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\ ™~, . Great Crowd From Station and * Call for Reserves, | SHS STRANGER ON BUSY BUSY CORNER Fires Three Shots Shots, Mortally Wounding Murray Lewis Near Grand Central Station. FIGHTS A POLICEMAN. Hotel Commodore Cayses Florando Fargnalio of No. “Dante Place, Buffalo, on his way to Italy and apparently demented, shot | and mortally wounded Murray Lewis of No, 217 East 334 Street at Lex- ington Avenue and 424 Street at 11 o'clock to-day. The shots alarmed the guests of the Hotel Commodore and several Wife and Daughter of J. J. Davis, _Coming Secretary of Labo seh iy ENING WORLD, arb ANKER FAILED TOSEND MONEY 10 EUROPE, 1S CHARGE cap hnndgahied Suit Brought Against Private | Banker Ordered for Trial To-Morrow. j Justice Newburger, in the Supreme Court, called for trial to-day a suit brought on Nov. 23 by Joseph Bifar- ella against Henry C, Zhro, a private banker at Sixth Street and Third Avenue, for recovery of $2,000, with in- terest from Nov. 22, 1919, which sum, it is alleged, the plaintiff intrusted to Zaro on that date for transmission to Italy. It is charged Zaro, instead of immediately trammitting the money retained possession of it until the rate of exchange had declined to such an! extent as to Impose a lose of $1,250 on |, the plaintiff. Counsel for Zaro asked for an ad- fournmem pending the appointment rag eed “MONDAY, or OEY 28, 1921. Women’s Press Club Gives Veritable ‘‘Hill of Money’’ tor ‘the A.L People Are i Westen Up to Eve- ning World’s Campaign to Aid Homeless and Jobless} pai Wounded = Soldiers—To Gen, Lafayette Police Post, A. L., Belongs Honor ot Sending First Post Check ($100) to the Rapidly Growing Fund. ae By Lilian Bell. Saturday. was a good day for the Service House Fund, I came before two large audiences and got two chances to talk about my “blesseds,” and Both audiences gave me money for American Legion Service House No. 1. But before [I tel! you about it I want to thank Gen, Lafayette Polies Post. No, 460 for their cheek for $100, which got mixed up with maii I have . Service House} from a newspaper, Wut rrom the peop! thro zh & newspaper, 1 puld sca’ urtesy to my eubject, but galloped through it in five minutes and then oni a out into my present cam- oie lady snorted when I said I bad jothing on earth to do im this world but to champion the cause of wounded soldiers, L suppose she was thinking of he self, [ stopped short in my speech nd said, “Madam, that js literally true. | have no busband to fuss over, my only daughter | fe and happy at boarding Cire nd by in Pe work, and ive at one to wore for my ‘vlesweda® or am i no juat wish you could have heard that big audience applaud. When I finished the President, Mra. Margot Holt Dey, interrupted the programme to ask for a oollection. Mary Moore jumped up and enatched off her own hat and began to pass it. Others followed her example. Men offered. They threw the m! the table in front of me. It began pile up. One woman pressed a io Rid piece into my hand. “M luck plece.” she whispered, thrauge tears, I piled the greenbacks up until they made o hill of money, When counted JUDGE HOLDS COURT “eraing ¢ Ae | WN THEFT TRL WN [Sencar te DYING MAN'S ROOM Naina huael Asem by Rob-| ‘The average: age 64/0 bers Gives Testimony Propped Up in Bed. Judge Louis D. Gibbs to-day moved his division of the Bronx County Court to the sick room of Paoll Lamato, twenty-five, of No, 4470 Park Avefiue, Metropolitan Tobacco Company, 4582 Park Avenue, Feb, 19, of $8,300 In bonds and cash Lamato, who was the night watch- man of the tobacco company, is ii} by Assietant District Attorney Ed- ward J. Chapman. Tho Judge t principal witness for be] which a man is most efficient, State in the trial of Joseph Meyer, pain! 4 the variance in 1 . Meyer, an alleged second offender, ||} would seem to be almost ideal accused of the hold-up of Lamato!Gapinet officers,” Dr. Pink said and the robbery of the office of the | day in an interview with the Ut No. | Press. with « cancer and expected to ilve] portant Government post than mete” but a few days, Judge Gibbs was told | youthful enthusiadm, So Declares Dr. Eugii Ly man es After Stril n AV verage. nseenpeinind 4 Cabinet is 64 years, and this is * most {deal" as regards mental ¢ ficiency, according to Dr. Eugene Lyman Fisk, Medicat tor of the Life Extension Insti “While there can be no exaet | mula for determining . the oetgee ye a 3 and their occupations, fi rot At that age a man will have quired poise and sound §i through ripe experience, whieh vionsty is more desirable for ah At the same time the chance of him being pbysi- e-loally competent is very high,* upon instructed a court attendant to] According to Dr. Fisk, the of a commision to obtain evidence in hundred of them ran to the street. answered and only came to light yes-| it amounted to $350.18. Then golden- Central Terminal, so that the police ‘reserves from the , Italy, Justice Newburger, on repre- toni Lg ; x volced Mime, von Kienner 6 and Risds ah 3 bebo Increased by tun- sentation of Anthony La Gattuta,| ‘day. So, although the letter 48) omered to help me raise more. Mme. | Order autgmobiles to convey the jury,} man, under normal conditions, Bas” passengers from the Grand dated the 22%d—Washington’s Birth-| von Klenner ie President of the Opera| the Jawyers, the oourt clerk and | not attained the mental capacity tory the East b5lat Street Station were kept busy for an hour. Lewis was entering the United Cigar Store om the corner when Fargnalio stepped up and fired his revolver three times. One bullet entered Lewis's abdomen and two others went through his right arm. ‘Traffic Policeman Belloch! ran from the crossing and, knocking aside the revolver which Fargnatio was puint- ing at him, overpowered the man. The policeman took Lewis and the pr's- ener together to Bellevue Hospital id then returned with Fargnalio to East 51st Street station. Fargnalio talked incoherently at the station. He said he had noticed JAMES + MRS. ACER JANE EE CAMS AND IAB onere USpmes SHOWS BIG SURPLUS FOR TELEPHONE CO. City Official Reveals $18,000,000 Accumulation in Arguments on Emergency Increased Rates. pany tas accumulated an $18,000,000 surplus over cxraiehs since 1915 and Lewis eyeing him for some time and Was satisfied the only way to protect himeelf from highway robbery was to shoot. He had a number of stock certificates of doubtful value in his pocket which he exhibited as causing him to fear robbery, He had also papers showing he was ‘a member of the Grey Detective Agency in Buffalo and had applied for appointment as a Buffalo police- man. He has ‘been staying at Volk's Hotel at Third Avenue and 42d Street. ALERT COP HALTS LIQUOR ROBBERY Two Men Held iAfter Mysterious Actions Arouse ‘Suspicions of ‘Policeman on Beat. A man who busied himself at 4 o'clock this morning with looking searchingly up and down the street and then ap- parently reporting to two others who stood in the doorway of the ticensed wine and liquor establishment of Her- man Altman, No. 770 Columbus Ave- nue, was arrested by Patrolman Ford of the West 100th Street Station. The og in the doorway immediately made off, Ford pursued them along 98th Street, holding fast to his prisoner and firing four shots at the fugitives. Patrolman O'Brien came up on the ruf and caught one of the fugitives but the other got No kare ee decnrtuee themselves Anthony Nocorus of the Hotel, Park Row and Pearl street ena Antonio di Francisco, No, 2365 Loril- Place, the Bronx. When an inspection of the liquor premises was made it was found the foor had been jimmied and two barrels of whiskey trundled up to it, apparently in anticipation of a truck on which to load it, Both men demed having had anything, { to do with the mms. but Levine, West Sis Court, held them in $18.00 000 pall each on charge of burglary. A year ago nine barr were stolen from this sai EFFORT TO ADVANCE HOUSING LAW CASES U.S. Supreme Court Asked to Advance Date for Hearing Arguments. WASHINGTON, Feb. 28.—Advance- ment of the date for hearing arguments on the case which will determine the constitutionality of New York State housing laws passed to curb rent pront- me was asked of the Supreme Court to-day, The Court was asked to hear the case this week with « suit attacking the oonatitutionality of the District of Co- lumbia Act, creating a rent commission, The New York sult is brought. by the rcus Brown Holding Company, a rea) male concen which ‘lost its effort in lower courts to have the law aet aside, se tare oe “FLIGHT VICTIMS HONORED. Military honors, were observed to-day | at the double funeral services for Junior Grade Lieut. Harold C. Stevens and Machinist's Mate Eugene Lindsay, who were killed Saturday when their Lan struck a hangar at the Rockawuy Point | Naval Alr Station. Father Brady officiated at the service held in tho officers’ There wi band from the Brookiyn Navy Y was in the procession from the air station to the railroad station. body was sent to /t Parente, Mr and Mrs. John Stevens, No. 11 Urban Street, Mount Vernon, N. + while that of Lindsay will be sent (o' San Francisca. “An investigation was startel at the air station thia afternoon, ei * Sota Woman's Body Off Edgemere, The body of an unidentified woman, that the additional reveque to the com- Dany, if the so-called emergency rates are pagsed, will amunt to $11,000,000 annually was braugh®but to-day ut the hearing on the application of the com- Dany for an order of the Public Service Commission authorizing a temporary, or emergency schedule of rates, for delephone service in the city, The hear- ing was before Charles B. Hill, Chulr- man, in the Hall of Records. M. L. Fertig, Assistmnt Corporation Counsel, also brought out that the above figures were based on the aliow- ance of $1 per station which, for the period named, Is approximately $5,500,- 000 and does not allow for income taxes paid amounting to $2,346,000. The city ix further prepared to prove, said Mr. Fertig, the percentage of net revenues to the book value of the property from pt. 1, 1920, were as. follows: 11.8 per i9i7, 19.2 per 1919, 15.2 per and 1920 (eight sheaths only) “6 per cent. The average {8 15.4 per cent. ACTRESS SAYS COP REFUSED TO ARREST Charging Insult by Taxi Driver, She Says Ghe Was Told She Had No Business Out So Late. Miss Virginia Allen, an actress, ap~- peared in the Adams Street Court, Brooklyn, to-day as complainant against George F. O'Kevfe, chauffeur, of No. 193 Bergen Street. She said he invited her to ride, and when she ignored him he followed in his car and called ber names, She asked a policeman to arrest O'Keefe, she sald, but the policeman said: “You women who stay out until tho very early hours of the morning can't expect better treatment.” “That officer onght to be here,” said Magistrate MoCloskey. “Do you know him?” Miss Adlen replied she did not, The magistrate said women are entitled to as much protection at 3 A. M. as at 3 MO Keefe denied the charge and was sent to jail-for two days pending an investigation of his character. Miss Allen lives at No. Schermerhorn Street, Brooklyn, SCOTCH AND y IRISH NIPPED. Castome Men Seize 400 Bottles ed From Stemmal Acting on information obtained yes~ terday from a member of\the crew of the steamship Shooters Isiahd who was caught trying to smuggle two bottles of whiskey ashore from the vesgel at Pier No. 46, North River, Customs In- spectors Ernest Lockwood and Jerry Rothschild visited saloon at No. 164 Eust 63d Street to-day and seized 400 bottles of Scotch and Irish whiskey. They then visited the Shooters Islund and arrested the chief steward, whom they accuse of smuggling the liquor from the ship and selling it to the East 58d Street saloonkeope: fe Shooters island arrived on Feb, 19th from British ports. Members of the crew, the Custom authorities assert, engaged in smuggling whiskey as « side |line. "The saloonkeeper guve himsel! up at the Custom House this afternoon and the selzure was reported to the Pro- hibition ‘Bntorement. Bureau, —_ MRS. ZINSSER DISCHARGED. Coart Deel With: Was Brought a lection hy Im- Pro Device. Supreme Court Justice John Ford to- day discharged Mrs, Gertrude B. Zins- ser of Passaic, N. J., wife of Rudolph Zinsser, a wealthy paint manufacturer, with. offices at No, 195 William Street, from custody upon the charge of wil- fully disobeying an order of the Court. She had been directed to produce her Guughter, Marie Loulse, | three years In habeas corpus proceedin; 2 by her husband. wi Justice Ford decided Mi io within’ the, jurlediction of apparently in the water three weeks, Piet res Pie no was wash ‘ou n improper et up at Edgemere, Long | case culminated a week ago with the Island, this morning. ‘The wom: about thirty-five years old, Foistea it it and was 5 feet 8 inches in and skin. Dieringer's arrest of Mri ii for di; srreat. ot insser for epbedian Supreme Court writ. airs, ser, at the time of her arr peared In New York to uive Ae aA ue proceedings based on the 4 That the New York Telephone Com-/| .CARMANIA HELD IN TYPHUS SEARCH Thirty-Five Sresure Passengers Are Found to Be > Deans | Carriers. The Cunard liner Carmanta, which | rived to-day with 614 chbin and 1, steerage passengers, was held at Qiar- antine while officers on the staff of Dr. Leland BH. Cofer, Port Health Officer, made inspections in a search for possible typhus carriers. ‘Thirty-five steerage passengers were found to be vermin- infested and were sent to Hoffman Island. R. H. Burnside of the Hippodrome staff, who has been abroad getting now acts, shouted to reporters to-day that the end of the voyage home had given him an idca for a new educated flea act. ‘The Carmania was scheduled to dock this afternoon, but is not expected to reach her pler now until to-morrow morning. The Swedish-American liner Stockholm, which arrived to~day was held at Quarantine. Twenty-five ver- min infested passengers were taken off . Fifteen of 337 immigrants examined by Board of Health inspectors an pos- aible carriers of typhus were found yes- terday to be vermin infested, it was {announced to-day at the offices of Health Commissioner Copeland. ‘The Board of Health announced six new cases of sveping sickness, four in Manhattan and two in Brooklyn. ‘Twe: | Geuthe were announced in Brookiyn. Health Commissioner Copeland | re- | turned’ to-day from a conference “in Washington with Surgeon General Cum- ming and the Health Commissioners of all the coast cities. ‘They unanimously Urged the appropriation of $300,000. for the protection of public health at New York, $300,000 for Boston, $800,000 for Philadelphia and $100,000 for Baitimore. Dr. Copeland urges citizene and elivic bodies to presx their Congressmen to Vote for the “appropriations, and it Is hoped to have the President send a spe- cial message to Congress on the subject. web Ba! 2B MILLER PLAN HITS GAS, SAYS O’BRIEN Corporation Counsel Warns of Menace to Lighting Rates In- cluded in Transit Programme. Corporation Counse! O'Brien says the public, in its opposition to thp Miller transit plan, has apparently lost sight of the fact that if the Governor's legisiation is enacted it will “override the rights and the intergsts of the con- sumers of gus and electricity throughout the State and especially In New York City. After declaring the eighty cont gas} law will be vihoa forever by the Miller programme, Mr. O'Brien concludes: “Unless consumers of gus and elec- tricity in this city are sroused to the danger which besets thelr rights In these matters they may expect within the immediate future, through the in- strumentality of an up-State public ser- vice commission, safe and snug from attack on the part of the people, and the Standard Oil Company, powerful and autoeratic in its mono} of the oll business und able to fix the cont of gos practically at any figure, through tise price which it imposes upon the gan companies for gus oll, to be compelled to pay a much higher price and under harsher conditions than they pay to- day,” STUDIES SLEUTHING. CAUGHT AS THIEF }Girl Accuses Sweet of Picking Her Pocket and He Is Hell. =” Willam L. Sweet, twenty-one and | hailing last from Atlantic City, who has | been studying with a St.“Louls cores | spondence school how to become a de- | tective, will have plenty of time now \to review his course. William is in jail | charged with being a pickpocket He wan arrested in Times Square by Detectives Musgey and Raftis on the complaint of Rose Warshau of No. #1 Longworth Avenue, Brooklyn, who said her beaded bag containing $3.25 and some toilet articles had been snipped from the handle with @ pair of scissors. The detectives say they found the bag in Sweet's coat and the scissors in his hand, Also they found in his pocket a tin shield on which was printed “Pri-| vate Detective’ and papers from a cor- 4 Other ccunsel for Bifarella, that this would put the trial over until next fall, granted an adjournment of one day and ordered the case proceed to-mor- tow morning. The papers in the case charge Bifaretia gave Zard $2,000 on Nov. 22, 1919, with instructions to trans- mit it to the Bank of Rome, in Rome, to be credited to his account. The purpose of the transmission was to enable Bifarella’s brother to buy a home. Bifareilu, it is alleged, went to Zaro’s bank twe months later and | asked for his book showing a credit in the Bank of Rome, He wag asked | to call aguin, A week later he was again disappointed and after some delay he wrote to the Bank of Rome. He received a reply in June, 1920, stating no money had been received from Zaro to be eredited to the ac- count of Joseph Bifarrela, Bifareila charges in his complaint he took the letter to Zaro's bank and was told the money had been sent to the Commeradial Bank of Rome. He wrote to the Commercial Bank, he alleges, and received a répiy *there was nothing to his credit in that in- stitution. Then, after demanding from Zaro the return of his money. he brought sult, After the suil was instituted, it is charged, Zaro offered the plaintiff a bank book showing a credit in the Bank of Rome of 23,000 lire, worth at that time about $750. Bifarella al- leges the credit was given in the Bank of Rome on a date subsequent to the date of the filing of the suit in this city, —— HER DIAMOND RING SET HUBBY THINKING Indications of Prosperity Cause His to Sue for $100,000 for Lost Affections. Irving D, Hurley of No, 392 Vander- bilt Avenue, Brooklyn filed a suit for $190,000 in the Supreme Court, Brooklyn. against Joseph O'Malley, who was in the Hurenu of Fire Prevention in the Mitchel administration, for the allena- tion of the affections of Mrs. Marie A Hurley, who now hus a clerical posi tion under O'Malley in the Brooklyn Ice Skating Palace, Hurley asserts that he returned from seas with the 27th Division to find Hurley working for O'Malley snd he persuaded him to take a poxi- Mri that tion a8 manager of the rink, Sub quently he observed, he said, s! ai weuring clothing beyond her resources, displaying a diamond ring which she said she had “found and had taken title to a house at Sea Cliff on which O'Malley held the mortgage. Since early last year when he questioned her story regurding the diamond ring, Hur- ley states, Mrs. Hurley has lived with her parents. EIGHT INJURED IN N. J. TROLLEY CRASH One-Man Car Jumps Switch Bloomfield Centre—No One Seriously Hurt. Straager B Chief to hia office and asked to be locked up. “My name is John Cahill and f live at No. 126 New York Avenue, Jersey City," the stranger js quoted as saying. “Lam a desperate man. I have a twentieth century vampire following me, She treats me like a she has the face of a madonna and the heart of a leopard. She has played with my heartstrings until I have become frantic, Tack, me up before I do something.” Chief O'Shea is keoping Cablil un rvation until r er iatives call for him, United States Attorney Leroy W. Ross completed to-day the transfer of Hoffman Island, Swinburne Island and the Quarantine Station at Rosebank, rempondence school on the art of sleuth- | in, tic was arraigned in Jefferson Market Court and held to-day for the Grand 1. to the Federal Government by State of ) Attorney General « cheek for drawn on the United States and able to the State of New York for t purchase. the| | Legionnaire Hight persons were injured in a head-on collision early to-day between | two trolley cars in Broad Street, aear! Bloomfield Centre, N. J. A one-mi"| trolley car going south jumped a «wire! and struck a northbound car. No | was seriously injured and all wer home ‘The, two most bediy injured are Mrs |! Lewis Berry, No. $1 Myrtle Avenue | Bloomfield, and Miss Jessica C. | | nun, No. 427 Bloomfield "Ay Newark, severely cut on the fave aid arms. Miss Brennan is 9 tegel mis the Franklin Avenue Grammar | Bast Orange. | Pater Oll, No. 10 Lakeside Ay motorman of t southbound arrested and released for examination to-morrow before Police Recorder Harry Yost, at. Bloomfield Police Chief Martin O'Shea of Hack- ensack sat up to-day when a well dressed man of twenty-seven came into| } elder the day—tI count it as contributing to Bat- urday's budget of good things Zor the wounded. The Gen, Lafayette Police Post has the honor of being the first american Legion post to send a eheck to The Evening World's Service House Fund. Many Legionnaires bave personally contributed and I have taken up several collections at American Le- gion posts after speaking, but the fact remains that Gen, Lafayette Police Post sent us our first Ameri- can Legion check. And this re~ dounds to their everlasting credit. The first check from an individual was one received Feb, 9, one hour after my first ap- peal. was published in The Evening World, and was from W. F, Deegan, First Vice Commander of the Stats of New York, and was for $10. It came a few minutes after the one dollar from my young friend, Mary Saul, ninety-three years young, who has the honor of being the first con- tributor to our fund. THE LETTER THAT CAME WITH THE DELAYED CHECK, Here is the letter from Genera: La- fayette Police Post. Dear Miss Bell, Evening World: Inclosed please find check for $100 from Gen. Lafayette Po- lice Post for a service house as headquarters for homeless and jobless members of the World Var. as advocated by you in your discussion of same in The Evening World. This, I take it, is the right kind of sympathy for the boys you refer to in your very able articles which [ and others have Yead. I made a motion for substantial letp gt our last meeting, and am happy to state jt was seconded and approved with the unanimous con- sent of the whole post, We also tendered you a vote of thanks for the interest you have taken to fur- ther the good work and the intell!- gent way you advocated the bring- ing of the matter before the pub- sit Sincerely yours, LAFAYETTE POLICH POST, OMARTIN L. FITZPS-TRICK, 3d Vice Commander. Now, I have received a number of requests from the Veterans of For- | eign Wars to be allowed to assist ux in th’. cause for raising funds: for Service House, as they contend that the wounded soldier problem {s uni versal and as dear to their hearts as to ours, } I: did not occur to me that any | one on God's earth felt debarred from | assisting in contributing to this) world-wide claim of the ae soliders. But if a special invitation trom | The Evening World would be wel- come, I hereby extend it with all my | heart. Come on and help us, boys, | and the next thing we must do will be to start a V. F. W. Service House. | I know the American Legion will re- member that you helped them and/ will return the courtesy by co-operat- | ing with you. pighth verse of the thir- there be no 1 do #0 love the spirit of co-opera- tion, thay the teenth chapter of Genesis is one of my favorite texts: “Let strife, | pray thee, between me and thee and betwenn my herdmen and thy herdmen, for we be brethren,” The co-operavion during the war between diverse religious and alien races and conflicting political parties was to my mind a great lesson in the universal brotherhood of man, which T hope will always be cherished in the hearts of men and never en- tirely lost. WHEN THE MONEY PILED UP IN A HILL. urday | should have Idorf helping to eat anniversary break men’s Press Club of but owing to a mis- read 2 o'alock, “so in time the w take, York C iy. my card got there ream, One what #tand T wou the bill now pending in Alban. ex-service men prefer service positions and urge was only giving one man p over another man we sidestep both and give those joba to women My stand that the American men for of the speakers, not res ke, spoke a . to give In civ! men nd women of the la for only by the tion of the in stopping the man drive alive and safe and prosperous Therefore. 1 stand with the Ameri can Legion and the Veterans o Foreign Wars in thelr efforts to take care of thelr buddies. and my pen is sharpened in their behalf, just exactiv as courageously er thelr swords were drawn in de! se of a menaced world. When it came my turn to talk, they had given me four times the amount of time they had alloted to other speakers, for the reason that 1 had refused to go and speak at all unies 1 had a reasonable time given me in which to tell my story of the need of the wounded for 4 Service House T don't sank for fun in a drive like this for atyvody 1 was down on the progra aption of “How I a Newspaper "among the Disabled Bol. | S1h.n00 tributed It Alor But ae I didn't gaimer that amount Club and is. credited with the ability to take the largest collections of any woman in New York. I told her we would love her forever—the soldiers and I—if she would help us, Sh td she would. Oh, people with money, look out for Mme. von Kie Tr, Send all contri- butions to The Evening World's Ser- vice Home Fund, or bring them in Dereon to me in Room 1125, World Bullding, SHOT BY “WATCHMAN, Vietine Whe Had dnt Stop Whe Josemh T. Wailde, of 1061 T1At Street, Brooklyn, customs inapector, was held in $1,000 bail for hearing on March 24 on a charge of felonioun assault by Magistrate Dale in the Fifth Avenue Court, Brooklyn. to-day Walde, according to the police, shot Donald McDonald, of No. 5811 Fourth Avenue, Satorday fight, as the Jatter was leaving the Morse Dry Dock gate at the foot of 56th Street, Brookivi, It was alleged that McDo had three bottles of whiskey concealed in his trousers The customa inspector was watching for cocaine mnugglers, and said th MpDonald, refused to stop when pen red iby him to do so. he bullet wa, extracted from MoDonald's bi t Norwesian Hospital today. st iil Mh | | K | THE VALUES AT | 00 COR TAFFETA - THAT PORTRAY Ad THAT EMPHASIZE? THE SNUG FITTED BODICE SLENDER LINES OF AROVE A SKIRT WHOSE THE NEW TAILORED is FLARING LINES CARE SILHOUETTE AT THEIR ACCENTUATED UY ROWS BEST, oA SLIM OF CORDINC BELOW? BODICE SETS ABOVE THE WAISTLINE, PUFFED A RATHER FLARING OF EW FROCKS AND CORDED SLEEVE ENDS AND WIDE SCALLOPS AT BOTTOM SKIRT ADD THEIR. Quota OF CHARM menographer, two court attendants, a detective, the prisoner and himself to Lamato's home. The dying man was propped up in bed when the twenty-two people who made up the party arrived, and in @ feeble voice, barely audible (o the men, who filled the room almost to overflowing, ‘recited that about 3 o'clock on the morning of Feb, 19, he was called to the door of the factory “A masked man stuck a cun in my fa he continued. “Three other men pushed in behind him, grabbed, me, Ued my hands and fect und gugeed me, tied me up ia a hore blanket und then threw ate down into a corner,” Meyer, who was arrested by De- tective Willlam J. Fallon, repudiated an alleged confession in which he |e said to have admitted going with three men to the Metropolitan To- pacco Company and watting while they went inside, He now pleads not guilty. Burgiars broke into the Farmingdale Station of the Long Island Ruilroad be- tween midnight and § o'clock this morn- ing and stol In cash, $225 in checks, unindorsed, and pack valuables worth approximately MAE Wo Connection With Any Othe: - Establishment in the World wo RTH | THILTY FOURTH’ STREET DAINTY AFTERNOON FROCKS IN A DELIGHTFUL ENSEMBLE OF THE NEWER FASHIONS FOR SPRINGTIME? ARE 4.5.00 oNEW FROCKS OF CANTON CREPE SILK SKIRT; MOST EXTRAORDI ROUND BOTTOM TUNIC ARTISTIC EFFECTS OF ORNAMEN TATION ARE PRODUCED BY? STEEL, BEADING a big executive job until! he reaches a notable exceptions many exceptions, he said the man is supposed to be at thy of his mental eMciency between and sixty. | Dr, Pisk suggested that all” taking important governmental’ hould be required to pass Seven physical and mental ination, and that provision should made for periodical re-examii In this connection, he advised lishment of an ‘clastic system physical exercise for Gavernment ecutives, adding that “we de: this of our army and navy. o! why not other departments? The ages of the members of F ing’s jal family are: Hughes Mellon 65, Weekr 60, Daughtery bd Hays 41, Fall 59, Wall 64, Hoover 46, Davis 47 is 58, DROPS HER ALIENATION sum, tice Platt of the Supreme Court I White Plains has signed an order Gis continuing actions of Mrs. Fanet 0. — Walinch against her father-in-law, Joe seph G. Wallach, laundryman, for alleged 7 nation of her husband's aff nd alioged conversion of about of in furniture and other prope’ ‘The order does not mention te ADWAY- FIFTH AVENUE AT {NNUAL —_