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AWS 10 PERMIT REAU MERGERS bcocpiacaaa: Takes Up Co-ordina- in Branches of the |p Government Service. = -IS -ONE ISSUE: Interests Also Require More Protection—Spe- i, Cialists Are Needed. 4% _ | By David Lawrence Ong! 1 Corepepondent of The Eve- ning World.) | WASHINGTON, March 28 (Copy- 1921)—/The passion for co-ordi- ation scoms to have séized the Hard- “tg: Administration in carnest. Scarces a4 @ Cabinet moeting is held but that * mora Dian is discussta for reorganiz- UNTERMYER HEARD IN CONTEMPT CASE Lawyer De Ford and Con- tradicts Attorney Baldwin. Samuel Untermyer appeared to- day before Supreme Court Justice MoAvoy to testify in the contempt proceedings against Robert 0. Scal- lan, William P. Beazgell, Ruel P. Smith and James Barrett, members of the Morning World staff. ~ Questioned by Sigtricd Hartman of Jobn B. Stanchfield’s office, Mr. UL termyer outlined the scope of the Lockwood committee investigation and told of his own designation as chief counsel in the investigation and appointment as Special Deputy At- torney General. He said associates and assistants had been appointed on his recommend&tions. Mr. Hartman asked him to tell the circuumstances itig’ different branches of the Govern- AMeMt sorvice and consolidating bu- When Congress gets back here im & fortnight the Executive will be- Pouferonces with logislative lead- bo that laws may bo framed per- Sia flexibility, jus far discussion has centred on important phases of Govern- Service wherein effort is said to too widely distributed—first, the ng of communications, includ- ‘Wireless, cables, telographs; sec- the absence of any general man- for the different investigating bureaus and detective agencies of the ‘Government whereby fraud and other Violations of the many laws of tho ited States are investigated, and the lack of a general super- visory bureau or department caring NSF ‘the different fleets of the Gov- 5 geen outside the navy, such as “tiie revenue cutters, the lighthouse steamboat inspection service, the } waving service, the coast and spate service and kindred activities. $ use ships but equip them sep- arately and aro more or less in com- Petition with each other in scales of Sway and the purchase of supplies. PePhe need for some definite organ- lon ‘which shall take charge of “communications of the United has been emphasized as a juence of the controversies in the Government is engaged. {s, for examplo, the contest Japan ovor possession of a base in the Island of Yap. there is the naval radio sitna- ~jayolving certain equities for io ws between the use of the facilitics to supplement pri- jyperations and the cncourage- , on the other hand, of private jes Of purely American own- GAL FIGHT BETWE! WEST- IN UNION AND GOVERNMENT. _ The legal fight between tho Weat- Union Telograph Company and Government over the landing of gable i Miami, Fla., and the on- c@bie situation as it affects ith America has opened up such questions of importanee to future trade of the United States it nA branch of the Governmont is wined to Bandle the entire sub- : of communications under prea- ‘mt statutes. Cabinet officers recog- ‘that the cable and wireless in- of the American people and Government require more pro- nowadays than ever before in of the tendency of Governments late the incoming and out~ cable business by the issuance gable permits containing provi- ‘thac are absolute, @ Department of State has been handling the international phases of the controversy, but it requires in addition specialists in communication and the moment the wireless is iutro- duced into the discussion the Navy Department hay jurisdiction or else the Department of Commerce if domestic jal stations are involved. is no agency which can survey Whole matter of communicationa "apd protect the Public from exorbi- rates. At present the consum ‘®ppeal to an already overbur- Interstate Commerce Commis- to get justice on the matter of pmunication rates, the most serious situation the Harding Administration is Senxious to cure’ involves the Secret ‘the bureau of investigation of Department of Justice; the in- service of the Post Office leading to the appointment of Will- jam A. De Ford as a Special