The evening world. Newspaper, July 16, 1919, Page 3

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\ The final order of the Public Ser-| “* @pansfer privileges and charges) 4s | FAL CARTS ORDER FOR TWO-CENT TRANSFER eieepictinn "Decree in Eighth Avenue Case Rouses Indignation of Officials. “TS A THREAT, THEY SAY. | Judge Mayer’s Decision Taken} as a Warning ‘‘Not to Start Anything.” Officials of the city are indig- Rant to-day over the Federal Court Order relative to the charging of “two cents for transfers on the Eighth Avenue line. The order, when feceived by the Corporation Counsel, | resulted in a hurried conference of | “ity officials, including the Mayor. ‘The order, signed by Federal Judge | OMciais as a threat by the railroad | {companigs to decline to issue any “transfers if the city, through its Cor- oration Counsel, makes any legal Move to upset the two-cent charge for transfers. While the order applies only to transfers to and from the Kigth Ave- Twe lino, it is regarded as a warning, Because so fur this is the only line Allowed to break away from the; “green car’ system. Cutting off tfansfers there would give patrons! ‘of that line a taste of what the whole | city would suffer by the release of ether roads now operated by the New | York Railways Company. Officials regard the court's order = designed to force acceptance by. the city of Commissioner Nixon's two-cent transfer plan straight five-cent fare on each separate line through a breaking wp of the green car system, if they refuse. Corporation Counsel William P. Barr notified Mayor Hylan of the order and its effect and there was a lengthy conference. HOW A 2-CENT TRANSFER MAY BECOME A 5-CENT FARE. “This order,” said Corporation Counsel Burr, “includes a section {which plainly states that.if the city @eclines to accept the decision of the Public Service Commission relative to ‘be charging for transfers to and New York Railways Company, the receiver of the company, Job E.| Hedges, ts to discontinue the inter- | change of all transfers, thus forcing the city and place them under one management, in which the city should passengers, who must transfér, to pay ‘two fares. The city is thereby wafned not to etart/any action for the purpose of | upsetting that transfer charge. If the city fails docilely to accept the) Public Gervice order for a two-cent transfer, it then will be placed in the | position of having brought about a| double fare for passengers.” Corporation Counsel Burr, after the conference with the Mayor and other officials, declined to forecast his next) ‘move, but he made no secret of the fact that he, considered the matter in the light of a direct challenge and | would meet it accordingly. In the order from Judge Mayer it is provided that Recelver Hedges is to| separate the Fighth Avenue | from the New York Railways systein on or before Aug. 1, 1919, and if the Corporation Counsel makes any move te stop the charging of 2-cent trans- | fers the issuance of all transfers on} the lines must be stopped. . vice Commission, which authoriz the 2-cent charge for transfers, is expected to be signed to-day by Com~- missioner Nixon, who is spending his ‘vacation on the New Jersey coast. THE ORDER THAT ROUSED THE IRE OF CITY OFFICIALS. Gection 10 of the court order is the ome which aroused the city offictals. This reads as follows: “This order is made upon the con- @itign that the receiver, subject to the order of this court, and the Highth Avenue Railroad shall, prior to the time fixed for the delivery of the leased property, enter into an ‘agreement providing that as long @@ the provisions of the order by the Public Service Commis- sioner of the First District of the State of New York, in case Ni. + 2,889, shall continue in effect and its operation shall not be stayed or on- joined, the passengers on their re- spective lines shall be entitled to the game privileges as to rates (including | \lf the receiver continued to operate} ythe lines of the Highth Avenue Ra'l- | } oad Company, as heretofore, and yere were applicable to such opera- m the provisions of the said order the Public Service Commissioner. “Said agreement shall further pro- fle that the duration thereof shall ject to the order of this court that the joint rates, fares and 8, whether initial fares or addi- tional charges for transfers, shall be a rtioned between said receiver and the Eighth Avenue Failroad Com- ‘pany as may be specified in said agreement, or if not so specified, sald ‘apportionment shall thereafter be brought before this court for deter- mination, and the apportionment, as determined upon by this court, ghall | to her on Christmas Eve last and prom- ised her their marriage would take place be regarded as an arbitration’ and shall be adopted without appeal and incorporated in the said agreement. | rovided, however, that if th order of the Public Service Com- missioner of the First District of No. 2,389, shall not ge into or if its operation shall be $r enjoined, then until further notice of this court, from and receiver, is hereby directed to discontinue the interchange of all transfer privi between jew Company and the lines ghth Avenue Railroad 5-CENT FARE WILL PAY ON A FAIR VALUATION OF ADMITS IN COURT SHE STOLE BABY FOR LOVE OF MAN When Woman Reveals Motive for Crime. CHALLENGE TO THE CITY jane cn Mrs. Carmella Marzano, No. 111 East 120th Street, confessed to-day that she had stolen a baby and repre- sented ft as her own in order to hold more firmly the love of a man, Judge Wadhams, who heard the story in the Court of General Ses- sions, told the woman that she could CITY CAR LINES, SAYS BURR be sent to prison for twenty-five years, But he was so impressed with the unusual circumstances that he Denies That Either Nixon or Fed-| sentenced her instead to the Bedford eral Court Has Power to Raise Rates. By William P. Burr, Corporation Counsel. (Written Expr Ev a Work Reformatory for Women. She may be released within fourteen months, Mrs. Marzano is twenty-sixx years old. Her husband, Antonio, went to war, remained in France after the ly for The New York | armistice, and is reported to have ) been killed in an accident. The testi- ‘The following is a rough outline of |mony revealed the fact that Mrs. Mar- Mayer, was interpreted by the city |the railway situation in this city a8 It)zano became enamored of Joseph Di appears to me: The city authorities cannot formu- Nicola and went to live with him at the 130th Street address, late any plan for the reorganization,| pj Nicola, who wes a witness, said readjustment or relief of the street that he wanted to marry her but had railways until they are in possession | teen afraid to do go because he had of all the facts ds the result of a thorough investigation and an honest valuation. It is extremely doubtful if the city has the power to alter the fare provi- sions of any of the perpetual fran- chises held by the companies, unless there is a surrender of the perpetual franchive and an application is made and granted for a limited term fran- chise under the provisions of the ex- |isting city charter. The Public Service Commission has no power to increase the rate of fare xed in the franchise contracts be- tween the city and the companies, nor has the Federal Court such pow The city now owns the sub ratlroads, although such railroads are operated by private companies. It can take over the subway railroads dur- ing the running of the present con- tracts at the time fixed in such con- tracts or wait until the expiration of such contracts and then take them over and operate them. Eventually all the rapid transit railroads will be ed and operated by the city. Prior own to that time I believe, and inthis I am but expressing my personal opia- jon, @ new order of things shoulu be evolved out of the present unsatis- factory, not to say chaotic, condition in which the railroads are involved. not bean convinced of the truth of the report that her husband was dead. He still loves her in spite of the trick “or because of it—and he begged the Court for clemency for her, Mrs. Marzano confessed that io order to strengthen the love between her and Di Nicola she told him that she was to be a mother. When the time approached, she said, she