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as HOPE IN DOWLING Value of Property Renting at Wigh Figures. THEN THEY COULD ACT. Would Result in Higher Assess- ments and Keep Down Tax Rate. ‘The demand by tax officials for a Jaw requiring landlords to file sworn returns, showing the value and in- come of their property, has been ‘ward J. Dowling’s bill aimed to base “@at rentals on the assessed valuation of property. ‘The danger of making the assessed value presumptive evidence of the valuation on which a landlom may draw interest, unless the landlord is compelled to file a sworn return each year, was one feature of the proposed rent law that aroused some concern among those interested in the housing problem. . A law to compel sworn returns an- nueily has been sought in vain by Jacob A. Cantor, President of the Board of Taxes and Assessments, Al- though his interest in such a law is Primarily because of its effeot on problems of taxation, he belicves that the housing situation would be helped if the special session of the Logis- lature would put it through now. RAISING RENTS HAS A “COME BACK.” “Taxes are to run the Government, not to punish iandlords,” Mr. Cantor said, “Of course, if a landlord, by raising rents, increases the value of his property, we are justified in rais- ing our assessed valuation. Sworn re- turns would enable us to know ac- curately about each parcel of prop- erty. We could tax a man on the full value of his property without, Renee working some injystice to is tenants by establishing a high value whéoh he would want them to y on,” Acting Corporation Counsel George P. Nicholson expressed no doubt as te the legality of regulating the man- agement of tenements, or limiting the rate of return from them. He has gwome doubt of the legality of fixing values arbitrarily on the basis of as- sesned values. “In condemnation _ proceedings, where the clty takes property for the public needs,” sald r, Nicholson, dence as indicating the value for which the city must pay. This is be- cause the city, not the owfer, fixes the assessed valuations. Assessed yaluations might be made the basis of presumptive evidence of value, in the absence of any other evidence, but only to that extent.” WOULD MAKE RAPACIOUS LAND- LORDS GO SLOW. How the basing of rentals on as- @essed values would work out files of the Mayor's Committee on Rent Profiteering Involving 358 ten- ants of one corporation owning prop- erty in the Dyckman section, The property is located at Nos. 22 to 88, inclusive, Post Avenue; Nos. 109 to 129, inclusive, Sherman’ Ave- nue; No. 584 Academy Street and No. 66 Vermilyea Avenue. It is owned by the Duluth Realty Company, operated by Julius and Edwin Bendheim. One of the tenants, a spokesman for other occupants aS well as for himself, has reported to the Mayor's Committee that his rent is to be raised from $40 to $50 on Oct. 1. cludes generous raises already put into effect. The spokesman states that his le an “average case” fairly representative of the other 357 ten- ants, and that the increase affects them all alike, A_ $50 rental from $38 tenants will produce $211,200 per year. This would be a 10 per cent. return on $2,112,000 actual value, Or $1,760,000 of assessed value under the provisions of the Dowling bill, which provides that the assessed value, plus 20 pen cent,, shall be presumed to be the actual yalue. Yet this property is assessed at only $824,000, less than half of the assessed valuation which would be necessary to justify an income of $211,200 per year, if-a 10 per cent, return were made the maximum per- mitted by law. On the basis of the Present assessed valuation the 358 ™ tenants should pay about $25 a month on the average to amke a 10 per cent. gross revenue, MORE CASES WHERE THE HIGH COST SHOE WOULD PINCH, Other cases in the Mayor's Com- mi! files, taken at random, and ewhich should interest the deputy tax assessors, follow: Tenant at No, 414 West 120th Btreet reports to Mayor's Commit- tee that Jacobs & Livingston, No. 120 Broadway, demand $118.60 for apartment renting for $67.60. Rate of increase 100 per cent. Assessed yalue $260,000. If increased in proportion to rental, 1931 taxable value would be $520,000. ‘Tenant at No. 69 West 132d Street reports