Deputy. “What matoriality has that?” asked Mr, De Ford. “None,” said the Justice, and ruled out the question, Mr, Hartman started tg speak but was out short by Justice McAvoy, who told him he would not hear ar- gsument on decision. Mr. Untermyer identified a copy of a letter from Mr, DeFord, received Dec. 22, 1920, ‘This, it way stated, was @ letter of resignation. Mr. Unter- myer said it was sent to bim after conversation about the timestone m plen of guilty. He said he told Mr DeFord that he believed t ho lit stone mon would plead, and that he was inclined to recominend punish- ment by fines, because the toxtimony of the indicted men was necded in the prosecution of John T. Hettrick and labor leaders, After receiving the letter Mr. Un- termyer sid he talked with Mr, Do Ford in the City Hall, where the com- mittee was in session. “Something was Said about De Ford going ahead to present his evidence againgt the Wuilding material men to the Grand Jury,” he said. He spoke of calling witnesses. I told him that I did not want immunity given any of the mon implicated by oulling them before the Grand Jury, until I had consulted with my wsogiates. 1 asked him what he meant by his grand stand play about resigning and said he did not want to resign, that he just wanted to make a record,” Mr. Untermyer told further of a con- versation in Washington with Arthur Baldwin, attorney for John A. MeCar- thy, Tammany man, who is one of the building material men under indict- mont. Ho said that Mr, Baldwin, was mistakén when he tostified at a pro- vious session that he, Mr. Untermyer, had been quoted as saying he did not want to send these men to prison, but had told him that it was an unpleas- ant duty to send them to prison, and told him about remedial and construc tive legislation hg proposed, ‘The punpose of Mr. Baldwin's visit, Mr. Untermyer said, was to talk about negotiations Mr. Baldwin said had been carried on in bohalf of the indicted me BEFORE M’AVOY ON FARMS CHARGED Tells of Conversation With|Twenly Such Structures Set eHE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH a8, rvzt. Women Pray at Mount Joy Priso as Six Irishmen Are Executed. SINN FEIN PLOTS TO BURN BUILDINGS Afire in Newcastle District —Many Others Elsewhere. LONDON, March 28.—A campaign of incendiariam in Various parts of the country is assuming such pro- portions that the authorities of Scot- land Yard are mobilizing a fleet of motor cars and lorries to rush men to any point where there is a call for their services, This plan is simi- lar to one adopted here recently when many incendiary fires were set in London. The Evening Standard asserts that further Sinn Fein plots to destroy farm buildings on the outskirts of London have been discovered, Spe- cial detectives were posted last night outside of Government buildings and No. 10 Downing Street, the official home of Prime Minister Lloyd George, and special precautions were taken by the Bank of England. Farm buildings numbering twenty were burned in the Newcastle dis- trict, while other fires occurred at St. Albans and in Hertfordshire, Bea- consfield and Buckinghamshire. Near the ruins at a number of places empty oil cans were discoyered> SHELLS SEIZED IN CARGO OF ARMS LANDED IN KERRY Crown Capture in Dublin Indi- cates Only Part of Ship- ment was Seized. DUBLIN, March 28.—Special mill- tary precautions have been taken in Ireland to prevent any anniversary celebrations of the 1916 rebellion ‘These measures resulted in the seizure here on Thursday of bombs, arms and twelve 18-pounder shells. A atatement emanuting from of- ficial Crown quarters to-day says the arsenal was landed on the Kerry coast, conveyed in fishboxes to Sligo, partly by road and the rest of the way by rail, and thence were taken to Dublin. The statement says the weapons were consigned to an Eng- lish firm and intercepted by Sinn Fein agents in Dublin, who removed them to the place where they were found. This story is significent, because if the cargo was landed at Kerry it would naturally be of much larger proportions than the arms seized. Only twelve shells were found, which would be a useless consignment, and probably formed but a small pyct of the whole. The landing of the shells suggests their accompaniment by field a GREEKS TAKE OBJECTIVE. t Junction Point om Bag- dad Railway. CONSTANTINOPLE, = March (Associated Press).