began walking the streets in search of a, ‘baby that would answer her pur- poses, f On March 23 in front of @ depart- ment store she saw a three-weeks- old child in a baby carriage, took it, carried it home, and went to bed. When Di Nicola came home that night whe said the child had been ‘vorn to her that morning and that nei rs had assisted at the birth. “1 believed,” said Di Nicola, “that the child was mine. For some time before she had been making little baby dresses.” Di Nicola said he promised to marry Mrs. Marzano as goon as she became strong enough, She remained in bed for some time; and before the mar- riage could be arranged she was ar- After a thorough, investigation has| rested. ‘been made into the condition of the The child she had taken belonged irgads and a proper| to Mrs. Annie Koskinen of No, 211 valuation is arrived at, holding com- from the Eighth Afenue line and tho panies” should be eliminated and a new transportation operating co West 144th Street. The police had been searching for sixteen days be- fore they found it. The discovery was pany under the control of the Public] finally made through the janitor of Service Commission should be organ- ized to take over all the railroads in be represented. The perpetual fran- chise, should then be surrenderd and a new limited franchise applied for instead. ‘This would enable the new company and the city to agree upon such oper- ating routes as past experience has own, and probable future city growth and development would indi- cate, are needful and profitable. I firmly believe that no charge greater than a 5-cent fare for a con- tinuous ride will ever be justified or necessary under the extremely favor- able conditions which will surround such a company, providing prudent and economic management is the basis of its operation. In this way the water would be | squeezed out of the street surface railroads. The prerequisite to all this is to stertain the rock bottom of real value and the actual investment truly repre- sented by these companies, HUSBAND IN NAVY, WIFE MOVED; WON'T RETURN Electrician's Chargls in Separation Suit Gives New Angle to Old Court Ruling. Courts have decree in many cases that husband and father has a right to say where wife and children shall live. The ruling was given a new angle to- the iiding where Mrs. Marzano lived. The janitor had heard the tale of the dirth, had ‘been suspicious, and had told’ the police. Counsel for Mrs, Marzano pleaded for leniency on the ground that the motive was “unique,” that Mrs. Mar- zano had been kind to the child, had loved it, bought fine clothes and toys for it, and that her only fault was 4 “misguided instinct.” ‘Assistant District Attorney Olcott called the Court's attention to the fact that but for the action of the janitor the mother might have been permanently deprived of the banana ———— 7,250,000 TROOPS CARRIED ON TRAINS IN SIX MONTHS Director General Hines Says Burden Explains Crowded Cars on Railroads. WASHINGTON, July 16—The rail- roads of the United States hauled 4,216,949 troops on special and regular trains for an average of 600 miles each in the first six months of 1919, accord- ing to statistics made public to-day by Director General Hines, In addition, probably two million offlcers and men made railway trips while on furlough and another million were transported tram camps to their homes after dis- charge, making a total of 7,250,000 mili- tary passengers, accommodated in ad- dition to the usual civilian travel. “This extraordinary demand ex- plains,” the Railroad Administration's tatement said, “why it has not been day when, it appeared from papers|able to mect all of the requests for ex filed in the case of James G. Payne ot New York began separation proceedings @gainst Oenia C. Payne on the ground that while he was in the navy she re- moved thirty-two blocks north from the house he selected in West 127th Street to an apartment of her own in West 169th Street and refuses to return. Payne, an electrician, entered the | Demtiat Nei navy at'the beginning of the war, Was assigned to the Denver and last January became @ lieutenant. Mrs. Payne lives at No. 463 West 159th Street. There are three children, 0 George RR, elght, anc years old. J., thirteen ; OE FILES $25,000 LOVE SUIT. Charges Sultor Hasn't K. riage Promise t Suit for $26,000 for alleged breach of promise to marry w Shirley, five cursion trains and why in some cases u cares on regular passenger trains have been crowded." adnythe first two, weake of July 100.683 ra returned from Europe and wer hauled by the railroads, sas BROOKLYN BATHER DROWNS. y Lones Life Try! Save Him, William J. Kraemer, thirty, of No. 460 Wyckoff Street, Brooklyn, was drowned last night while bathing in the Shrews- bury River at Fair Haven, N. J. Dr. Eldrid A. Carey, a dentist of Red Bank. , and a brother-in-law of Kraemer, with Kraemer when the latter was caught in the strong current. Dr. Carey almost lost his life trying to save m Kraemer, who is survived by his widow and two-year-old daughter, was employed at a mercantile agency in this filed in the Gu-|city. His body was recovered this preme Court to-day against Charles | morning. Nabl of No. 141 West 67th Street by ‘Miss Tessie Kubelik of No, 237 Kast 53d Street. tory. Miss Kubelik declares ‘Nabi proposed | NUWBURYPORT, Mass, July 16.— One hundred and twenty-tivg employees eis, per tnels iaeeriees wo of the George W. Richardson Company, Peasonable time hie ee eect’ 8 | comb manufacturers, ran for their lives asi Boy's Body Fo im Riv: The body of a boy about seventeen years old, five feet, three inches tall and welghing about 100 pounds was founa| tured by the Bolsheviki, according to fter the time fixed for the de- Gvery ‘of the lensed property, the floating in the North River off West|, Russian wirel 49th Street today, Jt bas not becn | her identified, & —eiemnenton abl shows no disposition to carry out | the alleged cdntract. to-day when fire destroyed the plant $100,000, mations) Russian Reds Claim Victory, miles southeast of Perm, has been cap- 4: The ti despaten received day, own was occupied 8 | and stocks of celluloid, The loss is LONDON, July 16.—Ekaterinburg, 160 ae) American Generals Who Were Decorated by French — | Government in Front of Embassy at Washington PI ANNINE $500 nN HER SENTENCE REDUGED BECAUSE SHE KIDNAPPED BABY TO HOLD MAN'S LOVE ARMELA MARZANO POODLE PROVES OWNERSHIP BY ANSWERING COURT CALL Woman Who Claimed Him Loses When He Ignores “Major.” Magistrate McGeehan, in the York- ville Court this morning decided that French white poodle, which was in evi- dence, named “Rags,” was only a year old and that he belonged to Mrs. B. F. Bowser of No, 14 East 17th Street, Manhattan The decision was forced through a summons obtained by Mrs. Angella Le- tlle, of No, 24 Hast 19th Street, who claimed the dog. The Judge called a dog fancier, Capt James Hamlisch of No. 7% Lexington ‘Avenue, who looked at the poodle's teeth and declared him a pup just over a year old, Mrs, Letille said he was three years old and was named “Major.” The dog did not answer to this name when called by the Court, but did when called “Rags.” _— HEROES WITH UNIQUE RECORD TO GET ROUSING WELCOME None of 51 on Service Flag Lost or Wounded in War. ‘The boys who went to France from 109th Street, between Park and Madi- son Avenues, are to have a w home reception at the 12th K Armory, 62 au Street and Columbus Ave- Saturday night, July 26, t's going to be a neighborhood party, a package party, an entertainment and a dance The service flag in this particular block bears fifty-one stars and the block has one record at least, not a single man was {ost, nor was one wounded during the war, The president of the welcome committee is Miss Rae Goodman, whose brother is one of the heroes, an the vice president is Corpl Frank Liggio, who was a member of the old 12th Infantry regiment SHOW USE OF PHONE IN WAR ' | Elaborate System for Police Field Days. An elaborate ing installed at police fleld days, the first of which will be next Saturday, There will be spec- ” The Muyor and other oMciais will b able to commu without leayir battle, | It, Further Light on Breach | and Children May Be Shown. From intimate friends of the | Croker family It was learned to-day j that,.the judgments of $217,000 Med | Monday against Richard Croker, for- |mer Tammany poss, by his som, Richard Croker jr. are only the Bee | innig of litigation among members, ,of the family that will involve, ultt- | mately, more than half a million dale lars. | William F. MeCombs, counsel for all the heirs, said to-day he was" | not in @ position to tefl of any plans for the next legal action. But it was declared on good authority that | ceedings will soon be taken that have a far-reaching effect on the Croker fortunes, While the present action grows Principally out of the alleged talture of the elder Croker to apportion to his children their shares in the estate of his first wife, amounting to. amout’ $320,000, it was asserted new Hght | Will be thrown om the breach between DISOWNS “THE FIREMAN” | Rye Wonders -* AS DEPARTMENT ORGAN) Why Humorists Warns Business Men Change Its Name Company Ordered to Pay Man} Croker's children declare that since Cash Collected by Publication Doesn't Reach Fire Fighters. ‘The following statemem was issued | to-day at the office of David Hirshfield, Commissioner of Accounts “The Commissioner of Accounts is in- vestigating the publication called issued ostensibly on vehalf| What they cannot understand up|on the following morning, but the] services” to his father, ald §80,000° of the firemen’s organizations in this|in Rye, N. ¥.—twenty-four miles out investigation that more than $5,000 has been collected from merchants in this city in the few the publication has made its appearance, funds has gone <0 any of the firemon's organizations, “The newspaper is apparently privately owned The name of J qhars on the editorial page as ‘Chair- man, Publicity Committee,’ “This statement is merchants friendly to the Fire Depart- ment and to the splendid men who com- pose our fire fighting force to prevent them fram being further imposed upon.” field's statement * Fire Commissioner Dren- “and I have nothibg to add issued to warn —_<——— BURGLAR-STUDENT'S FATE REVEALED TO PARENTS $4,000 of Goods Found in Room of Pennsylvania “Medic” Killed by Professor. PYILADELPHTIA, July 16.—Mr. and Mra, Frank Holfelner were not informed until to-day at their Buffalo home that Anthony William Holfeiner, the burglar-student, had been Sunday night while attempting to rob a University of Pennsylvania Fraternity ‘Telegrams had been them Intimating that the student had hope of hearing voice, the parents sent a telegram late last night, asking him to call them on | anawered inquires over the telephone ‘Holfelner was a second year| The hearing of the nine ineacre ticket | student at the was said to have been unusually bright Schapelle shot he was escaping. room revealed, $4,000 worth from Fraternity Houses, board- g houses and other pla BARBERS OUT ON STRIKE IN WASHINGTON. HEIGHTS Want Shorter Hours, More Money and 50 Per Cent. Over Certain Amount Taken In, Washington whiskers and the barbers are come iment $25 in money and a fifty per cent. with the boss barbers on every dollar over $32 that Broadway |* the journeym the hours and $20 @ week and 35 cents én every dollar taken Jof $30 a week. The compromise me es to $1 a haircut 50 cents a shave, ing to put the new was knocked out by Mitchell also said that the prices into effect | of their union, deciined to recognise the union of the boss barbers. lephone system is be- heepshead Bay for the | ete TesUp of Atiantio ad Pacific Co PHILADELPHIA, ial phones for the Judges, for the ome. |Ci#hteen ah ing stand and ‘even | Gate r of operations of the nited States dicted a comp » shipping on “up of all Ame cate with their offices ‘ 2 , heir seats. awe will |eifie coasts unless the also be a demonstration of the use of jand engineroom workers radicaly mod- ia lerate Gas demands, iking éeamen ———_— ———" | Croker and his enveren, eoneanee BS BARS NEW MOVE TO FIND | wrccstn, “weno ‘attea neroest am Ine TELEGRAM LOST 16 YEARS icc. C"short time arr abe death ot Croker’s first wife. , their father’s second murriage they’ Who Lost Job Through have never been able to see ‘im | Undelivery. alone; that