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( a yy FIGHT TOFINSHON: 2CENT TRANSFERS; BODY IN YN MOREE ANDRO SS ‘EEK NEWS TN VAN FROM POLICE, FIND Orders Saag to Catry Case to’Boasted Efficiency in Iden- U; S..Supreme Court, tifying Dead Fails in if Necessary. Woman’s Case. SCORNS POVERTY PLEA. in the matter of accidents and identi- . i |fieations since the body of the lat Mayor Says Lines Making Over nim quitivan narrowly escaped being 25 Per’ Cent. on Stock interred in Potter's Field, apparently Aren’t Suffering. exists in theory only. Mrs. Catherine Durham, 67 years Mayor Hylan to-day told Corpora | ld. who Jived with her sister Eller’ at No, 298 Bast dist Street, was ) Hien Counset:)Bur? to fight Publle! cued down by an automobile at Bervice Commissioner Nixon's 2-cent | 14:39 o'clogk .yesterday morning at transfer order through the highest 38th Street and Third Avenue, She courts in the land. If beaten in the| Was taken to Bellevue where she Btate courts, Mr. Burr will proceed | ed. In the afternoon her sister, The prated efficiency of the police | to Washington and lay his case be-~ " fore the United States Supreme Court. His itistructions are not to give tp the fight until every known legal reCourse has been tried \to the limit. The Mayor's statement was issued after he had conferred with the Cor- poration Counsel and John H. De- Janey, new Public Service Commis- sioner in charge of subway construc- tion, who was formerly Commissioner of Plant’ and Structures under the Mayor. It is not known whether Mr. Delaney was summoned to City Hall to advise the Mayor on the transit sitaation, with which he is familiar, orto discuss the Staten Island ferry a ike,of which he also has fixst- hand knowledge. In hie statement opposing the Nix- on order Mayor Hylan says: "I have directed the Corporation Counsel to do everything in Nis power to stay the transit corpora- tions in their campaign to secure an, increased fare by charging for transfers. “When we stop to consider that the Fighth Avenue Railroad Company \s getting 26.5 per cent. on a capitaliza- tion of $1,000,000, the Twenty-third Street Railroad Company” 23.18 pet cent. on its capital stock, the Forty- second and Grand Street Railway Company 22.4 per cent. on its capital stock, and other lines getting a large return on their capitalization, then the sympathizers with the transit corporations are bold enough to tell us that the poor transit lines are un- able to make a profit. “The Corporation Counsel will take the case to the highest courts in the State and to the United States Su- preme Court, if possible, in the fight to maintain the people's rights.” Friends of Commissioner Nixon de- clared to-day that if he could have talked the city officials into an agree- ment for a six cent fare, for a short time, the two cent transfer would have been avoided and the cost more equitably distributed than at present. Opposition of the municipal authori- ties to any raise or relief, according to the Public Service offiicals, forced the two cent transfer-experiment, ‘Terence Farley, counsel of the Pub- lie Service Commission, in explaining | the situation “to-day, declared the courts of the State and country had so interpreted the statutes, as re- gards the Public Service Commission, that its ruling and orders regarding rates would be hard to combat le- gally. Corporation Counsel Burr, in con- tradiction of this surmise, depends on the decision by the Court of Appeals in October, 1888, and on the edict of th me court in 1918. The first de- on reads as follows: Under the provisions of the State Constitution applicable to the con- struction of such railways, the mu- nicipal authorities have the absolute power to grant or withhold their con- sent to the construction of such @ rajiroad, and may impose any con- dition which, in the exercise of their discretion, they deem proper as the terms upon whieh their consent will given.” the 1918 decision reads as follows “Our Constitution by requiring the consent of the local authorities to construct