Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STAN ATED TE WM, re Goody Koonts, Re- ‘West Virginia, Oh Urless you stop it,” said ‘Welty said he had pre- his case “without malice’ and geen that he had no other wit- committee indicated a willing- to hear Senator Dial, Democrat, Caroling, who has filed com- against Judge Landis with the of Justice because of the ‘s remarks in the case of the wa, Ill, bank clerk accused of jem HUGHES MAY BASE FOREIGN POLY ON PRESENT TREATY , Washington* Studies His Sug- gestions for Changes and Reservations, that he ald not 'thiok sue" Wat's JOHNSON PRAISES HIM. charges had been substantiated.” ‘The Committee then adjourned. said It probably oS prmwng Jone, Chief of Bitter-Enders Says er ewer a ) wished (0 egies Is Not * lod to be heard at that time ; Unsatisfactory. of the Committes Phd Precwent pel that the chargts be By David Lawrence. Spe a ee ee (Special Correspondent ef The Eve- BOAT THEFT IS LAID eee eeu WASHINGTON, Feb. al (Copyright, TO HOOCH MARINES 1931)—sonator iiram Jonneon, one of Police Think Liquor Smugglers ‘% leaders of the so-called “Irrecon- “Borrowed” cable” group which hag opposed the ety Tobey me | ratification of the Paris treaty In any form, as well an the entrance of the tumboat Joseph J. Thompson of Tey York and Newark Tugboat United States in the present League ‘Company was stolen carly to-day from Of Nations, said to-day that the ap- “toothpick” dock, at the foot of Hudson pointment of Charles Evans Hughes Jereey City. The watchman had as Secretary of State in the Harding Gone away for a few minutes and when Cabinet was not at all displeasing to there was no trace of me im. “The appointment of Mr. Hughes,” vn their saurtiine remarked the California Senator in a & general alarm, t#lk with the writer to-day, “Is by no Up enough steam Means unsatisfactory to me. I was experienced man to get It away not one of the group who opposed the the absence of the watchman, appointment. As to internatiorm! pol- Staten ae Pretend rag erties icles, I understand that Mr. Hughes y a les jn one of his early talks with Mr. wank of Pier, 1.3% Harding endorsed the tentative policy diacet, ponte ses which Mr, Harding hag*had in mind . for-foreign affairs, See EN ey ska to Mtr, Heghes personally, 1 now be is an independent minded man. I liked particularly the way the denounced those Republicans who expelled the Socialists from the New York State Legislature. I tiked also | GET 5 DAYS IN JAIL Daughter Goes to Workhouse With bet Lareiptrny Miia edidecn a Parent After Refusing $50 Fine | aten ts vo much under attack, Acts for Shoplifting. like these In the face of the Republi- can bosses show that Mr. Hughes has ‘a mind of his own.” HUGHES RESPONDED TO A CALL ‘Mrs. Sadie Hender, thirty-four, SNAEDENY EA”. 3504 Daceechin nwa 1ONS IN FRONT OF THs PUBLIC LIBRARY COVERED worm SNOW . Bovs FIND IT A Fine PLACE TO FROG cific reservations, or by negotiating an entirely new treaty with Germany is the particular problem which Mr. Harding has asked Mr. Hughes to solve. What Hughes says will be done. President-elect Harding believer that & man who came within a few elec- tora) votes of being elected President of the United States and a man who haa held a position on the Supreme Court of the United States will be trusted by American public opinion, no matter what his conclusions may be after studying the facts. During the campaign Mr. Harding expressed broad principles and did not attempt a formula. Mr. Hughes will endeavor to work out a detailed formula, and whether it squares ab- solutely with the utterances of the campaign is not going to worry Mr. Harding #0 long as it docs square with the plank in the Republican tionad platform, written by ihu Root, which committed the party to “an agreement” covering substan- tially the same general objects as were, from the Republican view- j Hushes was reluctant to leave the Supreme Court of the United States to engage in @ political campaign and he was, of course, not