The evening world. Newspaper, April 6, 1920, Page 3

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CY WIL ASK par LAWS TOAD HOHE BULIN t Plan Is to Relax Tene- ent House Restrictions for Two Years. IULD ‘cess of Anti-Rent Gouging aws Inspires Legislature to Further Action. Mo trom ‘Staff Correqondent of The “Drening Worl) LBANY, April 6.—Assistant Cor- tion Counsel William V, H. yer of New York Is here to-day confer with the Bili Drafting Com- ston to get into shape a bill sus- ding the operation of the Tene- nt House Laws until Nov. 1, 1922, term of the new rent laws. The | will declare that emergency ex- and that public health is men- d under the present lack of hous- facilities. rimarily, the new temporary law to provide for making habitable 30,000 vacant houses in New York y am. providing homes for that pber of families now unable to re shelter, It will also permit increase In the housing facilities jenements by adding to the num- of familits who may dweil in es now limited. is common knowledge, according Pdward P. Doyle of the Real Es- Board, that the present tenement 8 aie being winked at because of desire of the authorities to make m for families who would be perwise homeless. Hundreds of tices to vacate have been served, t not enforced for the reason that @ people have no place to go, The ason for amending the law is to ve greater, latitude to the Tenement louse Commission, Reports of the successful working f the Anti-Rent Laws ia New York ty which have reached here have aven the greatest encouragement to heir projectors and backers to go rther and pass housing laws as pmpanion measures which will still ther contribute to the relief of the pmeless as well as the persecuted LAN COMMITTEE TO TALK OVER NEW LAWS, +A committee of seven named by yor Hylan is coming here to talk matter over with the legislators nd to determine the character ‘of ws to be considered and passed.. In ddition to the suggestions which Hess will have to offer as the re- |) wult of the conference yeterday in the ayor’s office, there are to come up the proposed bills cf the Reconstruc- Viion Commission appointed by Gov. Bmith. |The committee of seven, which PYhopes to get immediate action with- Sut the necessity of a constitutional endment, which is included in the fecommendation of the Reconstruc- pn Commission, comprises Health mmissioner Copeland, Tenement mmissioner Frank Mann, John P, o, Chief of the Board of Standards Assistant Corporation yer, Walter J. Salmon, estate owner and builder, E. A. Dougall, Brooklyn builder, and ward P, Doyle, representative of Real Esiate Board. "Mr. Doyle is here to-day and has jun already upon the work of en- ng the support of legislators on e proposed measures, One of these the exemption of mortgages up to $40,000 “vf principal from the State ome Tax. This bill was included the Anti-Rent Gouging bills series, is held up in the Committee on yxation. “This docs not really mean a great ing,” said Mr. Doyle, because the on the income from a $40,000 Biortgage bond is only a few dollars, it is desired to impress Congress exempt all mortgages from the In- e tam, ANTS NEW BUILDINGS EX- EMPT FROM NEW LAWS, “This would turn the attention of yestors again to building, which is he big thing & be desired right now, “In addition to this it is the hope @@ exempt new buildings which may Be put up wathin the next two years MR from the operation of the new rent PMMAWs as applied to unreasonable rent, BSP a new building is put up now, i “we } cost from three to tive tim 1 t Would have cost, say three ; t be fair to al into the his rent f the door was been sod deal of the gb-operative plan of ce which there ponding increase .n buildings 1 of tie 1yers, Ou LIMIT TAXES; THE EVENING a2 i- Society Girls i For | | Cc padlacda ae ho thei HUGHES asFRANCE ELEANOR LANDON Oy oan remmson A large dance called the ‘Peter Rab-| Orchestra and songs by Elfrida Wynno, bit” ball was given last night at the| soprano, and two English boys, Valen- Ritz-Carlton for the beneft of the|tine and Ernest