and operate a street’ rail- road (Const, art. 3, Sec, 18, as amend- 6) recognizes that our munict- GrapeNuts provides the elements needed to build strong, healthy bodies and All “Lost and Found” paverticed tn ‘The World or . New York, oF 4 Call 4000 Bi 4100 Moiny hem pBreokiye Of tie rmed at her absence, accompanied by her niece, Mrs, Mary Tiernan, No. 146 ast 44th Street, called at the East 86th Street police station where the case had been reported. ‘The women say that they heard of the accident and asked the Lieu- tenant in charge about it and that he told them that no such accident had been reported. They say, fur- thermore, that they were referred to the detective branch bureau in the station afd were told there that there had been'no such accident, but that they would be on the lookout for the missing woman and took the ad- dress of the gister. All night long the distracted women waited for some word of the absent Aunt and Atater, but none, caine. This morning they went to Bellevde and there were guided to the morgue, in charge of which was Patrolman Petgre Berfield, the man who idantified the body of Tim Sullivan when it was about to be consigned to a pauper's grave. ‘The body of the missing woman was in the morgue. pt hoe atlas NEW PACKERS’ INQUIRY. Senators to Investigate Campaign Against Regalating Bt! WASHINGTON, July 19.—Cortgress will investigate charges. that the big Packers’ are conducting a nation-wide Propaganda directed against the pend- ing Kenyon bill to regulate them, Sena- tor Kepyon, Towa, author of the meas- ure under fird, declared to-day. The Senate Agriculture Committee wilt conduet the investigation, Kenyon sald, He has collected evidence which will be placed before the committee. Included in thi he said, are copies of circular le! , sent stockholders, hol ses and banker: the Kenyon bil by packers to iders, branch protesting against To Join Morgan Wir: Elson Dean Jay, who since Nov., 1916, has been a Vice President of the Guar- anty Trust Company, will shortly retire from that post in order to enter the Paria firm of Morgan, Harjes & Co. palities are pro tant pnesoenees of legislative control, exercising fragment of power otherwise leg lative in character, ich has thus been irrevocably transferred by the org ag law to the locality, The nt by the municipality of author~ ity to use its streets is not a mere privilege or gratuity, and once ac- cepted becomes a contract which neither the State nor its sograer ean impair.” Job E. Hedges, receiver of the New York Railways Company, to-day is preparing a statement in which he gives the railroad side of the trans- fer question. He alleges that a com- plete survey of the matter has not, as yet, been made public and be Public Service Commiggion had no alternative but to grant some man- ner of relief. Phe receiver believes the city will find it hard to upset the ruling and order of the commis- sion, | 245,971,452 TRANSFERS ISSUED FREE IN 1918 ON B. R. T, AND GREEN LINES Experts, However, Figure Number Who Will Pay Two Cents Charge | Will Not Be So Great. T the Public Servicu Com- mission offices to-day it was said that the last avail- able figures for the number of transfers collected were those for the fiscal year ending Jure, 1918. In that year 162,079,914 transfers were collected on tke Brooklyn Rapid Thansit lines, and 83,891,538 on the New York City Railway, lines, It 4 revenue of two cents each were collected on all these trans- fers the additional revenue to the B. R. T. would have been about $3,240,000, and te the Manhattan lines $1,700,000, The experts for the railways took into consideration the fact that there are to be thirty free transfer points in Brooklyn and fourteen in Manhattao, where traffic is heavy, and that many persons who used free transfers will now walk short distances father than pay the additional two cents, They reported that the ad- ditiona] revenue on the Manhgttan lines would amount actually to about $900,000, The city'a experts regarded this estimate as too high by $400,000. There was a similar disproportion between the esi mates of the B. R. T. and the city experts, {deems it his duty to show that the| | Record Crowd: Fills Speedway-Park For Great Show of Police Poll Day GE UE, 0 CET {OOS OF SECOND MARNE. LAND ALLOTMENT | MAY BE FMT ERE TON - AS A CHEROKEE INIT BUN Lieut. Sacisal to ne tabesan hia Gunes Of Official Proot| Queens Structures Spoken of Arrival He Will Commatid That She Is of in! After Refusal to Accept. Department of the West. dian Blood. | _Rockeféller Offer. a 5 (Special to The Kvening World.» When Lieut. Gen. Hunter Liggett, | WASHINGTON, July 19.