplinary measures are te | Miss Goodrich continued. “The New| S‘Baff had a customer in Harlem,” | Emma decided that they would ex- | follow, York County Nurse registered schools, tion in Brooklyn Nurses’ Association, how many of these women ready gone to the front and h more are enlisted with base units, which will be called o! near future, This committe ing a census of all thi sources of the city, WANT RECRUITS TO F NURSING RANKS. “The next step is to gain additional Association, all of whose members are graduates of has an enrollment of some 3,000, and a similar organiaa- | the Kings County » also shows large enrollment, but we do not know nursing re- amine the talesmen “under protest.” Berkman, who has a sprained ankle, kept protesting to the Court | regarding his physical pain, which aandicapped him in questioning the talesmen, Judge Mayer insisted that the trial proceed. Miss Goldman explained that) Harry Weinberger had been in charge of their case, but that they had de- \termined to defend themselves, “We realize,” Miss Goldman said, “that the trfal will be a farce, but we will examine the jurors under said Cardinale, “His name was New- mark and he had a place in Bast One Hundred and Eighth Streot. Ho was gne of the best customers Baff! had, Joseph Cohen, tn the fall of 1918, instructed me to hire somebody to burn Newmark’s place, He thought it would hurt Baft's business, “I hired Ippolito Greco who ran & paloon and gunmen hangout in Harlem ‘and he agreed to the Job for $200, Ho burned out Newmark but Baff kept right on doing business. “Joseph Cohen offered $16 for each The feature of the report is a de- © scription of the sufferings of the wounded after the Battle of Otestphon. / | Surgeon Major Carter, who was in charge st, Basra when the barges at | | Wounded arrived, made ing the wounded m: ’ Kether, both British and ge Roe without Bre tection from the rain, without blankets and some with limbs set with splints made from of whisky xes, The Commi evidence shows ‘that 8 Carter's superior Koen threaten ut him under a and refe A a n the House ‘of ‘Commons Law said the Government was ering immediate action against those port. a have al- ow many hospital ut in the © is tak~ ILL UP) ° held culpable in the r recruits to fill the gaps in the nursing! of Baff's horses we poisoned. Greco | Protest.’ ranks shown by this survey to exist-| poisoned one horse. ‘Then it was de-| ‘TR court was probably the moat ospita are, the fore, bel ed | . Ni both to incrouse the eushher of sugia| cided that Baff must be put out of the | c@refully guarded room in New York entering their schools and to shorten | Way. in many long years. Unusual pre-| for girl who got a Job as maid last’ their course for college women, “"T know there are some good boys in| ©autions were taken, Marshal Mc-| Monday at the home of Mrs, Laura “The Red Cross recognizes only ON®\trariem who would be glad to kill that |C@thy and his deputies cleared the| Harmon, Kenmore Place and Jerome kind of nurae, and that is the trained ; ‘ Me corridors of the building of several] Avenue, Flatbush, and disappeared « graduate nurse. Many thousands of|——~ Baff,’ Joe Cohen told me few hours later with jewelry valued” women who aro taking sort courses ohen sald he would pay $500 to | score aged ka i hice geen bestia at $2,000, She left behind her hand- in Home Care of the Sick and First ‘a, Cnet woo, | half an hour before the selection o: ght Ald. soem to bo under nama dig at | Have Bafy killed. Greco wanted #700, bag, which contained a hair switeh, a jury began impression that these courses will fe| THO Price was agreed upon at a con- s - ip.