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% | A 44t MANY , Moran Talks of the Board Asserting Power and Overriding Mayor. MAY MEAN A BREAK, feature, veto are both correct.” If the Tammany +Meto Message Shows Mayor * Hadn’t Read Ordinance,~Ac- cording to Board President. est politicians, Unless Mayor Hylgn retracts ‘his Yeto of the recently enacted curb “broker ordinance he will find himself ‘at war with the Board of Aldermen, strong fight. ‘were clecte r elected on a Tartimany” ticket, | Salm be soy ‘The curb broker ordinance was passed Brooklyn Borough President. Besides, be migat be in # position to demani of certain Tammany leaders, holding ‘brokers were not keeping within the |down fat jobs under him, to deliver #e @ requit of charges that certain their law. It was intended to place the| The them to pay a license fee to the city. Mayor Hylan returned the ordi- b nance to the Bodrd of Aldermon sev- | thet nis vet and gave reasons for :shis action. Al- | Pol dermanic President Robert L, Moran, ordinance to for The Evening World, said: “No member of the Board of Alder- pitor to his veto of the curb broker | before he ¢rdinance. As a result His Honor has YVetoed the ordinance under a grave havo been possible had he talked of New York City hi over the measure with any member of | ts Mayor who cannot eur board. SAYS MAYOR DIDN'T KNOW PRO- VISIONS OF ORDINANCE. city the iangu: » “Because of the Mayor's failure to! nance which wonsider us, I am of the opinion that the members of the Board of Alder- men should assert their power. ~ gu rr} chase, Aldermen are contemplating calling @ special meeting of the board, which recently adjourned for the summer, and passing the ordinance over the Mayor’s veto. The City Charter mys a two-thirds vote would be required for such action. However, before any action is taken, the Mayor's attitude will be fully discussed and the opin- tion, but brings every person dealing | on the curb within the $500 license whether he beton; association or not, Therefore reasons set forth in Mayor Hylan’ insufficient and jermen. Republicans would naturaily, brokers-under the supervision of the | vote on the eide that would make the breach between the Mayor and the Department of Licenses and compel | Tammany Aldermen as wide as pos- sible. There is just one thin, avert a wart between the The Mayor must re- ! tract his veto and write a letter, eral days ago without his approval/which will virtually amount to an logy. Mayor Hylan’s action in vetoli license curb in Giscussing tiie Mayor's veto to-day | aroused Alderman William F, Quina, who Introduced the measure, to at- tack His Honor last évening assert that the Mayor had received in men was consulted by the Mayor | his office a delegation of curb brokers took the action he di Alderman Quinn's statement read in t: “Mayor Hylan, in vetoing the ordt- misapprehension, which would not| nance licensing curb brokers, reveals the astounding fact that the people pret the meaning of the English lan- ‘and the proof is herewith set forth. I quote for the yoters of this fe of the curb ordl- ‘all persons dealing in the pur- sale or exchange bonds, notes or securities in or upon With | ary street In the City of New York ' this thought in mind a number of the| shall be deemed to be curb brokers,’” MITCHEL'S NAME TORN OUT, HYLAN'S \ to un che $100,000 THEFTS * FESS ODS $9,500 Worth of Silk Stolen in Latest Raid; Detectives Scoff. at Owner. ‘The list of thefts in the dress goods district which the police have been controlled Alder- manic Board should meet and over- ride the veto of a Tammany elected | % Meatty $105,000 by reports of the Mayor it would be the first occurrehoe | Victims of bursiary to-day wiich be of its kind in the memory of the old- Mayor Hylan might take it into his head to resent the action of the Al- dermen, If he did he could put up a| No, 28 Kast. 20th Street, it was learned There are seventy-two | to-day, lost $9,500 worth of silk drees votes in the Board, which is com- Pgoods some time between Tuesday