The evening world. Newspaper, July 14, 1920, Page 2

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“I know something would to Barnsy. When I went to ly before 9 o'clock (Monday) @ crucifix and his picture next My heart. Shortly after 9 o'clock had \ wtifiing sensation in my chest @ot up out of bea. any more, Something seemed to tell me that everything wasn't With Barney.” : hour the chauffeur was dy- ng in the New London Hospital, it ¢°WaS several tours later she heard had happened from reporters. From the stories told here and in New London by friends of the chaut- + he had a dual character, In ot York men who had known him ‘for years regarded him as a sober, _ tndustrioua man. His chauffeur | efriends around the Connecticut hotel ‘sald ho was a hard drinker and at _ times quarrelsome. In continuing her story, Mra. Geiss- ie told how her husband usually went | t6 the Hotel Griswold July 1 with the De Cordovas and came back Labor eBay. _ “Last year when my husband came " ghe eaid, “I could see he was a. He begun to stay out at its, spending all his money. When )Femonstrated with him he called me 1 could not) me sneeringly ani sometimes threaten me. “He oame home tn that frame of | mind last on June 7, and when I tried to talk to him he knocked me down Two daya later he came home, packed all his personal belongings and left. Several weeks later, June 28, 1 cailed Mre, De Cordova on the telephone at her residence and talked to her, She made no reply, “Parly in July Barney called me up and bade me goodby, saying he wus starting that day for Connecticut with the De Cordova family, That wan the last I heard from him until last Thursday, when I received his check.” She then told how on June 10 she had brought her husband before the Domestic Relations Court, seeking an allowance pending trial of a sult for separation on the ground of cruelty. She said she had been granted $12.60 4& week, which he paid with the check se fecelved last week, Court Attache Patriok Shelly was delegated by May istrate Koenig to attempt a reconcti tion, it was learned at the court. He reported that Geissler refused, say- ing, “I can't tell you why, but it's im- possible for me to live with her.” At the #4th Street house, where the couple lived, it was understood the quarrel they had In June started over | ® woman's picture the wife La alleged ‘down. Sometimes he would answer ae * i \ ' [) 2) @ontinued From First Page) possibilities by the streak of oil which smeared her water was found to be much lems than had. been anticipated, and the task restoring tier bright polish much diMouit. ‘The Shamrock, despite the precau- of Capt. Turner in tying @ skirt ‘sails about her bull dotil he way of the dirty surface water, also droudged with the ofl. But after had been heeled over slightly at moorings the sailors had no- diffi. in cleaning the stuff off, For five hours yesterday afternoon the Resolute rejoined her, Sha TV. had all the attention of the ashoré and afloat as she out the new set of sails which to be used by her to-morrow, Winiam T, Burton obviously Ro effort to crowd on her full at of canvas. He was con- t6 try her out under jib, staysall, topmall and ma‘neail, For the part of the afternoon the yacht again and again around the the Lipton yacht: the ty-three-metre Shamrock, which aot leave her moorings all day, the other members of the Lipton The Shrewsbury River sailing men Mat Shamrock IV. was not as ‘as they had believed she was in- to be—that is to say, that when breeze rreshened she did not heel to her rail av easily as they had The suddenness with which expanse of sail would begin to to the water was startling to but almost before they had a ce to exclaim, the movement d stop and the mast would re- at but Httle more than twenty- or thirty from perpen- Ny Victoria, with Sir Thomas and few friends aboard, went outside the yacht and remained in her wake most of the afternoon while she @ run out into the ocean as far the Bar. Burton seemed to be Ing his crew in jibing and with the new sails and stiff rather than attempting any ex- iments Which would put a strain the yacht's main structure. OF SHAMROCK’S SAILS CAU: ADMIRATION. “Burton left the yacht to go up to Morgan's dinner to the chal- at the Columbia Yacht Club. before the skipper had gone the steam yacht the Sham- sails were down and furled and was ready for the night. are reports from, down the of the possibility