{® Palr of tortoise shell glasses and a them to be Red Cross nurses, or at| ference in Harlem between the two| Deputy Marshals and pecret ser- | plugged cent, least to do nursing work in hospitals | Cohens, Graff, Jacobs, Greco and my- | Vice men were stationed at the ¢l0- | cee y at home, ‘This is a mistake. salt We mak te Goenis tale vators, at the door of the court room few voluntee who hav aket “ Mat od 1 me ered 01 - such courage ind cane ne ave taken | “nae was very suspicious, He was | tid were soattored smn ae spec tain other teats have been enrolled by| hard to locate alone except at his| tors. Two deputy marshals were he Red Cross under the name of] West Washington Market place, |""sed on either side of the Judge'ls nurses’ "with the und + Seti ol f old ‘onte! " that in an eme peat arts alanine co laid around one of his branches | Sans reed aye Sdahegates et called upon to assist nurses tn certain | 4 Brooklyn, but Baff wouldn't go| tant United Billtes Attorney, who Is of the more simple routine duties in| over there, Then Greco cut a hole in| Mndling the case for the Governs Nespas and conval scent homeay At/a fence near one of Baff's branches in| 2" Was guarded by —Detecti¥e “NONE $0 GOOD” present hospitals are not. ca ¥ for| » z Serge: * e caus look for active service either at home| We Were tipped off that Baft was to| {ons were taken because of threat- Especially built for milita; or abroad is decidely uncertain. Wel be there he wouldn't come ening letters. whlch’ WAYS Basi Tee Loe we May as weil face the fact that auch| “Greco then took a rifte to the root|Celved by Judge Mayer and Mr. Con-|[ use—ideal not only for the the immediate petra eetation tol of a building in ine! Buldrea ine Laphe soldier, but for all rangh out © problems before us. D and 2 1 attendant, no matter| Tenth Street next to one of Bafta} ONe of the precautions taken, and |} door wear. how long she may had practical] places and watched for him threo|* Most Unusual one, was the fact that experience in irsing, can never be Jays, Baft didn't h Th all the witnesses were barred from ranked as a graduate nurse or take| oe, nt amt show up. Then! the courtroom and will not be p > State examination given by the| Oye? Py iad teas had done] mitted in the trial room until wanted York State Board of R \ lot of work but he couldn't get the | for testimony. The witnesses we: and receive her ‘RO N.' unless s money until the Job was finished. aiowed to remain In the corridor. » necessary educational require: One Gay ne talued eras PolWOMINE | eriends of the two anarchists were ni te the whole Haff family by putting pol- | nustied out Into Park Row and deputy I wish I could make all the young|#°" 1m, thelr milk, but Joe Cohen] marshals w soundly denounced by women in this country who do not| Wouldn't stand for that. He sald they | rasping-voiced females yo love know what to do with their patriotic | @dn't want anybody but Barnet Baff. | Siting” and. th zeal realize that from the minute they ‘oe Cohen sald the safest place @or| “iat the se will be put on a uniform here they have) the Job was at th wearisome process was early indls taken the first step on the way to the|¢verybody down th cated by the examination of the In- battle front, For it is an actual fact} obody would try to atop tt Gividua? taleemen by Berkman, ‘Then that they will be doing things in the [talk about it afterward. G ‘ in the course of Berkiman's queryin hospitals here exactly as they. are] looking over the ground, decided that]! the course o Medan’ ont done in the base hospitals abroad." Cohen was right, and a couple of|‘ t We ie A number of representative training |44ys later he showed up down there nded ta know if} schools for nurses have already with a couple of young boys named | Se might Ait ee fag peated Has a bellows tongue, pre- to credit for one Palo and Russo, One of the boys was ia eae Ne ene rate ee |p venting water from leaking © graduates and to gi very fat and the other was very thin, | (hat she might @xar aval yy Ak filli fiploma at the end of tw “T told him the boys were too young} men when Berkman had concluded. through eyelets, A cork filling years instead of three, Among these| but he said he would give them sot TRARMOD i the nm Str goer eet between outer and inner sole wh hools of nuralng