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NPD SHARES CLADVANCE FROM, ai 312 POTS New York Central Leads in Upward Trend Following | Rate Increases. | ji DIFFER ON LIVING COST Hines Sees an Increase While! Others Declare Prices Will Eventually Drop; Advances of from 1 to $1-2 points were madé to-day/in railroad shares on the Stock Exchinge as the result of @ steady flow of buying orders| from all over the country, which im-| parted considermble activity to Initial | dealings and brought oa substantial improvement all along the list. New York Central, Northern Pa-| cific, Reading, Great Northern pre- ferred, Southern Pacific and Union Pacific, all, dividend-paying stocks, figured most prominently in the ad- vance, but there were numerous gains in the more or less speculative shares, such as New Haven, Pittsburg & Western, Rock Island and St. Louls Southwestern Preferred. Popular specialities were absorbed in the rise, although the market as a whole was of. This movement, shortly after noon, affected the railroad issues too, but they, acted well when they got o BoOUG around iow, In high, low and Saturday closing} ‘he leading railroad securities varied as follows: 9 BAN A. T. & S. F., 82, 801-2, -8; Canadian Pacific, 121 3-8, 19 1-2, Rock Tyland, 451-8; New York Central, 72, *$5-8; Southern Pacific, 93 9-4, 91 #1; Union Pacific, 118, 116, 1151-2; New Haven, 317-8, 811-8, 27. An interesting question arising out of the advance in freight and pas- eenger ra ng costs. ned sides. ateument on out by Walker General 3 is how it will affect liv- There are two clearly de- One fs based on the figures recently given D, Hines, former Di- vector of Railroads, which indicated a sharp advance; the other side, to which Wall Street inclines, olds to the belief that the cost of living will not go bigher for any ngth of time, but will actuallly go down Mr. Hines cites instances in which 1@cents a ton added to the cost of coal at the mines in 1902 increased to cents more a ton by the time t reached the public, and in April, Inst, n 40 cents was added to the cost of mining coal becai of the miners’ wi Increase, the rise yyramided up to §2 more a ton when the coal reached the consumer, The other view, which has among its adherents Daniel Willard, Presi- nt of the Baltimore & Ohio, Is that] ayo. ¢ taise will give the railroads a long | © Three ht chance to improve equipment, |Saulted tend lines and expend thousands of jlars for improvements, This, he . wil] mean a better movement thus facilitating the meet-| while th nig of Public demand and causing a|Lane, ction in price from Hacken at business the dn- can stand erased burden is the opinion of the National City Bank, which says: “It idle, to say that business cannot and fhe charges high enough to p ihe cost of operating the railroads, Reports from Washington an- nounced that Attorney General Pal- | he mer has ordered his staff to look out in cortmodity for airy boost prices | pruised i e pil achedule goes into ef. tured rib. Traffic officials of railroads with| | Four tines 0 offices here pre to-day consulting § 4 y lay unc their legal departments in efforts to work out the new freight and pas-|* ihe 7 sunger schedules. Aside from stating | MWay Se that no schedules Would be ready to|man. | He ‘onounce before Wednesday, railroad se rau of officials retused to discuss their plans. Tt was learned, however, that the officials are puzzling over the follow- ng problems: furniture de: Las . ew FROHMAN HHarmon Sa ees AUTO BANDITS BEAT AND ROB MOTORISTS aler of were nsack, and ‘onse FAIRGANKS w of the girl were he: aneck motoreycle police- rested a man who gave a whole: West New York and Miss Mary Dinskie of Hoboken driving on Teaneck, just across the river ere rd RAYMOND HITCHCOCK Hold Up Girl and Companions in Jersey and Steal Rings After 3eating Victims. auto bandits last night as- William’ Howell, ie Cedar The bandits raced in front of the Howell auto and caused it | Howell fell unconseloys from a blow on the head and the bandits then took Miss Dinskle from the car and beat) Two of her ribs or Hp was split and her Howell also suffered a frac to stall. broken, ce cut and | ings were torn from the fin- Miss Dinski ous in the road. The| as a mile John Warmiskie of Lit- ape The others escaped. SLAYER OF EDITOR IS SANE. What. to do about commuters’ A . manus