prised of sixty-seven Aldermen and | night at 10:80 o'clock when the, goods five borough presidents. Io the event | were delivered to the loft and ‘the majerity of which like himself | of a showdown, friends of Hylan! o'clock in the morning when the junior claim ‘he could control the thirteen ad perhaps the: that will layor and the ere and to elected @ man read nor inter- vetoed: of stocks, Successor, fons of the various Aldermen ob- tained, Nothing’ will be done in haste. r “The Mayor was evidently laboring A isd | under a great mistake when he —_ state? in his veto message that ‘tie on ge Ussoclation,’ meaning that of the ae Begun by Mayor Who curb brokers, ‘could readily evade + i * é ordinance by moving its activities to ed in Serv ice Becomes other quarters within a block or 80 of Memorial to the present site.’ Ve Mayor Hylan denied be he Some thousands of years ago san Pe; aware that the curb broker o1 <Jleencnitaeente cs was amended on the day of its pass- age, on motion of Alderman Collins, so as to apply to ‘any street in the City Of New York.’ The Mayor ts further in error when be says that the ‘ordinance appears to grant to the said association an exclusive privilege; that 1s, the privilege of selling, exchanging 4 trading in stocks at the particular site men- tioned in it.’ MAY MEAN OPEN BREAK. WITH carvings cut TAMMANY, achievements. “Section 1 of the ordinance vetoed by the Mayor distinctly says: glyphic carvings After the passing greatness, curb brokers.’ Surely under the pro- visions of this section no exelusive|stone was opened Monday. was Mayor. floor, which is level boro Bridge, administration. new tablet was set Regardless of to station for all city | ebio supply HEN you goon yeur vasa- tion this Sumumer have your favorite paper mailed te you every day. Evening World, 18¢ per weak Ferries, capacity. |ground, ‘This from the {sland, nificent bullding covered with hiero- to commemorate many victories over his neighbors. a Pharoah who fanciéd the building and decided to have it go down to posterity as a memorial of his own so ho had the original hieroglyphics obliterated detailing his Mayor Hylan may or may not have *all|heard of this occurrence, but at any persons dealing in the purchase, sale|rate his administration has emulated cr exchange of stocks, bonds, notes|the ancients in the completion of the or .oeurtties In or upon any street in| new ten-story central storehouse on the City of New York Shall be deemed | Blackwell's Island which will be When the corner- laid October privilege is granted to any assoca-|bronze tablet was exected to inform the public that John Purroy Mitchel When sufficient progress had been made on the building a stone tablet was placed on the top setting forth that the structure was finished in the Mitchel A month ago a stonecutter chipped away the original inscription and a CITY OF NEW YORK Deparement of Public Charities 1918-1919 John F. Hylan, Mayor, Charles L. Craig, Comptroller, Robert L. Moran, President Board of Aldermen, Benjamin W. Levitan, Architect. belongs the new building is en inter- esting addjtion to the city’s property. It had ben planned to cost $600,000 but antually roquired $900,000. a central storing place an clearing the Health Department and the Department of Docks and A runway extends from the Queens- }bore Bridge to the roof of the store- house, on which there is a garage jwith parking space for two ambu- lances and an elevator of six-ton Ambulances will be driven from the bridge into the building and carried by the elevator down to the innovation preclude: the necessity of having to ferry am- |W bylances and. other vehicles to and erected a mag- awy there arose and new own 25 1917, a with the Queens- to this effect: whom the credit It will be hospitaly and will ‘Suffrage Leatler Who Explains Questionnaire to Candidates . | trying to keep secret under the "Keep, it quiet or it may encourage the| thieves’ order was increased to a total came public without the consent of the headquarters authorities, The firm of