of interference the races by a five-mile long of floating crude oll, pumped board by a tanker recently out- the three-mile limit. These yarns undoubtedly stimulated by the jy given to the staining of the by the oily bilge water floating Bouth Brooklyn, i According to the reports the gil spot ‘rifting northward up the coast has already made bathing un- ble at one or two points 4 has taken an inshore drift, ody here takes seriously any ht that the races will be af- d by this ofl blanket, even should a RAGING YACHTS READY FOR CONTESTS _ FOR CUP STARTING TO-MORROW Cup away from America, to have found in her husband's pocket, lose the mie though he had the better boat and was handling it more skilfully. After consultation with many yachtsmen a man from the Shamrock approached Stewart King, once head of the lobster fisberies in this part of the world and a boat builder and citizén of considerable swubstance, Ho has @ lifelong knowledge of every inch of sea in these parts. Mr. King reluctantly deciined to be the tutor for Capts, Burton and Turner. “I do not want to soem unobliging," he said th effect, “but Iam an Amor- fean ined! ght Want to see any boat from .acrOas the seas lift the cup which America brought here, . Mow would I féel if Shamrock won by a very narrow margin after I had point- ed the way for her by telling all I iknow abobt the peculiarities of the waters and the wind which comer over the hollows in the sand dunes and the highlands above them? 1 don't want to take the chance of go- ing to the end of my life carryin the responsibility for having nabled a British yacht to take the America’s I may de harrow @bvut it, but I hope not. Gentlemen, it cannot be don From the Atlantic Highlands to THE EVENING WORLD, WED NESDAY, JULY Boy Author Visiting Wall Street, Curb, Subtreasury and the Stock Exchange SToci< EXCHANGE Con np | Gan se me LOBE MEANY, A COovLON MILLIONAIRE] LIFT ip T STAYED AROUND , THER visir SUs- AANOU THE ne Mone “TAY Bar DRUMS: WERE ALmostT SROKEN BY THr NOISE AnD FOSION ” Poe 1 \/ ro. TAG ASURY Gwe ma rhar gSREG po Ape Some + woo Tir Boy a STEAMBOAT) 5 AND FLOAT OFF Beaeh Haven the seafaring men of the New Jersey coast heard, sympa- thined and applauded. That, t said, was just about right. ‘The Sh k's messenger went to another man, Just who he was his nelghbora are not sure. He was more Successfully segretive about it than Mr. King—by*whom the story has not yet been told except to close acquaint- ‘King is a good American, said the second man. “I hope he ia no better American than Iam, If he feela that wiy you cannot get me to feel any other way. ‘I'm sorry, but you will have to find somebody else.” Then Hank Smith, fisherman, sallor and all around seafaring man, was asked to take over the tutoring Job. Mr. Smith is well along in years, He took the matter under consideration. He nocepted, He had the utmost re- spect for the sentiments of the Amer. ‘cans who had declined to turn their instinctive knowledge of the Jersey coast waters over to an alien, But he had thought the matter out along another line, “We want to keep that cup in this country.’ he said, “because we want| Think of the milions and billioas on | jt, it to mean that we can bulld better boats and sail them better with a e of American citizens than any foreign born crew can sail a foreign bullt boat. I believe that's just what we can do and will, The cup doesn’t mean anything to me unless that is true, “Now, if we win because we have men aboard our yacht who know the secrets of these waters better than the men in the other yacht, we are going outside the real sporting terms of the contest. We are taking ad- vantage of things on our home grounds which we have known about for years and we are letting. our challenger run into them almost as much as though he were blindfolded, “Let Dim learn those things for himself, one might tay. But we all know those things could not be learned by one man in a month or @ year. They have been learned off here by our fathers and grandfathers for years and handed to us. LIPTON HAS SHOWN HIMSELF TO BE GAME SPORT. Thomas has shown himself a gome sport. He has spent his money by the million, and his time, and he has shown by coming back again and again that be thinks we are fair and come us far as the Ambrose befo broken up. Shrewabury seafaring folk are proud of two of their fellow to-day, for news which came @bout them regarding the