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Rhodes declares ealary, to © Biwell, wa the oe nies house after the murder. a fg himself a married man. It to start anew. ; ‘ing which was brought out : ‘and which has not been before | 3 a by the polioe, fixes the é ive within a few minutes of the that when she entered the h @mekt powder smoke, The ‘4 that the odor of powder in a ventilated room will not last than 15 or 20 minutes. | Assigtant District Attorney Joyce ald that he to anxious to interview ‘von Woblegel, the former hus- of Viola Kraus, whom ‘the date Boileau, ditustrator of pretty Magazine covers, pronounced he “most beautiful young girl in few York.” , ED ELWELL KNEW VIS- AND IGNORED THREATS. is believed that the murdered ‘knew his early morning visitor that if the latter made any the racing man, who was for his cool nerve, disregarded and hed little respect and no of the man who fired the 45- bullet into bis head. murderer may have let bimself house with a key, or he may admitted by. his victim. @ quarrel of some sort with racing man evidently heed to his griev- went on reading the Lloyd Gentry which he at the door a short ih the position in which the man was found in his chair it is evident to the police that he did x attempt to rise and was paying Jittle attention to the man who had to murder him. Thet he saw jurderer there is no doubt, for ‘shot was fired from in front of , the investigators say, the called Elwgll’s name while was reading the letter and he ‘up into the pistol barrel. The instant the weapon was dis- and Hiwell fell back in his his head almost touching the unconscious, and never spoke d Biwell, the son of the mur- i man, arrived this morning to a the funeral of his father in Lids N. J. He is fitteen years old, ‘a manly looking little chap, the of his father. He went to his jother’s home at No. 1187 Lexing- venue. about bis father associating other women were true, he don’t think so But\I didn't w my father. I hadn't seen him I was five years old. I have going to a prep school at An- » but I guéss that’s ‘all over. t know what I am going to do, t mother can't afford to send me ‘school. She has no money, and I have to stay home and help ” man amd woman whose where- wig are known are to be que joned as new witnesses in the case. im addition to this new lead the tives are working on the story © sisters whose names are with- for the time. These girls were along Amsterdam Avenue on of the murder, one on wr way to echool and the other go- to work. irs. Larsen, Elwell’s howsekeapbr, excitedly to When they observed the po- at rapid strides, their to aD apartment house, pre- to telephone for an ambu- afterward, the girls said, ‘business relations with his his Owed him two weeks’ or a ‘William Barnes, this, ‘An @ discrepancy in Rhodes's regarding the time he arrived b story of the chauffeur gave the at first that he believed his committed suicidé Later he scouted this belief, that there was no reason for theory. He was quoted as say- three women had keys to the house. To reporters he vigor- ily denied ever having made sich a went further and declared that never driven any women to or ) the Hiwell home, and said that had such visitors they went fm taxis or their own machines, Bishop, who was Diwell's while Rhodes was away the war, is auoted aa saying jhe know that several women had to the house. When Rhodes was to in regard to the statement, the keys, if the women had would be useless to them, as Elwell had changed all the locks the house was robbed last De- is to check up these apparent dis- | jes that the investigation is started over again in the mur- house. Mr. Joyce and the police Mrs. Larsen told the po- hoe have experimented and discov-) n asked if he thought that the | ‘gaw, according to their story, the avenue from 70th Street Patrolman and the woman turn back to y impelled them to follow. The was in the house only u time when he emerged and ly man, Wearing a Panuma down the steps from the Diagram of the Scene ama hat walked rapidly