The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1919, Page 3

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BROKER SULLIVAN Sdn ahs ely e ‘Bio EDWARD TO HONOR TNDGTED W HUNT ETY ANERCANS “FORBOND THEVES. FR fd A "Charged With Receiving Stolen even Women on List Which Stock Certificates Valued | Shows Many Privates and at $45,000. Four Generals, : A . TWO MORE MEN’ HELD. ' _ Loot of Gang That Got Million Wilda ba 3k, thy'a. eae Found in Washington rolr tornteip. « Fhose G cena Bariks. are ~ kc M Ninety Americans ranging in rank from Major General to buck private will be decorated by the Pringe of pa. Majer Gen. G. W. (The Grand Jury this afternoon nied Fethals. CG. B.—Col. C. Cordier, Brig, Gen. with Judge Rosaisky in the Court of ©. B, Wheeler General Sessions an indictment against cy —Col. Furbush, Col. J. E. David W. Sullivan; brofer, of Sullivan Goldthwaite, Col. Jones, Major 5 J |, &.Co, No: 10 Wali street, Gen, H. P, McCaig, Capt. A. J. Oren- FQ indictment charges | Sulfivan High thio oe ORR Oee ) With receiving atolen goods. The © B £.—Col, F. F. specific case mentioned in’ the indict- " ies eee D. 8. O.—Major H. R. W mont t that of'two certificates of 100 * an Major H. N. Hemsley (British Army), shares each of Crycible Steel, valued jy, i a jor R. B. oO al » © x at! $45,000, Jor I wens, Lieut. Col. P. 8. Morriss, Major W' e Mt is alleged that this was stolen apr Witleie, Hemapesony Major B. H. Warburton, Sergt. (ex- om Oct. 3% from .a messenger €M- captain) Michael J. Dotioghue. ployed by Clark, Chitds & Co., No. 136 M. C.— pt. th Y - ; Broadway, and afterward received bY joay, Lieut, ites Oca f Sullivan. The certificates were later juinie De eee, ae } rince (ribbon), Capt. A. Bingham } aot Mm possession of the ‘Equitable Company. amide! Marder, a broker, of No, 87 Madiadn Street, and Hyman Horowitz, & walekman of No. 5 Hester Street, were held for the Grand Jury in $10,000 bail by Magistrate Cobb in Centre Street to-day on charges connected with the assertions of the District At- torney’g. office that a master criminal and y assistants were involved in the theft of more than a million dol- lars’ worth of securities both from \ and by connivance with messengers of g drokerage houses. Marder was.arrested ‘it Canal Street , (British Army), Capt. J. B. Maclean (ribbon). ROYAL RED CROSS 2D CLASS —Nurse M. C, Brown (British), Asst Chief Nurse jould, Nurse B. M MacDonald, Nurse E. J. Parmelee, Nurse J. L. Rignel (now Mrs. F. B, St’ John), Nurse D. B. Young (form- erly Nurse Daisy Burcham), Nurse E. Gerhard. d D. Cc. M—Corp. W. H. Cardwell, Sgt. H..G. Hull, Sgt. T. Kenny, Corp. A.J. Levine, Sgt. E, W. Spencer, Pvt. RF. Corp. F, W. Osmond, Corp. Albert C. Westfall, Sgt, Chester M. Cellar, Sgt. Andrew J. Padgett. Wishe yumi East Broadway by Detectives ; 4 “Ranabeng nnd Grover Brown, and in ‘aise , ar hh Piaget ae District Attorney Swann's office he kins, pyt. G, 1 Cargin, ir, tp J N was ques'gned, for -hours. He WA® Douglas, But. FE, A. Duncan Set. P locked ‘upiat Headquarters, charged Garey, Set. H, Greene, Pvt Had. Har, with lafeedy in an attempt to dispose: tin, Sei. c. A. Heim, Sgt, J. W_ Hols of & certificate for 100 shares of stolen jang, Pvt, S. J. Howland, Sgt. b. H. Amerjcan Hide und Leather stock Ingram, Pvt. i. H. Kenny jr, Bg. H. valued at $3,200. | 8. Kirk, Pvt. W. Kolonoczyk, Pvt. L J. The stock certificate is alleged to Lacrouse, Sgt. H. E. Lynk. Corp. K. have deen stolen from the window of M, McCann, Sgt. L. Re Matson, Pvt. Sépuyler, Chadwick & Burnham, No. yy. J. vy. Morrison. Corp #...Posser, Broadway, Nov. 13. It was the pyt, H. Putman, Sst. J. Robins, Sgt. | property, however, of Miller & Co. of G. Rowe! Sgt: E.'M. Sholette, Pvt. W. No, 120 Broadway. 