The evening world. Newspaper, May 18, 1920, Page 3

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) IKING BARBERS. POST PICKETS AT “HOLD-OUT” SHOPS Scciincaes Demand That “Zone Pay” Be Given Them and Hold Out for Tips. SAFETY RAZOR BOOM. lew Pay Rates Would .Give the “Boss,” Is Claim, The barbers’ strike is almost two days old, and the chin of Father Knicktrbocker, which his daughters call “scratchy,” tells the tale. In most of the shops to-day only ‘the bosses were at work and only the letsure classes could spare the ..me to get a seat in the lonesome chair. ‘The strike leaders say there are from 5,000 to 6,000 barbers out and there ‘Will be 18,000 out later in the day, ‘The bosses say the number is not more than 2,000. ‘ Makers of safety razors and hair. eutting machines have felzed the ov- casion to do some intensive adver- * tising, the result of which remains te be seen, Some of the bosses were talking of an innovation this morning. The idea ‘was to get apprentices who could do the lathering, stropping and lotion- applying, while the boss barber would work exclusively with thé Yasor and scissors. But that system has not been started. 43+ Epstein, segretary of Local 909, + ‘sald forty boss barbers in the west Harlem district and eighty in the Yorkville district had “signed up,” “meeting the demands of the ‘strike / He said all shops that had not “se tled” were being picketed. President Paul Raia of the Master Barbers’ Association insisted that the +fight would be “to a finish” and said he did not know of any boss barbers signing. “If they do sign,” he said, might better quit running their own * ahops. Thero would be more profit for the journeymen than for the boss +if.the demands of the strikers wero The strikers divide the city into zones. In the “financial zone," from the Battery to Chambers Street, . where tips are gencrous, they want $25 a week and 50 per cent. of the chair receipts over $45. In zones where tips are’ smaller and fewer they want a bigger ni wage. A dozen or more c: by telephone * strike headquarters the Contin- ental Hotel trom men ip office build- nimum ceived this nage irigs who wanted shaves and haircuts “aelivered—C. O, D." All such de- mands were complied with, Barbers with razors and scissors and lotions in ‘handbags went from building to building and charged only the old prices, twenty cen‘s for a shave and fifty for a haircut, In some buildings they dven solicited trade, asking the ator starters to tell them Jj wnshaven business men could be found. At the headquarters of the Brook- lyn barbers it was announced to-day that any one who wanted a hair cut , of @ shave in his home or office whould call Nevins 3587, The price for the attentions thus provided was, haircut, 60 cents, and shave, 20 cents, provided the patron's home or office was not more than five blucks from a barbers local, A greater distance *,meant an increased char: There are 2,000 barbers out in Brooklyn, mainly in Borough Park, South Brooklyn, Flatbush and Bay Ridge. GIRL, 13, QUITS HOME FOR ‘CARE-FREE LIFE’ Police and Washington Irving High School Pupils Seek Wanda Weska. Wanda Waska is thirteen years oid ‘and her home is at No. 246 Avenue B 4th her mather and father, Mr. and Vietor Waska. On Tussday morning last she packed her books under her arm and started out for the Washington Irving High Schoo! whe she is a first year pupil. Nothing was heard from her until Wed y when her mother came home from work and found a note from Wanda saying she was tired of home and wanted a care- @ life. fer inda is a pretty little blonde and weighs about 100 pounds. police lave sent out @ general alarm and Washington Irving pupils are look for her. FATHER SUES FOR CHILD. Asks Castody of rl Held by Dend Wife's Sister. In the Westchgster Supreme Court at White Plains, Miles W. Standish to-day started habeas corpus proceedings for the possession of his daughter, Mary Elizabeth, who was given into the keep- ing of her mother five years ago when the latter divorced the father. The mother married again and is now dead © Her sister, Mrs, Hazel Truitt of No, 21 Millard Street, Bronxville, now has the \ child. ‘Justice Morechauser postponed the hearing until July 6, to give Mra. Truitt opportunity to secure depositions from Norfolk and Detroit” * . Journeyman More Pay Than , “they! py | Julia Glass, 16 and Matilda Locus, 13, Won Chance in | ais! 