The evening world. Newspaper, June 15, 1918, Page 10

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08 bes TWO-POUNDLIIT. Zw FORSUGARBUYERS, :* BEGINNING TODAY Food Board Issues New Order Restricting Purchases to Conserve Supplies. Sere 9 Purchases of sugar for ordinary household purposes in this city are Bimited to two pounds, beginning to- Gay, under an order just issued by the Federal (’ood Hoard An ex- ception is made in the case of sugar for canning, but this must be obtained by the use of canning certificates is- ued to dealers by the board. Rural consumers may get five pounds in one purchase. | ‘The new regulations were drawn uD Hy ‘ after receipt of a message from Food j ‘ Administrator Hoover. Housewives hhave been asked to adopt voluntarily 2 @ sugar allowance of three pounds 2 @ person a month. Proprietors of eat- 2 ing places have been asked to estl- mate the number of persons they £04-06-06000 0 bbses OEE ES ‘Eleven Brides To-Day in New York Vicinity of Interest to Society THE EVENING WORLD, 8 SOLDIER FINDS BROE BY WIRE AFTER MISHIP Camp Mills Private at Last Locates Fiancee in Kansas and Is Married. 18 Le eta debe ed by : Private Lee Strohtagel, at Camp < Mills, and Miss Lydia Pearce of : Lyndon, Kan., were married by tele- ; Kraph last night after all, 4 The marriage of the private, at ; tached to Battery D, 34lat Field Ar i tillery at the Long Island camp, and | t NS | | Power his @weetheart 2.000 miles away, €-29-96-6-05:2-4-9-26-6966.6-5295-6-85066066 5-00.06 oh | Seitmmerot + geerned indefinitely postponed yester } day afternoon, when the bridegroom, $4644 a minister and the requisite witnesses | ‘waited in the Camp Mills telegraph |_In the North Presbyterian Chugeh. moc and out in ees ee Aas a ahere wate ie aaa es another minister and witnesses gath- Lec pepadlteg nie ered, but without being uble to find wedding of Miss Dorothy Swinner- 156 ‘bride, she bad not been seen ton, ughter of Mr. and Mrs. James word camé, since she got her marriage P. Swinnerton, to Louis A, Stim ead |The coremony will be performed by | “Ater much waiting and much wir- serve in a month and fix their sugar Mr. Stimson's father, the Rev ae ing back and forth the wedding was eensumption upon the sane bas} Unusually Large Number of pir sori Macks. The bride, who Postboned. Gloom at the cap was It is said there Is no real danger of oe s r. John Kt. MacKay. Tho bride, WBO O11) tightened by hope that the ce a famine unless housewives besin to| Marriages and Subsequent ih bent Edel i Msg etiothe mony might be perfurmed late to-day take alarm and to hoard. In some | ceptions Are Sche pbs tahdtidettrdlpedtehshennatel toad ab But last evening a message came quarters there was talk that the oper- | Receptions Are Scheduled. her mother at her wedding, will ' trom Kansas, from Miss Pearce. It ations of German submarines along | of Newark, N. J., who will serve as Said she was ready to be married at 9 the Alantic Coast might interfere! A wedding of interest in Greek ‘natron of honor, und Miss May L. P.M. At 9.30 the ceremony over ths gomewhat with shipments from Cubs. Circles to-day will be that of Miss Smith of Norwalk, Conn., ax maid of jong distance wire was actually per- The board announced to-day | Tif! D. Stephanidis, daughter of Mrs. honor. They will wear white OwOe formed, It took fifteen minutes and that Jacob Nathanson of No. 33) Anastasia D. Stophanidis of No. 660 Sti) Huln wiih Niet me voleta, pansies | Cost $7.17 In telegraph tolls Throop Avenue, Brooklyn, bad been | Rivereide Drive, to Dr. Antonios N. | ang eweet | With Private Strohtagel in the Permitted to contribute $1,000 to the Vrahnos of Boston. The ccremony will, James timson will be ine Camp Miltw telegraph, office we he Red Cross and thereby avoid the re-| take place at 3.30 o'clock this after Beaten Ret Peat peopel wy Vie Rev. Tracy I. Huffstuttler, Chaplain vocation of his license for the period | neon In Holy Trinity Church, the Rev. | ioc wii} rls instead of men of the 43d Field Artillery, and wit- of the war. Nathanson, it was said, tart Courkoulis officiating, assisted |-phey wil rs, James Pierre nesses too many to enumerate. With Bad sold wheat and rye four at /Y the Rev. Mr. Lasaria and ne arama ol Mow Wak ie Sl" ae Pearce in Rnporia, Kny wore priit exceeding 75 cents a barrel. Na-| te buropoulos. eerie) Miss Mary Bilzabeth Scheffey of Judge Walter A. Jones, und, as wit thanson explained that he hud suf-|Sttendants will be Miss Corinna D.