to Mayor's Committee that Sam Greenberg, No. 204 West 143d Street demands §42 for apartment renting for $37. Rate of increase 121-2 per cent. Assessed value $17,500 if increased in proportion to rental, 1921 taxable value would be $20,000 ‘Tenant at No. 624 West 207th Street reports to Mayor's Commit- tec that Joseph Hisen demands $18 for apartment renting for $88. Rate of increase 25 per cent, Assessed value $50,000. If increased in proportion to rental, 1921 taxable value would be $62,50 ———___ WASON MAKES RESTITUTION. George W. Wason, former Treasurer of the Samaritan Hospital, Brooklyn, who pleaded guilty in the Kings County Court of grand larceny, has made complete restitution of $10,000 of the funds of the institution which he misappropriated, It was announced will b aterday. Judge Haskell asked to take that into o ntencing Wason t at Mountainview. eas .twe obil TAC ASSESSORS SEE I RENT BL Want ‘Landlords to Swear to brought to a focus by Senator Fd-- “tax values are not admitted in evi-) shown roughly In one case from the| The $40 figure in- | Selecting the THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1920. Five Most Beautiful Women in United States . Is Easy for Evening World Readers and Beauty Connoisseurs RS HARRY NOR MEN OQermmonsy warn Doe JURORS ACQUIT BOY; ONE GIVES HIM HOME {Young Alsatian Ealsely Charged With Attempted Burglary Meets Good Fortune. Willam Hart, seventeen years old, was not only acquitted to-day of a charge of attempted burglary in Brook- lyn, but obtained a good home five minutes later. Hart, whose father. was killed fight- ‘ing the Germans on the Western Front, and whose mother was killed in a bombing raid on thelr little village in | Alsace-Lorraine, came to this country 18 months ago. He had shipped for America as a seaman and when his vessel arrived in Brooklyn he wandered off and got lost. When he found Kis y back (o the pier the ship had After that he obtained work as a JURY OF WOMEN © SAVES NEWLYWEDS First Time In Ohio Such Jury Has Decided Case . In Court. AKRON, 0O., Aug. 26.—State history was made in the little drab Municipal |Court room of Judge A. F, O'Net! late yesterday when a jury of twelve women returned a verdict for the defendant in an eviction case. It te the first time @ woman jury has ever passed on a legal case tn Ohio, and one of the few women Juries that has ever been impaneled in the coun- try. The decision of the Jury saved a newly wedded pair from being evicted from their home, Attorneys for the plaintift. they were satisfied with the verdict and would not appeal, WOMAN DIES IN AUTO CRASH. Salesman Who Had Invited Her to Ride In Held. Frank W. Terry af So. 267 Central Avenue, Orang man of the Rich- ard Radiator Manhattan, ta being detained because of a fatal accident last 1 Terry was driv. Park and Invite and hi walktr When Terry's car crashed’ into r truck, Mis. Cruger was thrown «ied, and Terry and the alightly injured." ‘The driver, F Fricdler, detatned as a al wi 5 guid Terry tried to er in front of te truck without war SUSPECT HELD IN $25,000. Arrested After Burglary, In Accused of Posing an U, 8. Sailor, Francis Hinckley, ‘nineteen years nid, who said he had no home, w: arraigned to-day In Jefferson Mark Court charged by Detective Gilkinson of the Mercer Street Station with sus- picion of burglary. /Cloth valued at $20,000 waa stolen from w David Glick, No, 65 t. } re |. Glikingon testified tha: ‘Hinckley posed as a L sailor, and ut t in Inite thi d © war Stat “of the United 8 wenty-five thousand do Ml for you, young man,” said Magistrate Schwab, WHO ARE THE FIVE PRETTIEST GIRLS IN THE UNITED STATES? Artist E. O, Hoppe, Who Selected England’s Beauties, Asks Evening World Readers to men in Hester ( ; ; ties tron Help Choose Five American Beauties. Police RE these five women the most beautiful In America? a. (@mbulan =! That's a hard question, isn’t it? But it's up to the readers of The rly Evening World to help Mr. Hoppe, the brated artist-photographer, in his great task of selectin: heart sister, or you, yourself, are eligibler-send) the best photographs obtain- able, after marking on the reverse side the name and the return address American Beauties need not be society women; any woman in the country with the requisite beauty may qualify, and her photograph will receive equal consideration with the other: he list of ten American Beauties, in the order of their standing to-day, asso ine to selections made by readers of The Evening World, |s as fol lows? re Lsdle Hort. Mra John. Rarrrmore, Mes Angier Bo Duke sh Mra Joba Waui Some of To-Day’s Selections By New York Rea ders MO thy Aarerionn, Resale, Reliony (The Bem = — |Hylan Will Urge Appeal to Federal) | -sabiieadent raat rer eebaary an|Said He Was Shot Accidentally by . 