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A \ a + the south and east. AS DEADLY ASWAR BOMBS IN PAR Motor Car Killings Here Equal Bombardment Fa- talities There. A TERRIBLE LIFE TOLL Metropolis Needs a “Jay Walkers’ Law” to Make Pedestrianism Safe. By Martin Green. After two years of inaction in that direction the German military author- ities sent a fleet of aeroplanes over the city of Paris on the night of Jan. 90, 1918, and these planes dropped sixteen bombs which killed about sixty persons, mostly women and ohtldren, . On Jan. 31 and Feb, 1 more than 900,000 terrified people fied to the @outh and east from Paria, The German super-fun, stationed seventy miles away, began to drop shells into Paris in the daytime, late im the spring of 1918, The bombard- Ment continued steadily every day for @ Week and during that week clbso to 1,000,000 people fed from Paria ‘to ‘The night bombardments from aero- gg and the day bombardments the big «un Were maintained eored tae until along In July and all that time half the popula- tion of Paris remained out of the eity. Only th who had Ousiness obligations or whre unadie to leave their homes because of poverty, re- aided within the walla, Horror and indignation flooded the United States over this invasion of the homes of the people of Puris by bombs and shells. And the horror | and indignation were justified. | have seen the mangled bodies of children | scattered around an arca of half a block from the scene of the janding of one of the shelis from the super gun, But all this bombardment, whic! drove 1,300,000 of the residents of | Paria from their city, killed, it is es timated, only about 600 people—prun. ably less than 600. fe but slightly tn excess of the 517! Peace time victims of the automobile | On the streets of New first nine months of 1920. In nine months automobiles kilied im New) York almost as many peop!e—almost | a4 many children—as concentration of German fiendishny sacrificed tn Pari days of the war. Citizens of Paris to the:number of 1,800,000 fled from a menace that was terrifying enough, in all truth, and the United States throbbed with re- sentment against the murderers and sympathy with the victims, And the terror of Paris extended even to this elty when it was rumored that Ger- ™an Zevpelins were on their way across the Atlantic to drop bombs on New York, Citizens of New Yerk do not ap- pear to be fleeing from a menace that took 617 lives on the city streets in the first nine months of 1920. The pulation of New York Is growing Rally. ‘There appeare to be no local feeling of } cror and indignation over this sacrifice. All this by way of comparison, but there is a lesson in it. The people who were killed in Paris by German shells and bombs did not contribute gree to their own destruc- The missiles sought th out sky, whether they were tn their homes or on the streets, or, even, In thelr churches, Can the same be sald of the $17 New York victims of the automobile? An observer on the streets must honestly answer in the negative. There is an appalling amount of contributory negligence. We have traMc regulations automobiles, but, except at a few con- gested points, no traffic rhguintions for pedestrias Hundreds of thou- sanda of people cross the streets every ay and every night in the middle of blocks, The habit of cutting corners is almost universal, ‘There will not be 517 people killed by automobiles on the streets of Paria in the next twenty years, The laws f Paris compel the pedestrian to look out for himself. There are rules for pedestrians as well as for vehicles, In many Western cities what known as the Walker's La has been possed., “Jay Walker” ts 4 person Who crossea a street else. where than atea In San Francisco, for inst od gested business pedestrians are forbidden to cross streets save between white Ines painted on the pavements at crossings. It ls doubt ful if there is anfwhere a more reck- leas set of drivers than those of San Francisco, bit street fatalities there are rare in proportionate comparison | is and imgenuity | during the darkest | for could not dodge the orkers can dodge the automobiles—as tong as the automo- Dilea do not climb upon the sidewall, which, of late, has become a favorite outdoor sport DRASTIC REFORMS IN THE AUTO LAWS URGED BY EXPERT Control Should Be Taken Out of ‘Hands of Secretary of State, Says Cornell. } | | Col. Edward 8. Cornell, sgeretary of the National Highfays Protective So- clety, said to-day that the only way number of deaths due to reckless au- tomobile driving, Wan to take the Au-! tomobile commission out of the juris- diction of the Secretary of Bt and to make drastic reforms in the auto- mobile law: “Connecticut has done this," said the Colonel, “with the result that fata! ccldents have decreased 17 per cent n New York, during the past year, there has been an increase of 20 per ot. in | Work ot One M LY. AUTOMOBLES Building CA 2’ Be anand One Woman Proves It CLUES WITHDRAWN EVE A ( ’ 2 wv “4 . i . ’ t rs NING WORLD, SATUKXDAY, OUTUBSH 2, ivad. Done on Timein New York; — FLWELL MURDER GARAGE OWNERS This Man KNOWS MEN His “JAZZ” and FORCE Do.a $10,000,000 Job ON TIME Robert Gienn, Construétion Superintendent on the Cunard By get the work out of them since the war.” Tt was not until he was convinced that the Information might be of ser- vice in getting at a remedy for the housing shortage that Mr. Glenn con- sented to admit an outsider. Hugh Robertson, of the contracting firm gave his Consent. bay HE PROVES THAT LABOR HAS NOT LOST ITS EFFICIENCY. Once won over, Glenn opened the doors wide. He showed me every corner of the huge structure that might be of interest in explaining the labor condition, gave me permission to go anywhere he might have over- looked showing, and gave acces to the records which many builders in New York would like very much to peruse x Mitchell. H™ one man with cnthusiasm, with a collection of “jaas” recorda a sense of falr play and thorough knowledge of what he wants to do and how to do It, is proving that the potential efficiency of building trades inbor is higher than ever before was demonstrated yeaterday at the New $10,000,000 Cunard Building, Broadway and Morris Street. | ‘There, behind the high fence that had successfully of newspiper reporters as well as rival builders, Robert Glenn, Construction Superintendent for Todd, Irons & Robertson, let me watchs contented crew of 1,030 men hang up efficiency records that dwarf those of “before-the- war” in apite of the repeated complaint from other builders that “you can't crowded, subcontract day for juneh. port it ourselves. When the job & thore were few of us, 86 we t “Every foreman and, ors are menrbers of Cunard Club, We meet here once We run it and aw Building, Keeps Happy Workmen Keyed Up to Record Efficiency. the curtosity © doing the cooking, ~ alt atart- The Friday lunch con- being served other distin-| sisted of halibut, potatoes, tomato salad, bread and Sten, cote fee and chocolate whipped cream. The variety and ity could not be ‘duplicated ny downtown restaurant for three times what it costa the lunch club mem- ‘The lunch e owns a phonograph, and while the ead was be John McCormack and sulshed singers entertained the com. tn brick: performance {men who are helping put up the Cunard Butlding. ‘The hundreds of men in the various crafts moved about thelr tasks like men who wanted to work—not shirk- His only request was that precise figures be not ‘| show that the average time to lay a | brick on the Cunard job is less than h | 20 seconds, That means three brick: less than ope minute. Any one ho thinks that is not rapid work for | so precise a job, might experiment This number of war time victims! with a trowel of mortar and three . ‘The written , d up by the performance of the York in the/inen “clocked” witaout knowing they pany. Then, luncheon finished, “jaza” records were played while the younger men played accompaniment with spoons and forks on glasses, ta. ble tops, and one artist achieved a triumph with a tin tray full of table silver That putjarsed any jauz band! on Broadway, | “You wouldn't belleve’ what those| Jazz records do for us,” said Glenn. | “They all go out laughing and leap given. The records would run to @ fox trot part: LEARNING THE VALUE ACCURACY. | Gienn couldn't understand how in- formation concerning his personality | could help the housing situation, but | was induced to part with the informa tion that his father before him was a builder; that from boyhood he has been bewitched by the fascination of records were or| g timed, This was not but the steady. all day of the master crafts- {te a dining room ers, They did not speed up when the vows approached, They did not slack- en when he went away. Lay down on the job?" said Glenn, answering my query. “We don't know those words on this job. There is nothing the matter with the efficiency of labor. There is plenty of lack on the part of bosses, The present day bullding mechanic a a different bird from the one of fifteen years ago. They used to sign payrolls with 'X’ marks. Now many of them are pub- lic school or evgn high school gradu- ates, ‘They are educated, intelligent men who are chpable of higher pro- duction than those in the last genera. tion, They know whether a man knows his business or not. If the boss nw the building business, 4 the mechanics try to why teach him? EXIGENCIES OF WAR PRODUCED INCOMPETENT OVERSEERS. “The war opened a new era, I saw bosses in Government construction work who came out of buttonhole fac- tories and shoe shops, They had been foremen, so on the theory they could ‘handle labor,” they were put on as construction | foremen. —_ Bricklayers worked #0 thick that two would “Because & man who did not know his business set three men to doing fone_man's work on Government con- str@@tion, do you think one bricklayer will tuyn in now for 4 man who does not know his business and do thre men's work? If there {s only enou brick and cement to last a day you expect bricklayers to speed up and finish the job in half # day and then ask to be fired because materials are out?" We went to the top floor on one f bulldt; but of ab | of ker ‘on the teen— Joo ts irs | A wee charged up with 13 cents for a gallon he guve the carpenters for their of! This was his first lesson in exact- ness of accounting necessary for muc- cess In building operations, He saye| answer. it was his turning point and. having | me the “office.” away with a job like this Iron cg “eo that when @ youngster he quit school and went to work on his own hook, later on joining his father, ‘ain cutting loone to Once, out of a job and hard Iding job. as supply oser ans. . hn pelleves 13 ia his lucky! number, and'his private office on the Koom 13. and a table. BY AUTOMOBILES 2° xoinx aloni P, he held the combined job of pri- ate mecretary+and construction su. perintendent for E. W. Browning and Another time canvassed the building at No, 108 Park Avenue for “any kind He got one at $15 clerk, and was Lose Lives, Albert C. Walters of No, Street, Newark, President of Logdl No. Union, Workers been given the job on the thirteenth | of the month, baving first worked on 113th Street, and having been married President of Newark Iron Workers’ | Union and New York Boy | termined. Of course jet us give due was Mrs. Jane Dutton, ager for the Womai eredit to Butler and Rodman, architects and B. E. Paul & Co, contractors+but—but It) business man- ‘s Exchange who | saw to it that the building was ready ON TIME. It was a woman's will which would not take “no’ for an Yeaterday when 1 called at the new | uilding which was just opened but | “dolng business as usual,” I overheard | h of the month—twice thir- | Mrs, Dutton in an argument with two contractors, and I knew then the reai| secret of why the pbuilding was Gnished Room 13 {s furnished with a bed, two | on time. Standing in @ military pos to pay 9100, Th shall I get nome one else But the deal was concl | Mrs. Dutton had won, uded Of course they ition, this 1 only get home to Scaradale twice energetic, capable business woman, & week and sometimes only once & guwned-{n u cine little uaria affair, hor week,” he explained when he showed tron gray hair \wisted artistically ip “If you want to get | @ becoming coil, held her own and wou you must | her point at the voncluaiun. to step back while a third one| stick to it. j "to aie," she said with just the 1a brick and then he would stop a aeieneacaae | slightest stamp of her foy\'anda shai while the others took their turn.| TWO MOR KILLED of her head, “you said you would te was something shocking. | charge but §90 for that work and 1 am at's Chased, Do you wish to continue the work or and would do what they agreed and wo | forth and fo on. | "And that's to be all tho way through,” Just how in her private office and ab wan killed cuss how she actually accompli early to-day by the overturning of arfjall she h: mu I've had * laughed 197 Plain! Mrs. Dution when we were seated le to dine ad tle little elevators used to hoist |automoblle owned by the union at a| “What did you do with the labor mortar, and walked down, Gienn| (oltoy crossing In Verona, N. J. |untons and the strikers?” | asked. pointing out piles of bricks, tile, ce-| Timothy J. ‘Plernan of No. 49 High|. “I either got other people or else ment blocks and other materials} street, Newark, business agent of tye|!,started some other work and walhed awaiting the workers, ffered a f |for them to come back,” replied Mrs. TT dent expect trem to work on| let suffered a fractured Img. Charlealfutton, “I have had excellent co materials that aren't here,” ho ex-| Welter, the driver, of No, 137: Plain! operation with all the bore carpenters, plained, “If men are held up trom| Street. brother of the dead man, es-| head electricians and such men, but thelr work by failure of supplies it/Caped unhurt, The men were return-|in order to get this place ready on would be an casy allbl to say théy|!ng from a labor meeting at Dover, N. J. the date planned I had to literally wouldn't work. I haverthe stuff on| John Mullin, thirteen years old, of Work with the men. When ths hand, all planned 0 week ahead.|No. 334 Pearl Stret, died at Volunteer |WOUld say they couldn't do a certain I have men that can do the work, and they know I expect them to get It done, I kno fair day's work and expect no more for a fair day's pay." “A day's pay ts a good deal more now than before the war,” I sug- broken Jan. 1, and the building to be} FGicnn pointed to one of the brick-| VASSAR GIRLS WAITRESSES. | Srenea sept. 27.Ax Tho Woman's Ex luyars, @range had no home and I was moot “He used to pay $18 a month rent,"| Shortage of He teer {anxious to move in I just put my he anid, “Now he pays $38. He need ow about car shortage?” Glenn chuckled. “This gang would move bricks in ‘them badly enough," he said, “Up to date we have not had to go quite that far.” “How do you keep the gang feel- tog that way?’ I asked him, “Give thom @ square deal and know your business and men will alway feel that way.” Somewhere in the maze of steol Str to: Services Ss the evening meal, Miss Barrett, chief housekeeper, said to-day no relief is in sight and the col- loge sirle probably would have to cen- tinue thelr volunteer services through> out the wint elty ls obtained for the noon meal, the other dornitories the students serve breakfast and luncheon, to check the constantly Increasing | Pullmans if they thought [ wanted |giris from this olty fill vacancies ————»— Hospits! of injuries he received in wy ing to board a moving qutomodile op erated by Louls Btorling of No. 338 14uh vt, at Frankfort and Cliff Streets, | f in High school for Debt of U. #. Rednced $297,815,006, piece of work I would say, then 1 can do It” moving chairs and laddors ie with me. | whole energy “On one empecial occasion contractor did not deliver th jdoller when he promised that he could not get men my own truck confessing that the boller | That made bis el oleowhere." girdors outside the office a whistle) WASHINGTON, Oct 12—The nation’s and nervous energy of blew «rons debt wan reduced gy $237,315,995 woman, the creature who “Launch time," said Glonn, “Come ‘on Into the lunoh club,” which in Beptember, And he led me publie Corday’ wae ment. a coord! y the Very well 1 would start tc and b re | knew it they were working righ ‘The «round for this building was to the thing and we'r to met $6.0 day. Now he gets $10," % There. Lhate Worked seven days at a Modelling shops and even a studio] POUGHKEEPSIE, Oct, 2.—Unable to| time and twelve hours each da where the decorations for the dome |get help enough to walt on the tablea| When a workman told me that he and corridor collings are to be/ihe students at Vassar act as maida, | COUN Hot finish a certain job because painted have been Dullt on thel.ng membera of all classes have of.