The evening world. Newspaper, November 23, 1918, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1918, HOOK MET DEATH AS, INJURED, HE LED NEN 10 VICTORY Captain Refused to Retire) When First Hit, and Second Bullet Killed Him. Capt. Alfred John Hook of the 106th | Infantry, killed on the Flanders front, furnished a typical example of American bravery, After he had been wounded he continued to direct his men until they obtained their objec- | tive, when a second bullet took this life He was a son of Mra, Katherine Hook nf No, 1001 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, and had ser’ New York Cavalry. Capt. Frank H. Knight, Corps, dead of pneumonia in England, lived at No, 59 Seventh Avenue, Brooklyn, was a specialist in gyne- | cology and a member of the staffs of several Brooklyn hospitals. Capt. Douglas Delaney, wounded, is) @ son of Mrs. arles G. Cornell Jt» | No, 11'East 68th Street, and before | belng transferred to the 315th Field Artillery was in the Upton division. Lieut, Cari A. Dudley, Killed tm ace tion while leading @ platoon of the j06th Machine Gun Battalion, lived \t the Hotel Flanders, and before be- coming a New York advertising man was on the editorial staff of the Bos- ton Transcript. Chief Boatswain's Mate John P. Doyle, No. 550 Hudson Street, sur- vived the Alcedo torpedo disaster and risked his life in rescuing the crew of the Antilles, only to die of pneumonia while on furlough in this country. He iad insisted on taking recruits from Brooklyn Navy Yard to San Fran- sco before he recovered from influ- (nga and died in the California city.| ELSIE DE WoOLee, He was wel: known in Greenwich| Village. ew hom: Corpl, Harold Ferguson, Comeae let York W pean H. 107th Infantry, was killed while| Value of N acting Sergeant and leading his men | after all his superior oflicers had been ied or wounded. He was © brother of John Ferguson of No, 485 Ninth Street, Brooklyn. Capt. George Wilber Sackett, killed in action on Oct. 15, was @ son-in- law of William H. Cooper of Prem- tum Point, New Rochelle. native of Oak Park, Chicago. Lieut. Willis Gale, U. 8. 8. won, died of pneumonia waters. He was torpedo officer of he destroyer Shaw when she was ut in two by a@ transport off the glish coast. His father, Capt Géorge Gale, is a well-known Atlan- | tle City yachtsman, Sergt. Clendon §, Newell, Company B, 311th Infantry, killed tn action on Oct, 80, was a son of Peter Newell, the New York artist, a Cornell man, and @ resident of Leonia, N. J. Lieut. George A. Kent, Air Service, Samp- as injure an airplane fall In France on 5. His companion was killed. He is now on the way home from France and his mother, who lives at No. West 47th Street, this city, expects him home for Thanksgiving dinner, peopl. Francis V. Durkin, Company . 52d Pioneers, was killed near fan Oct. 30, ‘He went unscathed through the severe Argonne fighting. He wag a son of Mrs. Katherine Dur- kin of No. 518 Pearl Street, this city, His brother, Joseph, is manager of the Speakers’ Bureau, War Camp Community Service, Robert € nger Benson, Headquar- ters’ Staff, 8C7th Stevedore Battalion, illed in a mptor accident in France, was a son of Robert D, Benson, Presi- lent of the Tidewater Oil Company, 4a son-in-law of George W. Roeb- ling of Passaic, N, J, He was a Princeton man. Corpl, Alexander A. Kin, killed in ction, was a son of Dr. Yamei Kin, 4 “hinese woman physician of this city, o recently returned to China, The dung man was a graduate of Colum- bia University and*had been in the brokerage business. Capt. George Stanley Butcher, who enlisted in the Ist Regiment, N. G. N J., and was made a Lieutenant when it was incorporated in the United Stat>s Army, has been killed in action, He was recently mentioned for bravery nd afterward promoted to Captain. ri lie was a son of C, R. Butcher of Montclair, N. J. Confirmation has been received of airpl fal of Liew ve death ne by WwW. L. Deetjen. It has been learned at his machine fell 10,000 feet while} action. His home was in Mont-; alr, N. J | Corpl. Thomas Winter, Company R, 165th Infantry, killed in action, had} turned to duty after being gussed | July His sie mother, Mr therine Carr f 699 Second Ave- 18, this city, says Winter was moved enlist imme utely after ‘ar w ared by anger at the barbarous eatment of women and children by ¢ Germans. <ccnecmenneattipeenosmenes SHOES BOOTY OF BOY, 12. 