toward the east. The latter carried a handker- chief in his left hand, One of the young women who has been mentioned in the case as having been questioned by the detectives is to be questioned again by Assist- ant District Attorney Joyce of the Homicide Bureau, and is one of the several woman friends of the mur- dered man who are to be interrogated, But more than anybody else, the ° OSHPH Bowne Ebwell, turfman, detectives are seeking. two men, one clubman and whist wizard, the @ society man and both familiar about murdered man. the race tracks, both of whom, they] Miss Marie Larsen, his housekeep- say, disappeared on Friday after the}er, who discovered the crime. murder. Patrolman William Sin Of, the two men most sought to-|sh¢ notified. day, one was reported at his apart-| Police Captain Walsh, head of the ments to have made all arrange-|Wourth Detective Bureau, to whom ments. for departure Thursday and | singer reported. eee are Bg unknown.” | Lloyd Gentry, trainer for Elwell's eid aes ave had a grudge}peach Stables at Latonia, writer of “rr el because of;a matter the blood-stained letter Elwell was relating to the war, and also be- yeading when he was shot down. cause Elwell had won the affections William H. Barnes, Elwell's secre- eu his wife, with whom he ts not tary!, re rahe Capek diner, ebb Edward Rhodes, Biwell's chaut- whom feur. well's attentions to a woman ac-) 4. quaintance, He left hie hotel the | jAtht" Bison. who served as aise OR Was tinier, Bhwolt's ohautteur w ile Rhodes wa: An unusual move was made b | the police early to-day in attacking | \the mystery from another angle. Every garage in Manhattan was or- dered canvassed for taxt calls be- tween 11.80 Thursday night and. 8.30 Friday morning, It was intimated that the detectives have found rea- son to believe the murderer used an automobile in going to Elwell's home, but they will not admit hav- ing discovered anyone who saw it standing in front of or neur the Shae. Mra, Walter Lewisohn, a guest. ‘The theory that a woman did the| Viola Krauss,,divorced trom Victor shooting haa not been abandoned, von Schlegel, sister of Mrs, Lewisohn, though it is regarded as improbable | @ woman could have fired a .4 calt- | | HELD ON THREAT CHARGE. bre pistol with such accuracy, Dr, Chai 6 she | Andrew Scheller, Elwell’s betting commissioner, William H. Pendleton, Elwell's for- mer partner in the Beach Stables, Torey, the postman, who de- livered at the door the letter which Blwell was reading when shot. ——— Otter, the milkman, who left milk at the Elwell door at 6.30 o'clock. Walter Lewisohn, who gave a patty at the Ritz and Midnight Frolic the night of the anurder. ries Norris, who performed autopsy, said on this poln ‘woman ‘could have fired it if | were familiar with flrearms | He aid he did not know whether / weapon such as was used could be | equipped with a silencer, but,he did not think so, Nor was there any- he added, to disprove the theory that the pistol was fired {through the pocket of a cout, thinks the murderer could not have {been more than three feet away, — |Raunting. the Surrogate |. “The wound,” he sald, “would |He sald he had been | prove in my opinion that it was not [Divers in the My | self inflicted, Jance of the \{t. The circumstances, I think, prove | that Elwell was not taken by sur- prise, at least that the presence of th. man or woman in the house was urprise to him. He might en shot without knowing th that he was about to be si On th other hand, he might have been sit- |ting there trying to induce the mur- derer not to shoot.” Among the stories of where Elwell went after leaving Mr. and Mrs, Walter Lewisohn and Mr. Lewi- }sohn's sister-in-law, Miss Viola Kraus, ‘A. M. Friday Je one that n Surromate Clerk's Office. | A man who said he was Felice La- Posco was arrested to-day in the office \of William Ray Delao, Chief Clert of the Surrogate's Court, after, tt ts al- |lesed, he threatened to “take the law lint his own hands.” For six. weeks Laposco | thing, has been lenk's offic 4 administration