—Eniarg- Batked in his effort to have the oity ‘one of the ‘war's really great heroes, ing upon his denial of the statement Accept the offer of the Rockfeller |ianda hore to-night.itrom the Cu by a New York Iawyer, representing | Foundation of $800,000 “worth of: | adeno Aawitania, he will be told that tho obildren of Richard Cfoker, tiat | buildings, to be used for the restora- ‘he will fake command of the Depart. 'hi# second wife Is of Hebrew par-| tion of drug addicts to perfect healthy, ta, i not Indian, and that she ment of the West. How soon he will, usey mnt Not Ini ninger, ner | D% Reval 8 Copeland, the Health Gime General 19 unete, Congressman, William W. Pe veamacagae pyre 4 er Tt was Hunter Liggett who tod the | Martinge of Oklehowia, ‘sald o-Gay | week-end vacation Monday with bulk of SAmerica's Agnting for~e8 ay piece, Mra, Croker. She was porn |°tNer plans. | ‘The Commissioner, 1 throughout the crucial part o or on @ farm adjoining mine in Dela-|*%® intimated, will endeavor to take war, It was a force under him bs wate Cousty, Oklahoma, which ja over city-owned buildings in Queens,’ crushed the German drive which be- those days was Indian’Territory. Flor There was much discussion to-day” gan on the Marne on the night of of Mayor Hy! statement that he ALU er SGOT e Francis M, Hugo, Secretary of State, opened his first session as a | Magistrate to take evidence to re- ;voke motor vehicle licenses this morning in Special Sessions, Criminal | Court Building. He had six cases on the docket and announced he would take the testimony and make known his decisions later, Mr. Hugo had a full staff of secre- taries, stenographers and attendants with bim and entered upon his dnties Thousands Come by Auto and ‘Train; Early Morning Gloom ‘Fails to, Dampen Sop s Ardor on Hylan SECRETARY HUGO They're off at Speedway Park, Sheepshead Bay. ‘The first field day for the benefit of the Police Relief Fund is already &@ crowned success., The biggest jam of humanity ever seen in the park . crowded every nook and ¢orner of the great arena long before the hour for the opening of the carntval.' First Ihesor Gas Be Car Owner to Ap- Roads leading to Sheepshead Bay were covered with vehicles of all de-| pear Accused of Driving scriptions as early as 11 o'clock this While Intoxicated. morning. Crowds were ‘arriving. on’ surface cars and trolleys and the! subway, every cor of the B. R. T. be- ing pressed into service. | His honor the Mayor reached the park at 2.15 in a gaily decorated auto- | mobile, accompanied by Police Com- missioner Enright, and preceded by a mounted squad of police, took a spin around the track. He was given an- ovation ad he entered his private box, where there were Mrs, Hylan and Miss | Virginia and Mrs. William Randolph Hearst, . The arrival of the Mayor was under authority granted by the last the signal for the opening of the pro- | Legislature, gramme. Frank R. Waller of No. 515 Fultqn} At the park the weather was all Street, Jamaica, was the first accused that could be desired. The sun broke M@or car owner to appear before Mr. through the clouds long before noon, Hugo. Waller was present to defend dispelling the gloom which at one 4 complaint made by Mortimer L. gramme for a week; But early in the Brooklyn. morning Deputy Commissioner Fred,| Mr. Reynolds testified that May 24) erick A. Wallis got in touch with the last he and a party of friends were | weather man and with Col. Archie riding in Bushwick