|D@ could not get the material 1 premises, fered to serve one oF mar hy ofl alwayn maid, ‘If I get the material for “It cuts out breakage, trucking and |) fe meals each) you will you finish it? Gaining his running back and forth, This helps |9*? consent I hired a truek and saw to it to cut down expense tn these days | ‘" the main butiding the sontors wili| that the said material was there that of high prices,” Glenn explained. help serve breakfast. Help from thia! day. the boiler 0 pipes or He wrote to deliver the goods. I wrote that I would ge! and he wrote buck was not contract voki #0 I cancelled the order and pur- hawed “Bo that ts the way you kept things going with the clock and the calen~| dar,” I sid as we smiled at the will woman ts privi- to th de leged to change her own mind os fronsury Depart: | much a8 she pleases but always man: ages to kowp men to When Man COULDN'T This Woman COULD - Complete Big Building ON TIME | . the work the way a young ifelioby| Hlow Mrs. Ida Dutton Used Her Wits to Overcome Labor Union Material and Contractors’ Troubles in Forcing Construc- tion of New’ Woman's Exchange. 'y Fay Stevenson. HD you ever hear of a building being erected ON TIME? Did you ever hear of an architect or a contractor whose buliding was actu- ally completed on the date named? war dayd of labor unions, strikes an’ everything? Well, just that has happened! And especially in these post- A large, imposing: looking building has just been completed and made ready for occupancy on the very date de- It is the New York Exchange for Woman's Work at 64th Btreet and Madison Avenue, And it took a woman to put tho deal through! BUILDING MATERIAL MEN FIND THAT NO COMBINE EXISTS a High Prices Due to Inefficient Labor, Mayor’s Housing Con- ference Says, The ub-committecs of builders and manufacturers of oullding materials of the Mayor's Housing Committee met in secret sesston yesa- terday for the ustensible purpose of taking some action toward reducing the prices of materials used in the| construetion houses, After » hours Commissioner Mann handed ouf what he called a report of the procecuings. This laid the blame for lack of struction On aa insulicient supp.y of labor, the hou-prouucilvity of labor and w soar= y #ub-commit- of 0 olutely regulated by ly of den and jo a final ovnelus: ‘builders cannot expect any mate! reduction in building material pei for the immediate future unloss labor # eicleney to pre-war leona The Chairman of this very tm- portant body is Wright D, Goss, President of the Empire Brick and ‘iy Company and a director of the Association of Dealers in Masons’ Building Materials. It ts asserted thi bis sppointment was made at the direction of Vainmany Hull, some of whose members are closely con- nected with the 1 trust Senator Calder and G Smith Dive Housing To-Ntwht, Upited States Senator Caider and Gov. Smith will be the principal xpeak ors at a genoral mass-mecung ut Car- to-night called by the Com- ‘ountcils to discuss the housing Senator Calder will dwell national aspects of the con- the Governor will discuss the the State and city, Their Hitions; erixis in taiks will be supplemented by motion pictures showing how housing dimcul- Ues have been solved in England and elsewhere. IN NEW YORK. TO-DAY. Community Counctis, masse meet- Ing, Ca ie Hall, 818 FM, ew York Mogart Boclety, rehearsal, Mer AA Tote o nual dinner, Hote! tion in, eves reeting Cards Manufactures ation. meeting and luncheon, Motel 10 A. M ountanta Club, dinner, Hotel pha Sigma Club, meeting, Hotel ba sate My kdale Club, di anhattan Beckdale Club, dance, Hotel "Bomumoders, owning. Conference | tue prices of | FRO PUBL SLE ‘Police Request Halts Atiction of Objects That May Solve Mystery. Photographa of about seventy-five women, the “bite Ieimono” that fig- ‘ured prominently in the Elwell iny~ stery, the roulette wheel over which ‘stapendows suma of money were re- |potted to have paased, and other ob- fecta which the police believe may [ett help in solving the mystery, ‘were withdrawn to-day at the r- |qiest of the police from the Fifth | Avenue Auction Rooms, in which ‘are bod dinplay about $176,000 worth of | oalntings and other art objects, jewelry, furniture, ete, formerly in the home of Joseph Bowne Bhyvell, No, 244 West 70th Street, and in his Long Beach bungalow, ‘The other objects, personal prop- erty of the “bridge whist king," who was murdered in his West 70th Street home the morning of June 11, will be auctioned off next Wednesday. | Men and women friends of the la! “whist king” are expected to attend the sale to secure remembrances from his collection. The most valuable object in the Whwell collection ts a Rembrandt painting, vouched for as genuine, of Christ carrying the cross, The patnt- Ing In said to be worth $20,000. A col- lection of carved Chinese jade, a large Chinese Buddha, a teakwood dining room set, « toyal Vienna dinner net, a Loule XVI. table, beautifully carved and bearing paintings of Louls and court indies; a rare jews! case, containing many gema; tapentries, silver loving cups, many books, in- cluding works on whist, are among the other objects to be sold. One of the art objects displayed in ® handsome of painting, entitled, “The Woman in Gray.” ‘This ts ex- citing especial attention because of the testimony of a chauffeur in the murder mystery investigation that the day previous to the shooting of Hiwoll he had ‘na @ fare from the ‘whist king’s” bome & woman in gray. Was the woman who posed for the painting the same myster- fous “woman in gray’ who visited Ebvell in bis home a few hours be- fore he was slain? ‘The pollos and detectives of District Attorney Swann's office have been ‘daflied in all their efforts to learn the woman's identity, Will the wornan pletured in oll appear at the auction to bid on her own likeness? Wil she send @ commissioner to pu chase the painting? It ts understood that the possibility of tracing one of the much desired witnesses through the medium of an auction sale 18 not being overlooked. oo MOTHER LOSES $750 IN PARDON SWINDLE, Former Convict Toki Her He Had Influence to Procure Her Son's Release, Meyer Heck, a Sing Sing convict, told the prison attendants yesterday that his mother had been swindled out of $750 by an ex-convict who pre- jtended he had influence enough wo wet Hock pardoned. | The mother, Mrs. M. EB. Heck, who went to the prison from New York City to tell her gon the “good ne wept when she was told that sho been defrauded out of her saving: She maid that a young man, rep- ementing himself as being “laadore Rosenheim,” former Sing Sing prisoner, with Influence at Alt told her if ai © him $i he could get a pardon with ite She gave him the money Thursday” Tho ex-convict evidently had heard of the indictment of twe men accused of Dinying @ similag game. |, Warden Lawes has taken mteps to look up @ former Sing Bing prisoner named Benjamin Rosenheim, a mec- ond offender. He was released seven- teen days ago after serving a sen- teno of four years for grand larceny in Westchester County, Rosenhelm jknew Heck nm. Heck has to nerve, The Prisom Department and the New York police will try to find Rosen- |heim and question him, COAT ON BRIDGE CLUE TO SUICIDE Note in Pocket Says Wearer Had ! Decided to End His | Life. Two men crossing Willlamsburg | Bridge at 130 A. M. to-day in a taxicab found a man's © on the south road- | way, near the Brooklyn end, and took it to the Clinton Stree: Station. | In a pocket w John Stilmokaites, No, 615 Grand Street, | Brookiyn, and beginning “Dear | brother.” It anid that because of poor | health and failure in business the wi | fad decided to commit suicide. |Hcoman who went to the Brooklyn ad- found it was a florist shop that had lately changed hands and there was nothing to Indicate the pr | Advortiving Agencies, of eam be Rsloonenes airesliy 14, The Werte, ter addressed to | MEET AS STRIKE Auto Washers Demand $ Da | —Car Owners Must Polish Own Machines, The Garage Owners Association is meeting this afternoon at Terrace Garden to degl with the situation caused by the wadhers, polishers and other em- | ‘ees who demand shorter hours more pag. Stanley I, Clarke, Secretary of the ton, maid! wage Increases “are! imponsible because the public would! hot stand for increased conta. He maid! owners would, wash and polls! i own cars, or leave them unwashed nd unpolished, rather than the, additional