in the emtate of his m 00, W ve issue SAVE THE BOTTLES AND BRING DOWN PRICE OF MILK Steps Taken to Prevent Waste by Housewives Which Costs One Company $35,000 a Year. he was seen dancing with a young BW YORK housewives toss woman in one of the trotteries in w 5,000 ch year in the Tenderloin, and that after being be A Ma t bps ie there far Into ‘the morning they left mie Coren OF Bares. Foree together. The police were told the| Products Company milk bottles, young woman is well known in the] according to Patrick D, Fox, who ultra smart | confirm the wet. story. But they cannot to-day said he had been assured | “What baffles the police is this:|' the co-operation of the Hoard of Where did Elwell go when he left t Health in ix campaign to end this | Lewisohn party? Apparently he did waste, thus serving to bring down the price of milk. Mr, Fox ‘ President of the Borden Company According to him 8 per cent. of the milk bottles used in a year are lost through carelessness, Each bottle he sald costs six cents. Mr, Fox's plan of bringing down the costs {# by means of co-opera- tion with the city, The Boant of Aldermen as a iirst step is ex- pected to puss an order against putting milk bottles in garbage pails. ‘The second move, which will go into effect Monday, will entail u price of five cents on each milk bottle sold to grocery stores and restaurants, thus insuring a greater return, No charge will be made to housewives. not go directly home loft the Lewisohny car at 42 Street and Seventh Avenue, and as he said good night to members of the party, hi started across Seventh Avenue ‘and headed west. A detailed search of Elwell’s home gave not the slight indication that he had very long befor | Assistant Distr t Attorney Joyce spent yesterday in the Elwell home, where for five hours he questioned Countess Bonia Szaniawaka of No. 11 West Street and he Mrs. L, Hardy, who resides at No. 200 West bith Street. Searching among the dead gambler's effects the police unearthed & number of photographs of women. They were all pictures of young women, Most of them are strikingly bandsom: ‘The pictures of the Countess and her sister were among the Elwell col- lection, and Mr. Joyce sent for the women. jad of Elwell Murder and Private Secretary of the Slain Man | MADE 4TH DEPUTY: DRAMATIS PERSONAE IN. MYSTERY OF THE MURDER OF J. B. ELWELL More Than Thirty People Connected With the Case and Efforts to Trace Slayer. dnother guest. P. Figureoa, a guest. The last named four were the last who saw Plwell alive, at 2 o'clock on the morn- ing of the murder. Lyttleton Fox, Lewisohn's attorney. William M. K. Olcott, former Dis- trict Attorney, member of the Whist Club and friend of the murdered man. Mrs. Helen Derby Elwell, wife of the murdered man. Richard Elwell, son of the Elwells. Victor von Schlegel, divorced hus- band of Viola Krauss. Police Inspector John J. Cray, head of the Detective Bureau. ” Police Capt. Arthur Carey, head of the Homicide Bureau, Deputy Police Commissioner Will- fam J. Lahey. Joseph 8. Elwell, father of the mur- dered man. James L. Diwell, brether of the murdered man, : Arthur Caspary, a friend of the murdered man, and one of the execu- tors of his will. Capt. Wiltam A. Jones, former pis- tal expert of the Police Department. J. E. Joyce, Assistant District At- fifteen-year-old torney in charge of the Homicide Bureau, Countess Sonia Szaniawska, a friend of Edwell. Mrs. L. Hardy, her sister, |ASK COURT TO KEEP UP RATES FOR GAS Brooklyn Company Wants Injune- tion Extended, Consolidated Seeks New One. ‘The Brooklyn Union Gas Company filed to-day a formal application with Federal Judges Ward, Mayer and Knox, asking an extension until November 1 of the temporary injunetion granted by the Federal Court last Mareh forbidding Attorney General Newton and Pubite Service Commissioner Nixon to enforce the provisions of Chapter 128 of the laws of 1905, which limits the as com- pany's charge for gas to private con- gumers to 80 cents per 1,00 cuble feet The injunction now runs’ until