Avenue, near De- Colonel assured him that the weather ster, came bowling along at a rate of was ideal for flying. ‘speed which he estimated to be be- ‘A luncheon in honor of. Mayor Hy- tween thirty and forty miles an hour. lan started the ball rolling at the wore one grecned tote Sis and yp: | ‘Waldorf-Astoria, for the first of the Reynolds sustained a dislocated knee- | field days is called Hylan Day, next cap and many bruises, His friends | Saturday having been set aside in wete alt iaitey pier : wae declared that ‘aller was intoxicated, special honor of Gov. Smith, After that Waller was intoxichted. | the lunch a great array of antomo-| “Ie offered you help, didn’t het" | biles left the hotel, seventy-five care “No, he offered to fight me,” testi- fled Mr. Reynolds. in all, beribboned and covered with | “x. J. Trapert of Forest Hills Gar- | lags, carrying \the Mayor and the dens testified he was right behind the | Field Day Committee and their Waller machine and that it was | guests, traveling about thirty to forty miles For outriders for the auto cavalcade | | there were thirty policemen onemotor- an hour, and that the collision could have been avoided if the Waller car had been driven carefully and more | cycles with a trumpeter at their head.| slowly. He gave it as his opinion | \.in their wake were fifty Fifth Avenue| that Waller was intoxicated, pa Facial agy WN go cies hola |""As a result’ of the crash Waller buses with 2,000 singers of the Peo-| ple's Liberty Chorus, They too had their trumpeter, All along tho line from | the charse. the bridges to the motordome were! with Waller after the accident, sald | hundreds of patrolmen on horses, afoot| he admitted he had been drinking. and on motorcycles. Patrolman George H. Dinger read of felonious | ing trial on was arrested on a charg assault and is.now awai’ >, = the record of the arrest of Waller At Speedway Park the crowds) Apri 4, lust, for running down two fairly sparkled ‘with brilliant con-|women’ and’ breaking thelr. lena. in tumes, with beautiful girls and | Hancock Street, Brooklyn. The patrol- man said that when arrested for run- ning down the women Waller sald; “I don't care. 1 am a frignd of Magis- women who were there to pay tribute | to courage and brawn, Previous to |? the opening of the programme and while the crowds *were pouring | through the gates, planes were doing | o¢ ae nae atuiten on ® charge siunts in midair; bands were blaring | 9, speeding while intoxicated in familiar tunes and all the features of |“ 4" a carnival were in evidence, Pre.i. |, Srenk Angell of No. 662 11th Ave- nent among the bands was that,of Src Manhattad, was accused by TKalth's Hor Band pa #90 pieces, Magistrate Miller of Queens of The ary. was. represented py |delibertly running down a touring car Major Gen, ‘Thomay Barry, his aides jSziven By Hans Bartsh of No. 300 Capt, BE. H. Quigley and Lieut, F. | eee shit Binet on the pterricn Hanley and Gen. Mitcheil, who or ‘Ed _ H ine ast chief of air service in France. or war looper of No, 826 West the Navy there were Admira| Albert 52nd Street was ined $50 for driving Gleave,” Rear Admiral Bradiey "A, @ car while intoxicated December & Fiske, retired; Rear Admiral James !#*t. | He tan down a woman, Henry Glennon and his aides, Capt, | ,,Joveph Tambinl, eighteen,’ of P, Symington and Lieut. Commander 17 Hudson Aven Brookiyn, was Thomas C, Has ,convicted last October for running = jinto @ truck while driving across the BEADED BAGS FIFTEEN _| Meqhattan Bridge. TO FORTY DOLLARS Charles Magee of No, 2028 Grand | Concourse; Kalman Chany of No and all at _atrtetly wholemie 2192 66th Street, Brooklyn, and et Bi aren G, Gregory of No, 586 Emst 148th all at aie? tam Street, convicted of violationa while ™* intoxicated, aleo mppeared, time threatened to postpone the pro- Reynolds of No. 83 Bainbridge Street, | Miller of Hazelhurst Field and the catur Street, when Waller, in a road- | No, | GAS PEOPLE FORGE HEARING IN FIGHT ON BO-CENT LAW: Stay Obtained by City’s Counsel Vacated, but Burr Will