The evening world. Newspaper, December 31, 1920, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE ‘RVENING WORLD, riba ~ FOREIGN LANGUAGE FINANCIERS. PREY ON THE GULLIBLE Money Exchange Game So Profitable It Attracts Out- side Sharks to New York. "WARE SOVIET RUBLES. Absolutely Worthless, ‘but Sold to Victims for All That Can Be Got. By Martin Green. ‘The foreign exchange game in New York is so easy and profitable that it has attracted the attention of foreign language financiers elsewhere. The manager of a downfown office build- ing received to-day from the cashier of a suburban State bank in Chicago the following letter: ‘ Gentlemen: We are desirous of obtaining one, or two fair-sized rooms, adjacent, to be occupied around Jan, 15, 1921. We propose to open a New York agency of our banking institution for the purpose of accepting or- ders for transmission of foreign exchange. Kindly advtse us by return mail what you have available, together with the prices and details, and if the terms are: satisfactory we shall be pleased to sign a contract with you at once. The manager of the building wrote in reply that he had no office space available for a foreign ‘exchange in- stitution, It will be noted that the Chicago people want to get here in a hurry. Undoubtedly they have had a man on the ground studying the situ- ation, andi he has advised the home| office to set in with the getting js good Since the Federal an agency while Reserve Board and the Federal Reserve Bank of this| city have opened the way, with the approval of the State and WIFE SAYS RIVAL BALKED HUSBAND'S, RETURN 10 HOME Declares She Left A. M. Bates During His “Last Goodby” to “Other Woman.” FORGIVEN MANY TIMES. Divorce Plaintiff Asserts Tele-| phone Call Broke Up Plan for Reconc iation. i Mrs. Mirlam Dixon Bates of No. | 45 West S6th Street, whose action for | divorce from Albert Mullen Bates, | export manager of an automobile | company, has been carefully veiled | from public notice, has been awarded by Supreme Court Justice William P. Burr, pending trial of her suit, $ a week for herself and her son Billy, | nine years old, a pupil of the Peeks- kill Military Academy, Mrs, Bates said she was married | dune 1904, in Philadelphia. Her husband, she receives $10,000 a year salary and $12,000 a year from investments. About 1915, Mrs, Bates says, she re says. moved from New York to Philips | Manor with her husband, and in the| | summer of 1918 she und the boy lett | him and went to li Avon, N. J.) after rumors reached her that her \usband was attentive a pretty | young woman known a6 “Josephine.” They were reconciled in the spring of 1919, but lage January, she said sh.) . discovered her husband was meeting “Josephine,” and she left him again. | Mrs. Bates said ber husband wrote and telephoned to her, pleading for nother chance. Finally she agreed to another reconciliation. The next |day, Mrs. Bates said, the “other woman” telephoned to her, protesting | against the return of the husband (0) bis wife. She invited Mrs, call on her at her 66th Street ates api reasury| ment Departments, to trading in Soviet! irs, pates says that she went to Russian rubles, New York, with {t8| cali on “Josephine,” with whom she immense Russian Jew and large Russian population, has become the found another young woman, who | declared Bates had done a shameful | eld of the ambition of numerous! ining “in leading this young gi:l to nancial gentlemen throughout the) ceiieve ne cared for her, becuuse she! country who desire to deal in these] has fallen very muchoin love with rubles, It is tite most promising prospect since the days when hicks from the interior were met in New York by suave strangers who guided them to an old hotel in, Exchange Place, Jersey City, where the satchels were switched. That operation was After an hour she wept to} - |the apartment and found J part of what was called the green) on a bed, she says, with her goods game. |witting in @ chair beside her, Russian Jews and Russians de- sirous of aiding their relatives in the old country should take heed of the warning printed recently in The Evening World that