August 1 and permits the company to charge 96 cents, provided that the corporation deposits with the court the 17 cents difference, which is to be repaid to the consumer if the United States Supreme Court decides against the company when ite comes up Octaber 11 next. Arguments were heard to-day Vefore the same judges in the United States Court of Appeals, on the motion Med by the Consolidated Gas Company, uxking a temporary injunction restrain- ing the State offtvials from enforcement of the 80-cent gas law, The elty is not yet @ party defendant, although Cor- poration Counsel O'Brien has. fled motion to permit the olty to intervene. These motions are returnable in the Federal District Court Friday morning. HIS DATES OPEN FOR HER. jeyee of Per- * a When the platform man at the 125th Street Station of the Ninth Avenue “L" wied to “date her up’? for any eve- ning she might choose, Miss Joseph- ine Carl, nineteen, of No, 409 West case 127th Street, tried +o escape by getting on. ad the next train, she told Mi Feischman in Washington Helghts o-day. He pulled her back, say- “had a bottle of hooch" and meet him that evenin, ‘Miss Carl sald she " Policeman Curry, who arrested Patrick Tracy, 44, on @ charge of disorderly conduct, remanded Magistrate Fleischman Tracy for sentence Wednesday pending an_ investigation by Mi ri gala a a lon officer. ‘she was waiting for eveatheart when Tracy made hi bi OLICE RECONSTRUCT ELWELL MURDER AT SCENE OF CRIME INSPECTOR DALY PENSION ASSURED Promotion Makes Him Eligible for Retirement in Six Months at $3,500 a Year. Polico Commissioner Wnright an- nqunced to-day the promotion of CMef Gnapector John Daly’ to the Fourth Deputy Police Commiasioner- ship left vacant by’ the resignation of Prederick A. Wallis, who resigned to become Immigration Commis- sioner at Hillis Island. ‘Alfred Thor, formerly chief of Daly's etaff, has been appointed Act- ing Chief inspector and qwill assume his new duties at onoe. Daly has been granted six months’ leave of albsence, ‘Under the provisions of an act passed in 1918 and now part of the city charter, Daly can .serve six months as Deputy Commissioner and retire on a salary of $3,500 a year, half his annual pay as Chief Inspec- tor, He could not have obtained a pension as chief inspector, there be- ing no pension provision’ covering that office, Had he obtained a pen- sion as Borough Inspector, which pays 4,800, or as Inspector, which pays $4,400 his pension would have een $2,400 or $2,200. Daly at the end of his six months’ leave of absence thus will benefit by the law, which reads; “Services as Police Commissioner or Deputy Police Commissioner by a member of the police force shall be deemed performance of duty on such force, and any member who shall have performed duty on such force fo! a period of twenty years and for at least six months ws Commissioner or Dep- uty Commissioner may be retired by the Mayor and plaeed on the pension roll of the Police Department and granted the pension allowed a Chief Inspector in such department.” Daly was appointed to the uni- formed force on Jan. ‘21, 1885. He be- came successively sergeant, lieuten- ant, captain, inspector, and on May 14, 1918, chief inspector. He is the fourth member of the department to, be appointed a Commissioner. SAYS WIFE CALLED DOCTOR “DEAREST” Love Letters Introduced in Counter- Charges of Separation Suit of Ossining Woman. Love letters alleged to have passed be- tween Mra, Marie L, Clark and Dr. Raphael When, both of Ossining, were made public at White Plains to-day In connection with charges and counter- charges in the separation sult brought by Mrs Clark ggainst Orlo R. Clark, an osteopath. Bdgar Ryder, counsel for Clark, told Supreme Court Justice Seeger that Clark wanted to put in a counter claim for absolute divorce. He produced the love lettera. One, alleged to have been written by Mrs. Clark to Dr. Wren called him “dearest,” made many pro- fessions of love and begged him to “give me a chance to be happy and to make the most out of what years