'P. Shugy, Pvt. M. Silverberg, Corp, Before the District Attorney yes Stanton jr. Corp, P. Synott, Pvt, terday, Marder refused to say any- Pyt. M. C.-Ward, ‘Pvt. t aceording to/Detective Brown, Géorge Rigeie, Pvt. Ro R. Kennedy, ‘ gt. McLaurin Baker, Sgt. H. ba ( ‘ before Deputy Commissioner OF. ine cs Lahey at Police Headquarters last Angus Robertson, S: wight said he could: identify the thicf eon, Pvt trem whom he got the certificate if eat wit \ ne’ were permitted to go out On the York to receive her son's decoration), east sided Soe. Le RaW irst Sgt. John to ©. Byrum, ‘Pvt r 0. McDowell, He asserted he had returned it to 54°" Wilkinson, Pvt. Orie E the unknown man after having fatled ank ih Doe, Wagone: Turner, Sat. F to dispose of it. Meanwhile, the head Jonnely (Camp Lee, Ark.), Pvt. of @ messenger service, whom he is RT arastael ite gata alleged to have approached, informed the police and the arrest followed, THIEVES USED MANY BANKS AT CAPITAL. @hown a picture of W. W. Baster- day, whose activities the District At- torney is investigating, Marder, ac-| A cording to Brown, ‘identified him as 4 FLEE STEAM EXPLOSION. Workmen Escape From When Stea sement pe Boratas bursting s nt of the elght- pipe in the ory, building at! No man with whom ho had often done #19 Lats Street endangered the business. Marder said that when he enginee r. John Deckler, and fire. operated under the fitm name of La ee eee oy, af n on ; SL re The basemen: 4 almost instantly Unger & Marder, at No, 74 Broadway, je both natant in 1917, he frequently sold stocks for Kasterday, and claimed Eagterday groped to a ladde by which they escay still owes him $2,000. The steam clouds ro: ” foo: and @ ber o ‘Authorities in, Washington have fe- | (ors, and. a mimper of gun a co-operative investigation edvout. Lieut. Kiibr there concerning the gang of financial With six Nearly every ‘bank district thieves. in the capital, according to informa- i (ton which reached the District At-| LIPTON HOBOKEN’S GUEST, torney's office here to-day, has been ——— used for the disposal of loot. Yacht Chatleager Made Member of Washington officials asked District | Chamber of Commerce, Attorney Swann to furnish to them) Sir ‘Thomas Lipion was the guest of lists of all securities known to have | honor at a luncheon given to-day by the been stolen here the last year, and| Hoboken Chamber of Commerce. The sald they have information that Nor- | ries sand regulations were suspended, ; lana " 5 Sir Lipton was eleeted an honorary ‘nan 8. Bowles, arrested there on | am F Lipton was elesiad.an hénorary Wednesgay, controls "at least half a/ 250 gucats « wer 'tohn tec ng | Pergueon, E ker, & and dozen firms in this city’ also, and|Vorsuson, British banker: others elsewhere. linember of the family. that re re|many cup defenders, . Sit 7 Mr, Dooling sald to-day more) jy pected to, race for the than $45,000 of additional stolen se- | cup next Ju ourities have been learned about oe —— ‘These have not beon recovered: Of/ WOMAN FALLS 12 STORIES. the $1,000,000 or more lost in euch} iin aba thefts, he said; about $200,000 Agnes Zaulows Instnntly Killed in been located and much of it ts als | Accident at Ho ered boun* traced through | gone, anuites thirtvethreo years old, | Sul'ty 0. Vost 1034 Street, fell out of a William J. Griffin, First Vice N ‘Ww 1 s 1 out of dent of the National Surety vindow on the twelfth floor at her ros pany, which has been investigating this afternoc the financial district thieves, said | Death Was instentaneou to-day? ek Sea -s The net js being surols* Arawir! sctore jong expe replevy the | about the principils reaponsible for | ponneyivania Ra lroad 9 the robberies tn the fnan Ml d.stric It was learned to-day — that “Reg nning with New York Citys | mouentanterduy was indicted hers where the thefts have occurred, the ayy qais, Fey sh go A mren has ted into the West, DICK