The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1919, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

: } | | “WAN DYING AFTER » im Greenpoint Hospital as the result {HERO MEDAL TO BE ASKED FOR LITTLE GIRL WHO SAVED BLUE Ti OE MRS iSO MYSTERIOUS BLAST | SM"NSN FORDAOMMS “ARRIVE AS PART OF -GETS DIVORCE FROM (NODE FREGH Samuel Lucksavage Fatally Burned in Explosion While Unloading “Machine.” His body burned from the waist to the neck, Samuel Lucksavage, twenty-five, a truck driver, is dying of a mysterious explosion to-day on &® freight car in the yard of the East- em District Terminal Company at North Bighth Street and Kent Ave- mué, on the East River front in Wittiamsburg. Lacksavage, who lives with his wife and two babies at No. 203 Ten Byck Strebt, Williamsburg, ts em- ployed by Harden Brothers’ Truck- tag Company. His truck was ordered to the East River yards to get a machine consigned to the Rushmore Paper Company, Meeker Avenue and Newtown Creek, Williamsburg. ‘The freight superintendent sent two yardmen, Martin Quinn and William Owens, to help the driver, and the truck was backed up to 4 car 200 feet from the river. Quinn and Owens re- mained on the truck while Lucksav- age climbed into the freight car and began unwinding a cable that held a machine in place. ‘There was an explosion and the river was instantly a mass of flames Quinn and Owens, when they had re- covered from the shock, placed him on the ground and by the use of horse blankets extinguished the flames. Federal officers and inspectors of the Bureau of Combustibles are re- ported..to have declared there was gun-@ son on the car, They are said to ha\ carried material from the ma- chine .o the ground and touched a Tmetch to it. It is reported to have burst into flames. At the office of the Rushmore Paper Company it was said the company was expecting a cutting-and-washing machine from Toledo, The Rushmore people could not understand, they said, why there should be explosives in or ayound a machine of that character or gay other machine used in paper- mg’ ing. LADY DIANA MANNERS WEDDED TO GRENADIER Thousands, Mostly Women, Throng About London Church to Cheer Bride. LONDON, June 2--Lady Diana Manners, the best-known beauty in British society, was married in St Margaret's, Westminster, this after- noon to Lieut. Alfred Duff Gordon of the Grenadier Guari The ceremony attracted tremendous public interest and special policemen regulated the enormous crowds out- side the church, Thousands, women predominating, waited hours to cheer e, and to inspect her wedding ich was of Boticelli white Ussue. The bride wore « coronet of pearls. The honeymoon will be spent at Lord Grimthorpe's residence in Naples, ‘the couple returning later to the ducal domain of Lieut Duft Gordon, Belvoir Castle, The bridegroom is a cousin of Prince Arthur of Connaught GOVERNOR PAYS SURPRISE VISIT TO NEW P, S, BOARD Tammany Friends Flock to Lafa- yette Street Offices on Learnin,, Mr. Smith Is There, Unannounced and unexpected, (ov. Smith to-day paid a visit to the of ice of his newly created Public Ser ‘ce Conmnission at 49 Lafayette Street. ‘Uhis is the first time in the history of the Public Service Commission that @ Gov- ernor has found time to call upon his oppointees and sue how they are get- ting along. ‘The Governor was on his way by motor from Good Ground, L. I., to Albany, when tt occurred to him to greet Commissioners Noam and De laney, Commissioner Nixon offered his chief the use of one of the empty offices, that used by former Chairman Ordway Through the numerous underground channels of Tammany Hall friends of the Chief Exeoutive tearned he was in town and began to flock to the Public Service building, As a result, there was 4 steady stream of visitors. <> JURY PLEADS FOR HIM. Janit Set Gasol Afire, © Dea Every mentber of the jury which convieted Patrick Kennedy, a bar- tender at Eighth Avenue and 117th Street, of manslaughter in the second degree, appealed to Justice Vernon M. Davis to-day for a lenient sentence Kennedy is said to have caused the death of William Jones, @ negro jan- tor of No. 315 West 116th” Street, Sept. 7 Mast, by throwing ine on him and setting him afire, The jury said it convinced Kennedy’ did not mean to injure Jones, but to frighten him. Sentence of from one ~<o four years in prison was imposed, Bravery Shown by Sarah Mehl, Twelve, Wins