whenever they callea ta | Nearly sixteon years ago Phillip| @tain @ settlement of their alleged ———— Ryola, Suggested as Substitute, Guaranteed Not to Offend Liederman sent a telegram from the| grievances Mrs, Croker insisted ow Aesthetic “Drys.” Western Union office on 424 Street to| remaining in the room, | Samuel Koffler in Brooklyn, telling| Richard Croker jr. obtained « judg- | him to report for work at $20 a week| ment of $137,000 for “professional ge hasn't been delivered yet. Croker’ ffler lost the Job Im consequence | on ne, Stoene that, the oldie from Grand Central and just this sido lang brought auit against the Western | 104 to fulfil an agreement to pay of Port Chester, Cos Cob and Stam-|Union for $1,000. In November, 1904,| the! and Howard Croker shares in ford—is why the jokesmiths of the|he got Judgment for $695.21 but the| thelr mother’s estate. | Croker was e “4 U. 5, A. have suddenly gone looney | ¥erdict Wasn't fled until eight yea fore’ he catleattor, bis ‘Sense’ tn teed | over the name of their town, Every |!#tet Now the Westera Union wants! jand, He has never defended the | mail brings Village President Taco- hcl dae cere hits ads sd Bole kct trial ordered. —_—__ t dore Frend or Village Clerk Bill Scl-| Justice Benedict in the Brooklyn er from ton to twenty letters sug:|suprome Court this: morning dented | SOENTIONS HUNT IN: VAIN gesting a new name for Rye, the motion, gone into Bill Selzer’s wastepaper| rate of five per cent. which would basket, but one was tacked up to-day [PMS the amount to more than §1,5 i $ in President Frend’s butcher shop: Can't Find One in Day's Search of This one comes trom Kentucky and |WHAT BECAME OF THIS CAR?) Hudson County Meadows, but reads as follows: ae te tne Se iw Reporter Has More Success... rankfort, Ky,, July 14, 1 “Dear Sir: I see in the public pre York Garaget W. B. Delancey, Hudson County Super- that either your city or some whe on What became of the automobile? | intendent of the Mesquite Muteritine- | Sha’ aeoount. (n-colttetepiatise shande Promises to be # Washington Heights | tion Commission, stated in the predence ing Ita name so as not to offend the (Puzzle until the case of Chan Chuey ia| of witnesses to-day that he and other jing offend the \heard jater in the week in Washington | members of the commission, sceam- aesthetic \taste of the Anti-Saloon | ireights Court, the young Chinese hav- |Panied by four eminent doctors, spent the Leaguo and other Prohibitionists. |ing been held in $1,500 bail to-day by | Whole of yesterday in searching through ; Permit me to suggest that the name | Magistrate McQuage on the complaint |the Hi mn County meadows for moa- jcan be changed without losing its |of Mrs. Edith Coples of No, $41 West | @ultees AND DID NOT HIND ONE, Identity, I suggqgt ‘Ryola.’ Yours |12ist street that on Monday evenin, Corroborative testimony was given by | truly, last her former chauffeur ‘did take, | ‘the following: Dr. L. 0. Howard, ento- “(Signed) KENNPR TAYLOR.” operate and drive away” a car not his|™Ologist of the Department of a “What gets me,” President Frend | own. posite leate igen Bh 6 a A ia said to-day, “is why they are pick-| Chan Chuey was said to have de-|MoCombs of the Munkcipal ing on Rye. ‘There's Backus, up in'ciared that tho car is in. the Hudeon | Bureau of New Tork City; De... St. Lawrence County: Beers, Tioga; |it is mare ikay. in'teme neigioarseed | Hoa By’ Cana eelynee aroma: Brandy Brook, in St, Lawrence; |f®'#ge. An effort will be mad Brewerton, In Onondage: Clove and | orth st Worle on It Bits, Gitette| (The Hvening World reporter whe Clove Valley, in Dutchess; Jaggers,|the wife of a surgeon in the army, telephoned thia narrative paused twice in Wayne; Pitcher, in Chenango; —— in spelling the names of witnesses to Porter, in Washington; Rock Tavern, MO Fone) the Stee Se oe in Orange, and Vine Valley in Yates, ALIMONY ASKED OF PASTOR. Killeg one on ia left ankle and one on Aa tar as that goes, the Prohibition: | wite of the n ists have put Jamaica on the black- of the Re list and where can you get a Man- Kress Wants hattan?” Alimony of $15 a w sx | | You need mever eens Rev, Christian Adama Kr Heelies . TICKET CASES GO OVER, [or ‘tne neomayn 'vece'wcamune| ave wrinkles— Church, was demanded to-day before Viotating Meve|Justive Kelby In Brooklyn, by atrs,| Uless you choose {pomement, Jessic Kress, No, 252A Steuben Nothing 0 Htreet. brokers arrested Saturday night by In-] Airs, Kfess charges her husband Maes ~ y In-lwith having an ungovernable temper| fing little thieves of your beauty. ternal Revenue agents, charged with}und with cruel treatment, Juatice | Crow's feet at the corners of your eyes failure to put thelr names and selling Kylby reserved dee sion when he was| —deep gouging lines about price on the tickets, came up this morn- | \tstrostor ‘nt ch Satitan Ateitaee —little spreading wrinkles ing before Judge Smith in the criminal| North Chili, N. and receives about| @afe—where is your branch of the United States District | $700, Kress will file an| When these appear? Court and went over for two weeks.|ing a counter plea, his atte A handsome old Arab Sheik The bail of the brokers remaining at — ere toe of = and ie charged with violating the In- SAYS HE OFFERED $2 BRIBE. Frese eon well. “the Brokers Acew enue Law ternal Revenue Law are Louis Cohn, Desert. He hadn't a wrinkle nor # line Joseph Levy, Leo Newman, David A.| "47 Maker Accused of Trying to| on his satiny, bronze face. His sectet Warfield, C. Long, Alex. Jones, Jobn Benepe Fv was a scientific combination of won- Mahoney, Matty 'Moscoviiz and’ the] Carmello Piemi, eighteen years old,| derful Oriental oils, which we pass em ‘Tyeon Co., at No. 1482 Broadway, a candy maker of No, 832 Kast 76th| t@ you in Marjaneh Wrinkle Cream, ecliffreneeen Street, was held in $1,000 ball for | /t will remove your wrinkles speedily h them EX-KAISER AND WIFE ILL, neering Friday by Magistrate Simms in| gif you have them—or deed alll Harlem Court to-day on a charge of = ever coming if you start in time, ribery. gin your use of Marjaneh Wrinkle Patrolman Stephen Donald testi 5 y fied that ater ne had arrested two bed: | Geatera It Ne dosn't ate seed ae ipo : yy nea Y «at 79th Steet anc Avenue ; 4 _AMERON July 18 (Associated | yesterday Piemi offered him $2 for trial tube and with trial box of ex 5 | Pras) The former Gorman Em- |their fines in court if he would quisite Marjaneh Face Powder, to Usit and| peror refrained yesterday from sawing |them go Manufacturing Co. of America, Ine. trees for the first time in several — 8-10 West 45th Street, New York City. months. It is understood that he is| Twemty-Vear Term Third Free- Slemente of cit i conted Cut) suffering from a cold, The former port Bank Robber, | Uae “et chile ore pe ~ Empress has experienced a reci The third of th bers who held up| | of her heart affection. Both t tbh Witkt HERUKEAL Hark Gc wt a. | Emperor and his wife remaine h rep Gene Per lbnd ek, | us. lL. L, on Mach 19 lust was to-~ wen D ster, the personal physician of | tenved to erm of not leas th e said that the bosses compromised with | the former Emperor was called to the| years nor 1 re "0 care, in sing ’ |inetie inte. Monday. and remained nore | iiars Ft Ipdge smitin at e World $ all night. It is probable that the recent | Mineola. He is Wavid Brouns' n, nine | bad weather Ja responsible for the sick-|ieen years old, of Manhattan : | ness of the Hohenzollerns. p Hetoeasliore ummer Kesort SPANISH CABINET RESIGNS. Maure’s Ministry Steps Out After Three Months, LONDON, July 16.—The Spanish Cab- inet ded by Antonio Maura, which was formed on April 15 last, has re- signed, according to 4 Reuter’s despatch \from Madrid. e-: faq Annual and Auto Tour Guide Price, Five Cents, By Mail, Ten Cents, 4 Se Sa | | Place tor Ex-Senator. | | WASHINGTON, July 16,—Former Mustard Address The World An Lnexpensivo Condiment Good with Cold Roast Beet Senator Clarence D, Clark (Rep.) of vanston, Wyo., was appointed a mem- ber of the International Joint Com mission to-day by President Wilson, H wonedn the late James A, Tawney of Summer Resort B: 63 Park Row, New York — | tween Ex-Tammany Leader 7%

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