connected | cocaine to snuft and after a few sitta ble edie under the Solecuve | and viscolized bottom, a and t inn tals of| showed up with two other older fel- [of articles in erin, bp ote the ee dampness, New York City; Hospital, | lows, Antonto and Joseph Zaffarano,” | archiatic public nth ete cue Cleveland, Onto; Island Hos-| Antonio Zaffarano has pleaded guilty | &rest bo te on tha mil bt ie hee pital, Providence, 1.; Hartford] to participating in the murder and|pathles of th: quea- Hospital, Hartford, Cofin.; Presby-| Joseph ts awalting trial tioned them ¢ holdings of terian Hospital, Vhiladefphia, and the} Despite the assurances of Joseph |stock in munition works or of war B 1434Broadway 1357 Broadway Schools of Nursing of the Universities | Cohen, Cardinale sald, It was found| bonds, | whether their | sympathies 1177Broadway 215 Broadwa: f Minnesota, incinnatl, w with the Allies abroad or simply | difficult to employ gunmen who were Georg and Washington Unt-| wi o chance ot 00 a | with the United States, voraity,’ St. Louis, Mo. tho Preuby-| man'on the airect Inone of the Duseat | Fann J. O'Keefe, one of the tales terlan School « Nursing will be the| spots in the city Greco, Cardinal ERT are Late wy Bite. hess sald, anxious to get hold of the blo Seen liaT a a OW Prepay »| money, fumed at the dela , . Fanise e new clase early ia duiy, | Maney, fumed at the delay. AA Thursday’s Special | | anybody to shoot Haff on the stre: | we determined to use a rifle with a BAVARIAN KING IN PLOT ager be It and ket Ball fron ‘am V bush,” Cardinale testified, “Joe az ery nh a ey WITH RUSSIAN SOSIALIST Harry Cohen and I went to Jersey Ci v to buy @ rifle and a silencer b = Jeouldn't find a silencer, Then Joe Intercepted Wireless Was in Communication She Agitator Leni WASHINGTON Leopold of van forces, bh June avaria, comman 1 + general ke, ant peace, MV ouncing Varnish Plant A fire which started in n manner early t 0 damag Baker at to the Varnish alucr ratus In the cit ts Army ¢ TON, June Des Motnes VASHING the Cenual Depastinent, Manuf WS * and a silencer, With \" "Greco ‘couldn't talk Hnellsh and Shimmering Summer didn't want to u chance, He __|sent me down on Bowery and I Modes and Colors That Kin ought a rifle, a silencer and a box ding Ger- | Woe tried out t with the|t yard of my chicken 75 r ett use H ‘ed an rate oe ot but the silencer was too | e BON, OFT ¢ e dropped that plan m from a) then Greco somebody who received] promised to do the job right out on the street 14 spoken | 'vvankFrerrara, a chauffeur, was Thursday Only r and employed to take the gunmen te : i fayor mi) West Washington Market and get Sale begins at § Ts them away, He went down and event that is certain to further ee * Soe eres ane ee fs entrench the Bedell dregs salon as stein Was Instri by Graff to fashion's headquarters amongNew tick around Haft's prevent rk women of discernment. anybody from chasing the men who were to shoot Baft Rosenstein sate -) that if anybody t » Interfere he| Taffetas Crepe de would paralyz The Chines—Trim Serges— ord ually , but severa s : ere eet mane market oe Georgette Combinations by chance to shoot Baff came up, Dict fom the “eels: i . * AN Un> | Republicans Gain a Seat tn Congr dresses that reveal their high fay did RICHMOND, Ind, June Richard | origin In every graceful and ex- nt of the|N. Elliott, Republican, has been | steed UTP actur elected to Congress over Fimey I | treet, | imatocks Mepublican, deceased, from Alterations Without Charge Ned all tne Sixth District ndiana, by a yto fight piurality of about $00, returns showed to-day, | —s Gun Crem Abnotved | At the Fashion re Jent on the American armed me . (voites chantman M ing the! ' aL rep un. crew fron ity, was 7, ; mimanding wnanimoualy adi | te Nineteen West 34th Btreet ae. Cohen gave me $10 and told me to give He | it to Greco and tell Greco to buy a rifte Sina rt Silk F vocka # Senate Naval Hs 40

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