Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
AFTERPSTOL PLAY “TE FOURHOLD-UP MEN |BIG ALIMONY FROM AH FUR MAN One Taken in Room of|“Bought and Paid for You,” Woman—Two Arrested in Robbery of a Japanese. VICTIM PUTS UP FIGHT. Restaurant Man Held Up Twice in Week Holds On to an Assailant. ‘ Daring hald-ups in which revolvers figured, followed by, chases during| 10. nusband'’s co which the police fired numerous | 92,746,507. shots, caused excitement on the upper She Alleges Husband Told Her. Mrs. Blanche Steiner, wife of Julius Steiner, of Joseph Steiner & Bros., No. 116 West Thirtieth Street, fur garment manufacturers, was to-day awanied by Supreme Court Justice Bijur $600 a month alimony and a $1,250 counsel fee. Mre. Steiner, in her application for alimony, pending trial of a suit for separation, said mpany is rated at Mrs. Steiner in a long affidavit de- west side early this morning and iast| rides her husband's attentions to it. As Bernard Goldberg of No. 77 Fast 119th Street was getting other women, She told of an evening with friends at the Little Club, on off a| Forty-fourth Street, where she found Uiéth Street car at Seventh Avenue] her husband with « young woman, about 2 A. M, three men seized him| described as Mrs. Della Bartlett, at and took from containing $206. Goldberg's cries the robbers fled attracted Patrolman | tying, Phillip Marcall. One of the men ran his pocket a wailet|® table opposite, Her husband made this unexpected meeting particularly ing with his partner ag near her table to a taxicab standing nearby, and,| %8 possible. leaping to the driver's seat, to drive off. ‘The policeman fired several shot and the fugitive deserted the cab and ran through an areaway to the rear of No, 155 West 117th Street. A woman's screams coming from above caused Marcall to go to the third floor of the apartment building, where he learned that his quarry had climbed) the fire escape and entered the apartment of a Mrs. Ward, who ‘was roused {rom sicep. ‘The man was found hiding in a oloset in Mrs. Ward's apartment. He ‘was identified later by Goldberg as one of the robbers and said he was Alberto Rocco, a chauffeur, of No. 203 Bast 107th Street, The other two escaped with Goldberg's wallet, John Hinago, a Japanese, of No. 177 West 97th Street, was on his way home at 3 A. M. when he was set wpon by three negroes and forced into a hallway at No, 22 West 99th Street. The negroes took from him $105, a diamond ring and diamond pin, Policeman Mandell came up as the negroes féd, and after firing three shots captured two of them. They gave their names as Clarence Arvin, Neo. 129 West 133d (Street, and Clar- ence Field, No. § West 99th Street. Im this case also the robber with the booty got away. William Henderson, proprietor of a restaurant at No. 218 West 4th Street, was held up and robbed for the second time in a week, He lives above his regtaurant, and as he was going to hia/ rooms last evening three negroes grabbed him. He said he had re- golved after the previous hold-up that he was going to fight if It happened again, even if it cost him his life, As a result there was a struggle in which he was beaten on the head with a revolver, but he hung on to one of the robbers until Detectives Doyle and Lawler arrived. The other two escaped with $16 taken from Henderson's pockets. The negro arrested said he was Martin Alexander of No, 246 West 2d Street. — PHONE PURCHASES UNDER INQUIRY Bell System Buys Solely From Sis- ter Company, Western Electric, Public Rervice Commission Hears ‘The retations of the New York Te)- ephone Company with its parent or- ganization, the Bell system, and of the Bell system with the Western Electric Company, from which all supplies of whatever charaéler are purchased, were described to Public Service Commis- sioners Charles B), Hill and George Van Name to-day at a hearing in the Hall of Records. T. P. Syivan, Vice Presl- dent of the New York Telephone Com- pany, testified in favor of the com- pany’s application for power in- crease rates. ‘The Bel] system and the Western Floctric Company, the witness said, are subsidiaries of the American Tele- Giuph and, Telephone Company, but the to estein Electric charges the Bell sys- profit on all tem from 2 to 8 per cent said, cheaper than manufacturing or buying in the open market. The hearing was thus adjourned until March 21 a Justice Callaghan preme Court