it is extremely unlikely that they will be able to transmit money of any kind. This warning comes from the United States Government— from the same branch of the United States Government which has given permission for dealing in Soviet rubles. The Soviet rublé no value in this cOuntr ago a man went all financial district with paper’ Soviet rubles which, if they were worth their face value, would have amount- ed to $1,000,000 in American money. He tried to sell the rubles to all the big banks and trust companies, Not ‘one of them would touch them. No reputable bank would give him 6 cents for the lot. United States Government officials advise Russian Jews and Russians who may be importuned to send Sov- jet rubles to relatives absolutely » Not long through the before risking their dollars in an un- dertaking which promises loss und disappointment. ‘They should bear in mind that no bank or dealer in money under the supervision of the New York has authority to sell Soviet rubles. National banks ana dealers in money who ure not under the control of the State Department of Banking may sell worthless Soviet rubles to|\ such gullible persons as are willing to buy them, The Chicago concern which is about to rent offices in this city probably could operate through an agent and avoid the supsyvisory powers of the New York Superintend- ent of Banks. Inasmuch as Sov rubles in this country are not worth | money, and | @ penny & carlond as their value in Russia is problematical, it is not remarkable that persons hun- in Russia to} consult with some American banker State Department of Banking him and is heartbroken by his being on the eve of casting her off and re- turning to , his wife.” The next day, she continued went with her husband to Jose} apartment for a “last goodby. waited for him below in their mobile. she ne's She auto- | | Bates left her husband and forbade him to come with her, ‘As I turned and looked back,” I saw my ‘Josephine’ and |'Never mind, De WIRELESS FLASHES PLEA FOR STARVING she husband caressing heard him remark, Hpover Sends Relief Messages Broadcast, Enlisting ot 5,000 Amateur Operators. Herb terday his New 1 Hoover sent a message yes- to the American people from | York, Detroit and Chfago offices, by means of 5,000 amateur wireless operators. Mail planes en route and vessels at sea are expected to forward the message, which reads in part: “America, facing a new year that finds its population warmly housed and clothed, and possessing a great food surplus that can find no market at home, must decide within the next few weeks whether part of that surplus is to be bought for export for relief, or whether it is to remain on |the farms and in the warehouses, while hundreds of thousands of help- less children in Eastern and Central Europe starve, “Less than half of the $33,000,000 re- |quired by the European Relief Coun- 1 to conduct its child care pro- gramme until next harvest is now in hand, A check to Franklin K. Lane, or your focal committe will be a truly American New Year's gift MILLER GIVES OUT "FIRST THREE JOBS) |Ward Smith Secretary, © Smith Auditor, ( ; Public Works. John A, Cadle | gry for great profits can amell al AlBANY, Dec. 31-—Governor-eiect ehance to get into the business of | Miller's first official act to-day was to dealing in chem at a distance of gw |muke his personal appointments from miles. id the Bxecutive Mansion. he Evening World exposed, yes-| WwW. Ward Smith, of New York City, terday, without mentioning |was appointed Executive Secretary: | names of the offenders—transactions | jon), 4 arson, of Oswego, was ap which amounted to downright [op ee ee ieee en eet nriee t bery in the eelling of foreign ex- | POU pochemter. was appointed Super | change. These cases and numerous |jitendent of Public Works sothers have been placed in the hands of the proper authorities, There ar | circumstances connected with some|oyvercharged the public for various | of them which may warrant crim- | commodities. ane latest indictments {nal prosecutions, }found are against men who ov But, in general, dealers in foreign| charge for coal and men who over- appear’ to be licensed to this highly important branch of banking, involving trans- actions running Into hundreds millions of dollars a year, there is no law regulating the rate at which foreign money shall be sold True, there is a standard rate of exchange, promulgated daily, but there !s no authority in this State which can compel a dealer in ex- Foreign is rated as ® commodity, the only commodit that ally ald at any price the purchaser can be persuaded to pay. The newspapers are Tuli of records of exchange steal, In change to stick to the rate. exchange it is of indictments of men who have jcharged for building materials | it was held in finding indictments the coal profiteers that 40 “nis & ton ig @ reasonable a wholesale dealer, The that a public service corpo: not reasonably exact mor than a certain percentage of profit. In the foreigh exohange market rates are stabilized by competition The dealers in exchange buy where they can get It the cheapest. But when It comes to selling exchange they charg anything the Ignorant ustomer will pay | 1t is quite probable that the Legis inture meeting next Saturday will find @ Way to remedy this evil, | enh profit ws hold |tion mat New York Girl and Her Husband, Viscount Stuart Just Wed in London VISCOUNT AND LADY STOART NTR m Arona The picture shows Viscount and Lady Stuart leay Church, Westminster, London, after thelr wedding (hi Lad Stuart was Miss & nor May Guggenheim New daughter of Solomon RK. Gui heim, the “Copper King Lord Stuart is bh to the Earl of Castlestewart, County Tyrone, Ireland. He won the Britivh Mil ry Medal for valor in the we They ure now spending their honeymoon in Spain. FEDERAL RESERVE BANK NETS A PROFIT OF 210%; PAYS $39,000,000 TO U. S. Gives Bonuses toIts Employees, Adds $11,- 000,000 to Surplus, and Pays Six Per Cent. Dividend. “R HE Federal rve Bank of New York has given all its em ployees whose salary is $2,600 a year or less three months’ salary as an end-of-the-year bonus and has given all its employces a handsome allowatce S$ a recognition of faithful service. Although not intended by the framers of the Federal Reserve Law bank has actually earned 210 per on its paid-in capital, compared with 129 per cent. last year. ‘Under the terms of the Federal law the bank is not permitted to retain all its earnings. In return for the valuable note-issuing and other powers conferred upon it by law, the bank must give a very la part of its earnings to the Treasury Department. ‘The bank pays the United States Treasury to-day about $% representing its earn- ings for the year after paying operating expenses, dividends of 6 per cent. to the stockholding and making additions of about $11,009,000 to its surplus as provided by the Federal Reserve Act. to be a money-making inst{tution, the cent. ze ott 00, banks GRIEVING WOMAN ICOL. G. C. RICKARDS APHASIA VICTIM, NEW MILITIA CHIEF | Pennsylvania National Guard Ofti- cer Named by President Ranks as Major General Policeman Finds Her Scantily At- tired Sobbing at Riverside Drive and 95th Street. A woman clad in the svantiest of |. WASHINGTON, Dec, 31.—T'res! slathivig ee . bie do white dent Wilson has appointed Col, ppron and with a silk knit shaw! over | George C. Rickards of Oil City, Pa. her head was found early this morn-|Chlef of the Militia Bureau of the tries: at Riverside Drive and| War Department, He wiil receive Sth Street when Patrolman O'Brien | 4¢ rank of Major General and will of the West 100th Street jassume | duties to-day, suc (aenea: the BORNoE Gf NlacHoat cveding Major Gen. Je Mel. Car sponse (0 his questoning ter, who will go to a line command her name was “Cat ne," But pula | Col. Rickards is a member of the give no information as to her ad-| Pennsylvania National Guard and ay dress. She had recently lust her ehitd, | Mfantry reserve corps ofhcer, During ahesaid | the war he commanded the 16th Pen O'Brien. sent he levue Hos- | S¥lvania Infantry, and for a time the a) wire she wv in thee auth Brigade of the 28th Division. He svaon| ward told the | Was slightly wounded during the Ar- ¥ 1 | gonne offensive. He was phyticta ast stone |B nai a4 made