there are left to me.” Ryder said Dr. Wren was in Loni Lake when this letter was sent, that he replied wi ith a letter confess. .g ‘8, Clark. his love for a SPECIAL OFFICER SHOOTS FIREMAN Railroad Policeman Severely Beaten First in Fight Over. Crossing Trestle. Walter Wilberg, a fireman attached to Truck No. 4 af the Jersey City Fire Department, a war veteran with a Di tinguished Service Cross, was to-day shot three ttmes in the leg by Henry Offard, a special officer of the Lehigh Valley Railroad, Wilberg crossed the railway trestle at Moreeles and Grand Streets to take a short-cut to his home. Offami intercepted him and a fight fol- lowed tn which Offard was severely beaten, Then he drew hie revolver and shot. Wilberg was taken to City Hospital and Offard was arrested at the Penn- sylvania Railroad Ferry. He was 5 with troolous assault. ‘Two este Pi the Director of Public Safety Y Jersey City refused pistol permits to special Yeficere of the allroad com- panies. ‘TOMATO CAN USED AS BOMB. a Son, Held Two Malia in Wai WATERBURY, Conn., Police investigation has developed that ‘a tomato can, loaded heavily with pow- June der and charged with screws, bolts, nail, &c., was used in the attempt to kill Maragaract and Charles Russo and their families at their home at 25 Divi- sion Street last night. ‘Antonio Garger is held on of assault with intent to kill, and Vin« gem Amattini and Gluseppe Amattini ffather and son) on charges of assault, all in heavy charge by Anto, Mary Gardina, ten yearq old, of No. 81 Elizabeth Street, while crossing Cana) Street at Mulberry this afternoon was killed by an automobile aperated »; Fred Shaw Jr. of No. 1461 Thirteenti Street Brooklyn. was : is | fig ole "ot ve “Dando MRS. HELEN ELWELL, WIFE OF MURDERED WHIST AUTHORITY POODOGDOVOOOSOODS: So Far the Police Have ‘NOWN. facts in the Elwett murder mystery: ‘ Joseph, Bowne Elwell, noted turfman and international .au- thority on whist, found uncon scious with bullet wound in head. A bullet fired from a 45-calibre army automatic pistol found em- bedded in the wall behind the chair in which he was sitting; the shell lay on the floor. Elwell dies two hours later at Bellovue No weapon found. A letter he had been reading is found on the floor. The letter was left by the post- man at 7.35 that morning. It was between that hour and 855 when the housekeeper ar- rived that the murder ocourred. The front door of the house, within a few feet of the muri was open. ' Elwell spent the night before at the Ritz-Carlton and the Mid- night Follies with Mr. and Mrs., Walter Lewisohn and other friend: Medical men state that suicide would have bi impossible un- der the conditions in which the body was found. The dead man Was known to hav ciated with many beau- tiful women. MRS ELEN D ELWwes TERN ATION AR, NS FLWEL PLANS. FIGHT FOR ESTATE FRHERONLY SIN WOOGONIOOS KNOWN FACTS AND CHIEF POINTS UNSOLVED IN ELWELL TRAGEDY the Noted Whist Expert Was Slain. Only Established That INTS to be cleared up in the Elwell murder: What was the motiye for his murder? How did his slayer get into the house? Did home? How did the murderer leave the house? i What were,Elwell's movements after leaving the Lewisohns and their friends in front of the Am- sterdam roof at 2 o'clock Friday morning? Did he meet any one on hie way home? abs At what hour did he reach hie home? By what method of transporta- tion did he go home? Did he have any enemies? Why, after disrobing, did he ge downstairs from his bedroom on the third floor to the drawing room on the, first floor? Was it because of the post- man’s ring or whistle? Who are the three women said to have keys to the Elwell house? Was the slayer the husband of a woman who may have had a key to the house? Did Elwell know who murdered him? he accompany Elwell (Continued from Page One.) NECES LOSE FG TO BREAK 400000 KENNEDY BEQUEST Court of Appeals Holds ‘Haber- dasher Made Will Before Mind Became Affected. thing I have in life, all that T have had for the last twelve years, is my dear boy. If it weré not