Stanton, Americanization work of Haarlem| Several of the season's debutantes House, a settlement in the Little Italy|appeared in a “Melting Pot" dance, section of the upper east side. There] Mis iso Hughes impersonated {were selections by the Anna Byrnes F Baroness Elizabeth Rosen asiTA LAND SARAH STURGES as SCOTLAND THA CuAA SOSA oe et Lo Spain, Miss Erdman Poland, Miss Barbara Kissel Engta cers danein Columbia. Afterward the Chalif dan- A BACKDOWN ON -—STUTZDEBSN Stock Exchange Authorities | Will Set Important Prece- | dent if Ban Is Lifted. While it ts the consensus of the best Wall Street opinion that the now famous corner in Stuta will be ad~ “Wanted without recourse to the courts; notwithstanding he rull ¢ of the Law | Committes of the Stock Exchange! announced yesterday, it appeared to- day that “the only tangible basis for bose opinion seems to be that Stock | Exchange authorities, in Wall Street’e | have #o muddled the whole = | madiS¥ nat the only course left open v; for hem is diplomatically to with- draw from the position adopted when further trading in Stutz was forbid- den last week. This the Stock Exchange now seems to be endeavoring to do. When the Board of Governors last Wednes- | @ay, by a unanimous vote, declared view; Miss Sarah Sturges Scotland, Eleanor Landon Italy, Miss Qlivia nd and Miss Frances Fairchild gave an exhibition of Polish | PS "3% WALDORF ARRESTS CLEAR UP ESCAPE FROM POLIE CEL H A *, ~ \ President Says Higher Costs Make | It Necessary and Welcomes ejudy of Books. Shults vread is duc cent for 14 oz. loaves, Louls R. Welzmiller, Deputy Markets Commissioner, who had an _ inter- view to-day with John F. Hilderbrand, for.a rise of one ording to Mrs. President of the Shults Bread Com- ‘4 puny, He sald the cost of every mater.(One of Three Prisoners Ac- ial used in bread making has increased. < y ‘The company, according to Hilder- cused of Theft Tells How. He brand, is operatin He said Walked From Station. that each week it asimg the bide! price means a loss of $8,000, He agreed With the arraicnment to-day of three prisoners arrested in their room ut the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel late yesterday afternoon by House Detec- tive Joseph Smith and Detective Max Leef of the West 30th Street Station, oe rer cence the story of the mysterious disappear- 5 per cent and! ance of a prisoner from his cell in the West 47th Street Station last January was revealed. The prisoners gaye their names as Albert Lewis, Mark Tobin and Charles to delay the increase for two wee allow experts for the Commissioner of Accounts to examine the books of the rbrand said he wel ation. Hilderbrand quoted the centage of inc in making materials: In fund 2 per cent.: horses $0 per cent. machinery 200 per. co’ 10 to 25 per cent. r labor 6&7 3-4 per cent. MANN MAY HEAD BUILDING CAMPAIGN following per- cost of bread er’ mat Adcock. Lewis is known to the police na + as “Nick the Greek,” and the detec- Mayor’s Committee Drafting Legis-'tives say his real name is Nicholas lation as Part of $100,000,000 Pavalace. Tobin admitted at the 5 i West 30th Street Station to-day that Home tonstrsl aaa he is really Jack Sobelman, who Within the next few days Mayor stunned the force last January by dis- Hylan is expected to announce the appearing from his cell in the West appointment of Tenement House 47th Street Station after he had been Commissioner Frank Mfann a Chalr-| arrested on a charge of attempting to man, of the Mayor's Committee on get) stolen goods and with being im- Construction of Homes, which will piicated in a loft robbery of $10,000 have charge of the $10,000,000 build- \orth of silks ing campaign that will soon begin.