and that husband was “away on | Brigadier General, but later reverted nig to his former rank. He was 4 Major a trip. when the Spanish-American Wa Nv inquitles about the woman broke oul, and was made a nel in been receivé th | Porto Hico. He also accompanied his the police oa regiment to the Mexican border in where she foun 1910 thirty-el are ha nd brown #ye | New Yorkers Expected ¢ ow. lothing, in addition y| Ward to Get Pon mentioned, consisted New York National Guardsmen ye [Rennes OAT i terday expressed surprise ap [erat 1 | pointment of « Rickards ney had well-kept fine 1 me Esa Jexpected that the office would go to jor gentle elroumstan ‘ | Col. Franklin W a of Albany DE wae hief of Staff of the New York mili lary organization ICE BRIDGE IN NST. LAWRENCE) = orticers at heudquarters of the | Guard said that Vol. Ward was recom forms Eariier Than tseeal aod |r t Pr den by Goy | Smits May He — OGDENSBUT rhe| ARTY AWARDS ANNOUNCED. St, Lawrence Tu ty of : Three Rivers, Quebec, | fo! with |(Bicagoan Wine Flest Prize iw Chale | foe from shore to shore, as sult of oner Competition, Boe Drawir enters he ae | Armstrong Chaloner competition for year. mi inzo-1921 drawings from the ugh to bear traf nude will be on exhibition fror Gar8 Ae SAR SRG eS Monday to Thursday next week from| —_ me, , P, MM he N onal Throng of Pardoned Men to Greet| \oavemy St Design Mt {he Nationa Governor, | wards of the jury yesterday (Special to ‘The Reening Worid wore rat Glin A. Mitchell - soy [Of Chicago: anc 1, Hy Carlyle NORFOLK," Va. D eGov. | Vocch New. Yorke think $10, Vinoent Bicke of North ¢ lina Is leaving | Newbert, New Vork M Leeoh a office With « recond of mare men pare| received honorable, mente doned “than ay of pik precocomsorel Fahey eine sould boset, When ha'leaven the Capel onible. tasenee jitel he wlil he greeted by avores ofjerick Ballard Will those ye set tres, |. Wittemore, | cast 90th Street, F DECEMBER 31, 1920. _ 19 FROM BURNING SHIP RESCUED IN Liner Comanche, Attracted by Blaze, Picks Up Crew Off South Carolina, DOG OTHER SURVIVOR. | Sailors Landed Here After Vain' Battle With Flames on Schooner Korsnaes. Nineteen Norwegian sailors, and a collle dog which had leaped from @ to follow lifeboat South Carolina coast burning ship into the sea them, far off the were picked up in a in morning and brought to this port to- day on the Clyde Line steamship Co- manche which had made the rescue. For more than twelve hours these sailors had fought the fire which eventually destroyed and sank thelr vessel, the five-masted schooner. Korsnaes, bound from Newport News to Brunswick, Ga., for a cargo of lumber. They were. fifteen ‘miles from the blazing wreck of their craft when the Comanche, attracted hy the distant glare, steamed well out of her course and picked up the soli- | tary Lifeboat off Frying Pan Shon! | ‘The fre in the hold of the Korsnaes started in the afternoon of last ‘Tues day. All hands turned to when the first wisp of smoke drifted from a for- hatch, und Capt. K. Bomann Laraon, the Norwegian skipper, led them for hours in an unequal fight | It was impossible to check the flames, which gradually brought down all the ward schooners top-hamper, And when she lay a red hulk on the water orders |were given to abandon ship, This } ck In the morning took to a single Hfeboat was at 1 0% All hand: which had survived the fire Olay the collie, who had “been running | about t veesel at the heels of the }men as they struggled with the | Names, could not be found just at the last moment and the boat was put |ting off reluctantly from the schooner’s side when the animal ap peured on the rail, gave one b k and ped after the receding lifeboat. ‘The boat was stopped and turned | about and one of the sailors grabbed | Olay by the scruff of the neck and idragged him aboard, Then the men | bent their oars and pulled away | while their vessel set the sea aglow |for miles about them. [t was this }glow the lookout on the Comanche saw The steamship was |wpeed for the ight, ing a searching e rescue half later, Ingram, th |had made r his own boats | hie headed the watch ke e for lifeboats, came