4: sthes Pitbe 0 = inquiry Into charges ie price ol ge thers Puget For reaa beauty and distinction, 1] } iin Halo a benson Court to Operate Abandoned Hinestone was boosted when the city Slectrician, Whose Bail ; rs. Lie. Hoyt first and fore 5. Mrs. Josepd a. ‘Thomas. Lines, ale decided to une Hineator in- Is Ree led. These women ali possess a rare: 1 of granite. Contractors admit : * type of beauty which is as thorough.| ‘The Staten Island transportation ritu-| that the prices asked are “high, but} Word that Charles Ashkonas, 14, of . bred as it is striking tlon will be placed again before tt ribute this to the fact that +his is| No. 44 Attorney Street, Manhattan, had 5 3.W.R ‘oard of Estimate next Tuesday: by|\ public Job, awardeil to the lowest bld-| died at Long Island College Hospital, To the American Beauty Editor, The Evening} Mayor Hylan, who wishes to find alder, and that the contractora are un-| Brooklyn, was received at Adams tte “Beauty 2 Le LS co way around the restraining order ale to bargain for a lower price Street Court Just os John O'Connell, ~ on NE ai ied Ep A submit the names of five beautiful | iained py the Midland Raliroad Coin ane: 2 triclan of No. 134 Dyckman t ae y ib we city ae! 3 7 Brooklyn, was reloading « I am sure that the most beautifull 1 sire. guitete Schuyler Kerr pany prohibiting city buses on Staten , 5 isto! last night whea the boy wns meen figua cition' eas! 1 et Rin a uaaes PONZI DEBTS PASS __| pistol twat night, when the. oy | wae ra, Lyd Hes M Board of Estimate solved, as | wot In the left sce, was 2 * i MiG Mar Mitleens Bogor, t Oa ones tr nine as $5,000,000 MARK | bait tor examination to-morrow on a 3, Mise Norma Talmadge, Fe ironman : iw 0 for the purchase and op oe aawault Caer a Q'Gonn ih hw Bariywore, % American Beauty Kdlior, The kven'ne | tion of buses. ‘The Mayor will now ro- : TORO In oonrel 6 ai ia . S. C. . th Sh en Benes a Berane jad assachusetts Attorney General tha. devia sGaakh | e i. “toed The following list of quest the Board to ask for |r 5 | to te American Beauty Editor, ‘The oon eeanttan veprepente empowering the city to ap Makes Announcement; Based calle %6 ef wo, 10) yay already appropriate ta Rast jocked up Tho following are my aclections of) {POR the Hist two, the atntoly type. | money Mt hee Binet SPP eee convent=| on Office Record of homit ; } th ‘omantie e Jast| Mayo an’ de te sboonvents) hod fore Aahkenns died he de the Ave prettiest, women in” thelewo, the ly piquante. ence to which Staten Imana has been! BOSTON, Aug. 26 —It is announ arntire gabon Hied he di States: put, and siifts the blame to the ruil-|thw: Charles Pons!'s Itabilities . ee are atin 5 a road company and its "sympathizers In| shown by the records in the —_ ats 4 IS Terctas! Peat ca and ove of office,” He saya ‘the willl General's office, have paaxe AMERICANS BEHIND me Jobo Barrymore card of ate told nark, the total at the present time 2 djs Mae Osborue, BEAUX ARTS, |‘urther urge the Board of Bxtimate to/000 mark, the tot | Miss’ Osborne ts one of the most saesgia nee petition the Federal Court fo permit| being $5,014,092.54 ; IN GYMNASTICS uliful girls T have ever scen INDICTED FOR PERJURY. ate the abandoned ties; Dantel H, Ouk isttorns for Ponal, ——— . ‘ has announced that If he Ls called to the oy MKS. C, WHITE. ee : WY) witness stand, as has deen suggestoc,|ttaly First, France Second and By s bei . To the American Beeity Rdlior, The Brenihe) Rroeiklys M ned of Shielding lho will welcome the chance to tell for- Third in Individual Olympic ae 2 Awent, — mally what he knowa of Ponal’s aftalr The lollowing young women are mF a a ale - ‘ : q AUTOIST HELD | ha tet rey pode oul Contests. unquestionably the most beautiful ne Federal Grand