The evening world. Newspaper, April 30, 1920, Page 3

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NEW YORK RETAINS LEAD AS COUNTRY’ BIGGEST TAXPAYER b Paid $214, 644,234 | 234 Profits and Income Taxes, 23 Per Cent. id of Nation's Total; INTERNAL REVENUE, 24% — City’s Three Districts ‘Con- tribute 80% of Total Collected by State. a (Special from @ Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, April 30,—New York easily maintains {ts old place as ».{he premier revenye producing com- monwealth for the federal tax gath- erer, The first installment of the income and profits taxes for 1920, the figures on which ‘gre now available, shows that New York contributed ap- proximately 23 per cent, of the grand total for the United States, ‘These ‘figures do not tell the whole story tof thé extent of New York's pre- jominance as a taxpayer, because the ig Corporations of the State uniform- 1¥ paid the exact one-fdurth of the total required by law on March 15. Many other States, where tho indi- vidual and corporation returns were smailer, sent in more than one-fourth ot the aggregate in the initial pay- ments. It 1s certain that when the income and profits tax figures for the entire year aré available it will be found that the Empire State's show- ing {8 much more impressive than os indicated by the preliminary figures. | ‘The total amount of revenue re- eetved from the country at large in income and profits taxes for the first quarter of the’ surrent year is $908,829,172.18, of which New York's share was $214,644,234.41, ‘The collections for the first quar- | ter in the First and Second Revenue Districts of the State, comprising Greater New York, Long Island, Staten Island and Westchester, were | $173,271,815.88, or slightly more than 80 per cent. of the total yield for New York State. ' the internal revenue and luxury ‘Treasury Department on a fiscal year basis, so that New York's current contribution from these sources will not be known until June 30. Total internal revenue receipts from all sources in the United States for th® fiscal year ended June 30, 1919, were $3,950,150,078.66, of which New York contrtbuted $929,744,494.60, or % per cent, ‘The total cotlections of income and profits taxes tn the United States for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1919, were $2,600,762,734.84, of which the State of New York contributed $7 { 425,702.94, or 27 per cent. 4 Receipts of internal revenue from all sources for the calendar year 1919 were $5,780,675,089.97, of which the collections in New York were ap- proximately 27 per cent. of the total, or $1,549,644,164.20,. ‘The collections for this period in the Ist, 2d and 8d Revenue Districts of New York State, made up of New York City, Long Is! and, Staten Island and Westchester, amounted to $1,333,037,143.38, or near- ly $1 per cent, of the total for the State, —— THIS STORE TO CUT PRICES. Williamsburg Establishment Make Pledge to U. S. Official. United States Attorney Ross of Brook- lyn said to-day that a Williamsburg deportment store, one of the largest in the district, had made a written volun- tary agreement, after a consultation with himself and A. W. Reilly of the Department of Justice anti-profiteering nes forces, 10 reducg o0ds, inculding all men’s wear erwear, infants’ wear, on all sho women’s silk underwear and thin un- derwear, corsets, house Gresses, sults, girls’ suits, gloves aud many other ne- eessitic. The percentage of profit to be taker. was always as low as that fixed by stores in the main shopping disirict of Brooklyn, Mr. Ross said, and sometimes lower. Mr. Ross said he had been asked not to make public the identity of the store. oe LIVES AFTER 24 DAYS’ NAP. Thomas Carr Is Recovering From profits on many of und Sleeping Sickness, ‘Thomas Carr of No. 86 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn, is recovering from an at- tack of sleeping sickness of twenty- four days’ duration. When he became 1M, Feb. 24, he weighed 195 pounds, To- day he weighs 120 pounds. Carr, who is twenty-eight and mar- ried, passes his time in an invalid chair knitteing while nursing back his strength. His right les is paralyzed, but he has regained the use of his right arm. Dr. James A. Cooley believes the : ill disappear. Pater cnjoye tho distinction of recov ering after one of the longest ‘sieges of sleeping, sickness known. ‘He served over seas and was gassed at St, Mihiel. _ A en MINE PARLEY IN CAPITAL. The sub-scale committee of operators and miners of the anthracite coal ind try, which have been In session since March 8, left here to-day for a confer- ence with Secretary of Labor Wilson in Washington. The miners had asked for a wage increase of 60 per cent., but had cut down the demand to 27’ per cent. to. conform to that of the bitu- mminous ninera; then their employers cut then to 16 per cent. fs Bald the conference was. about io break up without any settlement Ynen Beoretary Wilson asked all hands to Washingtos, . tax payments are computed by the! Jtrict Superintendent of Schools Reynolds to make their complaint | ‘Bride of Cornelius ; Vanderbilt Jr. | As She Left Church After Wedding bors of 'His Accusers. Mr, and Mrs, Stephen Woolsey of! cipal of Public School No. 139, for his alleged kissing and caressing of their thirteen-year-old daughter, ary Elizabeth, in jhe corridor of the school, were to-day asked by Dis- mes J, in writing so that the may ‘be investigated, This followed an hour's -conference tween the parents and Mr. Reynolds at Erasmus High School. Whe a reporter was at the Woolsey | home, No. 280 East 16th Street, little Mary Elizabeth came down the street ying. When he asked her the rea- son she replied she had been sent home from school, where atest in the Eighth Grade, to’ which she belongs, was in progress. Mrs, Woolsey came out at that moment, forbade the child making any more statements and took her indoors. Mrs. Woolsey said that as soon as Mary betht ran home with the news of what had happened on the day she said Dr. Mordorf kissed her Mr. Woolsey went to the school and, confronting the principal, struck him twelve times. ‘This, however, was de- nied by an uncle of the girl, who said that there was no row at all. Many of the people in the neizh- borhood of ‘the Woolsey home were inclined to-day to uphold the integ- ritv and kindiiness of Dr. Mordorf whom they described as a man high priveiples who had done much| to make his school @ model. It was entire matter having kissed and hugged the child he bestowed fatherly caresses on sev- eral other pupils, congratulating them on their good schoo] work, Dr. Mor- dort is sixty years old and has a married daughter. The school is in the district of Local Board No. 38, the Chairman of which is Arthur G. Dore, Mr. Dore said to- day no complaint against the princi- pal had reached hig board. FIREMEN | PROMOTED. Drennan Creates One New Chief, 5 Captains and 8 Lieutenants. All existing vacancies in the ranks of officers in the Fire Department were filled to-day by Commissioner Drennan when he promoted tains and eight Neutenants, Capt, George T. McAl of the 2d Batfalion in L was made a full-fled! years he has been comn Acting Chie fayette Street, d chief, For ander of Truck No. 1 in Duane Street and is one of the t offers to hold a chiefship. ycaptaing a Thomas V Lin, nk A urphy’ and Robert Willian P new lieutenants are: Richard d 4, Edward J. Byrnes, Thomas Geehern, James T, Finley, William J joDonough, Philip Figspatrick, John J. Murphy and ‘Benjamin A. Asterita, THIEF BUILDING UP OUTFIT. Twice Breaks Window for Shoes, Overcoat and Cravat. There is a patient thief in this city the expense of the Browning-King Com- pany. The first time he broke a show- window of the firm's store at No. 16 Cooper Square he took a pair of shoes, The next time, which was early yes- terday morning, he ay HD mashed the the glass ari got a § fercoat and a i! 5 crave’ me Se. naede now area suit pt clothes, 1° 8) is underwear and collers. No Goudt"he has'a hat.” sald ‘that the day he‘is charged