And is the Interstate Com-|Cominianlon Says Cooper's Out teres Commission's authority final] breaks Are Due to Bad ‘Tem: ind sufficient in the case of railroads | phe commission appointed by Judge OY te ie Bieter Crain in General Sessions to determine The railroads it ls suid, are timid ti6 sanity of Philip Cooper of No. 1265 cont Imposing @ ralie tipon the eom- |i TA ng, Bronk, who stabbed tnuters, primarily because such al Pre 4 Ber blt iataenes vie. ts felt. simultaneously by the |and killed Morris Nimkolsky, an editor jargest number of persons. of the Jewish Forward, May 7 last in ecCommutation tg tho dark horse in]Seward Park, to-day reported Cooper the railroad business,” said an em-|icgully sane. Cooper went to the of- Uisyee of the New York Central.| tic» of the Forward to remonstrate be- Mrhere fa no money in commutation | guse he sald Nimkoslsky had ejected os such, but it ts considered a feeder) iin two months before when he was t, moro profitable business for the employment, and they quar retironss The Tome ee eae tat when, Nimkolaky denied any Increase on the commuter, but not hrelled when, Nims low intelilxen {insane outbr TO INSPECT FOOD STATIONS. Mate and Civic Representatives tal disorder. der. eaks in but that the ‘The commission sald Cooper was of mupposed mbs were due to bad temper rather than to men He will be tried for mur- —— to Make Tour of Marketn. ‘The "mouth" of New York—tho mar-| DIES SUDDENLY ON TRAIN. ets whore all foodstuffs are received— shh will be inspected beginning at mid-| Aged Man Had Letter Written tn night by the State Division of Foods Washington in 1864, and Markets and by representatives Of] 4 man about seventy-five years old ccveral \organizationa, including the|wan dressed and believed to be from school for Social Research, a class from] Watertown, N. ¥., died on a Pennsyl- the College of the City of New York| yan trein toeday betweon New York end several civic bodies. and Newark, It is belleved he was on Buses will start from the Pennsyl-|his way to Washington. He was taken vanta Station and will take the ob- servers to Washington, Gansevoort, Wallabout and Harlom Markets, the Vennsylvanta and Erle receiving piers, ihe California Fruit Auction, the Fish in A ne while crossing the Jersey meadows. was sent shead and an ambu- was waiting at Newark, but th man was, dead. hud jettors addressed to J. Market and a big milk distributing penraniey, No. 1M MBeardsiey. No. Ni contre. Street, iy ning Ag There —_>— 80 a ‘dated. in 1864, on st POPULATION GROWS 4038 P.C, Washington a Gieases to eat peste bade Signed and Weed River, Il, Shows = Increase in U. % WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—Woad River, Largest {n Madison County, Illinois, whose pop-| CHICAGO, viation Was announced to-day by the|Willlam Br “@ensus Bureau as 3,476, has shown an| others, Aug. ‘ons Lloyd 2.—The case of and nineteen charged with participating in increase of 4098.1 per cent, during the|a conspiracy to overthrow the Governs Liat few yeors, ment, went to a jury in Stite Crim hat {i the highest rate of growth | inal Cour By agr shown by any place In tho United stator] ment, the ' arlict, thus far in fourtveuls census, will bet be announced until 6 ‘clock. THIS IS A Be at Banquet That Beats All the Kisses _Showered on Themi in Tour of Europe | GOT KISSED Too~ THE MEN KISSED me! HAPPY SPEEDING To cauiroRNtal ABRAMS Honor Movie Idols at , the Hotel Astor. ular persons of the Hotel Astor, and Douglas Fairbanks. Those millions weren't tars of the screen. There were that smacked of the country, stop. not quite so blond, en's blue sunshine In them, dancing in them; with from girls, I got very few from men." “The bigs was & lunch from which lasted four hours. iGpatinues on Twelfth Pase) ’ MAE MURRA Stage and Screen Notables Youth and beauty, the genius and talent of stage and screen and millions of dollars in ready money last night pald homage to two of the most pop- in the world at the Friars’ Club dinner in the ballroom Mary Pickford in stage money, although they were made from the stage and the world of film. And the poets who used to write of the beauty of the stars had never seen the My goodness, no! lanes of beautiful girls, moat of them little girls, ned from smiling just a moment. | rest thing we got over there| authors, actors, playwrights and journalists