's Competition. | |* Two little girls, Matilda Locus, thir- teen, and Julia Glass, sixteen, are to play as pi.ao soloists next season with the National Sym: ‘ony ‘Orches- tra at its regular concerts as a result of Artur Bodanzky's recent competi- \tion for American-born musical art- ists who never have played in public, More than twenty-five pianists and violinists entered the competition and the two were adjudged the best, Miss Locus was born in Holyoke, in 1907, but for most of her een Yi Angeles, In 1917 the-fainily came to this city and live on the upper east side. Matlda’ took’ piano kc:sons in Los Angeles and for the past two years has been under the tutelage of Alexander Lambert, of No. 250 West 91st Street, to whom she was taken by Miss Sophie Braslau of the Metro- politan Opera Company. Miss Glass is a native of New York, the daughter of Jacob Glass, of No. 1331 Clinton Avenue, the Bronx, She -began to play ‘thé piano at ten, studying with Paul Wuesthof, of No. 124 East 85th Street, and later with Manfred Malkin, of No. 10 West 122d treet. cee saa EXPORTS URGED Riley Sales by Wholesale for Bever- agesand Candies. Department Justice t charged with curbing profiteering ities, telegraphed Washington to-day urging an embargo on the export of sugar. He sa’ 100,000 pounds of had been exported since January, ng & stringent shortage which was the excuse for hi price y also asked fo uthority to ot vf sugar by wholesale for non- sales seoutial manufactures, such as bever- ages und candies. Indictments for pr handed up to Judge fiteering were A. N, Hand in the United States District Court to- day against John MoElroy, doing business under the name of John M Elroy and Sons at No. 390 11th Ave- nue, “on two counts, one for selling pounds of potatoes to James Butler, April 10, at $14 a sack, or a profit of $5.69 a sack; and ovher for selling a sack to’ Senesky Bros., April 14 at $16 a sack, at a profit of 5.38 a sack Another indictment was found Mrs. Franzie A. De Silvp of the Belgian and French Export Com- Beaver Street, for soiling ar to the Paragon ay % for 27 cents of three cents a pany, No. 2 3,840 pounds of sui Sales Company, M a pound, a profit pound, and against Max Muller, wholesale grocer of No. 15 West togth Street for selling 675 pounds of sugar April 2% to Samuel Hahn of No. 366 West 117th Street at 24 cents a pound, though it had cost Mulfer (but 17 cents a pound, Indicted for Sugar Profiteering: BAY CITY, Mich. May 18.—Indict- ments charging violation of the Lever Act in connection with transactions in ugar have been returned by the Fed- eral Grand Jury here against) Harry Cohe 1 hide fur merchant, and Mt son, Jonesboro, Ark., suzar brokers, District Attorney Kin nounced to-day > —— $100,000 IN AUTOS STOLEN. More Arrents mapesion Norwalk, € NORWALK, Ce “Day Sheriff Perry of Westport, Robert L. r, automobile insurance adjuster, nd John Armstrong of the New York quad, were in Norwalk ay making an investigation into tne es whic& amount to over the arrest valk, nophew Westport auto who is held under $3,000 bonds ederal charge of receiving stoten mobiles in one State and. se: ling them in another, * Deputy. Sheriff P. stated to-day other arrests are expected before nightfall, 100 Per Cent, Stock Dividend, Directors of the Dwight Manufactur- ing Company have voted a stock divi nd of iW per cent... payable to stock of record May 2%. ‘The directors have Voted to change the par of the stock from to $100, increasing 1 number of 8! to 12.000 agains: 2 shares outstanding. Stockholders wilt Altken Erickss ‘500 nar ai May 18.