iicged at tO 4. $4,100 from th nto New England, into the capital Oy atin enix Bank on @ of our country and through some of fraudulent and wa doar the'up-State citfes,in New York. From ¢9,000 cage Nas ne Sean © cuusse taxen by some of the se put minal Courts calendar ourities Which were stolen, it is quite toy evident they did not remain long in pe And wwout New ork Chy, PUL Weis | New York Co gent to a fairly distant city, and froin Ste! there they were marketed through va- | WwasHiNGTON, Thee a eae ease of’ a, robbery where New York concerns, Bamberger Bros, the loss we ntly paid by the N I. Keeeh & and the National tional Surety Company, it discovered Surety Company, to-day filed suit in that stock of the Repubitc fron and the District suprome Court to recover Steel Company’ aud Pennsylvania from the Cornmercial Notional Bank Railroad stock, which were the se- of Washin tolen securities ag: vurities stolen, and stolen stack gresating the Stu Company. were |” Bamber trom, claim #0 shares of pledged to banks aH sec Reynold, co Company, — the and .upon discoyeri Burety Company 300 of Pennsylvania promptly repleviod the Republ, and Bteel and Studebaker stocks, and Railroad stock and K & Co, of United Pood Products stock, 100 WAR SERVICE |Mourning France, Says ‘Tiger’s’ Daughter, | “Goes to the Cemetery‘\and to Work;’’ No Time for Gayety in Ruined Nation Mme. phe eh an oe Jacquemaire Sums Up Conditions of Her War-| ‘Torn Country—The' French Family ‘Is’ Not| in Mood for Frivolities —Fashions of True\ ‘French Women Are Modest—American Aid | Has Saved Lives of Thousands of Babie the Future Hope of Re- suscitated France. \ } Marguerite Mooers Marshall. 6 ANCE is in mourning. France goes to the cemetery—and to work.” Brief and dramatic as her famous father in his immortal ery of deflance jto enemies without and within—"Je fais le guerre!” ("I make war!”)— Mme. Madeleine Clemencenu-Jacque- maire summed up for me the France of to-day when I talked with her in her apartments at the Waldorf. The daughtdr of “the Tiger” and of his American wife, Mary, Plummer, whom he married in our own City Halk is tall and beautifully propor- tioned, with a mass of tawny bronze hair and big brown eyes., It {s poss!- rble to find “tigerish” suggestions in the color. of. her hair, in hér long, graceful walk and the richly husky tones of her voice, but { do not think she possesses her fither’s tiger’ tem- perament. Instead she typifies, I fan- cy, the true Frenchwoman—dignified, gracious, tender, conservative—per- haps the only Woman left in the ci ilized world’ who can: say with truth; “my home to me a kingdom ts, all pleasant joys therein I find.” It is not this type of woman, who will talk of politics, of the League of | Nations, of the social war—even if| * the daughter of Clémenceau could with propriety allow her views on these topics to be publiahéd. There- sore L asked her about those social problems of the period of recenstruc- tion, which make the sharpest gppeal to 4 Woman—the cost of living, the condition of the babies, the marriages. the homes, the servants, the gayctics, the role played by women, w% wr , MME CLEMENCEAUIACQUEMAR eNOS BY Le GENOME mutiles (the mutilated men), the blind men. I have known of such beauti- ful examples of sacrifice and devo- | tion, The true Fren¢hwoman desires above all else to.make a home and| to be a mother. “She is a buautiful mother, Becatisé' she believes t in her homevdhavvan find her greatest | “and the short sleeve ia not worn with the tailored or street costume. I ain sure Amer’ n women wili have suffi- clent taste not to adopt the exag- geratéd modes which the best-dressed Frenchwoman shuns,” 'f I wasn't so sure, but I didn't admit it to our foreign guest. Instead, [ “Rr: 4 = _ | happiness apie service, she is not in-|aeked her if