race, strangely enough for exactly op- te reasons. Several daye ago Sir determined to get a native © give his navigators all that ould learn about local condi- in currents and winds io this of the Atlantic. It may seem i to the landsman, but there many miles out which may aid lor tinder a sali master vitally, ording as he takes advantage of or blunderingly antagonizes ot racing on the water the is told of a somewhat bumjtous York policeman who rowed 4 race in the harbor here against in # clumsy fisherman's "The policeman used a racing and badiy beaten, Tha a won not by brawn or oars. ‘ut by making the tricky work for him. What Is true little rowboats in the bay is u ire big yachts outside square adversaries and worth while, I'm not the one who is going to re- fuse to give him the chance to use the Shamrock IV, and his crew from off those North Sea mine sweepers to the very best that is in them, I'll go.” And Hank Smith did go out on the Shamrock IV, and the 23-meter Shain- rock in the interest of American fair play. And the very same seafaring men who commended Stuart King are warm in approval of Hank Smith, who showed the Engtish traits of the water in the area of the courses of which the races are to be won and Jost, things of which they had never dreamed until they took Summ out the firet Ume about ten days ago, Fluke fishing is now at its height along the tip of the Hook and in the Horseshoe. Mishermen from the met~ ropolitan district and from the Jersey coast come in fleets to the neighbor- hood of the yachts before going to the fuking ground, ne WILSON SENDS MESSAGE. IAkens Uastile Day 1, July 4 Here, WASHINGTON, July 14—President Wilson in a mesange to-day to President Deachanol of France declared that Bas- tile Day “like our own Declaration of Independence, gave notice to the world that men should no lonser be subjected Fraace to HANDLES MILLIONS IN GOLD Visits Sub-Treasury and Sees $175,000,000 in; Melted Coin—Stock Exchange Nearly “Breaks His By Horace Atkisson Wade. leven-year-old Author of “In The adow of Great Peril,” who is writ- ing his impre: ‘of New York es lly for TI Evening World). OOHRS, Now York breinn Wont Yesterday. I wet off to Wall Street, that I had heard so much about.! that one street. ‘There were more persons on Nassau) and Wall Streets than there is in the whole of Chicago, I guess. Just crowds and crowds of them, and all’ going. Some were happy and talked) land smoked, while others appeared downhearted. And then came the Curb Market. | That was the worst of all, I could) hardly squeeze through the people, there were so many. I didn’t know New York could hold so many, Men were sitting on the windows of the buildings. with phones in their! bands, As the news came over the wire they culled it down to the strug- giing mass of humanity. Others used the deaf and dumb language to con- hey! it to the crowds. ne man, Charles Hartz, told me I'd be a millionaire if I stayed around there, But I'l bet there’s more money in the Sub-Treasury than there is in any place on Wall Street. So this was the place where Washington made his first inauguration speech, Rab tor New York, the ex-capital of the United Btates. But what's the use of all this money, can you tell me? I can't see any use, since the country's coming to an end August 4, so some people say. But I'll say this. I'm going to buy a steamboat and when the waters begin to cover this land I'll just hop in it and float off. But what's the use of doing that? For didn’t the Bible say another flood would never come upon the earth? You're all wrong, you people who are Gloomy Guses, you're all ron) In front of the Sub-Treasury, a gray building—(and by the way, green and gray seem to be the fa-~ yorite colors here)-—stands the statue of our greatest man, George Wash- ington. Say, they ought to give us the honor of being the capital again, for didn't Washington want this place; didn’t he pick it out? ‘Then I entered. Here I became ac- quainted with the Acting Assistant ‘Treasurer Ulysses Simpson Grant. He is not the General or the ex-Pres- ident, of course, but he is Gen. Grant's namesake and a n Oh, boy! he's lucky to Grant as an unth He is an elderly man, hae gray hair, a little gray mustache, gray eyes, and in whole is all gray. ‘Then I was invited to take look Eardrums.” | English sovereigns, which were melted into gold bars. Some one told hiv) the sovereigns were used for ammu- nition during