Admiration of Police. Police of the 17th Precinct, Hous- ton and Sheriff Streets, plan to ask & Carnegie hero’ medal for Sarah Mehl, twelve, who saved Rose Linsky, eight, from drowning in the East River. To-day Sarah is the heroine of Public School No. 15, near Avenue D and Fourth Street. The police say her act was especially noteworthy because she is frail for her age. Seven girls were playing on the Eighth Street dock -when Sarah and Dora Linsky, cousins, went down a ladder to a raft. Rose tried to fol- fow, buf fell, striking the raft with her hip, The other girls screamed and ran, but Sarah remained cool and, reaching down into the greasy water, pulled the little girl out. She grasped Rose yy the hair, held on and made the other girls come back and help pull her out of the water. Sarah lives at No. 278 East Sev- enth Street., Rose lives at No, 420 Kast Eighth Street, and is ill at her home as a result of her fall. NO NATION-WIDE STRIKE OF TELEGRAPHERS T0-DAY President Konenkamp Says Atlanta Trouble Is Entirely Local Thus Far. WASHINGTON, June 2.—Arrtving in ing, President 8S. J, Konenkamp of the Commercial Telegraphers' Union of America, silenced talk of a nation-wide walkout of wire workers to-day as a re- sult of the discharge of 100 Atlanta telephone workers. “The Atlanta situation a local one,” said Mr. Konenkamp. “While we will call out all our wire workers in that city if the girls are not reinstated to-day, and while the situation tl may be the prelude of the bigger strike pending, the date for that bigger strike has not | yet been set.” of Dozen Girl ATLANTA Ga., June 2.—A strike of telephone ‘und telegraph operators here appeared early to-day‘to hinge on the question of reinstatement of: less than a dozen telephone girls. ‘The strike would go into effect jate this after- noon, ‘The operntors were discharged for joining the Commercial Teleg- raphers' Union of America, according to their leaders, while the company | asserts that inefficiency and not union affiliations was the cause of the di missal ‘of the employees. Chieage Labor D Rem CHICAGO, June 2—Resolutions de- manding removal of Postmaster General Burleson because of “autocratic man- agement,” were forwarded to President Wilson mittee of the Chicago Federation of Labor. Eee eee Z sticks Per Bird, Is Li . (Special to The Bvening World) SAYVILLE, L. L, June 2—Capt. John Hodge suffered a severe bidw| this morning when Bedpost, his famous | four-legged cockerel, was found dead in his stall, Out of Bedpost, the only four-legged | chick ever seen in Sayville, the Captain! |had hoped to found a breed of four |leggers equivalent to four broilers per | chick, | Capt. Hodge's next venture will be to! feed sawdust mixture to a selected u flock of Khode Island Reds with idea of getting chic! e with wooden legs. MAYFLOWER ORANGEADE SPARKLING GINGE trom: t R ALE 10,361 DUE TO-DAY Twenty- Eight Thou Thousand Sol- diers to Be Landed Here in Next Four Days. yo The transport Canada of the Fabre Line, from Marseilles May 15, ar- rived fo-day five days overdue and docked at Pier 31, South Brooklyn The delay was caused by a harbor strike at Oran, Algeria, which tied up the transport for five days. The Canada carried 1,192 soldiers, all members of hospital units or cas- uals. They were in command of Col. Ernest L. Isabell, former commander of the 102d Infantry, Second Division. It was reforted on the sitip that somebody at Oram sent the Colonel & case of Sauterne which he never received because it was intercepted by quick acting privates. Under the cot of one private who was in a state of coma for forty-eight hours after WEALTHY CHEMIST Detective Tells Tells of Fi Finding Au-| | burn-Haired Woman in Raid at Hotel. Secret proceedings which have been going on for several weeks be- fore a referee to-day terminated in a divorcee for Mrs,’ Emilie D, Lee Herreshoft of No, 375 West End Ave- nue from John B. Francis Merre- shoff, chemist, and son of Charles ¥. Herreshoff, famous builder of yachts. Although married since 1882, Mra. Herreshoff insisted upon pressing her action and Supreme Court Justice Giegerich was asked to sign a final decree in her favor. Mr. Herreshoff put in a defense, but the referee, J. Sidney Bernstein, decided against | him, , An aubyrn-haired woman of forty, described by detectives who found her and Convent Avenue "Girl Who Was Willed To Her Stepmother Goes To Real Mother, Happy ty Goodwin Is Sorry to Leave Her Convent anes but Will Like Being a Farmerette-: Betty Goodwin, the nine-and-a-half- year-old girl who was willed to he stepmother by her father, returns to her real mother, Mrs. Reynold Decker of Maybrook, Orange County, on May 10, in accordance with an order signed by Supreme Court Jus- tice Whitaker. The little girl had her last party! with her schoolmates yesterday a the Sacred Heart Convent, 138d Streo: She had charge of one of the charity bazaars on the convent grounds, and her best p: -onn wete her grandmother, Mrs. Bessie Goodwin, and her aunts, who Jive at No. 820 Central Park West. Mrs. Decker was invited by her daughter to attend the affair, but she fund it impossible to come from Maybrook. ‘I'm glad and I'm sad,” said Betty to her grandmother, with whom she live dfor five roan beppy to be ly to ‘my mother, Dut T feel sorry because | OLD ENGLISH DOCK ao reeves tare ty “Dering he fit trp tflal but three tentative selected. This case is sald to first of its kind im tions, The asked by the prosecutor if) ever read sea tales; if they opposed to capital puni: whether they, reallaed that tHe | : fendants, if onvicted, ou x hanged from the roof-eT the house. Accordime to the did. adopted from the English, Cat dersen and his son, if found may be executed from a facing the historic statue of Hale in City Ho'l Park. In the Kessler case, many ago, however, AT MURDER TRIAL DF FATHER AND SON Prtepective Jrdel Jurors Told Men Can Be Hanged From Court- House Roof if Guilty. + Ani Seated behind a three-foot mahog- any rail In an Old English style dock in the Federal District Court to-day Adolph Cornelius Peder- pine lawyers for the defend: jey Field, Malone~ and w. McDonald. The Governm bye s are Benjamin A. Mi . Lawrence are i of the crew. mal’ leged Ped a and his son Adolph” pei S the seaman, Hansen, to allow the crew to sa were Capt sen and his son Adolph, skipper and nate, respectively of the bark Puako. The captain and mate are charged with the myirder of Axel Hansen, a sailor, in 1918, Judge Hough ordered the old Revolutionary dock oo: structed for this trial in order to con- form with the atmosphere of the in- leaving Oran six empty bottles that | With the chemist in an uptown hotel had contained Sauterne were found, 8% “very good looking,” was blamed and there! is a suspicion that this >Y Mrs. Herreshoff, Mr. Herreshoff young man knows something about! @ few months under seventy. The the disappearance of the Colonel's re- | Couple have three grown children, one " treshment. of whom, Mrs. Sarah Lathrop Mas- |. RC. Miles of Salem, Ore. H. D.| 444 was divorced by her husband a Washington from Montreal this morn- | "| G9th Regiment and one tardy soldier to-day by the executive com- | | FOUR-LEGGED CHICKEN DEAD | 'Marshall of Whittier, Cal, Given | Johnson of Le Grande, Iowa, and Miss Belle Meade of Minneapo! Quakers, who had conscientious scruples against war but volunteered | to do their bit behind the lines, re- turned after twenty months in France. They said they found the soldiers im- | variably courteous and respectful of | their religious scruples. Sergt. Alexander Wooloott, former dramatic critic of the Times, and during the war a member of the staff of the Stars and Stripes, the army newspaper, came home on the Canada. With him was Private: H. W. Roft \of San Franeisco, who was until re- cently editor of the Stars and Stripes. Mrs. Herbert Corey, wifevof the war correspondent, also returned on the Canada. She was in Paris through- out the war and from the time the first of our men appeared there up to a fow weeks ago she was the guide for the Soldiers and Sailors’ Club excursions to Versailles. Mrs. Corey conducted more than 7,000 sol- diers on the sightseeing trip between Paris and Versaille: In these times of arrival of French | brides Lieut. John Latimer of Chi- cago, discharged in France but for- merly of the 109th Infantry, 2th Divi- sion, furnished a change by coming jover on the Canada to marry an American girl and take her back to France. Lieut, Latimer is an expert in fac- tory construction and operation. He was discharged in France in order that he might go into the service of the French Government in establish- ing a factory which is urgently need- | ed, He will sail for France from New | | York on June 15, In the interval he 19 | scheduled to marry Arel Agan of No.| 431 Barry Street, Chicago, straighten ‘out the passport problem for himself | and his wife, buy machinery for the proposed factory and obtain a set of| | plans for more factories, | Toto, a French poodle, the mascot of | Company F,-5th Field Artillery, First | Division, wearing stripes for wounds and gas suffered in the attack on Can- tigny in May, 1918, came ashore in the custody of his owner, Sergeant R. Al- len of Rochester. Six transports, with a total of 10,361 American soldiers, were due to-day, jthe first of a fleet scheduled during | the first four days of the week to bring home 28,000 troops. The Graf Waldersee, from Brest, with 4,387 army personnel, snd the Canada were the first to dock. One belated member of the old ‘of Gen. O'Ryan's 27th Division were among the 4,337 arrivals on the Grat Waldersee. They were Corpl. “Bill” |Thompson of Co. K of the 69th, No. 229 Clinton Street, Brooklyn, and August Bressler of No. 445 West 13th | Street. ‘The big show aboard the Graf Wal- dersee was the 319th Infantry of the Blue Ridge Division, recruited in and around Pittyburgh and consisting of '99 officers and 3,154 men, commanded by Col. W. 8. Sinclair at Galveston, ‘Texas. | ‘The only New Yorker in the regi- ment is the band leader, Lieut. Frank | Tresselt of Harlem. When the band) wasn't “banding” it was carrying | messages. Tresselt and several of his | boys were wounded while thus en- gaged, Sixteen telephone girls came home on the Graf Waldersee from A. E. F. exchanges at St. Nazaire, Brest and, Bordeaux. The 319th Infantry went 'to Camp Dix and the 142d struck out \for Camp Upton. | SCHMOLL ESTATE $1,309,264. | Widow Bequeathed $825,821, B | | Botel Astor, where he met the co- \signature “M. F. few years ago in White Piains, ‘The story of the raid by which de-! teotives for Mrs. Herreshoff obtained jovidence against her husband was re- lated to the referee by George E. Wil- sen, a detective. After waiting all | day in front of No. 26 Broad Street, | where the chemist has an office, Wil- sen told the referee, Herreshoff came out with a valise and went to the ‘espondent. “We followed the couple,” Wilsen testified, “and they went to the Hotel Navarre. One of the men knocked at ‘the door of the suite and in reply toa question from Mr. Herreshoff, said he was the engineer and wanted to fix a leak Im the bathroom. We were then }admitted under protest. “When we reached the bedroom we found the auburn-haired woman and Mr. Herreshoff. holding her hands to her face and recognize her. ‘The register of the hotel was pro- duced before the referee and Miss Helen Erskine, Social Secretary to Mrs. Herreshoff, testified that the Felton and wife, many years she had been separated trom her husband, and while both End Avenue, they were never in each other's company, She did not ask for alfmony, saying her husband has been payi the separation and that a settlement insuring her alimony in the future had been arranged. Herreshoff is reputed to be several times a millionaire. He was born at Bristol, R. L., the home of his father and the birthplace also of his famous brother, Capt. Nat Herreshoff, the yachtsman. ee ‘OHIO (ORY) WIFE CAUSES HUBBY'S ARREST TO SAVE | FAMILY’S ‘PRIVATE STOCK’ After Drought and She Calls Police. CLEVELAND, O,, June 2.—Only two men were arrested for intoxi- cation on the first Saturday night since Ohio went dry. One of the men was arrested after his wife asked the police to “lock him up” before he disposed of all taeir “private stock.” One week,ago Saturday night 214 persons were arrested charged with intoxication. Police records show that only six persons were brought before the “sunrise court" since saloons were closed here a week ago. FIRST OF PACIFIC FLEET, CRUISER CHICAGO, ARRIVES Three Other Warships Coming in Command of Rear Admiral Wood, ‘The United States cruiser Chicago, the first of four ships of the Pacific fleet which will visit New York, arrived last night and is anchored in the North River off %th Street. The Denver, ‘Tacoma and Cleveland will arrive some- time to-day or to-morrow Rear Admiral Spencer 8. Wood is in command and on board the Chicago ‘The training ship Granite State fired seventeen guns this morning in honor of the rear-admiral. ‘The ships will le off the 9th Street landing and visitors will be permitted aboard from 3 to 5 p. m. daily and from 1 to § p m. Saturday during the fleet's stay in New York. ‘The Chicago is the oldest ship of the navy In commission, except the despatch Boat Dolphin, | She was put in com | te Three Children, ‘The will of Edward Schmoll, special | ;Partner in the firm of Schmoll, Fiis | Co., No. 30 Spruce Street, who die 1917, was filed in the Sur- Dee. 21 roga! Court to- He leaves an cetate of $1,309,264 of which $896880 Ie eft to hie widum, Mra. who resides at) Emma Schmoll, Bri ‘The remainder of the| entate ie divided equally between his) sons, Armand and daukhter Therese, Robert and his! days. |Seerees was reported, as one of Secretary Whit ve “White Squadron,” the firet tes snips of the reorganized navy. ‘The other cruisers are about fiftesn years oid, fet ail d HEAT KILLS FIVE IN CHICAGO. GHIOAGO, June dead as a result of the heat wave which has beld Chicago in its grip for two A maximum temperature of ; She insisted upon | hiding her features so we could not) lived several blocks apart on West! her $18,000 a year since: He Runs Wild First Saturday Night | leaving my girl chums at senoul, You know, grandma, that although | Was two years old when I left mamma, I remember everything perfectly. I mber how I used io little ring against my teoth—the first ring I ever had—and mamma used to try to make me atop it, ‘Then I know that papa wan:ed jme to go to mamma, and I'm happy use Iam going to do just waat he wanted me to do. I shall try to make mamma very happy. I'd like to be a farmerette.” Mrs. Decker lives on a farm with her second husband. She was mar- ried to him a short while after her first husband, John Goodwin, divorced her at Newburgh. “Although my son married a second time,” said Mrs. Goodwin yesterday, “he loved his first wife to the last, and while he got a divorce from he! he felt that after all she was not to blame and was living happily witn her second husband. It was his de. sire that Betty should go to her SUSPECT ACCUSED OF SETTING FIRES NEAR HYLAN HOME anenialil Alleged Firebug Caught After a toh ee or hte | Thi S A . Herreshoff, whom had i |gtMr. Herreshott, whom she. had irteen Suspicious Blazes Mrs. Herreshoff testified that \for in Brooklyn. ‘The arrest early of an alleged firebug to-day brought relief to the police of the Witson Street Station | in Williamsburg, to the members of the seven truck companies in the district, to the deputy fire marshals, and to scores of detectives who had been on the jump for two weeks be- cause of incendiary fires. ‘There have been thirteen suspicious fires in : » precinct during that time, some of them only a few blocks from Mayor Hylan's home in Bushwick Ieee: The Fire Marshal sent out numer- ous deputies to co-operate with the ee under Capt. Jacob Van Wag- ner, who assigned thirty extra men to the job, All firemen in the pre- cinct were ordered to sleep in their mothe? in the event that anything happened to me. “Two weeks before John—my son took his life in the homé where he and Mrs, Helena Goodwin, his second wife, lived, he came to me and said he was unhappy for several reasons, and asked me to see that Betty went back to her mother. He left Betty two-thirds of his property in his wil and also gave her to his second wife, T do not bajieve he knew exactly what he was doing at the time he took his life, for he had financial worries t upset him, “Mrs, Decker and I are on the very ago she spent a night with uw home. When | ccedings I informed both Mra, Decker | Regular Price $15. and my son's widow that I would be! Price 815.00 |neutral, and it was left to the court ; |to decide where Betty should pass H Sale Price |the rest of her girlhood, I shall al- Silk Sweaters 12. 00 ways visit her.” Regular Price $35.00 clothes. A special squad of dates. Capes Sale Price 65.00 ives was assigned to trail, suspicious | ; parece Regular Price $125.00 Three fires yaeter occurred metto Street. Last midnight Julius J. Graver, who has a saloon at No. 369 Wilson Avenue, heard a noise in his cellar, He found burning paper poilce. The prisoner said he was Sydney Besthoff of No, 1405 Greene Avenue. The police say he admitted setting the three fires yesterday, and when asked about the others replied, “t don't remember, bat I guess 1 did.” ESpincentne Sha ARTIST BECOMES BRIDE. Whipple and Leon R. Whipple Taken by Justice Weeks. Margaret Hubbard Whipr n artist their acknowledgments to a contract of marriage entered into “in ac