—~Announcement re the fall of Aftunkarahissar, the tm- portant junction point on the Bagdad tajlway where tke branch from Smyrna Jolng tho ¢ main ine, was made here this betta is one of the two objectives at which the Greek offensive against the Turklen Nationalists has been aimed, the other belng Eskllshehr, the junction as (2 of the line to ener. inst mine that the Turk an troops were nix! at the ish troops were evacuating Kakish: Bt. 2 Lea WAGE CUT ON NEW HAVEN. Moard Ker Decision. NEW HAVEN, Conn. March 28.— Reduction of wages of shap _omployees| P! on the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railrond, to the sahedule which prevatied prior to the last deci- ston of the Federal Wage Board, were annoynond to-day by General Manager , Le Bard to a conference committee which appeared before him. The matter will go to’ the Board for a decision. Signal Hreakdown Delays Bast 4: Subway. ‘Trouble with the signalling appa- rete at the Bowling Green Station of the Interborough Rapid Trangit caused @ delay between 7.85 and 7.65 oes thin’ ‘morning of | northbou trains on the Lexington ‘Avenue Biv sion, delaying thousands of passe: in reaching their work. Aybroken raiepipe cau train on the Lexington Avenue ee line, BI yn, to lose twenty minutes in running from Crescent Street to gangs Street this morning, riviny lever rt a fol ing it were ha shorter periods. ued SE Teau. Somebody will have to decide that question. ‘The passion’ for co-ordination can, Wage guns, and this in turn suggests an equipment for the Republican forces hitherto regarded as impossible. O’CALLAGHAN JOKES OVER ‘DEPORTATION’ Pans to Tour U.S. for Month, He Says—Forgot All About Order to Leave. PROVIDENCE, R. L, March 28,— Lord Mayor O'Callaghan of, Cork de- clared to-day he had no intention of going back to Ireland im the near fu- ture, in accordance with the order suddenly kicked from behind tumbled from the corner of 149th Street and Third Avenue, the busiest spot in the Bronx. THREE BANDITS tered the Atlantic & Pacific tea store at No. 1121 Gravesend Avenue, Brook- | manager, John Jerouschek of No. 1961 | dow, back into rogister. reporting he had found but $18. They demanded of Jerouschek to where the rest of the money was. Jerouschek, and $211 in checks representing the Saturday afternoon there was no other money. the robbers struck him a heavy piow on butt of his revolver, down, back room and threatened to shoot him unless he told them where the money was kept. nothing to do with the money and give him another dose.” t reached him he put his hand into his IO This photograph was taken in Tae ohne n ISON, SOBLIN front of the famous prison in the City of Dublin, where so many Irish prisoners have been confined. On a recent day six young men were executed while the entire city mourned, Many women approached the walls of the jail and knelt in prayer as the hangman did his work, WHILE POLICE C0 BANDITS WORK HERE UNCHECKED. NFER ON DRY LAWS (Continued from #irst Page.) and headlong into collar. Both were stunned ‘The hat store is a few steps away the HOLD UP MANAGER OF A. & P. TEA STORE Pretends to Be Unconscious, but » They Make iHim Yield Money by Threat. ‘Three men with drawn revolvers en- lyn, at 8.55 o'clock to-day. They locked the door behind them and ordered the 50th Street and the clerk, Philip] Aarons of No. 4408 16th Avenue, who were at work dressing the show win- the store and stood them against the wall. One of the men went to the cash He returned to the others, | know who had $149 in cash Foceipts, said | One of | the back of the head with the knocking bin ‘The men then took Aarons into a He said he had er know where Jerouschek kept {t, “AIL right," sald the robbers, ‘we'll The manager had been pretending be unconscious but as the men of deportation issued weeks ago. ing, “He’s killed me!” He had been stabbed. Torto's four-year-old daughter's screams on the sidewalk attracted Policeman Dennis Sullivan of the Charles Street Station. Torio died to- day at St. Vincent's Hospital and the police are looking for Rocco. Three men are in Staten Island Hospital, one of whom will probably die, and the police are looking for two others who, though wounded, es- caped following a stiletto fight early to-day at Bay and Hannah Streets, Tompkinsville, Staten Island. The fight grew out of an argument over a game of pool. The men in the hos- pital are Rocco Luciano, No. 80 Han- nah Street; Angelo Ecoa, No. 228 Bay Street, and Angelo Naneli, No. 47 Hannah Street. Luciano is said to be near death, All three are charged witb felonious assault. pas ss coke FORMER BLUECOAT FOUND IN STREET WITH THROAT COAT Three Girls Who Had Been With Him in Restaurant Are Held. John Coffey of No. 108 Greenwich | Avenue, who was to be reinstated as & policeman Thursday after he had been dismissed for absence without leave, died in the Lenox Hill Hospi- tal at 6 o'clock this morning from a slash in his throat. Coffey wa’ found on the sidewalk at a Uttle after 2 o'clock in front of the cider saloon of Abraham Ward at No. 207 East 76th Street by Policeman Mannion, whe called a taxicab and took him to the hospital, Arthur Bretten and Dennis Shea, special policemen employed by the Star Blectric Protective Association, told the detectives they had seen three girls run from the restaurant after Coffey wi taken to the hos- pital. They pointed out the girls on Third Avenue a little later. They were Margaret Burke, a telephone breast pocket and drew out the bank-|°Perator of No, 1669 Third Avenue; “{ forgot all about Washington and| book containing the cash 4nd checks|Anna Hayes of No. 320 East 80th Matter Now Goes to Ratlway Wawel that matter lons since,” ho added, }*4 seve it to them. He laughed when asked about his SHOOTING FOLLOWS 8 for obeying the order. “L plan to tour the country, making addresses, for the next month,” he concluded. O'Callaghan has a speaking engage- ment here to-night, and will make Sinn Fein addresses at Pawtucket and in New Hampshire. The order for bis deportation was issued when it was shown he had smuggled him- self into the country without a pase- WALES MAY OPEN ULSTER PARLIAMENT Report Current in London—Prince May Also Visit Other Dis- tricts in Ireland. LONDON, Margh 28.—-It was re- ported here to-day on excellent au- thority that the Prince of Wales would open the new Ulster Parlia- ment to be wet up under the Home SALOON ROBBERY ON THIRD AVENUE Man Found ‘Wounded by ‘Bullet on Second Street—Two Stab- bing ‘Cases. James Hayes, nineteen, of No. 1955 Second Avenue, reputed chief of a 101st Street gang, was ehot and killed early yesterday ip front af No, 225 East 101st Street. Jake Malaga, who owns a aaloon at No. 1781 Third Ave- nue, #aid Hayes was one of four-men who escaped late Saturday night after hitting him on the head with a blackjack, smashing mirrors and taking $180, Several hours after the hold-up Patrolman Bosserman of the Bast 104th Street Station heard a shot and found Hayes lying on the side- walk. He died before an ambulance Street and Mrs. Lillian Langan of No. 217 East 77th Street. Ail three were detained as wit- nesses and sent to the District Attor- ney’s office, alain THREE DETECTIVES MOBBED AS THEY MAKE AN ARREST Two ‘Attacked at First and Third Is Assaulted as He Comes to Their Aid. A crowd of several hundred Ital- jans resident in Bast 108th Street av. tacked and seriously injured Detec- tives John Dougherty and William Caputo early to-day when they ar- rested Mike Bartine of No, 312 East 108th (Street, an ex-convict recently released, who had tried to kill Daniel Belluselo of No. 312 East 108th Street, who was instrumental in sending him to prison, ‘The detectives were show- OFFERS HIS FINE RESIDENCE FOR SALE TO NEGROES Flatoush Resident Explains Chil- dren Ridicwed His Family Be- cause of Religion. PRINCE, No. 110 Linden ys Avenue, Watbush, to-day advertised his handsome home at that address for sale “bo refined colored people or Italians." Prine told reporters the reason for the offer was that the children of the neighborhood had ridiculéd him and his children because of their religious faith. It ts said other residents of the district .are greatly stirred and may form a pool to buy ¢he prop- erty. One of those who answered the advertisement, it is said, was a negro preacher, Samuel L. Ar- rington, pastor of the Salem Bap- tist Church, He was told