The evening world. Newspaper, June 3, 1918, Page 6

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Als. egvero TH <3 5228 Bar Alcohol Within the _ War Zone. z June 8A decree was is- to-day by the French Army au- prities categorically forbidding the ing or consumption of alcoholic in the war gone. Violations e order will be strictly punished. B00 WOMEN BUSY ON GREAT BAZAAR FOR T6OTH'S BOYS Auxiliary of the “Old 69th” Give Long Planned Benefit This Week. than 800 members of the Women’s Auxiliary of the 165th In- fantry are working both at home and at the armory, No. 68 Lexington Ave- nue, to make the bazaar to be held June 6, 7 @nd 8 for the veneft of the boys of the “Old 69th” the biggest war bazaar ever held in New York. Two thousand dollars is the eum aimed at, Crisp Green Salads ‘for Hot Days! “Could have no better dressing ‘than a plentiful sprinkling of More OPPENHEI (34th Street—New York Sale Price Plain Figare Tags on Everything Thrift and War Saving Stamps M.CLLINS & © Announce for To-morrow ( Tuesday) An Extraordinary Sale of Several Hundred Women’s and Misses’ Dresses Attractive afternoon and street dresses of Crepe de Chine, Taffeta, Foulard, Crepe Meteor, Gingham Taffeta and Combinations Actual 20.00 to 25.00 Values 13.75 according to Mra, Charles Hennings, Chairman, Mra. Charles Hennin, Lainp Shate Booth; Mra. Frank Kenney, Refresh- baraar|Ments. A Manicure Booth will be run Cue “of Ge feareres of te | by manicures of the sity, who have will be the “War Brides’ Booth,” where | offered their services anda millinery fifteen war bride'mambers of the aulx-|booth un by professional miliiners. iiary will auction off everything from|, Many articles of the bazaar have Photographs to silk stockings. Arnone Kinane them arr A. Dembitt & coy those who will sefve at the booth are: | Sternberger Millinery, Emery-Beers Mosdames John |J. Fitasimmons, Company, Waterbury Clock Compnay, Daniel Dooley, J. J. Brown, James Ro- | Huyler's Candy Company, McCreery. : TI x . “4 nan, Dorothy A. Given and-R. Muller. | ihwalt Compare: vas pice, Greer. Mrs. Muller's husband was recently companies lave donated material to killed in action with Company C. | Make naitting bars. sia Weald The women bave been working since | n® mothers have written i covers afd fancy work of every de-| bazaar will bo used to provide them. ackiption, which will be 8014 or euc-| Wool, tobacco and candy are already tioned at tho bazaar. It was originally OMih® requisite lst planned to hold the bazaar early in the! hearts. have worked faithfully’ for spring, but on account of the women weeks now preparing to back the giving their services for the Liberty Ys.” Mrs. Hennings said, “and It is remarkable to see how cheerily they Bond and Red Cross drives, the bazaar work, considering that many of their sweet- was postponed. cs {men ‘are in the front line trenches. ‘@ went ten times over our quota ue" 8h ; 4 for Liberty bond. males "Ma The talk just now, over knitting . Theresa Hughes, Houth Chairman for the tat needles and sewing machine ts in ox- pectation of the “Mother's Ship” that pg, rl SO at Sd I ringin, the letters which our to far exceed our quota for the ba- |toy'y wrote on Mothera Daye maar, “We wish to extend an expression f sympathy to the mothers of the! rafted men Who are leaving each day. time I see the heart-breaking ells 1 live over again my boy's departure, But we want these mothers to know th at their boys won't be rushed to the front lines before they are ready. We feel that the Govern- ment has treated our boys squarely, and we know it will do the same by these boys who are leaving now. They will help to back up our boys, and the lotters woe receive tell us that Uncle Sam is providing everything in the way of food, clothing, &., to make our boys comfortable and happy. Let the mother’s letters be happy ones to | them.” CAN SERVICE COMMISSION RAISE 80-GENT GAS RATE? Question to Be Settled by Test Case Before Court ot Appeals. William L. Ransom, chief counsel ‘for the Public Service Commission, appeared before the Court of Appeals at Albany to-day to argue that the Public Service Commissions have no power to | ease ratos fixed by the Bighty-Cent Gas Law. The case in which Mr, Ransom's views will be heard is a test brought by the Munig- jpal Gas Company of Alban; The outcome of to-day’s argument is regarded as one of the utmost im- portance to consumers of gas in this city, where the Consolidated Gas Company: and its subsidiaries @ claiming that gas now costs 16 cents per 1,000 cubic feet more to manu- facture than the rates permi.ted by the Highty-Cent Law, | ‘The question whether the Public Ser- jvice Commissions have the power to |increase gas rates above the statutory maximum, was first decided in the case of the Brooklyn Borough Gas Company. Acting as referee, former United States Supreme Court Justice Hughes filed an lopinion to the effect that the Commis- sions have no rate-increasing powers. “TWO GIRLS ARE DROWNED; BODIES SEEN FROM TRAINS Daughters of Red Bank, N, J., Resi- dents Believed to Have Fallen Off Bridge. Special to The Krening World.) RED BANK, N. J June 4—~Train men and passengers on trains bound for New York this morning saw two bodies flotng in the Shrewsbury River Motor Truck |} | near the railroad bridge. yi . A train despateher notified Coroner Deliveri Albert W. Worden jr., and the bodics Everywhere Mins Margaret Archer will have! ,, charge of the Fruit and Flower Booth, 4 \ were towed ashore and taken to @ morgue, ‘They were Mary Jones, nine, SUES TO REGAIN FORTUNE Mrs. Ennis Bases Claim Against W. H. Brown's Heirs on Agreement Before Adoption. Mra, Florence Cugie Ennis, daughter of the late William H. Brown, silk merchant, who died in April, 1917 of his $250,000 estate, Mra, Ennis bases her claim on an agreement which she saya Brown and his wife made with her father when she was adopted, that she should be his sole heir Mra. Ennis introduced aa her estar witness Mra, Helen Le Peton of Brook- lyn, who testified that the Browns won consent to the adoption only by Brown's Mrs, Ennis was then Florence Cugle of No, 405 Lenox Avenue, the six-year-old daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Robert M. Cugie, Mrs Florence inherited her fortune of $156,- 000. It was Florences subs uent marriage to John William Ennis that induced Brown to disinherit her. She and Ennis were married in April, 1916, but kept the wedding @ secret. When Brown learned of the marriage he changed hin will as threatened, Among the beneficiaries in the Brown ‘will were the Church of the Transfigur- ation, Homo of the Annunciation, Free Industrial School for Crippled Children, St. Luke's Hospital, St. Andrew's Con- valescent Hospital, and Episcopal Hoa- pital, all of whom are represented at the trial before Justice Erlanger. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Brown lived at No, 134 West Sth Street before re- moving to Philadelphia in 1914, OF HER FOSTER FATHER adopted! to-day began in the Supreme Court « | legal battle to diapossess Brown's heirs agreeing to make Florence his sole heir. | Brown died in October, 1918, and- wth li lee AE SS | TALK ON LIMITED DEBATE. - Underwood War Wensure Up in the Senate To-Day- JUDGE CHATFIELD TO HEAR {SIX HURT, ONE A BABY, CHARGES OF DISLOYALTY) WHEN CAR JUMPS TRA | WASHINGTON, June 3 —Limitation i " eo 8 ° i} the war rial of Joseph F. Rutherford and| Jerome Avenue Car Dashes Into | of debate in : enat capt wie ; i i ; was ‘up for seu: " da | ey ater ie veripeee Ua Ales fh ant the ontling up by Senator Underwood of oda gers From Seats. Alabama, Democrat, of his amendment Contention by attorneys for Joseph to the rules providing that each Senator Six persona were {njured, one a six months old babe in his mother's arms, Pastor Russeit and head of the “Mil- |" eh ' speak but one hour and twenty iment excent when F. Rutherford, successor of the tate may lefitum Sect,” who, with five othere,|*hen a Jerome Avenue car, to-day. | unanimous consent is kiven for 65 is accused of preaching disloyalty, that [Jumped tie tracks at 176th Street and | tension nection SHU Judge Garwin of the United States| Jerome Avenue, dashed Into an iron pil- | In» renort \ "ted by Sengeee District Court in Brooklyn might be|iar and threw twenty passengers from | (Unierwood reaper} “unconaciounly prejudiced” resulted in sideration of war the case being sent before Judge Chap- field to-day.: Rutherford and his five co-defendants are specifically charged with conspiracy to cause insubordina+ tion and disloyalty in the armed forces of the United States. were treated their seats, The injured by Fordham hospital surgeons H - ‘The car was southbound and was us- | ing the northbound tracks, as the othe were being repaired. Mrs. D. Magee. ot 64 Tremont Avenue, with her baby boy In her arms, tried to save him, but | Smal Fhe case will come up for trial to- the | morrow, an adjournment having been was jammed against a window ae effected today, F. W. Sparks, defen.|D%0Y suffered lacerations over | the | t y aate : eyes, Others injured were Mrs. B. Mont dant attorney, said that to-morrow a demurrer might be asked to the Indict- Ment on the plea that It does not #pe- cifically state when the alleged acts were committed, Isaac A, Osland, a Brooklyn attorney, appeared to-day as Special Deputy At- torney General for the Government. ague, 60, of No. 1926 Walton Avenug: Mrs, William E. Kelley, 39, of No. 2086 | Daly Avenue; Rudolph Schoennell, 47.) ot No, 2401 Bast 177th Street; Charles 5. | Stewart, 38, of No. 250 West 54th Street. and Mrs. E. FX Hope, 58, of 104 177th Street. CONSTIPATION SCHEDULES, ’ pun I ARN B. R. T. POSTS | 5 . ‘FEDERAL CHILD LABOR LAW came son. ac over me f Rum cspee ona HELD UNCONSTITUTIONAL bs hed boggang pier Headache, indigestion and to ' In accordance with an order of the Public Service fommission, the Brook- lyn Rapid Transit Corgpany to-day in- stalled a time table system in all sur- face cars of the Flatbush Avenue divis- don. H Schedules stating the number of cars operated on each line, time of departure | from car barns and headway between | cars were posted in all cars on the Flat- bush Avenue, Nostrand Avenue, Ocoan ie} Avenue, Rogers Avenue, Avenue C lines! clear up a bad complexion. Genutne bears signature Supreme Court Sustains Injunction Restraining Government From Enforcing Act. WASHINGTON, June 3.—The Federa’ Child Labor Law of 1916 forbidding In- terstate shipment of products of child labor was to-day declared unconsti- tutional and invalid by the Supre Court. E FACES ly indicate = teck Iron in the Blood Carter’s Iron Pills Injunctions restraining the Govern. ment from putting the Pavia inte effect v. C, Peaatenenat nceaenansatal jand restraining a Charlotte, 4, COt~ ton mi from discharging children em- tained b; Woman Is Fatally Stricken in ployed by it were he court. Her Home—Cooler Weather | Promised for To-Night. |. Mother—Toromie, do you know what Though the temperature to-day waa) ® Prevericaer je? pop told me. lower than yesterday and an 18-mile-an-| ell, what 18 a prevaricatar?” hour northwest wind was blowing, two! says a prevaricator is a man deaths from heat prostration were re- who tells you he's glad he's married. ported in Brooklyn at noon to-day. Mrs. Rose Asta, fifty-six, of No, 19% Montrore Avenue, died at her home, an Douglas Cannittee, forty-nine, of No. S687 22nd Avenue, fainted at Fourth | and Bergen Avenues and died on the! way to the hospital. The Weather Bureau at noon re- ported the temperature at 80 degrees. Tt was 85 degrees at noon yesterday.’ It will be slightly cooler to-night, the Weather Bureau predicted, though there | were no Indications of any great drop in tenfperature, SAYS BOGUS PAINTINGS NET BIG INCOME HERE Dooling Tells of Factories Turning} Out Imitations of Blakelock and Inness’ Works, Assistant District Attorney Dooling sald to-day that he had discovered that two factories In the city have been turn- ing out spurious paintings of Blakelock and the late Geoge Inness, the Ameican landscape painter, One man, he said, had been making about $2,000 a yea, while the syndicate behind him have made several hundred thousand dollars, To show the interest in art, one man in Chicago, he asserted aned up more than $100,000 on a recent Blakelock ex- hibition Mr, Dooling added that viey of the signatures having been put on the pic- tures tn Chicago he was sending all his ———»—___ SOMETIMES A PREVARICATOR, Thirty-fourth Street TELEPHONE and the Utica, Avenue shuttles. Candidate for Governor in Wiscon sin Held Under MADISON, Wis., June 3. M. Becker of Monroe, announced candi Judge date for Governor of Wisconsin, wa arrested to-day on a Federal Grand Jur indictment alleging violation of the E: pionage Act. The indictment was re turned at Superior with 148 others, hal of them dealing with alleged violation: of war laws. MADISON AVENUE « FIFTH AVENUE, NEW Y' 7000 MURRAY Flatbush and Nostrand J. ls up and down our crowded sales floor Credit Department and into your cozy home. We are just open agcounts with good custome: to make cash sales. through our anxious to DON'T | daughter of Samnel Jones, and Lena i Alvino, eleven, daughter of James Al-|¢Vidence to the State's Attorney of that | | vino, both of Red Bank city. | The finding of strawberries in the Al- i DROWNED os William and Mary 4, 4 in \ quartered =) oak; at 497: ANAK, BRO uit In quartered oak; large carved heads Let us show you how you can furnish a Living, Dining and Bedroom 3 ROOMS FOR $225 th High Grade Period Furniture $17 -98 TWO HOLD UP CIGAR SToRE. | Gee e200 F, m United Clerk as He Opens Up. | Two men wearing caps and manks Jconfronted Benjamin Josephs, a clerk |for the United Cigar Stores Company, a few minutes after he opened the sore at No. $8 Second Avenue this morniny the point of revolvers compelled i open the s Whil f the jrobbers rifled it the other guarded Jo- in a back room Jools fenbers lore with #240. Tt in bee leved they escaped in an automobile tr Manager In | HEMPSTEAD, L. 1, June 3.—Thomas |H. Chapin, seventy-four years old, @ AWN |prominent sportsman, and for many ly i Al Manager i N lc died “at - D h deat AT 84ST. & S”AVE ||: Men, Pi . ithe w i ved by his widow, (wo daughters an a gon, Coming in at the rate of about $100,000,- 000 a day Ee es Alleged Moving Pletare Trust Agrees to Reorgantae, t from conspiring to monopoli ratate trade in films and camera organization, it is underatood, in conformance with te 1 i will reorganize the court orders. ee ee . Government Suppresses St, Johns Hy Star. ST. JOHNS, N. F., June 8.—The Gov- | ernment, under the authority of the} War Measures Act, suppressed the charge of printing lated to hamper the the Consoription Act. erations of (Madison Avenue section Separate Skirts ee ‘Will help this condition y GH. Altinan & Cn. HILL The Yearly Sale of Women’s Cotton Frocks to be held to-morrow (Tuesday) P loid Sid f POSTPONE your purchase of FURNITURE or RUGS for lack of ready |]| Vino fitl's Docket Indicaics, the itis MAN IN DRAFT. | ‘ aC: h. Make use of our CONVENIENT CREDIT and enjoy your home lee S6k 3 1 | Gloom Over Call May Have Caused orceloid Side Icer <* | berries and probably fell from Hub: ¥ Ps As illus § (08 while paying for it A BIT AT A TIME. j pean SCRE returning home, eAgy bas i" Bea ates is an event of the utmost Importance arstedi 24 a ee 4 Scrim start ap investigation, town, N. J. to-day identified the body . Senin mmnenen of the young man found floating in the a r 4 pony ge We " fare a ‘ei Curtains ‘BOMBING OF HOSPITALS bey atthe Sita of bert peter Assembled for this occasion are extensive assortments i. UAC cr na an fn SHAS Of Nie fon arte: Ie Boe of th ' t ch ing styles. i e ew, 1 ears old, a sal n for a Maiden oO e season's most charming sty!es, in the more wante EE | a | SPEEDS DRIVE FOR NURSES |i3.2""kwc‘nia™Pttivicncn'wsee) f° cage pay — Rugs ] 98 la call n the draft might have led to fabrics in dark or light shades, as well as in the combina- Rossel committing suicide the police be- : Pak 27x84 “German Frightfulness Will Not|teve as ip seiner piewed several Jet- tions that reveal effective and colorful tones. inches, Per Pair. Deter American Women,” os aot ta, Tasen that ba wa . Says Miss Delano, in & depressed mood. The extremely low prices at which these dresses er t $4.25 Kroehler Kodav Scrim WASHINGTON, June 3—The dein-| 9P2,°" See Tee Aa sec ee: ¥ P re way bie sf Mahogany finished frame: Panels erate bombing of hospitals by German] ing to the Hotel Astor." Another let, marked should be of significant economic appeal at the i i era will not deter American nura ntimated he was going to take Leeman secre halter’ ith fine Carved Boohoase trom rok terse in France, aad mage op sea present time: oy fe SB 50: toldsn finich, SY ta. ek, |[|Demariment ot. Naraine of the’ nei] MOLDAVIA VICTIMS INSURED. food tatesiae . 48 in. wide: § DQ.98 ||| Cros In & statement to-day. cup ererttaert ne Fr “The bomb! f Red Cross hosp! ire where was tar ta oc aes] "Heme oe'reeney oem” “| Vy $550, 6.90, 7.75, 9.50, 11.50, 12.50,15.00 | illic hurt be olneldence,” NGTON, June 3.— o ° ' Period Suite in Germans believe that auch methods wiit| torpedoed transport Moldavia, are cov A number of linen dresses (tailored models) are included American Walnut: | ere ony eerie interna for hacia trad air dependenta. will be paid an| i nin or Mahogany a ney are badly: mataken: eet | eee cae of abvut Ow 8 mnoBth for twenty] in these assortments " } ‘actics of frightfulness will mere Four pleats non se of sind more Ary nite arn sa In addition thoes with w iver, ohildren d A i : aed be fell cice, ||| t2uiet eisntenod? wttacerman a;| er aneeters cations death compena Foreign and American-made models | find that American Women do not know ¥ nts ranging from $2) to $75 | as illustrated, iow to retreat any more than do. our men Eee A 1.’ A nurses "will be American womanheod’s | ‘The War Risk Insurance Bureau has of higher grade, are now obtainable at considerable ahi Aiea ang adorat otating about, i concessions from former prices WASHINGTON, June 3.—Under an (of cotton and linen fabrics) f agcsement between the Department Ht Pestana cimetter rrp adapted for town or country wear, are on sale in the : Painting. the noseailed Moving. Mieture regular stock, at the following prices: $3.25, $3.90, $4.75, $4.90 and upward Third Floor)

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