| cic) pidge, N. J; Miss Alice L. LY- neases, Misses Anna Foster and [uth fered a toss of $2,500 in the autumn of | Stephanidis and Miss Flora D. Benas.| jan, M Helen BP. Calhoun and Williams. 1917 and was trying to make this up, | JobM D. Stephanidis will be Dr. Vrab-| Miss G owen of this city and, Why Miss Pearce was not ready ear. Dut investigation showed his book- | M0#'s best man and the ushers will be keoper was keeping two records of the bride's three brothers, George, the profits obbtained in connection | Sotirios and Stephen Db. Stephanidis with the sale of four. jJohn M. Henas, Takis Maloukos, ett George Maloukos and George Kyri Want Government to je Days) kidis, The bride will wear a gown of pearl y ™ Served. Which Beet May embroidered white crepe meteor and Hotel and restaurant men in this the attendants’ gowns will be biue city insisted ‘to-day that though/and pink Georgette crepe with hats they were ready to back the Govern-|to match. Following the ¢ ony it ment’s campaign for beef conserva- | reception will be held at Hotel ton to the end, they would have been | **¥°¥ better pleased with the new regula- tions if definite meals and days at and on which beef might be served had Miss Helene Whitmore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Dante! Webster W! more, will be married to Eugeae Van been fixed, The rule, which goes into | Valkenburgh Haynes this evening ut effect on Monday, is merely that! 8.30 o'clock at her parents’ home tn boiled beef may be served only twice | Mount Vernon, N. Y. The’ lev. Dr. a week, roast beef only once and beef | O, I, Batholow will perform thy core- steak only once. mony, which will be followed by « “A conference is being held to-day | smali reception, The bride will be om tmat subject in Washington,” R.| given in marriage by her father and A. Gushee, a member of the local com-| attended by Mrs. 1. W. Whitmore mittee of the Hotel, K Dining Car Division of th ministration, said hope a definite urant and Jr. as matron of honor and the Misses Margucritc Miles, Blanche Lebury Huth Gates and’ baith Tuthiti bridesmaids, Thomas J, Lyon will be reached soon. Meantime I have ad-| Mr. Haynes's best man and the ushers vised those who have spoken to me|will be John Lusk, Cassels Young, about it to serve only one beef dish on |. Webster Whitmore jr, and Licut Monday and only one on Tuesday.” SAY GARBAGE PLANT ODORS AFFECT SCHOOL CHILDREN Commanaer George Whitmore, U.S N. Mr. Haynes, who is trom Attant Ga, belongs to the AUanta Athiot and Piedmont Riding Clubs, In the Church of St. Mary the Vir- gin ut noon to-day will take place the wedding of Miss Dorvthy Louise Sut ton, daughter of Mrs, M. E. Sutton of . ‘ ‘ ean Unis city and Tuxedo Park, to George hai R of Ville Join in| Detroit, Mich. ¢o r Hot Law pie oy tat bo ote Strohtagel’s home is in Reaver Citizens of Line leumville Ward, U. 8, NL Migs Virginia Center | GtIswo'd, son As "late Gorge Gris! crowing, Neb. Ile met Miss Pearce Fight for Removal of Staten | Ward’ will be the bride's only atten-| ‘Ime’ ceremony will, takey place in at Camp Funston »several months (eh ey dant, and Lieut. Ches' Ward | one heii ar gs a ds ago. The wedding arranged by Island Alleged Nuisance. will ‘be bis. brother's mags CA ree eee perros Conba O00 later and ; trohtagel is Residents of Lineoleumville have | Small Tec will at the! Hill, the Bridgman country home, | twenty-eight. | Joined in the fight for the removal of - Mine Ag ' " ‘soldier's Bride by W ot, ) = Miss Agatha Katherine Galvin, j the garbage disposal plant in Staten | A military wedding taking place in| qaughter of Mr. and Mrey John F. Attempt to Baffle Weddin | Island. Petiti in b + to th Peleg N.Y ral Oe that! Galvin of No, 841 Riverside Drive, i MPORIA, Kan, June 15.—Miss and. Petitions will be sent to the|of Miss Augusta Se! daughter] ty be married to Matthew ‘T. ae ti seurce of Olive " of Dr. and Mrs. Augus Schinadt e| (2 be married to Matthew 'T, Murray Lydia Pearce of Olivet, Kan., was Board of Education in Manhattan Montreal, Canada, to Capt ree [ate 2! n nond Ill, at 1 o'clock jarried by telegraph here last night Mor ‘a » to ‘apt. dae his mornin, in’ the c asking that the board give the resl-| Wdgerion Ogilvie of Camp Upton, Tho | Kucensian, 107th Streoh, neat Brox. to Leo Strohtage! of the sist Artl- ; : ceremony will take place on the lawn Ag * : : ory, at Camp Mills, N.Y. The bride, dents another school unless the nul- way. Afterward a reception and lery, @ Pp 5 , Airlie Manor, the country home of | breakfast will be held at th 1 nf ¥ , prea k fiw eld a « home of who had failed at first to keep her sance is abated. Capt. Ogilvie's parents, Mr. and Mrs.|the bride's parents, Mr. Murray ts! appointment, said a woman) with It is pointed out that children at- ; m Ceiy . nity pest gered pa Te | Secretary f the aranty Trust whom she lived here sent her to Oli- chool are affected b; rom Camp Upto' attend Capt. | Compan | xt of ma ° tending the school are affected by the |Griivie as best man 1nd Ushers peeny a Fer en oe eet abla to etn lors and tha eachers have been 5 | nhurst, TL. 1, to-day, Misa marriage license without her parents’ compelled to close the windows and| Miss Isadora Tiiss, daugter of Mr.|tailian Clearwater, dauhter of the sonsent, hoping to avert the wedding. doors to prevent the odors permeating gad Ss. ene ig at of Boston, Mr. and Mrs. Charles K, Clear-| ‘The bride, wh ! by telephone 2, Col le to be a wd ory 8 r, is to be married to Ch her hom pturn to Ea m1 Ce 0 M unc th the school house Maange also | Carhart, U. 8. N. R., of this city, nieaf Nichols. The ceremony will, poria. at once for the ceremony. | have been made to District Attorney |day in Pequot Chapel, New London, | take place at the parsonage Mr. — > Fach of Richmond County, Conn, After the mony a recep- | Nichola is with the Ordnance Corps, | Members of the State Board of Hon wil Os Fay a a and Mrs. u 8. N. A., stationed at Worcester, EXECUTED MURDERER Health to-day will visit the plant | Bliss’s home Dn. ass — ——————_____._. “ ” na Will bentn bearivaa cn. the saeve-| - BLAMED “FALSE WOMEN | ent to acai the nuisance Monday. | DAY AND ODELL MELT ICE. |NOVEL READJUSTMENT PLAN. dla The Grand Jury wil resumo in- -_—_—— “t : | quiry Monday woof Amity Fille the Ale) No Capitalization 1 Unaer|Ostransky Left Statement Declar- _ Meet. ae Thiv Hide and Leather Idem, ing Woman He killed Commissioner Day and Tee) A plan for the readjustment of the ’ vali OBITUARY NOTES. Odell! made up yesterday. | capitalization of the American Hid Ruined His Life. Dr, Hrnest V. Beribner, widely knows | Though Dr. Day had likened the former) Leather Company ix under considera-| Hyman Ostransky, third of the as un alenist and for #ix Years supe>:| Governor to “the murderer of iittie chil | tion by financial interests, it was an-| murderers to be executed at Sing Intendent of the Worcester State Hos-| dren." he shook ha with bim and] nounced yesterday. It is proposed toi Sing Thursday night, left a state- pital, died in W er, Mass, yes-|anid: ‘1 always knew that if we ever! commute the 17 per cont. back divi. meng with Chaplain Katz with the terday aixtyethr _ [kot together and hid a chat we would| dends on the $12.50100 preferrad. stock |reaeat that it bo given to the newes ; corms M, Rendall. Yu come to a mutual agreement.” by giving sixty-four shares of 7 per! papers. Ostranshy, who was convict- tnown af “the father “41 In the littlo chat Which preceded this| cent, cumulative 5 red stock to the}ed of killing Dorah Cohen on Bast Mr. Odell had said: “You may rest holder of i ares of preferred new | Broadway last November, died at Ormonde M, Reid, editor of the glove | sured, doctor, that everything we can| outstanding, The plan contemplates ex lise P.M, His statement was dated, @epartinent of Lry Goods, a trade Jour-|do to help you protect the poor of the|tirement of all bon indobtedn ‘ 1.30 P aka is home, No, 268 4 “ debtedne “peath House, 7.30 P.M." It read: nal Oe at hip buna Bo. Bs West | City of New York will be done The outstanding $11,500,000 common} “My last staten x . J Dr. Way called at the office of the Tee} would remain unchan, under thie! “ct) No man in my cireumsta: eee anicl Zena Martin, for forty yeary|Controller with Aldermen Held and Col- | plan, and Ke was for dividends would | would, bave acted erwise, 1 was State ‘oma inspector here, | tins. He advocat uetion of th by commutation of the divie | erased: a United state tome Inspector here de advocate yi dends in arrears on the preferred Spy "C2y Let all r bewure of false Mecat Mathuch 'vasienay, aust bev nd the i axi | navel feature of the pian te that it dovs| women, Whuge only bury sto ruin ’ Or delivery at ov conte a hu not call for any increase In Capit wives of men and their familien Cd Ae Oe aa REY Bh PL cede aries | Hon il ae a ie dee Re en . phy ich, formerly com-' householders, thouxh occupants of of - been a business mar 1 alwave mander of Company H, 13th Regiment, |; buildin pay more. Mr, Odell an hon living make thi RG 8 N.Y and Prenident’ of the | Me detision next Wednesday. | PUPILS EGGED TEACHERS, | &t*mnent movil may" ienow’ that my eterans’ Association, is dead at his ” | ; did not have ain home, No. 1557 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. | —_ | ttt son Aihicinn Uinaew aca: | Thee aiOhe Biecdetiei ns Charles Edward Bateson, head of tio| CENTRAL GETS $581,000. | Res Matton or Suse | thelr tare, sorry for my faithful firm of Bateson & Dowd, commission | : tt gs. . |wife. She has always been good to merchants, is dead at his home, No, 139 " Seven ” on High SJ West 58th Street, aged sixty-six, Asked Beene S00. 7 State fF) school, West Hoboken, N. J., were found | — Benjamin H, Newell, a lawyer, of No. ay | guilty lust might b (Tare ; 2 Rector Street, is dead in M ALBANY, June Award Of ion of having thrown eggs at fy duce: | Chelation. Fs fal Up side Hospital, Glen Ridge, $581,000 to the New Canipal leet cedar x © teac he ihe f . nine. Railroad Company, for app bebopidles arte ) and were told! QOne*of the biggest excursions from SpA Heroes priated by the State for a barge canal | {Mat unless they publicly apologized in! any pler since the war began will leave New Draft Registration Dates for! terminal in buffalo was sunced | te audituriu © school they would to-day from the foot of Desbrosses Alanka and Haweall, to-day by the « vine, | forfeit heir diplomas Street. Four thousand tive hundred ‘ June 16.—Alaskans| gy Phs, Pilroad company sought $4.-] ‘The boys are ie members the New York Christian i or the land, Attorney Gen-| basketball (vam Badly Sil ant , of age since June 1917, ar pany's claim, said to-day that the Whe fon te oe HG” Pitinene a hale ste? to register in the perio: award was in keeping with the value ly . a iets uly 2 to Sept. 3, In order issued | ation placed on the land by the Slate} » for the Bae ee peoane OY a forday by Provost Marghal | ¢ meral |ApBralwer tudes ¢ first attack 5 Vg Nt Ven to ihe owder, June 31 was designated as @ land taken by the Biate te un tenohers ite et Am eH given te. Ine | sion gay for tMe Mawalian|the krie Basin, where largest ihen went to house, Where pnd it is expected that several thousend barge cana) terminal ie situated 1 ! Miss Doris Howland of Brooklyn ler In the day was not explained last night. Private Strohtagel kept bis Another of to-day's brides will be wedding date in the Camp Mills tele Miss Mary Virginia Duncombe, graph office. Chaplain Gritfiths “of er of Mr. and e the Sfist can testify to that and so daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert (2) Manager Pitkin of the office and Sydney Duncombe, who 18 to be mare Operator Lawner and @ scure or so of ried to Lie William Charles Lynch, Eiempstead women and interested sol US. A. to-day at noon, in the chan- diers, try of Nt. Thomas's Church, ‘The — But messages from Emporla, where bridesmaids will be Miss Rita Har- Miss Pear was visiting, suid ‘sat wood, Miss Katharine Hill, Miss Jean while the Chief of Police, a few Judges and any number of om nent residents were ready and wait Harper and) Miss Doro:hy Moore. Herbert Calvin will be Lieut. Lynch's best man aud the ushers will be Her- ipg, Miss Pearce was not ame bert Duncombe and K. HW Fox, Fol. those nt. The messag lowing the ceremony a reception will Miss Pearce had got her marring: be held at the he f the bride's Heense all right, but bad not owen wurents, No. 181 Kast S4th Street seen sinc Lash sinha | Strohtagel grew nervous, Chaplain | FNMths fldgeted with his book, The women from Hemnsten looked sympathetic. The white roses A Brooklyn wedding of interest will be that of Miss Hisie Frances Calder, daughter of Senator and Mrs, Will- ene of them had brought for thc tam Musgrave Calder, to Lieut. Rob- 2,000-mile bridegroom began to wiit ert Corwin Lee, U. 8. N. The core- Sespondently, fhe Chief and some of the others | mony Ix to take 4 30 o'clock have gone out to look for the bride,” | this evening in the fth Street the telegraph wire sald finally, And Reformed Chureh Will be fol- everybody took a deep breath—and lowed by 4 reception at the Hotel waited Kossert. Miss Sarah Murphy will be — “Can't find bride. Mr. and Mrs. E. the maid of honor and the brides- Lathe, with whom she has been visit- maids will the Misses ing, have not seen her since she got Calder, Alice nny, Helen lie said the wire after two or and Lona Hore The ushers will be three hours, | oiivers of the navy in addition to And that seemed to end Private| William M, Calder jr. and H. Murray Strohtagel’s wedding plans—so far as | Lamont yesterday was concerned. He kept | - right on working the wires, however, | nother out-of- oy . and then it Was announced at Camp ee ' Sathya te weenie be Pe Mills that the long distance wedding Tsubel Battell Bridgman, daughter of Would take Pince at j 20 P.M to-day. Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. ‘Bridgman of Then came ” ie menen se from Miss ATURDAY, JUNE % St rn see owas SAY MICH REALTY ‘so i°) IN CITY 1S OFFERED isu Beds at Nominal Cost Add to Ltforls to House Fighting Men Visiting City. Nowland Haynes, Director of the War Camp Community Service in New York, completed arrangements sterday for placing 450 beds tn the ot) Regiment Armory, Lexington . Thei Aventio and Mtb Birest,’ At nomaat| -anarords Glad to Get Their| cost these beds will be available tor] Money Out of Property, Jiery, sailors and marines spending Realty Interests Declare. nds in the city and Hable to such discomfort as that expertenced a week ago, when thousands of men in uniform were unable to get places to . ests claim the Pending the blankets by the Quartermaster's and | Medical Supply Pepartments—which | hus been held up by press of business Washington—equipment has been The Real Estat more than $2,000,000, can be bought for less. say would be defighted to get the! supplied by the, Freq cw “ ane money out of their properties and armory was obtained throug! e x. Armory Board and Col, John J. Phe. | Most of them would accept in {An “Gommanding the 69th, Before | Change any guaranteed security pay- another rk has sed the W. C.| ing from 5 to 7 per cent. a year. C. 8. will have leased a centrally lo- ATTAXVALUATIONS Board and Ad- visory Council of Real Estate Inter- allotinent of cots and|000 of holdings in Greater New York ut tax valuation, many Thousands of landlords they “I own twelve apartment houses on officers or with any responsible or- ganization of tenants or taxpayers. |__ Members of the United Real Estate Owners’ Associgtion, Taxpayers’ Al- ‘liance of the Bronx and otber big holders of home properties, mainly flats and apartments, declare that n0 | unitied effort to ralse rents has been attempted or will be considered. They say they were satisfied to act inde pendently whatever may happen, and allow rents to be regulated by the laws of supply and demand. “How to regulate rents by public authority, without confiscation of the Property, has been found to be much more than a mere matter of figures or argument,” said Secretary Leo | Day Woodworth of the Advisory | Council. “Problems of rent increases and profiteering may have been more serious and more easily trought home to public officials in Washington than in any other part of the country. The Congressional frame of mind on the cone is shown by the remedies pro- “The “Houso of Representatives Passed a bill to levy a tax of 100 per cent. on yentals which exceeded the rate charged on Sept. 30, 1916, plus 10 ir) per cent. Realty “interests demon- strated that rents had been unprofit- ably low on that date, and that the increased cost of upkeep and opera- tion bad been more t Ye age allowed. \ rehoebechiet SENATE AND HOUSE cated loft building in which 1,000 6 ” C fi FAIL TO beds will be maintained “until ‘the Morph’ hada ngs ise Daaea oe BIVE ADEQUATE RELIEF. present need Js at an end,” » Le “The Senate disca ene Standards and Appeals, to-day—he oa Mita U.S, ENCOURAGES PRIVATE DPERATION OF CANALS omlinson, Denying Statement, Says It Sublet Some Barges to Individuals. i