with the provisions of subdivision 4 section 11 of the Domestic Relations Law.” It was stated that the contracting par- ties, despite their similar surnames, were not relate Come in and see this OSTERMOOR At our Big, Modern Excellent value in tresses. “Built— not stuffed’’ genuine Ostermoor mat- Absolutely guarantees your healthful sleep-comfort. Full size—6 ft. 3 in. long, 4 ft. 6 in. wide. construction. “Built, not stuffed,” Germ-proof, dust-proof, vermin- in layer-wise proof, water-proof. Permanently elastic. Cannot bag, sag, or lump. Never needs sla Nia Everlasting satisfaction. Other Sizes and Styles to Suit Every Requirement and Purse The mattress shown many bargains offered mattresses, cushions, above is only one of the in high-grade Ostermoor springs and bedsteads. Don’t buy a mattress until you visit our big show- rooms and see the very ments at just the price style to suit your require- you want topay. Illus- trated Book free, also tick samples. OSTERMOOR 114 Elizabeth St. (Near Grand St. 3rd Ave. Telephone Showrooms extend through the block to 138 Bowery, acljoining Bowery Savi Ostermoor Mattresses are alse & COMPANY “L" Station), New York Ne. 4 Spring sold by good stores evers where, di around Evergreen Avenue and Pai-| and @ strange man and called the| BY CONTRACT MARRIAGE, Acknowledgements of Margaret H. | residing at No. 18 Bank Street, to-day | became the wife of Leon R. Whipple, | Who is connected with the Civil Liberties | Bureau, of the same address, Supreme | | Court Justice Bartow 8. Weeks took CLEARANCE SALE Dresses Sale Price 35,00 & 65.00 Regular Prices $65.00, $78.00, $116.00, $125.00. ¥ Sale Price 5.00 | Woolen Sweaters Sale Price 26.00” Regular Prices $85.00 and $43.00 FIFTH-AVENUE AT45"ST. Blouses (Jespersen Process) Will Manufacture New Newsprint Froih rf , Old Newspapers. Preliminary y Offering of 200,000 Shares. The Newsprint Reclaiming Corporation, organised under the laws of the State of Delaware, controls the only patented process for the removal of ink from old newspapers. This company has been organized to engage in the manufacture , of newsprint from old newspapers, One Class of Stock STOCK NOW BEING TRADED IN ON THE NEW YORK CURB. ORDER THROUGH YOUR OWN BROKER. Large Profit—Cost One- Third Less to Manufacture , 7 ‘The present price of newsprint is $80 to $100 per ton, ace cording to contract, credit, size of order, ete. At 200 the profit per ton by the Jespersen process is $45. A Le cpelppeed ze working 500 days can produce 30,000 tons, making jit of $1,350,000, ‘The mill will be practically next door to the publisher, the raw material (old newspapers) of ual growth far in excess of the requirements, coming to the mill more than half manufac- we tured, it were, out of its own vy the cost, therefore ” due to these economies, no heavy fi charges, ete., is Cr Ol duced by sbost two-thirds, as against that of wood pulp and sulphite. Modern Hundred-Ton Mill for i New York City. The procdeds of the issue will be used to construct 4 modern, reinforced concrete hundred-ton mill in New York City (built in a few months). Mamiioey is all roots. Mill should be in full operation before the end of the year. e Company ‘ purposes subsequently to build Wisy ten mills in Boston, Chi- « go and Philadelphia, giving a total production of 250 tons per © day, and with $45 « ton it, earnings of over $3,000,000 per annum, which earnings will be equal to 6 per cent. on a 4 $50,000,000 investment. os Tested and Proved. ‘The test of the product was first made on the presses of the New York Morning Telegraph, with four rolls of mee Reclaimed Paper, made at Holyoke, Mass., in th the American Writing Paper Company, in June, 19) Cm Tee second practical test was made on June 18, 1918, when » run was made by the New York Times from eight tons of Jespersen Paper, made at the Tidewater Mill of the New York Times in Brooklyn. Both runs were entirely satie- fact eer THE DIRECTORS. 410N. CHAS, H. INNIS, Attorney, Boston, Mass. FREMONT W. SPICER, Vice Pres. and Sec, “Fourth Estate,” New York City, Formerly with the International Paper Co, P. A. O'FARRELL, New York City. THOS, JESPERSEN, Chemist and Inventor, Wisconsin. GWYNNE T. SHEPPERD, Pres. Shepperd Mfg. Co., Philadelphia, Pa. DONALD C, MACDONALD, Publisher Boston Financial News, Boston, Mass. NEWSPRINT RECLAIMING CORPORATION r 612 Fifth Ave.

Other pages from this issue: