The evening world. Newspaper, March 26, 1921, Page 4

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SE IOVERNOR MILLER MAY NOT CHANGE “Republican Leaders Split and Governor Fears to Use Party Whip. * socoulhqual <—h -.aediallia | @UBANY, N. Y., March %—~Dhe P|} Direct Primary Law may not be dis- (| tarbed by this Legislature after all. A feal fight is on between the load- .@F8 of both Houses over the proposed Maeasure, and tt is a certainty that tthe bill framed by the Whitley spe- legislative committees will not be hy the Assembly unless the cracks the whip and ‘Qfives the Republican jambs into the . t it is quite possible, notwith- that the repeal of the Pri- Taw was made part of the platform, that the Governor tia hands off. Ife has not special message to the Lex- the subject, and it i# re- when spoken to some Concerniny such a mes- “The Legisiature may they may take action message in.” ie week the Republican adopted a plan to repeal the ‘but this was done only bitter fight behind The proposition was with the Senators from and it is no secret that ir constituents are op- dectoring of the direct against the changes was Frederick M. Daven- Oneida County, who, an independent, but became “regular.” The was under, and there was no bill before the was decided that the conference was that and the judiciary, down ‘Supreme Court Jus- He af if ai e = z 3 ii 52 if ? - i i g g tr iE eet eS en the public interest and of of many of the members. @ members of both mere automatoms, e party leaders dictated. Governor's programme over, and now the party are looking over the fleid, fig- the cost an: baer! UP any profits. big capital which blican Party, 90 redl; ls the consun- eit eat within the ‘Traction Bill, it is estimated, tis goat the party dearly. Not o going to ‘ the party up-Btate beyond the ; of the y bosses to patch 2 ot more sober minded $24 2) Moreen Welieve that the line es 4rawn somewhere, and that | Ihe place to draw it is in the Primary , % —_—_— oD SAY MOTHER TAUGHT _ ‘TWO GIRLS TO STEAL "Pree Locked Up in Jersey City - and Police Say Daughters Mrs. Teopia Marmowicz, thirty-eight, ff No, 165 Wighth Gtrect, Jersey City, ‘ her two daughters, Helen, fourteen, Julia, twelve, are under arrest to- on ® charge of petty larceny as a It, It ls alleged, of shoplifting. According to the police a fur cont, eyheveral beaded bags asd other urthle were found in thelr home. heed t irl, r lad Me teaer eiieee eeet Aes tr ak: ; See te ee TAFT MAY PROBE SMELTING. Wireeters tavite Him at Guseen- h helm's Suggestion. ifizt ‘William Howard Taft has been | | wited by the Board of Directors of the Smelting and Refining Com- ie co mvewens charges against the "present management, The board aald deemed an impartial investigation to wet at rest rumors which tended to depress the value of the was le 4 Bimnod"by’ stmon Newhouse, ¥. iL. Sr. 'A letter mi Og ha ee f ve prothe: 1 Fe hand bimon, an inquiry, was” incioved “with ‘the letter. i ___ TRIBUTE TO MRS. SPEYER. cs use inclosed 1d theft, if committed, was committed} was a ee er cee a pe ty ep rt _THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 1921. ere GUARD OF HONOR TO KEEP VIGIL AT Glad He Was Going Instead of | Pope, Last Message of Dying Prelate. | BALTIMORE, March 26—Arrange- | ments for the funeral next Thureday of Cardinal Gibbons are virtually | complete. . The prelate’s body will re- main in the chambor where he aied until Sunday'evening, when it wil) be taken to the Cathedral, there to lie} ip state until removed to the orypt under the ohancel after the final serv toes. Attired In hia archiepiscopal yeat- ments, the Cardinal's body lies on the ded in which he died. Prayers for the repase of hig soul are being said Without Intermission day and night. This will continue until the body is takerf into the Cathedral Sunday evening, when a guard of honor, taken from the Knights of Columbus and ather Catholic organisations, will keop vigil at the bier until the day of the, funeral. Cathedral will be open continuously during this parlod. While the Cardinal's last’ words were blessings upon those of his household, he sent a message to the Pope on Tuesday through Mgr. Jobn ®ongano, Apostolic Delegate: Piense ive to the Pope my m eage of allegiance. Tell him 1 am glad that it is not he who is going instead of me. He Js needed by his burch.” In the opinion of persons well versed in Cathotle Church affairs it is likely to be a long time efore the Bal- timore Archiepiscopal residence will be able to claim another Cardinal as ite permanent occupant. — CHARGE OF ‘INSIDE’ THEFT OF PALMER GEMS ANSWERED Insurance Company Should Jail} Thief if They Know Him, Says Lawyer. Jobn M. Stoddard of counsel for| Mrs. Charlotte King Palmer to-day characterized as ‘preposterous” the amended answer of the Federal In-/forth. The t surance Company way. part of her stolen jewels, The company says that “the, sald|and bungry by a member of the assured’s fam- ily." The robbery oceurred Nov. 15|for food. jast at Mrs, Palmer's home, No. 59| dwellers to Hast 90th Street. put him or her in jail,” said Mr.| daytime was Stoddard. “Every one knows Mre.| pitched in. Palmer was alone in the house cept for the servants when the ban-| sounds, No.80.—Billy Brighteyes Meets Pollykin Again. HB woodland was both busy and With every crack of the branches buds seemed to burst to Mrw, Palmer's} being dressed in the daintiest colors. sult to collect 967,300 insurance on|The forest was full of sounds. the big brown bear, had waked thin noisy fellow as he stumped his way through the forest looking Each day brought ning heard new love songs sung. The “If the company knows of any one|thrush, the robin and the wren split in the family who did it, they should] their throats singing at evening. was alive with The Evening World's Kiddie Klub Korner Crerright, 10M, ty The Prem Pubtishing On (The Mew Touk Bvening Werkh) Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Woodland Wonder Tales By Cous n Eleanor Pollykin Called and Called, rees and the ground were Brune, from his long fast. He new the woodland, each eve- Buy work time and every one By turns the woodland fleet feet ard soft dits attacked her." Mrs. Palmer told of three men, one @ French or Italian Raffles, who bound and gagged her and her ser- vants and then escaped with the gems, Mrs. Palmer took out an insurance 1 policy in February, 1920. This policy, the company says, would not have been granied if the company had known she “was in the habit of sub- Jecting jewelry to unusual and in- creased risks of loss and thefts.” Mra, Palmer valued tho jewels at more than $300,000, The company claims that “the loss, if any, to the plaintiff, was not more than one. twelfth that amount,” and becau sho “deceived” officials the policy is void. ’ Mr, Stoddard said, in regard to the company's “increased risk” charge, that Mrs. Palmer wore her jewels as any other woman does, and she could not be considered careless in wearing them in her own home. He said she ie now In Cuba, but will return soon, a GIANTESSISHELD | IN MAIL THEFTS She's Only Twenty Years Old but Is Six Feet Tall and Weighs 375 Pounds, HARTFORD, Conn, March 26— | Helen Burdick of Colchester, who 1s twenty years old, 6 fect tall, weighs | 87> pounds and Iv married to « man forty years her is the | County Jail to-day, having been indicted By a Federal Grand Jury oa a charge of theft from the United| States mails. She will be brought to| Hartford from New Haven Tuesday and arraigned before United States District Judge Howe, ‘The woman took a had been deposited in a mail box by a rural delivery carrior, it is dharged ‘The package was mailed Noy, 6 by Alex Dasasen of Reckley to Daszasen of Colohester. It contained wearing apparel, condensed milk, candy and a pair of gloves, Mrs. Burdick, the authorities say, admitted taking the package, by’ de- clared she had expected 4 package and that through her Inability to read well did not know it was not ad- dreaved to her ha: TWINS LEFT IN HALLWAY, Babes in Basket Found Side Al Martin Enright of No. 608 Brook Ave- senior, in in West ment House. .|nue, an elevator operator in an apart- ment house at No, 285 West 71st Btroet, heard cries at 5 A. M. to-day, and in .| a bailway found a basket in which were two babes, apparently twins and about thres weeks old. One was u girl Creaeed H lanket; the other wrapped in @ pink bl ty Was a boy, dressed in white also, but min Dlanket. No note was ina blue 5 y Mere) te | package (hat Mra | white and| The beauty of all this Sight and song brought Pollykin, the little blond girl, into the woodland, Several times since Si had kidpapped Billy Bright- squirrel friend, but Billy had never been there. Pollykin had about de- cided that he had run away to the big city where her Duddy sometimes went, or to the West, where her brother said he was going when be grew big. One thing surely was true; Pollykin was a very surprised little gir! when who should she find chas- ing up tree und down but Billy Bright- eyes himself. ubout by a wee gray creature, not nearly as big as hunsels, Was this une Billy Brighteyes who used to be so mischievous, #0 defiant of his mother's orders arid advice? Pollykin looked closer, It was! Click, click, Pollykin tapped the nuts Logether, Billy pricked up his ears. He knew the call and turned te see Pollykin standing below, smil- ing up at him. But at the sume time his wife, Nellie Brighteyes, began chattering loudly in the top of the tree, Billy hesitated. Whioh should he answer? He did want the nuts Pollykin held out; he wanted, too, to play with his old friend, Pollykin called again, Billy was Just about to come down to her when Nellie began again to acold and chat- r "Hurry those Lwlss, in language it all day for you, If you ko that we'll have no home for ldren, Hurry up." Billy Brighteyes turned his course toward his duty and disappeared in the top of the tree, and thouh Polly- said w our ¢ down, Next Pollyki FIVE GENERATIONS LIVING. Birth of Baby im Kipper Family onents Unusual Case. ‘With the birth of a baby girl to Mra. Harry Klipper, of No, 2880 Waghington Avenue, at the Community Hospital, | No, 19 West 10l@t Street, yesterday, | there are five generations of Kiippers living, Phe bab: fe 104 youre old story: Nellie Is Jealous of 4 Rreat-great-grandmothor nd lives in Auatria. ‘Tho other four generations are in this country. The baby's father is « news- paper man and mageaine writer, Wife Shops; Husband Decampe, When Mrs, Lena Knglert of No, 65s Centre Bineet, North Bergen, N. J., went shopping en March 10, her busband, Cha: (ook advantage of her absence and decamped. She found a note on the table which rend: “Don't look for me to-nleht, Hy tho time you arrive home f will be many mites away }1 took my Uttle girl's picture #o I can think of her all the time," The wife and her daughter, May, three years old, Waited for his return but ne word eyes she had come there to yisit her|1 And to make matters | \"°7 We) wtranger still, he was being bossed kin called and called he did not come | “Eastor.” B is for Easter, a day full of joy, ¢ All—meaning each girl and § is for Silenoo, when Jesus was dead, T is for Triumph, which reigneth in- stead, H i for Every one—doing what's right, R is for Righteousness—stronger thin mucht, By BSTELLD MPRTENS. FEBRUARY CONTEST AWARD WINNER. Fifteen Year Clas+. What | Do With My Savings. Since 1 was a small boy [ startea saving money. When seven years of ase my futher used to give me a quarter eyery other day. From that money I deposited 20 cents at the Post Office, and I received two 10- cent postal saving stamps, which I ped on my card. J saved then $30. When I Was eleven years old my father told me to pyt that money in & savings bank, Jithen opened an Account with thateypak. Until now hi 90. Of ‘Edurwe my father added some money to that amount When f will be a college graduate I will have enough money saved to use as a capital in my business, 1 have followed Benjamin Frank- lin's thriftinese. ANDREW REGUZIS, New City. York HONORABLE MENTION, Charlatte Abramson, Spring Valley, N. ¥.; Mollie @yrop, New York City; Marion E. Rooney, New York City; Frederick W. Roselle Parl Saul Meister, New York Cit Blyth, Brookly Mam! Gubbell, New York City; Muriel Fenty, New York City, MARCH CONTEST. ‘Ten awards of $1 each will be given the ten Kiddie Klub members, aged from six to fifteen, inclusive, who send tn the best ideas for a Kiddie Klub contest, Conteatants may send more than one suggestion If they wish. Write NAMB, AGK, ADDRESS and OCHBRTIEICATE number distinctly, Address Cousin Hleanor, N. Hvening World Kiddie Klub, No. 63 Park Row, New York City Contest closes Wednesday, March 80. |e paaaaaemaaaaa nee HOW TO JOIN THE CLUB AND OBTAIN YOUR PIN. Beeinning with any num out OUR lx OF the oon COUPON 762. $1 BOUNTY FOR “RATTLERS.” Vermont Leg Ther Find It Serioun, MONTPHLIBR, Vt, March 26.—Ba- cause of reported dangerous multiplica- Ulon of rattle snakes near West Haven, the Vermont House of Representatives to-day passed & bill providing for the paying of @ bounty of $1 a head on all of the reptiles killed throughout the State. The legislators laughed when the bill was Introduced, but testimony of the Hepresentatives of the West Haven dis- trict deseribed an increasing number of ratilers found there, ———<-— ow otentant ‘Teachers’ Annociation. ‘The annyal uweting of the Protestant Tenohers’ Association will be held on Monday evening, Murch 28, at 8.15, at the Hansen Place M, i. Church, Brook- lyn, Miss Margaret Stattery, author and lecturer on “Methods and Ideals in Religious Education,” will be the prin- cipal speaker. Hor subject will be “Tho Fascination of Ruts.” Special muse Meett M: et sult through the Gort’ of Chas start Ui rt han oo Jan. 6 ery, e i ‘esterday afternoon, F the wouple wore agn7. will be furnished and the eleetion of oMivers for (be ensuing year will tale place, ‘ nt ‘ha smu fgg I ce eA “Smallest Man On Earth” He's a University Professor, Says Detroit Educator—He Raps Colleges, DETROIT, March 26, AVID MACKENZIE, dean of Detroit Junior College, in a talk before the Twentieth Century Club, declared the unt- versity professor “an intellectual miser, not a teacher,” “Big universities are taking money under false pretenses,” declared Mr, MacKenzie. “Tho university professor is she small- est man on earth, merely filling his position in order to earn his living, so that he can go on ac- cumulating knowledge, “University classes are so big and the profedors so indifferent that students do not have the op- portunivies for education they have in the junior college. Tho university professor has no equal for pettiness, He has no human interest in his students. To him they are mere automatons,” Mr, MacKenzie scored the Uni- versity of Michigan faculty for sending back to thelr homes last month 300 students branded failures, “To brand a student as a failure is to damn him for the rest of his life," he said, TIED BOY TO POST, WARRANT CHARGES Woman, Head of Inwood Chil- dren’s Home, Accused of Cruelty. Following complaint that nine- year-old Robert Mounir was tied up lo @ post, Justice of the Peace Ralsig in Cedarhurst, L. L, has issued a warrant for the arrest of Mrs. Hild« Hoffman, who conducts a children’s home at Inwood, L. I. The Justice sent to the Children's Society four- teen other boys and girls between five and ten years, who were ‘ound in Mrs, Hoffman's institution, ‘The other children in the place were Morris, Henry and Soiomon Glass, eight, six and five years respectively, children of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Glass of No, 920 Bast 163d Street, the Bronx; Arthur and Clarence Weinberg, eight and six, sons of Dr. and Mrs, Wein- berg of Newark, N. J.; Erma and Morton Sterk, eight and five, children of Samuel Sterk, a lawyer with of- fiees at No. 280 Broadway; Henrietta, Sarah and Skiney Sadur, nine, seven and five, children of Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Sadur of No. 980 Prospect Avenue, the Bronx; Florence and William Chykyn, ten and eight, obfl- dren ‘of Joseph Chykyn of No. 183 East Broadway, Manhattan, and Ruth Goodman, ten, ughter of Mrs. Ma- tilda Goodman of the Bronx. ————— WILSON RECOVERING FROM HIS ATTACK Former Presitemt’s Condition Satis- fa fter Treatment for ahs us Indigestion, WASHINGTON, March 26.—¥or- mer President, Wilson was said to- day,} to, be recovering satisfactorily fram, an acute attack of indigestion which he suffered shortly after noon yesterday. Admiral Cary T. Grayson, his phydician, said it probably would be another day or two before Mr. Wilson could be considered entirely recovered, Mr. Wilson bas fbeen subject to nervous Indigestion for several years, land yesterday's attack, although with- out Warning, was not wholely unex- pected, it was said, Only members of his family and servants were present when the attack o¢curred, but burzied calls brought Dr. Sterling Ruffin, who previously had attei®ed him, to the home on § Street. Dr. Grayson ar- rived soon after, and with Dr. Ruffin applied the remedies that had proved succensful in previous attacks. Dr. Grayson said it might be posnt- bie for the former President to take not probable. Policeman Accidentally Shoots Himmelf. Patrolman Joseph Cheoh of the Bust 126th Street Station accidentally shot himselé to-day at his home, No. git Second Avenue, Astoria, 1. 1. In fastening hin belt it slipped to the floor and his revolver was discharged, the bullet entering his right leg. He was remoyed to Long Ialand City, it, John's Hospital, GARY, Knotts, first settled, first Postmaster and first Mayor of Gary, died to-day at Rochester, Minn. following an opera- tion, it leanned here. tically all of ‘the municipal institutions are the praducts of his, administration, Easiest to Usel Don't ruin your material i and fades. Buy “Diamond Tell dri eotton, ings, everythin, gr silk, or if it SE IMs daily motor ride to-day, bat it was) | | | SWAT THE FLY POEM CONTEST ENTERS FINAL WEEK WITH RUSH OF KIDDIE LITERARY EFFORTS SSS Avalanche of Offerings Sure to Come In From Children Who Have Caught the Spirit of The Evening To-Day’s Slogan “Kill the Sleepy Spring Fly Before He Wakes Up.” The second week of the great SWAT THE FLY contost is over and ail children who want their abare of the $1,000 offered by dward Hatch dt. fon the best essays and poems about bad Mr. Fly will have \to get their contributions to this office by next Saturday night. As the end ap- prouches, an avynianche of essays and poems is inundating ‘The Evening World. But don't put it off, kiddies. Read the rules and conditions care- fully and then send your best work ‘and get a share of the prige money. Read these examples, all of them sent in by children of ten and under, and see if you can't do as well, or better. GET RID OF FLIES. Mites! Ugh! ‘The enough to make one sh The fly is a pesky insect which thrives beat on dirt and filth. It is there- fore a menace to our health. We ought to declare war on it and make every effort, in the spring, to exterminate them from our homes, The best way to do this is to keep the home spotleasly clean. Keep all the foods cov- ered. Keep the garbage can cov- ered. Have no mercy on the Pesky little creatures for they have no me on Ue, ANNA GLABS, ten yeiirs @ld, No. 765 Trinity Avenue. ry SWAT THE FLY. The fly is an awful mischiet- maker, Here is an oxumple of the mischief it has wrought It was a lovely day in summer A mother busy cleanin She had put the baby on the in the nursery. ‘The chid, just learning to creep, journeyed into the kitchen near a pile of rubbish Flies soon gathered about the dirt, and as the baby was near t, alighted on him. The mother, coming into the kitchen a little later, picked the baby from the floor. The miachiet had already been done, however, for at lunch time the baby refused to eat. By evening he was in high fever. The woman sent for the doctor He came, examined the child and said that the baby had caught the disease from flies, After many weeks, with all the able assist ance of the doctor, the child finally recovered. When the baby was well the mother formed a club for the children of the neigh- THE “SWAT-THE-FLY” ESSAY CONTEST The contest began March 15 and will close at midnight Satur- day, April 2, All contributions, to be considered by the judges, must be id before that time. The immediate aim is to invite and induce CHILDREN OF TEN YEARS OF AGE AND UNDER to compose an essay or an eight- line verse telling of the menace of the fly and suggesting the best means for the fly's truction, The cont will be limited to the five boroughs of New York City. The prizes donated by Edward Hatch jr, the fly's greatest enemy, will be awarded through the medium of THE EVENI WORLD, and the names, ad- dresses and ages of all prizs winning contestants will be pub- lished in this paper, Prizes will be awarded to the authors of the contributions which are judged to be the best. The judges will be Dr. Royal S. Copeland, Commissioner of Health, and Dr. William L. Et- tinger, Superintendent of Schools, SSAY| TAIN M AN MUST 3OT CON- ay THAN 200 WORDS 4 Prizes of $50 Each 8 Prizes of $25 eel 16 Prizes of $10 he. 88 Prizes of $5 Each. 116 $200 200 160 440 $1,000 All contributions shall_be ad- dressed to the “SWAT-THE- FLY CAMPAIGN, THE EVE- NING WORLD, NEW YORK CITY.” Each contribution shall be written on one aide of the paper, preferably in ink, and shall bear he name, address and age of the and the sianature of arent or teacher attest- fact that the child is not author, either a ing the over ten. WHY WOMEN BUY “DIAMOND DYES” Garments or Draperies Never Fade or have ‘“'Dyed-Look” a poor dye that spots, streaks Dyes"—no other kind—then fect results are guaranteed, Each package contains directions so simple any woman can diamond-dye old, shabby skirts, ts, dresses, coats, sweaters, er~ tockings, d) cover- ist whether your material is wool en, or @ mixture, 16 rich colors an " World Crusade. borhood, She taught them to make their, motto, “SWAT THE FLY." The children are grown up now, but they are still faithful to their motto and are teaching others to adopt it, MILLICENT MILCHMAN, ten years old, No. 821 Park Avenue, Brooklyn. fly to @ menace n To. every tne's, health, ‘The mem baled lewect 1 know of mymelt WIL) a ewvatter at home, Mr, "le" Canne ive, Of that T em certain, With the help that 1 give. MURIDL DORIS, ten years old, No. 629 Hancock Street, Brooklyn. piven ce Will won te 0 grow, from tthe part deca, “Wien Moat THe. GRAY, nine years old, tte Street, Brooklyn, With Ube. DOROTHY |No. 758 Lafay Mr Hateh has received the follow- ing letter frém Health Commissioner Copeland, who, as you all know, re- cently expressed his pleasure at ihe- ing one of the judges of your work: “Tam very giad indeed to serve as ® judge in the contest which you are conducting. I believe that your in- terest in this direction will prove a very important factor in protecting our people, the babies particularly, | from this menace during the coming guimmer. It is very striking way of bringing home to the people the possibilities for danger which lie in this insect. With best wishes for the success of the contest. “ROYAL 8. COPBLAND. M. 1D." To-Day’s Suggestion WHAT TO WRITE ABOUT: “Why Children Should Tell Their Friends About Bad Mr. Fly.” “DANDERINE” | Girls! Save Your Hair! Make It Abundant! | Immediately after a “Danderine” massage your hair takes on new life, lustre and wondrous beauty, appear- Jing twice as heavy and pleatiful, be- j¢ause each hair seems to fluff and thicken. Don't let your hair stay life- less, colorless, plain or scragaly. You, too, want lots of long, strong, beau- tiful hair. A hottle of delightful “Danderine” freshens your — scalp, checks dandruff and falling hair. ‘This stimulating “beauty-tonic” gives to thin, dull, fading hair that youthful brightness and abundant thickness— All druggists !—Adyt. Get rid of that unsightly rash with Resinol A pure, healing ointment contain {ng a gentle medication that acts quickly and directly on sick skins. usually healing the irritated spots, and restoring skin health and at- tractiveness, Don't give up when Resinol Ointment and Kesluol Soap can be obtained > y fr any dragglar GREATEST BODY BUILOER. NO DRUGS — Do you feel bilious, constipated, headachy, upset, full of cold? Take one or two Cascarets to-night for your liver and bowels. Wake up with head cleat, stomach right, breath sweet and feeling fine. No griping, no inconvenience. Children love Cas- carets too. 10, 25, 50 cents,—Advt MOTHER! “California Syrup of Figs” Child’s Best Laxative Accept “California” Syrup of Figs only—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say “California.”— REBELLION IN STOMACH “Pape's Diapepsin” at once ends Indigestion and Sour, Acid Stomach, Lumps of pain. if sic undigested food cause If your stomach is in # revolt; , gassy und upset, and what you just ate has fermented and turned your; head dizzy and aches; just take a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin to help neutralize acidity and in five min- utes you wonder what became of the pain, acidity, indigestion and distress, If your stomach doesn’t take azans of your liberal limit without rebellion if your food is a damage instead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, harmless stomach antacid is Pape's Diapepsin, which costs ao little at drug stores,—Advt. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK Wowpans is 4

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