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‘WHOLESILERS’ AD \ TOBEAT HOARDERS etapa? _ With Butter, Egg and Cheese Men He'll Have All Foods Under “Fair” Control. Federal Food Administrator’ Arthur ‘Wiliams announced this morning that Bub-comittees of butchers and grocers ¥e being formed for each borough in order that a more thorough survey of | the market may be made and constant- ly revised. The members are to be warefully chosen, including only such Gealers as are known to have adhered hitherto to the Fair Price List. Each sub-committee wil assign its members to watch the retail shops and every dealer who tries to profiteer will find himself under a highly uncomfortable fpot-light of publicity. “The double holiday,” said Mr. ‘Williams, “has given us a chance to Jook the situation over as a whole, and the results thus far are good. It is certain that we have driven many prices down, Another thing that we have done which is just as important, although less conspicuous, is to call a sharp halt on plans that ‘were being made to raise prices.” Results are expected to show this, ‘week also from the work of the! committee on clothing and shoes, of | which Michael Friedsam is chairman. | This committee promises to make it| Possible to buy good clothes and good Shoes at reasonable prices, although the goods may not be “fancy.” ‘The wholesale and retail dealers in| ®ges, butter and cheese will get at- | tention to-day from Mr, Williams, ‘whose idea is to win first of all the fight for fair prices on the essentials, He is encouraged by the announce- ment from the Department of Justice at Washington that the Government is to keep close watch and see that| breaks in the produce markets are passed on fo the consumer. Thou- wands of expert eyes are watching the prices every day throughout the country. ‘The army is now turning over to the «ity its second order of surplus| fo..., amounting to $5,000,900. There | will be no sales of army food to-day | because of the holiday, but the} schools are well stocked up for to-| morrow’s resumption. Markets Com- missioner Day expects sales to break all records this week and before the week end will have a total of 100 ‘school buildings where the food may be bought. Mr. Williams will ask wholesalers to-day to help him protect the pub- ib by exposing hoarders, “If wholesalers will unite,” Mr, ‘Williams said, “and agree not to pay @ profiteering price on hoarded goods, they will be protecting retail- ers and the public against hoarders, it there are any. “It is merely a question of getting “the wholesalers in all kinds of food- stuffs to stand together and any one ‘who tries to profiteer will then be compelled to sell his goods at a fair price, or lose money by keeping them.” Mr, Williams also said that, accord- ing to reports he had received on Saturday night, grocers and butchers were observing the fair price lists, | and in many cases were charging even less than the quotations. “Not @ trace of profiteering” was found by the investigators, who included members of Mr, Williams's own staff and of Mrs, C. C, Rumsey's commit- tee of women, Most of the inspec- tions were made above 110th Street, on both the east and west sides, and below 59th Street, on the east side, “Wholesale meat dealers, including the big packers, also will be asked this week to tell the public their mar- THEATRE TURNED OVER TO “MOVIES” CLOSED BY STRIKE come Equity Plans to Shut Picture Houses Operated by P. M. A. Members, Actors’ Equity Association head- |Quarters reported to-day that the | first step in @ movement to close all | theatres owned or managed by mem- bors of the Producing Managers’ As- sociation, which have been opened as moving picture houses since the | strike was declared, has been euc- cessfully taken. The Bronx Opera House, in 149th street, near Third Avenue, the Bronx, was closed last night while an audience was assem- dled for the first showing of a screen Production called “Yankee Doodle in Berlin" with Mack Sennett's Bathing Girls, Cohan & Harris are the lessees of the Bronx Opera House. The house was closed by a walking delegate of the stage hands’ union, who