in Paris, Hite MARY PICKFORD cAaPpTain JACK GLEASON FRANK me GLYNN! once He CARRIED “any 4 THOUSANDS HELD UP Brighton Car Jumps Tracks at Fulton Street—Passengers Escape Injury. ‘The derailment of the last car of a six-car Brighton Beach local elevated train caused congestion and confusion | among returning merry-meakers until early to-day on the Fulton Streot cross-over. There w only about fifteen passengers on the train, them on the car that Jumped the rail, and no one was hurt. When the car jumped the track it landed across both the uptown and downtown rals. The downtown track was cleared in half an hour, butythe uptown tracks not for more than two hours. The crowd accumulated unul | just 11k the beautiful hedges in the|the station and in tho atrest. The country? only there wasn’t anything|©omPany relieved the congestion as eee OAL ba ada: best it could by issuing transfers to the overcrowded trolleys, and later to 3 When passengers were crosstown 1 Well, there was Mary to begin with, willing to walk to the stations they and then one couldn't tell where to | desired Halr of all colors, blond and| dark and black! and brown, wavy, frizzled, marcelled and all mussed up—eyes with heay-| radiating from them, with| moonbeams' eyes like cherries, BOOK THIEVES SENTENCED. Amateur Fined But Professional Goen to Prison. Two book ster rs, one amateur and one professional, to-day were sen- lke plums, like violets; eyes with the) tonced in the Court of Special Resiioue mischief In them, and cheeks liK@/for stealing books from the New York roses and peaches and cream. | Public Library, Fifth Avenue and 42d | Street. BEST OF THE WHOLE TRIP, DE)” scise Greenstein, of No, 1147 Hoe CLARES MARY. jAvenue, Bronx, pleaded that he had It was a beauty show for fatr and)stolen medical books to further his wished for, It was worth the price] $00 which ‘he puld. “an of admission alone, and the gowns| CRESS Feaikning Julius Sanberg that wore them. to sell. He was wentenced to a bit of a choke in her throat and a|” _ mist in her eyes, “It's the best of all| ae Su yea, we enjoyed Lurope,| COCOANUT OIL COMBINE, every bit of 1 | Britian Gain Contro} of Three 1 “How did Doug enjoy those 2,000 est Concerns in Philippine kisses?” Mary was asked, >, 2 “Oh, he didn't get them," she an- Poked c; apenas Ne ; Anion awered, “I got them, but they were! in three iargysl cocoanut oll come all from girls. You know I'm a girl’) yanies in the Philippines, which have girl, Nine-tenths of my letters @re| been consolidated into the Phil pp with @ cupital of « Corporation, “Oh, 1 got kissed," said Doug. “The CEN bsinete sirls kissed Mary and the men kissed vom ruiat of me. What? Ob, sure, The first that| Hw Bound nilippir rs got mo was a Roumanian, Ho made] “Among the dirgotors of the new con F *l cern are Dean C., Worcester, Car a wild rush for me, crying, ‘Oh, Doog! | 7" iio Ag énd-Orville Doog!’ and we clinched, Oh, it was great. I got to like it," and he re- Ste ist OFF FOR SARATOGA, One Hundred Kings County Demo- craty Go to Conference, The Kinga County delegation to the "“{ was called on for a speech and| Democratic Unofficial State Convention I made it. They didn't know what|' Saratoga left to-day, Delegates and I was talking abouta but 1 shrugged|iternates with prominent Democratic my shoulders and gesticuated like they i Ae arereasted aan 100, do, and every time 1 remembered a|ieader lett yustorday ta center ate French word [ said tt and then} leaders from up-State. The whole dele- topped and looked at ‘em. That) Sitio Js to have a o thin eve stopped anc 0 - “— ni ning, and may mak mand for brought the applages, and when I sat|plics on pho ticket. 's aI namep Usualastle for the renomination of Gov. Suite. BY “L” LERAILMENT} five of | there were between 5,000 and 5,000 on} ARENAS'S SUICIDE STARTS NEW HUNT IN ELWELL CASE, Woman Who Figured in One May Know Something About the Other. Tnvestigation of the death of Dr Jose ¥. Arenas, 2 young South Amerl- can dentist, by shooting in his apart- ment at No.116 West 70th Street last Saturday night has caused a renewal of police activity regarding the mur- der of Joseph 1B, Blwell, whist ex- pert and turfman, at his home, No 4 West 70th Stragt, June 11 ast, Deputy Medical Examiner Sohwarty, has declared that Arenas committed suicide and hay definitely freed tro blame the girt calling