—Deputy | Little New York Pianists, National Symphony Soloists \SwEPT FROM FEET IN RENT CASE JAM Also ie Authority to Curb. Lawyer 1 PFIRDIDS, Lott : Buttons Torn from Clothes Landlords as Court Opens Fou hundred tenants and landlo; ! FACES JAIL AGN Attendartt’s in Rush of Tenants and lined up‘ outside the Seventh District WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1920. ARNSTEN ANSWERQ WON'T UESTIONS: Breakfast a Holds He May Be fay Be “Degraded” by Revealing Details of * ‘His Flight. Nicky Arnstein faced the likelihood of going back to Ludlow Street Jail thig afternoon by refusing to answer questions put to him before Deputy | United States Commissioner Tallman at the Federal Building, in bank- Truptey proceedings instituted by suréty companies which made good | many of the losses due to the $5,000,000, ‘bond robberies of last summer and} fall. ‘ Some of the questions to'whtch he remained dumb on the ground that answers would degrade or incriminate him were: “Where did you go Feb. 10? Where have you been since Feb. 20, when bankruptcy proceedings were started? Do you know where Nick, —— Cohen 19? Did you go with Cohen to | Waakiniios| tase October?! Dia Joe bibs HESPER be GALLIENNE iste auoultiea avtise Hannya “MEALTIME” PLEA ANGERS LEACH Station Oct, 122" After much wrangling between At torney Saul S. Myers for the surow | companies and William J, Fallon, Deputy Comm He Arngtein's counsel, who said the right Will Ask Enright to Rescind of Arnstein to refuse to answer Police Privilege. “might as well be appealed to the ee PIIVUCRE, highest courts, right no: the hear- The cha against nine out of ten young patrolmén who appeared to-day before Fi Dupty Police Commis- fa slone A. Leach at police trials If Judge Knox authorizes the ques- jy Brooklyn was being off post. The tions, Nick may be locked up again, defense offered by the nine accused pending the appeal from the Judge's was “meal time. decision. Commissioner Press of legal engagements com- Promulgated a ry «iving patrolmen, pelled Arnstein to defer until to- @X¢ePt those on duty in police booths, permission to leave the Job for thirty morrow e 3 morrow his appearance in General ininutes for luncheon. When, finally, ing was adjourned so that Judge Knox may rule on their -propriety. Inright some time ago rds Municipal Court, 360 West 125th] Sessions to plead to indictments an officer charged with falling to signal Street, this morning and when court} charging him with grand larceny and his’ station house befor ng to a opened rushed door, sweeping] receiving stolen goods as a second sehoo! crossing explained that he was Charles Callahan, eourt attendant, his feet, tearing the ‘buttons from clothing and nearly trampling him he floor. in all here,” cxclaimed Caahan, when rves from the 125th Street Stati him. \ Friedlander announced that person apart- oses to Investigate in ions many of the nplained about ‘by tenants. found conditia the cond nents T have in many ready,” pose to Departm Justi id the Justice, “and I py nt and hat can be don Pricdiander’ gaded that fe making gublic a list of the wor together with the in order egrading to show the pe some of these apal ments EMBARGO ON SUGAR TUREK RING CASE GOES INTO COUR and “His Wife Are Hel Charged With Theft—Prisone; Recently On Stage, ‘That was the worst I've ever seen the years I've been attendant 8 unbearable f the homes I have visited In touch with the Healt names of th: off his on ‘on meal time,” Deputy Commissioner Leach showed some warmth, “The more that is done for offender. ‘The offense specified is that hé took and disposed of 300 shares Of Bt. Louls and Gants Vo 600 1045 He said, ‘the worse you st. ‘Meal 500 shares of A. G. W. I. steamship time! Meni time! Meal time!’ I'm going stocks, worth $14,209, stolen from H. to ask the Commissioner to rescind, the P, Goldschmidt & Co. and Ciark, .rute. Childs & Co., Oct. 31 last. His classi- ———__- Sigeosten! a woe tenes srows POLICEMAN KILLED out of his conviction five years ago) yy SCUFFLE BURIED for swindling by the “sick engineer" | formula. He will plead before Judge | you fel- re- ion ro- | Crain at 10.30 o'clock to-morrow. jSwann’s Assistants Continue Inves- Arnstein, abandoning the barn- | storming metiods of the last me tigation of Death of Burns— rat | days, went from his home directly to | Two Stories Told. opis | the Federal Building, using the Sixth funeral of Patrolman #dward rt-| Avenue Elevated. He walked into Francis Burns, who died after what was court unrecognized except by re- cated ndly scuffle’ In the Haat porters, He had much to say of the (g5¢n, et atation after the police visit he had enjoyed with his baby hank Habe: CacadgIsnt eho ORIGR lastnight. Be Lal gine fhan Ms T Tigh the New Amsterdam surety | BORD AA MV RN RRUAG Weitn: 86 Company appeared as the bondsman ;™@ss. Burial was tu Calvary Cemet of record for the $25,000 Wederal pail,| Assistant District Attorneys Dineen Id Miss Brice furnished the actual! col-jand Joyce expect to complete their In- ‘I Iateral, including deeds to her Long jvesti ation of the dea to-day Two} t Jand home, a lien on her salary con- {stories have been Id. All the olize tract, a half interest in a dressmaking |witnesses agree that Burns hit his head establishment and her royalties on a ayainst ah iron bed whe wea milling number of songs. The New Amster- ees Qf No dam is one of the surety companie: The a Corpores al tiaen dedbety ann West 4th her th 2 |they all deny that thi as any il elena ‘ which 1s a party to the bankruptcy |they all deny that th eMeed CED EES wyer and more | proceedings against: Arnstein. ng between the men, “Tho othe recently an actor in “Within the Law"| In keeping with his triumphal en- story 1s by'the dead policeman’s wife, and "Going Up," were held in $5,000] trance into New York Satur@ay Arn-{Who says he told her be dled and $2,500 ba by Judge Crain|stein directed the chauffeur of the that there had been a quarrel and that in G 8 to-day for the aj-]taxicab in which he rode uptown from | Murray hit him so hard he “aaw stars.” J theft of a ring worth court to “keep on Broadway where the |yig skull was fractured, Mrs, Claire Turek of No. 450 West E gang is." In Gaiilte ier wie tee e phone directions from the Federa AN ets vere f hpulldings Nicky was held up by a score |GIRL BEATEN BY THREE.MEN. Mrs, Turek caused the arrest of Mrs.|o» more of vociferous former asso- — Levinson some weeks axo, saying that]ojates recruited from 42d Street and|One Captured, Says He Had Been ae won want y person who| Broadway and thereabouts and shook| Drinking “Squirrel” Whiskey. Later the ting was, ret the ring | nands with them while traffic clogged. | ‘tose Hessinger of No. 251 West 66th Tur a throug the Jew = |Street had been #0 beaten about the ttle and Co ” Dy ree men tha he Hing had been entrusied t SAY CATSUP LOAD ie Giada inane Bide i had deen entrusied to Kellogg ant tose, lawyers? ‘the aw! WAS JUST WHISKEY |ourt, Masistrate Levine ordered that Rn eed for Henry of her picture be taken for an exhibit to eyercen Ads : the Grand Jury. One of the men over ‘ty Truck Driver and Bartender Ar2|chargea with felonious agsa. upon 4 } sc her. Willlam McGlynn, of No, 235 West Arrested as They Unload Stock 7°47 Strdet, was held in $3,300 tbail for FAVORS MERGER at Cafe, the Grand Jur; The young woman was returning to vithout A large automobile truck without)... ome last night when the three men OF GAS COMPANIES headlights or license plates nassin: through 18th Street, near Eighth Ave- Police after set upon ‘her ed Mol jemand cap: two shots New Jersey Utilities Board Denies| nue, early to-day attracted the atten- |Sictihy an aE orn + 4. 6 tion of Detectives George Borpau and | ‘squirrel’ zabethtown Plea for James Williamson of the Third Inspec= Higher Rates. tion District, who followed it to No. "| guages ¢ oe West 18th Street, where two mer “Adler Lal yea eat tp PNTON, N. J.. May 18.