called out the moving picture operator on the ground that the house is “unfair” by reason of its operation by Cohan & Harris, Equity officers threaten to close other theatres now being utilized for the display of moving pictures which are owned by the Shuberts and other members of the Producing Managers’ Association. Owing to the absence of dramatic shows, these theatres have been doing a standing-room- only business. The Equity purposes to deprive members of the (Producing Managers’ Association from enjoying All |@ny income whatever from their the- atres, and as the motion picture op- erators are unionized and affiliated with the Equity the job is suscepti- ble of accomplishment, Managers and actors flocked to town to-day from their week-ends at jthe seashore or in the country, and there was lots of movement on both sides, but none that could be de- scribed as in the direction of settle- ment of the strike. Equity head- quarters claimed to have information that many of the managers who lack ‘the obese bankrolls of the Shuberts, Cohan & Harris, the Selwyns, A. L, Erlanger, Golden & Smith and other leading producers are utterly sick of the strike and willing to accede to Equity terms, All that holds these minor mana- gers from breaking away from the Producing Managers’ Association, the striking actors say, is the control of theatres by ownership or lease in New York and elsewheres by the Erlanger, Shubert and Cohan & Harris forces. This control applies not only to the large cities but to the most remunerative one-night stands, ‘The Hippodrome opened as an all- union theatre this afternoon with great eclat. Equity actors and Equity chorus girls sent flowers and good wishes and everything was lovely, It was definitely announced at Equity headquarters that no contract which does not specifically recognize the Ators’ Equity Assolation will be considered as a basis for settlement of the strike. A contract such as that suggested by George M. Cohan, pledging managers to treat with an unnamed “association” will not do, say the Equity people. STRIKING ACTORS RUN OWN SHOW IN CHICAGO Open Week's Engagement at Audi- torium With a Score of Stars and 200 Players in All. CHICAGO, Sept. 1—Striking actors became managers to-day when the Ac- tors’ Equity Association opened a week's engagement at the Auditorium with a vaudeville ill enlisting the 9699564957 0663-0600 C0000 | | 900900900 00090000000000000H YEPLTT-L9D-999-9996-909900-0-9-9.90000000 oo 1 H9DOHS-905-90 Burgess Allison Edwards and Wife Will Make Their Home in Far East. Miss Jean Lawson, youngest|prother of the bride, acted as best daughter of Thomas W. Lawson,|man, Jean Lawson was named for broker, author and yachtsman of |her mother, who died in 107, Mr. and Mrs, Edwards will make their Boston, became the bride last Satur- day of Burgess Allison Edwards, Harvard ‘14 of Boston and Marion. The ceremony was’ performed, at Dreamwold, the Lawson estate at Egypt, in the town of Scituate, Mass. Mr, Edwards until recently was a captain in the 3024 Field Artillery. Captain Douglas Lawson, U. 8. A, a home in the Far East, where Mr. Kawards is entering upon a business career, JOHN BROWNING DIES IN LONG ISLAND HOME End Comes ti to © Clothing Merchant on His Fifty-Sixth * Birthday John Scott Browning died yester- day in his summer residence, Kidds Rocks, Sands Point, L. L, following an illness he contracted two months ago. Mr. Browning, who was treas- urer and senior partner in the cloth- ing house of Browning, King & Co., died on the fifty-sixth anniversury of his birth. At his bedside were his wife and his two sons, John Browning jr. and Hays R. Browning, Mr, Browning had been associated with the firm since his graduation from Columbia University in 1885 and was one of the best known figures in the dry goods business in this coun- try. er, Browning was a director of the American Exchange National and the Pacific banks. He was a member of | the University, Union League, Mer- chants’ and City clubs, and had taken an active part in war relief work and the Liberty Loan campaigns, Seoceerdantpecooracers WOMAN STARVES 10 DEATH WITH THOUSANDS IN BANK Found in Apartment With Win. dows and Doors Plugged Scott | FIVE HELD FOR ROBBERY AT LEHIGH VALLEY PIER One Man Also Charged With At- tempting to Bribe Detective to Release Suspects, After arraignment yesterday in the Tombs Police Court before Magistrate Schwab for alleged robberies on the pier of the Lehigh Valley Railroad, John Quinn, twenty-nine, employed by the railroad, admitted his part in the robberies and submitted a confession. Quinn was held in $1,500 bail, and two others, who are sald to have aided in the thefts at Pier 30, North River, wero held in the same amount, Matthew J | Tracy, twenty-five, of No. 28 West 13th and Bernard T. Curran, twenty- ue, Hobo- to be the principals, Jacob Stern of No. 197 Bedford Road, Brooklyn, | forty-five, a | shirtwaist maker, was held in $5,000 bail for al- leged complicity in receiving the goods stolen from the pler. William N. Jones, nineteen, Of No. 345 West 2ist Street, a driver, is also held in $500 bail for the part he Is said to have played in getting stolen goods off the pier, Detective Max Leet ws to fx ind release all four men, Lect said he saw Quinn check off a package of silverware valued at $600 which was placed on Jones's truck, and that the truck then went to Stern’s place at No. 137 Wooster Street, Stern was held on an additional charge of attempted bribery after having given and Wednesday morning. THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTUMBER 1, 191 Daughter of Thomas W. Lawson Is Bride of Harvard War Hero 1904844 4449089-06 4669-4089O6904980004 604 14404004406 FAMILY OF FIVE DRUGGED IN HOME; ROBBED OF $2000 Father, Mother, Two Daugh- ters, Son and Watchdog Mys- teriously Put to Sleep, Burglary continues to be a profit- able calling and apparently a non-, hazardous one in| this city. Thieves have used drugs before to further their ends, but it is not often that they succeed in putting « family well. surance broker, who occupies the ground floor of a two-family house at 261st Street and Tyndall Avenue, the Bronx, lost $2,000 to “chemical thieved' between 10 o'clock last Tuesday nixht Besides Mr. Alexander, there live in the home Mrs. Alexander and their thr.» chil- dren, Elsie, nineteen; Marie, eighteen, and William 8.:jr., ten. Last Tuesday was Elsie's birthday anniversary, and her father observed the occasion by presenting to her a, wrist watch costing $80. The family retired at 10 o'clock that evening, set- ting an alarm clk for 6 o'clock. When the alarm rang no one heard it, and at 7 o'clock Elsie awoke, feel- ing ill and -xceedingly drowsy. A pe- cullar odor oppressed her, went to the window, whereupon she discovered the broken open window in the dining-room. Miss Alexander aroused the whole | family. All complained of nausea, Brutus, the collie dog, also had been drugged. Every room had been ran- sacked. Elsie’s gift watch, a dia- mond ring, a diamond lavalliere and $120 in cash had been taken. The family physician, who was called, after ministering to the Al- exanders, could not identify the drug that had been used. When the manager of the United Cigar Store at No. 103 Park Row opened the place this morning the safe was missing from its accustomed spot back of the counter. He found it in the rear room, lying on its back, the door forced open, and $800 miss- ing. Scattered about the floor were tools which the burglars had appar- ently used—a brace and bit, a pair of gloves to eliminate finger prints, a piece of iron that is believed to have | been used as a jimmy. The back door and an iron shutter had been forced open. Another innovation in burglaries was that perpetrated Saturday at the home of Otto Gorlts, the former Metropolitan Opera baritone, where property to the value of $10,000 was stolen. The thieves had one of their number trail Mr. Goritz, and when it was seen that he was on his way to the house, No. 170 West 85th Street, the “shadow” telephoned to his part- ners at work and they left. A gold medal presented to Mr. Goritz by ex- President Taft when he sang at the White House in 1911 with Mme. Schumann-Heink, was one of the things stolen. More than sixty residences between Toth and, 90th Streets have been ,robbed recently, it has already been learned. DRS SELF COURTS HER IN MEAT SHOP; RECEPTION HELD THERE TOO Butcher’s Married Life Begins Eco- nomically—Huoks Dis- play Presents. Mr, and Mrs, William Goldman, of No, 301 West 119th Street, just mar- ‘and she! a bond when stolen goods, charged with recelving ried, haye! logrned at the beginning how to dodge the high cost of living, Goldman is a butcher in the shop BRAVED GERMAN INL TORTURE FOR LOVE OF AMERICAN ostcilpitentis _ Girl Born in Berlin Weds U, S. Army Dentist After Aiding America in War. A thrilling story of her life as an ' American spy in Germany was di- | vutwed to-day by Mrs, Edwin W. Peterson, wife of an American Army dentist, who arrived to-day with her husband aboard the transport Sierra. 1 of five to sleep and the watchdog as |The Sierra made her last trip as u | William 8, Alexander, an in-! transport, carrying 8,886 troops, and will be turned back to the Oceanic Steamship Company on the Pacific | Const, Mrs. Peterson was born in Berlin twenty-two years ago, but that did not prevent her braving dangers and hardships for the United States. In 1914 she came to Boston to study den- tistry at @ college where Dr. Peterson was an instructor, They fell in love, In 1916, Mrs, Peterson said, she’ re- turned to Germany to aasist her parents, who were in financial dim- culties because thelr property had ‘been largely confiscated. From the day she set her foot om her native soli until she left it after tha armistice , she was shadowed. The day war was declared by the United States Mra, Peterson was hur- ried to the woman's military prison |where she was guarded by soldiers carrying rifles with fixed bayonets. ‘Three days later she was tried by a military court and sentenced to | twelve years’ solitary confinement. | The food furnished her was unfit to eat, the cell was so damp that moss grew on the walls and floor and the rats were a constant terror, Not satisfied with inflicting these tor- tures updn her, she sald, the prison officers subjected her and the other women to unspeakable indignities. She lost thirty pounds, but despite her approach to exhaustion she suc- ceeded in opening an “underground route’ to Copenhagen whereby she {had messages delivered to the Amer- scan Army authorities in Paris. Two days after the armistice was signed a mob of Germans broke into the prison and liberated all the pris- oners, She managed to disguise her- self and after much suffering made } her way to Cologne, then occupled by the British, But the British offic would not believe her story and sent her back into Germany, Eventually she reached the American Army at Coblenz whence she was sent under guard to Paris, where Cupt. Peterson established her identity and they were married a month ago. Another German bride on the Sierra was Mrs. Harvey L. Richards, whose husband, an army Heutenant, lives at Houghton, Mich, They were married at Neuenhar, Germany, where they first met when Lieut. Richards was billeted in the bride's parents’ home, Lieut, Edmond O'Donnell, Ansonia, Conn, also brought with him a bride, who was Miss Bileen Ireland, said to have been the prettiest girl in Cork, Capt. B. N. Robinson, Medical Corps, of Baraboo, Wis.; was accompanied by the former Mile, Yvonne B, deWach~- ter, a Belgian, whom he married a month ago in Brussels, Aboard the Sierra was Alexandre Gaudin, 18, Nord, France, who suc- ceeded in reaching America after a year's effort and is now at Ellis Island awaiting deportation, Alex andre’s parents are dead and be boarded the Sierra at Brest on Aug. COUNTESS SZECHENY! SAILS TO-DAY 10 VISIT CUNT Cc qu ESS. ZECHENYI. Former Miss Vanderbilt, Whose Fortune Is Impounded, Starts First Trip Since War. Countess Lassio Sszechenyl, for- morly Miss Gladys Vanderbilt, sails to-day from Europe for New York on her first visit since t! world war began, She will go to Newport to visit her mother at the Breakers, Countess Szechenyi ts one of the American women whose extensive holdings in this country were taken over by the Enemy Alien Property Cus- todian after the United States en- tered the war, For several months she had been living in Switzerland, She cannot recover her impounded property until Congress acts on cer- tain war measures, She was married to the Hungarian nobleman in 1908. pi dad ath pattie TEARS WOMAN'S DIAMONDS OFF HER NECK IN STREET Eh Policeman Draws Gun to Protect Boy After Crowd Catches Him, Patrrolman McCormack of the Union Market Station drew hia revolver this morning to protect Adolph Degner, eventeen, No, 227 Bast Second Street, rom a crowd of angry East Side resi- dents, Degner was caught in @ hall at No, 419 Kast Tenth Street after a chase, Beside him was « platinum lavalilere containing three diamonds and valued at $300, The jewel was the property of Mra. @ussie Zemolowitz, No. 138 Avenue D. She was on her way to market this morning when at Avente D and 11th Street a youth ran up to her and tore the lavailiere from her neck. Patrol+ man McCormack, who was nearby and heard the womai cries, gave chase, Hundreds of others joined him. 22, He had procured an American army uniform and mingled with the troops on the gangplank, hiding when the vessel sailed, The Sierra brought over the Amer- jean crews that had taken back to SWEDEN HEARS CONSULATE AT MOSCOW IS SAGKED! ; iFears Something Has Hap-;- pened to Wealthy Man big Spoiled Wedding Party. Tt William Anderson, sixty-seven years old, does not return before to-” morrow morning and marry Mri” Laura Watson, is going to nena the police after him. Not that she suspects anything. But she is sure that some accident must have Be-- fallen him. They were to have been” married last Saturday at Westfield, N. J. but when everything was. ready, including thé: minieter, the fiance failed to appear. Mrs, Watson is @ widow with three children. Abtout four months ago she met AB- deraon in Toronto, He is a Califor nian and is said to be wealthy. On Aug. 19 Mra, Waterson returned | to her old home at Westfield and took - rooms at the Hotel Willette. The next day Anderson arrived, The pro-— prietor says the first week's Dill was hes for the whole party by wander- hut on Thursday Anderson bad hia bagwage sent to the station and that night he left. Mra Watson knew he was going, it Is sald, but understood ft was only @ short tri ahead with the plans a and now she's been the bri Re Wenley * Martin, a clergyman, was to perform mony. TASTY WAFFLES WIN HM ASIATIC FLEET COOKSHIP Admiral Gleaves Succumbs to bi nae eipbis fe says ‘he's a heewe men.” dali: aint ACCUSED AS HOLD-UP MAN. Breoeklynite thatinca os Man Whe Shet Hotel Clerk. Arraigned to-day before Magistrate Folwell in Williamsburg Plaza Potice Court on @ charge of gambling, Edward McGarry, twenty-five, was declared by policemen to be the young man who entered the ag Hotel Ry No. 146 Franklin Street, Brooklyn, on the night A June 30, thee shot t the. meat the “cash he leg and stole $126 from awe ieGarry, Pn cians to live 2 Laseie lyn, man dea" Si ate Tall, for examination on Thursday. Meanwhile mil aig the potice will look into matter, a 200 SHIPS WAIT ‘FOR COAL. Britain Ties Up Vessels om Way H Delays of one to four weeks’ waiting for bunker coal at Cardiff are reported by officers of merchant ships arriving @ to-day. = * Report That National City Bank| $9s™. Funds Were Taken by bs Bolsheviki, STOCKHOLM, Aug. 3) Bo! ie +|agents have sacked the Swedish Con- sulate at Moscow, stealing millions of gin of profit,” said Mr. Williams. “This profit per pound is not large, nd if the wholesalers will state it the consumers will have the protec- ‘tion of knowing what it is. The chain of municipal groceries ‘will have expanded when the sale of of N. A, Eisler at No, 2211 Bighth Avenue. His bride, who, until 7 o'clock last night, was Miss Gertrude Jones, is cashier in the same establishment, It wasn't long before they were walk- services of a score or more of stars. ‘Two hundred actors took part in the initial performance, Among those who appeared were Will- jam Courtenay, Frank ‘Tinney, Ada Meade, Blanche Ring, Thomas’ Wise, Walter Jones and Hazel Dawn. Holland six Dutch steamships com- mandeered by this Government after we entered the war, HIRES GUARDS TO WATCH With Paper, Miss Hannah Smith, fifty-six, of No, 436 West 38th Street, was found dead there yesterday. A bank book show- ing a balance of several thousand dol- AMERICAN FRENCHMEN WILL KEEP MARNE ANNIVERSARY Coblens Ratlway Track. COBLENZ, Sept. 1) (Associated * “Two bombs ,were found op Saturday on @ railroad -track he: Army foodstuffs is resumed to- plicit cat t Ww jing home together, going to the kroners, according to reports received |They were thrown into the Rhine by inorrow into. seventy-two. popular e lars was found in the apartment, | TWO Hundred Yanke Yankee Poilus Cele eavieh and all tet hart ce (iaa ana MEXICAN OIL GUARDS | Svensk Dagblad, It 1s de-|the men who discovered them. The ‘price markets in as many public| Actors and Stage Hands Strike im/ Miss Smith had not appeared at work brate Battle Next Sat- a fe ol that ums belonging to next train due at Coblenz on the track school buildings, New markets will Milwaukee. at a hotel since Monday, and a com- agar ve the announcement was not a surprise, the National City Bank of New York where, the bom 4s were found was a te opened in Corona, Ridgewood,| MILWAUKEE, Wis. Sept. 1—The|panion worker, Miss Mary Myers, of urday Evening. Goldman approached Bisler with the Royal Dutch Company Finds Sys-|were included. pe oe ae a 45 of tae pas- Long Island City and Astoria, actors’ strike reached Milwaukee Sun- | No, 420 West 37th Street went to see] ‘The first battle of the Marne will be| suggestion that his butcher shop be| ©O¥* ompany y' Fresh supplies have been forwarded ‘ort Newark and the Army | musicians walked out, refusing to work , 4 i 0 i * fom Bo Win Orne eee Sey | aeete George’. ‘Tyler production’ of | Windows and doors Were found) War Veterans, with more than 200| tion, Goldman had found rents high. ful in Tampico, res @ . 4 in which Patricia CoHinge is | stuffed with paper and barricaded by| American poilus, at the Fifth Avenue delay was met with to-day at the} ook, furniture. The woman was lying face | 2 £ * Two hundred friends of the young} wm. wara line mship Monterey latter base because of orders from ileal leita down in one of her two rooms, No food | Haittie next Baturday eroming ” °. @°| couple trooped into the freshly saw-|grrivea thi » sing. fea. Canann ton C the right of was in the apartment ne jaturda nin ve nor C0, ‘Washington to "give ight 9 se Medical’ Examiner’ Hohmann said|,, THe Federation is made up of Amert~| dusted meat emporium last night, fol-| Vera Cruz and Havana, bringing 196 way over everything” togreat masses! PHIL AIN'T MAD NO MORE! ‘ t 7 can citizens of French birth who went of war relics and other paraphernalia - by lL caused by starvation and | OV), oly fight for the land of their | Wing the tying of the nuptial knot] passengers, One of them was Christian shipped from Europe to be used in ps py RE rm fathers, and of reservists who answered | in the rectory of St, Joseph's Church, | Visser, General Manager of the Royal the Pershing Parade. The work was further delayed— some sald by twenty-four hours— when a great transport pulled up to the 69th Street dock and blocked the way of two lighters. Despite these @ostacies Deputy Commissioner of Markets O'Malley says the school- house stores will be better stocked to- morrow than ever. To-morrow’s “feature” or “special” day when the stage hands and CHICAGO, Sept. former Cub pitcher, who left the Giants after an alleged quarrel with Manager MoGraw, went back to his team after McGraw sent him word the incident ‘was closed so far as he was concerned, according to William Veeck, preside.it of the Cubs, to-day, “Phil told me Saturday everything yas smoothed over with MoGraw." said what was the trouble. Se ot STRAY BULLET HITS WOMAN. Shot Fired by @ Wounds Her, Miss Rose Ponzo of No. 213 East 66th Street, while standing in front of her home late last night, was wounded in the left arm by a bullet said to have reling Men celebrated by the Federation of French the call from t! ‘They will have as thelr guests many Americans whi Army before our entrance Into the war, including former members of the Lafay- ette Escadrille, LE See AUTO HITS WAGON; BOY HELD Potlee Say 1 From Connect hese shores, oO served in the Fren: Adm! Taking © ut Garage, rented out forthe wedding celebra- The rows of meat hooks formed a di play place for the wedding presents, The chopping blocks formed posts of vantage for musicians and when anybody became overheated in the dizzy whirl, a few moments in the ice box brought more refreshment than could a seidel of 2.75, pee BD ch ar tem Expensive but Success- Dutch O1l Companies, Tampico, who ts homeward bound with his wife and daughter, He sald he came by water because he feared he might be mur- dered if he came by land,+ “But our oil properties are well pro- tected,” he sald, “We hire Mexican suards to watch the property and other guards to watch the Mexican guards. - t h hd e e 4 - v4 It's expensive, but it works.” wal We ress variety. of arias 4 that he had decided to 0 been fired by one of eight men who en-| award Wilson, nineteen, No. 348|BEATEN AS HE CLOSES SHOP.) Witiam 1. Gongales, United States 5 fered. in S0-pound cases at 15 cents | Douglas left here Saturday night for | Saeed 1p & quarrel 12th Street, Brooklyn, was driving @ * Minister to Cuba, was another pas- pound. The prunes, Mr. O'Malley |New i Bho shot attracted Patroiman Alfred | pig touring car down ‘Thini Avenue|LAqwor Dealer Accuses Man He Twice senger, homo for @ visit. He said ho by ° . e H @aid, are as good as some that have Stang of the Bust dist Btreet station, early this morning when, at Glst Street, Ejected, could not understand why there should ou district } : gold at retail at from 45 to 70 cents. who ran to the gcene and selzed @ man. the hit a wagon. ‘The damage was| Joseph Bryson's resentment at being be © sugar shortage at home when th wa ? Kustralian ‘preserves in $-pound.con- who was taken to the police station |slight, but {t brought a policeman who |ejeoted from a saloon in which he had | 1 4 « tainers at 30 cents each, also wil) be to be questioned. No weapon was|Wanted to see Wilson's driver's Li- spent considerable inoney led to his Cuban warehouses are bulging with on sale. thirty-three, a “university graduate |found upon him, conse, sugar. \ — and chemist," to-day admitted he was | ,, The prisoner, John Funcheon, twenty-| |" haven't kot one.” the boy anid, and | poet taen bd Soper rir’ Bly oe @ 6 & y eight, a postal clerk, of No. 351 Kast|80 he was taken to the East Slat Street |Court to-day on a charge of felonious Mexicans Accuse Americans of Ol! /an “international crook." the police | Ssth'strect, waa ‘charged with felonious| station, ‘There. wien he was aearcived |ccoweit’ protoried by ieee on "| 40,000 SOLDIERS REPRIEVED. oO ” cont 4) Rebberte: wOUsOH 0! @ Holes, sney it, {t was found that he did have @ license’ man who keeps a liquor store at No. a ene MEXICO CITY, Sept. 1,—Federat au- | #a/d, that he had taken loot valued at Ponzo told the police that she} With his picture on it, The police say igz Coney Island Avenue, thorities here declared to-day that an {$5,000 from Detroit homes, Louzon|Was standing near the entrance of her |he also had a loaded revolver, and they | Hanneman eiscted’ Bryson, whose jean au- American citizen named Tolley had ding reception held in Maennerchor| ‘The touring car bore C tout I. eo turday 1 ie! nom ? een arrented at ‘Tampico and had con- | police hadge found Jn partment | Hail, No. Bast Sth Sirect, lucked |vonse, No. G0dih, Detecuve’ Ceupiue | an y inek wth te claeee anop| , ROME, Sept. L—King Kmmanuel to- CAS foseed to complicity ry recent robberies | belonged to the Chief of Mpotlde of Mil- | into the street. Eight men approached, |says the boy has confessed that he and | | Bryson waylald him, beat him with a| ¢ay to about 40,000 a9 of oll companies. confession in- | waukee. quarrelling, She heard two shots, felt|a friend took the car from a garage in'black Jack and knocked out threo’ ot other ‘Naerien 83 ry speaks several lanayanes ue said a night whet home when guests from an Italian we left arm and screamed locked him up Sonnecticut. ‘been found, on that chargé The other boy has n 1! re home is at No. 1681 Bast ith Street jot or ‘exada ayeee was held in $1,600 bail soldiers who had received prison sen- fences ranging from twenty years to {ate terme, Peo