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—— ha J | , Pa 1 on wi ern ‘Treat O¥ power over B.K ata majo: Slate people, who were in doubt be-! MILER CHANGES “IN TRANSIT PLAN OMIT HOME RULE Neither New York Nor Up- State Cities to Control Own Traction Lines. ITS FOES ARE ALERT. Final Conference on Measure Before Introduction Held To-Day. By Joseph S. Jordan. (Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) ALBANY, Feb, 14.—Gov, Miller is expected back at the Capitol to-day after an absence of more than two ‘weeks, during which time he has been more active than ailing. Another) conference on his transit measure dealing with the traction lines of New York City and the other public utilities throughout the State will be held this afternoon, elther at the Executive Mansion or in the Execu- tive Chamber, It is quite posstble that the Intro- duction of the measure will be post- Poned to some time later in the week, instead of to-morrow as was in- tended. The reason for this, it Is Said, 1s that all the Governor's ad- visers may have a chance to give the Dill e last study before it is latinched on the ocean of legislative discussion, ‘The Governor feels that there is noch- ing left fot him to #ay, after his let- ter to Gen, Bridgman and his ampli- fication of that letter to the news- Paper correspondents. But a number of legislators whol have been strong in their opposition to the proposed measure have not changed their minds any more than the Governor has changed his mes- Sage by his explanation or his elabo- ration of that explanation. They Want to see the bill itself and decide | tor themselves the meaning of its! provisions. And this holds good for a number of up-State solons who are in Tavor of home rule and independent thinking and action, CITY HAS NO YOTE ON ITS OWN TRACTION LINES, Gov. Miller has set two things in connection with the transit measure before thd’ public to the public's under- standing, if not to the public's satis- faction, He has stated, without equivocation, that the City of New York shall have no vote ¢n the pro- Position to take from it the sontrol of ita railroads, and that the three- headed Transit Commission, which shall be composed of New York men, will have no jurisdiction over any straction Ines outside of the City, sit And he bas said, also, that the State-wide Public Service Commis- x sion to be organized will have full the railroad ‘lines of| as It will all other public| other citi itilities. It is in this expression that the up- or pre as to their being affected, find| at their interests are identical with ‘hone of Greater New York. | And the Governor h: said also, In ~ effect at least, that whether the clty of New York likes it or not, It can be| made to like the new transit proposi- tion by the application of the police powers of the State, In respect to whether this includes compelling the vity to take over the rest of the trac- tion lines for New York whether it Mkes it or not, the Governor has not been so plain spoken, se In the confidence of the Chiet Dxecutive is his intention to foist upon the} 1 the old lines which have been to the se he ‘The of the traction system, ve Governor says himself, he will leave to the Transit Commission. ‘Phere is a good deal to be left to the ‘Transit Commission; in fact, it will dominate the ontire New York City transit situation, but the bill which is to create it will undoubtedly de- scribe the powers with which it ls to be clothed. MILLER’S APPOINTMENTS THUS FAR PURELY POLITICAL. Gov, Miller said in his first message to the Legislature that he believed in the man being fitted for the job, rather than the job being inegsured to. he man, But he told the Republican women who met here later on that he believed that spolls belonged to the yietor and that in point of patron- Republicans should come first, at he has carried out thiv principle, needs only to look over his ap- pointments up to date, to discover, ‘There are men here In his own party who are wondering whotiier he will name the commission, providing the vill goes through both Houses, with- out consulting the wi. 5 of Koenig. “Alphabetical” Kraacke (at present) out of a fob), Livingston, In his talk with spondents on tho ov. Miller said that n incident, a mere eae, he Swuaey and Cal the legislative coi Bridgman letter, he considered fare Incident. In his traction said that the commission should have the power to increas decrease the fare pending a hearing on the transit aftuation. The Lockwood resolution, broaden- ing the powers the. Lockwood which comes up consideration In. the dy been doomed to} emuscul, coy by the 8 of both» Houses, Housing Committee for to-morrow Senate. h go through dition to 3 + Pinanelal ¢ mmitte Speaker Machold, who has succeeded the Czardom of former Speaker Sweet, has turned thumbs down up- the resolution, backed by the rweful advice of “Boss George Glynn. Mr. yon gives the impres aap ¢ Governor's spokes: deride the suggestion that! | THE ie EVENING W ORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1921, LL ene le er Maligned New York Is an Honest Town; Burglars, ‘Bankers, Bowery, Broadway Put to Test and Only One Succumbs “And he’s leaving ¢ bowery clean “Eureka! Eureka! my mission is at an end tt" ASTISTANTTO DIOGENGS ~ VAWE FROMTH BOWERY SAYS - “Dont be so careless with your money young man! ! gt fee re iF dollar’? K AT LAST DIOGENES FINDS AN HONEST MAN! NOT ONLY ONE -BUTA SCORE OF THEM - RIONT HERE IN NEW YORK! Evening World Artist and Re- porter Throw Temptation in Way of People You Meet Every Day, andthe Lure of “Lost” Money Fails to Ex- cite Dishonest Cupidity. ApYICE FROM ny dollar . THE GANKER- “ WHADDYA KNOW! AN HONEST LAwyER! “Sure tts ~ theres ‘m Initials on f Are New Yorkers hon Around the village stove in Cow Hollow, up-State, the answer is neg- ative, “Tur'ble peeple,” says ®ilas Perl- winkle, And to look at the front page of the papers the reader might gather that police officials, revenue agents and the tity in general have gone to the bowwows, so far as’ honesty is concerned. But they're all wrong, according to the results of an expedition by an ar- tist and a reporter for Tue Evening World. Habitues of the Bowery, cops, law- yers, ordinary folk, and even bur- Slars, are as honest as honest can be. They won't take a dollar that doesn't belong to them, not even when the dollar is dropped at their feet. On the contrary, they either) point to the dollar in question or pick it up and give it ack. The investigators started on th Third Avenue L, armed with a dol- lar wrapped in a handkerchief. ‘The game was to pull out the handker- chief with a flourish, dropping the dollar, and then to see what hap- pened. It was dark on the L train where the first experiment took place. | The wandering berry shot across the aisle—and stayed there. No one even “Little Mother of Poor’? Celebrates 90th Birthday _At Dance and Reception on Staten Island, seventeen she was married to Patrick Sarroll and moved for a time to Canada, although later they settled in Bayonne, N. J., where*their ten children were raised. “I used to work very hard indeed in those days," explained Mrs. Carroll. “There was a great deal of cooking and sewing to be done, though [ had one of the very first sewing machines that came out, and thought it a won- derful thing.” All the six now living have pros- When she was Mrs. Mary Carroll Who At- tends Church Daily, Greets Many Visitors and Advises Young People to Marry, In a little red brick house at No 101 King Street, on the outskirts of the Greenwich Village section, was celebrated yesterday the ninetieth ; pered. One of them, Michael, owns a nobiced it: Aten @: Xow minutes {hel sisindey of Mea May Carroll, better | Giint wien ce Ge Hudson Terminal artist, who wan gettitg nervous! known to huddreds of the neighbors | Building. John owns the hare thot picked it up and gave it to the re- porter, The second attempt took place in the famous emporium of one Louis, right on the Bowery, The dollar slid under the brass rail. “Dropped sumpin’."" A man picked it up and handed it back to the reporter, Then he intro- duced himself as “Jew Jake” Silver, the man who had lost a diamond ring. Some one was leaving the Bowery, declared, and was taking “Jew Jake's” mond ring with him, Wasn't that his mother and sister, Hattie, have lived in ever since 1870, He and an- ntrick, are wealth} still attends St. An- {as the “Little Mother of the Poor.” The actual party was Saturday night, with dancing and refreshments | by the glx children and their families and friends. But all yesterday Mrs. Carroll received visitors who wished the littie lady in the Big chair many happy retarns of th day, Carroll thony's Church every day, and while not quite strong enough to visit the poor as in years gone by, is at home to any who may need aid or assist- ance, iy advice to young people is to Mrs. Carroll came to America with y—and here's my blessing to you, her parents at the age of three, and | my dear," was the parting advice of wus brought up by an uncle and aunt “Phe Little Mother of the Poor.” ‘|GOMPERS SPEAKS AT door, the artist in his wake, The nex! limit? stop was at a hotel. The dollar la porter and artist offered consola-| for several minutes in the lobby until CIVIC CONFERENCE tions and offered to set up the celery |# bellboy picked {t up, looked at it tonic with the dollar, Nothing doing.|a4nd asked the porter he had dit. The reporter admittes ed like one he had had one keted “Tow Jake vagrant rin; epeated the story of the which was goon to do- of War en Industry and i pock rt from the Bowery in the hands of . ( trol of Trade Agree- fame one else, and then set up the At the corne Sixth Ay ntrol Mf Trade Agre celery tonics himself, ‘The newspaper Bh eee wan at Peerage aa , Ments Discussed. a aseineth cope a tecnes ey picke up. looked at} eres ees Bh yi Delon ee Na atatiod oe | Alto: Parker, sohn Mays Han Replacing the dollar in the hand-| “Hey,” cried the reporter, — jmonmd, Daniel Willard, President of t kerchiof, they went to that rad old ne It belong to you?” asked the! Raltimores & Ollo, «Gilbert 11 f justice — Essex jarket | man. } 7 tague und Joseph H. Choate jr seus ies lobby, where the push-| “No. It belongs to my firm,” ro- | \S# Mi J cart peddlers were waiting to be|plied the reporter, i ea ui brought before Judge Nolan, the dol-| “How do you know?" ; Federa lar whizzed from the handkerchlef, was the thrilling climax {8 President “propped some dough, ain't It," 6 hame on jt," said the on Sen- marked one, pointing to the dollar, ays write my naz 1, man He was effusively thanked if I have CUES . oe on Hous: In the front of the court om there right over the signa- y ak were two men waiting to be tricd, perelary of the ‘Treas, ey at a el “Burg-u-lars,"” whispered some one, me of the raporter eid bu jomaper Phe ‘ou must be finder ter asserted President nd u chance, Who would sight of money quicker Out came Here was leap at the than a couple of burglars? the Ren OK unde the dollar. It remained there for ai- be his . most a minute before any one spled naan, Vi E it, The burglars may have seen it, at but they didn't attempt to pick it up! |lawyers, conn A lawyer spied it, picked it up, looked hon ae at it, and then handed {t back to the durin reporte regards The trick was not tried in the fin- |the tulle ar pe ger print room, where tho finger-|looked like mbery ai ef trate agracinents and of tole print man nd 'the court reporters | Darwalutng That would have een Lon ngerous: some one would surely | ENDS CARE OF ORPHANS. | sayy ste Wrote -tiyian Masterpieces! ve borrowed it, In fact, the two bing himsel I. representatives of The Evening |Patherless Children of ey ° a World were exhorted to try it and Winding Up Affatrs. Hy Ave ae see what happened, rvation wi e Thence Ww the sandwich-shop of 81 Pole Goede one Gus, another east side land- hee phase Leva mark. Here the proprietor himself AP nat Me came to the rescue and the dollar Into headquarters and went back into the handkerchier. It was no use. The cast side was hopelessly honest, so the Investigato: started for the gilded part of tow alighting at the Grand Central, In front of one of the yew on the upper level the dh i dropped. A prosperous-iooking yen- tleman, probably the President of some bank, apled it Immediately, “Here, young man, you dropped your You won't ever have you are as careless of {t as nut 1 Mrs 536 Park New York ¢ at end Presider Cofer of No. n of th Its Teland Ay mittee | wort ore Sinshes Her Sweetheart’ Face. 1990 Ni corked up | wa i in Avs van, of his being Chairma: of tue Republican State Committee, ore ooo eg «porter blushed as only a re- can blush, and dashed for the of ihe | hog. ¢ e “ACE OF ACES,” WHO BROUGHT DOWN 44 AGE OF ACES HERE TO TEACH LATEST FLYING METHODS Lieut. Nungesser Brought Down 44 German Planes— ‘Has 39 Decorations, Lieut. Charies Nungesser, world's premier war aviator, on whose head the German Government placed a price of 600,000 marks during the war, 18 a visitor in New York to-day. He arrived on the French liner La France, and after a month's stay hore wil go to Washington for a confereneg on aviation with Govern- ment officials, As modest’ as ho is d’atinguished, Lieut, Nungessor refused to speak of his war exploits when interviewed to-day at the Chatham Hotel, He is on a two-years’ leave from the French Army and will try to interest the United States Government in a plan for the training of advanced pupils in aviation at his flying school at Orley, France. He plans to teach American Army students the latest advances made in aviation and the operation of the most modern typo of fighting machines, Lieut. Nungesser is a Legtonnatre of Honor and an |dol of France, due to his exploits in bringing down forty- four German flyers, His favorite plane, marked wit his “fetich,” a skull and crossbones, was used in seventy-four convbats, in twenty-one of which he brought an enemy plane down in flames, Besides his official record of forty-four German planes shot down he has an unofficial Jat of forty others which he forced to the earth. ] The ace of aces, as Lieut. Nungesser | is known in France, has thirty-nine decorations, which include most of the highest honors in the gift of each of the natibns allied in the war, His breast is emblazoned with the Cross of the Legion of Honor, the Military Medal, the British Military Cross, the American Distinguished Service Cross and many othe: The Lieutenant is a suave, blond man of twenty-nine, with sharp blue eyes, corn-colored hair and smooth face, He is staying at the Chatham| Hotel, with the Marquis de Charette, | his interpreter and friend, who is a| grandnephow of James K. Polk, a President of the United States, The Marquis said Lieut Nungesser was carrying around with him a small mine of platinum, His lower jaw is neutly fixed up with the metal, tho LIEUT. NUNGESSER. 88 AUTOS AND DINNERS LED MOTHER OF 8 TOSCORN HUSBAND So Fialkoff, “Poor, Sues Wealthy Mr. Middleman for $50,000: Damages. Jacob Flalkoff to-day caused the aerest by Sheriff Knott of Isaac Mid- dieman, of N 00 Broad: in an action in which he seeks to recover $50,000 for the alleged allenation of artistic repair work being the result| tis wife, the mother of his eight} of one of four bud wounds he ge-|children, Supreme Court Justice ceived in the head. He reeeived thir-] Mord ordered the arrest, Middleman teen other wounds in battle, some of 000 bond, them requiring platinum braces,| Midd = wealthy contractor, bridges, splints and so forth in his|lving apart from his wife. He is fect, legs, thighs und other parts of| fifty-five. Mrs, Betty Flalkotf, whose | affections he is alleged to have lure his body. ‘This 18 his first trip to Now York, | {rom her husband, is fitty years of The Aero Club of America is planning | ase, and the mother of ¢hildren many honors for bim, and he may|ranging from twenty-elght- years also do some lecturing. petites See U. S. FLYERS GREET BRITISH ADMIRAL down to ten She was married to Fialkoff thirty years Flalkoff affirment in his affidavit that his wedded life was very happy until, as he telly it: “Some eight months ago a great change came over my wife, She held herself aloof {rom me and [ could not understand.” | As thexe were conditions that had never prevailed before and as T was utterly ung punt for them, I asked her what was the matter, Dirigible and Three Seaplanes Escort Admiral Sir Lewis Bayly to East River Pier, The United Fruit liner Toloa, bring-| ing Admiral Sir Lewis Buyly to this! ple toa SIN TEN! (SAMO) (OF 6 | "She would walk away from me sis yee alan pie ie and treat me in a contemptuous der h e en British-American naval Off the) Manner. Ih came as rage ae Irish const, was escorted to her besth| !@ me when I learned from other in the Hust River, at the foot of Maiden| Sources that my wife was very fre- Lane, to-day by an alr convoy, There! quently ing UL. on automabife were the big dirizible C-10 and three! rides, to restaurants and to places of yatta ot Lib Commenter ec amusement with Middelman, My Rockaway Naval "Nir Statlor Ad-| wife's own confided to me that | mniral Bayly "wa in command of Gest! inig comlition had been going On fo some time.” ! It Women Seg Their Duty — | Will Soon Be a Reality DLICEMAN KILLED BY AUTO, TAKEN FOR BANONT BY DRIER Man Held Admits Putting on More Speed When He Saw Dark Form in Street. Visit to Soldier Hospitals Will Disclose Deplorable Con- ditions There. NEED OF HOME URGENT. Demand for Good Care Should Assure Fund, Says Lilia Bell. By Lilian Bell. It often simplitios the matter of a score of claims upon my time toahic myself, “What is my immediate duty?" If New York women should ask me what their immediate duty was to the wounded soldiers I would answe: “Two things. Organize to raise money for Aserican Legion Service House No. 1, and go to Fox Hills with home oooked dainties for the 1,200 bed patients. Six hundred more are there since we gave $6,000 to wounded+ ex-service men in that hospital, at Chrigtmas, note counting the dis charges, which must be taking place in bunches by the way they come to us, so that the number who have en- teréd there since the first of typ yaar are all new to the place, and if you could see, that hovpital, you would know how much they need you.” ‘That is your Immediate duty. And listen to @ little advice from one who has had experience there, Take your dainties to the boys yourself. Give them the things that remind them of home, Put a glass of jelly on the table by each boy's bed. Don't baby or pet them. Don’t sit on their beds and hold their hands; and above all-things, don't kiss them. It makes me sick to gee elderly women kissing wounded soldiers and pretending they do it because they feel like a mother to them. Rats! You old women who kias sol- diers do it because you like It, You needn't think they do, They hate it, and talk about you behind your back for doing it, Be sensible! Wounded soldiers are not bables or sick kit- tens, and don't want to be treated as such. 7 hit a man. y Sit in chairs at the side of their] Eckert collapsed when.sbown Sheri- beds and tell them jokes and sporting | dan's body at the Bath Beach Police, news that you get from your own| Station. He was taken to the Di: grown sons and daughters, trict Attorney's office and will The home atmosphere {is what|rraigned in the Coney Island Court. wounded boys like, Sheridan, who was forty-five years SOME OF THE THINGS THEY'’LL| °!d and attaghed to the Bath Beach DO AT A.L. SERVICE HOUSE Station, had been in the Police De+ NO. 1. partment 19 years. During the B. R, Tn our new American Legion Ser-)T. strike lust summer he boarded vice House No. 1 we aro going to do| and stopped a wild subway train fn some wonderful things. the 62d Street Bath Beach eut after I told you about the dormitory for| the motorman had been stoned by transients, to which the stray soldiers} strikers, , picked up on the street can be sent| The dead policeman, who lived at to be cleaned up, warmed and fed.) No. 636 61st Street, Bropklyn, tm ‘sur? Won't that ve grand? vived by his widow and four children! Just in one day—the Ith af Febru-| Henry C, Willy, seventeen, of No. ary, 1921—I have heard of seventeen 740 Main Street, New Rochelle, died such waifs—seventeen wounded sol-|!n the New R@thelle Hospital yester- diera for whom no place could be| day afternoon of a fractured’ skull, ioe Oot nee. erat OR af fe Sustained when the limousine on the ervico Hour were only 5| sunning board of which he was rid- nd these boxe could by sent to, us) te aiowlbed ai tholley Sanaa now! Think of such lads, after a bath and| forced his h through the window of the door, the absence of the & good meal, being shown into the I+ brary, where an open fire burned. 5 Watch their eyes when we draw the| OWRer of the car Willy and Raymond curtains and light the lamps under| Fraser started the car and the acci- their pretty shades, ‘That is Creed dent happened. Fraser was held, of mother touch soldiers love—the| w. G, Rawlings, w Rock- straightening of books, the emptying 4 i Detynfing, of cigar trays, the folding of newa-| Ville Centre, was killed on Merricic papers, the tidying up of the room, | Road last night when the car he was Now, another thing I'm going to|driving hit one driven by Guy Davia hav REK, And that ls a grand-|of Seaford, L. L, and tured over. mother's “eookle jar.” It will hold a] Hig son, W. La Raw barrel of cookies if necessary, but! gon ved wun, Rawlings. “nineteeds every boy will be free to cat all he @ shaking up, and William Duncan of Rockville Centre Was rendered unconscious, but res vived and went home, Mrs, Davis and her five-year-old daughter, El: can hold, It will e wonderful, t think, to have these homeless boys who were with Davis, suffe: bit suffered slight fl their pockets just before they Ko up to bed. And to east_home made) cookies will cure them of the coffe: Rich Plumes Fly To Revenue Net As Barber Slips habit, As it is now, almost every boy T know drinks strong coffee late at night, and drinks lots of it, toe. Birds of Paradise Feathers Worth $21,500 Found On Ship’s Tonsorial Artist. Paul Eekert, a guest at the Hotel Maryland, No. 104 West, 49th Street, was arrested early to-day om @ charge of homicide in connection with the death of Patroimiin John @, Shoridan, who was struck by an auto~ mobile Cropsey. Avenue and Stryker Street, Brooklyn, shortly after midnight. ‘ Sheridan was riding south on Crop- sey Avenue on his bicycle when, ac cording to witnesses, he signalled the automobile driver to stop. The order was ignored and the automobile struck him, dragging him twenty-five fect. His bicycle was smashed and the top of his bead was taken off, Sheridan, left in a ‘pool of muddy water, died before an antbulance arrived. » Pedestrians were unable to get the llcense number of the automobile, but Detective Murphy later found am abafdoned car answering its descrip> Yon at*Ovington and Sixth Streets, Brooklyn. In it were some of: Eckert's cards. © Bekert, arrested in bed, admitted, the police said, that returning from)! Coney Island early to-day, he saw = dark form approaching bis car im the middie of the strest. He declared hé thought he was about to be held so put on more speed. He. sald. felt a jar, but did not know he at pooketfull of grandmother's sugar Kies just before you go upstairs? boys? w, people, the money for all this mfort and happiness is not coming 18 shud hoped. What |s the matter with you? Do you want the disgrace of the homeless condition of our wounded to stick to New York? Won't you pin a bill to a letter and send it in? at's start. something! end contributions World vice Soldiers. in or a check Do! to House for ning Wounded How about 9 glass of milk and a ireraft met the When Fialkeff jaid this Information flying signals of w ee panpurtelie British ral and lett before his wife it wl af Rear Ad: i Sims wa firma; “That it was immaterial to moet him Dest Bras Hause mt Lewtw wae her what 1 thought; that she loved niece, Mina” V the defendant, that he had given her te Anetenlig He aie aluuble presents and had promised inelsco and the Panama Canal o marry her as soon as a divorce Be ponrdan the Totes, makin could be obtained, and that he had Through Admiral Sims's invita ugreed tu take care of our children, ( Who saw submarine then suggested a double divorce vice with hii, tte went Meine tes ington this afternoon, to. ba ; vinits wid will return to.thi H © said I waa only, 4 poor man dinner in his honor by 130 att He| and ‘aarwot uy alle. ahnult will then spend e time with Ad- | thd 1 wen | ‘ital Shins at Newport hot uccept the attentions o J0- | * Jfendant, who ja 4 man of wealth and| MUST BE TRIED FOR | wouta maintain her in a better wt KILLING FRIEND | (ir), - WAGE REDUCTION | ON ERIE PROHIBITED, Prosecutor Hart, Howeve Borgstede Shot Walter | Accidentally Public Prosecutor A. C. Uart of ter | Us 5. Labor I Or No gen County J A to Hay a Cl Ur Hearing cepted ua fuct the story told b A fatally shot Walter “ CINCAGO, Fob, 41 | | bo Hourd tn a dockdon a vad to managen | putting int astle salary reduces nurs of work, how to hundic A revolvure Hormaeds| ine oxtrtine ' i the nema mort time weo neat Hicks] tions before the boast has an appe ner A revonver Aad de: | tuntt ur the wane. The } ee anes he sheotinet 7 nploye ee nt t 1 posurred } | attempted fo red ssa; bt track ta i h t i's toa Ms " \ t Nuction ut. Uh ye { petty eared it Dovembe, wae day, “ | Harry Felerstein, ehtp's barber of the Old North State, United States Mall Line, arriving to-day from Lon- don, pasyed rapidly through the gate of the pler past Customs Inspectors FONDLE ME,” SHE WARBLED Youth Tried to at Her Word—Cop Won't you fonate an Abraham Kleln and Kinanuel Reimerg on oh stage at the oes Tr when he slipped on an orange peel. res sine, ome i Fi “Gee, what u close shav mur- ropkiya: lest nig ida itn | MUred Pelerstein, as Klein ani - wits, aged sixteen, aa wiht ARCA Shane gue fing rs helped him up. able to resin hy : “But you're hurt!" exclaimed the |inepectors, “You're all ewelled up!+ “No, I'm all might, answered Vieres stein, as he attempted to pass on, + “But you're all swelled up!” the ind Onno screamed, and Spe tried to arrest th realated, and th ‘Aw, lay off—let y Patrolman Sims of the Bed-! spectors exclaimed again and@ unbute Avenue Station arrested Wolfwits. | Fi ‘4 4 Muslstrate: Geismar in ths Stony jerestein’s cout. They found, laze rt to-day paroled the youth |they reported, packages fastened custody of « prob tigation and sent on officer for ‘on Wednes, | 220ut him containing $21,500 of Birds of Paradise plumes on which no duty shad been paid Fierestein was held at the Customs House, for Rabies” « oe World, | atiieeeiatte » bd, Me The nor bible —iterally {Me Me Fe SY Read Ce at the Churas of sti Joun the Haptist | Alemander Rel, i No. 2005 Atlan: eo | tle Avenue, Brooklyn, a laborer em uid | ployed by the B. R. P., was killed [morning by u Brighton Beach su aturted to eresa Beach 5 train b vuw'ge hud an easy Uae when he Wecks at the Brighton a eeranertn cenit é FOE PLANES, HERE, Legion Service House No.1 © 4 "| 4 | | * , ee Se ee ee \ ~~ en eres a ae