the bables of France were coat Jacquemaire aad ee. Clemen: | tercatea enpectally in wuftrase.” |finding life a little leas precarious we must not. deny. Bate ah’ ote “But since France has lost so many | than during the terrible war day! iy er} men by war there must be many girix| Her brown cyes glowed, “America, France, in the heart of every mue, woman and child, there ig the impulse. to build, to ereate, to make the new, through its wonderful work, . has saved so many French babies,” she jd. “Now conditions are indeed bet- who Never will bave homes,” I out, “T know, and they are a dangerous pointed st fe php ath sl ati td hee Problem," ' admitted Madame. ter for them, und the Government is NOT imagine,” she ee; icon Trost | Uan't attempt to solve it, how doing somet and will do ‘more. atarly nh Lar} sl ulmost) Instead, she spoke with a smile of|My father {s very much interested in od distri Yet even there. things See rane nets | ie Movement: Spe Neh Propand ine ‘ . ¢ b yiving of prizes of money to the are L Sigg He. HA i people are grow- “When | was a jittle girl sald | a otherk ot late families, - French Te eden Atay gaat, July TE wastet saw always the same coachman,| babies are our hope for tha future; n Verdun. Already 3,000 men, little (the ‘same cook. Now often I do not] you may be suro'we shall také care of children, old people, had returned and|see any coachman or cook, and when |} were trying to erect from the ashes the homes in which" they -had ‘lived, to replace in those homes furnishings, -xactly like those that had been de- aro visible, -he or she is always new and | different!” | INCE the atmosphere seemed 4 bit lighter, I asked her about the | new-French fashions, the ultra- | ‘short skirt and sleeve. “No Frenchwoman of taste how. about French-American I ventured. “Do you ap- of the marriage of. American to French girls? Clemenceau - Jacquemaire, herself the daughter of an interna. tonal marriage, smiéd. “Ihave seen several such unions,” she declared, OW is it in Paris?” T asked “Wer ‘have herd that the sayety, the pleasurés of the wears aya before the j marten ¢ I believe they’ will .be. happy. days before the war are coming back jon ‘the street a skirt strorter thao Pranchwbeoan cieakes 1a. beed Sd - this," she declared, standing up tol wife, and your boys—oh, but we all “The. Krench~ family," ake" Feplied,| SHOW her own, which was scarcely ved. your big, laughing boys. ‘They with deadly simplicity, “4s_in mourn. | 8X inches from the floor. pning| were like sons in our homes—so why dressts are quite jong.” she addcd,! shouldn't they be sons. in-law?" 5 BOYS, BITTEN BY 003, | ARE TREATED FOR RABIES ing. The menibers of this family go to the cemetery, they go to work. They do not fe like going to the cafes or to dances. “There is in Paris a certain gayety of reaction, such as one always finds after a period of great strain, auch as we had after the Revolution. The newly rich, pooplé who in one way or WINS ALIMONY STAY. \braham J. to Pay e100 M Abram J. Levy to-day was granted a , Advises ®tay by Supreme Court Justice Dele- Brooklyn Board of Health Advises jin. or payment of $800 « month all. anther’ liaed ig wih Eh nae seobes [se ere ee ee LR mea ae eeremee Mite me oy people who are not pleasant to ing Slain Animal. amination under supplemental pr a know—they are’ trying to spend| Five boys, Howard Fell, eight, Will-'ings ordered by Justice Platt of W. their money and enjoy themselves.” |iam Murphy, eight, both of No. chester County An expiessive Ittle shrug helped|Dkyeman Street, Brooklyn; Ge Lovy igned an agreement March 5, out Mme. ,Clemenceau-Jacquemaing’s|Cassin of No, 442 Van Brunt Street, /1908, to pay his wife $200 a month dur- ‘onic inilection, “But 1," she auded, [John Verlin, cleven, of No. 29 Atlantic |ing the separation and as long as Mra. Avenue and Philip Belfoyd, nine, of No. | Levy in quite dnowwer tone, “L went from Temelna unmipteied,: Me. alerep my hospials to Paris, and 1 wap hot [274 Hicks Strect, were treated for rabiow 'that she now Ix being Introduced as the gay. It was too sobn, ‘Dae peuple in infection by the Pasteur method at the | wife of another man. One afMdavit sub- tue provinwes aud mM the bece coreg [Brooklyn Board of Health Bullling® at j mitted ix that of Levy's present. wife (ue truly #revco families in Parig fl. | Flatbush Avenue and Willoughby Street | who wax Lillian Albertson the actress, | s€ll~Luey are now gay ee re corroborating his statements, while an- wrabe Cost of living Is tive times!” ‘The tive were bitten Nov. 19 at Con-jother way that of Mrs, Dalay Hi ia Was ‘vefore tue war, A ronit| oy, 4 Dykéman wots 1 ut Co-| phreys, former chat of the Stage Which used to be o0 fran jorer, sie . | : ne how H0 trance, A. pane Ment || umbia and Pacilc Streets by 4 dog; Women's War Kellef Avdaciation Irane aparment is. now Ju frapes, |Xtterwards killed by Polleeman Thomas} Levy wants the court to relieve him Woollen aress goous, vefore the wan|Curtis of the Ariity Street station, Al from payment of the alimony on the 10 fianes: a yard, are now 45 or 47! post mortem of the dog showed it had/sround that his ‘former wife has re- fianes. shobsirings Wat usva ww be! | married. sents. are, now W cénte Only, bread + etwervation’ an examination of ius NOs ivereased in pricey veca us t twelve puplis. o tue Governiwenc-forbuue 1 We fave F foe whic pit tweive oupils off HAD LIVED 105 YEARS, a grout seaiesey of cou), “When my {the School of Our ‘Lady ef Good Coun- | til | friends companied ne “fo the sel at Ralpa,Avenue and Madioon § |) Mise Ann Ward Dies a rand saw the great pilcy of /enowed that there were no a)mptoms of | . being put boaid, Uncy sald, ! abies in that animal, a matter of| St Meterta Home, Br only we Muld Duy a little of itt’ | precaution, however, the parents of sev-| Miss Ann Ward, 105 yeara old, an sion sp stents so disorgaiized cin {@ral of the children have put them under | Inmate of St eters Home, No. 396 |vuncBown during cle weet the Pasteur treatment Hicks Street, Brooklyn, died Wednes- | ‘ . a day at the home. In 1916, r Have you heard about my work?” " ey Os the Rome: 3) 1030, Buprome: | Madame ‘broke, off, with a “charming | CONGRESS COMMITTEE HERE | court Justice Manning in Brooklyn, and neh sense of philanchropy. Ing the war it was a avork for. home- ‘iG on the application of Edward T. Cur- ran, tried before a jury the question | of whether Miss Ward was competent using “work” the ‘Dur- Invent ating Deportation of Allens J Other Prob! leas £0 ow T have une ‘ VMirst of all, Lind them jobs—oh, but [Committee began inquiries here to that he was one of her creditors, He all sorts of Jobs, and if into delays in deportation of allens held | asserted that it was belleved Mi thing better than they at’ Bills> Island and into naturalization! Ward had large sums of money se \66 ND how about the women?” | questions with a view to recommending |ereted. It is not known, whether any I asked...."\Do -you-have-to-| remedial, legistation, relatives survive her. | provide them with--joba?