Continue ‘Battle. The Consolidated Gas Company ob- tained an order late yesterday from the United States Circuit Court of Appeals vacating the stay recuntly granted by Federal Judge Manton in the District Court in the gas com- pany’s sutt to set aside the Dighty- Cent Gas Law. Juage Manton's or- |Staces Supreme Court the question whether the city has a right to inter |vene in the Consolidated's suit, The vacating order was obtained by bianca Justice Ransom, attoriey for jthe gas company, ana was signed by Judges Ward, Hough and Rogers. Ac- companying it was a notice from Abraham §, Gilbert, the special mas-| |ter appointed to take the testimony in the case, that the hearings would be resumed before him at 9.15 o'clock |Tuesday morning in the Circuit Court, Woolworth Building, Corporation Counsel Burr formed of the matter to-day “I am not prepared to steps will next ve taken on Vohelt of | jthe cjty," he sald, “but it is very probable that an appeai will be mado jto the United States Supreme Court. 1am very earnest about this matter, | and you may say that we will uso! every legal.means in our power to es- | tablish the city’s right to be e- | |sentede - atti ae "My firm belief is that when pxo- | locedings are started to Upset a law | was in- | July 14-16, | Liggett's corps; maiden name was Beulah Benton Fd- mondson. Her mother is my sister, and her father was M. 8. Bdmondson, @ white mi ‘Their home post office is Maysville, Ark., a border town on the lime between Arkansas and Okla- homa. Both her parents still live there. “Lieut.-Gen. Liggett commanded the First Army Corps, with headquarters at La Fertesous Jonarfe, when’ tne Germans smashed their way across the Marne on the night of Bastile Day. He was a Major General then. ‘The two crack divisions of the Amer- have known. Seulah cinee, che lean army—the two that had been tried Cn | Was s baby. She attended the iocal in the hells of Cantigny an} Chateaw- | schools in Delaware County, inolud- Thierry—had been taken from Gen.| ing the high school, and manifested the First and Sec-! considerable talent. When she was ond Divisions had been swung over | cider ner parents sent her to the Bos- for a surprise attack on Soissons—|ton Conservatory of Music, There she one of the fow real gurprise attacks atudied ca reeeon an@ music. She of the entire war. The 424 Division— | remained Boston two or three the Rainbow—most feared by the en-| Jere Mnf criule, im school lenened emy—was off on the right in the Champagne, helping the French, Heises ba koe, ening Paraition 06 bere Gen, Liggett had little left with| York she met Mr. Croke nd married which to defend the Chateau-Thierry ier, I think, on Thanksgiving, 1914. road to Paris, The 26th—New Eng-|! attended the wedding, which took land's Yankee division—was there; 0¢| ge ttyne home of Mahan Straus. was the 28th; the Pennsylvania Na-| cabaret singer to my knowledge. All tional Guard, and the 84 Division, one) the catertaining thes one 610 wae: of the so-called regular divisions—as| Private homes of well yet untried in major warfare, The story of the 34 Division's gal- lant fight on the Marne, how it changed apparent ' disadter in her name. @ princess, and I don't suppose she into 4) claims seriously to be. We often re- great American victory, has been told.| fer to people of Cherokee blood in a The work of the 28th and 26th, which |Joking way as prince or princess. cut into the German defenses of| an snn with thee Mm, Croker and Of course, she ts not Chatéau-Thierry until withdrawal| voy in Nacsvern ag portal was inevitable, was equally meritori-| sailed for Burope the ast ‘time. ous, But the credit for handling the lew York with the Governor American forces on this sector, for of Orlaho Troops white Takerasnciiy shifts of troops that amazed not only|ran across Mr. and Mre. Croker and the enemy but our Allies, for a de- we had lunch together.” termination that knew no deapair or|, Congressman Hastings is from Tab- retreat, was given to Gen. Liggett. Oklahoma, Both Frengh and Americans. knew for the