the Revolutionary War This must be @ joke, Hach bar worth $7,000. Then we saw some iron boxes. One of these they opened and brought a|* sack of money so heavy I could ba -4- ly lift tt and they could barely carry In it was $5,000,000, I then saw some more gold bars worth 8,000 cold men apiece. Golly, they were packed 10 feet high and reached 35 feet back. And then I thought of the little bootblack with his $2 a day. T now dislodged « bag of silver so heavy I couldn't put it back where !t belonged, ‘They next opened another lron casket and brought to view some $1,000 bills, “Aw, that isn’t any- thing,” I was told, and then they brought to view some bills of such large denomination that 1 was staggered, Just think of having $10,- 000,000 in your hands at once. And al; in $10,000 bills. Oh, boy! They jet me hold that much—for a minute. There are $1,500,000,000 dollars in this immense treasury, If they'd only give me that money I'd have had some time in Coney Island. I'd have invited the whole clty out there. After this 1 saw Gen. Pershing come walking along and I began to look for some more famous Missouri- ans, Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn and thelr creator, Mark Twain. en 1 wended my way to Bella- mor, in other words, Stock Exchange. Before 1 had gotten anywhere near them 1 could heor their shrieking and yelling, When | at last reached the visitors’ gallery my ear drums were almost broken by the noise and confusion. The floor of the place looked as though it had geen better days, pieces of torn paper being scattered every- where. It looked as though it hadn't been swept for half a year. The Stock Exchange Is the place where they buy and sell stocks and bonds. If a man wants to nell etock, or has been instructed to, by a broker, he climbs upon a small circular seat and calls out “I have stocks to sell. And he gives the number he has. Another man who has been in- structed to buy gives the amount he will buy them for, No money or stocks 1% passed between them, but both depend on the other's word. Upon the wall was a large board run by electricity. If anybody is wanted, a number appears on it. Bach member has a number and if his Appears there he knows he is wanted. If a red spot appears he |s wanted onthe telephone. There are many posts In the room, each surrounded by @ seat, while on each post is twenty number This tells whether you gain or lose, I don’t wonder that the brokers make $9,000,000 a year. At the Stock Exchange there are | and many telephones. If the through the Treasury, and I instantly grasped the opportunity. trary power, but that laws "snould” be Syst’ nd a) to all.” , ¥ 1 lB AED ‘We soon got to the place where they kept part of their money, This vauit le barred and it would a Soni rises or falls they telephone thi By them,I mean the brokers. When somebody's stock risas or falls it sounds as though a menagerie allowed to mingle with them are the floor boys; who are dressed in blue uniforms. No more than 1,100 are allowed to enter and if one quits another bhur- ries to take bis place. But before you can enter you must pay $100,000 to join and $4,000 initia- on fee. And I only wish J. P. Mor- gan would dig into his pockets and give me that much, Zip, and once more the ticker shows a number, This may mean a million gained or a million lost, So at last, ured with the noise and confusion, I left, heartily glad I wasn't \* broker. COX 10 WELCOME HECKLERS ON LONG CAMPAEN TUR (Continued From First Page.) and Judge Ansberry kept him In- formed of the progress of events. Gov, Cox insists that he ia not an orator, by any definition of the word, though he has an unquestioned fac- ulty for turning a happy phrase. His gestures are simple but effective obviously an unstudied accompa. ment to his words. S| So little does he rely upon them that one of the distinguish: citizens of Columbus, John Y. Ba, , an old Confederate soldier and a cousin of “Stonewall” Jackson, said to him at the close of an address, “If you would only learn the grace of gesture what & wonderful orator you would be." To this the Governor replied with his slow smile, “If I even knew that I es one hand, much less two, I'd be Jost.” With the speech which is read the Governor bas no patience, He be- Neves that if a man hae anything to say it will say itself, But he did not always believe this. His campaigning career began in 1908 when he ran for Congress. He was so frightened then at the idea of coming to a blank si- lence of twisting his toes or a button on bis coat, like an urchin struggling to “speak a piece” at a@chool, that he wrote and memorized twelve ad- dresses. Thus fortified, he set out and in less than two weeks discovered that he was not using them at all. Since then he has never even hidden a note in his hand to prompt him. The old timorousnesa had entirely left him when he got up in Con- gress, Just fourteen days after he had taken “his seat, and delivered his maiden speech. It was on the tariff andvhe “did his darndest.” At its close Champ Clark met him in the wide alale ck of the members’ Keats and bi to him, “Come here, young man,” he said, and when Cox stood before him added in his slow voice, “If anything ever comes into‘ your mind that you want to say, get up and @my it, You've found your legislative legs.” Gertain bellefs in regard to cam- palgning are very strong In Gov. Cox. One of them Ia that a forty-minute 4 should suffice any one who un- akes it and also prove most uc- ceptable to his audience, If a gath- ering insista upon more only twenty minutes should be added. and these at risk, He holds too that who go about with a loading thamselves down. When he starts his campaign this August he will have with him only two secretaries, one stenographer and one masseur, a party which can easily be packed into a motor car with him. ‘The maaseur is not an extraordinary the air from all the 1,100 members. were Sak ils sahara had broicen loose. Bi ia izes how much hia services can do to lessen the bodily weariness of # man all save ex! addition to the party when one real- | @ soreech fills | | COX TAKES SHOT AT HARDING PORCH BURIAL CONTRACT FAVORITISM ENDED USTENNGPOST. BY CITY OFFCALS Roosevelt Also Replies to G. O, P, Candidate on the League Nations: Issue. COLUMBUS, 0. July 14.—Replying to-day to yesterday's statement of Senntor Harding that the Wiison Ad- ministration had forced on him the League of Nations as the chief cam- paign issue, Gov, Cox t#ued the fol-| lowing to the dents: ‘Senator made two definite That he purposes to hark (back to the days of thirty years ago, and that he will make post newspaper correspon- Harding has announcements: This means*that he will be as far removed from the running current | ot progressive thought as the torial oligarchy of Lodge and 1 and Smoot has been removed from the heartbeats of the American people for a year or more. | “My campaign will be dedicated to the task of bringing peace with honor, of readjusting the affajra of civilization and of creating a new day out of which we will make the best of the lessona of the past. Therefore, things that the Senator believes vital and pertinent from his isolated per- spective will not, in all probability, be so regarded by me. His last statement is but a reiteration of what has been said in the Senate time after time, so that if this campaign on the one hand develops into mere morning sessions of the Senate, you will very readily perceive the uselessness of dally response.” D. Roosevelt, replying at here to-day to Senator sald “The attempt by Senator Harding yesterday to befog the true League f Nations iasue by dragging in the i ft President Wilson is merely further evidense of the historical fact that a certain type of Senatorial mind *cares more about squaring an Jancient grudge against an individnas than it does to consider the true | welfare of the Nation, It is of course well known that seyen-eights of the ‘opposition of these Senators is not to the Lengue of Nations fut to the person of the President of the United States himself, “History will take care of great part Woodrow Wilson has played. But the Democratic party enters the campaign with the clear cut purpose of proving that the world war has not been fought in vain. Senator Harting says ‘Should the Democrats win the treaty the Lea- gue will be ratified” He is right. “A Democratic victory means rati- his home Harding, the f his front porch a listening! Plans Made ° for Identifying Dead at Morgue to Prevent Repetition of Laute Case. Favoritism in awarding the bur ar of unidentified ‘bodies in the City Mortuary to one undertaker is ended by the new rule adopted to-day joy the Health Department at a confer ence of City Department officials called to fix responsibility for tie burying of the body of Mra, Julia Laute without notifying her family This, together with a rule compelling city officials to co-ordinate in noti- |fying any relatives or friends of all persons whose bodies have (been taken |to the City Morgue is an outcome of the efforta of the Evening Wrid to = | remedy this practice. Tentative measures which Third Deputy Police Commissioner Faurot and other officials will advocate were the universal thumb-printing of the city’s inhabitants, the footprinting of all infants as soon after birth as pos- sible, the marking by all persons of some part of their clothing for identi- fication and the furnishing to the Health Commissioner by all indus- trial insurance companies of data re- garding deneficlaries of policies held in such companies. No blame was placed in the Laute case. Mrs. Lyons, a sister of Mrs. Laute, was advised to tke her com- piaint to the District Attorney If she wante@ an investigation. Dr. Frank J. Monaghan, Acting Health Commissioner, who called the announced that the vestigators could not find that any provisions of the Sanitary Code had violated. The rules were all right, but man power had broken down, he aaid. As a result of the in- vestigation started by The Evening World the Health Commissioner said that he would have incorporated into the Sanitary the following measures: A final, formal report wil be made by the Bureau of Missing Persons on each and every case of missing per- sons turned over to it to ascertain the relatives or friends. The final formal report wil be turned over to the Su- perintendent of the City Morgue, who conference, in- been Code fication of the treaty and the League of Nations, which, as the world knows, is already constituted, A Re- publican victory means that the United States, with Russia, Mexico and Turkey, shall remain outside, The election of Harding means that in case of future war the United States will enter the war after the conflict has begun. The election of Cox means that the United States, in participa- tion with the other civilized nations of the world, will, through the League of Nations, solve international dif- ficulties and prevent a recurrence of the holacaust of 8." THREW HARDWARE AND CHINA AT HER So Alleges Wife Suing Bronx Doc- tor—But [He Says 'His Temper Isn’t So Bad. Mrs. Freida Boorstein, No. 1468 Bry- ant Avenue, wife of Dr. Samuel W. Boorstein, head of a number of clinics in the Bronx, was to-day granted $5) weekly alimony and $200 counsel fees pending her sult for separation before the Bronx Supreme Court, She charges her husband with cruelty, ‘The case ‘probably will come’ up Wor trial tn October. In her papers Mrs. Boorstein alleged that they were married in December, 1918, and have one child, a boy. She says she soon found her husband a man with uncontrolled temper and that in November, 1914, he threw @ pitcher filled with milk at her while at the breakfast table. She also alleges that one day, while repairing a window cur- tain, he rapped his thum® with a ham- mer. When she laughed he threw both hammer and curtain at her, asserts. Bhe asks $100 weekly alimony and 000 counsel fees, declaring her hus- band’s income 1a tn excess of $20,000 ear, * Dr 'Boorstein denies all his wife's allegations, snya that his temper ts not unusually violent and that his income is under $5,000. ENSIGN SET FREE Cushing Exonerated Charge That He Transported ‘Whiskey From Bimini by Seaplane. ‘The court martial sitting in the case of Ensign Windsbr H. Cushing, senior officer of Seaplane No. 3606, accused of transporting by alr 144 bottles of whts- ‘key from Bimini, Bahamas, to Key West, to-day returned a verdict exonera- ting him. Commodore Fahs, in an- nouncing the verdict, sald “The court finds that the spectfica- tions in this case “are not proved."” Ensign Cushing will be released up- on onder of the Commander of the ‘Navy Yard, who i# responalble for his custody. ‘The trial of Bnsign Frank ‘Lamb, ju- nior officer of the seapiane, will go on to-morrow, it ls expected. Befo: board of investigation at Key West Lamb is said to have admitted the bottles oar- \rled aboard the seaplane contained whiskey. ———»———_—_—. Canada’s Debt $2,300,110,208. OTTAWA, Ont, July 14,—The net debt of Canada now stands at $2,300,- 119,303, according to the June statement of the ‘Finance Department issued here jto-fay. i 4 ANTED—MALE. | Public Administrator's Ofice as to all information dbtained as to the de- ceased’s friends or relatives. No individual undertaker shall pe preferred in burials. ‘The Public Ad- ministrator is to take tn rotation from a list of Mcensed undertakers, who have Department of Health permits, the undertakers to whom the burial contracts shall be awarded. a oe Hotel Hermitage Elevator Boy Kul 5 John Berger, twenty-one, an elevator boy of the Hotel Hermitage, 424 Street and Seventh Avéhue, was crushed to death by the top of his elevator on the second floor of the hotel this morning, He died before an ambulance surgeon arrived: Fruits, Whipped FOUNTAINS. CHOCOLATE NUT CARAMELS | ( Pegclallsts in caremel-craft from th Creamery’ products, combined wit a phocolate Biuare Wrapped in 'suaitary waxed” ITALIAN 8TYLE CREAM CHOCOLATES —An old time LOFT goody with @ charm that is always new. You must know those ble nuggets of de- aness with centres Brooklyn, exact location The Cup MADE WHISKEY, GETS 3 MONTHS. Federal Judge Ignores District At- torney’s Request for Light Sentence. Louis Canhi of No. 114 Ludlow Street, pleaded guilty of violating the prohibi- tion law In the United States District Court to-day. Revenue officers swore to having found two gations of whiskey he had made and thirty-one tubs of raisin and prune mash for the manu- facture of Whiskey. Judge Harland Bb, Howe, a New Eng- land jurist who is presiding tempor- ariiy in’ the Federal District Court here, turned to Assistant United States District Attor Edward H. Reynolds! and asked: “What sentence do you think ought to Impoxe on this man?” “In view, Your Honor, of the fact that he has been in the Tombs for two weeks and that he has been of consid- erable help to the Government in fur- nishing evidence in’ this and other, eases,” replied Mr. Reynolds, “T sug Boat, that you give him ten days in jal. pte * sald Judge Howe, “in view of those circumstances, I'll give him) seo specified weight Inelud only three months in the Basex County Penitentiary in Newark, The next man to come before me showing that he manufactured liquor for sale will get the mit.’ . oe MARION AWAITS CROWDS. Prepares to Feed the Thow Notification Visitors. MARION, ©,, July 14—Plans are ac- tively under way for the feeding and lodging of the enormous crowds that, are expected to visit Marion on notifi- eation day, D. R. Crissinger, Chairman of the Local Committee, announced to-day that arrangements had been made with churches and lodges to serve meals, while numerous quick lunch stands will be erected under the committee's super- vision where sandwiches and box lunches as well as soft drinks will be sold. It is estimated the restaurants canfeed from eight to ten thousand ds of tens of welnepwurats ifn After devoting the fo to hin Senator Harding to-day confer- red with A. P. Moore, publisher of the Pittsburgh, Pa., ORDER AGAINST CABLE CO. Commerce Commission Prepares to Aawert Lin Jurisdiction. WASHINGTON, July 14.—The Intery state Commerce Commission to-day an-, nounced {t had summoned the Commer- clay. Cable Company and the ot! Macay cable Interests to show cai why they should not admit the commis- sion's jurisdiction over thelr rates, The cable companies failed to file schedules and reports of thelr activities as required by the commission's reguia tion: in turn must immediately notify the] © See the Racing Yachts Resolute and Shamrock IV.. From the Decks of the :MANDALAY Passing close to Sandy Hook anchorage View the Races From the Hills of ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS Three Trips Daily, Leaving °9:30 a. m., 1:30, 8:30 p.m. DANCING. ‘Trip ARB Fare 80e 20%. ; = [PENNY A POUND PROFIT | = may Ta sods PARR E SERVE ICE COLD REFRESHING EN- JOYMENT in liquid form in any number pleasing combinations. Tart, Snappy, Pure Fruit Syrups, Orange and Lemon Juices, Sparkling Carbonated Waters, Delicious Ice Cream Sundaes, Frappes or Sodas, Pure Fruit Juices, Crushed Cream and _ all SERVED AT ALL LOFT SANITARY SODA trimmings. Our Big Daily Special For To-morrow, Thursday, June 15th jc ‘chopp. x VERY HIGH GRADE ASSORTED CHoCc- OLATES or Bon Bonus and Chocolates — The more critical, the better Judae of candies you the more readily iil you apvrectate the ‘cellent “Quality, a eS ne ex immense Stores) New York, Newark, Hoboken and Paterson, lephone director os the vontal Favorite Wute Rose CEYLON TEA SEEMAN BROS., New York Proprietors of White Rose Coffee, Canned Foods, Conse, Cereals, etc,

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