The evening world. Newspaper, February 12, 1921, Page 2

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ae Ce ee age that in S ? als been Poland, passengers had | q Ss @orntshea us that we could find =k eleven in number of the total “who landed. 1 have lived in fear since fed place cases of feagon why the officials department. will meet persons to make rigid as to tis actual ‘This will make more cer- touch with every typhus.” rage passengers of been re- Both ships are of the Red Line, controtied by the Inter- Mercantile Marine. The im- will be fumigated on* the i li fy police boat John F. hip proceeds to any pler of * the Health Department. Hi “tens she _Smoraing. officiain said that the! Vanderbilt, Collier, quarters have been Hylan ts used to make sure no foreign anywhere the city without permission from fealth offi- steamship officials sent hur- Tied wireless calis diverting ships to other ports The Hollang-America ordered tho Nieuw Amsterdam Bhe had just sent a wire- would arrive here to-morrow a ‘The diverted vessels may only be he Ee more ats! bill of health there, be per- Met te @ Cab criticize they get lax | permitting the entrance of immi . When , @ native of Silesia, before him { print room, “Chicago Banker Now - , “Mystery Men” in* About Cabinet. Charles G. Dawes, Ohicago started @ new train of Cabin here. | the Treasury portfolio, but of the Cabinet problem. It ~Pointment made at Mr. _ “ ferpreted as evidence that . The magistrate thet Berkow be taken away and _ Washed before being put through the He sent him to workhouse for ninety days. - *BUSSER” DAWES GALLS ON HARDING: ~ GOSSIPS GET BUS Michac! | wan ur- with dered One of Talk ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla, Feb. 12.— banker, "who has been prominently under con- sideration for appointment as Secre- ary of the Treasury, headed Prosi- dent-elect Harding's appointment list Mor w-day withya conference that et specu - “¥/Onee conceded to have first cal! on more re- gently regarded as 1 lees formidable ‘eontender for the place, Mr. Dawes _ has become one of the “mystery men" was sald “at Harding headquarters that his call SiWas not the result of a formai ap- Harding's ~Pequest, but in some quarters the fact Of his coming at this time was in- he still is _ being considered for some high Gov- 4 ON WILL LIVE FO THE 6.0. P. HORDES Modified for Benefit of the “Small Fry.” HIGH PLACES FOR N. Y. Bache, Hayward and Harvey Men- tioned for Embassies. On all immigration | capeciat from « Gta Correpondent of ‘The the infected districts of Burope, Commissioner Copeland said: declare a littie embargo of | Teeisters, showing positions in the a right to do.| Government service, are being eager- satisfied that|!y scanned by a horde of office seck-| World.) Evening WASHINGTON, Feb. 12.—Official ers, who expect recognition at the hands ef the Harding Administra- ton, @oon after Marob 4, While the imposing festivities originally planned in connection with the inauguration have been aban- doned, this has not dampened the en- hustasm of the army of “Deserving Republicans" which is preparing to descend on the national capital co- incident with the turnover in Gov- ernmental control, according to in- fromation from back home being re- celved by the Senators and Repre- sentatives, Reservations at the leading hotels of the capital support the idea that Wastington will be filled with visit- ors inauguration week, regardless of the calling off of inaugural cere- monies, The bulk of these will be polfticlans who want to be here early for the “melon cutting,” and as the Teservations are for an period, it seems that they are ooming prepared to stay, The pressure is so great that men close to President-Kieot Harding pre- dict that the Civil Service will be attacked in an effort to uncover more Places. There are not enough places to go round unless some of the jobs in the classified service can be pried loose. It is true President Harding as on-the Shipping Board, War Fi- nance Corporation and the like to fill, but it is an axiom in polities that the “small fry” must be taken care of in urder to keep a political organization intact, and most of thexe posts are considered too big for the men who served in the trenches, CLASSIFIED SERVICE MAY BE UNCLASSIFIED. Practically all the Poot Office ap pointments, which are eagerly sourht after by local leaders, are now re- moved from the realm of patronage, but according to Harry M. Daugherty and others who have discussed the matter with Mr. Harding, the execu- tive orders which placed these Jove in the classified service will probably be modified with little dela; Republican leaders are now charg. ing that in the naming of postmasters the eligible registers were in- many caves %o juggled that Democratic as- pirants landed the jobs even under the fo-called mest 5; m. and a number of instances where Democrgts are al- leged to have been appointed over Re- publicans when the latter really won in the examination tests are to be presented to the incoming Adminis- tration, NEW YORKERS HAVE EYES ON THE BIG Joss, New York will receive many prom. inent positions under the new Ad- ginistraton, Senators Wadsworth and Calder are recelying scores of letters supporting various prominent New Yorkers for posta re and abroad, ‘The fact that Franklin D. Roonevelt was appointed Aasistant Secretary of the Navy from New York bas made that position a ape- cinl target, and more than two score of New Yorkers liave let jt be known that they will place no obstacles in the way of being drafted for it, It is likely that New York wiil re- ceive & generous share of places in the diplomatic service, Willam M. Collier is mentioned aa Ambassador to Italy; Col. William Hayward, who has the backing of ex-service men cau his fine war record, is talked of to succeed Ambassador liugh C. Wallace at Paris; Cornelius Vanderbilt and Col, Georre Harvey are mentioned for Ambassador to Tandon, and Jules Bache for Brus- sels. This in only a snail fraction of the number of New Yorkers who will be pushed for big posts in the diplo- FLOGK TO CAPITAL o barred at Etis! Civil Service Rules May Be transferred to the on which 925 indefinite ; will have many important posts in| the diplomatic servios, in the Cabinet | oud the Government bureaus, as well! R ALL TIME OR DIE BY SUICIDE,’’ DECLARED ABRAHAM LINCOLN danger| ever reach us it must spring up amongst us; it cannot come =If-destruction is to be our lot we must ourselves be its author and-fi aation of freemen we must live thro oh, aafon HUNGRY FOR OFFICE, HARDING CABINET IS DISAPPOINTING David Lawrence Finds Enthusiasm Over the Reported Selections. WANT STRONGER ONES. No By David Lawrence. | (Copyright, 1921) One doesn't have to investigate senti- ment very far in this, the nation’s Metropolis, to learn that President- elect Hurding’s list of Cabinet Secre-! taries will not evoke outbursts of en- thusiawm if ‘it should prove to be the | slate that practically all the correapon- jdents both in Washington and s* Augustine have been publishing dur- | Img the last few weeks. | Of course New York's point of | view may not ‘be national, but here. ‘at any rate, are some influential Re- Dublican leaders and newspapers, and tt is significant that many of them are finding fault publicly and pri- vately. Mr, Harding may have » lected what any Preeident might re- gard uy a good working Cabinet, int the trouble is New York had come | to expect a super-Cabinet, with Gen. | Wood, Herbert Hoover ‘and Eihu | Root in it, and authentic despatches | from Harding's headquarters have in- dicated that none of these .irce| giants of Republicanism would be/ chosen, { WOULD PREFER ROOT To | HUGHES IN CABINET. | Take the Secretaryship of State, | for instance. Now Charles Kvans | Hughes is well known in New York} and his ability is fully recognized, | but Bllbu Root would have been) more enthusiaytically approved be- | cause his training has been In inter- | national affairs and diplomacy. How- | ever, the objections to Hughes relatively insignificant compared the murmurs of diswatisfaction over the omirsion of men like Gen. Wo« and Herbert Hoover. While Gotham admires the genius and ability of Andrew W. Mellon of ; Pittabureh, who is slated for the Reerctaryship of the Treasury, some | Republicans are uneasy over the way | the Democratic newapapers have ih- | slated upon Moguing the large | financial holdings of Mr. Mellon They wonder if the country will ap- + prove the selection of a man whose | wealth ia said to be next to that of | John D, Rockefeller. But New Pork really doesn't object to wealth nor does it consider Mr. Mellon’a business | connections as a handicap, The bot- tom of the trouble is that Wall Stroet | and the banking ocmmuntty had | come to hope that onc of its own group of financiers would wit in the ‘Treasury Department under a Re- publican Administration, or that per- haps one of its good friends like George M. Reynolds, the Chicago banker, might be #0 honored. MANY LIKE LOWDEN, BUT HE DECLINES POST. ! ‘There seome to be no particular ob- Jection to ex-Goy. Lowden of Mlinols. On the covtrary, he is much admired, but the people on the inside here in- sist that within the last five days Gay, Lowden’s letter declining to en- ter Mr Cabinet at all has reachod Mr. Harding at St. Augdstine. Muoh praise of John W, Weeks, former U. 8. Senator from Massachu- setts, who is slated to be Secretary of War, is hoard, but there is no de- hying that the appointment of Leon- ant Wood would have been many times more pleasing Mesers, Wil! Hays ond Harry M. Daugherty, who are listed for Post- master General and Attoyoey Gen- eral. are papular in political circles, but it is nevertheless true that lead- ing Republicans question the adviaa- Willty of putting men of prominence TO NEW YORKERS omiaenpeaieeactie | | sang in Marguerite, MELBA ILL Italia | Omission of Root, Hoover and! Wood Reported as Particu- larly Unsatisfactory. * : , | fe Oia oa a! a | MME. MELBA. LONDON, Feb. 12.—Neilie Me the | grand opera prima donna, is seriously it with influenza at Monte Carlo, ac- cording to a spectal despaten received here, Mme. Nellie Melba is an Australian by birth, and is said to have adopted | her stage name from her native town, Melbourne, Horn of Scotch Presby- terian parents, her maiden name was Nellie Mitchell, Her musical educa- tion was received in Paris under Marchesi. The great teacher cov- rected her faults, placed the voice properly and from that tine the royal road to pre-eminence was the wity trod by the Australian singer. She made her debut in Paris ana her triumph was indorsed by Lon- don, Russia and Denmark, where she Ophelia, Lucia, Julet and Elsa, alt roles jn which she was icuously su In 1893 Mme. Mel? American operatic year app previous Capt. Francis Nesbitt rong, Mme. Melba’s husband, | t suit against her for divorce, | naming the young Duke of Orleans as co-respondent. FREES ALLBUT3 | TAKEN IN SHOW RAID Girl Performer Charged With Ap-| pearing in Insufficient Costume —Hall Owner Held. When the prisoners taken in the police raid Jast night on the hall at No, 98 Forsyth Street, where an al- leged indecent theatrical perforfhance was in progress, were arraigned to- day in Essex Market Court, 358 of them, inciuding two women, were discharged offhand by Magistrate Nolan. Sylvia Wayne of No. 1995 Preston Avenue, the Bronx; Ada Burt of No. 310 West dist Street, and Awana Trebeau of 57th Street and Bighth Avenue were among those discharged. After examination Sophie Trimmer of No, 511 Highth Avenue, cburged with appearing in insuffi- cient costume, were held in $500 bail for examination on Thursday, Sam Perles, owner of the hall, was held in the same amount, charged with maintaining a disorderly resort, and the same charge was laid against Sam Stein, the announcer, with iden- tieal bail. When Sylvi she fainted The raid was made after Detective Patrick Meaney had entered the hall, lor jcompany and its ia Wayne was disoburged | MME, TETRAZZINI. BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Ped. sudden illness forced Mme. 1 Tetrazzini to cancel her engagement here last night. dler conditeion shows no improvement to-day. i Accoming to her the singer is suffering from u throat at- fection, which had reached one ear. physician FIGHT-CENT FARE. IN SEVEN CITIES MAY END STRIKE AL Proposal Under Consideration Among Officials in Towns Near Alban; ALBANY, Feb, 12.—A uniform fare rate of eight cents in the seven cities affected by tie street car strike on the lines of the United ‘Traction Company as a basis for a settlement vhe wage dispute between the 1,200 employees is being discussed. Progress is reported in the negotia- tions, although city officials and representatives of the State Board of Mediation and Arbitration, who are participating in the conference, would make no statement. An efpht cent fare was granted the company in Albany in a decision by the Public Service Commission a few works ago But the same or- der reduced the fare in Troy to alx cents and in Rensselaer to five cents, Other cities served by the United Traction Company and now without street car service are Wateryliet, Cohoes, Green Island and Waterford. The company announced after the Commission order was served that it could not pay its men 60 cents an hour under the prescribed fare rates and posted notices of a 25 per cent, cut in wage out two 3 which caused the walk- KS a0. ring of the tracks in Albany oy of snow continued to-day. Non-union workers, guarded by State and elty police, were unmolested in their efforts to make operation of cars by strikebreakers possible. THIEVES TAKE SAFE AWAY FROM BANK a, DAY, FEBRUAKY 12, 1921. Put It on Truck and Get Away— GOVERNOR MILLER THROWS NEW LIGHT ON TRACTION PLANS (Continued From First Page.) # tribunal competent to deal with the traction problem. GOVERNOR MAKES CLEAR JUST WHAT HE WANTS. In an interview with the logislative correspondents at the Executive Mansion last night the Governor fur- ther amplified his (etter to Gen. Bridgman. He said that the city | would act only in an advisory ca- pacity to the commission. That the commission would have | no furisdiction f outside of Greater | New York That the Public Service Commis- sion law would be amended so as to cover the whwle State, What if the city should object to | taking over titles to all lines, assum- ing that the companies were willing jto transfer their properties, was a j matter that he wasn't prepared to answer, It was a bridge haven't come to yet. ‘ become self-sustaining. be done by & reduction in the cost of yperation, a8 well as by an increase in fares. That he hasn't undertaken to deal with the fare qustion, which he re+ gards as a mere incident PLANS OUTLINED IN LETTERS) TO BRIDGMAN The plan outlined in “en. Bridman is as follows 1. The valye of the piysical pro; the lines must already bo i De session of the present commission. 1 nation of the others. 2 minate ail yutatancimg inter- company leases 3. Retire Gutstanding securities ex cept sch underiying liens as ci y be retired, for which provision looking to eventual payment must be made. 4. Vest in the city ttle to all lines | row and clear of all encumbrances except such underlying Hens. 5. Make a lease to a new company, which shall provide for amortization of the determined valuation and for] adequate reserves for depreciation, | ontingencies and tne like. | 6 Mortgage such lease to an amount approved by the commission and issue stock and bends not in ex- ‘ess of the valuations determined by we commission in exchange for the securities retired. 7, To promote prompt reorganiza- tion and revamping of lines without usvessing security healers, defer in- terest and dividends for one or two years, as might be determined by the vommission, and at the end of such period prescribe a rate of fare suffi-| cient to pay ali churges provided for in the lease, #. As an incentive to efficient man- agement provision could be made for increased return on capital as fares ave decreased and a reduced return as they are increased, §. Looking to the eventual transfer of general regulatory powers to the single State-wide Public Service Com- niasion, provision could be made for 4 board of control, on which the city and the company Should have proper representation. The alternative to that would be representation by the city on the Board of Directors of the company, The board of control plan obubly preferable, and that board 1 have the powers of the ‘ransit Construction Com- T As all approved charges will adequately be provided for under the plan, the provisions of the dual con- be eliminated and such other changes made as will Ot these contracts into ‘he plan, and as may appear to be in the public interest, ugh all time or die by suicide. ETRAZZINI IS COMPELLED TO CANCEL HER ENGAGEMENT; AT MONTE CARLO n Singer Is Suffering From an Affection of the Throat, Which Physician Says Ha& Reached Her Ear. —Address at Springfi Jan. 27, 1857 RIDICULE GERMANY TO PAY. KAISER’S GLAIM TO. ALL SHE GAN, SAYS “GRACE OF GOO” FINANCE MINSTER f Statements in Interview Cause | But Won't Permit Dictation at GERMANS London Conference, De- a Sensation and Arouse | clares Dr. Wirth. Angry Comment. BE ¢ BERLIN; RLIN, Fob, 12 (Aseoctated Preas). pany i* not going to the Londo paral + to be dictated to, Dr. Wirth, the Minister of Finance, Feb, 12. The interview | with the former Kaiser, published | has yesterday, throughout variance in th caused @ sensation | Fh tmany. There is a wide! comment ormer ad- | declared in a specch to the Bremen visers of the Kaiser defended his “| Chamber of Commerce to-day. Great titude as “peace lord,” while others 4 }economte questions could net he solved treated his statements with anger and |, ridicule. ; “The Kaiser is still obsessed with | to accomplish all the idea that he exists through the! ¥* an," continued Dr. Wirth, “because grace of God, but the German people | We feel under a moral obligation to as- are thankful that they are no longer! sist in reconstruction, and we will make that way, he said. “We are prepared that we! The oity’s $250,000,000 in its roads' that he seeks to blame the war and can be released only when the roads the collapse of Germany on others. This might! py letter to! hostilitfes he struggled against war." . | waerts, said ; data for such valuation of many of; speaking to a foreigner, should insult + | the German. people. whould not -tike ‘long to’ make a val. Kulset'e declaration tha (he Social- not riready owne! by the city, free| the companies ov tracts for preferential payments could | ; ‘blessed’ with him,” Priel Dom-| reparation Preposats of browsky, German author, wrote in| pondon the Tageblatt | “Tt is charucteristic of the spiritual | ,, and mental disposition of the our own fn “The newspaper reports on thin seb. : et are incorrect, Kaiser | |. Our offer wih not ® Sinai one. The Nation must learn to realize that what we shall offer ean- not be extracted from) the national forgets tat the foreign policlen | wealth, but mut be produced oy Nort, his rexime, Wis rattling of the! And thin ratses the question whether he sword and his vain provocative | these circumatancen all the Cruits of the speeches stirred up the other powers. | revolution can be safeguamted, f¥e forgets that in July. 1914, he gave| "Work wilt have to be organized on himself completely to Austrian diplo- | 4 Stat scale, and what we offer must be made good. ‘The improved methods of operation ""*°> 7 +] “America cannot hold aloof,” adde and economy might ultimately result “Petiane the Kaiser did not want) 16 ginanco Minister, “when the ee in even reduced fares and still main- Wt!—lis nature was fur tom weak | nomic forces of the entire world shall as tain those fixed charg but, of nd fearful for it—but 1) was his in-| semble around one table, and all plans course, to be made self-sustaining Considerate action that brought it} are mere theories unless the whole necessarily Mnvolves out of operation, woul.” econ work! is prepared to co- Count von Reventlow suid: “Dur- | operat vefore the ing the days ‘ INDICT SUSPECTS | FOR PAL’S MURDER Friedrich Stampfer, editor of Vor- fe service, wit! “Tt is in vccordance with the well P . Be EN eee cea et otie of the former | Prisoners Held in Huntington, L. I, out reference to presen: capital!-| known tactinssness 1 former : nting vation, should be ‘determined. ‘Vhe| Kaiser, that he, living oad and Robberies Also Indicted for As- sault on Deputy Sheriff. Novone to Ger- | scmericad, 1 Feb, 12.—Indi ny or abroad will believe the| RIVERHEAD, 1. 1, Feb. 12.—tndiet~ |ments of murder in the first degree | were returned .by the Suffolk County ists betrayed their own county Grand Jury aguinsi tunes Van Nor — —- m an Jame On Dec. 1h, n{ White Van Norman, Selser and Wilber formulation of the pan u ie aegstiatone to pur nite eect |: Servaner were being taken to the While negotiations are necessary, | lingion. be 1 Js e nays that there should be no auch | the men hasan ae no oberiem, one of | intesiminable delay as that which-at-| Severance ‘wae ki and "Deputy tended, the sigaing of the dual sub-| Sheriffs Ama W, sand Charles way contracts. Wenzel wounded deputies have “phere novd be no haggling with | recovere ithe Ue ornabeting ib | the Miictmenta charged Van Ner- t i F F the murder of for th sion, appointed, Kecone to the, oleate to dewiue Just terms which the fired the shots, companies should not be permitied to ts also were urned chang- dictate, La assault in the first degree for the of the comm Speaking n belng | shooting of Biggs and Wenzel, jothed with all the power the State ie fendunts will be arralgned . : »|Monduy before Justice Arnon” Ia can give, to give it the whip hand, he bu Oe. raat says*that “it ts doubtful it a single | ROS Mt Sumoik County jak ecmpany in Now York could operate twenty-four hours under conditions if the regulatory powers of the State were exerted as they might be exerted, even now, in behaif of a better service.” Goy. Miller emphasized this point in his talk with the newspaper when he was asked, assu’ that the commission should determine that there should be a unified system of all the city's lines, as he suggested, if the commission could order all_the companies merged into one, The Goy- ernor’s reply was: existing During Lent Will Speak on WEDNESDAYS AT 5 P. M, “What Some Great Modern Thinkers Say About God.” ON SUNDAYS AT 11 A. M. “What Is Religion, Its Origin men Ww course that must be a matter | tor ation, but I think—what I and Methods?” bane onelusion upon in wt re- spect has been, feeling that the situa- tion was now such that the companies would have to accept a just plan, first of all, because any just plan would necessarily be an improvement of their present condition, and next because if the regulatory powers of the State were exerted as they might be they couldn't operate at all So that while it ts a matter of negotiations, it would | not necd to be a matter of haggling over term: DOESN'T WANT TO FORCE CITY INTO ANY PLAN. 2, That suggests this—ussuming the city was unwilling to be a party to any plan of that sort, wouldn't you say now just how that could be dealt with, if at all? Could it be dea with? In other words, could the be forced into a plan of that sort Church of the Ascension Sth Av. and 10th St. 74%-TON BULL DOG MACK Making Daily Trips Between NEW YORK CITY and NORWALK, CONN. The Governor—I don’t think it ‘would come to a question of forcing Will Make Special Rates the city ints @ plan of that kind. for Heavy Carting to Q. Is thee any reason by which you think the city would not want All Peinte to Norwalk, t? | 3 ‘The Governor—I do not think it| He Cc. ROULSTON Room 212. 63 Park Row vould ever come to that | With regard to an appraisal of the properties, the G r thought th sis wenvine. disguised as a longshoreman, had ob- : . "3 i 1, Provision for the imperative! fie ihatter of | determini Telephone 400) Beekman Beernent Position. PR ORONY OG | in political organizations in the Cah- | tained evidence and been thrown out| Loot Comprises $2,500 Cash | and immediate noods of the city for | {24 matter, Ot datermini z + Mr. Dawes js in Miorida to visit rei- ELECT BENNETT HOME HEADS| '"s!; of the place for being what the wudi- nd $8,500 Bonds further fransit faciliues should bel] <ion He did not wish to a _ atives, having come dinctly from What some of these New Yorkers|ence thought was boisterously drunk a 5 OmKIS, made promptly. should be done. On his proposed | D) Washington, where he created a sen- | mwe a fev Kew vort| oo 301 Mnom 8 that politictan with or TOLEDO, Ohio, Feb, 12h ie Pree Bid ed aa eedapel board of d that the olty |= RELaioue oe 3 5‘ ° ‘m for ° is eur to the ground is sometimes a 5 troke Bai ST ERTaTen any, can be giv OD world ha itation and ICE: ramsion lent week by publicly condemn-| soarnatneta’ Inatitation.| otter judge of the public pulse thas | FINAL TRIALS TO-DAY roke into the: Haake Of Temperance. | tet s orRANGIY: ITUATION IN| Cotann Un yee | ectaIRUe NOTIGRS w' oy 4 maint? | % 1 * 3 a ~y press e opi here f Sra dg yf oe words” the! award P. Howard, editor of the bern eniialy insite a ane he FOR BOY SKATERS} north of here. early to-day, louded 2| HANDS OF CN® TRIBUNAL. Peete SUC GH CG Tee ton BY uranic: > in ie publican majority Pross. and Merrill P. Calla-| 04 jaa alngle business, gaa Ben's heavy asufy contaning $11,000 Into al ‘The city administration, the Gov ee ee eee ene eae iain mae | sp aw f mAh Mme Congress in its investigation of | way have been elected directors of the New York has been somewhat of a | -1: 5 yay, | Walting truck and made their get a-|¢@rnor says, vowed the operation,| roteq the use of the rerulatory Adres by the Mey, Dr DD, Forsth “4 HHP Conduct of the war. Rogarding | James Gordon Hennatt Memorial Home| yoover stronghold, and ‘since the | Chicago Team to Compete With] way. by the city, of a ling of buses 8a 8 Powers of the State in case of their | ee \\ til course in that regard, Mr. Hard-| for New York Journalists, it was an-| former Food Adiinistrator hae come Sate . 2S ‘The loot comprised $2,600 in cash and| Temedy for the | presen! | opposition | \ Taag and the officiais clo hira | HOuNCed to-day. A new committee in] so prominently before the public in New York to Be Se $8,600 in Liverty Bonds, F. 1, Wallace| Condition. it wppeared to him to be }°PP id ihat it having been found DIED, offici close te f ns A new ¢ ee J c i in Liberty Bondy, F. 1. ce i del 4 raid that it ha f ae loa Sothing neg ete a f the home consists of Mr.| connection with the Ruropean child ected. President of the Sankanid = ee as SNe reo eibunel the | necemmury to make i Stat r wide Pub. STARINSZAK. “MALY. THE PUNKRAL a . Cl , 01 , s & io Service Ci on, anc eb SHITRC. Rei ceatih Mificance of to-day's conference be- reting in the office of Rodman| #0 that it is not unusual to hear one | CHICAGO Fob. 12.—Iinal trials «| that it could not be opened through the| % Mo lia Din a tea fang it did select two members of the commission | : ) YOR the assurance that the Preat- | Wanamaker monorial resolutions on ihe| man gay to another, or one woman to |gelect a team of Chicago school boy |Sembination untH Monday morning, hor moka ane 10 be necessary to| from the City of New York _ a sd bath of c. O] i a “ a A : _ _ ty pe oO e te The G r de) 00K @ntcelect has a high regard tor hin| New York Hernia and later of the liven: |avetn put Hooves ia te Cabieet es | skaters (0 meet a similar agarogution | waneral services for ttev. c,d. Rens] haves preliminary pquiry (008° inat bia plan ts merely tentative ant PUED AS BINESTORS. “aller's ability. ° _ in New York City: March 6 willbe held] public services for the Rev. Carl gevials wher Nea tkuanit “| enggestive, and that he be: no at pwith whom Mr. Harding| ABANDON FRENCH Laver ar sma, | OURAN STEAMER BADLY BURNED, |to-day at Garfleld Park. Forty-five | Jullus Renz, pastor emeritus of the Im-|Uai0 WAS such O tribunal teinpe il, Rem Call Columbus 8200 Appontments to-day included| MONTREAL, Feb, 12.—The Frencs| HAVANA, Feb, 12.—The Cupan| boys will race In the three divisions} manuel Lutheran Chureh, 3 Street] determine the facts; second, ty fyi. | bill to tle the eo A Complete, Puneral Service A. Wine We q samship V. 4 y| steamer Maria Julia, form ly the U.|/and this fleld will be cut to eighteen, }and Lexington Avenue, who died yeater-| mulate a plan, and’ third, to put ity Blan, oF go Curthe {hau otmosphere of refinement ‘ood of New York, Encetg A, Pece erry which lett New 8. S. Winona, was badly dumaged by | Who will Compose the Chicago team. | day, will be held at the church follow into effect; and no one Proposes to u course of procedure he best costs no more. m4 again peslipota and] Fork Feb £0 DAA and Paneine mith fice peataraay | wblie: in -deyteee herell 30 tha. hool Division the | Priva\e funeral services at his late reai- exchude the city from participation in he Jacksonville | 278. ae heen wbandoned at sea and! erc®, who brought the Preaident-lect her crew rescued by the steamer Cran- ahi to es radio message Dicked “up at Cape *tace to-day. she Was formerly the German Uskermark. undergoing repairs, Marines from the U, 8. battleship Minnesota rendered vi pable assistance in controlling Clamea, 0 and 440 yards. Contestants in semi and Juftior Hig: No. 321 Ocean Parkway, Brook Scnool section will skate a quarter of @ mile and @ half mile, Mr. Reng, who was 8% years do Wyn. Burint will be at Hudson, N.Y. on hienday old, is survived by a widow and daugh- ee any of these three steps. On the contrary, the bil gow in course of preparation will expressly provide for the participation of the city both ip } 1 FRANK E. CAMPBELL FROM SLGitr HEADACH WROMO “QUININY gyfnh Row ai " “TH FUNERAL CHURCH” Inc, relieve ne DF curing th (old (Nonsectarian) ie Le Wo 'Grove (ite eure S00 Broadway at 66th St. om BROMO.) 400. rh

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