Jury in Brook- ee ‘ spit pat ao ‘ \types of American womanhood: lyn today returned “an Indictment JAPANESE Al eee Min hight Gi aoe he centect LANTWERE, Aus. 3t-the fal 1. Bre. F Cooper Bryce, against Anthony Chrysty of No, 5723]. | tion with 41° case fe is on a jatanding in m ¢ i. 5 Mm Hoes Wiha ¥itth Avenue, Brookiyn, for perjury. | lest ef Race tm Trame Conte Aes | short val will be the guest at|ution, European method, was: Italy, 4 lt arabian tier, He is charged with fulse swearing in| Used @f Driving While racy jemted y north realden first, with 269.855 out of @ possible 404 5. Mine Rita D: > : ‘amashata Gotoh, twentydive, a st —_— a aie c:ond, with 346.786, an fffort to shield a Prohibition en Yamas! ¥ points; Belgium, a mn . M. J.B. Jrortement agent. He was held in}dent, of 3 Riverside Drive, the| Mevie Theatre om ei Foe stag. {and France, third, with 450.10 | we, Amertonn Beauty Editor, ‘The Srening | $3, 509 ball ty Judge Garvan for trial ‘arm Japanese arrested since the open: | Plans eh at iG ‘ —_ ‘The individual standing was: Zom- fori dot | Pret the Tra Me Court o es of battan Bureau ot utldinws for the . st, wi $95 ol DOs In connection with the naming of| ‘Chryaty denied before the Qrand [Ine of the TraMe Court one charge of Tl te iO ote moving [DOM Italy’. first, with 88.35 out of @ p America’s most beautiful women,|Tury tha had told two Department |driving ane tamobtie I er wera ity . theatre on property owed Gy {fbi® #8 pointes Marcos, France, second, which | have nth with Interent to A hat be, Mad ate Mancuso’ for trial in Special the clty at Henry ant Poraythe atreota, |With 87.62; Garnier, France, thind, with your paper, 1 take pleasure in pre- The Depart- |slons. ae it will be fireproof, ‘The Man Bridge ($7.45, Frank J. Krig, Bohemian Gym senting ‘Ye folowing Mat: wore that Ke [tie was arrested this morning’on Riy- Kealty Company, H. Jacobs, President, |nastic Association, New York, Was Mr. Biyoe Wing ont noe erside Drive, near §4h Gtrect & the lessee, tenth, Eat tea) toa veep TAL eS ~~ ++ t - ~— - - a seen tthe io to the Ameri ai. Beauty Editor, The Evening World, New York City. Tho furnishe to a tx beaten he ref her. ADELAIDE ROUT ences ITI OGDEN) Ovnces ATWO HURT IN ROW - IN JIMMY KELLY’S, DECLARES WOWAN Swann Asked ta Investigate Policeman’s Alleged Refusal to Make Arrests. the Street know! Kelly's early yesterday morning place i's much visited by taxicab par- The Complaint Bureau of the Dis- trict Attorney's office has been asked to investigate the actions of pollce- course of fisticuffs |tho basement restaurant at No, in 24 Jiminy The n as mn Broadway after the theatre. records show that an nce Was yesterday d to them. ht she said. Shi sed to act, by mer and that Dr. Snyder took to called to the place | yoble cargoes from sunken ships, The Policeman waiter in the ¥. M. C. A. in Brooklyn, |. )'0 the five American Beauties. These women unteer Hospital Maxwell 8. Mur- making his home in a room at No, 103 Wjl! represent the peerless American type, Just as the five ah DeAULiON | ay Of No, 38 Went 12th Street with Joralemon Strect. As several of the 1) Were selected by Mr. Hoppe, and whose pictures recently appeared I), ¢ B cudie. cuk Rua corth \e¥le housés in the street are allke, he wan-|/%¢ Evening World, were examples of Eng!ish feminine perfection. ae ‘ ‘ ; |dered Into the wrong one two we A wom Mr, Hoppe will sce the lists prepared for hlm by The Evening peooes neu fractured ate ce) go and was arrested, charged with at-| 4, Peis will start taking scores of phdtographs, From the mass of treated Frank Hicks 0, a tempted burglary. The case came up|) itd he will try to select his American Beauties. Many art r" 60th Strect, for a blackened eye and to-day before Judge Haskell of the| “Ve declared positively that it will be impossible to select five as America’s |broken nose, No arrests were muse Patines aad arcen thecaury hee pesca because this country has hundreds who are eligible. But Mr. A woman who sald she was the |fende tie fu ppe 18 going to try, and Evening World readers must hetp. wife of one of t on told Agsistant Pires, asked the, Court's permission. to| There are three ways for readers to make known their opinions, They piatiet rpiene anna, hat as give