The evening world. Newspaper, February 24, 1921, Page 3

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P*O. K. ON NIGHT FLYING. Ree CONEY FLIES ACROSS U. 8 IN 22 HOURS, 32 MINUTES; MAIL PLANE DOES IT IN 25, i Army Aviator ies at Jack- sonville From San Diego With New Time Record. Mail From Pacific Coast De- livered in New York in 33 Hours, Elapsed Time. JACKSONVILLE, Flu, Feb. 24.— Léout, W. D. Concy, who started from | Leave Field, Dallas, Tex., at 10.14 cen- tral time last night on the last lap of his ocean-to-ocuin flight, ¢ | Bescten 4 ius ‘gouahon shear sore a NEWPORT, R. 1, Feb. of.—Mre. t | Herbert Melyilte Harriman, it became o'clock this morning | known to-day, has filed suit for di- Tlie flying time from Dallas {o|vorce from her milltonaire husband, Jacksonville, as figured by Lieut. S.| cousin of the late E. H. Harriman, ©, Baton, in charge of affairs at this | the railroad magnate, in the Superior end of the fight, was eight hours and thirteen minutes, Mgr the entire flight from San Diego, a distance of 2,079 miles, twenty-two hours and thirty-two minutes, an average of more than 98 miles an hour. These figures are unofficial. If they stand, according to Lieut. Baton they will set up a new record for actual time between the Pacifi and Atlantic oceans, To compicte his trip from the Pacific to the Atlantic, Licut. Concy passed over the city on his arrival and dipped down to scrape the land “img wheels of bis plane on the beach, then swooped up again and went to the landing field. With the excep two hours, NENPORT STIRRED WITH DIVORCE SUIT OF MRS, HARRIMAN Husband, a Millionaire, Is Cousin of the Late Rail- road Magnate. a 1 to Tho Evening World.’ Court in this city. ‘The petition for divorce was esaled, so that the grounds upon which it ts asked are not yet known. Tbe case will come into court within about ten days. News of this action on Mrs, Har- riman’s part has come as a surprise to the fashionable society in which os Harriman THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY Mrs. Hoover Opens ‘Heart of Gold’ || for Starving Children of Europe anager of the Vault, a4, 1991. 2D FOR EU ROOF Se ST ARMING.CHL ORE Mrs. Herbert Hoover and W. B.| Heart ef Gold” yesterday. Sheppard, Assistant Secretary of the ‘The huge emblem, bedeoked with tional Bank and General | little American flags, contained hun- opening "The |dreds of gifts, from pennies to a $100 |check, for the Child Feeding Fund of the European Relief Council. total amounted to $57,000. The she and her husband have moved for so many years, But this surprise is no greater than the fact that the petition was sealed, an unusual thing in this State. This is the second time that Harriman has ‘been dn the divorce court as she divorced her second husband, Major Charles Spencer Hall, a retired British Army officer, Mrs. When Will These Prices COME: DOWN Tremendous Profits Still Being Exacted From People for Most Simple of Well-Known the flight from Ds © Jacksonville |in Newport in 1906. was made in darkness | Mrs. Harriman was Miss Mae Not until 1 was over Mobile, Ala.,|Brady, the beautiful daughter of Household did I sce a light,” Coney said ufter|Judge Joho R Brady of New York, bis arrival. At times, he added, he|@nd a great belle in the ‘80's. Her Investigation ‘by. The. Elvening~ made a Speed of 160 miles an hour, | first husband, who died in 1895, leav-] orig into the prices charged by but that the ayer speed the (ng ber a great fortune, was C. Rob-| yetaii druggists for household rip Was approximately 100 miles un ott Stevens of the distinguished fum-| remedies used to cure colds, hour, Fo Eee ean eee oKen Nine | Soushs, headaches and minor ills As news of his arrival spread! greater part of her life abroad un-| reveals unbeard-of profits, In @rowds fiocked (0 the landing Cicld.| ti 1902, when she returned to this} order to determine just who Is ves and His and seores of Brunswick rela frionds overwhelmed Lhe officer. country as the wife of Major Hall. They went to live at Newport, and profiteering, the prices charged by the wholesale Remedies. galer $1.40 per 100 The customer is charged @ pound by the retailer. Calomel costs the $1.63 a pound. He se tie at 10 cents a di tablets, He can make 4 the sale, Codliver oil costs saler $35 per barrel the etail drugeist from that pound—at 10 co There are 2 pounds. 20 cents cathul in one-grain 63 sales nts per whole- there the Major's eccentricities were | the producer or i mother, Mr. E. F. Coney, and three| the amusement of the colony, He} druggist, as well as the retailers Pints in uw barrel. The retail drug- M fais gist sells it for $1.20 a pint. Profit brothors were here to welcome him. , used to sit for hours on the veranda| gost, are quoted. bre * i of the Newport house knitting and Ny te et barrel, oF Over FL ap ink, If official sanction can be obtained, | Shiproidering, After one Saaanh ‘the ‘Take, for instance, the old-fash- The retailer buys cream of tar- Lieut. Coney plans to make the re- Halls seiled for England, saying they | toned remedy, castor oil, This | tar for 65 cents a pound, The cur. turn trip from ksonville to San inteaded living permanently in Lon-| costs the wholesale druggist a Secure ao eles ec Diego, Cul, by daylight, with one stop on Hut in the winter of 1906 Mrs.) fraction more thin seven-tenths Menthol costs the wholesaler at a Toaas point efucling ; eel *| of a cent an ounce. You pay the | $4.40 4 pound, It is seldom used in and shortly afterward instituted pro- form, but: off — ceedings for divorce. This was grant-| cashier in the drug store 20 cents its original form, but Is very effi- rear ie bo GA her in, Desenber, ‘e0T on thel|| torm-twes-ounge, Bottle cacious in inhalers. It can, how- From f an to) to ee Mai toe Dostana hod dauieall! toeewe: i 6 ever, be purchased in its crude threshold of New York ance.of| to provide for her. You have a beadache and “isk form at 1 cent a grain. Don't 2,486 miles—in thirty-three hours and| In August, 1908 she was married | {oF @uinine. Tho druggist wilt sell | forget there are eraibe tn) 8 wenty minutes is the seeord which t¢ Herbert Melville Harriman, son of | ' you a b poun¢ Oliven Varios and to era] grain. ‘The wholesaler sells it for Rochelle salts costs the whole- the Alr Service of the United States eee ear eal Matituten ro. | $473 an ounce there are 480 Saler 29 cents a pound, and the Mail has hung up for all the tecdings for divoree against Nee in| grains in an ounce, Figure it out retailer disposes of it to the cus- a " “ei ot for yourself! tomer at 10 cents an ounce. He sone 910, a ry ar wi ‘ue ne the Mic. eee eae me The producer charges — the could get $1.20-if he chose to sell . Ne Mr. Harriman was at one time a| Wholesaler 48 cents a pound for | @ pound! 00 pounde mai! delivered Yester-| teudiag wolfer in this country. having | powdered rhubarb. ‘Tho retailer Cascara sells. for cents a afte na hurst FP won the amateur championship of | buys it for $1.50, and sells it for pound to the wholesaler, who, l Parenti ir durs| America at Chicago in 1899. Ho aiso| $5 cents an ounce. A pound of the | turn, sells it to the retailer for 35 a be ie dur-' (von the metropolitan championship| Stuff would net the druggist $4.20. cents a pound. The customer buys ing the c ont : hak wear The druggist sells aspirin at 20 it in two-ounce form for 35 cent only twenty-five hou Ho was twice married, his first| Cents for_one dozen five-grain This makes a pound of cascara Saint It was rushed castward at) Wife being Miss Isabelle Hunnewell,| t#blets. There are more than cost $2.16. : ae ; Of Boston, who divorced him in| 100 dozen five-grain aspirin tab- The retail druggist for yea ag of 10% miles an hour. 1006. At one time he was a railroad | lets contained in a pound, The | sold double-distilled witch ha What the achievement demon-| clerk at $15 a