Cherokee Nation from him as the hero of the second Marne. fry fog and was a Gelegate to ie more gmnvention And with him Brig. Gen, Malin Craig, his Chief of Staff, shared the credit. arg rer Hq Presid Gen. Liggett gontinued in command | * inated, ow {oa of the lst Ai Corps until Oct, 12, n 1918, He led his divisions—never the same for more than two or three MAYO ASKS:. $50,000. weeks—through the battle of St. perarumie yay | Mibiel and through the first phase of Noo Gace for inde the battle of the Meuse-Argonne, Street: John B. Meyo, former Justike of from Sept. 26 to Oct. 12, Gen. Pershing had commanded the Special Sessions Court, has brovght @ sult for $60,000" gy i Gristede Bros; Bx-J First American Army from the day of its organization, 10, 1918, through St. Mihiel Brothers, Ine., of the Argonne battle. When th The First was to continue the great Argonne battle and the Second, for the time being, was to hold the gains in the St. Mihiel region, later to ad- vance and deliver the death blow. Gen, Liggett took command of the fighting First Army. The great attack, called the second phase »f the battle of the Argonne, began Nov. 1. Ger- many was crushed, The Second Army, commanded by [leut, Gen, Bullard, never got a chance to strike a real blow. For the past few months Gen. Lig- gett has been commanding the Third Army, the army of occupation, which wity created after the armistice, Besides Gen, Liggett and Gen. Craig, the Aquitania ig bringing Major Gen. J. T. Dickman, Brig. Gen, Dennis EB. Nolan, Major Gen, Squier, Brig. Gen. Fisher, Brig. Gen. Reese, Brig. Gen, W. B. Burt, Brig. Gen. H. O. Smith and Brig. Gen. O. N. Barnum, Another returning officer is* Major William Kennelly, who was captain of Company C, 69th Regiment. He wears the ribbon of the French Legion of Honor. The Aquitania also is bringing Benedict Crowell, Asststaat Secretary of War; and other notablees, walking at m "Avenue. on e end wagon td ree ar saosked bine down aed that result he suffered concussion of the brain, @ severe shock to his nervous system and other injuries, and he has since been incapacitated. Bape 3 oath DRUG ADDICTS ESCAPE. Believed They Swam From Rikers Inland to Bronx. Henry Gents of No. 783 East 1834 Street; Nicholas Aurender of No. 2018 Second Avenue, and Michael Nicolini of No, 2149 Second Avenu, under treat ment at Riker's Island as drug addicts, secured keys to the outer daore of their ward last night and esca: ‘Their tracks in the mu ies’ followed to the beach opposite the Bronx and there disappeared. It is believed they undertook to swim across the Sound to freedom. I Iced “opposed to accepting eerie from the Rockefeller crowd.” The number of drug addicts treated: at the City Clinic in Worth Street,’ bearers noon and 10 P. M. Mngt was 1,900, Registration of addicts at No. 18 Prince Street continued to-day in somewhat diminished numbers, Dr. Copeland regards the situation as, critical because from the time) they, sign the dosage cards the amount \weroine or morphine iasued ‘to the registered addict will gradually be reduced. Dr. Copeland witnts to pi om and, dation was to turn over to the city’ the buildings of its War Demonstra- tion Hospital at Sixty-fourth Street’ Avenue A. Mayor Hylan voted Comptroller Craig refrained from votii hg Ce, offer was Bot) accepted. he would not “ and tor this He admitted that he had asked for Rockefeller butidings. Some addicts peer = today that when they have gone to orhenes of clans w care them they have found one a, the Windows “No Drug Addicts Apply.” Physicians say they are periag. sat safe because ti do not understa) new law. ‘ame esas wtimate that more 000 drug addicts In New York have’ failed to register with the State Nar-) Me Mee pte e chains of " shee ena pete ive @ it yes. terday to say that faites tats * | . + oe GOT DOPE WHERE HE WORKS, Man With Nine Boxes Says Drag Firm Employee. ‘Tony Ladort. eighteen, of No. 5 Mon- roe Street, Who.was arrested late yes- terday at Monroe and Rutgers Streeth for having nine boxes containing an pes of an ounce of