| go the The Mayor said he seriously consid-| je was ered Mr. Mann bec as a city official bo ‘A. sub-committee of the Mayor's| \. sopeims | Committee is already drafting legis- | ing ste lation which will be a part of the | building programme, ‘This will con- po » this morning before arraigned in the Jeffe: use of his ability | Munket Court on the double cl on oplifting and jailbreaking, " , told the following story: and taken to the 47th Street Station i sist of law exempting real estate |/they charged me with the theft of|pared on April 13 to argue its case for | jor hi orth ¢ K. rd neve eard | the unicipal buses in Brooklyn. hearers | mortgages from taxation, $10,000 worth of silk, I'd never heard Paap collin yaaa Lees piece Aarcus | swith the brigklayers’ strike set-|of such a thing, and as 1 had never} After Supre 0 P Louie MlseanDRURI GND. Aut port ye {tleg,” said the Mayor, “the way 18} yeen arrested before I was worried. |! misealhes the ” ek i Sel fourth Street, Brooklyn, was driving |clenred for a great building boom.| wiiig 1 was lying on my bunk in|!" competition with the street cara of] 1Ge, ene elevated atructure at Waahe There is no necessity for assent to e the Brooklyn City Railroad cate (ise: CO aI UC eS | this award on the part of the mason | the cell they put another prisoner in|) 10) woo the city obtained. a tempo- | ister and Myrtle Avenues this mo j builders, for they agreed when I was| with me, He was a big man, and |sar. stay of execution pending appeal. j1o8 Wu” his horse ran away. Missen- NY ‘ 4 t “1 baum clung to his sea iL the wagon 1 ere ae that my decision | when he saw how troubled I was he|iro.gay the Appellate Division continued | siiiod nah. nnothay nate pare et [Sob ON ener RB told me to cheer up. |the temporary stay with the proviso! \osnington Ave “Tm a reguiar Houdini’ he sata; |that the city shall present its arguments | thrown out and drag ’ 4 can hold me. 4 ’ 1 ; |SIGN SAYS ‘PILSNER’s |r jo° i" sid me." Ail you hwo fone woek trom to-day. Then the mes | iy nous ax brokt SF eat lb ie ie OR OO on of a permanent stay—which wou he horse att | s¢ minutes, then get up, open the door | 10" ae y | DOES IT MEAN BEER? |?! minuto shen get voy of Le er eat ny driven. Oi iinay Ne | gt: a Well, 1 did just that. When I decide Meanwhile the buses run : | Question Up to Court When Land- | lord Sues to Escape Dry = , Law Violation, CF, - M | tees ene eee in Flushing in wh » Otto Kuhlman Lazansky to-day in the Brooklyn Su- preme Court and asked for an injunc | ton training Kuhlmann from th |further exhibition of a sign readin Lion Brewery, Murray Hill Tan, Pi sener.”* If Kuhlmann should be nd guilty | under the Volstead Act rme's a torney ued, the owner of the erty would be Hable for fine and co the This word uid, an ner”? Selnure from 4 Prisoner. Frank Murphy of Sterling, N. ¥ feted by a Jury before ted jarvin in Brooklyn h five and a half bottles of whis'c in his . need to-ay to oF " The ena reted ttyntion be wuse ! M lained that i h 1 invaded in his a Dies. yard Lit was buried vars, Alt he remuined in the service “When d was arrested last January | tried would with there "The that room week all th estab! trolle: truck, the f her s\ She old, police in The last struc Her Fate $10,000 theft he'd never heard of take shops and storing their Joot in the ‘Tobin and Lewis had rented about « Magistrate examination Thu TWO WOMEN KILLED BY,CAR AND TRUCK Police Unable to Kentify Victims in Manhattan and Brooklyn The police to-day are attempting to who were killed, one by a Sixth Avenue Robert Imperato, Hygienic Ice Company of Brooklyn, was passing the corner of Jamaica and Ala- bama Avenues, ing when a woman stepped in front of his oed “G. taken to Bi BUS HEARING NEXT WEEK. ‘The. city administration must be pre- that “no transactions of any kind would be permitted by members of the Exchange” in ‘Stutz stock, tho! the dn't was open and| accused of a door any it man advantage of a thing like that? Of| possibility of Allan A. Ryan & Com~- course he would. I did. T walked out] pany publicly advertising that they ote he tls ry Pas Se would buy Stutz stock without being follows,” walked ‘past them into the|feverely disciplined was considered | front roon saluted the Lieutenant) extremely remote. | at the desk and out into the street | Rut now that Ryan has committed no one stopping me. ‘That's all was to that jail break.” » trio admitted, say the police, they had been robbing various what was at first considered “leve ma- | jeste” and has been whitewashed by |the naive explanation given by Ex- change azthorities to The Evening} |World yesterday, that the. purchase Juf the stock is not a transaction, and jthat it would be necessary to both | buy and sell before making a market, it Was a matter of general wonder- ment in Wall Street to-day whether the Exchange will not back down complete! What makes a surprise of the dect- sion of the ange to refer to the | courts disputes regarding recent short | transactions in the steck and the amount of premium to be paid there- on is that the Exchange seems to be estabishing an important precedent, and one that is not unlikely to have far reaching consequences. y car and the other by a motor! Heretofore the Exchange has let ' members understand that such dis- | a driver for the| putes should properly be adjusted by the Arbitration Congnittee, and it has had in effect a rule that any disput- ants who put their differences before | the Arbitration Committee for adjust- | ment must contract to abide by the |deetsion of the committee and not ufterward’ carry their case to the courts. Because of the policy of the +) change In the Stutz matter, the ques- at the Waldorf-Astoria, which ago. rman J, Marsh held rs in $1,000 bail for jay morning. hree pris Accidents. lish the fdentity of two women Brooklyn, this morn-| truck. Before he could stop, ront wheels struck her, fracturing Kull, She died in a few moment was apparently about fifty years! Her body is in the Brownsville! ation, She wore a wedding ring | F. H. to I. G. Apr. 22,| 0 3 frequently he: i e victim of the trofey car diea|tion was frequently heard in Wall night, a few hours after being! Street to-day whether Ryan and his k at et and Sixth Avenue. | associates haven't really got Stock skull v ured | Exchange authorities “up a tree. and she was cella | Failure of Ryan and his | to setule privately differences regard. | ing short contracts was reflected to- {day in the outside market for the lyq to Be Declied, | stock. It was quoted at 205 bid, 330 sked, ex the 20 per cent. stock divi- dend. No transactions were reported, sociutes: of City Run Jitneys in Brook. Linger-Longer Taste There is or.ly one Milk Chocolate that makes you wish you had a “neck like a Giraffe”— with that linger- WORLD, TUESDAY, APRIL 6, n “Melting Pot’? Dance ‘STREET EXPECTS Haarlem House Americanization Fund 1920, Roumanian Queen Coming To America in September oeoe oa Marie Tells How Germans Plotted to Marry Her Son to Obscure Girl. BUCHARBST, April 1 (Associated Press).—"It was German agents who manoeuvred and brought about the marriage of my son Charles," sald the Queen of Roumania to-day in speaking of the morganatic marriage contracted in September, 1918, tween Crown Charles Zyzis Lambrino, a young woman who is said previously to lave had ttl social rank or wealth. ‘The Queen requested the correspon- dent to give her explanation of the be Prince and marriage, owing, she said, to many untrue reports of the action of her- sel€ and King Ferdinand, who were abroad at the time and who, she de- clared, had beén pictured as tearing asunder a loving couple. “I am convine of true love except on the side of Jharles,” sald Queen Marie, “I have never seen the girl except at public balis, She is not pretty, She is in- | telligent and ambitions, She saw her chance to obtain a great advantage, ind she took it. “However, it was agninst the pub- lie policy of the country to have a member of the royal family inter- marry locally and thus become mixed in party intrigues. it against this that the country sought a foreign was a longer-taste. It's AUERBACH MILK CHOCOLATE. Made of fresh, rich, creamy milk and the finest grade of smooth chocolate. It has a delicious, lingering, creamy taste, Remember the name — AUERBACH MILK CHOCOLATE CAKE Dealers: If your jobber cannot supply you write us for name of Auerbach jobber. D. AUERBACH & SONS ith Ave. 46th to 47th St, iy pay QUEEN MARIE d it was not @ cane |) YIELDS TO THEFT TEMPTATION AFTER FIFTY YEARS FIG Woman, 64, Sentenced to 60 Days for Larceny, Keeps Her Identity a Secret. A woman who sald that for more than half a century she had resisteu the temptation to steal, only to yiell in the wenkness of old age, began « sixty-day sentence in the Tombs thie morning. She is sixty-four years of and she is recorded as “Jane Doe’ When she was arraigned in the Court of Special Sessions she pleade: guilty to petty larceny, but refuse, to tell her real name or to give an) information that might cause her friends and relatives to learn of her plight. When she has served her term she expects to go back to hes, people, explain her absence as best she can, and resume the respected Ife which was interrupted for a mo- ment when she entered a Now York dopartment store on March 26: > “It seemed so casy to take things,” she said, But a store detective caught her anid found that she had taken a pair of stockings, two pair of gloves, a cot.ar, two purses, five books and a clock The tota! value was $58. Shoe has been in the Tombs since the evening of that day. Probation of- flcers at first could not get her to say a word. Finally Probation Officer Mangan did get a fragmentary story, which is believed to be pure fiction. | King and Queen. I begged my son to conside? these facts and he promised ‘o forego his personal wishes. Nev- ertheless, the marriage took place at Odessa, aided by Germans, Later it was annulled as illegal, “Lately my son has accepted a mis- sion to Japan, where he will stay for six months, Should the girl marry another pergon, the affair will be ended. “Lt have manystriends in America| the name she finally decided’ ta and have been urged by the Daugh- | give—not for the court record, which ters of the Revolution and others to} romaina “Jane Doe"—waa “Helen visit that country. I hope to do 80,| Coulson.” She said she came from possibly in Se AUTO KILLS MAN OF 94 Toronto and had been visiting friends at Weehawken until the day she was caught in the department store. “Always, until now, I have resisted temptation,” she said, been no ‘blemish. My son was kill in the great war fighting for Canada ('d rather did without ever seeing any of my people again than to have them know where I sun now.” In appearance she is just the sort of a gray-haired, modestly attired grandmother that one would expect to see in any sun parlor on a bright morn Had Deen y Years, Arrangements are bethe made to-day for the funeral of John Wesley Snedeker, who died yesterday afternon in the Mountainside Hospital, Glen Ridge, N, J.. it the age of ninety-four, after being struck by an automobile while on his way from the Park Methodist Chureh, Momfetd, NJ. antinn Mr. Snedeker, who was born in Hemp- mad, La T., had deen for eighty years entified with Sunday School work, Snedeker [ ANCRE “% prayer meetin; Bloomfield ‘and. had With the Genuine Roguefart Favor the hop would be day School class when reaohed He made and lost several CHEESE “You serve such delicious meals,” my guests declare. The secret is that Ancre Cheese is always part of my menu. Made hy SHARPLESS Philade'phs years. fortunes. Money to Viennn Childee A mitt of 8,000,000 crowns (nomin- ully $600,000) by “American business has been forwarded to the! Mayor of Vienna and the directors | there of the American Convalescent | Home for sick and undernourished children of Vienna, it was announced yesterday by the American Committer of the organization, which is now in Fifth Avenue at 35th Street WOMEN’S STREET FROCKS You Never Pay More at Best's proces of foundation Established 1879 of navy tricotine or Poiret twill 47.50 are the sort women are asking for every day, and this price is considerably less than most of them are willing to It is certainly less than a discriminating purchaser would judge these dresses to be ETON AND STRAIGHT LINE MODELS \fetal, silk. braid, or bead embroidery ee ET ; | j

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