The evening world. Newspaper, May 13, 1919, Page 3

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GHTSHPSBRNG (Club women 12340 TROOPS AND THREE ENERS {included in Number are About 1,000 of 82d All-Ameri- can Division. Of the eight ships due here to-day | swith 12,340 soldiers from France, the | Won Steuben brought 2,940, inotud- fing the 3234 Field Artillery of the 79th and 82d Divisions, wnder com- Mand of Col, Frederick ‘T. These troops were trained at Comp Sherman, to which they are retuin- ing. ‘The fegimental colors were deco- fated with the Croix de Guerre just before sailing by Gen. Bracquette of the 17th French Artillery Corps, who also decorated seventeen of its mem- crs with the medal. The Disting- wished Service Cross has been con- ferred on twenty-one men of the regiment. The 120th Machine, Gun Battalion, Cruse, mrs. wey, Ash Speman cnOE MARS HARRY ao >ESD Frol 18% Artillery Brigade Headquarters and a number of casuals were also on the Von Steuben. Among the casuals ‘was Private Joseph H. Brown, who ‘was captured in a counterattack after thirty men of Co, D, 165th Infantry, had raided a machine gun position tapturing several prisoners, Several of the party were sent back with the prisoners and, thus weakened, the te- mainder could not withstand a Ger- ‘man rush. Brown and Charles Knowlton were exhibited all over Germany in aid of a popular loan. The Von Steuben was stopped in ‘mid-ocean urday and lay to for forty minutes wh) hip Surgeon @man performed a successful opera- ) YOUTH ARRESTED. NEAR WALLSTREET HAD LOADED PISTOL 16-Year-Old, Against Whom| Merchant Coniplained, Also Had, Black Mask. i tion on Sergt, Tony Burnham of ? Yeer, Idaho. ; , Among the gencral officers on the] Oscar B. Fisher is not old enough | ship were Major Gen, Leroy 8. Lyon,| to gtow a beard as yet—only sixteen, Brig. Gen, Adrian 8, Fleming, 158th] he says and looks—but he had a cow- Artillery Brigade, and Brig. Gen-| yoy size loaded revolver in @ handy Logan Feland, who was a Lieutenant Colonel in command of the sth| Pocket when he was arrested in front Marines when the 2d Division checked | of No. 79 Nassau Street at noon to- the German drive on Paris. He has the Croix de Guerre with two palms and three gold stars He also nda the D. S. C. He was accompanied by Lieut. William T. Hutchinson of Free hold, N. J. The Louisiana’ brought the 107th Ammunition Train compiete, 1,137 en- listed men and thirty-four officers; 824 Military Police Company, 107th He also had a black mask in ‘The rest of the story will come out as fast as detectiv ‘On the second floor of No. 79 Nas- | sau Street Max Solomon deals in! haberdashery and Liberty Bonds. He | is the man who complained about the day. another pocket, it is said. can unravel it. ‘EDITH GAVELL’S BODY explained that he was “waiting for somebody.” “Been waiting for six weeks?” in- quired Detective Meringolo, And they took him to the Old Slip Sta- tion, where they sefirched him. in addition to the gufi and mask, he had a skullcap and a memorandum bo which seemed to indicate that he secretary of some kind of boys’ or- ganization in Richmond Hill, L. L. He said he lived thege, at No, 10818 Jerome Avenue, Arraigned in the Centre Street Court, he was held in $50 bail, un- der the Sullivan law. The detectives intend to ask more questions. STARTED FOR ENGLAND ort British and Belgium Troops err wo! Clubwomen Frolic as Shakespeare’s ‘“‘Lady Friends,’’ Making Their Husbands Set Up a Hubbub of Applause Bis OTTS MAN = COONTRY GRawo MOTHER LD, wks. COunre SF. VAWGER IY GRAND cHino -_—$ i SINGLAIR OIL CORPORATION BUYS 32-STORY BUILDING BRON FAMILES STING ON STOORS AWATNEEO Nineteen Ordered Ousted To-| Cross ; Day Defend. Homes—Wait | Devens, has boon