to-day made a temporary number of prominent steamship lines in Brooklyn Su- permanent injunction restraining @ and sevezal locals of longshoremen's unions from refusing to ship and handle the product of the Burgess Brothers Company, lumber merchants of Brook- lyn. Justice Callaghan criticised officta’ of various steamship lines for no fighting members of the unions, and declared that had they done so the “eonapizacy” on the part of the latter would have been frustrated Basi aad : Sol B. Gets Mra. Ada Gelemer of No. 956 Inter- yale Avenue, Bronx, to-day filed with Justice Martin in the Bronx Supreme ‘papers in an action for separi- wainst her h , Sol B, G mer, alleging abuse and neglect. She said her husband, who has an income of $15,000 a month, maintains an apart- ment in a fashionable section for an- other womun. The defendant was Served with the papers at the Pennsy!- venis Hotel ctatted| OB October, 1919, she says, her hus- band went to London to attend the tg|fur sale there, and remained away five months without writing a single letter home. Mrs. Steiner said that she made her husband's uncle and father ac- quainted with her anxieties. One evening, she says, she and her husband were to have dinner out, but her husband put on his pajamas and seemed to forget the engagement. When she mentioned the dinner to him, relates Mrs. Steiner, he flew into @ rage and said: “Who were you before I married you? TI bought you and I paid for you. I will get you to eat out of my hands yet.” Mrs. Steiner says she employed de- tectives to follow her husband and they learned he was living at the Sey- mour Hotel, No, 60 West 45th Street, with a Mrs. Bartlett, where he had two bedrooms and a sitting room. Mrs. Bartlett, she says, was known around the hotel as Mr. Steiner's sis- ter, The couple left the hotel on the day of her‘discovery, the wife relates, and sailed for Burope on the Olympic, returning Nov. 17. 10 P. C. PAY CUT FOR SHIP WORKERS Reduction, Effective April 1, Will Affect 30,000 in New York Port. A 10 per cent, cut in wages affecting about 30,000 workers in shipyards in this vicinity was announced to-day, the reduction to take effect on April 1. No- tices of the intent to make the cut were posted in various yards on Saturday, .ac- cording to Henry C. Hunter, of No. 30 Chureh Street, attorney for the yards. ‘The concerns making the reductions are; Morse Dry Dock and Repair Com- pany, Robins Dry Dock and Repair Company, Todo Yacht Basin, Company and James Shewan & Sons, all of Brook- lyn; Tietjen & Lang of Hoboken, and the Downey Shipbuilding Corporation, of Staten Island, Mr. Hunter said that the reduction would be applied to twenty-four ship- yards in all in the port of New York. There had been cuts, he added, at ship- yards at Baltimore, Norfolk and other building centres on the Atlantic sei board. Slack work and high produc- tion cost were given as reason for the reduction. SEIZED BY PRIEST | AS POOR BOX THIEF Jersey City Clergyman Captures Alleged Robber After Wrestling Match and Chase. Father Ignatius Szudiowicz, pastor of the Catholic Churoh of Our Lady of Czestochowa, No. 118 Sussex Street, Jersey City, was in his study at noon to-day when the electric alarm attached to the church poo> box sounded. The priest ran to the rear of the church, where, he says, he found a man taking money from the poor box, which he had Just broken open. He grappled with the thief and there waa a wrestling match, when the intruder broke away. The priest chased the man for about a block and recaptured him. He held on to him until a policeman arrived. He gaye the name of Joseph Carullo, No. 167 West 37th Street, Now York When he was searched he had $7.27 in mal) coins in one pocket. In another he had $420 in bills, a check for $250, gold watches and a diamond pin valued at $800, pea BOY ROBBER GETS 16 YEARS. Queens Judge Threatens Life Im~- prisonment for Burglar G: Judge Humphrey, of the Queens County Court, In sentencing nineteen- year-old Eugene J. Dunn to Sing Sing for ten to sixteen years for assault and robbery, declared to-day he would break | up the robbery trade in Queens “even i{ I have to sentence all these young loafers to Sing Sing for life.” Dunn was one of the group that aulted and robbed William Hempel, a grocer, and Frank Ruoff, a butcher, who have a Joint shop in Creed Avenue, Queens Vil- lage. The bandits got $165. Judge