The evening world. Newspaper, June 19, 1919, Page 3

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pasa ‘ ae ae ORGANIZED LABOR VOTES TO DEFY COURT ORDERS AND ASSAILS JUDICIARY eatimestlipictaies Federation Condemns “Usur- pation of Legislative and Executive Powers.” FOR IMMIGRATION BAN | Radicals Who Would Admit Aliens Wholesale Beaten in Convention, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June 19.— The American Federation of Labor in @ resolution adopted at its convention here to-day, condemning what were declared tobe “usurpationmby the judi- clary” of the Government's legislative and executive powers, recouimended, that organized labor should disregard injunctional decrees of courts, on the Sround that such decrees violated rights guaranteed under tho Consti- tution. ‘The memorial demanded that Judges who exceeded their authority should be promptly impeached, It asserted that “our courts and judges have been disregarding the rights of the people and exercising powers more tyrannical than any assumed by the most tyrannical despot ever known to history.” The courts were described as “a sinister influence which is sapping the life from our institutions and creating the worst sort of an auto- eracy.” A recc~imendation presented by the Federation's Executive Council was adopted, as part of the resolution, recommending that the Supzeme Courts of the States and thé United States have some of their powers taken away f.om them and be reor- ganized. The Federation also adopted a res- olution favoring the restriction of im- migration during the reconstruction period. In @ debate continuing longer than two hours the radical element bitterly assailed the idea, while the conserv- atives, led by Secretary Frank Mor- rivon, insisted It was necessary as a means 6f protecting labor from ex- ploitation by vested interests.” Max Gorenstein of New York, a delegate of the Garment Workers’ Union, declared he did not think it was necessary as a measure to pre- vent unemployment. The only way to relieve unemployment, he said was to obtain universal adoption of a 44-hour week. James Duncan, of Seattle, onp of the radical leaders, also protested against the adoption of the resolu- tion, declaring: “If you put this over we will start @ counter movement in understand that women about to bear children in Russia are given a six weeks’ vacation. If that is true, I am for Bolshevism.” Hoots and jeers greeted this re- mark. Duncan continued by mentioning Ireland and asked if the convention desired to put up the bars to Irish brothers “in case anything blows up in Ireland and political refugees are looking for a haven.” Beoretary Morrison referred to @& speech delivered by Elbert H. Gary. chairman of the United States Steel Corporation, in which the latter was quoted as ‘saying that “There are 4,000,000 Chinamen we can get to do agricultural work.” “These people,” the Secretary con- tinued, “wanted to bring these China- men here to work in the fields for the purpose of driving farm workers to other industries and cheaper labor. Don't be fooled. You are going to face unemployment here and if you are wise you will exert every effort to stop immigration for a limited time to give workers, soldiers and sailors an opportunity to get employ- ment.’ ~~. 6.0. P. QUITS FIGHT TO SPLIT LABOR ON LEAGUE OF NATIONS Evening World Exposure Stops Open Bombardment of Delegates by President's Enenpies. By Freder’ck lawrence. fecal Stall Commmponit of The Ere. ning Word.) ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. June 18.— The Evening World's exposure yes- terday of the conspiracy engineered epublican politicians foment ition to the indorsement of the e of Nations covenant in the r Federation of Labor con- vention had the effect of completely stopping the open activities of dele- gates who were opposing the indorse- ment for political reasons, Open wire Pulling by politicians came to a sud- den halt very soon after The Evening World's exposure becime known among the dele Delegates who are strong support- ers of the League circulated copies of The Evening World among men who had shown their susceptibility to par- tisan politica! influence, and asked the questicn, “Are you one of the ington-owned politicians to whom The Evening World refers? Are you go- ing to take orders from aati-Woodrow Wilson United States Senators as to ‘ ew your vote shall be cast as an Seattle. 1) SCULPTOR ZNM' CONGENAL REN COSTS HIM A WIE Story of a Cottage, Woman and a Trunk Win Divorce for Artist’s Mate. Justice L, A. Giegerich signed an interlécutory decree of divorcee to- day against Bruno Louis Zimm, well known sculptor of Fort Lee, N. J. Zimm came into prominence some years ago in a raid on Emma Gold- man's headquarters, when he, took exception to the action of the police. The testimony upon which the di- vorce was granted was furnished by Mrs, Veenie Minor Meade of Wood- stock, N. Y., who is a sister of Mrs. Roddie Minor Zimm of No. 130°West Fifteenth Street, wife of the sculptor. Both women are artists and wore their hair bobbed a la Greenwich Village. , Mrs. Meade said’ her brother-In- law had fixed up a cottage at Wood- stock and when sh asked him if he was going to live there with his wife he replied: “Not by any means. I am bringing the most congenial woman in all the world here, In fact her trunk ar- rives this afgernoon and she should arrive about that time, too.” Mrs. Meade said she met the woman that afternoon and saw her dressed in a house gown the follow- jing morning. She had no oppor- tunity to learn how congenial her brothet-in-law's mate really was, Arthur A. Bryant, a professor, said that he and Mrs. Bryant were stop- ping at the Pennsytvania Hotel re- ceny when Zimm called with a “Mrs, Zimm.” When the couple en- tered the Zimm apartment they were astounded to find that “Mrs. Zimm" Was not the one they had known. | “That was rather ca@pbarrassing, was iit not?” inquired Jucge Glegeric! “Rather,” said the professor, Bryant and I quietly quickly withdrew Zimm designed the Slocum disaster monument and other art works in Washington, D. C. FIRE IN NEIGHBOR'S HOME KILLS A JERSEY MAYOR Speidel of East Paterson Has Apoplectic Stroke After J ag Blaze. A fire in a home near his own is be- Heved to have caused the stroke of apoplexy that resulted in the death of Hugo 8. Speidel, first and only Mayor of Kast Paterson, N. J. He worked energetically to help save the house |and died soon after reaching home, Mayor Speidel was a native of Rock Island, Il, and thirty-three years old, He was Président of the David Henty Building Company. He is survived by a widow and daughter. ee, STATE INCOME TAX HIT. Violates Home Rule Pri Henry M. CHICAGO, June 19.—New York's new Income Tax Law was discussed at length here to-day by members of the Na- tional Tax Association. Lawrence Arnold Tanzer, counsel for the Legisla- tive Committee that drew the bill, sald objections were found to have as basis @ devire to avold paying any additional tax. Henry M, Powell, former Assistant Corporation Counsel of New York and counsel to the Mills Committee on Tax- ation, said the New York Income Tax Law’ contravened the “home rule” Principle by taking away the powers of local assessors over personal prop- erty and Incomes and transferring it to the State Comptroller. ‘and and American Federation of Labor repre- sentative?” The political conspiracy ended right there. This morning @ score ef men who had been counted as among the opponents of the League for political reasons only were asked !f they had changed their minds, To a man, ex- copt one, these delegates answered that they would support the resolu- tion to indorse the covenant, The one exception is a delegate from a middle Wostern State. He stated that |he had not quite made up his mind what to do. Aside from the Bolsheviki who are outspoken in their opposition to ‘he Léague covenant the only active agi- tator against it this morning was Andrew Uuruseth, leader of the In- ternational Seamen's Union, Furu- seth is neither an extreme radical nor one of the League for politics only enemies. He is given credit fc. sin- \cerity and his reasons will be given respectful attention when he states them to-morrow, With ‘he political opponents of |the League silenced by The Evening | World's exposure It is possible to ap- | proximate the vote tor ard against indorsement, Leaders of the federa- u estimate that the voto will be: For indorsement, a) against ima tel; oa indorsement. approsimatelp | THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1919. Grace Fisher Asks Millionaire WAN SDES WITH NACISTRATE WH HELD TWO GS “After Reading Record He Says Mancuso Could Have Made No Other Decision. After reading the record in the case of Lillian Kahn and Sally Cobin, ar- rested by Detective John J. Gunson of the Vice Squad for alleged miscon- tive’s testimony by Magistrate Man- cuso and discharged ang exonerated by Judge Rosalsky with a rebuke for the detective, District Attorney Swann to-day, took the side of the Magistrate. “Iam convinced on the’record,” Mr. Swann said, “that Magistrate Man- cuso could have made no other deci- sion than that which he did make and I believe he has been unjustly criticised, The detective testified that on four occasions these girls had made proposals to him. There was no apparent reason for the Magts- trate to doubt the officer's testimony. “Magistrate Mancuso tells me that the records bear out his statement that no certificate of chastity was ever presented to him. Four days after he had suspended sentence in the case he received a certificate from & private physician, which made no reference to the chastity of the girls, but merely reported their good health.” The District Attorney, who called on Magistrate Mancuso in the Jeffer- son Market Court this morning, ap- Peared to be particularly resentful of the activity of one of his own as- sistants in the case. Mr. Swann resents the part played by Assistant District Attorney Sam- uel Markewich, he said, because the case had never come tothe notice of the District Attorney's office offi- clally and because of ai office rule forbidding any member of the staff to take part for defense or prosecu- tion in any cage involving friend, relative or acquaintance, Mr, Marke- wich, the District Attorney said, had oppeared for the family of one of the Birls in the settlement of an estate. This resentment of the part taken by his assistant is increased, the Dis- jtrict Attorney intimates, because Magistrate Mancuso is now a candi- date for reappointment and Mr, Swann's office contains five candi- dates to succeed him. “In view of this situation,” said Mr, Swann, “it was manifestly im- proper for Mr. Markewich to inject himself into the case." Assistant Attorney Markewich in- sisted to-day that it was Judge @o- salsky and not he who criticised Magistrate Mancuso. It was also said on the Assistant Dis- trict Attorney’s behalf that he had not appeared publicly in the case but because of his friendship for the fam- ilies of the girls had cajled their situation to Judge Rosalsky's atten- tion and interested the latter. In the course of District Attorney Swann’s conference with Magistrate Mancuso, Migs Luther, probation of- ficer of the Women's Court, was called in, ‘ “Miss Luther, who had charge of these girls," Mr. Swann said, “told me that so far as she had seen noth- ing developed at the time to warrant any other verdict. From facts that have come to my notice—not on the records and not part of the case—I believe that if Magistrate Mancuso were aware of them he might have given a different decision, But on the facts as contained on the records he did only his duty and it is cruel to criticise him,” In addition to the inquiry of the District Attorney the case of the two girls imprisoned four days for al- taken up by the Police Department, Chief Magistrate McAdoo and Deputy Police Commissioner Bilen O'Grady. In this connection, a similar case has come to light, Two women walked through “Peacock Alley,” stopped and spoke to a man, and presently ali went to a taxicab, A detective followed, opened the door of the taxi and nut the women under arrest, He asked the nmn if he was acquainted with the women and the man is alleged to have said he was not, though he has since denied say- ing it, When the case eame to trial the husband of one of the women ap- peared and identified the man as an old friend of the family. In spite of this, the women were found gullty 4nd the case is now pending before the Appellate Division, The proseoutors admit that in most ot these cases the women are com- pelled to prove their innocence in- stead of the accuser proving their guilt, Often they are held on the un- corroborated word of a detective, It is probable another detective will be involved in the case of Miss Cobin and Miss Kahn, Both girls tell of a second detective who questioned the army officers who had asked them to “have a drink,” while Detective Gun- son was arresting them, If Gunson has been suspended pending the in- ves:-sutions no official order has been posted or When asked put Commlenionte Baright said duct on the street, held on she detec- j to Name Wealthy Men in Suit | | Actress Suing for ~ $250,000 ‘Demands Reasons for Al- leged Breach of Promise. Gustav Schirmer, millionaire music Publisher, was te-day ordered by Su- Preme Court Justice T. F., Donnelly to file within five days the names of rich men under whose protectiop, he alleges, Miss Grace Fisher, . wall known musical comedy star, lived. Miss Fisher, whose home is at No. 236 Jersey Street, Buffalo, is suing the millionaire for $250,000 for alleged breach of promise. In opposing the young woman's ac- tion Schirmer told the court that she was debarred from suing him because he had paid her $1,000 in cash to “purchase his peace and prevent an- noyance and scandal.” The money was handed over, he charges, after Feb. 24, 1917, the day on which, Miss Fisher alleges, the music publisher promised to marry her. As a further bar, he alleges, she told him after the $1,000 payment was made that she was already engaged to marry a well-to-do young man of Cleveland, Ohio, Later Schirmer amended his answer to the suit, de- claring that hy did not consider her fit to be his wife since he had learned that she had lived in various apart- ments in New York City under toe protection of wealthy men and uacer names other than her own. Miss Fisher told the Court that the latest defense interposed by Schirmer was all news to her, and she asked Justice Donnelly to compel the de- fendant to name her wealthy ad- mirers, also the apartments and dates she lived in them, ag well as the name of the wealthy Clevelander who was to wed her. FLYERS LEAVE ALBANY IN MINEOLA-ITHAGA FLIGHT Former French “Spad” Aviator Quits Mineola on 250-Mile Trip. ALBANY, June 19.—The five Cornell javiators flying from Mineola Field to | Ithaca to attend Cornell commencement exercises, left Albany shortly after noon to-day for Utica, which they ex- pected to make this afternoon. From Utica they intended to fly’ south to Ithaca, which they hoped to make be- fore sundown. They did not put on their circus here, as originally intended, ‘The flyers reached Albany about o'clock last evening from Mineola, hav- ing been fored to dscend at Pough- keepsle to walt for a fox bank to clear away. MINEOLA, June 19,—Charles 8, Jones of Rutland, Vt. formerly of French ‘Spad" Squadron No, %, and Ralph H. Mann, a Worcester, Mass., banker, left here today on a 20-mile airplane flight for Middlebury and Burlington, Vt. They are to attend the Commencement exercises of Middleburg College, of which Jones is a graduate, and the University of Vermont, which graduated Mann, ‘The aviators planned to make one, or more stops en route. a TORN BITS OF A LETTER WIM SUIT FOR MRS, FOLSOM Found Them in Husband's Waste- Paper Basket; Name of Co- Respondent Withheld. Torn bits of a letter which Mrs. Jane Tolson of No. 440 Riverside Drive found leged misconduct on the street WASiin her husband's waste paper basket | and pieced together, won her a divorce to-day from Arthur Marryatt Tolson, eret, had recommended a divoree, Every effort was made to spard the corespond- ent from publicity. Witnesses testified that Tolson and the corespondent lived together at the Vanderbilt and Mo the Hotels, and although 4 photograph of the woman, showing her to a beautiful well-dressed woman of middle age, was introduced in evidence, her name wa not mentioned. She was knowp at the two hotels as ‘Mrs, Arthur M. olson.” ‘The Tolsons separated six months ago, after Mrs, Tolwon found the tell- tale letter, Mrs, Lucy M. Smith, who lives with Mrs. Tolson, pieced the letter together and testified before the referee, The couple were married Nov. 21, 1894 PLANS SELF PAYING MARKETS Rental Dr. Day, Commissioner of Markets, to-day wrote to Mayor Hylan ex- planing that the increased rentals in wealthy glove manufacturer of No. 45} East 17th Street. Justice Giegerich signed an inter locutory dec after Referee Morgan J. O'Brien, who heard the case in se THREE WOMEN AND A MAN HURT IN STREET CAR CRASH DEFENSE REVEALS HOW T WL HT TO SAVE WARS Charges State Constabulary With Overlooking Many Important Clues. Staff Correasondent of The From 4 rening World.) MINEOLA, L. 1, June After the defense in the trial of the elderly Dr. Walter for the murder of his wife at Long Beach, (Special 19. Keene Wilkins, Feb, 27, had indicated the intention gt showing the presence of numerous persons who might have been robbers in the neighborhood, Carman Plant, the detective for Nassau County, was put on the stand by District Attorney Charles R. Weeks. Plan had charge, under the District Attorney, of all investigation follow- ing the death of Mrs, Wilkins and the collection of the exhibits brought be- fore the jury In the trial. Many of these exhibits have been attacked by! Attorney Charles N. Wysong, for the defense, on the ground that they were | “framed up" by Allen Meyers, of tho Burns Detective Agency, employed by the District Attorney to assist Plant. Q. When did you first hear of Mrs. Wilkins’ death? A. Sergt. Sneider telephoned for me and I went right down there. In an automobile I went |down the road to the wrecklead bridge crossing to Long Beach and stopped all the people I met on the road, I stopped at the bridge and gave some directions to the bridge tende rafter questioning him. Q. You went to the Wilkins! home and what did you see there? A, Of- ficer Elbert White. He was watch- ing a hammer and iead pipe on the walk outside. Q. Did you go into the house and seo the Doctor? A. I did, and he told me what he said had happened. REPEAYS DOCTOR'S STORY OF MURDER, ‘Then followed the story told (twenty times or more during the week) of the battle with the rob- bers, The listeners were particulurly interested when told what the doctor said as to what happened when the robbers left. “The doctor said,” testified tho wit- ness, “that he lay still until he know they were gone and then he got up to fo out and look for his wife. He remembered, he said, he would \Every [ane of Glass in Twol|cuatched cold and picked up his hat Vehicles Broken in the that had been knocked off by the nit} robbers and put it on.” Collision. At the morning session Trooper Four pérsons were injured, one of| Hackett of the State Constabulary them ser.ously, last night when a Cham- bers Street car collided with a Broad way car at Duane Street. Both cars were badly damaged, every pane of glass in both being shattered. Those injured were Bertha Rech, No. | 25 Overing Street, Bronx, who was |taken to Volunteer Hospital suffering |from shock and hysteria; Katherine Farrel, No. 34 Gouverneur Street, | cerations of face and hands; Mrs. P rick MeGeery, No. 1232 Nostrand Ave- nue, Brooklyn, contusions of the right cheek and left arm, and Clifford Den- ton, No. 451 West 47th Street, con- tusions of left elbow and abrasions of t ace. | "The accident was caused by slippery | rails, > TURKS TO BE HANGED | FOR ARMENIAN MASSACRES Two Sentences to Death and Five Others Given Ten Year Prison Terms, June 19.—Two Turkis! officials have been sentenced to be hanged and five others have been im | prisoned for ten years, following con- | viction by court martial of complicity in |the Armenian massacres at Trebizond, according to a despatch from Constanti- nople, ‘Those recetving the death sentences were: Vali Azmi Bey and Nall Bey, members of the Central Committee of the Union of Progress, Mehmed Ali, chief tax-collector; Talat Bey, chief jof the gendarmerie; Diazi Bey and Nouri Bey, chiefs of police, and Mus- \tapha, police agent, reeeived the prison | sentences. | LONDON, Sseeeenenthaemedsin: som | FIRE FRIGHTENS BELLEVUE. Patients Alarme | Blase Ac: | A small atl in the Loom branch of Cornell Medic 412 Bast 26th Street blaze 10 o'clock this Laboratory, @ morning excitement for several minutes’ am | K patients in | Bellevue Hospital, which 1s opposite. Two companies of firemen responded to @ single alarm, but previous to their arrival the patients were frightened by black wmoke that poured through the laboratory windows. The blaze is sup- posed to have originated by combus- tion among chemica’ An interested spectator was Fire Commissionér Drennan, who was in the neighborhood. He was in evening dress. ———_———___ PEOPLE FLEE KRONSTADT, Five Steamers Carry Refa |the public markets were in line with et an attempt to make the markets self- HELSINGPORS, June supporting. He says that the tenants steamers, loaded with refugees, lot the markets are doing bus! “ left Kronstadt for Petrograd, accord- free, O: o Profle, Sad OLEDt 8s Ing to a despatch received here to-day, ¢ New York City," he way: 1 required, 2 Reecnt unconfirmed despatches re- y, frominal ported Kronstadt, the principal western ald here- defense of on Gre from — - swore that Dr, Wilkins, reciting the story March 11, thirteen days Jator, said the blugeon of the though it had not marred his scalp, had “knocked the derby down over his ears.” Plant testified the Doctor said the |robers had covered the parrot’s cage with'a skirt of Mrs, Wilkins, There was a skirt ove rthe cage, the wit- ness saw, but the monkey cage in the Kitchen was uncovered. Every time 4 stranger entered the breakfast room in view of the kitchen, Plant said, the monkey uttered @ shrill warning signal, Q. Did you ask Dr. Wilkins any- | thing about the hammer White was watching. A. Yes, he said he had never seen it before, never had owned one like it, didn't know any- thing about it, For a time Plant was ocbupied in {dentifying various exhibits, He ver- ifed a bit of newspaper shown to him by District Attorney Weeks as {having been wrapped around the head of the hammer, He also identi- fied the twine, which had held the paper In place, by the blood and gray hairs attached to it. Mrs. Alice Keefe of Long Beach testified she went to New York on the 12.31 train with Mra, Wilking Feb, 27. Q. How was she dressed? A. She wore a dark gray oxford coat and a purple hat tled on her head with a | veil. Mrs. Keefe identified the hat, the strip of veiling and @ button from her coat which was picked up near the Wilkins home. Counsel for Dr, Wilkins charged the State constabulary to-day, by in ference, with overlooking scores of clues to the murder. In cross examin ing Trooper Hackett of the State con- stabulary Charl N. Wysong, for Dr. | | Wilkins, asked if the constabulary | had ever looked into the movements | of 4 man named ‘Thom, who was reported to have been lurking on ‘the | beuch that night “No,” said Hackett, ? “never heard of him," “Or Dickson, or Dugan?” continued Mr, Wysong. “Never heard of them," said the trooper. Q. Ever hear of a man who got on! @ train at Lynbrook for New York | about 11 o'clock that night with blood | stained cuffs? A. We looked into | |that, but couldn't find where the ru-, | mor started, Q. Ever heard of a rough looking man in New York who said in a loon early next morning that the | morning papers would tell of a terri- ble murder at ‘Long Beach? A. No, Q. Did you try to find out about an pelea soon. uae the Wines me nigh some men i “No, me Mra. Tig Cabroskev..0 e a distharged by Dr. Wilkins, appeared | » VICTIM OF QLo fo-day ae a Witness for the pros- ( @eution. a er é Mrs, Cabrosky described Dr. Wil- | teatten we ¥° king's watch as one which opened “ ea a wateN wus found concealed Inthe | ¢ Chereed with havin «windlel ie Wilking home after the marder: thy; Y*tore Bebbera of No, 10) Baxter, doctor says the watch the robber took from him was a hunting case watch £ - mgartean, clerk of the Hotel Joyce in Baltimore, identified the signature of “Richard C. Howe" on the registry sheet of the hotel for Mareh 15, Mr. Baumgartean mid the man Who registered as “Howe” looked like Dr, Wilking, but had a different look- ing set of whiskers, “Perfectly correct.” observed Dr. Wilkins, beaming through hia eye- Riosses at his counsel, “perfectly cor- rect.” TELLS OF SEARCH FOR STRAN- GERS AT LONG BEACH, Trooper Robert J, Hackett of the! State Constabulary of reh of Long Beath for strangers r the murder, None was found who was in any way suspicious. Charles Klein, who tends furnaces in the winter and is @ painter in sea- son, waa the first witness, Q. Do you use a flashlight in mak- ing your rounds? A. Yes. I use it to find the keyhole to put the key in the door. Q. You were at the Shubert house, near the Wilkins, that night, and when? A. I left home about a quar- ter past nine o'clock. Q. Were you at Max M where the Duisbergs live? A. Yes, I was there just after I was at the Shuberts. In cross-examination Charlies N. Wysong, for the defense, got Klein to tell step by step of his rounds, @. You were at five houses before you got to the Shubert house? A. You. Q. Then it was about forty minutes after quarter after nine o'clock fore you flashed your light a Shubert doo: ten. A. It must have been, All this testimony was brought in to offeet the teatimony of little Clara Duisberg that she heard dogs bark- ing in the direction of the Wilkins house about twenty minutes of t and looked out and saw lights on second floor of the second Duisber; Mayer house flashing up and out again, The defense contends the burglars ran to this house after th murder. | BUN TROPHY IS KIDNAPPED BY N.Y, UNIVERSITY SOPH Walter Topping Enters Hall of Fame by Stealing Prize Awarded to the Freshmen. The name of Walter Topping has be- come a classic to the sophomores of New York University. Topping this morning got away with the famous Bun trophy which had ben bestowed by the seniors on the freshmen and which was to be handed to the class at Commencement exercises to-day at University Heights, The prise, is handed down to the class deemed most active and most representative of the university, The sophs were sore that the seniors the , about five minutes of it away from the home of the cus- todian, Senior Eldred Halsey, while the seniors were receiving thelr diplomas. hmen and Seniors chased. th sophomore in vain to the Pennsylvania station. Itis presumed that Topping has his trophy in his home in New Bruns- wick, N. J. Cannot bag, sag or lump. ticking free. As you know, the Ostermoor is built— layers of wonderful elasticity are laid and evenly compressed by then enclosed in @ moisture-proof, dust-proof and vermin-proof tick. Never needs reno- vating. Come in and examine an Ostermoor this week. Ostermoor cushions, too, for every purpose— window-seat, furniture, yacht and church cushions, Big illustrated catalog and samples of mattress out No. Lango, thirty-two, a shoemaker of 32 Oak Street of $200 by an old game Sampasore, forty-four, « bart 243° Spring Street. and were arrested Laat tt and locked’ up at headquarters cording to Bebvera, the two him to put his money in @ hai with theirs, and then, leaving him a fake roll in another handkerchie®, | appeared How Easy to Drift into Slumberland on an OSTERMOOR! How gently it yields to every curve of the body! i Every muscle, every nerve relaxes—a few minutes of drowsiness—and you drift off into slumberland. yy Select Your Ostermoor in Our Big, Modern Showrooms: There is a size and style to suit every requirement and Ny poe OSTERMOOR & COMPANY 114 Elizabeth St, (Near Grand St. 3rd Ave. “L” Station), New York Telephone Ne. 4 Spring Showrooms extend through the block to 132 Bowery, adjoining Bowery Savings Bank Ostermoor Mattresses are aleo sold by good stores everywhere u Low Shoe styles that meg exacting tastes. Trim ank fit, no gap, no give—a fi of all Hurley Low Shoe “NONE #0 GOOD.“ ith, 1434 Broadway 1357 Broadway! / 4 LITT Broadway 215 Brondway Se-4l Cortlandt St. s4 Whole Wheat cuit and il will he i keep 5 your t r ature a t stuffed, Eight soft, Y MAYFLOWER GINGER. ALE PARKLIMG ORANGEADE

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