Herscher an¢ Tissen- baum, océupying the seventn floor at 0 partner, M. Tissenbaum, made an early visit to the office to lay out work on @ rush order. Mr. Tissenbaum found a policeman and several detectives in the hall of the building. They were watching eight of the hundred packages of silk which had been delivered the night before.. The eight packages were lying in a heap on the floor on the street levej. The detectives at once tool: Mr. Tis- senbaum in custody saying that his posséssion of @ street car transfer punched at one o'clock showed he was the burglar. After an hour he con- vinced them, he said, that he was a momber of the firm and tley per- mitted him to visit the loft. His statement that 92 packages of silk were missing was ridiculed. Acting on a tip Central office de- teolives headed by Snydd@ker and W. J. Miller raided a garage at No, 128 Baxter Street last night and arrested the six men they found there in the company of silks, clothing, feathers, belts, powdér-puffs and garters valued at $15,000. Magistrate Frothingham to-day in Centre Street Police Coirt held the sextet in $1,500 each for examination next Tuesday. They furnished bail: A number of persons approached Trafic Policeman Gasser at Canal and Forsyth Streets this forenoon and told him a crew of men were removing bolts of cloth from the loft of Harry Ellas & Sons, woollen merchants at No, 65 East Broadway in spite of the fact it was the Sab. bath. : Gasser caught David Getsoff of No. 53 Jefferson Street and locked him up. There was $1,500 worth of wool- Jens on the wagon, Herman Greenfield, Vice President of the West Side Cloak Company, of No. 8681 18th Street, made complaint to Capt. Kuhne of the Bath Beach station yesterday that he was waked by a neighbor, Harry Balkan, of No, 8680 18th Street, Friday morning be- fore daybreak, who told him robbers were breaking into the factory. Mr. Greenfield said he ran to the fac- tory, saw the robbers, who had col- fected their booty and were playing pinochle in the office, apparently waiting for a truck. Mr. Greenficld telephoned to Lieut. Lewis at the station. Half an hour later a policeman wsiked around the corner and said he had deen told to “step around and see what was doing.” The pinochie players heard his argument with Mr. Greenfield, according to the manu- facturer, and jumped out of a window and got away, One man was caught by Mr. Greenfield himself. That a Jarge amount of silk was stolen recently from the Gotham Silk Hosiery Company, on the eighth floor of a loft buliding at No. 422 Bast 534 Street, was admitted by an officer of the company to-day, Other officers of the concern to confirm a story that $12,000 worth of silk, $10,000 worth of waists and two bales of silk worth $2,000 were taken. Charged with grand lareeny and aiding in the robbery of rugs, tires and linen bandkerchiefs valued at $5,000 from the American Railway Express Company at Tenth Ayenue and 33d Street, seven men were ar- rested yesterday and taken to Police Headquarters. The prisoners were found In @ garage at No, 819 East 26th Street, NC-4 CAUGHT TRYING TO FLY AWAY ALL ALONE Ropes and a Crew Tie Down Rebel Plane in Central Park, Where It Will Be on Exhibition. ‘The tranyatlantic seaplane tried to fly away -from Central this morning all by itself, and would have done {t had not Ensign ©. J. O'Connor rushed outwith ropes and a crew and tied the rebel down. The plane {s now moored fore and aft. “And if the American Navy could hold down that big Bricish dirigible,” suid O'Connor, “what chance bag this Nancy to get away?’ The “Nancy” had no chance, even though the wind was tugging mightily at her wings. She will stay right where she is, in the sheep meadow, and be on exhibition next week. ‘When the Navy recruiting office near the seaplane was opened this morning Junior Léeut, John Evans, who lives at End Avenue and 824 Street, was The arrangement waiting to enlist a3 4 gob. His rank is in the Navel Reserve, which is not active bervice just now, Wvans 4a @ machinist's mate, second if DENIES ROBBERY CHARGE; . | ADMITS HE'S DRUG ADDICT Accused Man's Wife Appeals in Vain That He Be Sent to Institution to Be Cured. ‘Timothy Foley, twenty-tive, No. 1910 ‘Third Avenue, arraignetl in Harlem Police + Court to-day on a charge of robbery, denied the theft, but admitted that he Is a drug addict and said he wanted to be cured. Foley's wife ap- pealed to Magistrate Sims to send her huaband to some institution where he could be cured. Magistrate Sims said the evidence of the robbery was s0 cellar that he would have to hold. the Prisoner im $3,500 bail to the Grand jury. | Leo Golden, No. 1600 Washington Avenue, the Bronx, was the complal ant On June 27 he was alone in a shoe store owned by a relative at No. 2108 Third “Avenue. Ho had just gashed a check and had $150 In’ his pocket. Golden said that Foley, who was well known to him by name, en- tel the store and compelled him, r threat having his brains blown out, to id over the money. Golden was not found until pot night pbc <i ae sch, DIVORCE FOR MRS. TRANTER. Referee Recomme $1,200 a ¥ An absolute divorce and $1,200 a year alimony will be given to Mrs. Beatrice Tranter, No, 90 Schermerhorn Street, Brooklyn, if Justice Kelby confirms the report and recommendstions of the ref- eree in the case, Justice Kelby r served decision. ‘The husband is Sefton Tranter, No. 14 Morningside Avenue, manager of the brokerage firm of Ware & Leland, No. 61 Broadway. There are two children, Fredericka, seventeen years old, and Sefton jr., sixteen. The referee rec- ommends they be left with the hus- band’s relatives. ‘The evidence on Which the divorce is recommended names ene Mary Debrau, gives the place as No, 456 West 56th Street, and \the time e, 1914, STOLE GIRL’S RING, CHARGE. “Lopned” Diamond to Man, Gays Loser of Diamond and #10. Louls Brown, No. 827 Kelly Street, the Bronx, met Miss Melvina Gross, No. 879 Longwood Avenue, the Bronx, for the second time June 21, She says fon ‘to wear his dia hayr. He then “Jok: her pocke' and «© bills from it, she asser ingly” tracted $30 in and disappeared, Detectives locuted him up-State and had Miss Gross lure him home with a love letter. He was arrested when he reached here last night. In the Morrisania Court to-day he waived examination and was held in $1,000 ball on a larceny charge, ————— Medals York and Read. COLUMBUS, 0., July 12.—To-day is the last “full blast” day at the Meth- odist Centenary Exposition here, which has been in progress since June 20, Sergt. Alvin C. York, greatest hero of the war,” and Lieut. Com- mander A, C, Read of the N.-C.-4, were to speak during the day. Both were 10, be given specially designed gold niedals, il ROO na eR Editor Drowned in Jersey Found Nenr Coney. The body found floating in the water off Stauch's wherf at Coney Island last Wednesday morning was identified to-day at Brooklyn Morgu as that of James Martin, twenty-on of Kearny, N. J. Mr. Martin was tele- graph editor of the Newark Evenin, Ledger. He was drowned on Jun Wille canvelng at K burg, N. a Haym. Goes to Kure Alt Hayman, general manager for Caarles Frohman, Inc., sailed for Eu- rope yesterday on the Mauretania. This is the first time he has crossed the At- lantic since Charles Frohman went down on the Lusitania, It was sald at the Bmpire that the trip on business ompany, which Is making prep- for an active season, ‘or thi arations -_——$—_—— Billy Sunday to Hold Se | | | WOMEN VOTERS ASK CANDIDATES TO TELL POLICIES Assembly and Aldermanic Nominees Questioned in Political Drive. he women voters of New York Cify have opened their first political campaign with the distribution of a questionnaire to all nominees for the Assermbly and the Board of Aldermen. The questions include Prohibition, the eight-hour day and equal pay, and the abolition of party emblems on the ballot, “The women themselves differ on these questions,” said Miss Magy Gar- rett Hay, Chairman of the New York City League of Women Voters, “‘s0 there is no reason why any candidate should hestitate to give a full and frank answer, This is in no sense 4 women's platform, but merely a lst | of subjects in which women voters | are interested and which we think should bp made issues in the coming | election.” Some of the questions sent out to would-be members of the Assembly follow: Are you for or against: Legislation for the strict enforce. ment of the Prohibition Amendment? The maintenance of the direct pri- mary system for the nomination of candidates? Equal pay for equal work for men and women and wages based upon occupation and not upon sex? The establishment of a minimum WORLD EXPOSITION exposition, “almost every nation, large and small, in the Old World could be , With a band on board, steamed along- _ |FORMER MISS GAYWOR W 1926 URGED | BY WANAMAKER Would Be Worth Billion Dol- Armed Thieves Climb to lars, He Says, to Show Over Packing Boxes U. $. Power. Force Entrance. —i Four shots trom a rifle held jos by Prescott and Harry Wilson “ window of the house at No. 82% | 17th Street just before da: 4 morning roused al! that part Flatbush section of Brooklyn tracted a crowd in which were @ eral policemen. The house entered by burglars, Prescott said, who bound and gagged made away with silverware at $500. “L heard them at work out young Wilson said, “and was when they stepped into a second room from the baicony, I told we had been here only ten that everything the family value is in a safety deposit they wanted money, I there was $20 in my coat on t! rack downstairs and they wore 9 come to it. “Each of the two men drew and one of them warned me that jf | made an outery or talked loud would shoot. Then they bo gagged me and ransacked the “When they ‘went away I Harry and we stuck the rifle the window and fired.” ft Detectives found that the robbers, xpecting to get into the house: wy way of tho cellar, had removed a door from its hinges. Failing, they apparently used packing to climb to the roof of an ell kitebem, comeneeneenippinieinaes Chairman Hirsch Thinks All Plan Might Relieve Housing Situation. of A great exposition in 1926 is urged by John Wanamaker, who celebrated his eighty-first birthday yesterda: The exponition, he declared to-day, would show the world the great pro- ducing power of the United States. Mr, Wanamaker would have tho world’s fair cover 800 acres in Fair- mount Park, Philadelphia, He said it would be worth o billion dollars to the world at large in the knowledgo of what America can do in supplying every need of man. The veteran merchant spent his birthday at bis desk in his Philadel- phia store, exchanging reminiscences of earlier days with old friends and receiving congratulations and testi- monials from friends all over the country, “If the work of preparation were | begun in time, in speaking of his plan for a world ung ie interested to its own advantage in putting up its own buildings to show the best it has in art, In machinery and In manufactured goods, “Touching shoulders and shakin hands and looking each other in the face would do wore than anvthing else to make the people understand the realities of the American flag and the principles for which {t stands.” 6,540 CIVILIANS SAIL FOR EUROPE IN A WEE \ New Record for Passengers Since Vrs. HARRY I VINGUT Says Polo-Player Husband Drank to Excess and Failed fo Provide for Her. Mrs, Harry K. Vingut, who was Miss Edith Augusta Gaynor, a daugh- ter of the late Mayor William J. Gaynor, has filed suit for divorce at Reno, Nev, according/ to despatches, alleging, among other things, x treme cruelty and failure to provide.” Mr. Vingut, polo player’and sports- ! man, admitted to-day at his home in War Was Declare Set by lemitntown, In L, that the sult had Three Steamships. been filed, and sald in reference to ‘Three transatlantic steamships sailed|the cruelty charge, “Oh, I suppose from New York to-day with 3,235 civil-| it's the way they do things out there.” fan passengers, The total number of Mrs. Vingut has been in Reno with outgoing passengers from New York’| hor ‘er, Mrs, Ralph H. Isham, since this week Is 6,640, which means that] early in May to establish a residence, this has been the biggest sailing week |ang alleges in her complaint that Ce eae eae (ee saaupertation) since) shortly after she was married to ar. The White Star liner Baltic sattea| Vingut in Wilmington, Del. in 1910, to-day for Liverpool with 1,176 pas-|he developed “an abnormal bea wt sengers, of whom 360 were first class, | for liquor” and acquired a “worthless, The lst included Mr. and Mrs, Grover | #hiftless dispositio also that he Whalen, Mr, Whalen ls going to study | displayed no affection toward her and docks in Europe, no interest: in their home, Finally, Commissioner Whalen and his wife| she says, she wax compelled to leave were bidden bon voyage by a large] him in 1917. ‘ aes party,. including Mrs. and Miss| She declares she procured the ser- Hylan, Mrs, William Randolph] vices of a physician to help him re- Hoarst, Mrs, Hugh Kelly, Mrs.|leaso himself from the drink habit. Whalen’s mother; Police Inspector|To the physician, she says, Mr. Vin- John F, Dwyer and Capt. Hallock of|gut confessed drinking 4 quart of the police boat Patrol. The Patrol,|whiskey @ day. | side the Baltic to Quarantin La Sayow of the French Line sailed CLEVELAND PHONES TIED UP. |owner for Le Havre with 1,120 passengers, in- cluding Miss Elizabeth Carnegie and Henry Carnegie. The Caronia of the Cuna, 8: Force Union Recognition, CLEVELAND, 0., July 12—Telephone unmarried persons at moderate f le advanced the : liding of similar nt Jota in outlying sections might remedy for the housing problem. service was tied up here when ap- proximately 90 union operators and with 1, and the Scandinavian. jelectrical workers of the Cleveland American liner Frederick VIIL with 907. | (Bell system) and Ohio State Telephone iermans have sailed for home| Companies went on strike at © o'clock ‘aaeabeemai this morning to intoree thelr demand POLICE WALK RIGHT IN for union recognition AS HOLD-UP MEN WORK ania the Italian liner Amer. Miss Rose, Sullivan, of Boston, Integ- national organizer for the telephone section of the International Brother WHEN TROJAN IS DIS Several Hundred on Boat for All hood of Electrical Workers, is in : chargo of the atrike for the wile |” rea ccerrad to the R y Trail Three, Suspects to Saloon and | Union, oMelala declared requests for refit ensselaek Fe to be added to the demands, a wage commission with representation of employers and employees and both men and women commissioners? An eight-hour day for men and women in industry, The printing by the State of the records of candidates of all parties and their dissemination among the registered voters? Raising the age for compulsory school attendance to sixteen years? The doing away with all party em- biems at the head of the ballot, that a more intelligent voter may be de- veloped? Nominees for the Board of Alder- men will be asked similar questiona and in addition these ‘Are you for or gains Municipal ownership and control of public utilities? The establishment markets? An appropriation that the school houses may be kept open during the summer as play schools for the chil- dren? An increased appropriation that greater number of streets may be shat off as play grounds for the children and a supervisor in charge? of termina! Answers to these questions will be put on file at the office of the League of Wom ers, No, 373 Fifth Avenue, for the use of women voters. HELD AS BRONZE HAIRED MAN WHO ROBBED 20 MAILBOXES Bronx Man Accused After Widow's Money Orders Are Stolen, jarnin nmer, nineteen, 2 the Bronx, is ar ot being “the man with the bronze hair’ who has robbed about twenty mailboxes. De- tectives Wey and Haalitt arrested Goldhammer last night after the pri- vate mail box of Mrs, * Bilaw Fraser, a widow, at No. 1076 Home Street, had been robbed of two money orders totalling $50. The police say the suspect letters from the boxes by me filehed ng of @ Billy Sunday ts to hold # ti Ocean Grove, N. J., y anight, Aug. 23, fire sermon on Stop Robbery—Two Shots Fired and Two Prisoners Taken, Three youths, shadowed by plain- clothes men, entered @ saloon at No. Machinery trouble disabled the ples’ Line steamboat Trojan, Albany, shortly after midnight Ahe craft was about five miles Newburgh, N. Y. She anchored river to await help from the proceeding from Albany. Few of several hundred women and chil-/ dren who were passengers knew *hat TO ENTERTAIN WAR HEROES. 161 West 86th Street late last night and | Co™ y Service Arranges Pro- held up the occupants at the point of| #ramme for Soldiers and Sailors, revolvers, ‘The police enters right] ‘The War Camp Community Service after them and after an exchange of/announces a “Twylight Pageant” at shots arrested James Breen, nineteen, | 7,30 to-night im Central Park at the he was disabled. No. 695) Virginia Avenue, Buffalo, and|West 67th Street entrance, for sol-|*#! ' Cornelius Lynch, Ne. 282 West 114th}diers and sailors, There will be| The Repsselder hove alongeile some, Street, this city. fencing by Burton and Winters, too |hours | and the passengers were transferred to her and landed at Beas con, N, ¥., opposite Newburgh. ‘They were sent to their destination by train, No one was hurt, ° President HL F. Morse announced the Tro} was in tow here fon pe) He rim] sald the st company, would mal Gal Munday schedule to Newburgh return to-morrow. Politemen John Neeson and George B, Patton made the@mrrests, As Neo- son entered the saloon one of the men fired at him but the bullet merely grazed the patrolman‘'s head. Nee- mn fired once but missed and the n fled. Another of the robbers ed on Neeson and floored him ‘ore he could fire again but Neeson seized him before he got away, Patton chased the third man to 37th Street and Highth Avenue where he dancing by Mary Gracq Cunningham and songs by Carl Haller. ‘There will also be open air vaude- ville to-night and to-morrow on the Madison Square Roof, free to service formed Pacifle fleet will have a farewell entertain- ment at the Riverside Community House, Riverside Park @nd 97th Btrest to c caught him. p-morrow akternoon, at 4 orslve ———- i P ry o Metri an Bree geile a in 3.000 | al, Althouse, oF, the, gtetrepetitan | ROCKAWAY HEROES FETED wa Mra. Jersey tt Women § PLAINFIELD, Point Association Gives iy er-Dance to 100, "| One hundred of the 106 boss of He DROPS $20,000 IN GEMS. Carrie Left in Phone Booth, They Are |Chapman Catt will ‘make the principal} away Point who served in the wee fee at the first meeting of the New |tyrned and last night a big di ° % ’ Wajnrned Sy Creer ‘sey Wom o Sultrage Fetitestion given to them at the Kennedy Mrs. A. B. Fisher, mother of Car-|Committeo next Tuesday afternoon In| i os pavilion, where with i, ai toonist Bud Fisher, dropped « silk bug |Newark | Among the, othe sed N w Secretary Wi if nen Secretary . Legislative y Federation Demarest, and the Beatri tern, the New Jerse: Clubs; Mra. LH of the W. C friends they had a dance which tll morning. For the ai containing Jewelry valued at $20,000 in a telephone booth at the Hotel Ma- Jeatle yesterday, who died the o » Randolph, ‘Président of /has put up & monument and Capt. Alaric Simson of Calcutta, Sersey Federation of Colored aix trees, each of which will be India, stepped into the booth shortly with the name of one of them, after Mra, Fisher His foot | * es = touched the bag, and he turned it over to the Majestic office just before Mra, Fisher appeared to give notice of her loss. Snownto Cab from Valparaiso, Chile, reported a heavy snow and sleet storm sweeping the southern part of South America, An unidentified ship off Valaparalso was reported wrecked with probable loss of life and other shipping was said to be in danger. is in at Pater long wire and that he admits having been in the House of Refuge on similar charge. G mmer, it. is said, (Induced Mrs. Fraser to give him two’ business recelpia which he took to the Fox street F Office with a note of his own rg representing Mra, Sruser as being iil and that the mapey orders be ber 's0my cashed far N. J, with @ fracture Selved ‘whan” he collided bead on. with | nol skull) re- | pro’ yesterday their Ms