herself Ruth Jackson, who was slightly wounded when Arenas was killed and Ignacte Marti and Juan Maldonado, who were held aa material witnesses by the po- lice. Detective Sergeant Goulding, in charge of the Arenas case,recalled the statement of the proprietor of Rubin'y restaurant and all-night delicatesson store that Elwell was a frequent late visitor at that shop and that, he was *sometimos accompanied by a woman known to patrons of the as “Babe Ruth.” Goulding bas learned that Ruth Jackson was known to her intimates as “Babe Ruth.” In order to learn if the coincidence may bring about new lines of enlightenment regarding El, well's associates, Goulding set out to- day to get Rubin to go to Bellevue, where the Jackson girl is, to learn if ‘ne can recognize her. Goulding also fecalled that a negro chauffeur who sometimes drove a restauran’ taxicab used by Elwell said he had) taken Elwell on occasions immediately before the murder to a house at Co- Inmbus Avenue and 66th Street. Jackson woman has been quoted since the Arenas suicide as saying that she lived at Columbus Avepue and 66th Street under the name of Barres. ‘The detective also had in mind an anonymous letter received at the Dis- luriet Attorney's office recently which named a prominent member of the South American and Mexican colony living in the Hotel Ansonia as one who had information regarding the Elwell murder. When detectives working in the El- | wel case looked into the story of Rubin regarding Ejwell's woman friend “Babe Ruth" they could get no |rurther than that she “had left town Jana had gone to New Jersey.” In- vestigation of the Arenas suicide has disclosed, according to Goulding, that Ruth Jackson was at that time a patient in Bellevue Hospital suffering m alcoholism, Magistrate Schwab in West Side Court set Mart! and Maldonado free jon receipt of a sworn statement by Deputy Medical Examiner Schwartz that the death of Arenas wus clearly a case of suicide, i BENTZ ARRESTED IN BOSTON. Alleged Head of Connterfelting Band Caught After Year. Capt. Tucker, in charge of the secret service of the Treasury Department tn this clty, got word to-day of the arrest in Boston of James Bentz, alias Jimmy Burns, who has been under indiotment here’since last August for countertelt- ing. ‘Through the information of a girl, Margaret Murray, who was yfriendly with Bentz and who has confessed she had distributed $1 bills which had been altered to look Ite $10 ‘bills, the“author- ities at that time arrested nine men of whom four are serving sentences of from five to eight years in Atlanta prison. ‘The girl was allowed to Ko to fer “home in ‘Hoboken ‘on "a. suspended sentence: Bentz and another man who is still at large were traced to St, Louis, Chi- cago and Detroit and into the United States Navy, Ratnins—150 Carlonds of them Sold by Anction, One hundred and fifty gnrioads of {raisins owned by the California As- Jated Raisin Company were sold at auction at the Mercanile E here to-day, Prices rang to 24 cents per pound. > German Aun. ‘The five former Gorman warahips bound here will not arcive until Aug 10 or 11, according to a radio chessage eceived at the Naval Publicity Bureau o-day. It Was expected they would ome into port early this week, but it so public change from 22 Warships 10. Former Doe THE EVENING WORLD,. MONDAY, AUGUST 32, “1920. Friars Give Ovation to Doug and Mary 6,000 PETITIONERS SUIG IDE WROTE ASK FOR SPECIAL . ABOUT POISON AND SESSION ON RENTS. LOVEOF A FA WOMAN Bites soma’ Bronx nl Washington Heights Off to Plead N ‘ith Governor, Declaring they teeth that shall want a law with fully suferuard the rights of tenants and leave no room for differing interpretations aa to ita in- tent, George F. Donnelly, President of the Fair Play Rentpayers’ Aaso- ciation of the Bronx, and Capt. Henry A, Ely, head of a similar organization of Washington Helgbts, left for Al bany to-day to confer with Gov, Smith Mr. Donnelly Japt, Bly have with theny for presentation to tio Governor petitions bearing the seni lires of 6,000 rentpayers, representing more than 26,000 residents of the Bronx and Washington Heights The petitions urge upon the Gov- nor the need for calling an imma diate special session of the Legisla- The| ture for the passaye ‘of amendments to or chagge in the present landlord. tenant laws. The present laws. the petitions claim, because of the varied nterpretations given them by Muni- ipal Court Justices, favor the land-| lords, and amendments or new laws which will fully recognize the rights ot tenants are wanted, The trip of Mr, Donnelly and Capt. Ely to Albany was undertaken after an appointment had been made with | the Governor for a conference. After presenting the petitons they will ura upon the Executive the issuance of an immediate call for a special seasion, é malin UNWRITTEN RULE BARRING CHILDREN HAMPERS TENANTS Justice Robitzek Says Renfs Will) Go Higher Than Ever Unless Practice Is Stopped. Judge Robitzek in the Bronx Mun!