for him there would be nothing left for me. , “[ am sure that my husband was murdered, but I don't know by whom, He was very fond of women and knew a great many of them. He was killed by some one he had offended by his attentions to some woman. I don’t believe he made a practice of showing his attentions to married women; he liked younger women. “I do not intend that my son shall become a gambler like his father if I can prevent it. I will teach him to play bridge as a recreation and a mental exercise, but as to gambling, I pray to God that he will never be- come a gambler, Playing for small amounts such as $5.or $10, is perfectly all right and is not gambling. But when a man goes into it as his father did it always leads to trouble. I wish to obtain for my boy all the happl- nesy in the world, but happiness does not lie in gambling,” SAYS SHE WROTE BOOKS ON BRIDGE FOR HUSBAND. The Court of Appeals at Albany has affirmed the verdict of the Sur- rogate's Court sustatming the will of the late Andrew F. Kennedy, Cort- landt ‘Street haberdasher, who killed himself at the Volunteer Hospital Jan. 5, 1918, leaving an estate valued at more than $400,000. Mrs. Harriet B. Stetman of Phila- delphia and Mrs. Katherine Noble of Pittsburgh, nieces of Mr. Kennedy, contested the will, holding that their incle was of unsound mind when he Mra, Elwell is a tall, statuesque[exccuted it, He left three of his . ‘ "aa former employees and Bernard Mc- woman of middle age. Her hair is!Gann” q hatter of No. 210 Bowery, blonde and she has fine white’ teeth and blue eyes. On her fingers, as she talked to-day, were several diamond lange’ bequests. Under the will McCann, a life-long gets $40,000 and one-fifth of iduary estate; the two nieces and opal rings. Opals, according to} who contested the will $25,000 each accepted superstition, are unlucky. |and divide one-fifth of the residuary Speaking of her husband's books on bridge, which are deemed to he au- thoritative upon the subject, she said “{ wrote every one of those books. Mr. Elwell signed them, that is all, and he received the royalties trom them. ‘These amounted to $18,000 that I know of and there must have been @ much larger amount. He got the qredit and distinction from them, but I not only wrote them but took them to the publishers, Scribner's, and at- tended to their publication. “I am not sorry that my husband ie dead, His manner of endearment was to tell me he hoped he would stamp upon my dead face. When I estate between them; two nephews, Hugh and William Kennedy of Tor- onto, $1,000 each and one-fifth of the vesiduary estate between them, and Courtney Babcock of Babcock, G $10,000 and the remaining iifth of the residuary estate. The three employees who get large bequests are William ©, Nagle, No. 1036 East 24th Street, Brooklyn; ard #, Devinney, No. $722 East 24th Street, Brookiyn, and Miss Anna T. Crowley of Corona, Queens. Fach gets $50,000 in cash, Fifteen other employees of the Kennedy store re- ceived from $500 to $1,000 each. Kennedy was sixty-six years old at the time of his death. (He had been n the Volunteer Hospital suffering from cerebral hemorrhage. (He ‘got ‘a razor from a friend and cut his own | throat. ‘The courts found the will CATCH THREE BOYS CHASED OFF ROOF Accused of Brass Theft, Two Are Arraigned in Children’s Court, One Held on Burglary Charge. Detective Charles Battalora and Capt Richard ay of the Clymer Street Sta- tion, Hoooklyn, answered a call early to~lay to the plant of A. Laxdwig & Co., No. 133 Middleton Street. On the roof the policemen saw a light and three boys who fled when the officers ap- peared. _Battalora chased them down the fire escape and Capt. Giay ran for his auto and followed along the street to Public School No. 122, a few blocks away, where the trio was caught, They gave their names as r Panzo, fifteen, No, 403 Marcy Avenue; Morris Selko wita, fifteen, No, 118 Middleton Street, and William Moyan, sixteen, No. 258 Heyward Street. Selkowitz and Panzo were arraigned in the Children’s Court