The evening world. Newspaper, January 28, 1921, Page 2

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Of 8 Se Te ee 9 hag cman ee ——— + anew a ZAP — Mtle town of lnwryer, No. T108 Amboy Road, Totten- ville. 8. OBSTINATE ONES MAKE A “HALF A LOAF” EXCUSE. ‘Their plea in extenuation is that half a loaf ts better than no bread. It Was better to get some kind of a res- olution to enable the Lockwood com- mittee to continue its investigation than to power at all. The Republicans who vowed for the Donohue amend- ment were Fox, Hawkina, Lieber man, Reiss, Steinberg and Wailace of New York; Bly, Carroll, Caultteid, Clayton, Crews, Druss. Gempier, Gi- accone, J. G. Moore, Muses and Warren of Brooklyn and asian and Pette of Queens. ‘The Democrats of New York bave fone on record as being opposed to traction amendments as pro- posed by Gov. Miller, und Demvecrata, Republicans and Socialists uf Brouk- lyn and the Bronx have taken the game attitude. The hop of the Republl- cans on the Lockwood resolulion bus made the others skeptical of their actidn on the tfunsit situation, and now is the time to get them tnto line. Gov. Miller is urging haste on the framing of the bills which are to in- corporate his Kess on the taking away from Now York City its au- thority over Hs Wransit facilities, but bis advivers have counselled bim to make haste slowly, While he is fret- ting over the delay, lawyers, logisla- fore and enginvers ure trying w avive bie problem, so that there muy be no mistake when the bills are intro- duced. FRETFUL GOVERNOR MUST BI PATIENT, ‘With aN the huste demanded, plomty of time will be afforded to Now York City to army its opposl- tion in fighting force and to acquaint the men of the citles wp-Huste with the: fact that the Govamor's pro- gramine ts aimed at them as well us at Greater New York, and the hope of New York ix that they will we the light and join in the split aimeng the Republican legisiators wyhidh bus been caued by the stand taken by Gov, Miller on the traction situation, The Governors haste will have to mow down, for Jt te & question whether the proposed bills can be framed by the end of next week. They will be Inunched® the Public Seryice Cominitee of Senate, of which Senator John L. Knight of the A in County, ay seer ow , Only Brie County tes between it und the banks of Lake Brie, But Sena- tor Knight and the town of Arcade and the county of Wyoming are mere incidents in the traction fight, the same as Gov, Miller he the fare in. ‘The bills are really being framed by the Bill Drafting Commitue, and the Governor and his counsa are going lover every section to make them com- Len with presént lawa and the Con- stitution so far as is, discernible to the legal eye, and to make them tn line with the Governor's recommenda- ons. I'nderlying it all are the pu- 1 ce powers of the State, which are as elusive as the “invisyble hand” that fers 90 fur as jemmbly ovul Bid tn the robbery. —e———— EXTRA! DR"P 10-CENT FARE! A The Brooklyn City Raltroad Company, at 4 public hearing before Public Ser- view Commissioner Donnelly to-day, alandoned hie intention of charging a 10-cent fare on its Graham Avenue tne. running from Long Island City to Perk Row, In @ schedule filed with the Public Service Commissioner recently, the eompany announced it would divide the ine into two sones and ould it woul tifaight fve-cent fare, Qerens Depety ‘Tax Receiver Ex~ encrated, Anthony Moors. Demity Reoslver of ‘Baxes in Queens County, who was suspénded a month ao by Comptrol- ler Craix pending investigation of « theft of $400 from a enfe in the office of Taxes In Long - cA te AUNTY tne day. Moors was cha with falli ‘a Fenort the theft, tog ee tad 4 = the af Gamptesling Craig's staff, alti . me verre ee MF FOOD DOLLAR GAINS 25 PER CENT; VALUE NOW 56.1 CENTS Advance Leads All Other Dol- lars in Comparison With the Prices of 1913. WASHINGTON, Jan. 28, HE dollar is getting to be worth more—especiafly the food dollar—according to efficial figures of the Labor De- Partment. The clothing dolinr, the traveling dollar, amusemont dollar and other dollara have been getting more valuable too, but the food dollar leads the others with an advance of 2% per cent. since June. It was worth only 45.7 cents, compared with 1913: now it ts worth 561 cents. Turning it Bround, $1.78 is paid for the food Which in 1913 cost $1; last June it took $2.19 to buy that amount of food. Changes in the value of varie- ties of food dollars in the last five and’ six months follows: _THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JANUARY GOV. MILLER SEES URGES 200,000 BRINDELL WITNESS [BLIND GIRL WINS CITY'S BIG CHANGE | RAIL WORKERS CUT HAS HOT TIME ON | HONORS IN SCHOOL; IN TRACTION NOW THEIR OWN WAGES HIS EXAMINATION) ALSO IS COMPOSER Expliins Message as to Water Being Squeezed Out of Transit Securities, (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) ALHANY, . 28.—"The water has Rot been squeezed out of the see ities im the sense that the securities have been retired, but im marke! values. ‘This ls Gov, Miller's exptanation of what he meant in his message with regard to the traction companics of New York City not earning fixed charges, and which might misicad the public into a belief that th companies are not making money on their actual investments. The purt of the Governors message sent to the Legislature on last Mon- duy night, relating to the subject, reads as fullow “The market value of outstanding eveurities is undoubtedly much below the intrinsic value of Lhe propertios reprenented, “The water has already been squeezed out of the pecuritios, und the companies ure oul earthing (xed charges, ‘he time is therefore propitious to deal with the subject in the public tntereMt and With exact Justice’ ty all. AL would be Little shurt of a) public caluiuity if the opportunity tus pre- wented were allowed to puss, “OL course, uly cousierution of the subject must wluct trum the Prom LAL Lae puboe etude tol on walled upon ty pay curnings upon, or Ay itt bae wal noat mc ct itn, The Govervor was asked ye Af he lad peeu tie euitorual cou on thin statement, and he watd Cust he bad, us well as other statoments by citimons which have been pub Hshed, and thin wis hin annwer: “EP think what f aaid wis reasotiab lain, unless Wbarly — wantitedt Minundersiund mo, Of course, Ue Water has not been mqucexed oul vf the securities in the seme Uuat the securitios have been reuired. ‘The securities are outstanding. 1 wu Gk ny about muri t vi ues. “If anybody will take the trouble to get a list of wecuritios of var traction companios and compute their market value, it won't require Breat export to deterinine at « that thom values ure necessarily away below acti intrinsic values. For example, the underlying bonds tanvied upon” pobhe authority, the money for which concededly went into roads, arc salling Cor lone than 50 cents on the dotlur, “That in what 1 wis talking about. And the fact thut the securities aie so low and the und rlyin: bond welling at 60 conte on the dollar, pre- sents a situation that should be tuken advantage of, Nothing can happen that won't be a help to theag securi- ties holders. It im therefore in a situation for the city to muke ud vantageous terms; terina favorable to the city. “Now, of courte, what ts bound to happen if the thing drifts, is one of two things, Either the propertios continue to deteriorate as thy arc until they are virtually scrapped, or the und. rlying bonds will insist upon having the thing go to a foreclosire sale. And if it ever goes to a fore- closure sale, and the owners of the underlying bonds become the own- ers, as they would, the opportunity of the city to deal with them would Probably be passed. “Now, of course, this talk of ex- cluding the city, like this talk of the watered securities, is more of what I have characterized as loore think- ing and loose talk. What I am think- ing of, ultimately—I say ultimately. and I would not think it would be very far distant—the thing must be put on a bas's in which the city is an actual partner, “It is & partner now in the sense that it has tts money in there, but an actual partnership in the earnings of the roads, and very likely some place in the directorate of these ope- rating compunies by representation of the city on their board. Actua home rule, in other words, instead of the thoretical kind that doesn't exist, is What | am thinking of.” 207 YEARS’ PRISON SENTENCES FOR 15 BANDITS IN BATCH (Continued From First Page.) the proprietors and robbed the tills Juan Alvarez, the leader, nineteen years old, who lived at the Bronx Y¥. M. C. A, received a sentence of fram 9 to years; Valerino Santos 7 Cristiano Avelino, 6 to 10 ano Jolos from 4 to 14, and Silvestrlo Bombaro, from 4% to 16. Paul J. Nagel of Hellevilie, N. J. and Jack Perry, who chloroform and revoed Mra. Helen MoHugh of $2600 in jewelry in Van Cortlandt Park where thoy had gone in her motor car, reccived sentences of ten to twenty and twenty years rorpec ‘tively, Mra, MoHugh pleaded in court fo leniency fo Nagel and was rebuked by Judge Gibbs Benedict Costello, & Bronx stone mason, was sent up for from seven and one-half to fifteen years for rob- bing Thomas Dudgeon in Bronx Park. Detectives Fallon and John- gon, who arrested him, were com- mended by the Court, Antonio Le- pore received a sentence of ten years for attempted robbery, and Dave Morrison got from two and one-half to five years for burglary, of which he was convicted yesteday. When the fifteenth man had been sentenced, Judge Gibbs said of his day's work, “I hope that message will ring clear to the underworld. pase Dh a Bice Executives Advocate This as Best Way to Get Out of Present Tangle, oH CACO, 28.—Two million ruilroad employees should voluntarily Inn, owt thelr wages, In the opinion of ratl- way executives meeting here to-day to aiiscuss the labor and wage situation. W. G. Bester, Presidem of the New Jersey Central Railroad and a mem- ber of the Labor Committee of the Association of Railroad Executives, urged the employees to take this action to bring the nation out of the mull tangle. He said this view was held by many other railroad executives. In @ statement made as he wos going into the meeting of the rail- road executives, be said: “An arbitrary cut in wages for our employees woud hurt. They should get together and tell the mun- agement they are willing to accept little leas. William Lee, President of the Railway Trainmen, ie vn ree ord as saying it is not high wiwces that employees want but purchasing power. The dollar has a greater purchasing power to-day.” No recommendations for drastic slashes in wages will come vul of the conterence if Mr. Bosler’s opiu- fons are followod, “It’s mighty pour business to underpay labor,” he suid. if fulr wagea ure paid we get the cream of the labor market; if not, vther industries get it, It takes the bewt employees to run railroads sue- coanfully.” Hv wlamed former Government con- trol and present supervision fur tio pitght of the rouds, | “After the Government spent nine billion dobre to run the ruade they were turned buck in u run down condi- lion,” he wud. “We also found wiges avd us the law of Lhe Lend, irreapeo- lave of evouonic conditions, “The Gevernment uow owes the rowdy upward of $00,000,000 19 a guar duiwoe, ‘hin wut bus becu certified by the Iitersate Commerce Commission, | but fs still held up, he eld. | “Tis loaves thy ruuds unable to pay | Uboir obligutions,” he suid. lagoons GOVERNOR KEPT AT HOME BY ILLNESS Throat Sore, He Defied Doctor's Onlers to Speak at Banquet Last Nicht. from a Staff Correspondent The Evening World.) ALIANY, Jan. 2X.—iov. Miller did not put in an appearance at the Capitol this morning and will not be seen in the Executive Chambers all Way. He (s home in bed with « sore Uhront, Last night he gave padity- whack to the League of Women Vo- ters, but to-day a woman is boss of the Exeoutive Mansion and is telling the Governor of the State what he can do, and what he can't do. He was on hand, as usual, at 9 o'clock, yesterday, went over his mail, saw visitors, met the legislative cor- respondents, laughéd with them, chatted some and was interviewed. Then the doctor called. At the Executive Mansion this af- ternoon Dr. Leo H. Neuman said of his condition: “The Governor has a slight bron- hial cold and should be kept quiet for a day or so. There is absolutely nothing serious, He will be confined for a few days to the house, but not to bed." 71 SALOON KEEPERS IN JERSEY HELD Woman Defendant Nearly Paints When Asked to Sign Boni— Thought It Was Confession. Seventy-one saloonkeapers arrested in Jersey City, Bayonne, Weehawken. Special (Sp af Union Hil, Hoboken and West New York by Prohibition enforcement agents were arraigned to-day before Federal Commissioner Hendrickson, who held all save two in $1,500 bail for examination in Newark on Mon- day. The two, who were said to be third offenders, were held in $5,000 bail. They were Fred Meyer and Louls Enowitz, both of West New York. Mrs, Helen Ritter of No. 125 Washington Street, Hoboken, one of those urresthd, nearly fainted when weked to sign her ba bond. She shoughtsit was a confession, John (“Bunny”) Shea, another de- fendant, pushed a dollar bill over to Commissioner Hlendrickeon's girl clerk after bis bail bad been ar- ranged. She pushed it hick, but he insisted she take it “What i this money for?” asked Commissioner Hendrickson, amt her to buy somo ice cream w for herself,” said Shea. i Senate Committee Favors Change tn Clayton Act. WASHINGTON, Jan, 28.—The Pre- Mnghuysen bill amending the Clayton anti-trust act so as.to remo tions on ratiroad transac Donahy Who Contradicted Story of $5,000 Bribe Grilled by Mr. Untermyer. David Danahy, business agent of the Marble Setters’ Union with the Bullding Trades Council, the target of a minute and merciless crose-examination to-day by Samuel Untermyer in the trial of Robert P. Brindell for extortion. [ts object wus to break the effect on the jury of the story told by Dunaliy yesterday us first witness in Urindell’s defense, That story was a flat contradiction of the narrative of Max Aronsen, the garment Brindell of extorung $5,000 from him as the price of calling off a strike in the Aronsun building at Seventh Avenue and 36th Stroct, Mr, Arouson suid be was sum- moned to the building by his mason contractor, Mr Wieland Danahy vwears he was at the office half an hour %efore Aronson with Stove Birmingham and saw avlluing of Wie~ dund, Mr. Aronson and Mr. Wieland mwore Mr. Wivland took Mr. Aronson to Brindell’s uffice door, introduced them and they went offive and Briudell and Mr. Aronson were be- hind the closed dour for twenty minutos, Mr. Danahy swears he and Binn- inghuin were together in Brindell's double office when Aronson knocked, was admitted, introduced hinsell and tulked with Brindel! in front of both of them “for ten tninutes” Mr. Aronson told of w talk at that tine with Lindel! of euld-bluoded threats to cause loses of runt, in- terest and ousts by ullowing tw strike to cuntinue unless $6,000 wan paid; of @ comparison of his wituution to that of Mr. Levy, who hud lost thousunds of dollars by such delays, and of bur. guining and fually compromising on $5,000. Mr. Danuhy ewears the converea- tlon was umicablo and that brindel! took unquestionably Aronson's woud to enforce union conditions and prom- ised the strike should bo called off as svon as word could be seut to the proper person. Mr. Aronson told of going to @ bank and getting $5.000 which he put in Brindell’s hands in the sume vifice at 3.30 o'clock. Mr. Danahy swears that Brindell, Kirmingham and himself left the of- fice half an hour alter Mr. Arunsun left and were together there until after 3.30, Q You were a regulur attendant at the. Lockwood Committue hearings und have a habit of making mem- orandum slips of your dally observa- tions, Did you muke such notes in the Lockwood Cumuittes hearings? A. Yes. Q. You have them with you now? A Some of them. Others I mem- orized and destroyed. Q Why did ycu momorize them? A. In case 1 was called as a witness, Q How many have you now? A. The witness took a bunch of yellow slips out of his pocket and selected three, Mr. Danahy sald hehad been in- terested in Lhe testimony of Con- tractors Petegor, Pardeiio and Par- ¢ons, who had testined regarding Marple trade conditions, Parsons had told of having the witness, Dan- aby, and Patrick Crowley arrested, charged with extortion, and of their being held for General’ Sessions und dischanged. Q You did not know Brindell had thu power to start or call off strikes? A Tae power as @ Chairman and the duties that go with it. Q. You heard hm tell Aronson the strike on Arongon's buliding woud be called off. Did he consult with anybody about that? A. No. Q. Have you a good memory for dates? A. Fair, Q. Have you any memorandum of the meeting between Aronson and lirindell Sept, 29? A. Yes, I have it with me. Q. Whan did you make it? A, 1 didu't make It, A stenographer made It in Mr, Littleton’s office Wednesday @ week ago, Q. Who was present? Birmingham and Robert P. Q. You story is all Yes. Q. You wore in Brindell's utiece how long? A. About an hour, Q. Birmingham's office was down- stairs but he was up there too, How long was Aronson there? A. Eight to len minutes Q. You all left the office at 1.30, half an hour after Aronson left? a Yea, Q. When you arrived at Brindell's oMfice was there anybody outside? There were always people s Q, Do » Ww A I've had him pointed out here in the corridor. Mr. Wicland was the masonry con- tractor who told of sending for Aron- son to come to Brindell’s office and pf meeting him there, “Did you see the man you now know as Wieland at Brindell’s oMce?" aked Justice McAvoy, answered the witness, Mr, Untermyer renewed his cross- was manufacturer why uccuses inte the A. Ste Brinuell. of that conversation independent recollecuon? A. companios having interlock) 7 favorably report state Commeree ¢ toe t jay, modified to prov supervision of such transi ue Anteretate Commerce C you remember Wielamd tele- A just before Me nsOn are rived? A. No. What was the first you saw of . & XL wae in the outuide 28, 1921.” WEALTHY KINSEK WOMAN HELDFOR $50.00 RANSOM Mrs, O. S. Witherell {s Kid- napped as She Answers Fake Report Husband Is Hurt. LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. #— With her frantic husband, father and father-in-law, al) wealthy, spurring on @ squad of private detectives to aid police and Deputy Sheriffs in a widespread search, not one definite clue to the whereabouts of beautiful Mrs, O. 8. Witherell, twenty-three, has been found since she was kid- napped from her home, No, 1843 ROSALIE VONTERS- COHM. Rosalie Cohn Shows Histrionic Ability and Is Accomplished Musician, Pourteen-year-old Rosalie “Win ters" Cohn, has the distinction of being the only blind child to gradu- ate from a public school, Last night she reoeived her dtptlonr from Public Scheal 127, Hrooklyn. At the graduation exercises she as- tounded the audience by her por; trayal of a mother in the school phy, Whitley Avenue, last Tuesday night. A rahsom of $50,000 has been de- manded for ber return, conditional upon compliance with instructions not to notify the police. Rewards for information as to the wherenbouts of Mra Witherell were announced to-day by relatives and friends. Five bimdred dotiara wan offerad by her husband; $1,000 by her father, John C. Kratz; 00 by a LLos An- geles newspaper, and $600 by neigh- bors of the Witherdis. Shortly betore her husband, who 1s Presi¢ont of a loan anu Investment company, returned home from his business, Mrs. Withercll was callrd to the door by @ stranger, who tola her there had been an automobile ac- cident nearby and that one of the In- jured men, apparently her husband, was calling her name. Placing her DR. AH KNAPP, EYE SPECIALIST, SUES FOR SEPARATION Noted Surgeon Declares Wife, eighteen-months-old baby in she care of w neighbor she hurried away with the stranger. Alarmed at mmerxplained ab- sen the husband and hia father, A. J, With sell, a retired banker, tele- and by rendering a piano svlo, Rosa- lie, who has udopted the name of “Winters” from thet of a story hero- ine whom ehe fancied, ia the young- est ohild conyoser of acceytudle music, ber first plece being “Rose Luthuby.”* When fourteen years ago a Httle blind baby, thought to be feeble- minded, was pinced In the hands of Mrs. John Alden, Preendenmt-General of the International Sunshine Society, it seamed itnpossible that the child would ever develop normal powers. Years of care und attention given her by the society have developed even mors than aormad qualities in the er At muste she ts a wonder, and has won many prizes 48 well ag a scholar- ship. In duncing ehe is graceful. There is no part of domestic work which she cannot perform well. Her necdlowork is excullent, as shown by the white lace trimmed gradQution frock which she made in three months. Gentle und refined in manner, the ttle blind girl has won the hearcs of everyone, both in her school and in the home. This is evident from the fact that the other blind young- sters intend giving a play shortly to ratxe funds fur the continuance of ltosalie’s education; also by a gift of a beautiful opal ring surrounded by diamond chips, given her by mem- bers of the society and a gold watch and gold buttertly fab given her by friends, for tn spite of the girl's blindness she loves to wear and {cel jewelry. It is her intention to attend the Bay Ridge High School and later on- ter college to prepare for a career as teacher among the blind, or us teacher of music. office. Brindell and Birmingham were in the inner office. There was a knock on the door—- Q And a little gray-haired man came in? A. A black and gray-haired man. Q What did he say? A. He sald am Mr. Aronson.” Q. Nobody introduced him? A. No. (Contractor Wieland and Mr. Aron son both swore that Wieland accom- panied Aronson to Brindell’s office and introduced them outside the door, atter which Brindell ushered Mr. Aronson in and closed the door. Mr. Untemnyer put the witness through @ long course of examina- tion as to how it was he remem- bered so closely the date of the Aronson visit to (Brindell and his er visit to a job at 210th Street ere there waa labor trouble, Isn't it the only date you can fix by memory in your whole business asked Mr. Untermyer, ‘It is not." shouted the witness, “And you know I have fixed many a one. You know it. You'— Mr. Untermyer had just one inquiry Q. Didnt you say you made your ‘ast visit to the 210th Street Station Oct. 12, A. You. Q. You are sure of that? You put it on @ memorandum which you momortzed? " Q. Don't you know that was Co- lumbus Day and nobody was at work there? A. T went up there Oct more her. sald Mr. Untermyer, Mr. Littleton was question- ing John Ryan, oreaniver of the newly formed housewreckers’ union the next w tness for ¢he defense, Mr Untormyer spoke up and direeted the witness to answer "yes" or “no” and to “stop making exptanations, Justice McAvoy leaned forwant and said: “Counsel will cease addressing the witness while under examination ‘This is the thint or fourth time this has happened, I would rather leave the bench than perm't ¢t to continue lf you wish the witness to be re- proved you will make your request to the Court. You will not addreas the witness agnin,” rmyer made no reply, amining Ryan Mr. Un- neht out that since Inst April Brintel, as business awent of the House ‘und Dor’ Builders’ | Union’ had reoetved 50 cents a month from each of $600 men or at the rate of $21,000 & youn : i On cross termyér bre phoned > relatives and throughout the might conducted a fruitless search. While the pulice, private detectives and deputy sheriffs were hunting for tbe missing woman, making a house- to-house search of Hollywood for the kidnappers, frenzied relatives of Mra, Witherell deived into the realins of the vecult in au effort to learn her whereabouts, John C, Kratz, her wealthy father, visited a medium yesterday und was told that he would hear frum his daughter soon. The demand for the ransom was made in ™ note placed under the door of the family home and ad- dressed to Mrs. Witherell’s husbaod, The note read: Mr, Witherell: Your wife is sule, Do not worry. Have $50,000 tn cash ready and you will hear from ie svon, Don't notify the police or detectives, or all will be lost Police and private detectives work- ing on the case have abandoned their first theories that Mrs. Witherell haa been murdered or that she was kid- napped for revenge. Although they do not admit the letter received by Witherell was written by the kidnap- pers, they concede that the missing woman js being held for ransom and announce that they have reason to believe startling developments will come soon. They point out that the note sent Witherell demanding ran- som may have been the work of a crank who read about the case in the newspapers. in Reno With Four Children, Abandoned Him in 1918. Dr. Arnold H. Knapp, one of the most distinguished opthalmologists in the country, and professor of that ‘ranch of sclence in the College of Physicians and Surgeons since 1903, began sult to-day against his wife, Julia Long Knapp, now in Reno, Nev., for a separation on the ground of abandonment, Dr, Knapp allegoa in the papers filed that his wife left him and their home, No. 10 East 54th Street, #e- cretly and unexpectedly on Sept. 16, 1918, taking with her thetr four ahfl- dren, and going to the bome of her purents in Camden, 8 C. In his petition the eye specialiet amies he went to Camden on Oct, 5, 1919, and asked his wife to return to ‘him. (She promised to do this in the but on April 23, she wrote say!) she would so and a separation, Lu She left Camlen in July giving word even to her family where she intended going. Dr. Knapp instituted a search for her and finaly located her and the children in Reno, where she had had a residence for @t months, ‘The Knapps were married tn Cam den April 14, 1909, and have two boys and two girls, Elizabeth, eleven; John, 10; Bilen, eight, and five’ Dr. Knapp's attorneys are Choate, Larocque and Mitchell, —— KIDNAPPED GIRL FOUND. ‘Three Brooklyn Wen Held Witheet Ball After Exciting Arrest. Fifteen-year-old Fillmino Gegtiardo, who had been missing for five days, was returned to her home to-day after Do- teative James Powers had fired five sho! at Antonio Scudere of No, 97 Joh Avenue, Brooklyn, during a chase Brooklyn. With Scudere were ai Dominic Marrone. No, 21 Union A nue, and Louls Gentile, No. 260 Nai Street, Brooklyn. Gentile offered to lead Nicholas Gal ginrdo to his daughter. father Notified the police and then went with Gentile to a harness shop, No. 21 Uni¢ Avenue, ‘There Gentile and Marroi were arrested but Scudere ran. Pow captured him after a chase of rel spring of 192% blocks, ‘The girl was found in a terical condition. The prisoners held without bail in the Adams Street Court on a charge of kidnapping. ph a Telexraph Employees in Rome Strike. ROME, Jun. 27.—All the postal and! telegraph employees have gone on strike ( and services in these depurtments have ceased as a result of a collision betwoen employees and the Fascist! which pe- cessitated police intervention. Postal SSS Ss ee it" “ONE-ELEVEN” cigarettes] ¢ » Fifty Years of Know-how UST an inside word about One- Eleven. The American Toe! bacco Company has served the public with fine tobaccos for many years. It commands the! experience and skill to prepare and know good cigarettes, The American Tobacco Com» pany would not give the address of its home office as the name of anew cigarette if it did not believe that the blend would please you. Finarry— -—which means that if you don’t lke “111" Cigarettes, you can money back from the dealer, lida | try them! at . . . GB. Alinan & Cn. MADISON AVENUE- Thirty-fourth Street An End-of-the-season Sale of Boys’ and Youths’ Winter Clothing will present purchasing opportunities of rare occurrence Boys’ Mackinaws and Sheepskin-lined Coats (sizes 8 to 18) Boys’ Corduroy Suits (sizes 15, 16,17 and 18) . Boys’ Overcoats (sizes 15, 16 and 17) ° Youths’ Long-trouser Suits (sizes 15 and 16 only), at 12.50 Youths’ Long-trouser Suits (sizes 16 to 20) practically the entire remaining stock . . . . (SIXTH FLOOR) ‘IFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty $9.50 at 7.50 at 12.50 e at $29.50

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