—Dey started to unload a number of t Cooper of. Brooklyn is ‘to-day showing pplication of the Elizabethtown Gas] ‘The detectives questioned tho chant-| ie iets a ativer toving eu enit mpany to charge 60 cents per] feur, Thomas Krause of No. 1109 Teller | Darran ti Hin Seat Be the © feet for gas’ to the Perth] Avenue, the Bronx, and Edward Mec- sie becar bie Lag as Li ny, Cranford bartender of Keough's cafe, 1» : aie epi ae tee t Ca uchen sas nt of which the truck wa Atanaing nny { rit entatl i i 20) iat ' nahway as| ind were told the cases contained ca nthe erjminal courts. building, Company and the Rahway Gas) ind were 101d, {he Toneuiscloned in the | Manhattan, Casher, havin im pany, the Public Utility Com: forty boxes 276 quarts of whiskey. moneéd the ithou . nission to-day gave the corporation p hauffeur and bartender we - |s0n. Coop t ssion to new net rates on or be United States 3 te + . ck in $250 bail clive after June 1. The Solar an oA upplication Station custom —— Vins for Public Appearan Hesper Le Gallienne, Poet, Bride To-Day, Scores ‘‘One Week Theory’’ Expects Marriage to “Add to Her Writing Power, Not Detract From It.” Come! Taste of Life before it is Yoo late And twilight shadows creop acrons the skies, For death ts waiting at the postern gate, © 4. 6 Re not of those who meet an empty fate Afraid of all the gifts that living buya— Come! Taste of Life before it I# too lar From “Villanelie of Life and Death’ —by Hesper Le Galiienne. Mise Hesper La Gallicnne, daughter of Richard Le Gallienne, and herself a poet whose work ‘has attracted wide attention both here and abroad, will be married to-day in Greenwich, Conn, to Robert Hare Hutchinson of | Philadelphia, writer and educator, Miss Le Gallienne, who is twenty three years old, plans to study music and carry on her work in poetry after marriage. 1 feel that marriage will only im- prove my writing,” she said, “and as for Miss Hurst's theory of one break- fast a week, why, I'm going to be disappointed if we don't have seven breakfasts at least. Marriage is part of life that adds to one's writing power, dops not detract from It.” Miss Le Gallienne has had an event- ful life, She was born in London, the daughter of Richard Le Gallienne by his first wife, She grew up in London and Parisian literary circles, and began writing at an éarly age. Four years ago she came to this country, where she has been assocl- ated with the Butterick and Harper publications, Many of her poems have appeared In Harper's Magazine, and also in English publications. Miss Le Gallienne’s only attendant at the wedding will be Miss Eva Le Gallienne, her half sister, now star- ring in “Not So Long Ago.” After the wedding Mr. and Mrs. Hutchin- son will make a. tour through New England, pavoae ee HELD FOR ATTACK ON HIS‘LANDLORD Tenant Accused of Wounding Flat Owner's Wife Who Tried to Save Husband. Samuel Penesse of Haverstraw, N. . Was arrested theye this morning on charge of assault. It is alleged that n attacking ‘hls landlord, John Roselle, Y with a knife, he seriously wounded selle's wife, who rushed in front of cr husband. A At the same time Roselle's son, John Jr, sixteen years old, ran into the room and saw his Mother fall. He snatched from a drawer and followed where he fired ut him three tim evolver nesse to the si 1 and wounde n Penesse was being talce uurthouse two men iired ré then ran. say Penosse and Rosell d aver a question of rs occ patties by Wenesse, NITTI TO BE | PREMIER. King Asks Mim to Form Cabinet After Bonomi Abandons Attempt, ROME, May 1%--Signor Nitti, whosh Cabinet resigned last week, has accepted-an Invitation by King Victor Emmanuel to form a new Ministry. The invitation was extended to-day after the King had conferred with former Premiers Tittont and Orlando, Signor Bonomi, Minister of War in the retiring Cabinet, abandoned his attempt te form a Ministry becau: the popular party in Parllament di clined to participate. >~- Leans Oyer Platform; It By Train. F Cogan, No. 619 76th Street, Brooklyn, while on the $9th, Street sta- tion of the’ Fourth Avenue subway, Brooklyn, ‘this morning, leaned out to look for a Bay Ridge express train and was struck in the head by a swiftly His skull was fractured will die. He is em- Manhattan offices of the moving train. and he probably yed at the Water 0} gaming. was committed urge of bigamy , neral Sessions. sh arrested at Lindenhurst, L. 1, here she was tivi with Samuel Cohe etired butcher, to whom she ried In City Hall, New York, Dec. 1, 1919. Cohen anserted el a then the wife of Abraham her of Montre Mis was } LER “00,000 | Safety pins were about all that held y cubic |together the clothing of William Lin- | etter ¢ Chocolates aka Lo Pri With a minimum price of) gent, a Peck Slip bollermaker, wh he wer ice” ied the merger of | appeared in Essex Market Police Court the Perth Ambo; nford, Metuchen, | to-day to charge four men wi hate | end Kahhway ec panies m4 soon as pys- | tempting to rob him ‘at the 30 ys and Division Street last night sa — — torn glothes were the result, he said, of the of the quartet to get! | SAILOR ON TRIAL AS SLAYER, | +#,, tne loot Sie ened Mas fer A UKM Gite 4 UMOFTOW | Hy Ham A Real Old-Fashioned Gum Drops—and it isn't 29c Accused of Pinylag tin Marder je Cowli name alone which is old. Bt but the method & Yr r of Store Proprietor, Clinton | n ing these juice A drops, Nothin Ww A vay ; * 4 pon the men just as they in-modert verntte Parra Wek ethane eight Guy Nichols, .formerly a sailor, Pandata eoah ae ~ — charged wih complicity the Ikilling fs jf Sugar Rolled Nutted | MILLER’'S | Assorted Milk Chocolate of Samuel Wolchock 1919, "BH Dates—againt ‘vne food STORES yi what vo his stationery at 08 Wyckoff r, Killing: Paint condy Grea ' y tulent of the y rest | Avenue, Brooklyn, was placed.on trial] witan TInt MG. TiAcabuiv ead ; wit t fruit ‘ and y before Just Man in venin ‘ was killed in Cen in- whipped , hat ure arttully ’ first degree, ei 1 Ps day. He was on a ladder uffed Ww with the right W r, one of Nichols'a paintin west bridge in Transverse 1 flavor and. then embedde | loa ontederates, ts in ron Road Ni re an automodile driven ree siway | in ao blan- ricon under sente e of deata, om by Philip lish, No. 402 ah’ ‘ At dist &. et of M tie other, is awaiting trial. Avenue. Breakiyn, struck the add * 10s 4 wcdwemy |i # Bs Detective Oswald teatided to-cay that | @Imertin divd in iiower Hosnital.. al ler'a_, Mily tha Waleiowe nina = TS TE had a Me ant te receive five oparee of $100 par value for Nichols admitted hy & FATHER’S ABSENCE DELAYS MARRIAGE OF MISS MAUD KAHN Mise MAUD, KAHN, onore pies Ceremony Postponed to June’ 1 “Until He Returns From Europe. The marriage of Miss Maud B Kahn, elder daughter of Otto H. Kahn, to Major J. C. O. Marriott, has been postponed to June 1% owing to the fact that Mr. Kahn is unable to ob- tain passage from Europe for the wedding to take place at an earlier date as had been intended, The ceremony will be performed in St. John's Church, Cold Spring Har- bor, L. L, and it will be witnessed by a small gathering. The reception will follow at Mr. Kahn's country place in Woodbury, L. I. Major Marriott was assistant mill- tary attache at tue British Embassy, Washington, He was recently de: tached and gazetted to a guards regi- ment in London, where he is at present stationed. i COL. W. D. MANN DIES IN 81ST YEAR Was Last Survivor of ‘Custer’s Brigade—Editor and Owner of Town Topics, Col. William D'Alton Mann, owner and editor of Town Topics and the last surviving member of Custer’s famous cavalry brigade in the Civil War, died yesterday at his homo in Morristown, N. J, A complication of diseases was the direct cause of his death, but he had been {ll for eight months since stricken last October with influenza, He was in his elghty- first year. His widow, Mrs. Sophie Hartog Mann, and a daughter by @ former marriage, Mra, KE, Mann Vynne, survive, ‘The body will be brought to New York to-morrow morning and a ser- vice will be held at the Chureh of the Heavenly Rest. He will be buried in Woodlawn Cemetery. Col. ‘was a member Military Order of the Loyal Legion, and his clubs were the Manhattan, Army and Navy, National Democratic and New York Press, SEEK ELOPING GIRL AGAIN. Sixtee -Year-01 idnd Reported Mt State of the Constabulary in Orange and Rockland Counties were advised yester day to look for sixteen-year-old “ina M. Taylor, who Is reported to have eloped from Dunaville, Va., again and is believed to be bound for Orange County. ‘The girl was picked up by the