expense. Already the service of the 500 garages has been reduced to the mere safeguarding of care of patrons. The men demand an eight-hour @ay, time and a half for overtime; that two weeks’ work establish a helper as @ “steady hand,” and ask a minimum wage for washers of $7 a day, This class of work paid $21 a week in 1917 and now pays about $35 & week. Polishers, interior men, foor- men, elevator men and “all-around” men want $6 @ day for work which paid $16 a week in 1917 and now pays about $35. For foremen $50 a week is asked. That work now pays from $30 to $40 and more in some garages. . Garage owners say to grant the de- manda would add $10 to §20 to car owners’ bills. Automobile “law driea,” where owners may have their cars cleaned while they walt, are predicted to take the place —/ the service garages. Sa JOIN FORCES TO END SHIPPING THEFTS Underwriters and Trade Associations Report $15,000,000 Loss Since War. A committee of marine insurance underwriters in co-operating with rep- resentatives of trade aascociations with @ view to arranging @ plan for ending) thefts of goods in transit, which since | ' f goods in transit if they could so.) agreement with Buropean panies, British firma have been es hit aa those in the United Staten, rates here have #0 tncroased that, elite an example, & consignment of shoes to Italy on which the rate be- fore the war was one-half to one-quar- ter of one 1 per cent. of the value, te now 5 per cent, ‘The rite to the Levant fa 15 to 20 par cent. ‘The Insurance men tell of one case in which a whole barge load of cotton Was stolen from alongside a vossel tn port, Often a box supposed to contain a plano i found to contain only bricks, Many marine {naurance men believe most of the thefts occur In the United Stat THETOF Robbing Trucks and Pai Booty to Little Ones, ‘The note of hammering, by the equally familiar sound parts. Halomone has the contrat York Forwarding Company to sea cities, Sometimes nis trucks, Jaden, are stored overnight in praigpmcarton onde ae at work, four children, i AND HER CHORE Police Say They Caught sudden strike of Pre being ripped trom a box, at tracted the attention of detectives te the barn of Angelo Saiomone, a walle to-do trickman, at No, 17 Imlay” Street, Brooklyn, inst night. amounting to thounahds of acute value have been stolen of late shipments from this aity te ee rd hauiitig goods ‘shipped by the New i; Se i case of cloth passing bolts the ohiidren be carried home, which is at No, 282 Just After the open four toon bolts obildren, : i : i E i a i E i i ] e > i LF i i g whe After e E police state, were typewriters, manicure other goods to than $26,000. hours’ work Salomone, thirty-six years old, ® charge of grand four children, Dom! seph, thirteen; Salvatore, nine, had been i fs Police questioned the not long ber of $2,000 “had He s 2 i | | { fi 3 i 1 2 i i EF i § | I 7 5 or, appeared and at his tion was put off that counsel may Salomone was the Districte Al 5 g ce act ft 2 i i | | | FREANO, Cal, crop thia year for bout 176,000 tone @ which handle ebout 000 tons, jounced to-day by or Giffen. Last about 198,000 tons. Mith is the only food for which there ix no substitute, Yet it ia the cheapest. complete fc And while doi milk makers. lute waate. | in Associate Editor of gives the | This Seri Daily Thereatter in Mad Speaking of Conservation— Consider the Cow S THE world’s population grows, and the liveable areas become more con- gested, conservation of our food resources becomes a very serious problem, Did you ever think what the cow does for the cause of food conservation? Just this: Year after year, during her life as a milker, she takes food material that you cannot eat and converts it into the best and only ing this, she produces beef supply and replenishes the Ea A cow gives more for the money her than any hilper man © what she consumes would Efficient organization makes her product immediately available for food. Sheffield Farms Co., Inc. New York . in the world—milk.« Sinn Fein Irelan FRANCIS HACKETT the New Republic, result of a personal investigation, just completed. es To-Morrow in WZ the E 23 a8 E petty a cee ae a e235 &: z ee eee er ee ree er ee ee tee ee, te 8 ese7k