week in the Union| Wholesale druggist pays the pro- for 25 centa a pint and less. He rivated chiefly was the practicability) Pa offices at Omaha, huving gone| ducer 62 cents a pound for his now charges you b0 cents. fying even under adverse to the job a@ letter of introdu product. a | (WHEN WILL THESE PRICES Met lust from Cheveane,) Hon from I. H. Harriman, who wrote Epsom salty costs the whole- ME DOWN? . s ; 4 ei ne. of him: “If he can't earn his salary, | Nicago made by Pilot Jack’ discharge him." He remained on the Knight wes made not only at night) Joo ter four monthe and returned ts [SUBPOENAS FOR 5 GIRL BIGAMIST MUST but through snowstorms which were, New York in April, 1905, 80 ah xa b i mL ey, every summer at the Newport -—— wurd flyers helpless ul Chicago, Al-| home, the Pines, in Clay Street. In er cf though Knight had never before been| the winter their residence is at No. Alleged That Organization Is Paying | Condition Imposed by the Court over this route, he went up un-|183 Bast 56th Street, == Commission of 50 Per Cent. in Return for a Suspended daunted by the prospect of bad|~ - F ers. Sentence, weather in the upper str and/ land to Hazelhurst in three hours and to Get Menvbers. Sentence i ; forty-seven minutes. Fourteen min-| Foliowing complaints that the activi-| Mrs. Anta Barney, seventeon years made the run in amazingly swift) wes atuer he had landed Willlam C.|tieg of the Liberty League of Amerlca,|oM, after she had pleated § time: Thrice alighted for fuel and} Hopson, who brought one of the of the iateenty: Ue 5 : | Obs ae ou ad pleaded guilty to exchange of mail and was off again| transcontinental pouches, landed with | NO 90 Park Tlace, are irregular, alt jgamy bfore Judge Mulqueen in Gen- Caen Ot ma ee ihe 1e00.| six other pouelies of mail from Cleve. |Poenes were tasued io-day by Acting | erela Bossions to-day, was allowed to ke the wine land and Chicago, He had continued| District Attorney H. Banton for tive! go free on a suspended sentence on her mile flight in thirteen and a halt). aight begun in th tter city at| persons alleged to be organtbers of the promise she would return to live woth hour: 7.08 A. M. (Central t that morn-| league, which has for {ts purpose, it Isp her first husband, William Ba Before the accomplishme of ing, bringing along one Cd the San| said. the “fighting of ti awe 540 West Sth Street, who mu " ¥ a} 8 t Francisco pouches to guard against a ‘The basis of the cony is that the | in pef beha terday, which Is eons d ‘the | possible ‘ nt to one of the planes} , “4 ie ts : at t a ‘ nits Momentous step in civil aviation, the} breaking continuity of the deliv. ag ls employing lo 8 weording to Miss Mule! Spragu ihe 1 ° areas ° contributions on a 50 nt. comm: the Probation Officer, the Barneys w: shortest time for delivery of mail] ery, : ; betweeen the Atlantic and the Paci: Sach had braved snow storms be- | son. married June 21, 1920, and parted after i Se aeene cura, made by | tween Cleveland and Bellefonte, Pa.,| ‘The persons summoned and asked to) a quarrel lust tall No ws Se act | Which completely obscured their] bring the books of the League are I A friend of Mra. Barney, Mew. Joss combination of alrplane and f4st) vision, and the seven @acks of mail| Bennet, No. 61 Broadwa member of | phine Voght of No. 708 Eleventh Ave- mail train | arrived In New York at the General] tne law firm of Nicoll, Anable, F nue, settled the $25 bill of Archibald As & result of the record flight the | Post-Office after being transferred to} ang C. Cratt, formesty | Lee, an ripr dacctator By acing ~.Post Oflce Department has an-|a train at Mineola, at ©1° PM. nee | oe the Just him $3 in cash and promising to find nounced on May 1 night flying) Jot have been had they been sent | Preside al Survey Cc ‘a nice wife for him.” She introduced ‘ill bo regularity established along | py the speediest route pany ow; Harold | Mrs. Barney, Miss Sprague said, ax lor the New York-San Francisco route —-— Riper, a 149 Broadway sister, a war iwidow who wax eng R ore 110 Will | re r ail will “be: delivered between RK pomarry and mai) willbe: delivered betwen! SQ AIRMAIL PILOTS, [siren as anne Adsiy & Boortarst. | “te and Aire Barney weve ms b 2° MANY PLANES IN USE; law reporter, No. 141 Broadway Jam. last and lived hap toge re aaure ~—o- untit Lee learned that Barney Was not In establishing this new record, the | Oana ne ee meds toutsane| HAS COST 26 LIVES |pog BITES COP IN BOOTH. | oo. _ nals, becwuse on Tuesday last Capt. = . 