Humphrey killing Prof. Wilfred Phineas Kotkov, of the Hebrew Theological Seminary, on Ved. 23. he said, by continually danc- j wet April 4 as the date of trial of four men accused of Man Who HAROLD HAMMOND ae awl Hammond, Neither Lochinvar Nor Caveman in Tactics, Courted Both Long. It remains for the other twelve wives of twenty-six-year-old Harold Hammond, who admits he was mar- ried fourteen times In three years, to tell of tumultuous courtships. Wives No, 1 and No, 2 of record— Eli@beth Marie Burke of No. 203 W. 87th Street and Loretta Fitshenry of No. 117 Beach 92d Street, Rockaway, who obtained a divorce and an annul- ment, respectively, ‘Friday through the same lawyer at White Plains, have no such tales to tell. Harold Hammond was to them a prosaic lover, just an everyday eort of wooer, whom they'd got accus- tomed to having about. He was, if the words of two wives are worth recording, indeed rather slow. He courted each of them more than a year. He was no Lochinvar, no caveman. + Hammond, who is now in the naval prison at Kittery, Me, serving an eighteen months’ sentence for deser- on after enlisting under the name of his brother, Bradley, following two desertion® from the army, told his lawyer, Julian V. Cabbarra of No. 115 Broadway, that he had fourteen wives in towns between Vermont and Virginia, He made the confession after Joseph J. Fitzhenry, fathor of Loretta, had bim arrested for bigamy last May. He doesn’t, he said, re- member where all bis wives live, nor, for that matter, all their names. He lived with some of them, he contin- ued, only a day or two. He married Miss Burke, who \s twenty-two now, Oct. 15, 1917, at the Municipal Building. He married Mise Fitzhenry, who is twenty-one, Jan. 17, 1919, at Hoboken. He lived with Miss Burke only two hours in a boarding house in Bast 12th “Street, where he was arrested tor being A. W. O. L, from the army, and sentenced to thirty daya at Fort Ethan Allen. He lived with Miss Fitshenry at the home of his mother in Benson- hurst until April, 1920, nearly @ year and a half, during which time @ chil@ was born to them, “Id known him a year before L married him," said Miss Burke to- day. “We went around a lot to the movies, dances and things like that, and he seemed as nice as other fel- lows. He never struak me as being anything different. We got to like each other and he seemed to have a good job as a checker on the docks, so we got married.” “[ didn’t hear from him but twice after he was arrested two hours af. ter we were married. Once he wrote from Fort Ethan Allen, and more than a year later from Nashville, Tenn, asking me to gend him $10. “after the war somebody told me he was married again, to a Miss Fita- henry, and that they had a child. I called up Miss Fitzhenry and her fa- ther sent me to thelr lawyer.’ Miss Fitzhenry said she had known Hammond as a child, when their fam- ilies Lived in West 10th Street. They met again in 1916, she said, at Rock- away, and ocasionally they saw each ther in the city. “He started coming to in 1918"—— “I soon put a etop to that,” Inter- rupted ber father. “I didn't like the fellow’s looks. He didn’t look right to me. He wouldn't look you in the face. Once, when I came in, I found him hiding behind the kitchen door. I put him out of the house.” “Then,” the daughter continued, “we met at other places. After we married and went to his mother's, he stayed home most every night, going out the house in3 Years Really “Slow”’ As a Wooer, Two Declare HOME TOSEARGHT |» once in a while to play eArds at his brother's. 1 don't sce how he could ie ba TA aes yi — YOUTH SENTENCED TO THREE MONTHS IN PUBLIC LIBRARY Arrested for Loitering, Queens Prisoner Must Learn of Dickens and Hawthorne. AGISTRATE KOCHEN- DORFHR, sitting in the Flushing Police Court, to- day sentenced Dominick Citera, charged with disorderly conduct, to spend the next three months in the Carnegie Library, Borough of Queens. It came about this way: Patrolman Walters arrested Citera for loitering. In court the Magistrate, in speaking to the de- fendant, said: “You ought to be ashamed of yourself, standing abdut the streets, You ought to get ac- quainted with Dickens and Haw- thorne.” “I don't want to know Dickens or Hawthorne,” replied Citera. “They might be murderers.’ “You surprise me,” said Magis- trate Kochendorfer, “You say you are a public schoo! graduate? Probation Officer Hamil) will in- troduce you to the library. You will report to me in three months. Unless you can then tell me who Dickens and Hawthorne were you will serve six months in the Work- house.” Citera is nineteen years old and lives at No. 49 Fulton Street, Maspeth. POLICE LOSE BAIL POWER. Authority of Brooklya Licatenants im U. 8. Canes Revoked. Authority of police Lieutenants to ad- mit to ball violators of Federal laws was revoked in an order jxsued to-day in Brooklyn. Heretofore, when Federal prisoners were arrested, especially for violations of the Volstead Act after ¢ P. M,, it had been the custom for polic Lieutenants to admit the offender to 4h on auhorization from the United Sta Commissioner over the telephone. ‘The order issued to-day requires the United States Commissioner elther to bo present at the station house or the pri oner be brought before the Night Court, where ball may be allowed by the Mag istrate. ONE DEAD, ———— 2 LL ON BOAT. e—Pre- te Be Analysed. One man was found dead and two unconscious this morning in the cabin of the new fishng smack Winifred H loaded with founders and lying since Saturday at Pier 18 Bast River. “"Dhe dead man is W Nantucket. The two t are Ctpt. Willlam How crits of Bayshore Dr, Alvarez of the Volunteer Hosp’ tal suid they aze puazied bythe case, Unrecognizable fumes were distin guishable In the cabin, A jar of pre serves was taken away for analysis _- RECEIPT MAY IDENTIFY MAN. Body ¥ d im Woods Thought to hat of Albert Folem ‘A receipt for an insured parcel found in @ pocket has led the police to the Delief that the man found murdered iv the woods near Oceanside, L. l, las! Friday was Albert Folcan, who left bis home in Canton, O., on Jaa. 1, intending to find work in New York The, el in question was mailed on Feb, 26 to Mrs. Michael de Gennaro of No. 1242 Fourth Street, Canton, a sister of Folcan. She her brother had he Eaat with that she had a large sum of money ani not heard him. bave married any one else between January, 1919, and April, 1920," Neither of the ex-wivea of Ham- mond seem concerned or even curi- ous about the other wives he sald Nor do they seem aad aout experiences with him. In they seem glad they're rid of stead | | FORGE WAY INTO A Find Brandy. and Champagne in Buffet—Are Pursued and Captured. William Roberts, a prohibition agent attached to the Manhattan of- fice, anid Frank MoNulty, who is not an agent; ‘went to the residence of BE. 8. Davis, No, 610 Bast Bighth Strect, Flatbush, and according to the ac- count of the affair which Davis has given to the authorities, aroused him and finally forced their way into his ‘home. They said they were prohibi- tion agents and had come to searc! his premises. ' Davis, who ie head of the Eagle Manutacturing Company of No, 203 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, grain alcohol distillers, demanded that they ‘show warrant for the intrusion, Roberts showed his shield, but declared that & warrant was not necessary, After the men had forced their way in they found a bottle of brandy and one of champagne in the buffet whereupon Roberts said they had suf- ficient evidence, But, as Davis told the story, Roberts then gaid to him that as Davis had money in a safe up- airs perhaps an arrangement might be reached whereby it would not be necessary to make a report of the seizure. ‘Davis replied that at least they oright talk it over, and opened the champagne for the party. Mrs. Davis was ab this time listening over the f, i stairs and goon after called the police of the Parkville Station by an up. stairs telephone. Roberts eventually realized what was going on and,| in ratsing the money *% run it, drawing a revolver, said that he was! going and that McNulty, said, was also armed, would remain. But MoNulty decided to go too, and both men hastened from the house. As soon as they were out, Davis, in bare feet, pajamas and bathrobe, ! started after them. So did Mra. Davis in a dressing gown. block the fugitives ran into the arms of two policemen and were arrested. In the Snyder Avenue Court yes: terday Magistrate Walsh held them in $2,000 bail each for disorderly con- duct. But when Harold Dobbs, Pro- hibition Agent in oharge in Brooklyn, learned the circumstances, he ordered the suspension of Roberts and both men will be rearraigned to-morrow charged with unlawful entry. Charges of soliciting a bribe and of attempted extortion Will wlso be preferred against Roberts before a Federal Commissioner and McNulty will be charged with impersonating # reve: nue officer. lives at No. 13! S6th Street\and McNulty at No, 246 56th Street, Brooklyn. William J. O'Brien, a prohibition agent who Was,arrested last night at Broadway afd DeKalb Avenue Brooklyn, by Charles Wateon of No 0 Cedar Street, Brooklyn, who said O'Brien was brandishing revolver! suspended to-day by Harold Dobbs, in charge of prohibition ay forcement in Brooklyn, O'Brien wtr released in the Gates Avenue Cour for lack of charges. JURY THROWS OUT 22 DURESS LEASES Rack-Rented Tenants in Largest Apartment im City Win Victory. Appeal will be taken, it was learned to-day, from the sealed verdict opened by Justice Robitzek in Municipal Court in which the jury nullified, following claims that they were obtained under duress, the leases of twenty-two ten- ants of the Hunts Point Apartments, No. 1018 168d Street, the world’s largest six-story apartment building. Among the ninety-seven tenants were former Assemblyman William 8. Evans, Sol Bonaparte, Dr, Harry Fishman and Assistant District Attorney Adlerman, who represented them in court, It was testified that Dr. Fishman's rent five years ago was $65, Last Octo- ber he Was paying $90, and was not\- fied he could renew at $115. Louis Harris, another tenant. was raised in three years from $60 to $140 cally all of the three, four. five and mix- room apartments were subjected to rent raises of more than 100 per cen above the rents of three years GET READY FOR FISHING! Weak: ere 3 Weeks Ahead of Time Is Prediction. Agerial to The renting World ) CAPE MAY, N. J, March 7.— as been the warmest March 7 wenty-fve years at the shore. thermometer registered 68 degrees at 12 o'clock. The sun was pot shining Old inhabitants here say thar weak fish and founders will run at least th: weeks ahead of time this year on so ° mild weather EVENING WORLD'S SERVICE HOUSE IDEA INDORSED BY MILLER Governor Tells Lilian Bell Pian Will Be Productive of Much Good, ALBANY, March 7, Miss Lilian Bell, Evening World: Your effort to raise funds through the medium of The New York Evening World for a ser- vice house to present to the American Legion is most com- mendable. Such a plan as you have In mind is productive of much good and I wish you every success. NATHAN L. MILLER. 78 | bathrooms, collets and In the| | Have Get Fine Mountain For Our Wounded Soldiers Furnished Bungalows in Vermont Mountains, lous Boys. By Lilian Bell. we can hardly keep up with it. Mr. and Mra. Frank Wilson of New soldiers and sailors than any two peo- nington, Vt., for my “biesseda.”” It lies in a high, clear, mountain at- are four bungalows already fur- accommodated immediately. They need them. | There is a foreman to keep thin: |running, whose wages the Wilsons id any boy able to work, oither at gardening will pay. There is a sawmill, or at the sawmill, will be paid regu- lar union wages by the Wilsons. 120 feet of solid rock, providing water of such purity that it refreshes me some to write about it, ‘They are putting in a complete sys- tem Of sanitation, we shall nd, mark you, they are doit this for the ‘wounded! ihanined They did not sign a contract for this plumbing until they had obtained my consent to accept this camp and the editor's promise of co-operation How is that for appreciation of ex- who, he Service men? Have you been forgot- | ten, boys? Not by everybody. But to my astonishment I am told who assert, even in the face of all the publicity the cause of the wounded ts now getting since The Evening World threw open its col- umns and I began to tell their story, is not needed and that the American Legion is needlessly disturbed, the picture we printed in the Christ- mas campaign? for pieces of shrapnel the surface—shrapnel shot into them three years ago. Boys by the thousands are break- ears ago and camp will do the tuberculous boys! ‘What good food we shali give them! House and get it to us fresh, can have cows and horses. We will need a car. We can keep hens and rabbits and dogs and cats. I want a cat for my own when love cats. already named the place. It will be called Camp Bennington, out of respect to the thriving littl city which lies nearest to it and wh citizens are so loyal to \t# progres: Now we have started a new bank account in The Evening World. Tt is called the Camp Bennington account. ‘We had to do this because the Wilsons had hardly had time to reach the ground floor of the World Building when Mrs. Agnes Edwards came in with $39 collected from the Woman's Civic Club of Riverside, making the frat contention Cam; noington ni joys and ‘onn. toward You see I knew I was goin this wonderful gift for my I told Mrs. Edwards. Now we have two things to work | Plush, Silvertone, Frost | Silk Lined, Plain, to Wear With Your Qwn Fur: Large, inant . and Mrs. Frank Wilson Make a Generous, ‘Unex- pected and Unsolicited Of- fer of 50 Acres and Four an Ideal Spot for the Tubercu- Good news ‘is coming to us so fast Rochelie, who have done more for the ple whom I have so far met, have given me a fifty-acre camp at Ben- mosphere. Twenty acres are ploughed for planting. The soil is rich. Tacre nished, where twenty boye may be will allow us to bulld others as we They have drilled a well through e ining water, that some of my workers find people that the Government is taking ample care Of ex-service»men and that the udlic is mot needed—that my work Boys are now being operated on working to ing down from gas received three re crawling back to tals, victims df tuberculos ‘What a wonderful lot, of ‘bod this | ‘They can raise all the vegetables and fruit we need for the ie e I come up to visit my “blessed.” T I have already selected the woman who will run this camp. And T have |) BROOKLYN—Fulton Street Near Hoyt....... DU a Use, ‘ Camp, for, I figure that, as Camp Benning- yours at the rental of #1 per year, we of J eet $10,000 ti all fo run It. That will be to Re people are nearly failing over them- selves to give contributions to & camp, reallaing its value. The $10,000 run- ing expenses will be quite easy to get. But who will help me to pay my rent for it? I've got to hustle around and earn a dollar a year for two long years, and tho prospect frightens me. ‘Think of my nerve in taking upon thyself the burden paying two years’ rent on a camp in Vermont, when I already have my hands full! Well, who wants to pay the first year’s rent? In full? I won't pay it in monthly instalments. 1 want to be a sport and pay the Wilsons in full—a year’s rent {in advance! Who knows? They may need the money. You can't tell about these rich people. They get awfully hard up at times and I certainly would like & prince if I could Ko to them with a whole year’s rent for Camp Bennington and pay them in advance. Let thom spend it as they wish. They deserve a little fun after such gen- erosity to my boys. Now if there is still one person lett who needs to be convinced an to whether ex-service men are properly cared for or not, let them read the followin, To my mind it thi most pathetic appeal from an ex soldier that [ have ever read: “Ex-soldier, American, friendless, willl) to work hard in return for good home; A-1 references, James J, Curran, Box 46, Hudson Observer, Hoboken.” Those American, my heart. To think that in all this beautiful, friendly world, with so many loving homes open to ex-soldiers, that there is one American boy who must call himself friendless! , that our Ser- vice House were functioning now! Curran, if you see this, come over to The World Building—to Room 1125, and you will never be able to call yourself friendiess again, [am your friend. I have always been your friend, although you did not know it. Through me you will find other friends and a good home and a job. So come to \see us, boy, ‘and find your friend: The clipping was sent to me by an © ler, signing his | Imitials, RK. J. W., 12th Infantry. He too wants a job. Well, there are more jobs than there are boys to fill them. I have trouble in finding ‘boys to take those 1 have to offer. Apply to the Ex-Service Men's:;Em- ployment Bureau, No, 729 Sixth A’ nue, and there is one job that I know of which could pay as high as $1 Oor $12 a day, Now, don’t write to me to get you a jeb. Go after It at three words — ex-soldier, friendiess > nearly break «| the above number, peopie no eyes to read, | no ears to hear? Do they not believe Now that Harding and Coolidge ar in the saddle, I have great expect tions of what the Umited States Gov- ernment is going to do. T hope It will do #0 much that it will put me out of business in my work for the wounded, And f believe it will, The first thing it should do in to co-opera with the State of New York and set- tle the controversy about a hospital for the Insane or mental cases at \Creedmoor, Three million dollars, patriotically appropriated by the State, are lying idle, Contracts ready to be signed are mildewing. Thousands of shell-shocked ex-ner- vice men—mild cases now—are rapid- ly going insane and becoming incu able—because the Federal Govern- ment will not meet the State Govern. ment and cut that fool red tape, Red tape! Because of which more sol- diers have died than were ever killed by German bullets—in my opinion, at The Service House is now a se! fact.’ Two hundred dollars mare hunt been sent me by Fort Washington Public Sehool—the balance of a fund rained by teachers and pupils of a sohool built on the site of the Battle ce senator: ne hundred per from start to finish! oes And many thanks for so handsome a check jas Evelyn Goldsmith and Lieut, Murray Phillips are no! geet with The Evening World's campaign for the disabled swvidiers’ service house. Send all contributions to Fiber r bring to me in Room 1125, World Ruilding. cont. World Service House Fund West Thirty-Fourth Street—New York { Sale at AU} (Three Storess***** ' Your Unrestricted Choice Any Winter Coat Whether Formerly Priced $55, $65 to $75 $6. = Magnificently Trimmed With Furs Your unrestricted choice to-morrow of any Winter coat-remaining in stock —regardless of all former costs and prices. ing style successes of the season—of Bolivia, Suede and Wool Velour, Sill Belted coats, cape-coats and wraps, Glow, Llama. Genuine Fur Collars of Australian Opossum, Natural Raccoon, French Sealine and feet| OMly one who escaped the . .NEWARK—Broad Street & West Parl : Including many of the outstand- ASUSEDOF HOLD AMS Demanded Money and Drit From Saloon Man ai Then Attacked Him, - Four Jersey City policemen_w suspended by Director of nile Safety John Bentley to-day for # alleged drinking escapade, and of them were afterward held in S10 ballin Bayonne on charges of m™ bing a eatoon keeper. suspended men are Miles nott, William Calnon, Walter Daly and Christopher Geerloff. Daly is the charge. Director Bentley gave am Evening World reporter this of the affair: ? “On Saturday night when these lloemen were off duty they are anid: have gone to a dance at © te Hail, Jersey City, and afterward | bave joined a rinking party. 3 Bayonne. There they met one Wi : lam McMahon and John Burke. Bugle” is @ former policeman of _ “The party went to the saloon John Stachowski at No. 98 Bast 3 Street, Bayonne, and demanded it is charged, When whiskey was re« fused they are alleged to have sented themselves as revenue and demanded $25, This also was ne= fused, 2 ‘Then it is alleged that Cainon pled with the saloonkeeper, him to the floor, poked a revolver his ribs and told him to keep quiet, ‘The saloonkeeper’s family, 2 aroused by the noise and came from the living rooms above. They — were held at bay with a revolver. The cash register was opened and $f taken, 5 Burke and MoMahon were ae by the Bayonne police. “While tt were being arfaigned Geerloff was found asleep in the courtroom and he | was arrested. They were taken a Jersey City detective to Bayonhe, Tt was aald that the identified all but Daty, psuiabaser ee TWO HOLD-UPS BY ONE BA\ Police say Same Robbers Operated — re mad Club. ‘ The police ‘investiguting the of the Roulaton chain store at No. Rogers Avenue Saturday night, up the manager, Duncan Kennedy, revolvers, believe the band to be the aume one whidh at one o'clock morning raided the Kensington Club No. 821 Gravesend Avenue, taking in money and $1,800 worth of from card fies - ‘Three youths were if the band whigh — visited the store. When Mr. Kennedy raised his hands over his head took $100 from the cash register and frem one of b Miss i Fisher of Now foe ee a sod arrel, ‘The thieves ened her It’ ahe gave an alaren > OWNER ON TRIP, ROB HOME: A a 5. Cramm, Real Estate Finds Place Looted om Retara. When Aliya 8. Crdmm, prominent Brooklyn real estate operator and Prose ident of the Thirty-necond Ward Voters Club, returned to his home at No, 2808 Farragut Read, Brooklyn, to-day, after & month's vacation in Cuba, he found | his house had been burglarized. About $1,000 worth of silverware and clothes had been stolen, A side door had been immed 5 . ‘umm’ misao abeent. J oe 6 had al to the polles by Predenick Dav * ° busin : door open last Friday NoCoet ’ ‘ in House or With Nutria, $10 by rowing her oe | aE