with) Flatbush, who are seeking to bring | to book Dr. Olver C. Mordorf, prin: | *] $15,000,000, SCHOOL OFFICIALS HYLAN WILL VETO INVESTIGATE GIRL’S. WAR CLAIMS BILLS STORY OF KISSING FOR SUBWAY WORK rincipal Mordorf’s oad \“Joker’”’ in Measure Mae tania Defended by Flatbush Neigh- | py Walker to Aid New York City Contractors. It became known to-day that James |J. Walker, Tammany Senate leader, instead of being the sponsor of but one contractors’ bill which would en- able subway builders to put in “war claims” against the city agg-egating is actually the legislative parent of two measures which are | proudly referred to by contractors as request! be- | “The Gold Dust Twins,” in that their enactment would mean a_ golden shower for the proposed beneficiaries. The Walker bill would compel the | Board of Estimate to give a hearing | chief, tive exp-| who is gradually outfitting himself at] * tf contest. on contractors’ war claims which the | Board of Estimate has so far refused |to pay. This bill is a State-wide measure and the Mayor was not given an opportunity to veto it. But he says he has asked Goy. Smith for a public hearing. Thettwip of this measure Is another Walker bill which is distinctly a New York City measure, Its provisions are identical to those of the Walker State- wide bill in that it would legalize a raid on the New York City public treasury through the filing of “war claims.” A section of the latest Walker bill, referring to action on “war claims,” says “the Board of Estimate and Ap- portionment of the City of New York is authorized and empowered to audit and allow its charges and claims against the City of New York such an amount as in its diseretiog may be just and reasonable to cover the n&cessary expense of the performance jor the work.” This, section is regarded as the “joker” in that it gives the impression that the Board of Estimate has full ithority through the words “author- and empowered.” According to ers who have studied the Walker law: Bill, court decisions have interpreted the words “authorized and empow- into “must.' 'That is, the Board of Estimate would have to give a hearing on all the contractors’ war claims whether it wanted to or not, land if the Board of Estimate threw out the elaims the contractors could | bring forth witnesses and “experts” to prave their cases in court to which they would appeal after reversal by the Estimate Board. Mayor Hylan will veto the Walker bill applying to New York City. CHICAGO WOMEN REDUCE 3.9 POUNDS Stoutest Member of Training Class Loses Most of All. CHICAGO, April 30.—Dr, John DIN Robertson's class for fat women lost an average of 3.9 pounds in the first week of they sixty-day experiment in reduc- ing. ‘The average weight of the class of twenty-four women had dropped from 201,86 to 197,76, when Health Commis- “ Robertson weighed them tn. Nellie Leonard, who last week cales at 323 pounds, led all ith a loss of an even eight One lost six and one-half pounds, one six pounds and the others various amounts ranging down to ingle pound, Inspired by the success of the first class, @ second group of sixteen, ranging in weight from 240% down to 146, have weds JAY, APRIL 3 VANDERBITIR, ANO BRO START HONEYMOON TRE enteeghiadooe Will Tour Across Country— Usher at Their Wedding Is Engaged. The departure of Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt jr. on their! transcontinental honeymoon begin- | ning to-day at Virginia Hot Springs, after their marriage yesterday after- noon at St, Thomas's Church, was} | followed by public announcement of the engagement of Miss Marion Car- | rou, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. #radish Johnson Carroll, to Martin W. Littleton jr, nephew of the new Mre. Vanderbilt and one ofthe ushers | at the Vanderbilt wedding. Friend Present at thegeception following the | wedding were busy to-day spreading news of the new engagement. The Vanderbilt-Littleton wedding was the first in several years to cause @ real Fifth Avenue wedding block in which guests made their way into | the church through excited throngs which fairly fought the police for so much share in the oeremony as might be gained from the curb or from bus tops. Cornelius , Vanderbilt jr. aka Miss Rachel Lit{leton were married in St. ‘Thomas's Church, Fifth Avenue and} 584 Street, shortly after 4 o'clock vu: terday afternoon. ' Thousands witnessed the simple ceremony and heard the beaytiful music in the church, and thousands more filled the sidewalks of Fifth Avenue and adjoining — strects, jammed the very stone steps of the church itself, surrounded the red and and Mr« and 53d Street sides, craned their | necks from passing buses and extend- ed their heads from the windows of | Shops and workrooms up and down "the avenue, The crowd pressed so hard to sce the bride’ and bridegroom enter and leave the church that dozens of police- men had a difficult task. When the | bride's motor dashed down Fifth Avenue and pulled up in front of the church, a liveried servang on the run- ning board brushed crowding folk aside, and she jumped out and ran up the. carpeted steps under the can- opy—she was a> few minutes late—! there was that the pol @ moment. her shoulder at the faces peering through the glass sides of her car. BRIDEGROOM RIDES IN HORSE- DRAWN VEHICLE. Then the crowd waited patiently until bride and bridegroom came out agains time together, ial car started up, a uni- fuened "policeman on tie front seat with the driver and a mounted traffic officer prancing ahead. It turned into Kast 63d Street and disappeared, but not until the waiting crowds ‘wero rewarded with a full view of a beam- ing bride and a happy young man, waving his silk bat at the poople in the street. An observer counted 110 cars with thelr rear wheels to the cury in one block and only three horse-drawn vehicles. But the day of the horse is not entirely gone in New York.so- ciety, for young Mr, Vanderbilt drove to the church from his hoine down | the avenue behind a team of spirited | animals with purple-coated coach- man and footman on the box, and s0 | did his father and mother, Brig. Gen and Mrs. Vanderbilt. A recital by 7. ganist of the ch 3.30. Members of the ice could not handle for Miss Littleton and her half-brother, | Martin W. Littleton, who gave her away, bemg the last to. reach the church, | Tho ushers were Martin W, Little- | ton jr, Harold Vanderbilt, Godfrey Rockefeller, Jasper Morgan, William Rhinelander Stewart jr., Ernest Stires, | John Brodix, Lorrillard ‘Tailer, Robert Fiedler, W. Trumbull Thomas, Monroe Mayhoff, Thornton Wiison,} Thomas H, Howard and James Henry! Van Alen jr. Next came the bridesmaids, the Misses Grace Vanderbilt, sister of the bridegroom; Katherine Mackay, Mar- jon Carroll, Katharine Keogh, Helen Moran and Adelaide Routh Ogden, all Wearing most attractive costumes in Watteau effects. designed by Mrs, Cornelius Vanderbilt. The skirts were of white lace heavily embroidered in silver,- with little ruffled coats and panniers of rosé pink taffeta. ‘Their hats were of yellow leghorn turned | up directly in the back, showing their hair dresved in old-fashioned curls and puffs. Long dark blue velvet streamers were brought around in front, completing an effect which was oth novel and picturesque, All car- ried baskets of spring flowers. BRIDE THROWS BOUQUET AMONG BRIDESMAIDS. Walking alone after the brides- maids caine the bride's sister, Miss Minnie Littleton, the maid of bonor, whose costume was like those of the bridesmaids save that her colo were blue and silver. Then came the bride, walking with her brother, and wearing a very plain, but heavy white satin gown, with a little pearl em- | broidery and a long train gathered at the waist in the back, Over this, and extending fur beyond the satin train, fell a long tulle veil, coming down over the face and bound (o the head with a simple wreath of viange blow#oms. She carried white orchids and lilies of the valley, and as her only Jewel she wore Mr. Vanderbilt's gift, @ platinum pin, containing four large diamonds set around one very large stone, After the ceremony 700 guests at- tended @ reception in the lic and Mrs. Martin W. Litt! 118 East 57th Street. Re: head of the staire the bride threw her bouquet among the bridesmaids, and it wis caught by Miss Adelujde Ruth Ogden. Here the guests viewed the wonderful English wed- ding cake and the $1,000,000 worth of | Prep Ee gp eanihedayn nin asx ee a eee white canopies on the Fifth Avenue ¢ Tugh of women and girls |] The bride smiled over | Nj cme ie et MARION CARROLL, ; TO WED NEPHEW OF VANDERBILT BRIDE WiSS MARTON CARROLL Mote UNCER weer ame UNDE RWene ara bridegroom ran out of the house, fol- lowed by a rice-throwing crowd headed by the bridegroom's father. The bride, in n gray, travelling sult, and the bridegroom, in a business suit, Jumped into young Mr. Vander- bilt’s new sedan and sped through Central Park, followed by a long line of cars, "The couple will spend the first part of their honeymoon at Virginia Hot Springs and then go to the Pacific Coast. In the fall they will go abroad. * The following is a those who attended the wedding and luter the reception at Mr. and Mra, Littleton, Vanderbitt frandmether of th bridegroom; Brig. Gen, and } felis Vanderbilt, his. parents: anderbilt and her dnunts Countess Szecheny!, Mr. Van- derbilt’s’ aunt; Payne Whitney, Mrs, W. w. Payne Whitr Reginald Va °K. Vanderbilt Seward Webb, Mr. and Ts. ‘Seward Webb jr, Mr. and Mrs, Miss’ Joan Whitney, » Mr. Vanderbilt's his. daughter, se Littleton, Littleton, Mr. and ittleton, Robe: Vincent Astor, Orme Wilson jr. Gov. and M. and Mrs. James W. Gerard, Mr. i Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish jr., Clarenc Mrs. John Purroy Mitche Porter, Mrs. James Roose: EK. Henry Harriman, Col, Mrs. Wiliam and’ Mrs, M Webb, Mr, tnd Mrs. Hemitton Ha pert H. Rockefeller. Sumner Burch. » Mr. and Mrs. El- nd Mrs. William G. Also, the Belgian ee, _M._ Burden, and ri Baroness de Cartier, Yiiam A et, Mrs. and Mrs, Mr. and Mrs. Bradley ‘ Tudge. “and Mra. Bartow 8S. Wee! partial list of the home of No, 113 Bast and Mrs. Harry Creighton Beeckman, Heyward, Mr. and Yintahop and Mrs, Charles bassador und ‘8. Ogden Gor- Mr. “PIKE SLIP MAYOR” CORK MAK, SETLES DISPUTES NYDDSH ss | Jeremiah McSweeney, Fifty Years in 7th Ward; Recalls Good ‘Old-Irish Times, | Jeremiah MeSweoney won't tell you his age, but he's proud of the fact that it was fifty years ago yesterday since he took up his residence In the old Seventh Ward and more than forty years since his neighbors first dubbed him “Mayor of Pike Silp. Proud as he is of tnt, he is‘even prouder hf the fact that—as he'll tell you bimself—he's “the only Irishman in the ward who! Gan talk?Yiddist: with any Hebfew on tho east side"— } and get trusted in it, too, ‘Then, too, bis reputation for square jdeating has made him general unof- } cial arbiter of the whole district. It Is 1 him that Igaac and Ruben and Mike bring’ their disputes for settlement, and his is the decision they take rather than that of the court. Besides he charges them nothing for It. ‘These are some of the reasons why tho old timers and the new timers of | the cld Seventh Ward gathered at Mr. | McSweeney's teed store, No. 459 Water | Street, yesterday, to congratulate him | on bis anniversary and wish him many happy returns. They over ignored the old unwritten law which for 4 genaration has been that of the Medvs and the Persians, that the “Mayor of the district must live in the distr:et." for MéSweeney is no longer a resident of the ward, S€t lives in the Uttle house he bought himself ten years, ago at Bathgate Avenue and 180th Streot, the Bronx, But as one of them oxpressed it “McSweeney's the Mayor of Pike S!'p if he lived in Jersey City.” Praise | and affection would go no higher, | The “Old Man,” as they call nim| down on Water Street, was a boy when he landed in ghe United’ States ! from the County Cork, Ireland, back in the summer Of 1870, His first job was as clerk and part proprietor of a grocery store at No, 119 Mulberry Street. He was there 18 years nnd ‘inade a pile o’ money at it.” Before he left there he started the feed busi- ness on Water Street, and in the late eighties gave up the grocery business and devoted his attention to the feed. In the meantime, things going well for him, he had married. His wife was Irish—from the County Tyrone— and here on a visit to her uncle when she met McSweeney, Father Kearney and Mrs. Charies 8. Whitman, Judge 3. Patriok’ Alton B. Parker, Mr. ang Mra. Morgan of old Bt. Patrick's, on Muluesry O'nrien Mr and Str. “sohn Bs |Street, married them in 1878. ‘They tance ‘a Mas, Olive a Srevtea cube “Age vie ind |bad four children, three boys and a Mra. John Hiays nond, Dr. “nd girl, ‘Two of the boys are practicing firs. Austin ustice’ and Mré.1 rn yaictans now, having been gradu- Newell Dw yin and Mrs.Jated together trom Fordham Univer " f _ Sinn bardch Mr and Mra George |sity. Another is studying dentistry in B. Baker jr,’ Mr. and Mrs, August| Memphis, and the daughter is a elmont. ‘Others’ were Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey|trained nurse. The two doctors and M. De Fudge and Mrs. n)S.{the nurse served with the A. . F. man Drexel $r. kus. Mr. and » Mr. and “Mra. . and ‘Mra, Lewis Munsey, George ‘Mr, and Mrs, Cor- Kergorlay and Mile. Foster Peabody lius Bliss Com! Kergorlay. An amusing incident in connection with the wedding was that more than two hundred, women who desired to witness the Wanderbilt-Littleton nup- tial, minus invitations, gathered in the Miftth Avenue Presby! 5éth Street took plc I c ¥ Y wl ny of them succeeded church, but it was not until the cer was about to begin that they » Vanderbilt-Littleton nup= to tnke place in St. ‘Thom- as's Church, three bloc! uth, and then they hurriedly left. SERVICE MEN FORCE WOMEN FROM JOBS Riot in England, Overcome Police and Compel Car Line to Yield, LONDON, April 30.—'Direct tion” has had a signal victory in Bi tol, where ex-service men of the en- tire tramway system walked out as @ protest inst the continued em- ployment of women conductors. Violent rioting took place. all the cars running were smashed aud the passengers driven out, the ex-service, men overpowering the police, ‘The tramway company finally capitulated. ‘The men are now not only demand- ing the substitution of men in all pre- war jobs where women took their places, but where they had pre-war] employment they are insistfng on thelr pay being raised to equal that of men In similar work. | i | + _ “nna, guarantee wi hureh, at wedding 8 in the rear of the j] in France, while the dentist-to-be was in the army, but did not get across. “The old district has changed a heap | ince 1 came," sald Mr, Mcfiweeney. ‘Sure, when I came to the ward first this was all called the ‘dry dock belt,’ | and devil a thing else in It was thero but dry docks where the big sea- going sailing ships would come to be painted and scraped for another voy- age. Then, of course, there were the saloons—ten of them to the ‘bloc the most part—but they went before Prohibition came along. “And before they went the real old New Yorker went too, There wus old ‘Tommy Shields, Aldermun for eventh Wand for years and years. hen there was Johnny Morrissy, him | that started in as.a prize fighter and became Senator for the district in | Albany. I knew them all) and Dich Croker. “Why, I met Croker once when hé was flat broke. It was just after that tor even O'Brien and oJhnny McKenna; and John" Kelly, who was boss of Tai nuny Hall ‘those days, wouldn't iv [Dick a job until he'd been elected Alderfgan for his ward and #o vindl cated by the people. Then John made | Croker Fire Commissioner McSweeney fairly bubbled rith yarns of Judge Edward J John Fox and Dr. Shine, who mar three sisters, “the prettiest three girls in the ward:" Big Tim Sulliv: |Florrie and Little ‘Tim and Jim | Oliver, who won fame | Asgembly as the eumber from 1 dise Par Ilis fuce beams when | the old times, but It grows ev radiant when he falls to tellin day, how the Jewish people who pop- ulate the district around his place of | business now come to him for advice —"and me an Irishman.” y to stay down h said weeney, “but [ hope that, long as lit is, PM still be ‘Mayor of Pike when I come to go." [pee A name with a reputation behind it is good, but not so good a written ith a reputable name be- hind it. The CRESCENT Phonograph has both, Sold through ir authorized dealers only. Crescent Talking Machine Co., Ine.. New York, Hstablished 1918 \ railroad | scrap he had with ‘Gas House’ Jimmy a ' 1 don't know how much longer 1|} JERRY MW SWEENEY, OLD SEVENTH WARD LEADER 40 YEARS Permission for an expert examina- tyn of the books of the Hudson and Manhattan Railway Company has been granted to Jersey City by the company to expedite a settlement of the con- tention of the Corporation Attorney John Bentley on behalf of the city, before the Interstate Commerce Com- jon that the Increase of {ures in ‘ubes is not justified. Attorney Carmalt for the rallroad said there was no merit in the exam- ination of Comptroller Silllek of the vy Mr. Bentley, unless Mr. Bentley were guided by expert advice, An expert accountant and an experl- enced railroad man selected by the city will ald Mr, Bentle; has gt When the New Jersey Central tion Company asked authority crease its rates from 7 to 10 ride before the Public Utilities Cos mission at Newark yesterday, for the mi there would be no objection if th company would make Its cars ont nde In. The commission will nounce its verdict May 12 at Tho railway’s lines are South Amboy and Atlantic | In 1918 the fare was raised from 61 6 and then to 7 cents, Despite. increase, a surplus of $104,000 in has been reduced to $16,120. income in 1917 was $25,369, 1919 there was a deficit of $6,556. Mayor Bogardus of Keyport Howard Roberts, counsel for municipalitt declared its cars were not safe, ask€d the commission to company to bulld up gs condition to the increfised MAY RAISE F. IF CARS ARE Jersey Municipalities So the Public “Utilities Commission. © i¢ipalities replied served by the ae Vulmeotur Saves Woman's tte. The life of Margaret Murphy, thirty, of No. 238 East 50th Street, was saved” by @ pulmotor thie morning after aie = had deen found unconsclous in epartment with a gas tube in her When the pulmotor had which took half an hour, wan taken to-Belevie Hos ven no exptanation. i nee Made by SHARPLESS, PHILADELPHT® oe Jus our palate, Muy real, chewy, juicy confection. Milk Chocolate elses) Pulpy, plump date: lected for abaolute me fection and ripene: fully washed and then blanketed in @ layer of the Milk Chocolate 49c thet has, made Miller's standard ot Pound Box purity: ie Milk Chocolate Maple Creams — For those who relish & roal masterpiece of candycraft we heart- lly recommend these mounds of purest, Mill Chocolate crammed full of the most delectably Pound Box favored Maple cream, Net Welght not to be ignored. of the purchase price. SCOTCH MOLE NATURAL CARACUL ° HUDSON LEOPARD NUTRIA sates LEOPARD CAT MARMOT PONY bedded. in delectable creams and then fete, incompal MK'Ghosolutel & for real con- noluseurs, candy FUR ‘STORAGE 2%. REMODELING & REPAIRING: pak & Co. Fifth Ave. at 35th, Street Established i875 suggest THE ,SELECTION NOW OF. FUR COATS § for next season "5s wear i and offer convincing { reasons for so, doing. TH very low prices prevailing now are sufficient reason for buying so far in advance, the advanced styles are another, 9 but the system of deferred payments and free storage present advantages that are Selections may be made and reserved , for future delivery—on payment of 25% § QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED low as SEAL DYED OTTER tinctured with the. Pris Ky peopormiath Ak Ml Chocolate. feds as = po ia EA EL Milk Chocolate chino Cherries blushing ¢h err & layer ol fondant coating 295.00 325.00 295.00 275.00 275.00 175.00 175.00 100,00 85.00 rendered re 1st. charge purchases made tg ‘ay will appear on bills

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