the price Was $20,000, of which $6,000 was required in cash. address when she was arrested last week on a charge of grand larceny by “slicing” the bank deposits #he made for her employer was arraigned in Harlem Court to-day, when it was said her real name fs Catherine Farrell, No. 120 East 114th Stheet, The specific charge has to do with only a $10 theft, but the amount said to have been stolen in two years is about $18,000. ‘The girl pleaded not guilty. Max Rothman, manager of the Azanel Garage, No. 166 Wast 120th Street, where the girl wae a bookkeeper, testified re- garding seven transactions in which he | said she deducted $ to $20 from bank deposits. Detective Prantner testified she had comteased to him. At this pouit the gtl’s counsel watved further ex- amination and she was ‘held in $5,009 ball. The girl denied that ahe had been on the Installment plan for $150. oe ARBITRATE STRIKE, IS COURT ORDER First Action of kind in State Directs Troy Traction Company to Meet Board. TROY, March 28. Justice ‘Howard United Traction Company, whose; regular employees have becn on strike for eight weeks, to submit their con- tentions to a Board of Arbitration and ‘be prepared to proceed at 10.30 o'clock to-morrow morning. The employees; who went on strike because of a 25 per cent. wage cut, applied to the court two weeks ago for an order compelling the company to arbitration. ‘fhe tompany objected on the ground that Presidents Droog- an and Maloughlin of the unions, who brought the action, were not regular employees of the company and therefore not eligible to institute the action. Justice Howard to-day overruled the objections. The order is believed to be the first of ite kind in the Stat WAGE RAISE DENIED ON “SHORT LINES” Petition Against Sixty-Seven Rail- roads Refused—Advances Made Not Affected. CHICAGO, March 2%—The United States Railroad Labor Board to-day dismissed appeals for inereased wages filed with it last fall by fifteen railway labor uniéns against sixty- seven “short lines” throughout the country. About 4,000 employees are affected. Short lines which accept for their men the terms of the $600,000,000 wage award of last July will not be priv- ileged to go back to the old scale, under to-day’s action, however, the announcement of the board saying: “This decision shall not be consid- ered as affecting any wage increase now in effect nor any agreement re- garding wages between any of the carriers and their employees. pt Eads. “ Supreme Court More Jersey Builders Cat Wages. ‘Wages of all men connected with the building trades will be reduced from 1 to 20 per cent, May 1, according to plans soon to be made public by the master builders of Pasaic Bergen Counties, The cut wil follow the action of the ing ‘Trades Employers’ Association giving money to a 7 She declared the "$2,000 automobile" she was said to | have bought was an old she bought — ny ordered the | {Unding ap }lated prom SUPREME COURT DECIDES-FOR U.S. IN INCOME TAX CASES snaeatlitontias (Continued from First Page.) ernment imposed a tax on the increased value. The opinion was read by Associate Justice Clark and was unanimous, Coupled with the Ryerson case was that brought ‘by the Et Dorado Cpal & Mining Company, an Indiana cor- poration which abandoned business in 1917, disposed of its assets and ac- counts for-§276,000 and distributed all its fands among the stockholders. It was assessed an additional tax of $3,000 on the ground that the money obtained through the sale repre- eented an increase of $5,940 over the value of the assets in 1913 The court based tts decision on those rendered in former bearing on the meaning of the term “income.” Increase of yalue of a capital in Vestment is taxable as income under the Revenue Act of 1'16, was another decision handed down. The court's decision was given in the appeal of David M. Goodrich from a ruling of the Internal Revenue Bu- reau assessing him upon the inereased value of stocks purchased prior to 1903, Action of the revenue officials was affirmed by the Supreme Court in the transaction showing a gain. The court ruled that the transaction showing an actual loss could not ‘be taxed since there was no “gain”. de- rived, Inorease in the value of corporate bonds, originally acquired and held for dnvestment, is taxable, under the Revenue Act of 1916, the court also ruled to-day. The Supreme Court reversed the decision of Federal Courts of Conne- ticut which held against the Gov- ernment on the question of whether an income tax could be levied against an increase in the value of seourities purchased and held as.an investment, but ruled that the tax could only be imposed on the actual gain Thousands of cases of income as- sessments come within this decision of the court, upon which deponded the necessity of the Government re- nulions of dollars in taxes. jore appeals in anti-profi- leering cases brought under the Lever Law were dismissed in Supreme Court ‘to-day on motion of the Fed- eral Government. One involved pro- ceedings against the American Wooten Company, while three others were against the Brooklyn Edison Company, Tncorporated. The Supreme Court agreed to-day tu review decisions of New York courts holding that ‘dividends applied by credit in partial payment of stipu- tums did not constitute in come" so that “decline in mar- ket value of securities owned by the taxpayer constituted ‘depreciation of Property The decision of the lower court was rendered in favor of the New York Life Insurance Company in suits filed by that company against Charles W Anderson, Collector of Internal Rev- enue for ‘the Second New York Dis- trict. of $311,000 ct Against Director Gen- eral of Railroads WASHINGTON, March ver- dict for $45,000 by a court in Youngs- town, Ohio, against the Director Gen- eral of Railroads as a result of the death of George J. Smith was in ef- fect approved to-day (by the Court In refusing to review the Smith was killed by a loco a street crossing at Niles, Ot. peniehiner <li MUST PAY $5,000,000 FOR AVIATION SITE United States Loses Appeal to Su- preme Court in San Diego Bay Suit. WASHINGTON, March 28.—The Supreme Court to-day sustained California Courts in a decision grow- ing out of the condemnation by the Government on lands on North Island, in @an Diego Bay, for a naval aviation site. ‘The Coronado Land Company, own- ers of the land @aken, won a verdict for $5,000,000 with interest from the date of award. The Government took an appeal on the ground that the Jury had included certain tidewater property in that to be paid for when title to such land was clearly in the State or the deral Governmen: COFFEE New York’s Own Drink RAL WAGE RULING WL DEPEND UPON HARDING'S ACTION peneaier eS President Must Name 3 New Members to Labor Board Considering Subject. The terms of one-third of the mem- bers of the Railroad Labor Board will expire by Jimitation on April 13. ‘This may mean that what is largely a new body will determine the nm tional agreement and wage reduc- tion questions now before the board. It means, by appoincment, President Harding has it largely within his” power to make the policy of the board and in effect say whether or hot the wage reductions demanded by the executives shail be made, He thus may by indirection do what his predecessor did by, direction—regu- Jate the wages of "2,000,007 railroad workers. The three men whose terms expire are William L, Park of the railroad group, James J, Forrester of. the la- ' bor group and Henry Hunt of ‘the public group. Under the law the rail- road and labor smembers are to be named from lists submitted by those interests. Interest in the appointments cen- tres in the disposition the President may make of the vacancy in the pub- He group, This is because a public group really sits as umpire between the other groups, and the votes of two of its members are necessary to make any decree or decision valid: CUT PRICE SPECIALS Monday Only Clusters “ib, 4Q, 29. Cut to Peanut Brittle Ib. Tuesday Only Chocolate Peanutines, lb. 49. Cut id Cut to 16 New York Stores “Kiddie baad a P 4, UNITEDRETAIL CANDY STORES GRAND RAPIDS FURNITURE .-. APARTMENTS FURNISHED COMPLETE FROK1 #50. to *500, AS 204°2" STATION ar Cowan v OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS” $1- WEEKLY #4 opens AN ACCOUNT *3, DOWN ON #509" o ae +B DOWN ON #756" 7#2 DOWN ON #00 FISHER BROS COLUMBUS AVENUE SBET 103° €-104" Srs Creorr Teams ered with bricks and bottles thrown from windows and roofs and directly Money’s Worth or Money Back arrived. The police believe be was killed during a quarrel over division of the loot from the saloon. of course, be carried too far, and opponents of some of these plans in sist that Just because newspapers |of Parliament. epection it; the naval and military ; : gence bureaus and other inves- HE New Yorker’s morning and evening cup of machinery. At present prac- Rule Act passed at the last acssion coffee have made of him a little more than Aioally every ment , t attacked by scores of men on the ‘ } rk sup covene 50 Phere pin raat Pe ee oe ond magazines both uae white paper! rhe Prince, it was sald, would also! A. Woods, No. 225 Brown Place, ar | idewatk. just a coffee drinker. fo Wis aa Fler gar Liaw. ‘This means an uphomo.| why they ought al be ‘grouped andlor | Visit other aiatricts im Ireland. was held in $18,000 bail for examina. | (Dougherty and Caputo were worsted They have made him a discriminating coffee Reuphalaerea Oona weneous group of Government inves-|the same management, and that the thon to-morrow. when Acting Capt. MoQuaine of the drinker. i; limitation Leather, 50 | Samuel Spiocgel, .No. 183 Second eres Street, was found on the sidewalk near his home with three bullet wounds tn his body and is in a serious condition in Bellevue Hospital. The police do- various bureaus in ee orawe a $50,000 LEFT TO | DOCTOR. have made for efficie: long Tun ‘beoause of the specialists they Remembered in WI te devel oe Band, Secret wervice operatives say ihey| _t¢ Woman and Her i mp, ‘Bast 104th Street Station and Detec- We tive John McLoughlin went to their assistance. Dougherty, McLoughlin and (Caputo are all on sick leave as Operating indiseriminately general supervision by any It Is @ fact that the rivalry be- He can detect the smallest variation of strength ‘er flavor in his coffee. Coffee to him means the correct beginning of his day—a fine , ent, phone Fitzroy 4706. VICTORY UPHOLSTERY CO. 447 7th Av. nr. 34th St. non BRANcy the bureaus has heretofore pre- | .row' countertertane atten” i Dr, John B, Stillwell of No. 9 Hast) clare spiegel was dancing with a gir!|the result of injuries received in the and satisfactory sense of well-being. BrKLYNCINaD Myre Na ‘vented consolidation Mr. Harding's | others, Department of Justice inves: | 4%h Street wae made the beneficiary! in a dance hall at No. 19% Seoond| riot. Bartine is held. bit) White Rose Coffee has been spe- sepertenity dies in the fact that his | tiga: insist they know how t.|of # $50,000 bequest in the will of Mrs.) Street when man asked him ’ cially Secretaries are in a recep- | bandle intricate cases involving vio-| Mary B. Dortie, filed for probate to-} to step outside. ‘ow minutes later) CIRT, HELD AS THIEF icked to meet New York's he was found wounded. most (iecenctt ts coffee taste, state of mind now because they | tone of tho trust laws, and so the |day in the Surrogate's Court. All “Lost and Found” articles whole discussion proceods, . Dort! which disposed ot] Broole lorio, thirty-two, who had AIDING MA r ad © not become enmeshed an yet in| times the “arguments pro and oon are 4 torune phic en acy et been entertaining four friends last DENIES AIDI N COFF x So nan and Penea baremce Ree it red tape or internal) made by the friends of the Job scek-| the bequest was made to iuwell| Right at his home at No. 42 Cornelia White Rose Coffee— reau, o Dr, SU 103. World Building, will be Mated er and it then becomes doubly diffi Me appreciates of his noble and dis-| Street, Manhattan, found one who for thirty days, These | 1 od kk DECIOR quEBTION oF (28h, indness to ‘me and my hus-|the police were told 4s named Rocoo, “Catherine Brown” Pleads Not hahaa: an thé famous ean at any of ‘The Worl rice { agg Harding and his Cabinet ave |, te, Dortle died feb. m. we | Foor ‘aid followed him down’ the| Guilty to “Slicing” Bank De- pr aA Advertising A, can csirane seen, te ce eokman, Now Brooklyn Office 4100 Main, PARENT BUREAU, a sarang at nea Sel aati . outoome Hi tnd hed, buen dnd ferered RA eS In a moment the others heard a one | Statrs, well and Payson Merri Avenue were named a cient oy were eather $130,000 oe, tae.000. "9" room, bis i teh! of the a seream and lorio rushed into the bands on hia ory- ‘White Rose Ceylon Tea