cocaine each in bits sustained by being bit easion, told Magistrate Simpson der was granted om the request Of! smash at the Germans was planned | defendants’ wagons, : The action was Tombs Court to-day that he gx ! Corporation Counsel Burr, who de-|the First American Army was divided | commenced ‘In~ the.,uprome tour the. Cocaine from drig Arm where he sired time to present to the United! into the First and Second Armies, O'Go! vigek Battlo, & |'# employed. hile his story od been held for examination ow is being Mo: u “HIGH COST” HITS NEWPORT. ed ae Reason for Navy Of fleers Seeking Sea Daty NEWPORT, July 1@.—Naval officers long associated with Newport, discuws- ing the various reported reasons why Admiral Wilson, Commander in Chief of the Atlantic Fleet, ts keeping the battleships from Narragansett Bay thisg summer, declared to-day they did not know why the Admiral took this action, but that they believed naval officers did not care to return to Newport, because of the high cost of living here and the reported scarcity of cottages and apart- ments, OMicers orgares to the evel War Col- lege,. they ag soon receive ‘orders for ‘aut ole } peiaasiia Sse tic creed amiauted, o2art'aS | FET MAN TQ GERMANY a law which Was passed for the spe. | cial benefit of the people—the city WI BE ENT showd be permitted to defend it, and , it Is the “dhty of the Corporation ‘ounse) to see that the city's right a are established.” ye EE Only Thirty Sacks So Far—Mes- | he petition to have the XN ‘on | y order vacated was based on eerie sages Must Be Passed by |resentation that the company is ios. ish Censo ing many thousands of dollars daily dds nom | by the delay Only thirty sacks of mail for Ger-| | Circuit Court of Ap |many hav b ecely owt | | Appeals had|many bave been received at the post Pry Exce {Previously held that the city had no | office h The mail wil be sent Tues | 2H Summer Beverage Par a eee defendant in the |day,’ when, It 1s estimated, there may ch is brought against the | pe 150 sacks. State Attorney General, the Public |°* 190 sack’ It’s So Refreshing and Has That Service Commission and the Diatrict | yy iM! ack mil hold, 2,800 tote —————_—_—__—LSS LT jAttorney of New York County, It expected that not more th ° 150 will conta ; or |was to gain time to appeal this de. |} $40 sll contain letters, Exquisite Flav cision that Corporation Counsel Burr | eleven pounds in weight. asked for the stay ta for sending mail’ to a = — peel eS German, been made, Officials of “MUROER. VICTIM” ALIVE, eaete mann oe tp |was lifted. Only commercial messages ‘ e « orted an Having Com- | are received. t A muntcated With His Father, ————_—_— Absolu e Auction Pint sPApROle, eho mysteriously je 0) Fifteen Robbe: e & isappeared from “his home | stephe Norwalk, Conn. on Web. 13 ' Pa 24 vps Glapen was belleved to have been murae », £3 West 17th Street, Bayonne, yes- r@) ol sald to be alive and to have « terday was committed for the Juvenil Noe Agtwe fees i uurt charged with being the thief who bers Street, is said to have rocefvag aig (caused the Police Department a tot of Information, @ received this unrest during the past several months, ording to the he boy edn: i i |feased to’ having committed Atteen robs | |beries in department stores, eandy weneiiet®. Rhip, shops, delicatessens and bakeries, | . Vesged ckaway ta | be launched this alter) Pane Cases Make Stubborn Fire, | Corporation, at 1 | Chief Kenlon personally commanded | 4 Isiand, Tihia ie the twenmtiotn {his fire fighters for several hours early 7 ny has bullt for the } t ARSR Bee DUNE TOP 506 fi to-day in Uaitling with a stubborn blaze feet long. The sponser will be M in the plano case factory of Joseph N. Litnel ©, Duncan, wife of W. bt. bu Soury & Bune, Lov, ab No oid Wowk can, Chairman of the Liberty Loan 24th Street, Vamages uated to ¥ hee of Lo “900,000, Via ‘TATE AT AUCTION. the cable companies declined to say-how many messages for Germany their com- panies had received since the embargo { REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION. -