7 Chad Ant 4 cight William E, Lewis was killed in > tail] Since May, 1918, Postal Planes teemen chases Animal pie WARNING | IN CAR ACCIDENTS. spin at Elko Ney. He was one of the Have Covered 1,600,000 raacabee| aie al St. Bernard, | BFO"x ddme May Have te Restore alr service pilots on lis way to the Miles, entered a police booth on the Bowery Condactors Kast from San Prancisct ay | Coney Island, this morning while Po-| Deputy Public Service Commissioner The new mail record was established WASHINGTON, Feb, 24 ticeman Cornelius O'Neill was telephon- | Halley declared to-duy there when Ernest M. Allison, aerial mail | WENTY-SIX men have been | ing, ‘The larger dog attacked him when | 47 further accidents in the operation carrier, landed his De Hayiland Four Killed in the Air Mail Sef- | he tried to drive them out Jof one-man trolley cars of the ‘Third at Hagelhurst Field at 4.50 o'clock vies eince it was inaugur- O'Neill chased the canine eight |Avenue Railway Company in the Bronx with six pouches of mali which bad sed’ tn Ske ta ne blocks, Policeman Charles Sheehan|be will consider orderiag the company a ae oat the CE at Miley ated in May, 1918, Superintendent | joining in the pursuit, and at Neptune | to restore a conductor on the rear plat- © 16 Di ¢| Staunton announced to-day. Dur- | and Mermaid Avenues O'Neill abot and | {OTM 6 one-man cars were intro- He bad completed the last lap Of] ing the same period, the postal led 4 The lies +g | duced during the war as 4 labor saving the first transcontinental delivery of 5 killed the dog. ne policeman's | emergency. thirty-| Planes have covered 1,600,000 miles. | wounds were treated at Coney Island r. Halley held a public hearing in mail solely by airplanes, begun thirty-| Pl hk red 1,600,000 mit i dwt Ci Isl Te ee, RantiC. Bearing three hours and twenty minutes The list of fatalities Included | Hoxpitul and he weot home . In which’ two pleas iot fire pyparatua earlipr. and in the successful comple-| eighteen pilots, six mechanics, two —— iene: Genioliniad aud savaral’ Heenan tion’ of which seven aviators had| of whom wem killed on the | Ht Je APPTOVes B1,500.000 for New! injured so severcly they are still in given their best services and nearly] groitnd, one division superintend York-San Vrane Ale Mail. Lincoln Edward A. faher « dozen plancs had becn used to| ent, and onc clark, who met death WASHINGTON, Feb, 4.—The Houne | dts Vine a al Mor brave snow and rain and dar during an unauthorlacd joy rte belies ces Hivad sie laeian <atoe ieaanne | Renee Compuny, declared © the mountains. and pleins and Between fifty and sixty pillow | ment’s i D techanisnt of the one-man care was ents appropriation of $1,500,000 for| not ut fauit, ‘Transit inopectors testi that tHe record might be made. and 350 mechanics are employed the New York-San Francisco airplane | fied the cars violated the “fire sie ssielr Cigre- im operating the als nail, rule ia (ores out of gx jocks made. F. J. GOULD ANSWERS FORMER WIFE’S SUIT a Record of the Decree of Divorce Granted Him in Paris. ) Kelly Gould admitted maritally’ with one Mario Casassus, according the record of the Civil Tribunal of Versailles which granted a divorce decree to Frank Jay Gould on April 16, 1919. A trangeript of the reo. ord of this court, translated into Eng has just been filed with the answer of Mr. Gould to the sult for separation brought against him by his wife here The court record embodied in the answer Files Mrs. B lish reads, in part: ‘Whereus, the spouses Gould are both of Amertean nationality—-the buaband by birth and the wife in consequence of marriage; and their cause should therefore be Judged uc- cording to the laws of their coun- try with regard to divorce: “Whereas, the laws of the State of New York presarthe divorve as the proper return for certain im- proper act Therefore, we pronounce the im- mediate divorce between the spouses Gould and in favor of the husband. and sentence Mrs, Gould to all the costs taxed in favor of Multro Legrand, solicitor.” Presiding Judge Osment de Courtis any and Judges Bisson and Huchard ndings of the court Mrs. nied, on uuppedl, steed in papers ‘that she Nad be misconduct, but the decree was ue UNION NEEDED CASH, NO STRIKE IS CALLED “ENGROSSED” HE DELVES INTO RANSIT PROBLEM Stops Work Long Enough to Express His Sympathy for Gov. Miller. SILENT ON HIS) PLANS, No Comment When Asked What Phase of the Car Situ- ation He Is Looking Into, Having hours a has puzzled New York City experts for generations, Senator Hiram W, John- son of California, Mayor Hylan’s im- ported special counsel in the city’s fight against the new traction bills, to-day stopped work in Corporation Counsel O'Brien's office mastered in twenty-four transit situation that long enough to express deep sympathy for his op ponent, Gov. Milter “L quite sympathize with (ov. Mile ler, author of the transit bills," sald the Senator, Senator Johnson's condolences over Gov, Miller's troubles were ex, Ppreased when he was told that the Governor would not appear either tn the Senate or in the Assembly in be- half of his traction measures, “{ shouldn't think he would appear in behalf of bills such as they are,” said Senator Johnson, The Senator announced yesterday that although had arrived from Washington the night before he had a full grasp of the transit situation. To-day, deepite the fact that he had evidently “mastered the situation’ yesterday, the Senator admitted that he was “deeply engrossed studying the situation.” Whether he had found the dust sub- way contracts, the Manhattan elevated first cousinship to that system and the thousand and one phases of the sur- face car sys Was not quite as sim. ple as the Japanese question in Call- fornia or stampeding a Republican Convention could note learned. But the fact remains that Senator Johnson, who yesterday had the traction riddle worked out on his-fingertips, is to-day “engrossed.” “Can't you-tell is what particular phase of the (ransit problem you arc delving into? # raporter “There were so many you know “We won't go into that.” the ator replied “Tan't there he sked. Son- a likelihood of entering a protest aguinst pearing in this State the ground that you have some one your ap- A lawyer on no lioense as to practise here?” was i “Don't worry ubout that.’ Mr. Johnson. “I beg of you worry about the situation at At this point Mayor Hylan's special counsel forgot, that he was "“en- grossed” and began an attack on that part of the preas he is not sate isfled with “The masters of some of the owners of the local newspapers, the corporate interests, insint that they oppose me," he suid. “If 1 wore the livery of these masters how they would receive me and favor me with kind words, Service Fours Pane Fund for Ben- efit of Disabled Soldiers Can Thus Be Aided by American Legion Members Anxious to, Help Their Buddies. By Lilidn Bell, ‘The more I work with the American Legion the better I tke tts members. I wish the whole world would know what the American Legion stands for its principles, aimm, scape of work and plans for the future. Capt. Hugh Robertson, Assistant State Commander, spoke at the Har lem Post Monday evening and told of the legislation that the American Le- gion has succeeded in having passed. It was simply wonderful. And I do love the spirit in which they work. ‘They have fights, of course, They are red blooded men, But they fight it out inside the Le- sion and not outside! . Anotver thing that L Jove avout the Legion is that It makes no distinction between the man who fought over= seas und man who lied and per- jured his very soul away trying to get overseas and into the thick of things, but had to stay on this side and feel | his heart break. If anything, the man who enlisted and sucrifiocd and gave up everything and stayed on this side, being useful in a humdrum way, has more of my sympathy than the man who was rushed overseas. L love # fight, ‘That's why 1 am so ety. for the boys who couldn't got into the big one. The American Le- gion fights shy of politics and poli- Ucians and is the most naturally | democratic body of men In existence anywhere on earth to-day, and Is by way of becoming, for these two rea- sons, the most powerful They feel the need Houses just as keenly w! this first one is started and is (n running order, they plan t start others, until every penniless, homeless boy is off the sireets and in one of our Service H of Service as | do, and, Now, the Legion is giving tts whole attention to disabled soldiers, and} while it may seem to outsiders that the work moves slowly, they are working with the ponderous machin ery of the Government, and when they et the legislation over which they are now urging, the case o the dis abled soldier will be settled as f would like wo have its mothers of dead soldiers would like to have it, 4 as mothers of the wounded now 1 hospitals, despair of every having it On Monday night Mra. Puret, Major Deogan, Capt Robertson, Léeut., Boll und I took in two posts and spoke at both Commander Robertson uel Moskowtcz called at The World Office to invite me, came in & taxt for me and we had a, royal welcome, Furthermore, we took up # collea- tion and | came, tr © with a check and Sam- for nearly fifty deliars Major ix one of the best speakers as and is ab- solutely feerless n I meetgmen like Major Deegan | think, “No wo der the Germans begged for an armistice We went next to MoNally Post, where they wer having a dance, MeNally Post was th first one, to} own its clubhour The € pear mad the nerve to stop a mont bewitching one-step and| Jet me ean appeal for funds tor our Service Ho They promised us a real collection! later, ‘To-night 1 am going out to Mount Vernon Post lo speak at the State Armory, | Want to warn them to jeave their money at home if they want to keep it, for the things I am going to, tell thom will pull it right Costumer Says This Was the Rea- can't understand this hysterlalout of their povkets, ae te 3 esi of some of the nowsp: aw. Why, Now, I am perfectly willing—in son Advanced to Him by TWO | ithe World and the ‘Times express in-| 4 flattered and delighted—to be Business Agents tense regret that [ am working atlasked to apeak at these American ess Ag all. But they ought not to worry| Legion Posts. But there is only one Albert Floersheimer of No. 159 Madi-|%o much about the situation, I re-lof me and only seven days in the won Aven head of a firm of cos-| pent, I’m una fo fathom thoir| week, so [ am not physically able to tumors, appeared. before Justice Br-| hysteriat Why are they opposed to| speak samowhere every night in ad langer In the Supreme Court to-day to] me? Are they against # man who is|/dition to planning this campalgn, ee cen eee eae oltrying to do some good? Liven iflurging people to get out and help me, oe # permanent injunction against the! toy “believe I can do no good forl|getting Jobs for penniless boys who Hlermational Ladies’ Garment Workers’) the people of this city. I certainly] throng my oMce, talking my Wana | Union raining it or it# members| cannot do any harm, ‘That's quitelout over the telephone, rashing from interfering with his business.| obvious. ‘The new pers are simply|uround in taxis looking at possible | Argument was postponed until neat] mad over the fact that | am here ervice Houses and trying to m Monday It's beyond me.” ber that 1 ma lady when ings Floersheimer, hia papers, says that| Senator Johnson refused to discuss 1 enough to swe j on Feb. 1 last. Sigmund Haiman and] 4 report that ho was agninst the ap 9 thi t five or six Sumuel B. Shenker, busmess weente of| Paintment of Herbert Hoover tw ther, Get me big audi-{ Ang’ lw okie inauslrys. ipforneart President Harding's Cabinet enc Conserve omy — tim ond » industry. Informed ‘him strength and work up the collections vet GROIKG AAG Seen Gealess | before come. Spread the gospel of the International Union, 1|;CANNED FRUITS CUT | }rtore bei a sevvicn It youl inquired the purpose of the stril know! ‘Tell otth And help me, | was informed that It ‘was « TO NEAR HALF PRICE |i’ i yearned team work on | incrense the revenue of the unie the ottier aide, G n imitation ‘ nce ROOM) Le Rtkee,. weosilizeat san os ‘Re, [oF it here und show a little speed. in hich would, through the strike, pro-| California Packing Company “Re-| Of it Were and : cure additional members, each of whom ds : fae habe? ¥ 1 | would be rec to pay $17.50 for vises List Downward on Unsold | __ You set the people and 1} Shs membership bo There bein several pt se Roles al NA Aula pal pos, Sy ng several 1920 Outpu turn me loose before an audience thousand non-union workers, a consid . |with ready money and then you can erable increase in revenue might be] Unsold canned fruits of the 1930 | wort look: forward to from Ut source," pack, amounting to 27 per cent, of Call came to M Furst's t Floersheimer swears that, following|fornia’s production for just year, have take him at the 8, W.} this interview, despite t fact that| been marked down fro % nearly | House bald there were no matters in dispute 50 per cent. in according to un} “Mra. Furst, 1 can't get three ge con himself and his employees, the| announcement of the Califo mack. | meala a day on my compensation bab ae dl array Mane ra ‘orpat The low oe Niet, | And food fn trike wan in-his plant. He wi free tate} OES pill che ire no more union men, he says, op in. suKar ut home K anil | WOMAN FOILS PLAN | incttriaih Vai" Oa ET i orga a ay the cost of labor ny CO" ner 1 ‘ 16 1 TO BURN “L” STATION |." soinparison' oi tie veces a y OP atin uiirgrenh ae with the new revue that pears|boy picking oul “Margie” op the — havo be on er from $4.6 $3.10, apri-| piano with one finger, two other rs = cots 0. $1.80, cherries fro ‘ ae Wires Cut and O# Used on B. R. ‘thee Spanchoa from $iip| Dlaying checkers, ypme reading ana J athe 5 chbetrita tren $a 10e tg | all emoking. you would know what a T. Building at Futton Street $3.40 to $1.50, — | home they h Then ly comes down ana and Latayelte Avenue. | Pp N playa a little of his wonderful jazz) | APPEAL CONVICTION. sod. they 1 ' The Fire Marshal and police of . rouse themsiels r Br doy ure investiguting an| Hindmer's Cownset Also Saks dodge comm Jincendiary fire t damaged the Grane te Me Lenic Rane a W west-bound Mufayette Avenue sta- Francia M. Scott and Jomph &. Travs-| whe comes door aft ‘ tion of the Fulton Stn clevated | d#le Jr. counsel for David Lindner, No.) hour 7 6 re re on ople, if you could only « Line at midnight, The station has no| 134? 56th Street, 1 a contractor,| Ob, pe ‘ ; notice to-day that they fll i {ture the hoys who walk the ote ticket seller after 8 P.M, the pus-| fare "yee enimy Wat thes will apical | lehts because they have no homen| nengers who Ket on there paying on| grand karceny, and asked meanwhile gor |and no money, you would flood Thi | the train. leniency on the part of Judge Crain in] World with money for our Service x the Court of General ona House The police and firemen called by| The jury had recommended “extreme|— f woul the: tas : railway employee found kero-| clemency,’ and 4 nuimber of dealers In| on, rick eal : contractors’ suppl (letters to| Me, seno had been poured all over the| Judee i 1 | ease m i i floor of the washroom, and t the} Orear who ie com r 1 be Cares tt were vial ate P. de-| Realty Company, and found it more|The Evening Wor ervice House . in atte heavily mortgaged than had been rep-| Fund, or brought in person to me in ewox lke stalion, ecucoiod, st +o Bouy wd Mlacd Luustiung. Wanted: Mass ame B So People Can Hear of Pitiful Plight of "Herm f | the | number had been examined, WARNS INTERBORO TO GIVE SUBWAYS BETTER LIGHTING P, S. Engineer Reports 10 Per Cent, of 800 Lights In- ; spected Defective. ae As a result of recent duciccar of poor wubway lighting, Publie Service Commissioner Barrett will — to-day notify Frank Hedley, Preai- dent of the Interborough, warning: him that unless the lighting is fm proved a formal order will be im sued for certain specific changes. Investigation by R. H. Nexeeny | clectrical engineer of the commit nian, showed out of 800 lights ‘exe amined 10 per cent. were defective, Mr, Hedley retorted that Inter- borough reports showed only seven-tenths of 1 per cont, were _ defective, Engineer Nexsen reported fitele ering waa apparently due to the fact that trailer cars have only one ¥'* brush in contact with the rails, (Mess Steud of the two motor ears Davey and when contat is briishes become jomentarily leat. worn MORE IMMIGRANTS Cleansed of Vermin—Copeland . Praises Ship ‘Lines, A total of 450 immigrants were ex amined by Health Department officers ) at the Grand Central Station ahd the Barge Office tn the last twenty-fotr ” hours, of which 21 Were went to Willard Varker Honpital to bo rHdded of vermtin Commixsioner Copeland #aid he was ree ceiving splendid co-operation from tne steamatip companies, When the Aquie tania docked yesterday apecial cabins and medical forces were at the dispagal of officials in charge of typhus preven- tion. All the 1.340 cabin passengers of” Aquitania landed ufter 23¢e0¢ thelt! One hums? dred and forty4ive had been taken frame the steerage at Quarantine and seat. ta Hoffman Island. rm Disinfection of the 1,860 passengers the steamship Providence, which, with the San Giusto carrying 1,209% nore, has sbecn held at Quarenting fom: raat cacr oe GEuNg eine wind veoeeel a Now hep “B-day, wih a | oa PROBLEM ‘OF ‘OPTICS AT DIVORCE TRIAL Detective’s Evidence Differs Prowl Height of Window From Floor on of Room. Jacob 8. Hamberger, head of @ Brooklyn detective agency, ® witness for James Weir Hawkins In the Brooke? lyn Supreme Court to-day in Hawkinin sult for divorce, had a difficult time explaining things. It wag related that private deteg-~ tives, using @ ladder, entered the bed- room of Mrs. Hawkins at No, 263 East” i9th Street, Brooklyn, and found her with George Stimpsof, of Jameapouye Lt. Hamburger said he stood opposite the Jnoue and watched through the Window, the shades beng up. e used a field «! could see couple “only from the waist seat Cross examination bi the admis: sion that the window three feet: higher than the floor, And thus apro- lem in option arose. Asi vow he could be sure Aho aaw was’ hire, Hawhinal aie her mother, with whom she fis he said the mother was much and heavier, that the mother ts shorter and I It was then Brought out er. CIGARETTE. No cigarettehas — the same delicious flavor as Lucky Strike. Because Lucky Strike is the | Notice to Advertisers ‘pe eopy lease orden 2 Nica n be inserted only aa and in order Of re oo made by The World cust be reosiwd by vag | © mint necting of Stee Sunday World mad received by 1 P.M Th jg My sr Friday. Copy go Ae by The World must be received ar su Main Sheet cooy. " received by 4D ty io Yecqaire, Pla ter of mee ‘and positive 0 cone Ff Orders. 70h peoviiesl wbece. When. outitted Fann Glave unis Of Ams Character, whe FOUND INFESTED 21 of 450 Sent to Hospital to Ba A A SR CL 8 OL LE A AR A A CLE CCL LG LA

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