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Rock Level Is Near and Plan. Housing Campaign. CHANGE THEIR TACTICS. Bankers Lower Rates and, ) Housing Stringency May End in Year. Homes for everyone—and stea@fly increasing surplus—these are promised now by mortgage lenders and builders. A sudden change is sweeping over | he realty field. The tion is within sight of permanent cor rection. No tian $1,600,000,000 and possibly $1,500,000,000 wilt be set | aside for construction during the coming year throughout the count It has heen released by profiteers living necessities, who were forced to} housing situa. le: Ty throw their hourded goods on the! mart A Falling prices of steel, iron, jumber, cement, brick und all other building Materials are combinin wage demands aa 4 result of sands of. men out of we new building om the most !mportant beeause | nothing can be undertaken without the right Iind of financing. While pankers demanded § per cent. often with a fat bonus, during the first t quarters of ar, they ha waking tine } cent, this week, plenty of capita! left untaken, s expected to remain falrly Bil the §800,000,000 or anore income “ix and other payments on Dec. 15] have been tet, but the rapid piling} up of funds indicate that a period At constantly increasing casy money 1s at hand. ) This just what builders have Sheen waiting for. More than $600,-! © 900,000 in delayed projects cannot go ‘ahead until building foana are in apparently Rates atitr with, 8 MANY CONFERENCES LOOKING TO NEW BUILDING. Arohitects, contractors and building material experts in the metropolitan district call conferences thin week to consider the price levels of materiais and labor. They announce privately to-day that the best opinion regarded guch necessities as close to bed rock Dottom. Conditions have changed 80 radically tn the after war readjust~ ment that no one looks for the low Tevels of 1914. That home builders will get a vig shure of reappearing mortgage cap- ital is indicated by current opera- tione, In spite of the winter season, when residential construction usually is at low ebb, a great volume is un- der way, home builders claiming nearly half of the total instead of the normal 80 per cent. Reports for one week as tabulated through F. W. Dodge Company in the metropolitan ¥ district show 146 residential projects { planned at a cost of $8,376,000 in a total of 297 of ai] classes at $19 000. During the same week last year contracts were awarded for 74 resi- dential prejects calling for $3,616,000 out of 163 of all classes at $7,006,000. | Private dwellings for one to three, families® each, mainly on suburban gites, form the great bulk of new housings. The problem of city apart ments seems to remain almost as ‘puzzling as ever, although many plans are under way and a little rther easing of the butlding loan ituation would start them with “ ‘ash, Tho more cheerful aspect ot ‘inotor car of \etralshtenet ou 6 mortgage market, however, Is too to spread all pver the field at ihre Rett Ae SMASHIN PRICES RELEASES QVER A BILLION DOLLARS OR BUILDING OF HOMES ee Realty Operators Say Bed| WILDCAT TROLLEY IN ACCIDENT CHAIN Hits Cart, Cart Hits Hits Auto, Auto Hits Auto— Nobody Killed. A Vanderbilt barge of stopped, for gon in Concord Street, Avenue son, Brookiyn on} its way to Park Row this morning. , Gel rdt did all he could to the mechanism to get a more on, when suddenly the car started full speed | aheud. & = In ings began to happen. = The 4 collision with the cart{ Miss PEARL E.CURRAN.. ae eee cite oe ue All the Music for Ceremony Unit- | vowetables it hed contained were| ing Miss Curran and Mr. Hol- fiung about the roadway, the cart ton Is Hers, Too. wes hurled into an attomobd! of Miss Pearl Ffizabeth Curran, |the Department of Plant and Btruc- tte driver, Steinert of No, 220 Kast 149th Street J out and cutting his head. Th e, in turn, wad thrown into that No. {, and converted Into a projectile decided hit on Willlam Bayer of No. It required nearly to gut the tangle J | tures, hurling mo! of ¥ ree whie J. Higgins of made a 259 Clifton Place. a quarter of an how! Concert Stheer'n Home Robbed. a Mrs, Marte Stetson, aid to-day that whi rom her home, No, Brooklyn, thieves entered ternuon ‘and stole Jewel and clothing valued at roubers jimmied tossed furniture hud been once that continued betterment in money} avatlable for construction cannot tall| to ptecipitate a huge flow into apart- ment building sooner or later ay a resist of the law of supply and de- mand, BUILDERS SEE BASIS FOR ALL TO COMPROMISE. ‘sof the most important ing a fair chance to go ahead 1s shown by a statement to-day | |from Weyner H. Waitt, who has built » hand. Operators say the building bese several big structures in the best resi-| appeared; malfcious mischief has beer dustry s-eager to absorb all of the|dential sections, “He le @ governor committed in Mublic School No. 62. {hou aborers now out of jobs|of the new Real Estate Investors’ Si RSS er ape g Beet ee eee rdueteial reneiton,| Corporation, embrecing moat of the| Nnere Biadkhoast have bec dacorata® , as the result of Industri, +] prominent builders and operators inj With pictures which hurt the feelings o flso that their demands for steel aod) the west End, Riverside, Fifth, Madi- | the faculty: ink has been spilled on @jher building materials will belson and Park Avenue apartment| firuet ova were fret 4 , i - | nree boys were first auspecter Though to keep the mills running at|huuse districts. He recognizes the| rineipal, John, Breen, who. told full capacity for the next two years, | Tapidly changing conditions of mate-| (i, pole thet they stayed away from rials and labor, and in discussing the he declares that “the | entire real estate community bas been made to suffer through the greed of a! landlords.” he seeks to compro- laws new rent few unscrupulous his associates, mise this situation, and that builders are Willing and eager to have a normal supply of city apart- ments awaiting tenants at the end of the two-year restrictions {mposed by the new laws, or by November, even tf they cannot agree to start a building campaign sooner in the face | hight they'll fold up thelr kit. bugs | Now owner of Life, and has no fear over of high money, labor, materials amd | Man, and steal away." acceptance, Incidentally, he ‘emarked other handicaps, most of which, in) “That's just what we want!” de-| thet he had written a boos on Egypt at the opmion of the general run of| J. P. Morgan, who arrived on the | cred Mayor “We want lone time, and he was introduced by butlders, could be readily adjusted, |White Star Iiner Celtic, was inter-|lot of noise. the crook hears | Golott Burgers oa an author ruther “Ro-day the builder {8 confrouted |viewed by a reporter for the Evenige|the approaching motor, he runs) thin én aie . with a 6 per cent, Interest rate on his |\wony, one interview followas | WAY." leas matra or ane Avila Guild, how pert | loan, the payment of large bonuses | winacatrant r, Mor CHASING THE PATROL wie] cr ate’s of, tee, Autiet Gold. nue, bs to procure any financing, und the| Reporter: Good morning, Mr. Mor- WEAR THE BURGLARS our. Gibson during the war pas.er d: custom of lending Institutions to Joan | gan, What do you think of the Bura-| ee nie ya vere among t Cate pre e on a basiwof pre-war costs,” said he. | pean situation? ! soon as tie bt ; Comhene present serious obstacles and|Peah Situation? hing to | uon AES Arambens Hilton th witano. abit thebigh rates demanded ure due to the| Mr Morgan: I haven't a thing to| hind, Let the burglar « uw sUgation. by ease with which money can be in-|say. Are you a newspaper man? — [can't Kuny wp. let Bil vag. feat | A veated elsewhere on more favorable| Reporter: Yes. would Cee ne Cm ee Dt Sut onl terms, Bankers. who established the} a4r, Morgan: Well, I'm surry for | New gersey or back to hivayo = : foreign Government. bonds, forced this|you, 1 don't think I'd like to be a] Make the car an armored car—a) thinks that force works hard country into paying the same hich | newspaper man. gular tank, so that the Lieutenant | enoust and docsn't ) any exer cates ae Europe. It is very unhealthy | Reporter: Well, I'd rather be ajcan laugh at the two-handed gun-jclse. ‘The Commissioner grown and unjust, especially with all of our| banker, mysel jnen and pop back at them from chel-| pluinp vince le was Inducted into immense wealth and credit resources. | Mr, Morgan: Ha, Iguegs there |ter while their bullets spate: lend on joer nee : a Tt would seem necessary to stop thia|may be something in that, No, ‘my | the steel sides of the earthen ge _ But ts it fair to make the cops walk, financing of forelgn Governments at |boy, I really have nothing to say, | Out and arrest them mothe While thelr superiors: ride inside ears high interest rates and allow the|rn be in my office later if any on | It's a great schemé, and when t 3 Why not put the cops on bicycle: money to be used in this country at|wanty to see m fully installed, let it be erstood | Bulla a house over the bike ao th reasonable rates by American busi-| ‘rhen Mr. Morgan resuméd puttin nie | et, ee 1 outenent ae luxe ba gt y can pull up the Bes wen it s black pipe right of way to the station hor is or for any other reason, ey Mohon shis'iadone: i mobey, daca |** eh eID can work his 8 O 8 to tell th jean dis aniasiven ;thate wae not flow naturally Into 6 per cent have on’ or two colls ready; that ho| while the burglars hide Dx hallways jnorteages, it would then seem neces-| Monger Releaned Erom Jatt, ‘3 coming re will be no delay at until the cop goes by sary for the Legislature to find means} W, ‘Perceval Monger, charged by the station house and the I eniaret Aud the inspectors? Why, compe! of inducing banks and insurance com-| Mrs. Emma Swift Hammorste!n with and the cop can go bic) more | them to do in rough- panins to loan larger fixed proportions | maticious persecution hs been burglars, and might pi a hold. vi of thelr funds on mortgages. We | tetaed trom 1 fates bp man om two on the 8 muat take action quickly along some |7@8ed | , Think fe saved—yer, and thing be dons fit i of these lines because the tremendous | frome he enorny When Arthur don i watch ‘a| immigration under way will sweil o Woods Conuniasionsr Ne! crit recede poptlation so greatly that Brisis will be pon explration of the new atrictlons.” Motorman e unaccountable rea- she was away L > front’ about until the Opemtors express confidence | BRIDE’S MOTHER WRITES DAUGHTER'S WEDDING MARCH Auto, Auto trolley car, Gebhardt daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Gros- Joseph | venor Curran of No. 165 Corona Ave- EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, eee 4 | ROLICE 2.5 WIRELE EATER + Radium Painted MotorCars, Not Motorcycle ‘Bath Tubs,’ Will End Our Crime Wave 5 i | Appropriation of $50,000 for Armored Car Patrol Boxes on Wheels Should Be Only a a Starter—Crooks Can Be Driven Back to} Chicago Only by ae de Luxe Patrols. 's ae BY rite silinogp: Bang! & Don't worry, good people; 2f aeroplane looking tor a Tete P to drop a ton or two of dynamite on top of us. It's a Police patrol de lt Acting Police Commissioner A. Leach, who has move gvod jde f how the department should be run hi Lfeutenant on Jo than Commisstoner Enright ha hewn in all his ineumbency, was - SSR thetore the Board of Estintate yester- | Red and Blue Societies Protest day advocating a motorcycle patrol. | He wanted $50,000 put aside to buy motorcycles with side cars, and the, board transferred the amount from | Against His Linking Them With Bolsheviks, ue, Pelham, will be marrted this afternoon to’ Winfred Byron Holton Je. at the Huguenot Memorial Church, Pelham Manor. There will be a re- ception afterward at the home of the bride, The songs and music at-the wed- ding will be compositions of the bride's mother, and one of them will be a wedding march especially com-| posed for this occasion. hea i auto- sq Jay the jINK, CANDY, “CIGS” IN “CRIME WAVE” | concert sing- ‘oln Plac Washington Heights School Bo) ed in “Reign of Terror.” ‘Three boys, eight to elevon years old,! have been arrested by the police of the} | West 177th Street station, who belleve that they fave thereby put a stop to| the ‘“erlme wave” tn Washington Heights. The names and qdresses of these youngsters will not *be published just how, for it Is possible that the police are wrong. But there has been what the police call a “reign of terror” lately in the Washington Heights district. Candy and clgarettes have been stolen from shops; small sums of money dis- rare | ,000, The door and! pla scrambled by soliool sessions, and are beileved to have ended” when nobody else was there, are not yet wocused of anything— held for investigation,” gear J.P. MORGAN HOME; | GIVES AN INTERVIEW Says He Doesn't Think He. Would Like to Be a Newspaper With it is evident 1922, | 80 the burgl: WAY NOT GIVE THE COP AN OUTFIT LIKE ‘rHis 2 |May S co : BOLSHEVISMLURKS |‘‘@an Without a Country”? - INBLUELAWWAKE,| 48.7%. W: W. Pariah With : JUDGE DECLARES Scotch Name, Yankee Grit hes McGregor Ross Is 66 Years Old ft," tchtyan lage, Tmt s Restrictions on Free-| and Has Spent 55 of Them | $ithiyy, fem his fread Charlte, ‘i dom Tend to Fan Flames | SN of Discontent. County ug ad May, ad- es County completed Bolshevism Judge Mitchell November F Jury, which its to-day, declared lurked in the wake of the movement to enact Sunday » Law Jude Ma adage that best G that whieh ve. 8 least, and said that the va) Kighteenth, Amendment was il problematical, although prohibi- tron doaerved y falr and honest trial, ‘c ntention af law wru, at! to establish peace, ond contentment, c.tizens unreasonably their free- dom of action.” The danger of pass ‘ng lewa that will not be respected was apparent, he pointed out, and e brite. happiness nd not chy to reetratn other funds. A cop will “chaut tre | nis er . eteavatgme| SUCH enactments tended to create only cycle while (he Lieutenant jounges| , 72: onmeh Mxscutive Bearelary) discontent back in the “bathtub” and keep an|0% the Caecko-Slovak Chamber of} “Long since mon recognized the ad- eye open for pitvoimen who don't) Commerce of America, arinounced| vinability of keeping church and State patrol and on burglars and other] that a mass meeting of his country-] "Part." said Judge M “Let ua Ko crooks. | nen will be shortly held for the pur-[MO%Y before enacting antiquated. It's a good ides! Great idea! Bot|jocy of drawing up a resolution tol carded and unnecessary laws that {t's only the beginning, ‘The Evening | ayo ttylnn dumenalog: the Tenge: Doe DNBS corn hpon oer Resse & World hastens to back it up and) nation of Dr, Thomas R. Killilea, Mu- *¢c!!M of discontent, dissatisfaction show how it can be exteuded to the and unrest and which may fan anew Commissioner. Killilea grows: niclpal Civil Service entire servic entire service, action against Dr. Just a sir atoreyele with an ey slraplel moxoroyalen wth) st of statements he made before the old-fashtonod side car would be too WO Mov iutce Guetatiee teens li j primitive, Why not a real car with) 000 | St) Ba OL Se rane ieee in which he hursday said the Red MU the trimmings? Haye green |}ights on it and carry a wireless and | 4N@ | Diue ; Turners, | qomposed | of gong. O| $; 4 big gung! Secure cko-Slovakilans were spreading e life out of the burglar and make | Belshevism among school children | his liver jump, Svare him so he can't|_ After vigorously denying tut his run and then grab him 1 been given to apreadins: Have the car painted with radium Mr, Prantner sald: it us well as! “During the war there was no bet- of ter cltizens in the Clty of New York wear {t con a couple Gogs for outriders; that will than the Czecko-Slovaks. Their record , baie, dogs that: ko w to bark—.°f public and private activities dur- bark’ right out, BURGLARS WILL BE “SCARED OUT OF THEIR WITS AND TOWN. ng thal time is an Indication of the! general makeup, \They are hard working people.” turned on they beat it jGanigation made up of good Ameri- ‘The dogs can be trained so that af- tizens with these Socialistic ter a while they can bark without be- s We offer no offense. We ing told. Then, if the night Is cold) have members of other good Ameri or stormy, the Lieutenants won't haye can socicties In the United States helping us in our good work. to go ou out tot ‘They can send the dog: rk. This wil! warn the burg lars and they will go into hiding. By Ire caithe the nenslo, wil havo a | RECALLS ‘HIS PE HS PEDDLING DAYS knowledge of what the dogs are bark- “Dreadful,” Says Gibson, for Yo artist to go around with his drawings under hls'arm, feeling for all the world like a swindler,” Charles Dana Gibson sald yesterday, recalling his earlier ex~ perlences at 4 luncheon of the Authora’ more. The motoreyele can bo. heard all over the precinct as soon as the | Lieutenant starts’out. This will make one less of the gang to whack up with and one less for the cops to capture. It will be easier all aronnd Nolse? Sure there'll be noise. Lots of noise “But,” objected President Curran, “if the arooks hear your Lieutenants roaring through the streets after mid- League of America at the Cafe Boule- vard Mr Gibson ade-d th z Of unvertalnty own worl, des the t he stht had a conet:ning hts fact tyat he te cused Mo another | letter to eed NC orney 3 us before the connection with the junds of rent law re- Lely Memorial Avsozia- car Hamme: en, rod to det The Byen i ore in n igment ely wut vt salting up ¢ d them along, Anything aioney Enright, good, é -|\the The dogs will make as much noise; Dr. Kabiilea, when informed of the} as the motorcycle it they're gpod| contemplated action against him, dogs. This will wake up the neigh- Sald: borhood where the burglars are at "We ave very careful that we work, and keep the people up nights. Neither mislead nor misjudge any old What chance has a burglar with all Sovlety in the city, National so the people sitting up and waiting fo! sure made up of f him? Burglars always work in the 408 of other respe gark, and as soon as thé lights are Nor do we want to confuse any ing for. They will know that there | are burglars at work, or curt to he. | Artists to Go About With Work. and prepare ‘themselves accordingly 5 ; Burglars won't ni lookouts any It {s a dreadful thing for a young) a the flames of Bolshevism, which so far, fortunately, {s small and unma- tured and hag found here no grounds in whioh the seeds may thrive and develop.” Judge May said a general duty was imposed to observe religious exer- vises on Sunday, and to foliow the ten commandments. + “But,” he continued, "We aie a cosmopolitan people, and the map jwho works hard al! week is eutit to rest, refreshment and enjoyment, Wo can direct that the Sabbath I> vestricted to religious services, but we Jonnnot by law make people religious ;We cannot make them respect the |law, but we can easily create a feel- ing of resentment, disgatisfaction and unrest." The Judge d that the social ferent from those of any other, and jrules gonerally applicd elsewhero in Nation are not applicable here. Ho defended basobull and other ath- letics as good Sunday pastimes, Judge May spoke of the general criticism of the City Administration, specially the Police Department, He said he held no brief for the Admin- istration, which no doubt had its faults, “But,” le added, “I still bel have the finest Police Dopar the! world.” WOULD BOOST RATE FOR TAXI RIDES ve we ment in Ordinance Proposed to Advance It to 30 Cents for Quarter Mile Instead of 'Half, Alderman William F. Quinn, Repub- lean, of the Eleventh District, Manhat- tan, hua prepared an amendment to the texicab ordinance, which La belng con- sidered by the Committee og Pubdliv Thoroughfares. It providés that the charges shall not vary with the num- ber of passe sors. At present two pas- 40 cents for th or fraction and 10 cents ceding quarter mile oF inore pasyengers are cents the first halt sengers are earrted for half mile wt, 40 wat each wa ameniment Balle for 20 frat quarter Yall conta for successive quarts iso provides for a change of 60 for w trunk inate trate, Hand now or in th cone t Seventeen men and wo after at 3 o'clock thiy morning nan apartment In @ how 107th Street, off Broadway. « 7 West Side Court auverad problems of this city are enyroly dif-! in Lumber Camps and Mines ' and on Farms, Building Up the Country That Refuses Him a Home Outside a Jail —Turned Loose in New York Till Supreme Court Tells Him Where He Can Go and Live. 4 Marguerite Mooers Marshall. This the story of a real “man | without country,” sixty-six-year old MeGregor Ross, the I. W. We mberjack and organizer, He has just left EN Island, for the second time tn two years, and has left the authorities somewhat In the position ' i of the man who, clutehing a bear by the tail, couldn't hold on end couldn't jlet wo. Now the Supreme Court of the United States Is to be asked to decide the question of whether MoGregor Ross is an American citizen. He! doesn't know. Scotland—at lewst, if| names mean anything, the country of his ancestors—doesn't know. So far the United States doesn't know. Even if he is proved to have done anything to deserve deportation—and hin friends say that for two years charges against him of criminal syn- dicalism have lain unproved in the State of Waahington—to what doun- try cun he be deported? “All dressed jrp and no place to go” is the slang that most aptly describes the condition of Mofregor Rows. EYES 8COTCH GRAY, CHIN SCOTCH STUBBORN. I saw him yesterday in the office of his lawyer, Miss Rose Weiss of No. 110 West 40th Street, after the bond was finally signed which gives him his freedom, pending an appeal to the Supreme Court. He is a ploturesque old figure, over six feet in height und thin with the peculiar meagreness that comes upon men In their age, just as pillowy plumpness {9 fo often the portion of women. He has cheek boues that almost thrust ives at the beholder, thin gray the 'S brown, weather beaten skin} PLANE REACHES and 4 Hie. His deep vet eyes) CHICAGO IN 5 1.2 jare SBeoteh gray, jile hin Sooten! ¥ me stubborn, | HOURS FROMN. Y. : } And tho n ideas ye hus trav-! -——- ys £ elled w long way trom th Covenun-| Average Speed of 151 Miles ds ' wire: tora, ‘bo bas all vholr ft repaints ‘ i Maintained for the Enti (ere e from Ellis | Flight. le Inland Jong ao, but he refused, part i - ly because he would not pledge hin-| — WASHID nel to give up agitating tor the 1. W.| records for fi |\W., partly because in the group to ow York Waxp teen beohan hich by was confined be alone could |+ : lepeak inglish, und he felt that ho| by the Alr Mall Service, sayy an was nesded to see gat th 4 got! uncement by the Post Offic square deal. e first tol 1 man without country” Fr a nbers is the alka of Ne rk | re the winter of 1864 in New ¥ juys, “IL have a dim | frevollection GF culning by buat, but still Eve 1 could read and write,! » amd 1 remember a book J He has no remembrance of parente or other reiatives, and he has never married, “L worked on canal boats duriny the next few years,” he continued “T picked slate In coal mines and dk odd jobs in Philadeiphi Baltimore Pittsburgh, New Orlean Then } went West to Colorado, New Mexico 4 California and other parts, did a) sorta of work that took a stron back; took a run back East, ther t when money got short, went to wor again, T never got Into any troubl, except labor sauabbles. MAY BE AMERICAN, BUT NEVEr VOTED. nt “{ cam remember that some tim some one said I ‘an. was Scotch, something was said about Glas so I took it that I came froi But I have never voted or taken ov gitizenship papers, as I am not sur that I was not born in the Unite State “Lh t on looking for the big stak- by working on railroads, steamboat: construction, fruit and other kind of forms, in lumber mills, and a fishing for the market. Of course #: first bthought I'd make a bi fortun: and do wonders, but as I learned how labor was treated on differen Joby I came to realize we must al { combine—all of us who worked fo the boss.” Moat of Ross's time for the twelve years has been spent in the lumber camps of California, Orego: and Washington. “When I began," he ‘sald, "we were * working ten to twelve hours a~da at the hardest kind of labor, sleepin: | e straw and carrying our own bed ing.” Now he considers conditions~aav: improved through the J. W. W. agi tation, of which he Was a leader, His two arrests In Port Angeles, Wabh are due to his I. W. W. affillations, “How do you feel about being with out a country?” I asked. “Are yo ag unhappy over it as was the Philt Nolan abyut whom Edward Evei Hale wrote his remarkable story? ALL COUNTRIES LOOK ALIKE TO “ HIM, “I've read that," gmiled Mr, Ros: ‘but 1 can't say I fee) that way 6 all. I'd as goon be in one country @ anothor. Industry, the world of work ers, te the country to which I belony I'd take an oath of allegiance t American working men, I'd fight fe them any time they needed {t, Cer tainly, I have no feeling that Scotlan is my native land, “And, after all, I've given fifty-fiv: years of my life to the mines, tho lumber camps, the railroads of Amer tea, I've worked In these easentis industries through the years wher they most needed workers and whe) conditions were hardest. I've helpe in the development of this countr and worked for the betterment of m fellow workers, Isn't lt a good de | of a quibble to claim that a man { not a citizen of the country to whie he's given at least fifty-five years o his working life?” “And what will asked, you do now?" I “Tl probably have to stay in Ne . York for a week or two,” he ay eae wwered, “but I want to get back ou 7, ‘West, to the lumber camps and th: men. I want to keep on with my or ganization work.” Out of ordinary human pity for a q old man who has been shifted fror one jail to another Yor three years o account of the Ideas in which he be Neves, even if most of us don't; I tol | rt him that [ hoped he would endur fewer hardships in the future. “There's plenty more like what IX gone through,” he retorted, with hi +o cool, {ndomitable smile, “and 1 guear |p Nkely I'll find what I won't dodge.” pay If he is proved to be an Amerteav America may damn his principles but she's got to admiro, his pluck, Department J T. Cristensen piloting single motored de Havt- of land planes, made the distance of = 742 miles tp five hours aod 3 ea! minutes, actual @yitg time, Cristensen left Chicago at 6,6; . A. M, and Gow to Cleveland, sit iailos, at the rate of 217 miles an Changing planes at Cleve lnnd) he made.the Might to Ni York fvom there at an average speed of 151 miles an hour, are riving at 126 ae Re eR A LC OL A A RE enn a ee a tte <r tn oe