anxious to go inte the Cabinet, which in a sense means & resumption of political bur- dens, for on no question Is there just ow such bitter feeling and sharp di- vision of opinion as on foreign policy. Entirely apart from Mr. Hughes's exceptional qualifications and pres- Lge, the selection of Mr. Hughes has another significance that may not be immediately apparent, but which will be revealed after: Mr. Hughes has ‘been in office a short time, Mr. Hughes thinks in straight lines. He will endeavor to meet the pledges which the Republican Party gave at Chicago, but he will work out a for- eign policy in his own way, ‘The fact that Senator Johnson of California is pleased with the selec- tion of Mr. Hughes does not mean that the new Secretary of State has said something or is committed’ to some policy which is pleasing to the irreconcilable group in the Senate, On the contrary, an examination of Mr. Hughes's utterances on foreign policy shows that he has maintained a certain Mexibility of viewpoint which will come in handy when the many on Typhus—More Cases of Skeping Sickness, Ton new cases of sleeping sickness ‘Were reported pentenieg. and to-day. Of ax patient, a negror'irem he indies, was transferred from the Horine Ho: tal on Staten Island to the POLICE LI tal near Hell Gate, EUTENANTS DINNER Mayor Hylan to Be Among Speakers at Sad Annaal Gatherin: ‘The twenty-second annual dinner of “ng 3. oie Mesctieengar de goagpy aa Oe factions of the Republican party start Commodore. Among the speakers will| PUlling and hauling for their own fe Mayor Hylan, Governor Edwards cf| theories, Here, for instance, are the New Jersey, Potice Commissioner in-| main points which Mr. Hughes made Gen. Robert L. Bullard. Rear Ad-| on the covenant indicating the condi- taba Satta: SSP Se. Tahit| tions upon which he might favor the lormer’ Secretary = State Hugo | entrance of the United States into the present League of Nations: fe Father Francis P. Dut 1—Omitting the guarantee in on the dale will be Gen, George +. ‘Wingate, Chief Magistrate Will » the Rev, Luther Wily Jon) Mmodore BR. P. Forshew and Frederick | Article 10, . fe Owen, About 1,600 invitations $—Suitable limitation as to the have ‘been sent out. Z field of the League's inquiries and BARS VISITORS TO DEBS. action so as to leave no doubt a that the internal concerns of Sastneass wi states such as immigration and tariff laws are not embraced. 4—Provision that no foreign power shall acquire by conquest, purchase, or in any other way, any possession on the American Attack He Made o) WASHINGTON, Feb. 21.—D. 8. Dick- ‘rson, Superintendent of Federal Pri ons, to-day said the privilege of seeing iditore had been withdrawn . trom continent or the islands adjacent : thereto, Baugene V. Debs, Socialist leader con- ‘t—Providion that the settle- fined in Atlanta Penitentiary. ‘This stop was the result of a state. int Debs issued attacking President iison at the time the President r gn ‘4 recommendation for Debs’ pa: Dickerson Th ment of purely American ques- tons shall be remitted primarily to the American nations, and that Buropean nations shall not inter- rary for pepe Per | vene unless requested to do so by it was to the effect that it was| the American nations, dent Wilson who should be « can- S—Provision that no member date for pardon, — <> TWO VANISH IN EXPLOSION, w Goes Up. BRADFORD, Pa., Feb. 21—-One man was blown to pieces and another ts thought to have suffered the same (ate hen & magerine containing 200 qua: aiomiyesrine exploded at the pla: the le Powder Compas, at ttle Ha rg Run, near Derrick eatly to-day. is of the company believe the of the League shall be constituted & mandatory without its consent and no European or Aslatic power opel be constituted a mandatory of any American people. 6—Pxplicit provision that una- nimous agreement or decision ts required. —Provision that any member of the League may withdraw at its pleasure on a specified notice. MAY MAKE TREATY BASIS OF NEGOTIATION. Mr. Hughes has inclined toward the view that there was @ substantial on victims were robbers trying to force an | basis in the treaty of Versailles which ‘a nto the plant ify Order to ates! | could be utilized in nexotigting new understanding with rope Peteons tring. at pastes Gtr were | whether that amount of good in the INTERNATIONAL. Boys Revel on Snowclad Library Lions; | Father and Son on Skis in Warren Street STORH CAUSES | 12 DEATHS AND -—INWURY TO MANY | Woman Killed by B. R. T. Subway Train When She Falls From Platform. ‘The storm was résponsibie for twelve deaths, and caused many minor ac- cidents in which a number of persons | Were injured, | Barly to-day Oswald Stampfer, fifty- five, No, 270 Bast 123d Street, col- lapsed on reaching the 724 Street and Broadway station of the subway and died froth exhaustion before an am- bulance arrived trom Knickerbocker Hospital. R Arthur M. Krewer, sixty-five, a clothitg cutter of No. 175 Herkimer was leaving a B. R. T. train at the Park Row end of the Brooklyn Bridge at 8 o'clock to-day. Dr. Hayken of the Emergency Hospital staff, said |death was apparently due to heart failure, which might have been ren- dered acwf@iby the unsual crush on the trainuend platform, due to the storm. . Frank Mareno, a driver for Gold- berg’s dairy, Glendale, Queens, started out in his milk wagon this morning. When the horse came back without wagon or driver, Frank Mareno jr., and others started out over the miss- ing man's milk route, They found the wagon overturned on Metropoli- tan Avenue near Continental Avenue, Mareno was unconscious under it. He had been pinned down and could not free himself when a drift turned the wagon over, Finally the horse kicked itself free and went to the barn. Mareno was taken to the dairy office and died there. Exposure geused’ death, Local service on the Fourth Ave- |nue subway of the B. R. T. was tied up an hour and twenty minutes when Mrs. Julia Aamodt, fifty, of No. 89 Beth Street, Brooklyn, was run over and instantly killed by @ train at the Prospect Avenue station, accordigg to Street, Brooklyn, dropped dead as he | ah WADE BY JERSEY MOTOR OFFIGAL Demands Names of Cops Who Arrested Colyer and 'Wants Them Disciplined. ‘ Motor Vehicle Commissioner Dill of New Jersey sent letters to-day to Chief Magistrate MaAdoo and Magis- trates Cobb and House of the Trac \Court, demanding that he be furnished ‘with the names of the policemen re- #ponsible for the arrest and confine- ment In a cell of Douglas 8. Colyer of No. 230 Grant Avenue, Nutley, N. J. Mr. Colyer was arrested at 42d Street and Broadway last Saturday for violation of the rules. regarding REPRSAL THREAT ADS INYONKERS. MAY BRING CLASH WH ORY AGENTS Snag for Anti-Saloon League - Seen in Working Indepen- dent of Government. If the Anti-Saloon League persists in its determination to work inde- pendently of the Government in ob- taining evidence of Volstead Law violations in Yonkers, it is ilkely to run Into a snag which the law itself provides fof just suoh things. Wayne B, Wheeler, counsel to the League, «| recently organized 1,000 minute men to enforce the law in Ynokers, the theory evidently being either that the Government was lax in enforce~ parking. According to the Commissioner the arrest and confinememt of Mr, Colyer ment or that the job in question ‘was too big for it. So certain cite , zens were ‘banded together and it ia | Former Ambassador to Mexico Of- fered Post of Under Secretary of State. WASHINGTON, Feb. 21 (Ass0- ING CITY. Officials of the big milk companies declared there was no indication of a tie-up of the milk supply. Milk trains Followed Man She Claimed @S the edge of the platform. Common Law Husband and Shooting Resulted. (Special to The Evening World.) ciated Press),—Henry P. Fletcher, |#F@ from four to five hours late, but] BUIIALO, N. Y., Feb. 21.—Grace former American Ambassador to ® ample supply, of milk is reaching | collins, twenty-three, of No. 437 68th Mexico, is to be Under Secretary of | the city and 80 far there has been| street, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, is dying State in the Harding Administration. |° interruption in deliveries to con-|jn st, Mary's Hospital, Niagara The tender of the position to Mr. Fletcher, who is here after spending considerable time in Florida with the President-elect, was made through neceptance of the position offered him is sald to be planned by Mr. Fletcher immediately. According to information here, Mr. Hardine had Mr, Pletcher in mind for service in some diplomatic ca- pacity, and in selecting him for Un- der Secretary of State consulted Mr, Fletcher's wishes, There have bech reports that Mr, Fletcher might be named Ambassador to Tokio. Mr. Fletohber, who is a Pennsyl- vanian, has been in the diplomatic TRACTORS AND MEN CLEAR CITY STREETS to combat, as it did not drift in the conduits and interfere with the oper- ation of cars, The company mas- tered the storm with eighty swespers, sorapers and wing-cara which it kept schedule though sefvice In the sub- Subways in Brooklyn also were run- ning on almost normal schedules. Through service on the Sea Beach line, which had been halted by snow that piled up in the open eut, was resumed this afternoon. ‘The B, R, 'T. reported that the only trouble it was having now was on the West End Mne, which is running only as far as Bay Parkway, with a shuttle operat- jon and ‘windows treaty can best be retuined by ratify @ radius were | Of m few miles. | ing the pact with a new set of epe~ ~ sumers. The NeW York, New Haven and Hartford reported only two trains late. They were Boston to New York the Electrical Division of the New York Central, reported that line op- erating in “first class condition." The Long Island Railroad nounced this afternoon that service would be close to normal in the rush hours this evening and that none of its patrons would be obliged to stay overnight in Manhattan, “Our roads have been all cleaned | up,” suid an official, “and not a train| is stalled, The only possible diffi- an- was keeping at normal, it was re- ported at the Pennsylvania Station, | the wectern trains arriving only a few minu'es late, ‘The storn: broke Jocal records for “speed snowing.” Not in twenty years had so much snow fallen in so With the exception of a few sieam trains on the Staten Island Rapid ‘Transit Railroad ali traffic was tied up and only a third of the 25,000 reg- ular commuters were able to reach famine, Deputy Street Cleaning Commis- using fourteen of the new tractors Willis Avenue, Third Avenue, Melrose Avenue and crosstown streets on which there are car lines were fairly well cleared early to-day and trafile was almost normal, _ KILLS SELF WITH STRYCHNINE. Coroner Robert Johns of Westchester County was called to the Eagle Hotel in Poekskill yosterday to investigate the | death of a x who registered aa "D. Baer” of Bos committed suicide an le M tor ley ways was somewhat abno: i abnormal a8 @ | sioner James Brown had 2,000 men at| Fesult of the large overflow crowda | Aon” james umn | tha i that usually use the surface tines, |YO'K Clearing streets in the Bronx, t t baby brother and sis to whom she own mother being dead, were rendered semiconscious by kitohen of their home, No. 601 18th Street and Ninth Avwmue early to-day Street, Brooklyn. Allexed Ridgefield Park, N. J., Policeman, Cy Oberson and Willam Gleason were Governor Falls, from the effects of two bullet wounds, Police are holding Charles lespie, twenty-eight, a New York Central detective, in connection with Charles. E. Hughes, whose selection | ‘ins, each arriving two hours be- | the shooting. Gilleapie is a former ae Secretary of State was announced | "Ind schedule this morning. member of the 22d Infantry and Saturday by Mr, Harding. Form)| G H. Wilkins, Superintendent of| served at Fort Hamilton The Collins girl came here yester- day and claimed Gillespie to be her common had lived together four years in New York City, that he had written her endearing law husband, saying they She demanded why tt was tters after his recent marriage to azie Burns of this city. Angry words passed between the couple und four shots were fired. Two ok effect on Miss Collins, one bul- t is in the left shoulder and an- other in her left breast, oe service for many years, serving un-|CU/tY may arise from a slight short- der the Wilson “Administration unui |age of men” 3 CHILDREN NEAR DEATH. recently, when he resigned. Service on the Pennsylvania lines| wpittte Mother” and Her Are Overcome by Gai Ida Kosetti, sixteen years old, and her . John and May, “little mother", their Fas to-day in the TWO ON TRIAL FOR MURDER. Men Shot and Killed on the night of Sept. 7 lust they shot and killed Patrolman W1 Ridgefield P An attempt was made to have the trial delayed, or u foreign jury brought in, because of alleged prejudice against Patrick Henry Maley # assisting hor husband as coun: se! for Gleason, he defendants. Mrs. ALBANY, Feb, jons of William D, um Ritter at nomina- Cunningham of Ellenville and John D, Corwin, for- mer Mayor of Newburgh, as Judges | jj of the Court of Claims, will be sent! to the Senate to-night for confirma- | As the |front car of the train, slowing up, was a short distance from her, and as she neared the edge of the plat- that were stolen. for an/hour in the West 47th Strect| understood that private detectives Station, when bis bail was reduced | wii) be employed to get evidence. from $600 to $100, was a violation of! when any cases which are thus dug the agreement between the New York! up come into the Federal courts the and New Jersey, regarding violations | snag will appear. Title No, 2, Section of the Motor Law, which provides| no, 2 of the Federal National Prow that New Jersey motorists shall be/ nwition Act, reade in part: served with summonses just like New] “The Gommissioner of Internal Rewe Yorkers. enue, his assistants, agents and tm. Mr. Dill said to-day that if the/spectors shail investigate and roporg, names were not furnished to him) violations of this act to the United with satisfactory evidence that the/states Attorney for the district in pelicemen concerned had been prop-| which committed, who is herdy erly disciplined, he would cancel the | charged with the duty of prosecuting agreement and instruct the New Jer-} the offenders.” sey police and automobile inspectors! No provision is made here for thre to arrest and lock wp, pending triad, | gathering of evidence, swearing out at oll New Yorkers who violute the} complaints and making of arrests by New Jersey automobile ordinances. | private agencies. Recently there wae >». REWARD OFFERED 4 case before the Fedral authorities, Drought by a private detective FOR MAIL BANDITS | s¢excy, which sought to have a man | tried for violation of the Volstead — la This case was dropped and there was no prosecution because the complaints had not come from, the proper source and the arrest had not been made by proper authorities, The police have been co-operating with the prohibition agents in making arrests and in conducting prosecu- tions. ‘The reason the Government authorities have honored police com- | plaints is because poticemen, like pro- he regulary No Trace Found of the Robbers | Who Took More Than $1,- 000,000 in Toledo, TOLEDO, O., Feb. 21.—1t was report- ed to-day that the loot in last week's mail robbery at the Toledo Post Office amounted to more than $1,000,000. point, wrongly phrased by the Dem- lice, ag a direct result of the| Post Office inspectors said, hibition agents, are em= FOR SERVICE, coratie Administration, | ney eae *Jamount was much higher than expert: | ployed as law enforcement officers Generally speaking, men at the ni when ‘ | = 3 ed.” Unofficial estimates of the amount , and have a permanent tenure of their onal enttrusiaem or not for Mr.|Gourt of the United States may be WARREN STREET! Faldian of No. 415 &4th Street, Brook. |"* Cer $400.00 and $500,000, $21,000,000 MORE va - 000, Sndgban were Gratkc to aaralt tak te | hin ce No. Federal .authorities to-day offered a Treepling’ hs sesetteilo-at' SbCeNtarY r jlya, entered Ns staton just ae reward of $1,000 for ¢he arrest of each ASKED BY FRANCE her . (three-car southbound train was pull: | of the five bandits who took part in - Sevigny ae cine minors rat rn bs at Be on pee roaieas pd AID west to cast winds | BAY RIDGE WOMAN ing in. The edge of the platform Bl tie robvery. So far no arrests have ——- 5 } wervie for but a few feet fromthe ticket booth, |teen made, and: police intimate they | (> tions Strong, thirty-two, of No. 107 West! the Republican party and the country. HUGH ee ¢ . i pacer ay io abi omc) x DYING FROM SHOT and Mrs. Aamodt preceded her bus-|Tiave found. little to help them in a| CO! a Additional Credit af, $300,» Everybody here knows that Mr. PLR GuneLy Ge WILK REACH- —-= bund and Faldian and walked toward |solutron of the robbery. No trace has 000,000 in April, 1919, been found of the eleven sacks of mail Treasury Reports. WASHINGTON, Feb. 31 — The France had askeed and received an ad~ ditional credit of $300,000,000 from the CARRIED HOOCH i fell to the “ neaks, hte torwand whpile oe: the IN COAT POCKETS | rewired totes cn ser, itis first car passed over her body, which See clary Committee to-day by Nicholsa became wedged in the rear truck of|Two Men Arrested in Subway Keller, Assistant Becre athe the that car, Are azury, In charge of foreign loans. John McAvoy, fifty-five, who livea| Found "i ei ith Five ranve desired this sum, (Kattey at the Bowery lodging house No. 258 iarts of Ii. aaid, to cover outstanding commitmen Bowery, was found dead jast night When Mark Siooum and Giovanni to the United States and Great Britain, in a snowdrift by John Purcell, a truckman, in front of the latter's of- fice at No, 38 Spruce Street. It 18 be- lieved the man had been shovelling snow in the vicinity. Returning to his home late Satur- day night, William Fink, forty-six, fell exhausted and died in front of his home on Fourth Street, Midiand Beach, 8. I. Snow hid the body until yesterday afternoon, when a so John, uncovered it while clearing a path. a Disregarding the advice of rela- tives and friends, Miss Anna Bailey, sixty-five, of No. 101 Washington Street, Jamaica, insisted upon going in the storm to St. Monica's Catholic |Church, at Jamaica, yesterday morn- ing. She was scarcely in her pew before she was seized with an attack of heart disease and was dead before James Wallace of Sterling, Conh., blinded by snow in crossing 86:1 | Street, at Lexington Avenue, was | wtruck by a taxi, At the Itallan Ho pital it was said he possibly had in- } ternal injuries and a fractured skull, | Mrs, Julia Long, forty-eight, No. 8001-2 West Sist Street, slipped on the Ice on the “L" stairs at soth jand broke her left acm short & time, Zen inches waa the!” no cofres pot in which Ide was| Galatino Flores, twenty-one, f record for the first twelve hours. brewing the amorning beverage, boiled S#ilor from the steamer Soral, was When the stare came out about 10/ over and extinguished the flame of the| removed to Bellevue Hospital with laat night there had been two inches! gx stove. She failed to turn the lever | frome feet. ——— added, In the 1888 blizzard it took| and In a little while all three were over- | ; Saas twenty-four hours to produce 16% | come BROOKLYN GETS MORE GAS. (Continued From #irst Page.) ui ‘They were discovered by Mra. Mary — - —_ a Inches, The Weather Bureau said Benaring, whe yes PBs fear Ne Kings County Co. Reports Ability en ve. Dr ‘arbough of t Methodist 6~ company, sald the damp and adhe- LC hector a tae ware: for: Sh copal, “Hompital” revived. ‘the. trio aiid to Install New Service, , sive quality of the snow mado it easy nk | see med to have been side-|jeft them In Mrs. Benarino's care Peace was signed to-day in the long fight by residents of the Borough Park section of Brooklyn to get gas service from the Kings County Lighting Com- pany. ‘Through a long pariod the com- pany was unable to supply all applic eants and there were many complaints to_the Public Service Commission, operating throughout the storm, paay the , eee: ; ‘ placed on tril before Supreme Court| "To-day the company reported that by Gangs worked oJ) night and to-day Ree iat hag CORFE UERGE TT iiloa G) We. Warkér“inr Harkennac the installation of 10,891 feet of ma clearing up the tracks. sh eit . the discomforts ie a coal|te@#y On 4 charge of murder. It is| Sr plant capacity, : Subway and elevated lines ran on ne SD . & coal) aueged that following a drunken row|and. 1,899 now imeters, ervice had been made equal to the demand, — - ‘| COAL PLANT BURNED. Six Buildings in Newark Destroyed; In $100,000, The plant of the international Coal Products Company, with the exception of the office, at No. 150 Shaw Avenue, Newark, N. J., was destroyed py fire to-day, the loss being. estimated at $100,000. The fire, the cause af which is unknown, started In the engine soon, and in ap hour had consumed six build: 5, Joal briquettes w the plant. Th two other pla manufactur: company has mines and at an . Ing to Bay 0th Street. It is hoped | bY @rinking Fok ge lle a vente ott" | tion, Gove Miller announced to-day, adn Went, Virathie, to send the trains through to Coney | Ss yy old. | Judge Cunningham's nomination Is a| id pointment, and Mr. Corwin will Price of Crade OM Cat Again, Inland by night y Charles Morschauser of! PprPTSRURGH, Feb. 21.—The prin- The New York weather forecast for | .,ROCHEST! - | Poughkeepsie, whose (erm has ¢x-! cna: purchasing companies to-day the next thirty-#tx hours is for in- | watohed other por 1? — [announced a further, reduction rang- creas cloudin th rh oma. | themrelves out of 0" bank. day y ing from to 50 cents in the price sahil dindes with rising tom: | rene es out Or a and the sun was! Feiner domn's Siraitibe dora Of crude oll. The price, of Penn peratures, probably followed by rain glining brightly to-day, | yeanedd tor “all wwe fasuly, crude was reduced 60 cents to G&36. . “~ ‘ 4 Mr. Kelley sald France wanted §63,- Viorilla got on a subway train at Spri 000,000 to cover British claims against and Lafayette Streets this morn|; & 3 ®\the french government, but decided bottle protruded "from the coast pocket | iater that only $18,000,000 was neces- of one of them. Directly across the car| sary. The od tes had advanced sat t Serry & f the Fede the $18,000,000, | & a credit of $50.— ARSRESBATTY ale 08 7 tn 000,000, from which France is seeking narcotic squad. Sals says a search re- vealed the two men had five quarts of whiskey in their pockets. ‘They were held in $500 bail east, py United States Commissioner Hitchcock, A truck containing some empty bi rels and two filled with whiskey, ac to obtain $21,000,000, DIVORCE FOR LOUNSBURY. Justice Cobalan Grants Decree to A. BE. F. Man. cording to Polleeman Henry J, Platt A decree of divorces was granted toe was seized at Kast End Avenue and| ’®y by Justice Cohalan to George. L. 88th Street. Frank Frontaivio and Vito| Lounsbury, who went overseas as a Dunbre, in change of the truck, were| Private after serving with the Seventy- held in'$500 bail each first New York Infantry on the Mexican —_- border, against Mrs. Kathryn Louns- i bury. Mes, Barrett Andrews G Final ‘The case had been held over for « Decree. week by the jlustice to wive « Barton c \c Thayer of Baltimore, named by Loune- Supreme Court Justi © Young in Gog ie legals Ahi Oppertinnite to aan White Plains to-day signed a final de-| thy Charkes against Mimeelt cane ane cree of divorce in favor of Mrs. Hannah hich was based D. Andrews, prominent in Bronxville soolety, against her husband, Col. Bar- rett Andrews of Manhattan, “Three months ago an interlocutory decree | bury was granted by Justice Seeger, upon] ®t” report of a referee. The deer fows | 1917, not provide for any alimony border. ——=— NEW YORK. Announce the opening of a Tea Room 508 Fifth Ave. at 42nd St. New York an exclusive rendezvous for Luncheon and Afternoon Tea { { } 4