the youth a home with him, which | ™&Y Send a list of their selections, or clip pletures which hav» appeared in id * tte was granted. newspapers. These clippings cannot be returned. the party, which included another ; The third way is to send photographs. If you think your wife, sweet-| Woman besides herself, was leaving the place one of the men tendered a $20 Dill in payment for what had been No change was forthcoming and a request for It led in which both men were eo declared she sppealed to a policeman for help, but She was told lo return and renew the complaint when her husband was able to uccompany ——— PLANS CITY-RUN CARS ON STATEN AS REAL DEMOCRAT AND POPULAR dl Pittsburgh Roumanians Who Present Trophy Hail Him as a Good Mixer. eon Prince Carol of Roumania was din- cloned to-day as a real democrut, be- loved by his people, when two young Roumanians extolled his pra.ses after presenting a trophy to ais Soon after he arose and before he had | had luncheon—for the Prince pre+ serves his fashionably elender figure by abstaining from breakfast—he was visited by Lieut. Dimitri Dem Dimancnsco, military attache of the Roumanian Consulate, Pittsburgh, and Sam Blotor, a steel worker from the Woodlawn district of that city. The attache presented Blotor, who, | ‘as spokesman for twelve Roumanian— steel workers, presented a foot high | bronze statuette, with the figures “of two Boy Scouts running, This the Prince waa requested to take with him to Bucharbst to be offered as a trophy in athletic contests by the Boy Scouts of Roumania. | Prince Carol is head of the Boy 'Reouts of his country, President of the Associated Athletic Clubs and @ keen sportsman, being Interested par- ticularly in winter sports, Lieut, Di- mancesco said he had been a member of the Boy Scouts headed by the Prince seven years ago, \ During the Inst two years of the World Wat tie Lieutenant said he served under the Prince in the latter's company of, the Vanatori de Munte (Hunters of the Mountains), the “blue Devils” of Roumania, Prince Carol now t# Colonel of that organ- ' | 300 TONS OF COAL ‘ ‘zation. He joined it, an infantry unit, because the wealthy and nobility usually chose cavalry or artillery units, Prince Carol desired to set an exumple to the titled and wealthy by joining the infantry, At the degin- ning of Roumania’s participation the constitution forbade the Crown Prince from front line duty, but a& the Rou. manian reverses grew the Prince re- pealed that and in 1917 and served at the front, being active in the Transylvania campaign. Lieut, Dimancesco said the Prince was greatly beloved by the Rou- Coal mining at the bottom of Long|™anians for his democratic ways. He doa not dress any better than the LONG ISLAND SOUND, Brought to Surface Off Pen-' field Reef by Latest Salvage Invention of Simon Lake. ‘sland Sound has proved auccesmful, | iority of this subjects, with whom it was announced to-day in a bulle-| ho mixes freely, often taking long tin stating that 300 of fine| walks unattended through the coun- bituminous coal had heen recovered! try, uiking and eating with those at a point three miles off Pe nfleta | ! meets and often working in the Reet at a depth of 60 feet, ‘The coal] Melds, his tdentity unknown to his was brought up by the latest inve fellow workmen, He is Interested Jtion of Simon Lake, Inventor of the|#eatly in child welfare. So anxious submarine, val-| is the Prince to have bis people well treated, said the Lieutenant, that he tons designed to salvage Argonaut Salvage — Corporation's} maintaing an office in the palace steamship Reilanee cargoed the 300; Where he receives all classes and taps Into Bridgeport, Conn,, yester-| hears all complaints, Whenhe ts con- day. vinced a wrong is done, he uses his influence ‘to have It righted. Princess Ghika of a titled Rouman- Long tsland Sound, a graveyard of wrecks, is regarded as an exteremely profitable coal fleld at the very doors| tan family, who is visiting friends In of N York and New Enginna,| Now York, called on the Prince this ‘Three salvaging equipments are about | afternoon to pay her respec William Nélson Cromwell, who was chairman of the Amenican-Rouman- jan Relief Committee, took the Pri away in his car fur luncheon at the to be put to