several hund hands will forever have my gratitud My income from not begin to meet the expens maintenance. Taxes are the least our troubles. into the upkeep to-da; d per 6 ‘om jeneral M e the United States Railroad Adminis-|@nd we gust pay the highest wages. tration, denied yesterday 4 published|! have a friend who owns, a house | statement that the Federal authort- ties were opposed to private opera- deficit of $200, tion on the canals of New York State, year he had a has bdullt scores of such big struc- tures in the last two decades—“and any man who will take them off my these houses does 8 of The cost of everything is higher by nt. than ‘it was | re raised the rents in my houses last fall | bill and adopted a proposal fo) - trol of profiteers by tenbe yey Federal Rent Administrator. The rents were to be standatdized at 7 ber cent. a year net as a valuation to be determined under principles id down in the bill. While the Senate and House bills are in conference, and because of a general belief that the bills cannot be harmonized, there has been passed and signed by the President a joint ution stating that hereas by reason of the evist- ence of a state of war, it is essential to the national security and defense and for the successful prosecution of je. of with twelve families in it and last|/the war to establish Governmental T| control and assure adequate regula- tion of real estate in the District of jf hueahasl aaae : Columbia, therefore be it The Federal Government is inland 1 expect to raise them again | Ct sympathy wie and res to eM-|next fall—not to increase my profit, | o¢ Rime ei ar TaLinnon “Haverat fiesta otner inne | BEC tS Race cown the doticlL” |after the war no judicial order for the the one operated by the Federal Gov- | LANDLORDS STAND ON LAWS OF | Traiiry of Possession of any real iV conducting bi SUPPLY AND DEMAND. state, Now of hereafter held or ac- rnment has asked that, so fur as| number of properties anywhere poraible, the relroad raver, Pep main: |Greater City in response to request : Inder ‘consideration ty | from interested parties, as voiced re the authorities in Washington, and|cently in The Evening World it is expected that within a few days| These facts could be put in the for public announcetnent will be madelof legal evidence, and th Of the conclusions reached.” tion would submit them to any au-| thorized b Se! H 1 legitimate public hearing. To col- ‘1 the statistics, however, wou! WABHINC ‘The Sen-|take much time and labor. owner has the personal right to pu lish such details of his private vestment business or to refuse make publi just as has any oth effective | husiness man. The permission of es ey houst changes in the increased rates are regarded as certain by com- Finance Committee, at a special | ting to-day, decided not to attempt | pension of publishers’ second class | mail rates, which become ly, and these organizations will n wittee membe: when the new revenue | undertake the work until they bill reaches the Senate, all but Senator | be assured that the results would noot of Utah agreed to-day that any | juplished in full and in the prop to suspend. the increases now They are ready to co-op manner. would be hopeless in view of Opposition | Vie" with, committees of city or in the House Sta in the organiza- | conduct in- | would have to be obtained ind!vidual- | Brokers quired by oral agreement or written Directors of the Real Estate Gourd | lease for one month or any longer 5 hanine and the Advisory Council declared | pertod, or for the ejectment or dispos- as also furnis' they would rejoice to tabulate | session of a tenant therefrom, shall be s barges o place on record statistics re- de, and all ‘ garding assessed valuations. ta tinue so long as the tenant continues n reply to e inquiries, the] operating costs and net profits of any | to pay rent at the agreed rate and performs the other conditions of the its | tenancy, except on the ground that |the tenant has failed to take reason- able care of the premises, or has com- mitted waste, or has been guilty of which’ is a nuisance or amounts to a disturbance of the peace ‘m | y of investigators or at|of adjoining or neighboring occupiers, or a Violation of law, or that the ja |premixes are reasonably required by a landlord or bona fide purchaser for b- | occupation by himself or his family | while in the employ of or officially con- ed with the Government.’ We are advised by Charles W. irfax, President of the Real Estate Association of Washington, jot |that this resolution will not be of un benefit because it does not alter ex- {sting profiteering, which is mostly in | sub-leases, and tt closes rental space r-|which would be available if owners te|could be assured that they could re- to) n er eh | Fs Cut Out and Save These Magazine Pages and Make a Complete Kiddie Klub Year Book —— KIDDIE KLUB MAGAZINE- * Edited by Cousin ELEANOR: thereto expiration of leases, , “This interference of such with the greater laws of demand seems to answer the why rents cannot be fixed at aa trary level the same as food It is certain that to limit at an unprofitable figure will dis- courage the construction which alor can provide a necessary increase accommodations. And the authorities are beginning to rec ° this principle in a broad way with | movement to revise the entire fixing policy, because experience demonstrated that It forces a to substitutes and discourages ¢uction.” BRITISH TITLE REFUSED BY VETERAN Big Estate, So Title Is Extinct, Property Scattered. ; LONDON, June 15.—George Alexame der Philips Haldane-Duncan of Bostom, Masa, has refused to accept the or to benefit in any way from the tu of the late Earl of Camperdown, only brother, it ts disclosed in the lcation of the latter’s will here to-Gay. In consequence the title becomes ex tinct and the estate goes to more tant relatives, ‘ The estate embraces 14,000 sores land in Forfarshire and Scotland, and Warwickshire, besides a town house at No. 39 CI Street, London. George A. P. Haldane-Duncan, s@¥- enty-three years old, has long Ii Boston, wher in ‘ebruary, married as his second wife the of John Adams Blanchard, daughter John Dove of Andover, Mass, He no children, resides at No, 62 Commonwealth Ave- nue and is @ member of the Someraet Club. He used to live at No. 8 Glouces- ter Street and spend the summers fn Nee Tate wit riginally Mies is late wife was original Laura Dove.” By her first marriage she had three sons, John Adama ard, Harvard, "si; Harold Blanchard, "M8, ‘and Archibald’ Blanchard, "02. sons now live No. 8% Boylstao They are members of the - erset, Myopia and Tennis and t Clubs. Archibald Blanchard lives at 24 Commonwealth Avenue and to the Somerset and Tennis and quet Clubs. iilinennicsticaes NO TRIAL OF ROSE HUBER; ‘ Accepted. — twenty-seven year of No, 612 East 159th Street, pleade guilty of mansiaughter in the secon degree yesterday in the Bronx Coup ty Court. She was origtnally indicted foi murder in the second degree and het trial was scheduled for next Mon but Assistant District Attorney accepted a plea of manslaughter. » On Jan. 1 last Earl a Lewis, sec ond engineer on @ coastwise steamer, wos removed from the 159th address with a bullet wound {i chest. Miss Huber said Lewt attempted suicide. Before he died on March 17 he accused her of having shot him. Interesting Contribatio From Our Own Kiddie Kiab Members* Volume I.—No. XX. fs {STORIES AND POEMS { STORIES AND POEMS § THE ENCHANTED Romctnd tose Tr bush that grew in the woods. It was much like the other flower: but it was very modest. It grew b hind an old oak tree, where it was al- most hidden from all other things in the forest One day in spring the king's son rode into the woods. Seeing the flower he sprang from his steed to pluck it ‘ it would die he dug up the earth around it and plucked not only rose but the entire bush, Upon reaching his father’s palace he com- rvant to plant it in the Fearing manded a | yal palace garden. He himself tend- ed it each day. One day as he touched a blossom it became a maiden, After | to him her story they were) the old King’s consent relating married with ver af Schoo! Garden ey lived happily ever after. and (ney TENNS WARSHAW, Loan Service Flag, War Sav ig Columbia—Drawn by AMILCA aged ten. nue, New York City, * Flag, Service Flag, Third Liberty ing Stamp Flag and the Shield of RE ACCONCI, No. 608 Crescent Ave THE ADVENTURE OF A PENNY.) 1 ecame | tn the melting pot and into IL was put 1 mould. erywhere: hand to another I passed! she was put in a home sewed, helped cut bandage where st to a farmer, singing a song. try and its fighters. vain | was dropped into the mould, | Teuue out a penny shining like gold, | ‘hem she | who should she > m IRVING SEGALL, aged ten,| hep father? V18 83d Street, Brovklyn Mons, d’Ore © smiling at her b told her he had so Jimportant papers that were to be livered before midnight to a Ma St. Morie. Joan knew Major | Morte, and as it was only to the a town she volunteered to deliver the FILLING THE HOPPER, | they “egeed” the viber two. (Thrift Bamps will be scld on the boat saved. badly defeated. Joan, jis known now as Joan IT Jis well known and she is idolized every French heart | From LOUISE MORAN, aged t MPL: | No, Nod Her ste vrawn PAEAMAN G |COALAS Juty aged fourteen, by - agua snes 6 FRE “BAFRIOTIC POEMS AND PROSE PA | With Lincoln on one side, the date JOAN Il. DE FRANCE. on the other, Laden bey Ae I ch ren Into the hands of # rich} In France there lived a@ little gi boy's mother, by the name of Joan d’Ore, She lost She took me to @ store and ex-|her mother in a German air raid, and a" changed me there, : see sey vor Hin years I've been travelling | Mer father was at the fre As Joan had no one to care for her she nd did many useful things to help her coun- One day she was He hast es ood of hay, helping a purse carry some bandages wished that I could roll away pets ey When 1 got out, that is, when they|to a bospital nearby, and when found mo \neard some wounded soldiers had just Thad a green mold all around me. — | rrived she asked permission to see ‘As she passed along the cots, | Although a hard task, Joan succeeded lin finding the Major, and the day was M. d’Ore got well and Germany was if you please, 0 Springfield Avenue, Newark, 2 YANKEE LAND. O country, great United States, The one Republic grand, In all the world there are no mates ‘To equal your good land, You've always stood for Freedom's cause, Would fight for this tif death, Above the cloud your eagle soars With victory in bis breath, Your country is so vast and big, ne| Its population great, The minerals that miners dig Are found in every State, Your armies now are very strong, Your men are true and brave, They fight for right wrong, America to save. put me Your navy bold will never run, The hard foe it defies, Better than every fleet ‘saye one, More numerous in size. Jor st ext em, France ‘The Kaiser's men to beat, Though not experienced perchance, They never will retreat, ermans soon will realize ory mated by your might) is yu could beat two realms their size, And aren't too proud to fight. eh) ram JACK DANTRE, aged thir. [ua and not for When your sons arrive in war-torn teen, No, 126 Hancock Street, Brook- Saturday, June 15° } LEGEND i THE THINGS OF THE GARDEN, (American Indian Lore.) * HB Indians believed in the great AE Good Spirit and the grea Evil Spirit, and they believe in many less powerful gods—tmo in number than you can count, Td them every flower had its god, and so had every tree, cloud, waterfall and river, They used to tell of three sisters who lived in the gardens and watched over the corn, beans and squashes, We know that these vegetables live in the same kind of soil, and the In- dians said it was because the three sisters loved to be together afd | never quarrelled. One sister was clothed in long leaves and fine silken thread of the corn; another wore a wreath of and garments of the tendrils of the bean plant, while the third was gor- geous in the yellow blossoms of -the squash. ‘The next time you are in the coun- try on a bright moonlight night ercep into the garden and see if the sisters are dancing and singing, but be very | auiet Jest you frighten them away, | _ From ROSALIF PICHMAN, No, 73 | 1 Morgan Place, Arlington, N. J. THE PITCHER PLANT, We are talking about a very strange plant. Its leaves are reddish-gréen” shaped like a pitcher. The leaves act like a trap. They catch insecta Phe sticky substance on the leaf makes the insect a prisoner, The pefi grow like an umbrella, hiding pretty stems, I shall never forget. the rare pitcher. . From IRENE WARD, No. 27 Colo- nial Place, New Rochelle. ETTY’S WAR GARDEN, BETT's WAR Deve © Ane petrtoty That you ahowdd anew, (Are waters the vegetadion, #0 that Ge W1L grew, rawing and poem from HELENE | CONNIMAN, aged twelve, No, 314 Market Street, Perth Amboy, N. de

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