on changes of Juvenile delinquency, and Moyan in the Plaza Court, charged with burglary Moyan was held in $1,000 bail for ex- amination Friday. ‘The boys, according to the police, had bundled ‘up $60 worth of brass, which one of them had obtained when low- cred through the scuttle by a rope. DETECTIVE TIERNEY DEAD: Had Seen Twenty-nine Years’ Ser- vie Handled Big Cane Funeral services for Detective Edmund Tierney, retired, who died in his home 0, 59 Adrian Avenue, the Bronx, on turday, will be held to-morrow morn- ing in St. John's Church, 238d Street and Kingsbridge Road. ‘Tierney Joined the police department in 1890, He retired in 1919, afterward becoming a New York Central detective on the electric division. During his twenty-nine years with the Police De- partment he was for twenty-elght years a first class detective and figured in several large arrests, He leaves a widow and two daughters, Catherine apd Dorothy. —__—»—____ Two Die From Weod Alcohol. BOSTON, June 14.—George A. Hamil. ton and his wife, Irene, died to-day, saw him for the last time four years ago I asked him if he wasn't inter- ested in Richard's welfare and whether he didn't want to see him All he replied was that he had heard he was getting on very well in my care, adding ‘So why should I worry?’ When my husband lived with us his invariable method of addressing his son was ‘Get the hell out of here.’ “The death of my husband stirs up all sorts of things I had hoped to forget. I had not seen him for four years and everything he meant to me was connected With abuse and suffer- had been made before Kennedy's mind became affected. in “My husband had a dread of death, When anyone talked of death he would leave the room, He could not even bear mention of the word. He even went to a quack doctor who told him that by a certain regimen he could, live to be 125 years old, He used ‘to eat two prunes for breakfast and then go upstairs and practice all sorte of exercises as part of the regi- men.” LOFT Sanitary Soda Our Big Daily Special for ine 14th BRITTLE—You ne den that many Mrs. Elwell, who said that she was me ave reKaTi Miss Helen Derby, first cousin of Dr ust, “Hrittle ix Brit Derby, who married X Ethel 7 ver sae ales Roosevelt, added that when she mar- ried Elwell she had $35,000 a year with which to maintain a home, “but in those days,” she cc young and romantic.” GIRL SLAPS A_ FLIRT. And Court Slaps Him With « Ten- Day Sentence. A sick mother was all that saved Harry Pacorakes, 31, of No, 321 West 29th Street, from ninety days in the workhouse, according to Magistrate Short in Coney Island Police Court to- day, who let him off with ten days. oodnens you ckly slabs of studded 29c fiirtations of this ‘ate pronouncing corner loafers and the Kind," said The ‘specified wolgint [PENNY A POUND PROFIT | . | eo NLY THE _RIPEST and CHOICEST FRESH FRUITS yield the luscious Juices for the Syrups used at all Our Two Big Daily Specials cherry tree. bie gold Pacorakes was found guilty of dis first. dipped Se, Selden tented: tun orderly conduct for attempting to fiirt Fondant Cream and , » which are with Atiss Florenes Hogan, of No. 5° luxuriously nat %, Sue ts in 8 blanket West 196th Street, last Saturtay, in with our Jncomparele Stores: New Yorks | rants velvets pe LEHe> West End Depot.’ She sapped his From MK PT ES 9 Brooklyn, “"Newnek, | Chocolate.” “We Magistrates must protect and Hoboken. POUND BOX c women of tis communtty from street ‘exact location sce telephone itirectory. victims of wood alcohol poisoning, in fhe opinion of physicians who attended a = Trade Mark, Fountains. Our Big Daily Special for Tuesday, June 15th CHOCOLATE COVERED ra COCOANUT CARAM choicest crushed Kies and quality of Sun Blas Gi masterly blended and pressed into cubes, ichly covere then ri bly, covered with our 34¢ runt, velyely Choco- late, produc koody of charm SPRCLA CHOCOLATE cov B COV. RED DATE S—Tho Fur East contributes very materially to the deliciousness of this POUND BOX treat in supplying these Od includes the container 4