- cipal Count to-day disposed of 200 rent cases, granting in a majority of tho cas ith unable to find other quarters. Ninety-five per cent. of the tenants who appeared In court had families ranging from three to eleven children and one and all pointed out the dif- ficulty In obtaining apartments un- der the unwritten rate of many land- lords barring children from~.thetr honees, “This Is exactly what T Lockwood Committee,’ Judge Robitzek ready are beginning to each other in an effort obtain told the commented “These tenants al- bid to said thelr speed ix less than expected > Year-Old Falls to Death. four years old, was killed w foo ¥ Israel Hochman, No. 19 Willette Street, {rom the fourth yard at his residen ot en window to-day to the quarters for their children and they are going to | i stays for tonunts | oginst | run rents higher than | ever unless some step is taken with- | out delay.” Judge Robitzek ordered Henry} Bohiman of No. 587 East 139th Street to find other quartera by Sept, 1.| Jacob Cohen, Hohlman's landlord, complained that Bohlman’s apart. ment had been raided and a poker game broken up. Since that time a policeman had been stationed in the hall outside Bohiman's door, which embarrassed other tenants and thelr friends. Kobitzek agreed with Cohen that the tenant was undesirable Mrs. Marie Dunn, No. 268 Kast 202d Street, haa eght children, Hev landlord, Campano, has eleven, Cam- pano wanted Mrs. Dann’s rooms far hia own use, Mrs/ Dann promised vo move by Aug. 1, but to-day she tod Justice Robitzek ahe had not been ble to find quarters. He gave her until Sept, 16, “NICKY’S” TRIAL OCT. 4. Pronecation Oppor Arnate! Plea for Immediate Action. Tho trial of “Nicky (Jules W, Arnstein on charges growing out of the! wholesale bond thefts Inst winter through Wall Street mesaengera and! others, was # to-day by Judge Crain nm for Oct. 4 *, for Arnatein's counsel, William J, Fallon, asked for an imme diate trial but Asalstant Dixtrict. At- 1 Sheridan pleaded for de that Assistant Dintriot Attorney ‘only person In the prose ughly familiar with be back from his September ora offics ease, Ww vacaUon until lat In a For Robbery. In General Sexsic to-day sentenced Gilbert Powers, No. 184 Bast 95th Street. to nincteen years in Sing Sing for robbery in the firat de Powers was found guilty beaten James Nineteen Vea Judge MeIntyr Gallagher, st 65th Streot, ina cafe at’ No. Phi enue, June 6, and robbi plac 250.50. He had record, Dandy for Iced Tea Ulule fiose CEYLON TEA New |4 Ib. Size for Convenience Body in the ” Newark Morgue Supposed to Be That of Capt. Enos. In Holle’s Morgue, in Newark, the body of a man who dled Jate Satur- day night of cyanide of potassium poisoning, taken with suicidal intent, reported to be that of Capt. Sherman P, Enos of No, 195 Stockholm Street, Brooklyn, is waiting for somebody to come and claim it Letters the man left addressed ‘to & woman, ostensibly his wife, indl- cate that he was driven to his death by @ Jove affair, A pleture of an un- usually pretty woman of not more than twenty-five or twenty-six wae found among his effects, and he made fa request that it be buried with him. Other letters of a personal nature addressed to “Capt, Sherman P. Enos" were also among his belongings and indicate that he was at one time # tioned at Fort Leavenworth, A small note book contained the names and addresses of about twenty women. ‘Two letters found were addressed to Goldie Ohotirnoff Enos, No. 11) Madison Avenue, Now York City. No such person is known there. Speculation on what was “beyond the horizon* was expressed in the let- tefs, together with details of Eno: use of the poison, He wrote: "| don’t like large doses of pol- son, It te 80 useless to contort and