81,275 in Footwear From Stree® Showean: Frank Congeme, twelve years, of No. $ Johnson Avenue, Brooklyn, pleade lity yesterday {n the Brooklyn Chil- en's Court of stealing women's shoes at $1 He was remanded for once next Monday Frank stole 1 airs of shoes from woases in front of Nos. 177, Manhattan Avenue and m Avenue, He took them to a it ho and chums had built in th torn down Lycoum Th , and Montrose Aven te y yest the at a palr c oes under t light and arrested ed of burglary hildren's Co ) arreste two nths ago in the 18 Out on probat¢ >_— Vaper Strike FB Striking es returned an appeal Ronrd of Ar- Rochester 1 > 8. Tho ‘ ‘otypers came back 4, \ last night, so that the Demoeret ind. Chronicle and Rochester puokteh, paper faye of eBforced suspension, for years in the First | Medica! | He was a) in English! “ELSIE DE WOLFE WEARS THE “BRISQUE,’ | | i | | | winter chateau, which a bunting lodge, for th: as a remedy in th burns received by sold been the victims of } other practices of ( ness, has not only wo won for Miss Elsie I a medal wh risqu two gold wings and a insignia wh was her by the Surgeon G remarkable work in ¢ years’ service in Franc generally in all hospita pital to further the use of has been nursing in the aring tor the: patients and in recognition of three ” WON BY Helped Prove w Remedy in Liquid Fire Burns. | generosity of a wealthy Frenchman in dedicating to the | French Red Cross his beautiful he had used as © use of a hos- “Ambrine” treatment of diers who hat iquid fire and man frightful- n the admira- tion of Allied army doctors but has Xe Wolfe, who chateau, the ich cdnsists of red cross, an nferred Upc eneral for her e Last August the use of “Ambrine,” which is a wax substance, passed the experiment 8 nd Frenea Aviny doctors e contemplating using it ais. ‘This noted ROOT WILL LEAD HOH FHT FOR RETURN _ OF NATION'S ROADS Railroad Securities Owners’ Association Hire Him and Other Noted Counsel, Elihu Root and other prominent lawyers have been engaged by the Nationa} Association of Owners of Railroad Securities as advisory coun- sel in a fight to protect their interests Junder the existing Government sponsorship, and to secure the re- | turn of the roads in at Icast as sound a condition financially and physically |as when they wero turned over to the Government, or adequate com- | pensation if they aro not returned. | Lawyers who will serve with Mr.| |Root are John G. Milburn, counsel John 8. Miller of Chicago; ‘Forney Johnston of Birmingham, Ala, and H. L. Bond of Baltimore. The Chair- man of the, Association's Exébutive Committee, 8. Davies Warfield, said: “The war is ended, The objects for which the railroads are now to be operated are matters of concern to interested in their securities and to shippers, the travelling public and the | ountry at large, “What is done from now on, how- | ever, must be taken as indicating the railroad policy of the Administration. Is it proposed to carry out the inten- tion of the Congress as expressed in the Federal Control Act and return them ‘within a reasonable time,’ with each railroad, in the wording of the act, ‘in substantially as complete equipment as it was at the beginning of Federal control,’ or is it intended to use them for laying the foundation for permanent Government control and operation under such plans as the present Railroad Administration may desire and as the forerunner of | Government owrership? “Congress has made no provision In the act for any such t:'e of them vided,for their return, Tere is first to bé decided the time of such return. The twenty-one months was not al lowed by Congress for their ex,lo'- tation. pursued charges incident to the so- called unification are piling up against them, which it will be very difficult for them to repay. The policy in force is destructive of {ndividual redit, Purthermore, present condl- tions cannot continue without obliter- ation of railroads as individual going | concerns. | “The «assoctation will have some suggestions, to offer in relation to |plans for their return which must give equal protection to the shippers, | to labor and to the owners of railroad securities With this in view the association has named an advisory counsel and has added to the general counsel t tioned.” the millions of people who own or are | On the contrary, it has specifically pro- | Under the policy now being | © well known lawyers men- | Van Brink’s ‘Child W. Wife,’ Who Disliked Brooklyn, Is Now Doubly Divorced ccvmeposeein ‘ Wealthy Auctioneer Gets De-! COUPLE IN DIVORCE cree Despite Woman's “Beat- TANGLE IN WHICH TWO ing’ Him to It” at Reno. DEGREES ARE GRANTED Louts Van Brink, a wealthy auc: |tloneer, and his “child wife,” Hthel, | positively refused to live | Brooklyn, each has a divorce to-day, | | The closing chapter of their romance, | which began here and was shunted |to Reno and back, was written by | | Supreme Court Justice Finch, who} ‘awarded the husband a divorce over | the wife's protest that she had beat | | him to it, ‘The couple were married when Mrs. Van Brink was seventeen. Van Brink, | | testimony showed, somo time ago! agreed that his wife go to Reno and | | sue him for divorce on the grounds | of Incompatibility, He was to pay all | expenses and not to contest, provided | no other charges than the one agreed who fu | | me Jon be mado by her, He gave her | $1,300 expense money. But, it was alleged, she made charges reflecting on him, and he} stopped her expense money. She re-| turned to New York. He announced} tho divorce agreement was broken as | far as h@ was concerned, but she went back and got the decree. Soon) after her return to New York, Van Brink began an action of his own, |alleging that his wife's divorce was \illegal, because he had never been |served with papers. Justice Finch upheld him and this leaves each with a decree Of divorce. In 1916, when Van Brink was suing his wife in Brooklyn for custody of their eight-year-old daughter, Janet, he testified they were married tn 1907, when he was forty-one and she sev- enteen, For a few months they were! | happy, but frequent quarrels and sep-|- arations followed because of her de-| sire to come to Manhattan and be “on the go.” He said his wife in 1913) “framed him” into a compromising situation and exacted $50,000 in bonds us her price for condoning the offense. He afterwards got back $35,000. He |said his wife showed such a prefer- ence for younger men that he told her in 1914 they would have to separate. She begged him to return to her, he said, and thero was a brief reunton, she making an agreement: No paint. No peneilling of eyebrows. No more high hats and short skirts She to live in Brooklyn, She to give up all her old acquaint- ances. Louis VAN BRI He back riding and other outdoor ex- TWO MEN TO BE Nf She to go to Manhattan only tolercise, but her restlessness grew and see her mother, and then to take the} :tie was soon coming back to Man ong as chaperone, h n. He testified that once she uple took up their residence] returned home at 6 A. M. in a taxi- ern Parkway, Mrs. Van Brink}cab with a former Judge, and that| business school, then horse- | was. the straw, She admitted, Van Brink said, that she liked to go] }to cafes, skating rinks and root gar- | }dens and to meet other men, and when he said something would have | MED FOR WORK to be done, she and do it.” replied “Go plumb to | Jefferson Hall, WIRE PLEA TO-DAY. ‘Brooklyn Union Appeals to All Organizations to Help Sa Condemned Man, ve Telegraphic messages are apeedinis over the wires to-day to the various organizations of machinists in all parts of the country, calling upon them to endorse a nation-wide strike to save Thomas Mooney from execution on Dec, 13, This is the result of a meeting of protest held last night In No, 4 Court Square, Rrooklyn, and an overflow meeting in Saengerbund Hall, Schermerhoyn and Smith Streets, The meetings were un- der the auspices of Micrometer Lodge. No, 460, International Association of Machinists, Attor the open mecting a closed sossion of the lodke was held, and a. its conclusion Theodore Russoff, Secretary of the organization's com. mittes which Is working In behalf of Mooney, announced that a resolution had: been passed embracing the’ fol- lowing four points: 1. The Executive Board of District Lodge 15, governing the entire metro- politan district, was requested to call a special meeting to take action toward calling for a “cessation of work,” the date of the strike to be left open, 2. The district lodge was requ to call @ mass meeting durin "ADOO, REST GNIN G, SAYS FAMILY CAN’T T LI VE ON $12,000 SALA ~ STRKEFORMOONEY, W. E. COREY NOT GOING TO FRANCE NOW TO JOIN WIFE, SECRETARY SAYS, om. TOUS. MACHINISTS P first week of December to take up ; 9 ihe Mooney daa Mrs. Corey (Mabelle Gilman) 3. The international oMciais of the| in England, but Will Re- Association were requested to Issue | turn to France, @ call for a general “cessation of . work,” to continue until “relief is A Ga AM a clea aebe granted” to Mooney and Warren K. Billings and until the “persecution” of E. D. Nolan, as a member of the association, who was indicted with Mooney, ceases, 4. A committee was appointed to! visit other lodges and urge similar action, The fact that Lodge No. 492, New York, had voted to begin a ten days’ strike on Dec, 3 and that Lodge No. 432 was expected to take similar ac- uon on Tuesday night was an- nounced tn the open meeting amid cheers by Parsons Metzkow, Pres of District Council No, 15, who, “The red flag waves over wo- Rane of Europe, and now the Mayor of this city, who says he was elected on @ labor platform, announces that will prevent it from waving in New York, Believe me, 1 know a places where he will'not prevent Sectalinta tn ty Protest Aumainat Hed Flag Ordinance. A Variety of oratory was expended yesterday in the City Hall. when the Aldermanic Committee Welfare held a public hearing on he Frenchman, whose name js withheld, = 4 : consented, through the Baroness de | ’ Mreasury through all the perplexitien | reer, erainance of Rothschild, to let the French Red] and problems of transitional. fine | Se?ealy prohibiting the display of Cross have the use of his chi uu for] ancial conditions, and of the finane-| the red Mag in any public place or beget Eh Hatt “we Pen the treaunen | ing ot a wa ; Ry hich been without 1 parce, mee committee, after Pb o large s¢ | a ——— precedent alike in kind and in scope, | listening to the speeches, went into oie \cheraan 18 35 Utne viens 4 le the formulation of the policies that nt {E thank you with @ sense of gratitude | executive session, but not before on ° r fC oe REDS. © RAE OUnD Dg (Continued from First Page.) |should govern the future work gf the | that comes from the very bottom of | Socialist woman had protested hy: athe tee Veenaae Meith BOA reasury. L would suggest that my|my heart | tericaily against the association of gecting Wee rrenehs Cetas Sue lresignation as Director General of | “Gratefully and affectionatly yours, | the free love idea with Soctalism, an the Americai barracks, | dent and Mr. McAdoo could instantly) Raroads become effective Jan. 1, | “WOODROW WILSO | Ass has been working there since it was} be dismissed,” The sole reason of | 914 or upon the appointment of my | Mr, McAdoo's family consists of his] Anke Gompe: put in operation last August. The] Mr. MeAdoo's resignation was to bet~| successor, wife, Mra, le anor Randolph | M Wide entire chateau is camouflaged wiih a} ter himself. | “I hope you will understand,my dear | aes ebter of the Br nt, SEATTLE, Wash., No vain covering of chicken wire on which | sets to be relieved about| Mr. President, that I will permit | whom h ried May 7, 1914, Ie ha , mea | fs small pieces of cloth stitched to-| He expects to be nothing but the most imperious seven children, three sons and four n, Secretary of the Seattle Cen- | | gether, The use of “Ambrine” is suc- | Jan. 1, but will remain until his suc-| mands to force my withdrawal from | daughters, they being the following: | tral Labor Council, stated to-day ne | cessfu! rogressinx, and by the ten-|cessors take charge. He will then! public life. Always I shall cherish as | W Mam rhs Med Hoo, Jr Francts| had written Samuel Gompe Presi- ‘der care of the nurses many nen vacation of about three months |the greatest honor of my career the a Bote Pin * tae eat anki Platt. dent of the American Federation of |soldiera have been saved from death | ynrore returning to New York, tt is|opportunity you have so gencrously | Mme. Mohrenschildt, and Sally, the! Labor, asking him to take charge of | ement . te eto serve the country under | children of his first marriage, and| ¢p . and disfigurement, | understood, to practice law. Ho says |siven m anal | Fillen Wilwon McAd | the union movement toward a nation ieenemee | Understood, DP : your leadership in these epochal | F | wide strike as a protest against the Pr |he has nothing immediately in view |") meg, lo | execution of Thomas J, Mooney, con- ‘WILL NOT PAY HIS RENT, Se ee cee eat ae vattecsiong 980+ {MB MPADOD MAY ENTER |e mon | | dicted that before night his desk will WV, G, MAT ; re AS HOME IS HEATLESS | be loaded down with telegraphic of-|REST SECRETARY TREASURY N. Y, U. ARMY COURSE ters of big jobs paying munificent| €VER HAD, SAYS WILSON. UNTERMYER FIRM HERE | | siarian: ‘Tho President's letter of acceptance, MAY BE FULL YEAR Silk Merchant, \ Whom Landlord M’ADOO'S LETTER OF RESIGNA- | dated Nov. 21, follows: 1 Secrelary. Teed by Leaden “ Seeks to Dispossess, Is Backed TION TO WILSON. ‘My Dear Mr, Secretary: I was not peeks ISPOSSesS, aaCKeC ’ ‘s letter of resignation, | unprepared for your letter of tho 14th, Both Parties and Trusted by | Fxnerfence irs St al ts’ Training Up by Fellow Tenants Mr. McAdoo's letter of res * i because you had more than once, vf bi is J ixperlence of Students’ Training \ dated Nov, 14, follows: course, discussed with me the circum- Business Interests. | Corps Results in Plan for As a result of the refusal of Ralph! “pear Mr. President—Now that aal stances which have long made tt a) 01, @ scAdoo's resignation| 4 Bloom, a silk merchant, to pay the! armistice has been signed and peace| serious personal sacrifice for you) ta) William G. | McAdoo resign | Extension, | November rent for his apartment in t is assured, I feel at liberty to advise| remain in office. I knew that only] ‘rom ali his G posts caused pare a D Robbia, at 96th Street and We you of my desire to return, as soon | your high and exactfng sense of uty) as much surprise in New York as it ne ay ork University, as a End Avenue, dispossess proceedings | as possible, to private life, had kept you here until the imme-|qia in Washington. Many bankers Tesult of its experience with intenai- |were brought yesterday before Justice| ‘I have been conscious for some | diate tasks of tho wa should be over] here to-day expressed regret, By | Hed study by ita 2,000 members of the r h D t ni ime the necessit for this ste But I am none e less distressed "i a - S.udet T s Corps, is co! d * Hoffman in the Fifth District Municipal] Hime Of titge. could not consider it| shall not allow our intimate peraonal| many Republican wall ay Demo- | Siudents’ Tralning Corps, is consider | pany, owner of uildin p Som=) while the country was at war. relations to deprive me of fhe pleasure | crats, Mr. McAdoo is considered the/ 18 the adoption of a@ four-term Mr. Bloom sald had refused to pay! almost six years L havelof saying that in my judg t thy | strongest man in the Cabinet, There elve-month scholastic year for its |becuuse there had been neither heat 1 asuntly under the pres-| country has never had an aber, 9115 every evidence that in the recent schools. After the meeting of pot water In his apartment, Only ony are ut responsibilities. Their] more resourceful and yet prudent, a Mar Cline “Hawianl They shiwraat University Senate yesterday, [to Catia te water Sate’ wives | exactions have drawn heavily on my | most uniformly eMictent Secrevary’ of | SUN, MOF ihe businvan interests ncollor Brown announced the ap- | bathe. Was Compelled to patronise| strength, The Inadequate compen- he Treasury; and I say this remein-|Confience of tle biindss i ponitment of a com nittee which will ja Turkish bath, “InOctobor and in the| sation allowed by law to Cabinet | bering all the able, devoted snd dis. | and lun wumiiiatrtion Ot the Treas: | investigate the merits of the propo. early part of this month, Mr, Bloom| ofticers (as you know, TI receive no| tinguished men who preceded you, 1) UNS MUIRE Ole MAT OnCuUeOT com-| plan of year-round training at the | sal the house was ung ated and the! compensation as Director General of} have kept your letter a number of my Me “i ” par beast eed EY the univesiian é e bella were out of order le iy believed by the university au- eee Morente, wha testified support. | Realiroads) and the very naome | days In order to suggest, 1¢ 1 could, Seriado pak i y versit Marcus Brown, ident of the can-| depleted my personal resources that than the one you have now felt obligea | “O44, 4 i } of the ya fl ort dent soldie: fs struction company, said he bad val iy! Lam obliged to reckon with the facts| to resort to. But I haye not been able Lene oe cal s Mer oh ee tan CET ERIN OR LB Rte ied get plumbers to make re fe situatio . of any. isk you to| ! & Ares rved 1 do not wish to convey the im-| make further sacrifices, serious a8 (he | 4? Meadoo, Untermyer & Marshall, f pia pression that there is any | loss of the Government will be in your|°' WC ttemyer was asked to-da | FRENCH E EULOGIZE BELGIUM. WHITE LIGHTS B .2E pairment of my health, retirement. I accept your resignation, | wnat’ basis there might be for inaes | Ss LA AGAIN, | is not the tact. As a result of long | therefore, to take effect upon thé ap: | re eT id not reply to the| Deputies Rise and S ertie | overwork I need a reasonable period | pointment of @ successor, because in tion, but of Mr. McAdoo's retir Nath | wet Only at AML City's | of nuine rest to mr pnish my | justice to you I must ne ha anid : ; ation. righ tate. energy. But more than thi "1 also for the same reason accept |<t nave known for a long time ot| PARIS: Nov. 23—At the beginning | New York became a white ,|for the sake of my family, our resignation as Director General] pig desire to return to private life,| Of the sitting of the Chamber of Dep-| teat ates ‘Ito private life to retrieve my per-Jof Railroads, to take effect, as youlana that but for the war he would|uties yesterday Paul Deschanel, Prosi. Pe pouideuayy 6 with a sonal fortune suggest, on the igt of January next,| have done so long ago. It wag al ants cetthe: Chaiian wate lat faile Jing of Fuel Administrator ¢ cannot secure the required rest }or When your successor is appointed. | great personal sacrifice for him’ to| (ent {hdnea'itetetam AM Teac ‘ban on unnecessary lighting, which opportunity to look after my |The whole world admires, Iam sure,|temain in public life." aia? prance had besaihapaee fa met had been in effect certain nights of| giccted private affairs unless |as { do, the skill and executive ea: | enna ceive during the German iuveaion the the week many months. The theacre lieved of my present responsi- | pacity with which you handled tne Mares Riek D ia Ania Marnenant CG neenia autnat #1 district seemed brighter than ever be- reat and complex problem of the sth “wifiges N ne ‘ide Fe ese fore, Moving picture houses, hote.s| “I am anxious to have my ret Unyied administration of the rail-| Meyer B. D. Peck of Caldwell. W, 4.,/ with the same ideals as France, and rener . br t effecte: th the les | or the stress 7 }was found dead yesterday from apo-| Who had fought and suffered wi and stores generally were brilliant, | ment effected with the least possible | Ways under the stress of war uses, Vienas” Ai the. Deeullan aroma. citi nd huge electric signs came !ack|inconvenience to yourself and to the |and will regret, as T do, to see you | Plexy in his automoblie in hie garage | (Me oe es Grose and te life again rvice, but it would, I think, |leave that post just as the crest of | diye Provost. Mayor Pecke who! in the Henat rsident du Rost The merchants of Harlem, except accept my re ation now iMculty is passed wa of the leading Caldwell phyel- | also ed eo Be >» con: those in 126th Street, did not t as Secretary of the Treasury, to be ¢ the distinguished, disinter- | cians. wae ealied Inst night to attend | aa0 B Re huiina tthe abate’ eoea | advantage of the opportunity to light|come effective upon the appointment 1 and altogether admirable ner-|# patient and waa stricken after he're-\ 14 the Belgian nation an expression up, but Harlem's mainNhoroughfare| and qualification of my successor, so |vico you have rendered the country | iuined, Dr Beck was, siaty-four ye of unalterable gratitude and of wos os brilliant ag nome parte of Up-| that he may have the opportunity and |in both posts, and especially for the |7\4;, Hv had been a physicion here for Of MOntes le Ke te wie ot per Broadway, advantag of participating promptly 'way in which you bave guided th sghter, Mra. Provost. ‘the regeneration of Belgium. '; ’ oaceee ee meee: eaeennemassnunseannenus:oumst aan eamn-ossuamnansastsansssniiansssseamsesmnsentinnts on General | for a trip to F nee to join his wife, who was Mabelle Gilman, the musical comedy star, was denied to- |day at Mr, Corey's office, Mr. Corey | as too busy to submit to an inter- view, but his secretary latened to and answered Questions put by a reporte “As for Mr Corey," said the secre- tary, “he may go abroad some time, but he is not going in the near futu: and hasn't any idea when he will go.” The reporter inquired ff Mrs, Corey was in France. The secretary replied that she is at the present tiene in Bngland, | "On her way to New York? asked hs eporter, 0," said the secretary, “She will ko back to Franc! “Do you know if she contemplates returning to the United States now that peace is in sight?” asked the reporter. | "So far as I kno ary, “Mra, ns to return to th Mra, Corey was in loatbreak of che war, there for more than a ye Jost no time in going after h nd rete on the Lusitania in November, 1914. Before her departure from France she turned over to the answered the y has made United States. France at + She had been Mr, Corey | | beautiful the suburbs of | Paris. | It was said at | to-day that Mra, Ce the last time Since that time she has been actively at work at her chateau-hospital, The Coreya were married in 1907. after Mr. Corey had settled $700,000 on his first gife, and she had divorced | Mm. chateau in Mr. Corey's: home went to Paris a DEALERS MUST LABEL MEAT FOR CUSTOMERS | Cards Displayed in "Shops Ordered * by Food Board—Poultry Men Penalized, ae selling fal the ommission hy adopted resolution requiring retailers to label conspicuously all meats that they offer to patrons. The commission declared that cer- tain retailers are amb, mutton, pork and poultry, ia |kind, quantity and quality other than | quantity and quality, interferes with | ers from designations, To prevent meat under State Food ¢ welling beef, veal, |their true kind, nd that such practi 16 di mand sale of such ne- ties at a reasonable price. The rule applies only to the grea* y and to Westchester County Three poultry houses in this city were sized yesterday for repur ing to their shippers prices In excess of actual ‘ot quotations, The license of Lass & Cohen, No 450 West Mth Street, has been sus- pended indefinitely; that of N, Dur- {ham & Sons, No. 313° Washington Street, for one week, and that’ of W. J. Heinrichs, No. 423 West lirh Street, for twenty days. All suspen- sions begin on Nov. 30 There May Be a Tea Just as Good as “DALAL ' Orange Pekoe, but nobody ever saw it— “The Quality is Incomparable.’’ Seabed | we | know. | ours Is a chivalrous Government, she the dining rooms of the Knick@r+ Joveker, tne Watdori-asioria, — the site, the acAipn and vier notes, |Red Cross, for hospital purposes, her | about six months ago. | She’s Getting Rich on Open Handed New York Is Showering on Her. This waitress, Who has taken the place of the man who went on @ | strike In leading New York hotels, i# a working girl, but she isn't a poor king girl. No, indeed. She is fe jinore a poor working girl than that | [high salaried woman Secretary you The wages of this waitress $40 a month, bat ber earningse= well, if it weren't for the fact that’ are would be compelled to pay an income black gowned, white aproned Yount women who are now serving in are earning Whar even in New Yore “sind WO Approautate real money, ANE Mewdaces tie Amount might Offer inuuceiments to Colege Beadle ates for a Career of serve un te art of serving. aswer, of course, is tips, Open om « New York, the yuINnunents and tue visitoré whom this same New York lures (they're giad to be lured) make the wage paid by the hotew jaerely revaner, with the real tee for servites endered to follow. The size of th pends on the character of the service af Nome girls in the fashionable New| =) York hotels are oa uing at thelr pres- f receipts nearly $4,000 a it is said, is making lew All, it is pointed out, $1,200 make more when they become more pt at their work and learn to serve well more customers, for the not given as many tables as y succeed. Also they all the opportunities cannot ¢ thcir predecessors possessed, because the girls cannot serve drinks—and the dizay heights of waiters’ finahee ix reached in the men's cafes of the big hotels, James B, Regan, proprietor of the Knickerbocker, estimates that the tips of the girls in hin dining rooms on normal days average from &3 to'$#, During week-ends and holidaya they amount to more. Augustus managing director Astoria, says the girls at that hotel | n from $2 to $5 a day in tips metimes more, Other hotel mana- « state that waltesses at thelr pick up” al course,” said Me. Regan, ery girl, Whether or not she is @ waitress, is pretty, but. her beauty has no aring, #0 far as I ean judge, on the size of her tips, The jdiner \first demands servpee what ‘he is wfling to pay for with his tip; the amount of it is commen- surate with his appreciation," The amount of the individual tip given the girl waltresves iy said by | Mr Regan to be larger than that given the men, who, however, made more use they served more ta- bles. ris in most of the hot given but two tables and serve al average of twelve guests daily, Mr ulle, on the other hand, states that has found many people do not Up xirls as generously aa they did men waiters, and aseribed the son to the fact that they subcon- vusly felt man's services to be more val girl's The girls, however, appear to. he satisfled with their receipts, Thi hla have that they intend 0 keep them and the waitresses evi- lontly intend to stay. Some of these ris have had no previous experi+ except that ned by observe jance in being served, for, it is sab |that nearly a score of ‘them were anos actresses in Broadway houses, are making more money than | they ver made Jn th the FIVE MEN IN AU AUTO SHOOT | WHEN ORDERED TO HALT — | Policeman Returns | Fire—No One of Throngs at Ninth Avenue and Forty-First Street Hit. When Patrolman John Rackua of | the West 37th Street Station saw @ touring car dash south on Ninth Avec hue at 41st Street last night, he ito the driveway and red the chauffeur to halt. Instead of stop- ping, the driver put on more spe and when the machine swung diet Street, toward Bighth Av two of the five men. pass arose and discharged revolvers direction,of the patrolman. All the shots went wild and The auto- ord Backus returned the fire. mobile continued Ite wild trip. to Kighth Avenue, where it turned south. Witnesses to tho revolver battle tried »dtain the number of the machin, but failed, #0 fast was it driven, and when other cars reached Highth Avenue in chase no trace of the fugitive car could be seen None of the shots fired struck of the crowd that. lined. all cormore and not even a Window was broken, ‘ ar

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