police ee |Animal Day Pig, Dog, Hori oll aa Bird Figs. ure in Cases, and Judge Is Glad Mastodon Is Extinct. Magistrate Geismar called the first case of the day in the Fitth Avenue © Police Court, Brooklyn, this morning, and William. Cummings, a dog am vird store man of No. 416 Fifth Ave- nue, Brooklyn, appeared in answer to © a summons obtajned by Morris Selig, © who asserted that Cummings would © not restore to him a poodie dog, value’ $25, which Selig claims is his, Cummings denied- the charge and” said he bought the dog from Reg’ nald Worme, No. 39 Second Street, Brooklyn. Worme in court admitted selling the dog to Cummings and said he got it from Mrs, Hulda Appert, No. 210 Sixth Avenue, Brooklyn, Mrs. Appert admitted this and said her! husband received the dog as a prea ent fram a friend named Macy, pres- * ent at the birth of the poodle. “That covers the life of this dog,” said’ the Magistrate. “Case die- missed.” Mrs. Elsie Wedler, No. 470 Seventy- sixth street, Brooklyn, wag the next to appear. She was accused by Mra,: Mary Troy of No, 1261 79th Street, of retaining @ canary which Mrs, Troy claims ehe left in her care, and now wants back again, This case the court adjourned until to-morrow. Frank Caruso, No, 1365 63d Street, Brooklyn, then came up to answer the charke brought by Health Inspector W. J. Dooty, of keeping a pig in his home without @ permit, He admitted his guilt and the Magistrate sus- pended sentence provided he gets rid of the pig. “How'll I do that?” asked Caruso, “Eat it if necessary,” said Geismar, and this Caruso promised to do, Joseph Kango, No, 151 28th Street, Brooklyn, then answered a summons . from William Evans, agent for thé Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and was given a sus pended sentence for driving a lame horse. “It's a good thing the mastodon is extinct,” exclaimed, the Magistrate when Rango vanished, “or who reone what we should have had kere to-day.” FAIR DIVISION'URGED OF CITY’S PAY BOOST Civil Service Forum Asks That 90,000 Employees Share Equi- tably in $5,000,000, The Salary Committee of the Civil Service Forum has started to canvass the members of the Board of Estimate on the question of “fair and equitable distribution” of the $5,000,000 additional salary fuuds which will soon be given to 190,000 city employees. The committee obtained the views of Borough President Curran of Manhat- tan, and after a conference it waa learned that Mr. Curran favored the Forum's programme-tthat civillan eme ploye rdiess of rank, title or pould receive increases similnt of city employees attached to the. unifarmed forces, euch ‘as firemen and policemen. WAR ON “CLOSED SHOP.” wu te Carry Fight to the Ballet Box, The National Association of Manu- facturers, holding dts silver jubilee con- vention at the Waldorf-Astoria Hocel, was urged to-day to take up the “chal- lenge” of President Samuel ot the American Federation of for a meeting at the polls in November, Manufacturers of Middletown, N. Y., a few weels ago after, it 1s alleged, she ran away from home with Paul Milde, an actor,” Milde | “detained, but was allowed to gu wi after the girl was returned to jer! mother, Mra. Norma Taylor. Chief of | Police McCoach of Midaletown has teen notified the girl has fled again, Before leaving this time the girl received letter from Spring Valley, Rockland County. ot sirects oer an Manin, a4 Ta x. OMMISSIONER is one that has been réached by every judge of tal knows the piquant flavor of this delect- able Vermouth. Mouquin’s Vermouth is O:s: MOUQUIN RESTAURANT & WINE COMPANY 133 PRINCE STREET, NEW YORK CITY THIS MAKES IT UNANIMOUS thousand delegates, re} retenpie dee tlecaceeine. are. in attendance. Pre ident BI C, Mason in his opening address, clared anew the unalterable of ue NAM: to the Colpeed a goat, of living lared tobe fe direct tan’e economig law for the indul spirit of slothfulness gp some of our inhabitants, tion aby nee of A "part of eg ainturd © accor por Y, Sun, May 13, 1980. McCABE’S verdict ble beverages who

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