The evening world. Newspaper, January 17, 1920, Page 3

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. _ THE. EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1920 SWANN STOPPED STOCK DEAL HUNT __ FORGRAND JURY Resented Dragnet Search for Proof of Official Specula- i tion in I. R. T. THE JUSTICE IS BLAMED. Weeks Accused in Demand That Grand Jury Minutes Bg Made Public. Supreme Court Justice Weeks, who ‘has under advisement to-day the mo- tion of Assistant District Attorney Talley to make public all the Extra- ordinary Grand Jury proceedings in the “overshadowing crime” and other inquiries, is expected to announce his decision Monday. Mr. Talley in making ‘his motion yesterday charged that Justice Weeks last November engineered an in- vestigation in Wall Street in an effort to prove that Mayor Hylan, District Attorney Swann and others had “sold short” securities of the Interborough on the eve of the Mayor's charge of conspiracy made to the Grand Jury. Assistant District Attorney McQuaid, @& member of Mr. Swann’'s staff, con- ducted the inquiry, Mr. Talley also alleged that Justice Weeks had acted as adviser of the Grand Jury. In the midst of the charges Justice Weeks insisted that Mr. Talley incor- porate his allegations in affidavit form before he proceeded further, and an adjournment was taken for this purpose. Not only did Mr. Talley fur- nish an affidavit but he obtained one from Mr. McQuaia and filed both as @ part of his motion papers, with a copy of a letter from Mr. Swann to Justice Weeks. The letter filed followed the 1 of Mr. Talley's argument and w step further, insinuating that tice was helping out the Interborough officials in their fight for an 8 cent tare. Mr. McQuaid’s affidavit made it plainly to be inferred that Mr. Swann knew nothing of his activities. SAYS THAT SWANN REQUESTED THE INQUIRY. During the argument Justice Weeks explained how the investiga- tion had been started through the re- ceipt of anonymous letters and said the inquiry had “been quested by Mr. Swan who desired that it be made tor the Extraordinary Grand Jury. He further said he had most certainly acted as adviser for the jury, which was his might and nes nt a e Jus- duty after the jury had quarrelled; with Mr. Swann. When Mr. Talley went into court be carried a long typewritten argu- ment. The purport of his pl that if the minutes of the Grand Jur; covering the Hylan testimony, the secret court s% n, and the tes mony of Interborough officials officers of the brotherhood of em- ployces only were placed on file, the public would get an erroncous ‘con- ception of the “overshadowing crime” and charges leading into the Dis- trict Attorney's office. “Pither the entire minutes or none of them should be made public,” de- clared Mr. Talley. “The alle investigation of public officers in pur. ault of the ‘overshadowing crime’ was | part of that investigation, Let us have all the evidence or none of it so that thie pretense and myster, may be dispelled.” | SWANN BLOCKED CONTINUA- TION OF THE INQUIRY. | “I want to say that the investiga- tions showed that neither the Mayor nor the District Attorney had sold stocks short,” asserted Mr. Tal “That investigation was after threo or four day: the court. This brought out the fact that after Mr. McQuaid had made a preliminary ation, with the aid of C| halted observed it of the Stock Exchange, to ‘ * us | BARGE OF BOOZE .., ors Island during the war, but] "The city is also prepared the Herald from the inside of its office, MA HEU MEAT Het See Bie Tele r admitted. "And yet | with the armistice the |for the appointment of a receiver to TO SLASH POCKETS | aay even now that so for us eon: 9 eRe : eee 2 af 0 ‘ ; . | repre: city's Interest e cerns any act of mine the nan 6 Woeks, he drafted a circular letter, you know what Kinstein id doing tol BIGGEST SOFT COAL foo Hires SRniccd on Sareea oat ea Atsantor divi [epremnt the city's Intereata. I ex: sabia cern any ‘net of mine Uh New to brokers, asking them to report’ the law of gravity! There Is no f xed) MINE TO REOPEN 2 A ounke "sion of the Re tems ees ink | | "Tam led to say this because ofvthe any officials who had dealt on the | point in science. The fact of spiritual | irge Raises Puzzling at No. 44 ast 23d Street 1a . ES | Victim Causes Arrest of a Man, but ext raordinary intrest th pen origaride short side of Imterborouch securities. P® Tohdiccin at lehaton the sare | ; : i ea ere ote ae 4 ntergst in, tnct——that, haa bee ie This was done at the suggestion of communication is at least on | American No. 4, at Bicknell, Ind., (Question, $20,000 GEMS LOST-IN TAXI. | ither Blade Nor Money | {tated aa to fie future of the pets the Justice, but Mr. refused | basis as the atomic theory of mattor pity oo ie Sea policeme suardir /100 SILK FACTORIES CLOSE. : ————$—— | Is Found on Him. eset | 1 eeereerenenrenen - to sign the letter PE ROTEL RAY Aes | oan ies tent working hypothesis, a Sealed Two Months Because oe Hen aie Vollce Unable to Trace Jewels of ; ; i | fOSth Post, A. Ls fo Give « Ball. sistant to do so. The investigation! sanaple theory with plenty of proof Rcreekeing sags wait uke ¥e 5 | A ragor-wieiding thief, who ampututes { No. 308 of the American Legion was then dropped. ‘The letter was to) oe : 4 Mysterious Fire, terday with 8 rela of Green Rive Men, W. [hiv pockets with not o Rep cera niyo have gone to 3,000 stock brokers. It); D4 pe eae BICKNELL, Ind,, Jan. 17.—The Amer. | Whiskey al for Cuba off 94th} of ‘ to Inw de i 308th Regiment to-night at the would appear, therefore, that the in-| “1 pave a guod deal of sympathy for| join No. 1 mine, said to be the la ! he whiskey | LE ee nt Armory, No, 120 West quiry was stopped by the District At-| 41. sceptics. For some years 1 did} pitun cowl mine in the world, W'S to be transferred ne four: | SORTED HIN SFL SHE tS ae uployve The | he reviment tomey, |not believe in personal immortality. 1 on Nov, 7 becuuse « fi ne huriow, |f ent: ee es eae vmpany in dof the or- SOUTH AMERICANS HERE. | '*'* difficult to believe the dead com- rious origin, wi the with al venir seed Be Atha dine mts for the remgon AMERIUAN ct. |municate with the Mving without past tne Haye j } ad Wao: : Ee AL gmt ae Teen aye Loe oa rege ‘ |ter. I probably shouldn't be convinced | after tho intense com. Nxt f " and Vanderbilt: Avena avely {an Informa full “dress Ding American Congress, of it myself if I had merely listened] ders, said to w trike to enfo mand ewhere betwee ' a buttoned [148 required nor, desired. | Titeta Gixteen delegates from South ond to what others have said on the sub- | tons Kins the js ’ i ah a cade in hi Ses . , admitting the ok jer Central America to the Pan-American | jo rh i 1: i . es byehiee toi iddbn Shain n Financial Congress, which will be hel d ; . | had Wott p fee ry | a ig aauainveak he ial be =r er in Wash ngton beginning Monday, ar-| “Those with whom T he . ae Ae snd ofconl a di y . wi " ito “ : ontainir wwe and iy ETA LU gat tie tee tved here yesterday on the steamship | pathy'’—and now @ note of ity coor A ¥ : i # ivan valued at $20,000, Sle ith 4 i tht Orcoma. The Argentine delegation was | controlled, indignatic nded in che | WITHHOLDS HAYE’S LETTER. Th Let ae n eras seth sine Ne Pra RE tradivarius | violl headed by Domingo Silaberry, Minister quiet tones of the speaker r those } ‘ Tut bee ei ts pahenurrae ve Pike the’! pat ier || ted the owner, | Er uncle Macm len, of Finance; the Panama delegation by | ho say spiritual communication is of | Heleve Srehbin | erine ; ae At the hotel, where Mra. Dertysiair nial ele eit Alfaro and Juan Navarro Diaz, 1. In the words of my frie lend Andesson'n Dry ‘Mer mit and ship the bor ea a diy oF LW ag wins rnoon. He {8 director of mer nelal Ministers; the | the devil. In the Patil Gear Ho Anderson, he > | BOY, 12, KILLS BROTHER ner pee, Lepris mphony Orchestra, with am ton by Fernando C./Conun Doyle, if it ie Ae saloon Leag fused in > i. \. ph Peery ee West 42d Street. He of Finanee, “and : paper dey: be EGG HIS $300 CURE | ’ driven tion by Ricardo Ve ee a wb DUBE & ‘ a . “4 Finance. — Seye Q kJ ot FOR HYPNOTISM | seit tine Discharged When He q Be adie een tit, enibugnies In We Me I [nent Bite: Ssenatnet ate PLANNING CONVENTION. Be ier awetthed semaane tenet ‘ nb ye | . i Simcial to ‘Tae Exeniig Warta ; / editiitio, Kawarie came from (hill | ; Hl 1 Mug hortune Teller Broke It on His| nee Pherieceament iat cee esp Ag tan FRAG coat Wece aatiice auielll Ghia Chivers de Afratres Wn” Get 1 ' ‘ ¥ discourteous tom Chest, Victim Complain lounith, four-years-old, was shot and) ., Ane ninth oh the cane: fer GannOD, Real state See eae Momcere and mink areivi | comune froin s nee to Magistrate killed ‘by ‘this brother Clifford M. Smith, | Pian for the holding ot tne es Supreme Court Justice M tehell yes: | I) to Chili fou German iiNd! thought trunaferenee fron . aaa ava tiimenon hasnt eppe Chiarilli, No. 121 Houston collar of tha home, No. | Prangwce dune 28 Mire teunred 20° | the mult for $260,000, brought by Mee. fl eweepors sllosated to Chill, he sitter or some other mind c ation | believing that his illness was Both parents wore | [AY by & sub-committes ol "™- | Victoria A. McKenzie against Richard | [| OWN YOURHOME —_— > jof the st | ———__- —_ by hynotic influence, went, he cratic National Conardttee, | Chalrinan| 41, Lane S taeeee eens ail L. $. METCALF DEAD AT 83, | “Communications may be effected) nrooiiyn er of Commerce | says, to Marguerite Costello, twonty- cider "boy sald that a cartridee Homer 8. Cummings announced that |term in Great Meadows Prison, to {ind and be yout ows landien®, . ~ in eich of these ways, and we have | on Ticket 160 Mulberry Street, @ fortune jammed in hi orae pMara, a lawyer of B of $26,000 In favor ‘o fesier” than most persons He Once Waw Bult the North to mak lowance for them,” he The nominations committee ot M » Chairman and would go nee tO. Bet out of court by realise, itted readily Jot everything that | Broo! r h pare! he quotes her, wil che ¢ » to take charge of the | Kengie and Lune ae y AWond nl comes through the medium is to be | nar following an- |#Way the hynotic influence, You bring | | | tating Ae RIROHBOn “WAAL es | erf Assortment Be a eee: twat usa aur iudge |UHBL eiactlon neRe ine 800, made up this "way wo $0 | ‘questing « tancheon oe! AWAITS GRANT'S REPORT. || “sy eprortunue to einer bus ae { At to|James Sherlock Duvia five $20 nd fon. $10 bills, | , Avenue, mare land upon which to bulid ment lpatan . t A moat u " tel r - i et tha’ matey rear coven eae | pinuee d ies EE eT HTL io nd woe 8 oe to Dae ° a jum and ye told me Ka ~ 7" 7 : s announced 2 ne ump a sresident, H. HH. Doehier pista money, laid| Wiliam Bu University Geta 82500, | De Taken Until Then. i Dulit is offered the readers of AIRE RG zs i }mond sald he was well aod s rwsident, — Ku Jon a table bn ‘and closed | 110 Ninth BETHLEHEM, Jan, 17.—Charles Li | \]] wo-Morrow's Sunday Works sit wax clghty=three years |Z ahould pay mo attention to it. I|Gharies ta sch ew omonibera of | hts eyes, Aw mubstance | assault { Pittsburgh, a graduate and| Bishop Burch sald yesterday that | rad ' know fle would way more than that, | {he board of dir nge W. Baker, | dropped “on “his ‘ch he learned | M4 Ne kh University, to-day | further action on the report of the ves~ edit | A : orman. Dc 1. Ceuntord, | this was an Cant | f *y,| trymen of the Church of the Ascension | If she g: me meskage ‘in which | juy Duval, Oharie nd the $200 wae ® an initial gift to Lehigh ’ hn she g i 4 Minninon, Willem 1th tie which is to serve ux the|on the Rev. Percy Stickney Grant | t he talked ubout God Almig er SE pan Mh, ator A. | Rita ee One of an endowment fund for| would not be taken until the promised J should discount it- does: talk |tranare’ wilt Mec i ¥ D ealeatea ee. ‘4 ¢ Taylor gymnasium and | report from Dr, Grant reaches him. @ (4 ‘ers m i i Papen! mda ae are hl warke |aleid um was| Dr. Grant refused to be interviewed, } i> that way, Mun, Molor Rteinbrink, Ast tur n vas | the «itt eral years At hie home it was wid he wus Pct SA | eens Sao pa four years. i “But if be aiid, thrdvgh her, und J. Harvey Williams ehurge of grand larceny, | sso ang cost about ing from « severe cold. ecifically re-| “Communication With the Dead Is Like Using the Phone, Only We Can’t Call Them Up,’’ Says Sir Oliver Lodge “We Can Only Leave the Lines Open and) ‘= Have the Instruments Ready”—‘‘In Twenty, Years We Shall Say of the Survival of the! Spirit and It’s Ability to Communicate With! Us, ‘Why, of Course, We Always Knew, That.” | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Y twenty years we shall say of the survival of the spirit and of 10 ability to communicate with us, ‘Why, of course, we always knew | that!” | Almost casually, smiling’a little umder his thick white beard, Sir Oliver | ¥ Lodge, one of the world’s most distinguished scientists and quite the most distinguished defender, not merely of immortality but of the power of the | | immortal to “come back" to the mortal, thus summed up his conviction that the present wave of interest and faith in psychic matters will rise and not recede in the years to come. | Comfortably leaning back {nan} arm-chair beside his fireplace at the | ‘Father do you remember how I used | Ritz-Carlton, between puffs of the|to come into the room? and Tf an- after-luncheon cigarette. which he|#wered, ‘Yes, my boy, tell me about Y smoked through a long holder, this|‘t’ and then he told me of a certain gin OUVER tall, broad-shouldered Britisher with| little trick he had—that could not A f Lopes. the fine brow and the keen, half-|come from the medium'’s subconsci-| 7H i Ishut blue eyes, talked to me of life and death and his belief in the liaison between the two. He spoke coolly, tolerantly, temperately, with a stud- lted absence fanatic enthusiasm land the not infrequent gleam of a ous mind since she had never heard | - of it Re r they long to console those they uve Tia ptabi le FHS early in left, The mother or the wife need nut 8 cen Had conducted u series of|he a convinced Spiritualist. In most remarkable experiments after he had | instances all that is necessary is to set passed on, to show that messages can yin touch with a reliable medium. ‘Love jsmile. His quiet voice and lack of|come over which are telepathy from | ridges the chasm’ lemotion took the edge from cven| the dead but not from the living. He| «phore are those." the Grand Old his most challenging assertion: gave cross-communications—that is, ; Man of physical and psychical sclence jmade them uncannily convincing. he gave part of a message to three i. concluded, with his wise little smile, | “Dhere are no dead," said Sirj different mediums, and only when the |“who say that this discovery of the Oliver, clearly and carefully, “cither 8 were pieced together in A) spiritual world ter than any ps the sense that those we love be- learing-house did they make | sther-scientific achievement since the jcome extinct, non-existing, or thai|#ehse. No one alive in the world knew | Hoginning of time. I don't know that they go to a world far beyond our] ‘he complete message till then, so it kem Their world, I am convinced, is} Clearly could not have been the result jour world, sce +. of thought transference fr« ing | \I'd quite say that, but I'd go a long way toward it, For most of the other discoveries and inventions, such as the from another as} There is a veil between nd them | ud | dees of electricity m, merely \—that is al A often wears | ¢¢ IMMUNICATION with the | satisfy material ne: while the dis- | thin | Oe ad,” Sir Oliver offered an! covery that those we love persist | ‘“Ten't it true," I asked the great] ilustration, "is like using the | meets the deepest longings of the soul. lephone or ientist, “that your belief in personal | |survival and in the communication ¢ between the living and those we have | ¢ called dead is based on something} [more than emotion, on such proot as! have die i wireless telegraphy, ex- | And if they are immortal, we, too, shall pt that we cannot call them up. Welbe immortal. I believe the sensible n only leave the lines open, and hav) people should take hold of psychical he instruments ready. ‘Those who! gcience and develop it, instead of leav- at the end of a long life are} ing it to the cranks as it more or less appeals to the investigator of nat-|not usually anxious to come back,| has been left, and then in a few years jural phenomena But the young, the boys we lost in the, We Shall have something which will | “Quite true," he replied, “I first| war, they are so eqger to get through! | Man tO wll of us a great consolaslon, received such proot back in the eight- | Their interests are in this world, and: universe,” ies. I had irrefutable confirmation | ~~~ eta aan eee —— in '87, But for years I kept to myself . y p yscit| AUTO PLUNGES OVER CAN’T BUY BOOZE, my beliefs and the evidence on which they were founded, Then, in 1906, I! jcame out and said what conclusions I had reached. 50-FOOT PRECIPICE SO HE KICKS WINDOW snd of the None Seriously ht Was the Hurt—Chautffeur Ni “Last Ss CN tee Ne Pook Daring Chance When World,” Pessimist Tells Court mond, around whose communi-, & ; cations with his father the Crash Seemed Inevitable. When Asked His Motive. well known book, “Raymond, or Life Atanasio, chauffeur for! Kiral Lashinaky, twenty-three, of N and Death," was written, did not die superintendent of the treatin AepPRAU INIA he till 1915. Curiously enough, he had hip Company, wa. ng of Bernard Nadler at N never, so his father told me, made any Ns employer home early this ning treet at 10 o'clock last agreement to return to earth if he When out of the snow and neae Ar acing a certain sum of 18th Street, ner . Brook- oe a could after passing out sug) al doy siding H “But he b loward him, Alanasio's only | sc Ae otibeaae on,” the scientist and the father udd- Wiatotmwarveroncts. Pee ee ed, with a tender, ,humorous little He whirled na Si Haniaaet smile; “he has said to me, ‘You re his auto dived off indignar member, father, how I used to laugh Hy ‘Out, BARR Vani tla ania at your ideas about communication «to his job you know it is Prohibition Lahaina ‘ ou Bing sluss from the broken wi Kiral Leshinsky put a. cur from over he’ now LINOW FOU cue one of his eyes, his know and hia place And stepping fat Morey th were right. l wrist anded his machine right ede through the plate: Meer valued! “Do you consider,” I asked, “that! up at the foot of the embankment and found i mployer and his brother, Jc who was riding with Mr dazed and jolted, but o The machine was dam The Joy riders did not stop. the fact of spiritual communicat.on with the living is as well establisacd, | ** from the scientific standpoint, as the pe law of gravity or the law that two iii" bodies cannot occupy the same space | Mr. Bonizzi went on to his home at | at the same time est 19th t, Hrooklyn, in a} ests By SUA aa wall at (hese inweler| vi arargsts towers ve! a) POLICE, GUARD ave been generally accept- | ALL BANKS ARMED, [CAN SIT IN LONDON AND CAUSE “PISTOL DUEL WITH | Wireless Transmitter Fires a Mine at Dis-' GUNMAN REVEALS tance of Thirty-five Miles and Rings Bells. ae | Copyright, 1920, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) | Bandit Who Tried Hold-Up in LONDON, Jan, 17. | A: interesting demonstration of some remarkable wireless develop- Manhattan Bank Says Jesse | James Inspired Him, | ments was given at the Marconi headquarters at Chelmsford Thursday. A device which makes it possible for ships in distress | to ring alarm bells on vessels 300 miles or more away was first shown. | This was described in wireless despatches. But an even more convine- ing demonstration of the power of wireless telegraphy was given when @ small mine of gunpowder was exploded. At a given signal, Cambridge actuated an automatic transmitter, and almost immediately afterward | the charge was fired at Chelmsford. (The distance is thirty-five miles.) A member of the Marconi Company pointed out that there would be no difficulty in firing a gun from a spot 300 miles away. All the | “big guns used in the Passchendaele offensive could have been fired as easily from London as from Ypres. Paris could cause an explo sion in Berlin by merely pressing a key. An airplane could wait until advancing enemy troops had reached a certain spot and then explode a mine which would annihilate them. ' When the range of the instrument has been increased it would be a | comparatively simple matter for a man sitting in an easy chair in Lon- don to cause an explosion in New York. All that would be necessary would be to leave in New York a receiver suitably hidden and cou- nected with a mine. The police to-dny they were | satisfied Jan Stratton, the diminutive truck driver, had no ac complices in his attempt to hold up the Manhattan Savings Bank at| Broadway and Bleecker Street yus- terday. Stratton has been held in $5,000 bail for further examination in | the Jefferson Market Court Monday. { Stratton is thirty-thre and has | curvature of the spine. THe has been | living at No. 1869 Cropsiy Avenue, Bath Beach. He has a gash on his! head several days old but declares he “not know how he got it he promptness with which his de- | mand was met with bullets reflects credit on recent steps taken by New York banks to prevent holdups. Con- |stance M. Bird, President of the Manhattan, who aided in the capture, id: “L think this will be reassuring to patrons of all banks throughout the fd STATEN ISLAND RR PLANE TO BRING STANDS BY PLAN SERUM TO SAVE Most of the are armin, are armed y man h his revo! i times, W are always propared for emergencies. | . | Every man spends a certain time at | ‘rifle range downstairs and we | ‘ve some good shots.” He denied | with a smile that the women em-) ployees had yet been given revolvers, | aie = Senn Stratton sserted he nothing of the past few days except t he had been drinking heavily. He ad a vague recollection of being In Zellevue, which is supposed to hav yuld recall | ' id, but Anti- | Serum May Aid Two Nothing. Gained by Argument Four Already D. Says Counsel, and Receiver been where his scalp wound was % : reused, About the robbery he sald: Will Be Asked. Others. Ii did it all myself, 1 didn't h a anytbor th me. What's the good ; : anybody with me: What's the good! ane Midland Railway of Staton! ‘Tho poisoned olive death Ist in the | pene put oR uch a and am | {sland, through Bertram Kadie of Del Bene family, No. 2828 Hughes | ready to take my t | Ae Weren't you atruia to co in and|Counsel, announced to-day that it! Avenue, Bronx, now Includes four tackle that bank with the cop out-|would stick by {t# announcement of| names, but it is feanst that the side?” Stratton was usked by a re- porter, ; suspending service at one minute after) number may be increased to els | solited' the cope, he FesPense “| mignight Monday morning on all tive! within a few how ! you honestly think they would | of its lines which serve the interlor of] ame qead are Paul Del Bene, ; ‘OU $5,0002" | Staten Island. wife, Marie, and lis two sons, Demi- “Well, you can't tell what 4 f rs ecw a will do under exeltement. T theuert | “We gave ample notice that we ; Mie, sixteen years old, and Antemio, | 1 would get away in the crowd and | not continue,” said Mr. Ale. nine years wo brothers of Daul, take a Broad cus downtown. Board of Estimate and Apportionment! Dominic and Angelo, are at Pordham “Did you do anything to make citement. 2" has ignored the notice, ‘There is noth-| Hoxpital nt the point of death, Ter " I shot jn the d Ing to be gained by further argument] year-old Lena, daughter of Paul, was \s ; Tue ible say: tl} and much to be lost to the owners at) oported to be recovering. | nd T believe Uae Bibio ‘leo. HAY the lin Five agencies ure investigating th "Thou shalt not steal, “Ihe Hoord of Direvtors will not Gus | case the Departinent of Agriculture, | at part of the Bible dowsn’t con-|thorize any continuation of operadon| the police, the Health Department, cern me,” said he TWvhat prompted you to do this™ Jat 4 five-cent ture, Nothing remaine| the Medical Hxaminer's office and the “Inspiration, booze and Jesse | but to forfeit the franchise and to ask! Rronx District Attorney's offies James.” f x the upreme Court to appoint « te ‘The United States Post Office mai! ike ls ales a on velver to wind up the company's ate} irplane was delayed at Chicago this policeman and sent to Biiclwells | fairs. BOTAN walt for a» packuge o at tere Ment DAUI agen Louis A. Dreyfus, President of the| serum from the University of Iinois. | 1" her charge. Recently | ciyie League, was kept busy te Ik it arrives soon enough it will be| 2 had inal ea Tedd anal i answering telaphone appenls from | used in an effort to save the 1 | trom a ivdriviiie, | those who will he marooned Monday {cf the brothers at the hoapital | | >_> ‘by the suspension, Mr. Dreyfus has) The anti-toxin renched Chicago at | RED CROSS WIL lurged the authorization of a seven-|8 o'clock from Urbana; | tor trouh as held that th delayed at fa Ms AID FIREMEN NOW | ul in Staten Island was! plane. ‘The pilots, racticate Decause of the 1ONK | hope that they: cotlid | ‘yi 1 wit it and the stesp «rac “Nei }Disasier Squad to Respond With) firus couta not be fairly tied, ee 8 sia he : Teak cana neten! for he anti-toxin was perter lot Food and Clothing to believes, ut les# than ten cents t Hot Fo nate hort distanece and from twenty-tive | Prof. Kubert Graham, and fir Phird Alarms, to forty cents for long distances, Waed gat Detroit. where ave 1 aes u So far as can be learned no effort | aay within four a Red Croks § | nas been made by the administration [Old within four days of ree at médnight ty start a Staten Island bus line to | fod poison, newly discovered | such linportan lretleve the altuation an Monday called botulism, ‘Two others were | quire 4 ularm oc i Corporation Counsel Burr and Ae-| dangerously ill for weeks, All had eighteen taps will be sounded for the | sistant « ation Counsel Nichol~ | ten ripe olive a4 ivision, ‘Two Red # ate preparing to fight the shut- J Cross diviat myo sed oe dead s Dr. Graham announced he had per- | As soon tis the necessary wmpers | fé Hare Ail gic rd un anti-toxin for botulism and ying ’ ting [are in shay ene ai Boe te ¥.| physicians administered it to the two! Me eT will wo to Staten Island and ap pe Nhey recovei | ute bY to Juatles Clark for a restraining or- | SUfe They recovered, | jder, ‘he first step will be a request | meas we erved for fires | for an injunction — +) ask | THIEF USES RAZOR » yy me RISKLWVESTOS AN EXPLOSION IN NEW YORK TWO MENT | | work | ters affectiny IN GARAGE BLAZE . ae Shifters Keep on Moving Out Autos Until Overcome by Dense Smoke. Lynch and Abraham Levy, rage of the at 4th d Avenue, were roiling second floor to the’ @ie- them on their day's locke this moriing two shifters in the Taxi Town ab Company Street ond ars off thy v or to start at 645 when one of ghe cars backfired and storted a blaze. Lynch was bedly burned about the face at the first blast, but ren for a fire extinguisher nd he and Levy continued rolling@he rs to the elevator while the flames spread about them. As fact aa the Abs Were placed cn the big elevator men on the ground Moor lowered.ahe Lift, removed che cars and senteth ‘levator back for another load. Sor me oon the street saw the flames breaking through the windows and turned in an alarm, Lyneh, artly overcome by smoke and suffer- Jing tro! is burns, staggesed to @ window and fell across the Lottom of the frame with the upper part of Bis body hanging out. Levy continted his work alone in the blinding smoke until he dropped unconsctous with the flames crackling over his body. Hook and Ladder Company Now 16 ran a ladder up to the window and the firemen carried down the uneon- form of Lynch rived about the sam bulance from the When the cars Dr. Levine ar- time fn an aim~ lower Hospital. ased coming down the elevator shaft, Pete Kelly a chauffeur, made his way to the seepnd floor und while groping through the smoke stumbled over the body of vy. Dropping to his knees he half dragged and pushed the shifter tou car and placing him inside, rolled the car to the elevator and took it and its burden to the ground floor where Levy was revived and treated by Dr. Levine, ‘Then und Lynch were sent to their homes It is estimated that the loss was ubout $50,000. n cars were de- Stroyed and these were sald to have been worth $3,800 each. The rest of the dam ysulted from water, smoke and broken glass. Little or no damage was done to the interior of the building which is of concrete @nd iron and glass. Kvery window wast broken. a ee Dr. « Prise for Life Work. Dr. Charles Chandlef, technicat adviser to the Chemical Foundation, and Health Commissioner of the ity 1 1873 to 1884, was awarded the rking gold medal py the American, ction of the Society of Chemical In= dustry at the Chemists’ Cluv, Noy 0 Fast 41st Street, last nig ; Dr, Chandler,’ who 18 eighty-threa old, was aeclaimed last night for xty' years’ untiring offoct in the of industrial ¢ . one of the most noted pro- faculty of Commnbla Uni- often consulted on mat+ the city's welfare, NAME, HERALD TO KEEP jmmarta » Prank &. y ‘The Sun and the Herald this momming carry the following: oncerning the Herald: “While T have not yet gone very far In the matter of getting acquainted with To Him It 1 Maney 5 wee nn nen en re [ey

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