|.,The committee divided Into kroups,| Funeral services will bb held’ {n'St prone m with job8?! some visiting naturalization courts, ! peter's Chureh to-morrow morning at Ave they keeping the jobs .they had | while, others " suudied | the denortation |g cyotock. Interment will be in Cale z the wor?” machinery atthe Island and conferred purine thawert s with oMelals. "Formal hearings will be-| vary Cemetery, “For tho girl widows, for the women with litte children, some: work must ee Shoes on Sale to Policemen. | jein at the Island Monday —_ > be found," she | replied seriously.! son Bore te C ana ™ Woods,| Special Deputy Police Commissioner “But the others, those who went Into| Friends “af former Polfce Commis. |Julian Ulman, in charge of the Home the factories, the munition plats the goner Arthur Woods were congrati- ice Division, anuounced to-day pre cee od a Se the ray tatinig him to-day on the news that a son} that 9,000 pairs of shoes will: be put ment offices of France, during.the war ting Mi | had been born to hin and Mrs, Woods, |on sale to policemen next week at the e NO they are NOT keeping on with thelr Wir Rene Sigs Helen Pierson Hamilton, | old Police Headquarters. in Mulberry work. ‘They are going back to their 0 . husbands who have returned trom the: ff, Me, Mame of Mra, Woods's mother. Street, The shoos are the first de- trenches, going back to make thelr ago. “Phe boy has been baptiaed Loon. Wvery of a large » that will be homes beautiful again, ard, a’ traditional name in the family sold wt cost by the P Department | “Many. women -are marrying. the, of Col. Woods, commissary. bot DOCKMEN TN FIST FIGHT AT HEARING ON WAGE PROBLEM Butler Leaders Ejected From Meeting | by. Police—Com- mission Preparing Decision. In accordance with its promise to hold a rehearing in the event the cont of living had not, been reduced by Dec. 1, the National Adjustment Com- miasion of the United States Shipping Board to-day reopened the wage ques tion of the longshoremen employed on the Atlantic Coast, Testimony for sidés was taken and the Commis. sion held an executive session this afternoon to prepare its findings. The hearing, which was held in the Produce Exchange building, was fea- tured by) a@ fist fight between ad- herents of rival factions in the Long? shoremen’s association, and the ejec- tion of some of the Butler leaders by the police. Mayor Hylan, who in a | Expressman Pays $2 Fine for | Blocking Traffic While He | Picked Up Coin, [ii HATS « hot one, Judge. It corta me a doliar and a hat to pick up halt a dollar,” said Albert Johnson, an express wagon @river of No. 210 West 634 Stheet, to Magistrate Frederick B. House in Traffic Court to-day after the latter had fined him $2 on @ charge of ob- | structing traMe at Broadway and 91st Street yesterd In pleading guilty Johnson ex- plained: “L was driving along Broadway when { saw something shiny in the street. I discovered that it was a 50-cent plete, so T stopped, got off and picked up the halt- dollar.” “I'm sorry,” said the Magistrate # he imposed tho fine. COMMISSIONER DAY ACTS TO END NAVY FOOD TIE-UP | \ i speech on Nov. & promised the long-! Cajjg Conference With. Officers ip Shoremen of the Butler faction that he. would present their cage to? the Adjustment Commission, did not at- tend. Martin Dolphin, a lawyer, who said he was sent by the Mayor, who also claimed to represent some of the anti-O'Connor locals, was not al- lowed {o, represent the men, The charge was made by ©, H. . who represented the shipping interésts, that thefts of hundreds of thousands dollars worth of goods a month were made while ships wets leading and unfoading in the New York port, Reéepresentatives of the longshoremen resented the insinuation that their’ men were responsible for the thefts, Both sides agreed that there had not been any substantial reduction in the cost of! living aince the | former award of Oct. 6 At this potht Dol- phin appeared as representative of Mayor Hylan and thé Interfational Longshoremen’s Association. Chair- man Ripley asked him fof his cteden- tials, ° He, handed the Chairman a paper signed by Richard Butler and W. J. Smith O'Connor declared that neither of these men was h member of the International Longshoremen’s Asso- clation. Dolphin then handed in q list of what he said were twenty-six longwhoremen locals which had asked him to represent them. “Are