about an hour and a Av first) Cap Charles Comanche's commander, ady" to launch some of wt the graft from the’ appeared suddenly out of and was picked up with a full snes » glare hail. Many of the badly burned in their the fire wo H Keon | rescued men struggle with were attended by Dr Grant, the Comanche's sur: The men lost everything suave the clothing in which they stood, and as th hed her berth at Pler rthe |N He made jmme arrangements to care for them fll their wants. ‘The men and the collie as well hail | from Bergen, Norway WELCOME ALMOST SUFFOCATES RABBI Schappiro of Poland Carried Faint- ing From Synagogue in Riv- ington Street. were and soon as Comanche r 46, North Riv wegian Consul was notified. and On bls way to Jerusaleme but pa ng short visit to America, nd Rabbi Chaim Schappiro of Dohobicz. Volund, who don the land yesterday, was driven First American-Roumanian gogue, No, 99 Rivington Street, 10,000 persons fought to get int« Gre to t Sy na whe he huildit he crowd almost suffo cated I Schappiro, who was car ried, fainting, in the arms of severa policemen frem the auditorium, on he second fluor, to the oflice below In the synagogue, Cantor Rosen Watt, with Cantor Rottman and Can tor Zeidel Rovyno and @ choir, chanted welcoming hymns. It wa clock when Rabbi Schap pire was driven to the home of ends in Brooklyn. MRS. CARNEGIE’S PLANS. Vitting Up House Neat to Her Owe for rv Daughter. Mrs. Roswell Miller, daughter late Andrew Carnegie, ts to 0c | five-story McAlpin residence. the west wall of the apy the at No. 9 at which faces the gardens surrounding the Car negio mansion. ‘The announcement ap parently Ja to set at rest peporss that Carhe an to well thy Carnegie | mansion and live In Burope. The McAlpin house was purcansed by | Mra. Carnegie about a year ago, and when alterations now being mad fintahed, there will be a through the west wall, giving acrens to arnegie home Qui bears the meV LONE LIFEBOAT the stormy dawn of last Wednesday | Winovaescioy Suc. GREAT DRIVE HERE HELP EXPLORE CHINA TO MAKE NEW YEA Light District to Clamp Down Lid. New York's Celebration of New the Volatead Act prove successful ng Prohibition Agent Dan Supervi tel J. Chi dered to report at headquarters, No. | agents have been brought from Ken- | tuoky game of "1 Spy" will start. CONSTANCE CLAVELAND RORRRSOM i sos ae ‘nlaies fort, it was reported, | Constance Cleveland Roberson o%@1he Tenderloin district between Herald New York who, in February, will be come the bride of Hayward Cutting of New York, avila war hero, ts planning to honeymoon in spend her celebrations were enacted, the wilds of China hotels are not expected to be subjected | ished in pride but well fed. She will accompany her husband. -t9 ynusual espionage, ax recently the SS who is 4 member of the expedition were given a clean bill of health tor] THEATRES TO CUT headed by Roy Chapman Andrews Of obeying the spirit ax well as the letter ie the Museym of Natural History of o¢ the prohibition law Broadway Hears Tickets 4 New York, into the depths of the & " iy Manchurian desert (n search of bones | During the past ten days enforce- | CReaper, Seem After Jams dy of the ever-sought missing link, The ment agents have depended more in| The first deftnite indication thet pies Hition plans to spend five years making arrests upon evidence we-/of theatre tickets may be reduenay Tien note ahows Mian Roberson uted through the ude of search war- | throughout the country seen ee in funoy. dresa (comune At rent (rants than upon buying drinks, | (gt oe eres en ae une Bas PE i A aa meee Whether search warrants will be | Mont’ of the four ieadia =e employed jn (o-night’s operations |the ‘Loop’ district of was not divulged. UPHOLDS CUTS IN =: RENTS BY COURTS Allen jr. ing the Judge dry agents of the city. Alien, who Is expected in Brooklyn, conference with Federal Judges Ch field and Garvin Agents to Be Massed in White Yeur's Eve will be a dry one if elab- orate plans for the enforcement of pin declined to divulge bis plans, but from other sources it was learned that every available Prohibi- tion Enforcement agent bas been or- and New England to supple- ment those regularly employed here. amounts to sealed orders and the merry ‘There Is to bea concentration of ef- in that part of Square und Columbus Circle—the sec- tion of the city in which In years past wildest scenes of New Year's Eve The big to Brooklyn to re- Prohibition enforee- ugh, from which he ansferred several months ago James Shevlin, who has since | been transferred himself, was direct~ to exact « rigid enforcement of the law was assured during a t- that persons con- RESERVES TOQUELLE. 6. FRESHMAN DA Near Riot After fter Banquet 10 Traffic in Theatre District Police Wave Clubs. © After holding their annaat at Murray's, in West 42d night, 200 freehmen of the Ci the City of New York caused not by doing a snake u Seventh Avenue at 424 Street, amuxement of hundreds of The reserves of the ¢7th Police Station were called, after many threats to use thelfieltl did they succeed in breaking % West 27th Street, this afternoon. | sanke dance and clearing the Up-State districts have been combed | for traffic, It was not long, of agents for the occasion, it was un-| till the dancers formed again at 40 derstood, and ‘large pumbers of] Street and Broadway a The banquet went off more than even the most optimistic man expected, Since Dec, 12; , Zero hour, whey several hundred] the freshmen broke up a similar agents will xo over the top, has been|@et for the sophomores, there fixed at 6 o'clock. At that hour the] ¥een some doubt as to whether. agents will sally forth under what] freshmen would be able to holda banquet at all. It was only by ing a fake dinner at the 16th ment Armory Wednesday might fl they were able to throw # sophomores off the scent, and place and time of the real remained a secret to them, Two sophomores, who were tured and kept under cover fake banquet, have been freed, di 4 ‘i Shuberts have placed nig man eo $2.50 for tickets to thelr at ons. Boston, t It was rumored on Broadway day hi general revision would take effect shortly after in seagepioatial FIROMEN SUE B. BR. T. FOR Lieut. Cornelius G, William H. Halpern of No, 211¢ Place, both of Engine Com, ? Brooklyn, brought suits yestera : Supreme Court for $29, respectively against victed of violating the Prohibition | Sr yu injucies: they sattersa jact will be given jail sentences, Nostrand Avenue trolley car — with @ fire tender on Nov. 2 ———— Confirms Power are Municipal ARREST GANGSTER FUNERAL OF A. J. AFTER LONG WAIT), Funeral services ‘for “Ale ; Judges to Fix Reasonable- Hemphill, Chairman of the i | ——— Directors of the Guaranty ‘Trust Oo ness of Rental. | id in Ce jon | pany, will be held at 1 o'clock sum eile New Yorker Sought in Connection Aftaringon in AN Sou tae Jy cj 0 ila rf urch, at ‘ou venue | justices. Cropsey, Manning ana}, With Killing of Philadelphia atreet. The ia a a i van "will of Kelby, sitting in Appellate tenm of | Detective, Freehold, N. J. 50! ay RE onlay, : (Spreial to The Brening World.) Brooke n Supreme Coutt to-day con-! pai ADELPHIA, Dec. 3i—A man| ie jeurred In a dectsion upholding the| known to the police as “Dopey Pete Funeral services for Mri clause of the new rent laws giving | Costello,” long sought In conrection| Tennant, wife of the managing municipal courts the right to fix the|With the murder of Detective Joseph | of The Byening World, will take McGinn, was captured this morning|at the Hendrik Hudson, 110th reasonableness of rentals and Riverside Drive, at 230 PB. f van taken by Charles /#{ter an all night watch by a squad Of] Sorrow. The Rev. John Atkinsol The appeal was ta A By Saee ® | special officers in a house at 63d and|tor of Christ Church, Tist Street ag A. Graeher, owner apartment | Race Streets, where detectives had| Broadway, will officiat wel lin at Nos, 17, nd 29 East | peen informed by an “underground tip” — 17th Street, Hrooklyn. Three tenants, |he could-be found, Costello has no ad- Mexander Nichols, Albert Smith and |dreax tn this city, He is said by the Van Brunt Schenck, objected to in-| police to be a New York gangater. creases in their rent and, upon ap-| Detective McGinn was killed on the siying to the Municipal Court, ob- | Right of Oct. 3, when he attempted to pe y raid a house where gambling was car- tained the | following reductions; |i o. Nichols from $58 to $55 4 mont When McGinn entered with a detail ade of officers the men in the room mith from $45 to $42, and Schenek, dash for the windows. One fired at from $60 to $55 @ month MeGinn. The bullet entered the de- ‘The de mn pei si it i tective's brain, proper for landlords to submit bills ‘ Ur particulara apecitying causes tor| KING'S CHAUFFEUR ‘rent advances, bat held also that! COMMITS SUICIDE [tenants had the right to contest the emg ‘and were not to be prevented ‘, uy . uj {from submitting bills of particulars |’ Alexander's Driver Ends Life While specifying causes why the rent % Py ~ should not be raised, ‘The landlord in | Greek Crowds Cheer 08 no case can charge rent in excess of Constantine, that specified In the le the deei- ae, son held . ATHENS, Dec. 31.—-Demetrius Fug _ lus, chauffeur to former King Alex- ander and his inseparable companion | GIRL BELIEVED A SUICIDE. rents Unable te Expl Ing in New Bronawiek was declared a aulelde at an inquest here to-day, ‘The death of his former master in sald to have broken his hea: om | When King Constantine returned with The shooting last night of Mins crowda’ singing and shouting over the} Monoghan, sixteen her home on! new ruler, Fugalas «rieved that another Rarityn Avenue, New Brunswick, N. J..| had the honors which should have been to-day was investigated by Corone: Alexander's, Willum F. Harding, who pronounced) A® triumphant crowd sang Conatan- | nm F Hare i. w Sronog, ay ng.” Fugalas shouted thy cage a suicide | » join my King,” and xirt'® mother and atep-father,| imself. Mra Chatlon Hughes, found ride, Grace, wha had worked in a’ ur) FEWER LYNCHINGS IN 1920. Been 1 for ten days owing to a shutdowr of the p ! bul he Total Palle From Si te 61, Bight or| mather sald she had no couse for worr Whom Were Whit on that account and was Involved. in no love affair 80 far pa aha knew. KMGEE, Ala, Dec, #1 ngs wore lens numerous In 19 DINNES TO NEW SHERIFF, — 181%. scvorting to records « Iskenee Institute, Sixty-one persons, Arend Celebration tn) 1idlig eight white mes, were lynched Bs cheater, *F compared with elgbty-thive Inet your f Westohester. i) sixty-four in 1918 nembers of the "Ly "Hetyenie. Instances In 120 ore OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of Sth Ave" _ * $14 Fifth Ave. nr. 32d St, - Let the First Dinner of 1921 be a treat to the whole fe and all the guests, Give Rddy's Sauce on New Ye Sheriff's staff, and others|of tne law prevented yn hinge, the re nitonidied’ last Might. at the| Bort showed, ton of thea Instanwes be erik ae ok ne | Ing in Northern and forty-six In South: | 1 the new Sheri, | Me 18 Now ore inty Judge Young,| Of the sixty-one persone lynched of th kers, prained Mr, Wer fifty-two w Ie eg: th and nin ' or a member of the Rossa |4n the North and West, One was a ne Mewes Ah See igi Sry woman Hlgnteen of thosn Yynched | MADE IN U, S. A. of Supervisors 4 public offtctal of vin xed , tigi ioharadter:. haritt’ Moewltee wha oharged with having attacked! § APG rocers ancDelicatessen SI recently underwent an operation, w —are able to. be present fhe appointment of Kadward Gitson,| AGNES HERNDON DEAD. a reaident of Yonkers. an a tom: ei malary Of $1,000 8 yeni, WA8 AN | Qotpege y ‘de Mansy Pree - dacth © Quarter of € rye an in Typom Tue ul Mrs. Agnes Herndon Andrus who day. | for twenty-five years was an actress | K second term of the class in| known as Agnes Herndon, died to-day | typography of the New York Bvening | at her home, No, 7 Thirty-second Street High School, Irvin . | Whitestone, L. 1 Her husband, Albert | ; j ; Andruas, lf, now playing in "Little Ol: Street, will ope eaday ‘The | New. York,” at the Plymouth Theat studies will Include adverttaing typosra- | \athattany oofreading ond cont estimating, |” Mra. Ande nt, ha layed tm ortns | I ne will be i walt ie Mes phen evenings jin. Spats hn La rhe class is open to men and women n she wes a member of ‘the Cast and le free of charge. of “Experience.”

Other pages from this issue: