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POLE EAS TRIST WANTS $15,000,000 ~STOEK ISSUE GFT This in Spite of Fact Its 1919 Net Earnings Were $13,643,549, STILL FIGHTS 80C, GAS. its Own Figures Give Lie to Its Oft-Repeated Pleas | of Poverty. us @ ‘The latest move made by the Con- solidated Gas Company in the fleld of high finance has caused a consider- able stir and has aroused the interest of the thousands of consumers who have to face, monthly, a much in- creased gas bill. On Jan. 9, 1920, this company ob- taimea the permission of the Public Service Commission to issue $25,000,- 000 of five-year bonds to provide funds for the payment, at maturity on Feb, 1, 1922, of $24,275,240.50 deb- entures which are outstanding, and for other purposes, ‘While the company in the trial.now | going on to test the validity of the %0-Cent Gas Law was reiterating its| claim that it was suffering daily the! logs of large amounts of money owing to the high cost of labor and ma- terials, the bonds above referred to Were being offered to the public with} a statement issued by George B. Cor- telyou, the President of the company, setting forth in glowing terms the} Prosperity of the company. He an- nounced that the gross earnings of the Consolidated system for the calendar year 1919, after eliminating inter- gompany items, were $70,482,892, which after deducting operating expenses, taxes, &c. (including $3,068,609 for re- newal and replacement reserve), amounting in all to $56,839,343, left net | earnings for the calgndar year 1919 Of $13,543,949. ‘These figurgs are startling in view of the claim that the company was staggering under the statutory re- quirements that it sell gas at 80 cents per thousand cubic feet. ‘The surprise, however, at the fig- ures shown in Mr. Cortelyou's state- ment was mild compared to the shock created by the announcement just made by the Consolidated Gas Company in a petition filed with the Public Service Commission asking leave to issue at par $16,000,000 of stock, bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness of such character, and in such form as the company ma; hereafter determine and the commis sion may authorize. THE CONSOLIDATED’S COMFORT- ABLE FINANCIAL CONDITION. Among the statements set forth in the petition which is sworn to by G. M. Thomas, Vice President of company, is the announcement! that the company has out on loans to various of its stibsidiaries funds, which were not secured or obtained from the issue of stock, bonds, notes or other evidences of ' indebtedness, amounting to $19,950,000. Th junds wefe in addition investment of the Con- ed Gai do not include the con- ingency account and other funds of the Consolidated Gas Com- pany. ‘According to the sworn statement of Mr, Thomas, the amount of these Announcement was made here to- day of the engagement of Flora Payne Whitney, daughter of Harry Payne Whitney, sportsman of New York and Newport, to Roderick Tower, son of Charlemagne Tower of Philadelphia, former American Ambassador to Aus- tria, Russia and Germany. 1 Miss Flora P. Whitney, Engaged to Be Married to Roderick Tower Roderick Tower is a member of the New York~Stock Exchange and @ Harvard graduate of '15. He served as a Captain in the American Air Ser- ters Increase—Keep Up Pre- ‘cautions, Copeland Warns. New cases of influenza reported to the Health Department in the twenty-' four hours ending at 10 o'clock this | moraing numbered 2,153, as against 2,825 for yesterday, a decrease of 25 per cent. This indicates, according to Dr. Copeland, Commissioner of |Health, ‘that the epidemic is on the | downgrade because a decrease in new cases of influenz@ is a forerunner of decrease in pneumonia cases andin deaths from influenza and pneumonia. ‘The other figures in to-day’s report are not so encouraging, New pneu-| monia cases showed a 17 per cent. increase, j ing from 602 reported yesterday to”705. For the first time in the history of the current epidemic the new pneumonia cases reported exceeded those reported on the cor- responding day of the epidemic 1918. ‘ | Figures on deaths from pneamonia | and influenza showed an increase for attributes the increase in pneumonia cases and the increase in deaths to the dispiriting weather and pro- mounced changes in temperature of the jast few days. : Following are the figrues for the vice during the war, being a flying He is a member of the! Knickerbocker, Racquet and Tennis instructor. and Harvard Clubs. 200 DRIVEN OUT BY HARLEM FIRE) __ | ri | Lack of Escapes Forces Firemen to Climb Front of Burningé Building. Two hundred men, women and children were driven to the street at 4 A. M. to-day by a $15,000 fire in the five-story building of the Public! Storage Warehouse Company, Inc. No, 23 East 115th Street. , “The building, with mo windows ex- cept in front and no fire escapes, bulged with smoke, flames and gas from melted pipes. ‘When the windows and scuttle were opened the smoke and gas were let out and the firemen let in. They made| short work of the fire by climbing the! front of the building. The lower floor} of the warehouse was filled with auto trucks and the upper floors with furniture. ee WHISKEY STOLEN AS | SIX MEN GUARD IT) | ' Thieves Borrow Horse and Wagon| |} and Haul Away Four Bar-. | rels of Liquor. bonded ‘Dhieves entered the ware- and 6 o'clook four barrels this | ot | between midnight morning and stole whiskey, 100 proof—%00 gallons in all house at Pouch Terminai, Staten Island, #Man Who Wears Them Pa DEATH INTERFERES ‘IN MOTHER’S FIGHT FOR ONE BABY GIRL! Two Claim, Browit-Eyed Child, Which Got Mixed Up in Hospital. ATLARTA, Feb. 7. 'E has taken a hand in the tangled claims to blue-eyed Mary Elizabeth and brown- eyed Loulse Madeline, eight- months-old babies, over whom two mothers were going to court to-day. Pneumonia claimed Mary Elizabeth, whom neither mother wanted, and the other child fell into an open grate, suffering burns that might prove fatal. The children were born the same day in a loca! hospital, and recently Mrs. John C. Garner an- nounced that the-blue-eyed child given to her was not her own, but that Louise Madeline, the brown-eyed girl, was hers. Mrs. Daniel L. Pittman, who got the brown-eyed child, maintained it was her very own. twenty-four hours ending at 10 o'clock to-day: NEW CASES. Borough. Influenza. Pneumonia. Manhattan ... 852 - 259 Bronx . 96 Brooklyn - 307 Queens a4) Richmond 9! Total to-day . 706 Total yesterday . 602 Total same day 1918 4,875 645 Total to,date . 56,570 11,619 | DEATHS. Borough. Influenza. Pneumonia. |Manhattan . cy 109 Bronx . 16 17 Brooklyn 87 Queens .. 9 Richmond . d wit Total to-day .. 1938 Total yesterday ... 110 140 Total same day 1918 408 358 Total to date ...... 1,624 2,954 The figures indicate that Influenza will from this tinie on attack only those Who are readily susceptible to the attacks of the germs. But for the outiook arising from the condition of the streets and sidewalks the predic- tion might be made that the danger is over. Dr. Copeland repeated his warning to the public to protect the ‘feet against snow and slush by wearing rubbers or overshoes or even wrap- pings of cloth. A rise in temperature RETAIL PROFIT $4. | ON $6 PAIR OF SHOES ,for Footwear That Cost $10.50 will make New York a sea of slush and it is a physical tmpossibility to get rid of the accumulations of snow and gurbage for many days. “The epidemic,” said .Dr. Copeland, “has spent its force. The public can cise of means of self-protection which to-day over yesterday. Dr. Copeland a telegram to Admiral Sims, inform. keep it down onty by vigilant exer-|* SHOW BI OROP, FROM ING BEFORE PEAK NOM PASEO, WLSIN OBESE Pneumonia, However, Regis- Daniels Reveals _ President Asked Foreign Rulers Not to Decorate U. S. Officers, * WASHINGTON, Wb. 7.—Secretary Daniels and Rear Admiral Sime dit- fered regarding the acceptance of foreign decorations by American of- ficers, the Secretary to-day told the Senate Sub-Committee investigating naval awards. The Secretary said Admiral Sims recommended that naval officers be permitted to accept such decorations on the ground that it would have a marked effect on morale and efficiency. Daniels op- posed such a plan. , Provision for American military forces to accept foreign decorations was contained in the army bill passed by Congress, Mr. Daniels continued, but hie did not know this at the time, ae he had not kept track of the bill. The chief of the Bureau of Naviga- of tion, howevér, had sent a telegram stating the substance of the bill to Admiral Sims on July 18, 1918, On July 31 Secretary Daniels sent ing him that+by the President's order “the State Deaprtnfent had been directed to diplomatically in- form all European Governments that this Government does not desire any decorations conferred upon American officers, either army or navy.” © Five days later, said the Secretary, Admiral Sims replied that he was placed in a very embarrassing posi- tion as he had accepted the British order! of Grand Commander of St. Michael and St, George, and had ap- proved the acceptance of other hou- ors by Rear-Admiral Rodman and ‘ other officers. Sims wrote the decoration was not offered to him until it was handed to him by the King himself. “Do you wish, under stances described above, be returned to the King, Mr. Daniels said he replied that in view of the action taken, pre- sumably before President Wilson's request reached the King, of course, the decorations already could not be returned. He the hope at the time, he no other foreign decorations would ‘be given. 4 ‘The Secretary oad Admirals Rod- man and Strauss were reluctant to accept decorations from the King of England. WhenMr. Daniel# was cross-ques- tioned concerning previous testimony, he conceded that Admiral Sims had served whero ordered and said that he meant no reflection when he said the Admiral had served most of his time on shore duty. Secretary Daniels read from the recent speech by Representative Byrnes, who quoted alleged state- ments by Sims in Europe that the e had to be granted because He also that Sims to Great the circum- the medal to he asked. armist Pershing’s supplies failed. nes's statement eaving the sea read B; urged Britain. VICTORY HALL SITE Hints at “Nigger in Woodpile” in panned etna, rt xpressed f home at Westbury, EXT that rea ents | Rare Collection. LA GUARDIA OPPOSES | | CHICAGO, Feb. 1—Rare yorks of EDDING IS TO-DAY’S BIG SOCIETY EVENT ie MiSs ELIZABETH S. THOMPSON Takes Place at St. George’s and 500 Will Witness Ceremony. @ The wedding this afternoon of Miss Elizabeth S. Thompson, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Lewis 8. Thompson, of No. 903 Park Avenue and Richard F. Babcock, in the chapel of St, George’ Episcopal Church is one of the lead- ing society events of the winter sea- son. Five hundred invitations were issued for the wedding and the re- éeption following, to be held at tl Park Avenue home of the bride's pa- rents. . The Rev. Dr. Ernest M. Stires, rector of St. Thomas's, will perform the marriage ceremony, assisted’ by Frederick 8, Swezey of Shrewe- |. Miss Geraldine Thomp- the maid of honor Babcock, brother of the bridegroom; best man, Miss Lowrie Sage, Miss Helen Lee, Miss Hope Lincoln and Miss Ellen G. MoCart bridesmaids. The ushers P, Thompson 2d, brother of Miss ‘Thompson, and William P. T. Pres- ton, J. Averell Clark, Livingston Par- sons, Henry Rogers Winthrop and Robert Morgan. , Miss Thompson is the daughter of Lewis 8. Thompson of New York, Red Bank, N. and Thomasville, Ga. prominent New Jersey oil man, and spgrtsman, ‘The bridegroom is affiliated with the Clark-Dodge Co, No. 61 Wall Street. He is a Harvard graduate and member of t! cou; $10,000 N ART FOUND N THE HOME OF MS. NAL Inventory of Feeble-Minded Widow’s Estate Reveals art than $1,000,000, were found by authorities here to-day M. Kimban, valued at more in the home of Evaline Hy ' j 1 H ‘SWEATSHOP FARES I NOW'S HOPE Transit Men to Confer on Utilization of Williams- burg Bridge. Public Service Commissioner Lewis Nixon hag called a conference for next Tuesday to which he has re- quested the operating heads of the New York Railways, the Third Ave- nue Ratlway Company and the New York and Harlaem Railway Company, to be present, to ascertain what can ‘be done about placing the Williams- burg Bridge trolley service of the Fourth and Madison Avenue lines, curtailed since Feb. 1, when tle own- ership of the road reverted from the New York Railways Company to the NeW York and Harlaem Railroad Company. Since the Fourth and Madison line went back to its original ownership and ceased to operate under the title of New York Railways Company, the Bvening World has urged upon Com- missioner Nixon that some substitu- tion be made to repiace the digcon- tinued bridge service. The curtail- ment of this service is seriously in- conveniencing thousands of Brook- lynites, referred to by the traction interests as “the sweatshop pas, sengers,” who daily toll in the uptown | dry goods district. As soon as the bridge service was stopped the Evening World pointed out that the ‘Third. Avenue Company, which now operates some of ite ser. vice from the Post Office via riage | Street to the Williamsburg Bridge and over to Brooklyn, might be in- duced to switch its Third Avenue service from Harlem into Delancey Street to the bridge and on the Brook- lyn, thus opening up a substitute for the Fourth and Ma yn Avenue cars that now go direct to the Post Office | and no longer cross the bridge. It) was pointed out, too, that the only way now to get uptown north of Mth Street from Brooklyn was on the Grand Street-Post Office care and transfer to the Third Avenue ling at the Bowery: ; ot 1h a AS SHOT IN POLICE CHASE. Victim Broke Into Bronx Store, ° Dominick Pagitocca, twenty-six years old, of No. 2384 Belmont Avenue, the Bronx, was shot in the left arm early to-day by Patroimany-William Wehren- berg. Pagilocca was leaving the dry goods store of Thomas Hennigan at No. 4724 Park Avefye with a bundle of stolen property He and two others had collected. after breaking into the store, the police say. Pagtiocca refused to halt and his two companions fired on the patrolman, he says. The other two men escaped. Patrolman | Wehrenber; Anserts. lives tried in vain to find a pol duty. Pagiiocea put up a fight before ‘he was arrested. TEXAS JUDGE FOUND GUILTY. Sentence Suspended on Spitting Charge When He Qu » Demosthenes, Judge Henry E. Bolt of the Munici- pal Court in Wichita Falls, 'Tex., who Was arrested for spitting in the 96th Street and Broadway subway station yesterday, was found guilty in the West Stde Court before Magistrate Levine this morning. Sentence was suspended becau e Magistrate al- Léon XiIIL., from Havana, Guided By Wireless on Shore After ~~ Reaching Hatteras. io Capt. Francisco Muret of the Leomy XIII. of the Spanith Royal Mail from Havana, docked his ship this morhing, the first of a fleet of 26 ves, sels held up by the storm to get” through Quarantine. He had a hard time making port In the storm and was ~ entirely dependent on the calculations ® and directions givén him by wireless: stations ashore. It\was impossible-fems him to make any observations after be reached Cape Hatteras. a Passengers who left Valparaiso, Chill, | wearing Palm Beach sults and Panama hats, artived here (o-day shivering in ” great coats and mufflers on the fee covered steamer Santa Ana. The Santa Ana ran into the Atlantic const Dlizeatd off Cape Hatteras, Capt. Geltzler said. Sleet froze on the wireless apparatys. causing {t to collapse. A temporary ap- paratus wae rigged up. The voyage Was in elgnt one Philadelphia Cr Cheese, worked until soft. It's great! OF THE SKY POINTS TO NO Phony Picture OR Feeble Film IF THE SKY IS Blue cotothe Rialto IF THE SKY IS Red tothe Strand loane of moneys to the affliated com- $5.48 to Produce. are, by this time, known to every- Boom For 42d Street widow of the founder of the Kimball| lowed for the wide differénce in cus- and valued at $4,000, secording 01 4. savestigation by Federal Food PO” . Plot A ipl Seen tom between New York and Wichita Eighteenth Amendment standards. ion by Federal Foo Se 5 iano Cor : Paina ‘Tolt{plaadaav hte. case IF THE SKY I ‘ Six, waichopen wart op duty when: the | Saat aiceion Weng dieciowed (et BABY ABANDONED IN HALL. | asdermanic President ¥. Hf. La| Mrs. Kimball was recently declared] eloquence., quoting Cicero, Demise S - theft was committed and the police |certain shoe dealers pay $6.50 for one er Gisahdla andounced today that ha ns |duaeia-chindee tase. an. inwentorysot| mane vi iH] tw R | pany . P 48 | cannot explain, to themselves why they | standard make dnd sell it for $10.50,a| James Donohue, a B. RT. guard.| os 1. ine rection of a Wietory " ie mt a Drmpameeldan oo ce ellow 80 to the IXIVOL Westchewten tang Omran | did not hear the lock being broken from | margin of $4 a pair. Several months | found @ girl baby In the hall when he | OPPose orect a er estate was ordered by qhews S clea ‘General Union as a 460,000 | the big doors. ‘There is no trace of the), eraiiers paid $5.25 and sold for| arrived at his home, No. 36 42d Street, | Hall on the site bounded by Park and|Court on petition of her ‘brother, IF THE SKY IS ‘The petition further states that the ever: ss rook! at 1 A. M. to-day. She is! Lexington Avenues and Forty-first and L Angeles. . he thieves teok a horse and wi elvis | 5 | Bi yn, 3 Irving H. Cone of Los ie money derived from the $15,000,000 of | ram the barn of Sanford Hoss, three |$ Contenting themselves with $3.75) ote ‘eight weeks old, was warmly | Forty second Streets, Paintings line the walls and an- TEEN £0 to the apito! stocks, bonds, notes or other evi-| squares away, loaded the liquor into | ™mangin wrapped in a pink woollen blanket and “I wonder,” he said, “why the carry-| 4 pei s ay through | © 7 Gences of Indebtedness whick will De | the wae ee eet ie ‘belived fe Tear | Mr. Williams received a complaint | weil droqsed. Ing out of such a lofty iden can be ac-|taue furniture ie soattered throus’ Watch the Sky Feb. 2Ist. lamaed if the commission grants the | Tlaced on a boat. ‘They returned ‘the |Fecemtly and at once ordered the| When he carried it to the Fourth Ave-| complished on only one pilot in New| ‘he rooms. A co mies by art} An international organisation of i ‘i Pigor the reimbursement, in part, of {horse to his ut kept the wagon. | manufacturer and retailer who han-|nue Police Station Lieut, Betta was in-|York, « plot located in the contre of a porcelains me descr! ae OE a veob ls totinet. a neve aecdin a * y, at No. hotels. The method] critics as “the most won moneys actually expended from in- dled the shoe to submit cost data, It|terested because tast Monday, number of large tae SHCACEROH dhestnan aie é a THIS ANNOUNCEMENT ome or from other moneys in the| MADE BED IN PACKING CASE. | was shown that it cost $5.48 to manu. {876 Fourth Avenue, ten blocks away, al employed by the Victory Hail Associa- | Amertag.” tthe. Teles blatas, eee Is JOUNC treasury, not secured or obtained ener tacture the shoes, an increase of $1.04 | £71 baby the same age and dressed al- | tion in presenting its case is auch that} Among the pfintings are Rem-| 46 99.99 in 1919. ‘Tho ae \ DOES NOT from the issue of stocks, bonds, notes | policemen With Drawn Revolvers ‘ “Of | most like this one, even to the pink} jt drives a public official to a careful| prandt’s “Portrait of Artist's Father" | 0000 in . e heaviest losers or other evidences of indebtedness, over last fall, The factory selling |) oye: was found in the hallway. The] inquiry to find out who is behind the | "ats Lis were silk and velvet manufacturers and REFER lowing: ose Hor the Disturb Boys’ Sleep. ‘i 6.50 fi inkshaan 9g | Dlanket. ry ‘ *} valued at $100,000 and Joshua Rey- | wholesale purchasers. for the following purposes: ‘For the price of $6.50 is an increase of $1.25| 1 jeutenant thinks they may be twins. | proposition. ” According to the Raliroad Ad ee ae ee ihe capittt stock. | While passing a vacant lot filled with] over last fall, Both are in the Kings County baby] “Jf the Victory Hail Association per- | Rold# “Lady Sarah Bunbury,” d0-| con” boxes of cloths. in transit. aco TO ANY CHEAP fonds, notes or other evidences of [empty packing cases, near No. 45 Kast = ward. sists in its claim that Forty-second | clared worth $65,000, opened’ and robbed and waste pa OR , \e 5 ———_—_—_—— : j indebtedness of the New York Edison | 224 Street, early this morning Patrolman HOYT ASKS ANNULMENT. Street and Park Avenue, and that site} Value of the estate was placed at Poiygeliciee | inten Ropbere often e Gompany, New York Queens Electric |Joseph Shaughnessy heard @ voice say * | CURRAN AIDS SNOW FIGHT. | atone, is the piace for a Victory Hatt, | $2,800,000. Hy Rng siner coke id throw good: is out INFERIOR Light and Power Compan: “] hope the cops don’t get us.” He sum- Sear } —_—__ then I shall be forced to believe that pare ania 364 ——»— . 7 United Electric Light and r}|moned Detectives Michael MoNamara| cI a Wife Had Not Yet 0 ca there Is a ‘nigger in the wood-pile’ 4 FILM Company, New York and Queens Gas : ; 4 ” AMBULANCE IN COLLISION, |40m= rprcett of New ‘Dorp Dead. Gomany, tha Wentohester Tiahine | 32s coseme Anderson and with revolvers) Diverse When She Wee i Street Department. somewhere. eh beatae =—— Join Puree sixtystous sears cat’ NOW COMPLETED Gompany and the Central Union Lelali ie in oe (Spectal to The Evening World.) i ” eagans Docte: superintendent of the post. office Gompany, as and when issued, $15, |oupants of the packing case to sur-| WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Feb. 7.—For| Borough President Henry H. Curran mTanianden: {ef "SNe. pest: office ay OR TITLED 000,000." f render but received no Answer. One of! the past three days Supreme @burt |helped the situation to-day by assign- LIQUOR O. K. IN PIE, Bt his home there. Bee nag ote eny 6 a the detectives icked he x and out = “3 vi ° en “ a 4 ce Wi ot from the Department of . A Swedish hospital ambulance, »peed-| {rom pneumonia an a wa ,WHY THE CONSOLIDATED 18 /ran three bobs, who were caught utter | Justice Wiliam Popham Platt haa beon |ing B48 laborers from the Department of) | BUT ONE MUSTN'T | in:\in ce scnne Place, Brooklyn cocoey theowner of the aiahd World | WATCH THE SKY chae a . ‘i ea pony ent | Public | stg . s whic! pended a week a ecause ‘ The extent of the ownership of the arr eeaye sale,they, were Zoseph Gen: | suit brought. by Arthur 8, Hoyt, former | of these 238 were restricted to shovel: | DRINK IT IN SOUP} :«iasea into « trolley car near Sehenees | 37" the "Mbense of procacsian, Openuas Consolidated Gas Company in these et; Patrick Pareto, ten, No, 320 | President of the Gluten Food Co., and Jing snow into manholes, | — nae weet ssaeidibel died PP yg Hee Bee ae enner rapped | FEBRUARY 2 Ist subsidiaries, to which the above out- Street and, Nicholas Deries,| the A. & Hoyt Co. of Manhattan, now Commissioner Kramer Says Policy| ‘’1°°owen, whe waa riding In the born in Staten Jaland and was ‘tihe| standing loans were made, is as fol- Shes had been to @ motion ‘pictary | ‘2 business in Columbus, O., _ ¢gainat Killed By @ Fal ; : f punice has cut about theface: cut n, | Democratic leader in. New Dorp. \ lows: a show, where the Yed until 11 velack | Mrs. Estelle Carroll Hoyt. to whom he| qpomas Waters, forty-two, of No. 431] of Allowing Beverages in Cook- | me? CF hin induries he crawled out of Amber of Oone on ts of one of the boys, ereuaee eta 1 ctorman George Mahon, No. 175: ; a miving his son art old-fashioned ‘i : ing beam while working in the hold| ‘ eee ore : f ee ene | ; pes Miving from whom she had not obtained | —=—=————=—= === Sterling Place, all of whom recetved : KILLED IN ENGINE CRASH, [it's {om whom st tad not obtained eine ee ta wh arise York State, Mrs. Hoyt testified Hoyt | BRIG tions of the Volstead Act as it ILEY "OST IN H Tle M 1% . h . h Ww W 7 * rs safe é 4 iad wae nese, Mieal Bald $100 toward, the expenses of her! 1¢ STREWN WITH pertains to liquor for culinary | PEAR BAILEY LI STORM. ow I Lost My Faith in the 1. W. W. » ) John Foraythe of 9 West 2ist Sorensen LOBSTERS, CRABS| es Warden of Hospital at Overbroek, 5 ‘ x In the petition of Vice President] Street, Manhattan, fireman on al , Stokes Divorce Trial Monday. , In cooking, such as the maki A sensational human document in which Phomas no statement is made as to| switching engine, was killed; Michael| "‘The law firm of Littleton & Lindsay . - - Pre oe aia ae ot ire Ne Jy Mi ; " he derivation of the $19,000,000 which | shechan, No, 121 Baldwin Avenue, Jer- |to-day filed netice of trial of the divorce | Weary Residents With Baskets! would clearly Prppeg tenia Benjamin R, Bailey, Warden of the Harold Lord Varney, one of the national leaders of js out on loans to the subsidia ex-| sey City, engineer on the same engine, | action of William FE. D. Stokes against |* + 3 * ‘\wasee County Hospital os i ‘ cept tite ataroment that | was 20" evmay |g wite, Mrs."Helen E. D. Stokes, in| and Dealers With Trucks erage purpose. But 1 It were de- | Bavex County Hospital as Overbrook. the Industrial Workers of the World, and _ its was not secured or d and ce “4 : i A ., ” ire 7 Dy Mt of : - “wee ‘ . Pi ‘ fesue of siocks, bonds, notes or other | Were Joco- | the Supreme Court for Monday, March 1 Making Big “Catches. sired for soup, half of which | night, and it is feared that he may have chief propagandist and historian, tells why he re- evidences of motive collided w hing Mrs. Stokes last week was awarded cus- ° would be liquor, the law would | wandered away and become exhausted 5 ra - rs “It is. impossible fore, to de- | ine gtr eee aia eaijrond ag tha taBe | tody of her children in the Denver, Colo.,| E in the wind made | apply, he Said in the storm. He has been lil for a year signed from the organization. He says that the termine from how much] of Academy S sey City, early | Juvenile Court by Judge Ben B, Lindsay a4 at Goney Island The question of allowing elther | and physicians had urged him to take a . : of this “amount reprewtta oxcean| to-day; ed the view of ~ cae | smooth as the proverbial | hotels dt individuals to obtain | rest American masses are not revolutionary, but are werraling induswy of ¢ ‘conasite the signals, Porter Kill by Eley glass this morning. The‘tide was Nquor for culinary purposes is Attendants discovered the Warden's loyal to their own institutions of government. Hie dated company | ahaa enna Angelo Bacigalupo, forty-fo care low | @ matter of policy that will have | #bsence from his cottage. He had not ‘A ? However th consumers are won.) Bishop Dinappraves Church Merger. oid, of No. 271 William Street The cana ot Brighite Beach to be determined in the future, | taken any clothing nor left a note. He emphasizes the utter hopelessness of Social Revo dering why they should be asked to Bishop Charles Sumner Burch has of- |in the Rhinelander Bullding at } bate és Ce ' 4 is 6 3 fifty-seven, 6 feet tall and weighed Z y pay more than 60 cents per thousand | cially gisapproved the proposed merger | William Street, looked up ear was covered with blue.claw crabs | socording to Mr, Kramer, He Fas. 390 pounds before his iitness, He! lution as a method of human progress. ( ‘ euble feet fe a ths of St. Andrew's Church, Harlem, with | and small lobsters, Residents of declared last night that State (1, 4. widower. Freeholder Frederick dated Comp . 1 the Church of the Beloved Disciple, In| to take the vicinity went down with bus Commissioner O'Connor had no | adams, Chairman of the Hospital Com- pits ’ “ * Ne ne ita otter Guaneye th Lael RaTSTEAE ESLER Gan alana Leah esata Lae an kets and fish deaiers sent trucks | right to issue a permit for such | mittee, suid Bailey's accounts ware cor- To-Morrow’s Sunday W orld igeagury, : anorovale aig aa: ae to carry away the “catch, _ use by hotels, pect a