you the Chairma.. of this Commission?” Dolphin asked Presi dent Ripley. straight,” ‘ “1t'twandngult for you to come here | and ask who is presiding,” replied Chairman *Ripley. nless you are appearing for the longshoremen L will have to ask you to withdraw. At this point Tom Weldon, one of the leaders in. the radical faction, yelled from the ldbby: “This man Has « right to be heard.” Prot. Ripley called for order in vain and threatened to adjourn the hear- ing. Joe Franklin, President of an I. Le A. local in the Gréenpoint | section, shouted to* Weldon tovshut.up, and the two men struck at each other, The crowd on both sides pustied toward the combatants and succeeded In separating them. During. the controversy over Dol- phin'’s credentiais Richard Butler started to address Chairman Ripley, who turned to O'Connor and asked: “Ig this man a member of the LL. A. “No,” replied O'Connor, “Then you will not be heard,” Rip- ley told Butler Butles ptarted to talk. “Officer! called Chhirman Ripley. Three policemen who had not heen observed came to the rail. Mr. Ripléy inatructed the policemen to aject any one who Intérrupted. “The police took three or four-‘men from tlie room and about twenty more followed. The police were instructed to close the doors. “ Ripley then told Dolphin that attorneys were needed at the hearing After more argument, Dolphin, ue- companied by Butler and all the tat. ter's faction ‘left the room, no The longshe nen sald the cost of living was continually advancing und that a higher seale was paid on the AUantic than on the Pacitie ! Coast Betts, for the ship owners, declared that there had been & marked reduc- tion in efficiency by longshoremen, At this point ‘Tom Weldon agatn burst into the room, His face was distigured.~ He began by saying: “A court in hell” ‘This was as far a8 he got when policemen removed hirn. Dolphin returned to the Produce Exchangé this afternoon, The Ad- justment Commission was holding its xecutive segsion at No, 45 Broadway Dolphin said that the delogates from the Butler. faction had met and ait thorized him to represent them. He suid that he had also conferred with Mayor Hylan and hdd been authorized to tell the Commissioners that the Mayor would appear before them if they desired bim to do so, -~ —_— Brisk Fire on Broadway, Two floors of the five-story tuft building..at No. %0 Broadway were partly gutted by fire shortly before 20 o'clock last might, The blaze startet ‘n the fourth floor, occupied by the Sax- ony Warehouse Company. When the first. engine company ar- rived the flames had eaten through xn airabaft. and, mushroomed down to .he second floor, occupled by Morris Frank, a tailor The damage is un+ known — “1 want to get things Effort to Speed’ New Consignments. . Reports from the ten navy food sta- (lone operated under the Department of Markets that thousands of customers were turned away empty handed. yex- jterday, because supplies were entirely | Lemke left ¢ h led Commissioner | was found, and he saw no ohne Vice President of Funch, Byde Jonathon ©. Day to appeal to navy oftt- rive at or leave the Lemke boilt!™ ‘exhausted, to-day consignments. Witness at Secret-Hearing Says _ Youth Was Alone’ Dayéi; of Death. “2 Testimony, was kiven to-day bat Jobn. W.. Lemke, who .was os strangled, clad in a woman's on his motor beat ff College. Jon Oct. 19, carried « large the boat the day of his d testimony was given at Disteit torney O'Leary's John Doe intended to finally determine Lemke committed suicide. or murdered. da Frederick Hess of No, U8 Street, College Point, who, boat that was moored fifty feet’ the Lemké launch, decidred Lemke, rdw to the boat wit bundle several hours before his ‘Thjs is the first testimony Lenike brought anything to the” It i» regarded as ‘significant, one of the puazlitig features