work capable of recover- | ing 2.000 tons a day, Ships sunk dur- ing the war could yleld 20,000,000 tons of coal. -— —— Cromwell home, No. 12 Weat 4th , Street, With them were Gen, Gav- LIMESTONE HEARING anescu, T, Tilleston Wells, Rouman- SET FOR NEXT WEEK |ian Consul in Now York and M. Filldor, Roumanian Minister to i : Washington Inquiry Into Charges on New) 1, was announced to-day that the Court House Contract to Prince would shop this afternoon es and that he had no particular. pro Begin Tuesday. gramme, A box was reserved for him at the Republic Theatre for to- net's performance of "The Lady of the Lamp.” The limestone contract feuring in tho city's plan to erect a new Court House will be placed before the public for criticlam and suggestions at a public hearing next Tuesday morning in the Municipal Building, according to an- uncemen? to-day by David Hirshfield, Commiasioner of Accounts. —— BOY VICTIM DIES AS CASE IS HEARD ATEST ATI Many in. Connecticut : Indifferent or Opposed to ~ Voting at All. REST ARE REPUBLI Reflective of Sex Regard of Ballot by Many With — Misgiving. f This ta the fourth article of @ ries dealing with the potitical reae |. tions of the passage of the Suffrage Amendment in New Jersey, Conten Hout and Delaware, To-day's article begina a review of the situation te Connecticut. Marguerite Mooers Marshall, Wake up, Connecticut women! In four words, that summarises my impression of the political status que of the women of the Nutmog Stata, who by the action of Tennessee, thirty-sixth State to ratify the Nings teenth Amendment, are now enframe 3 chised and will have the chance to vote this autumn in one of the moat |) Bess important elections since the founda. 5. | tion of the Republic, ih T went to Connecticnt feeling tha@ = 7 its women citizens would be partieu- (7 larly delighted with their new 4aty | and privilege of voting, since I knew that many women hid resented Gov, Holcomb's refusal to call a special © fewsion of the Connecticut Legisine | ture, at which the Suffrage Amends ment mixht have been ratified montha ago. Perhaps the Governor's obd@uracy made the woman in the atreet feel ik 0 was hopeless to expect immediate participation in political affairs, ‘Per. haps this hop@lesuness is the reasop why, In too many instances, she takes litle or no interest in these affairs. * The fact-tenains that there are 1 ma Connectiout heya: thought” about whether ney want vows, who giggle and shake jheads when you ask them thelr lion of the League of ‘© there out-and-out Anus in j necticut than in New Jorsey-Antie | Who even now say flatly that they” will nét vote. |. Naturatly, there are plenty of in: tobligent and thoughtful women do not intend to be slack polls, But these very women spoki » fo me with considerable misgivings 6 7) the sudden enfranchisement of aht and frivolous members of and I must say I found sup for’ thetr misgivings tn my oui survey of the women of thelr State, | Lev’s hope Connecticut ‘women will | read and study tnd think as never before in the owe months remaining: before Bleotion Day ich political opinion as is sharply defined among the women is overe helmingly Republican, Out of some forty I found, as T remember f, just one wotnan who was sure she would vote for the Demvoratic Presidential — amin s long to the independent vote—that ia, they say they want to consider the ta 3 | sues and the nomin fore committing them: great majority Is even militantly Roe publican in ntimen: about the League ef Nations oF 9) posed to It, and keen for a Repu can Administration on a times, ‘This was the attitude of one of first. women I interviewed, She Miss Bertha Klumpp, the dark-hal) quiet-spoken young manager’ of & « hakery in Railroad Avenue, Greete wich, just across from the station, I think {t's a splendid thing that women are going to vote, through the tifleation of the Suffrage Amends ent,” she assired me warmly, “Ei belleve in Woman Suffrare, and, of course, Connecticut women hardly pected it this year, after this Stat not entering the list of the ratifyers T shall vote in the fall, unless net ie om thing crops up which would prevent e com the women’ of this State from (Continued on Page Twenty.) 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