wey’. ven. for Something to Happen. sixty-five other . jeases expire May 13, have to _join the strike. The family of Private J: who wired Mayor Hylan fi =. Devons that bis bed ts mig? woul er me, No, 1733 Prospect Brooklyn, unless something was Will not be forced to move until Justice William B lord, and attorneys Tenant's Protect! Was the main support of the A younger brother, who also the service, is at home. filnese mother sapped the financial of the family and when the rent raised from $16 to $20 a refused to pay the increase, about to be evicted. Forty-four tenants and bed a ry Ms op Scanian of ronx Mun! Court to-day. landlords cut thelr proposed creases in half. Seventeen of tenants live at No, 1121 Clinton nue and the others at Nos. 241 Hoffman Street. Eighteen an apartment house at No. 3810 Avenue were unable to effect a Promise and must vacate by day. Arbitration by Capt. C1 Goldsmith of the Mayor's Co Nineteen families, who were to bo evicted from an apartment house at No, 686 Bast 136th Street to-day— where the strikers have recruited their ranks to about 120—are still de- fending their homes. From early morning until after noon to-day the tenants were scattered over the side- walk waiting for something to hap- pen, That something was expected to be City Marshal Mosier, armed with eviction notices. Insk the tenants’ belongings were packed, but not a Man or woman raised a hand to carry out the smallest article. Marshal Mosier did not appear. Re- porters called his headquarters and were told he was “out somewhere.” Even seme of the tenants, weary in waiting, got the same answer, And back of it is a problem in finance, which the tenants knew. They were waiting to see whether Mrs. Rose Rudinsky, the lessee, was willing to pay all the expenses at- tendant on their eviction, If an evicted family moves of its own ac- cord the landlord is out $4, and some- times less. But if the marshal bas to evict the families physically, he hires men, and with his fee and the court costs the landlord is out anywhere from $12 to $15 on each family. So the Bronx families just eat on the doorsteps and waited. Counsel for Mrs, Rudinsky ap- peared before Justice Morris and re- quested him to sign the eviction war- rants, Justice Morris said he would’ not sign one of ‘them until Mrs. Ra- dinsky brought in certificates show- ing that none of the families were dependant on a soldier or sailor. tion of Brooklyn—at No. 331 Street, No. 524 and 540 Street and No. 2044 Bergen The landlords were allowed to from $1 to $: oe tenants given until Friday to pay or meve. Ie Your Garden Sfunted? It won’t grow without phorus. Ph is just sin te at aes te It means Remains of Heroic Nurse to ssc : | Liberty Street’ Property Said. to] "1 would distike to get @ Se ia A __ ~ jamus to 1 you to si Brussels Station. A 1 Producti 4h Walter Seaman Comly, Mra. A. M. Have Brought Close to ba tie caidaetennon + esuta 5 Annual roduction o @| Palmer, Mrs. Axel ©. Ihiseng, Mrs ." . BRUSSELS, Mey 13—Escorted by A Fey ‘ Meredith Blair Lovelace, Miss Minnie $2,500,000. “Go ahead and mandamus,” re — Avekes Bs ora Gee ee Woman’s Forum‘a Snappy I. Wilson and Mrs. William Albert| Another seven-figure realty deal ia| torted the court as Solomon left. roops, the body of + 4 ; “if Lewis, the financial district was reported to-| yr, be are in the string of heroic English nurse murdered by the Entertainment. Miss Elsie Rogers was mistress of |, a ‘ ee a can, Germans, was removed to-day from the ceremonies, She prompted, helped to vA ee P. Day, Pty Pec which No. 636 is one, The trouble city where she faced a firing squad 5s yh make up the actresses and busy |!n the transaction, announced the sale} aroge over the eviction of a tenant in 1915: Several husbands begged off trom| everywhere making the annual show | of ie fay Liberty Tower Bullding | ana the families visited Justice Ra-|90 delicious 0 The heavy casket containing the body, in or = and e os of these clubwomen a sm hing suc- [at No, 55 Liberty Street to the Sinviair ronx Municipal Court. ’ nab eered. Crom Hilla THRLVEOKIG. WHEE Loe ine morning sae inte cess, “The Tivol orchestra gave Its )Oll & Refining corporation of ‘No, 140 sean gt am ‘oon es their |Ground fresh daily in New York, the Germans had rudely interred it, was| thelr wives act in. the “Forum Fol-|servicesdor the show. Bena wey atrike. At present fifty-five families wie placed on a gun carriage. draped in the | lies” at the Rivoli Theatre, Several | K XU PEAL. , Tye property, assessed by the oity | have joined the nineteen strikers and. H. BENNETT BISCUIT CO., N. Yous ; : & , a r en Union Jack of “Haas ey dor bag more than haif a dozen hundred de- ASKS LUXURY TAX RE EAL. ji.) Company st. $5000.00, te sald te —— ——EEE= =e were many bands, Mobile Ordnance Repair Shop and | Fisher boy, and he told it this way: |gijent spectators uncovered. lighted clubwomen also attended and pey ¢ casuals, “That kid has been hanging around| At the railway station ‘the geet their applause blended well with the re More than a thousand. additional ee wpe ervice of the Church of Englgnd was! yocitorous foot and cane ork of the| The Nat WleAmerionn (824) Division tnen are [Here OF and on for six weeks. The lreag by the Rev. Mr. Higahan, who was Nseldaarny and cane we iy eee nye i " first time I saw him was when he |one of the last of Miss Cavell's friends z oe —ltor Boles Iie 4 96 3 ic Me les aa a th Liberty | bid her farowell before she was taken| The occasion was the annual PDF| Sancan sor from Bordeaux, came In and sold me three Liberty | to be executed. The casket then’ matic production of the Woman's jucury t 4 ‘Tho other transports have a total of| ponds—$50 each par, market price. |W# placed on a special train for Form, Everybody was in costume) “The n 10,968 American soldiers, i “There was quite a lot of money|Wwas waiting to carry ‘the body to Eng-|—for it is not possible even to bur- On the Giuseppe Verdi, Marseilles, : Nody could soe | de trae, British nation will bay I iiesque the venerable Will Shake- te i 7 in the safe and anybody could see|iast tribute to its heroine Thursday, a be are 1,890, inclading the Téth Division ; a military, funeral. in Westminister | speare in civies. Mrs. Anna Lazear {he first b ‘Theatrical Unit, it, I noticed the boy hanging around) Apbey. Later burial will take place at/ Anan, costumed in a bright red vel-' merchants Re Talia, Marseilles, 1,796 men,| in cront of the bullding day after day,|Norwich, Miss Cavell’s former home. |~ tle Cot mney ff tN Oe Los the burden ‘has the 2d Army Headquarters, 3084 | warking up and down, Last Thurs-| |sombre black beads with a cross at Field Battalion Signal Corps, 78th he 8"! SMITH VETOES SEVEN BILLS. )i0r incest, made a most fitting Division Employment Detachment, |x there was nobody in the shop phe sith ad | hee ree & mots Bt 5 8 e, . . ™. 1 Portia, er act consisted of calling A. 3984th Casual Company Motor Trans- | but me, and the boy came in, He) Disapproves Means ave ieee fa esate A ~ port Corps, scattered, and 22 casual; said he wanted to buy some six Daniage Ca: Against Sta) { dience © beneficial civ y fice! shirts, and I showed him some, but) ALBANY, May more | the audience to some beneficial civic a hae y » Gov. Smith | Measures proposed by the Woman's ‘The Antonia Lopez, Bordeaux, 1,174,| he didn't seem interested, He kept| vetoes were announced by Gov. Smith 0 { 6 SALON ope OU, in| nis hand in his pocket all the time|to-day, six of them on bills author-|Forum. Mrs. Harry W. Cortin, as ' ae espacial casual companion, 628) izing the Court of Claims hear Desdemona, sported a Jady-in-watt Infantry Headquarters and 2d Bat-|and I was worried damage cases against the State. Three | ing hat 0 a rose-colored, satin- tulion Medical Detachment “Saturday he entered the building (> Kee Aelita oe Maehh eh aasinesa | Eas pe r : Mein ms 3 a 7 0 o ec is we wed on ¢ a | embroidered, flowered robe real lace ‘The Espagne, Havre, has 317 cas-|and walked up and down the ball| iog0at have been sustained during | reatooned itself about her bodie als, and the Pesaro, Marseilles, 1,407, | outside my shop. But there were|ing Mohawk River floods of 1918 | a te | Juding the 153d Field Artillery Bri- veg Oe s And in pranced Ophelia, known in Anclu fee a nar id Artillery Bri-| other customers in the place and the | Another was to recover for injury | os qe ee ila VAlectae ado Hoadavsr tere. asucl ocleers” | boy went away. When I saw him|atieged to have been sustained | Prvite Ne) 08 f Diem Ne , : 0 eames again this morning I called up the|through the administration of impure Goldie. She wore a Jewel gown o ° police.” | vaccine by a physician in the empl gray silk, flowing yellow curls (hired POOR of the State. he others were in s ikematiee r ges TEMPORARY OFFICERS When detectives reached the connection with Btate contracts, one th the sap i nd, a faints My hd f 2 - a. " for plumbing in t capitol and ¢ ilies held in her right hand, and 4 sau Street address the boy was er other on account of highway con-! crown of petite rosebuds graced he ‘} c s nh post. @ struction, “ . $ i} | wing sing 1 lilting melody about Thousands Who Entered Service| | Matteawan Neat ce J pala Ja i eplace: whose husband is Marcus 3 arks. | for War Period to Be Replaced = | Husband Marks applauded tremen- From Reserve List. | dously at her entrance. An appreciative WASHINGTON, May 13.—All_ tem-| \smile greeted this outburst on his | porary officers who entered the navy rat for the war period only will be released Mrs, Stanley Lyman Otis, Lady ; within the next few weeks, Acting Sec- | lgrenvain: lentesed ches Pal neyy i retary Roosevelt announced to-day. | several vital lines, Said L j There are more than 1,000 officers in! HA a sa nane epee sere | ‘this status and they will be replaced by ‘ acbeth: fo Arabian. Daria reserve officers who are accepting tem | will sweeten these lily hands o min 4 porary commissions with the agreement | | Miss Helen Varick Boswell, as Kath- to reman in the service until six months \e& \arine the Shrew, was the star of the after peace 1s declaréd : ——— | show. Incidentally, Miss Boswell Ci wrote all the snappy dialogue of th ALY a eng ar, voi ¢ kit wh cod e ’ HIGHLAND CASTLE, City Hall Park, May 13. burlesque of Shakesp: M . HIE mendacity of the press of th tention to-day addressed to His Grace the but y pS Ss a | never, never has His Monor'’s Court asked that the Faugh-2-Ballagh | "Oh, How I Hate to Got ( t tees "#* w! Guard be ordered out ffrom Traffic Stations to clear the way of the royal | Mort era jer automobile across Manhattan Bridge from Bushwick Manor. tay ie Degen ere (Much ap a “These lying articles,” said His Honor's letter, “destroy discipline | Herm and encourage vicious violators of traffic regulations to continue their sire John | Rancid SoWAert ae disregard for life and property by violating the rules and regulations |y tue jsva at ereniei ) ar Qrore. surnamed Whalen, first lord of the privy chamber, Was |organdy frock, bright red stocking ‘Joyous— summoned to His Honor’s side black ankle-ties and a bonnet that 5 mee bal the wentill a A lively chap and merry wit, my lord Grover soon dispelled the [aever ped Aya Beare te ; ‘ TRL yoo bad ee ae great” man’s grouchissimo profundo, entertaining him with a State. [forth the frst big Toney or te if of the world’s greatest hotel at ment given to the scriveners by John, the Congressman Delaney, of dignity,” laughed Mrs Yawser your command, even then you Brooklyn-on-Gowanus in the Duchy de McCooey joe aes Seen ene EN couldn't conjure @ more ex- “I desire,” wrote the Congressman, “to take exception to com: |° Mile. Alma C 1, soprano, algo 1 we OSoy DESSERT plaints that the returning 47th Regiment of His Honor’s troops was not |a,member of the uruin, sane the Made in « fow minutes—e different way welcomed yesterday by His Honor, His Honor was there, kid, greeted | veils, Isabel Thorpe sang “il fe AW pd the men on their arrival, gave them a dinner at the Astor and presented Bacio” Titania, who is Mrs Arthur we ie tae the regiment with a silk flag.” pee adc vobete ye daly RIE At eral meals. each package, HOLLAND RORK CoMPANT Mich. leaving the porte fedora calculated to ereate envy in f y and he dashed off a lette Duke of Inright, declaring that never, His Grace the Duke of Inright went buggy riding in his automobile Royal Constabulary at 1,12 to the tick, His e Realm occupied His Honor's at- , directed to the Populace w ochere the Hea are of the jrace wore a saucy green the breast of younger knights, Hel i und the m on her head, sta Wires Its 000. ental value Is approximately $2 0 an A few days ago the United Steel Cor- poration bought through Mr. Day the day se $5,000,000 B pire ‘Building. I does a a Nicaragua Warned by Us. WASHINGTON, May Chamorro of Nicaragua has that J At | against attemy D0 o sacd | Rica, This known to-day after le action and | publication of despatches from San Jase may have speedy relief from | that hostile forces crossed the ‘of those unwise taxes." Made the American Way | De morning, just after the silver rays of the Sun have scattered the mists of night, car-load after car-load of fresh milk is delivered at “Candy Headquarters” — rich, creamy milk, fresh from the cows. We use it to make our milk-chocolate. We add to this milk the best quality of smooth chocolate and great quantities of big, fresh roasted, crispy almonds. With the aid of the most modern, up-to- date machinery we mould the milk, choco- late and almonds into the finest Almond Bars in the world. The taste of one makes you want another—and they are Made the American Way UERBACH ALMOND BARS sold from Maine to California Sc and 10¢ There's an Auerbach Candy for every occasion “ABC Blocks’’ “Tewn Talks” ‘Happy Hear’ D. AUERBACH & SONS Finest Chocolates, Breakfast Cocoa, Candice and Specialties Eleventh Avenue, 46th to 47th Street, New York “Candy Headquarters” brought close to the latter figure. 13.—President been warned by the American Government ing any invasion of Coste ranklin Simon 3 Co Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts. Warm, Roomy and Weightless Misses’ Polo Cloth Coats Well Deserve Their Vogue OLO Cloth Coats have all the fea © tures of top coatrper- * fection. — warm weightless, roomy but / not bulky, and comfort ” with. style. The models are. of” especial interest as they reveal belts and pockets, larRe convert- ible collars and wide cuffs that are seldom seen in the mannish type of top coat. Buffs and grays are the accepted shades of polo cloth, and as for lengths there are short coats reaching just below the hips, or longer coats, as pictured. | | | — “re ere? f Sizes 14 to 20 years, Polo Cloth Coat ° 4350 39.50 to 79.50 MISSES' COAT SHOP. Second Floor There is no tex on Women's and Misses’ J Coats, Wraps, Gowns, Dresses, Suits, and — many of the major items of feminine apparel,

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