of ¥ cane ‘has bedn wheré the Clothes Which Lemikt's body was found ; tr, Hese declared he remai: boat all ‘afternoon, from shore until veh on, Bie clals to adopt a new plan to peed, up| It was learned to-day cia 4 Saaieg i A meeting at the Brooklyn’ base be- tween navy officers and .Commissioner Day was arrahged to-day. © After the conference it nounced that Navy clothing, inélud- ing underwear and: blankets, ‘willbe offered for sule"through Dr, Day's or- ganization, and the rate of supply, of Navy food to the city will.be more to charged. Under the new plan the food will be placed in freight cars which will be ligntered trom the Navy byge to yarlous water, front points. The Navy will use ‘labor supplied by Dr. Day, but the Navy will supply ite own obeckers.* Six freight cars a duy will be us®d, éach carrying @ight truckloads, TAKEN AS Drookiyn Grocer Acodsed of Charg- Ing 18 Cents m Po: Charsod with profiteering in wugar by nellfng it at 18 cents a pound, Herbert MH. Thornton,” who, with hla father, Joseph ‘Thornton, conducts the Ourlisle Tea Company at No. 360 Lewis Avenue, | Brooklyn, was ed, States Marshal Power, sugar nt the illegal price to Pred Rate- ner, Who keeps & grocery store in Ful- m Ktreet, near Grand Avenue, He was arraigned before United. States Commissioner MeGoldri¢k. and nebo ey ARREST 38 SUGAR DEALERS. Warrants Charae Preftieering— Price Reaches 20 Chicago, CHICAGO, Nov, 21.—Warranta ~ ing thirty-eight Chicago grocers” wil proftecring Hing sugar were issued to-day by United States Commissione: Mavor ® Sugar was selling as high as 20 cents a pound here to-day. CAN Arabian Jelly Wa! and t pungent in flavor, then tastefulness. Mil Chocolate Assorte: Fruite—~ The candy of candies! Fruits—ping- apples, cherie: aprieots, dates, and “& host oi in a layer of the jus you that in late melts mouth, Extra Special 44c Pound Box 421 Broudwey At Cunal Bt, ~ BAD Broadway At Apring Mit. ow wt ors rie boxful of individual candy geémk | | vessels, pictures, too, | | dome unconventiogal snaps THE PFOTOGRAPES NSinle gous SuGait PROFITEER.| (MILLE “Getter Chocolates aka Lower Special for To-day Chunks’, of syle! UST A YEAR AGO—Nov. 21, 1918, to be exact— $e, German fleet surrendered. The World's vure Section on Sunday next shows all the war- ships Germany has left—-a few forlorn third-clags In the same section are some unusual LADY ASTOR CAMPAIGNING A QUEEN GOING SHOPPING A MARQUIS'S DAUGHTERS SEESAWING There's a page of exclusive Roumanian especial interest to the women— BACI.ELOKS IN THE U. S. SENATE. Supposed to have been the of young Lemke, hie disapseared, Proceas sorvérs sent to the Kiniokers booker Hotel in New York, where sie had been living, to subpoena her to tontify at the inquiry, reported had been unable to find any trace Her, and a’ new search has been Be- gum A ‘number of new witnesses ” eave been called to testify at the ine quiry, which Js beng cond mo hitid closed. doors in the Grand Youm at: the Quéens County ‘House’ in Long Island City: it was learned to-day the fire tf tenga hogs a in, No, nog. au recal em “Avenue, Flu tolt reporters goods about a year ago, but. Teimwuber anything aoout tl ; chaser, 8 A : Mr OLoary, and Assistant aa Sitorney Morris will go tw’ of "the ‘motor Mildred J. IL, paying part! tention: to its’ last voyage b discovery of Lemke’s death, the passengers, and te vented to-day by Unit- It t¢ alleged he sold: 100 pounds of DIE and waren ot, hieth toothsome, covered’ wi ivetiged the "reat: of ‘Orental exttaetn, make these mere Lae eo Tr. by AR Tr Lo bl SEX CONVENIENT STORES ‘TAS Broadway + At Efehth 8t, 4ter Bt. i Head ‘at 40h Bt, nos, ANG at foncant ere d wctable milk chocolate. PPOO9O9 909900999990 S009 05H; peregnality! . of film stars, and OF THE ONLY SEVEN

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