causes unnecessary pain. Then again T want to enjoy the outdoors and live over and over and wolik the paths trod by my beloved and myself, wholly absorbed in our love one for the other, seeing nothing, knowing nothing, by each oth What a beautiful moon! “Oh, that you had given me an- other chance. Well, 1 will meet SUSPECT TYPHUS; — PASSENGERS HE! La Savoie Ordered to Be Held at Hoffman Island, Five Hundred and Eighteen boat Ya i ‘A case believed to be typhus, die | covered to-day among tty gery Bam sengers of La‘Savole of the Line when she reached Quarantine, re« sulted in the ordering of the 618 steer. paseengers to Hoffman Istan@ for ue. jation and examination, La Savole let Havre on After the rem siege gee sengers On board Service oe 209 second cabin mitted to proceed to ‘the. reach pler for tandi H.C. L. HITS EVEN GAMBLERS, © in beans were being used as chips, ‘The, police gathered “chips” consisting of thousands of beans, and these wii be. evidence against the men More th seven being jetors of the finces visited. All. these were hel $500 bail for the Grand Jury, The found in the places were in cash bail each, to appear when wan you beyond the horfzon./ And, dear~ est, you know you ure ‘wholly mine and to no one else can you have your heart, for you gave it to me and took mine to you. penell: “How I miss you, darling, Thank God I will be free and my spirit will hover over you. ‘This time I am going beyond the horizon and I will be an adventurer on the bor- der of the trackless. “et am taking small wherewiths and I do not feel any serious symp« toms. However, the dope is doing its work and I am reminded of its action, It is now growing quite dark and I am having’ considerable difficulty in writing. No more heartaches” ‘The writing ends here, Max Enos, named in the identifica. in the Captain's tion slip, found | pocket, is travelling press. rej presenta - | Uve of the Canadian Pacife Railway, ; and knowe nothing as yet of the Captain's | He im at present on the road death, / MERCANTILE TRUST. Cc OMPANY OPEN ToDAy! Deposit your surplus money with our Special Interest Department ODAY this latest extension of our service begins. Money DIRECTORS: 8A. AUBTIN Breatienc st te Company August UOTE AVERETT Men RARL p BABST an Sugar Refining Oo. SDWAKD J. BARBER ‘Steamehip Lines, Ine, HENRY 8. BOWERS | MARRY DRONNER Blair @ Co, Ie THANE MB. clos pa, ‘Trust Co, COFFIN fonent ranklin Ry. Bapply Ca,, 1me, DELON W. COOKE ‘Associate Director ‘The Conard 8 One any YRED'R ¥. FITZPATRICK way Stes} Spriog Co WILLIAM GIBLIN Vresident Mereastrle Safe Dephalt Co. HARVEY D. GIBSON President Saturdays 10 to 12. deposited August 2nd to 5th, in- clusive, will draw interest from Ist. The hours are 10 to 3, ‘ . and women in the finan- cial district will find this new department safe, profitable and convenient. It provides a means near at hand of putting to work small sums that are always readily available. Modern methods, prompt ser- vice and courtesy will prevail. dollar starts an account. Depositors will draw interest. on amount over five dollars, which will be credited quarterly and compounded semi-annually. The same financial skill and ex- perience that has marked the di- he Uperwe Heston Goat rection of the Mercantile Trust Tice ean Company heretofore will apply to AUR HoRR this new department. Depositors Baeble Life Aswur. oe, will be ehisatially advised by our HGRERT &, HOWELL officers cqncerning any financial Netona! bask of Commerce pi matter. Morgan, Hi Ce., . Py digs arn Call today and any of our Sea iete ce. 7 officers will be glad to explain the JOHN MemTUGH details of the Special Interest Messe Wetala nat tank Department. If you cannot call "EH, in person, : letter will receive a 01 . AGI BLE inm “Prompt reply | SAMUEL MH. MILLER Vice-Fres Coase National Bank yy SHERBURNE PRESCOTT Cotaelidated Teatlle Corp JOHN J. RASKOB View? at de Neen Rid ARLES 8, SARGENT 3 ba fr Bea batere RUGENE V. R. THAYER pea Bre eet weeape a ritnee,| REAPS Cee rtsh naan 14 exw + A ya! Bank of Canadat MERCANTILE TRUST COMPANY 5 BROADWAY? Mémber of Federal Reserve System The high cost of gimbling parapher- © nalia was shown yesterday at Passaic three raids on alleged gambling © places, when it was found that lima Apparently some time elapsed before the following paragraph was written in LL Cy mie 2 7 prisoners A i | | | |