The evening world. Newspaper, April 8, 1921, Page 3

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FLOD OF AREST KEPT UP BY POLE MAKING CT ORY Every Charge Made That Law Provides—Two Women Among Prisoners, ED. 250 ARE ARRAIG No Respect Paid to Person or Place—Many Held for Trial iff $1,000 Bail. Arraignments of prisoners before Police Magistrates and United States Commissioners to-day revealed that he process of drying up New York is proceeding with considerable celerity. Almost every sort ‘of violation was charged. For the first time persons were arraigned and held on a charge | of buying whiskey in a saloon. ‘There | were charges of operating a still :n an apartment in a tenement house and of selling liquor, possessing liquor and ransporting liquor in bottles on the person, suit cases and in tazleabs. Two woinen were arsaigred | on a charge of selling. The routine procedure inaugur- ated yesterday was followed, In cases where prisoners denied the stuff they were accuse in valises, Of possessing or selling was alcoholic, samp) were rent to the city chemist for analysis and the accused were held in $600 bail, In the other cases the prisoners were held in from $500 to $1,000 bail for the Grand Jury, Every Police Court jn the greater city handled numerous liquor law violation cases, The total of offend- crs a ned to-day numbered nearly 250. United District. Attorney Ross of Brooklyn sent letters to-day to Police Commissioner Enright and States District Attorney Lewis asking for lists of arrests and places raided un- | der the State Liquor Enforcement | Law, stating that he would begin in-| Junction proceedings Kederai | under arraigned by Patrolman Harry Bium- berg of the Street Si Blumberg in Lex ngton Avenur ing when Mc Hast Sist ation wns on post yesterday eve Intyre passed him and he noticed that MeIniyre’s overcoat bulged on the| right side. He followed McIntyre to| the entrance of the Hotel Commo-| dore and stopped him . “What have you in your pocket?” asked Blumberg, tapping the bulge “A bottle,” replied Molntyre, ducing it. The bottle was corked and sealed and carried the label of an old pro- and, at one time, highly esteemed brand of whiskey. McIntyre said he was taking it to} his boss who lives at the Commodore. | He refused to give the boss's name. Magistrate Ton Eyck held him in $500 | bail for examination next Wednes- day. Mrs. Kate O'Keeffe, fifty years old,| who keops a saloon at No. 859 First Avenue, arrested by Detectives O'Con nor and Adelmann on a charge of hav- ing whiskey and gin in her place, was held in $1,000 bail for the Grand Jury by Magistrate Ten Eyck in Yorkville Court. ‘The danger of operating a home still ima room or apartment with windows opening on the street was illustrated in the arraignment in Yorkville Court of James Janosek of No. 414 East 70th Street by Patrolman Bernard Bajart ona charge of violating the State En- forcement Act. Bajart said ne was| passing No. 414 early to-day when| there was wafted to his nostrils the unmistakable odor of whiskey. He foMowed the trail with his nose and it led him to the basement, where he| found Janosek in his apartment oper- ating a still with a capacity of ten galions. Ho also found alcohol and wine on the premises. josek was held in $500 bail for the Grand yury. , He had opened the front windew, he said, about five minutes before the officer entered his apartment The arraignment before United States Commissioner Hitchcock of Louis Jackson, manager, and Angelo Debol, a waiter of the Hotel Weyln, S4th Street and Madison Avenue, 16- vealed that the current price of champagne appears to be #25 a quart. Revenue Agents Murphy, Bernanke and Callahan swore they put on even- ing clothes and drank champagne at that price at the hotel last night, The raid was made, they said, because of complaints of persons living in the neighborhood, Nora Doyle, a waitress employed in Harlem and living in Brooklyn—a palo girl in poor health—bought a Bottle of wine for $1 from Dominick Sata, bartender in a saloon at No. 2485 Second Avenue, last night and started home with it. Hagle-cyed sleuths saw the bottle, which she car- ried openly, and arrested her, She was arraigned in Harlem Police Court to-day charged with buying the wine, and Bata was also arraigned charged with selling it. The girl was released without bail to eppear again on April; |$100,000 Will Build and Main- statute to close places found in vio- ion of the law |“Not marble, nor the gilded monu- ‘Phe first case of the arrest on the ments street by a policeman, under the | Of princes, shall outlast this powerful State law, of a man carrying a bottie rhyme”— of alleged hovch In his pocket, came | to Shelley, who penned the marvellous up in Yorkville Police Court to-day | description of— when Louis Mcintyre, an employee of| “Life, like a@ dome of many-colored « Wall Street brokerage he was glass, THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1921. “The House of Poets,” Built in New York, (\N\'S RE) HAIR . | ’ Will Be a Club and a Clearing House, A Tribute to Culture and the Arts f i tain It, and It Will Be the Home of the Dean of Amer- ican Poets, Edwin Markham —Might Be Made a Sort of Ludlow Jail for Editors and Publishers Who Might Be Arrested by Verse Writers for Non-Support. Marguerite Mooers Marshall Hail to the House of the Poets! That is to be New York's newest contribution to culture and the arts, if all goes well with the plans of a little group of verse writers and verse lov It will be a real house of bricks or brownstone, not one of the metaphorical structures which long have been the real estate specu- lations of the poets—from Shake- Speare, who wrote— Stains the white radiance of eternity.” House of the Poets will combine the functions of club and clearing- house for all Americans ever guilty of writing epic, sonnet, ode or even buni- ble quatrain, with the distinction of being the home Of the dean of Ameri- can poets, ‘The first dean nominated is Edwin Markham, author of “The Man With the Hoe” and of many books of verse. And if at present the House of the Pocts seems a bit of a castle in the air, it is expected to take more concrete form in about two weeks, Wlien the comm. ttee in charge meets at the Hotel McAipin, on tne evening of April 21, to consider ways and means of house-raising. Ralph Waldo ‘Trine, the New Thought leader, is Chairman of the cretary 18 that comimttee, and the beautiful ‘woman and ardent poet, Blanche Shoemaker Wagstaff! (Mrs, Alfred Wagstaff jr.), who is as well known in New York society as in the literary world The Acting Chairman of the Com- mittee is Robert Mackay, managing editor of the New Success. Other members are Mrs, Corinne Roosevelt Robinson and the Rey. W. Norman 14 and Sata was held under $1,000 bail for examination the same date. William H. Anderson, a bartender, namesake of the boss of the Ant- Saloon League, was arraigned in Adams Street Police Court, Brooklyn, to-day, charged with violating the State Enforcement Law in a saloon at No. 491 Hudson Avenue. He wa held im $500 bail for a hearing next Friday, * | John Baldwin and Max Jerkins of No, 102 Bast 15th Street, Manhattan, and Robert Rockwood of No. 759 53d Street, Brooklyn, pleaded guilty to grand larceny in the second degree in the Kings County Court to-day, The ydmitted taking $7,200 from William Brandt of No. 2% West 49th Street, for thirty casks of what they alleged was whiskey, When Brandt opened the casks he found them full of water. Bernard Brown of No. 2,109 Madison ‘Avenue, who was arrested last night he was leaving Reisenweber's arrying @ suit case containing twelve quarts of champagne and two pints of whiskey, said to-day when arraigned | in West Side Police Court, that the | Hquor was left over from a dinner} given to Benny Leonard and he had} volunteered to transport it to Leon- ard's home in the Bronx He was held for examination | A woman, the first to be arrested under the new laws, was taken into custody by Detectives Lipscher, Benes and Reilly of the 1st Inspection Dis- trict, on a charge of having in her possession & quart and a half of whiskey and a gallon and a half of alcohol. pe i8 Dora Wagner, twenty- three, owner of a candy store at No, 220 Madison Street. Magistrate Nolan held her in $500 bai) for examination Monday. Two purchasers of drinks were ar- rested with the man who sold the drinks to them, and were held tn the same bail as the seller—$1,000, The purchasers are John Bozzio, No. 238 East 150th Street, and Michaet Fiori, No, 231 East 150th Street, They were charged with having liquor in their possession, Auivuiu Petrino, No. 640 Morris Avenue, Bromx, was’ charged with selling the liquor, bas MAKER Pep oa tas leo lng Guthrie, both of whom will speak at the first meeting for the establish- ment pf the House of the Poets; George M. Judd, ‘Treasurer of the! committee; Anna Her 1 Braneh, Mrs. Florence Earle Coates, John Hall Wheelock and Don Marquis, all well-known ports; Right Rev. Bishop Henry ,C. Darlington and Dr, Henry Van Dyke; Zona Gale, who has writ- ten poetry, but is best known as the ithor of “Miss Lulu Bett"; Ida M rbell, biographer of Standard Oil; Dr. Winifred S. Stoner, the educator; Mr, and Mrs, Louis Leakey, Mrs. Robert Mackay, Ida Benfey | Judd, Henry Irving Dodge. ART OF VERSE WRITING EXPER- 1ENCING A RENAISSANCE. “phere probably are at least 200,000 poets in America,” Mr. Mackay in- formed me, when'I talked with him in his office at No, 1123 Broadway, and, a8 a managing editor, he ought to know! ‘In the last few years there has been a tremendous renais- sance in the art of writing poetry; it fs becoming more and more an Aac- copted necessity in the affairs of the ‘American people. Poetry societies have been established everywhere. At the last dinner of the Poetry Society of Now York there were 1,000 people, although the cost was $6 and $8 a plate.” ! Knowing som@thing of the rates of payment for poetry even in these lyric times, L agreed with Mr. Mackay that this dinner represented an achieve- ment “But what will be the difference in function between the proposed House of the Poets and the present Poetry Society?” I asked. ‘The House of the Poets,” he ex- ined, “will serve in America, we ope, the same purpose served by the Palace of Song in London, That structure is the home of the Laure- ate; it also is a clearing-house for young poets from all ‘over England, a place where they may come and get in touch with the latest developments in their art. “We who are interested in it want the House of the Poets to be a real house, centrally located here in New York, where the dean of American poets, the great and beloved Edwin Markham, may live. But, also, we want the House of the Poets to be not merely a gathering of the arrived verse-writers but a source of help and inspiration to the amateur poets seattered all over the country.” “But ought they to be helped and inspired?” I sumrested. “The poor dears neyer will make any money and some of them might be excellent plumbers and milliners.” WILL BE A GREAT HELP TO AMBITIOUS POETS. “Many of them do not want to nake any money," Mr, Mackay in- formed me. “They already are suc- cessful in their various walks of life. Hut they want to write poetry, and think what it would mean to them if they could attend lectures on the technique of ver: writing at a House of the Poets, if there they could meet such men as Markham or Charles Hanson Towne and read their verse and have it criticised kindly but truthfully by these masters of the art.” “How much will the House of the Poets cost?” I asked. “We estimate that we must raise a fund of $100,000 for buying and mainy taining it,” he replied. “But its fleld its uefulness is unlimited, It would contain a library of poetry, for one thing. It might be the forum for settling the quarrel between the vers librists and the upholders of the ademic school. It would have on it the stamp of metropolitan authority It would benefit from being located in New York—and might not New York benefit from it?” It might—New York will try any- hing, once. But if the poets them- selveg are actually to benefit, I sug- gest that the house be used as a sort of Ludlow Street Jail for editors and publishers, until they agree to satisty the claims of all the writers of verse for non-support | Sade Se Rosenbach Company Exhibits Tem= ple Collects ‘The Rosenbach Company of Philadcl- | phia, announces the exhibition of the famous J. F. Temple collection, in its galleries, No. 1 Walnut Street, of | that city, It includes Colonial furniture | and American class, The collection con: tains the largest and most important assembling of Stiegel glass, made in the Eighteenth Century at’ Manh Lancaster County. The « | glass goblets and r pieces ms Baron’ William Henry Stiegel, have long been popular with museums and other collectors, here, | commuter on Zona Lane 9 SAY SETTLEMENT FOR MRS, MOROSCO WAS HALF MLN Attorney for Wife of Theatric Producer Is Now Suing for Legal Fees. al (Special to The Evening World.) LOS ANGEL! Calif., April 8&—An action has been brought here for ¢ collection of legal fees by the attor- ney of Mrs, Oliver Morosco. The hear- ing In the suit has disclosed that in the trouble between the theatrical producer and his wife there was a property settlement involving about $500,000. Charles Hanson Towne of New York was one of a party of distin- guished literary men who attended the mission play at San Gabriel yes- terday. The will of’Jared §. Torrance, Los Angeles capitalist, who died March 29 leaves to Rachel Torrance of New York, $5,000. Carl Laemmie, President of the Uni- versal Film Corporation, plans to re- turn to New York to-morrow after | Spending part of the winter here pre- paring summer film production pro- gramme. It is reported that there will be a violent “shaking up” of the nnel of the at U ‘sal City. Art Shafer, former Giant, score of seventy-five is a figure in South Californi: golf championship play at Hills. Bert Lytell, film star, returns from several months of picture-making in New York with regrets he couldn't bring the Lambs Club with him. Anzia Yezierska of New York leaves for home after about two months adapting her work for scre says she will gather from the east side hundreds of half-starved mothers widows and orphans to appear in her plays, paying them adequate wages each a day. company with a prominent ‘Ss annual Beverly —_____- CAT CAUSES FIRE; WOMEN OVERCOME Match Ignites Bed When Mrs. Tier- ney Tries to Drag Feline From Beneath Mattress. Mrs. Catherine Tierney’s gray cat crept feebly Into her fifth floor apart ment at No. 243 Madison Street to-day and crawled under a bed. The cat was evidently {ll and would not respond to coaxing, 80 Mrs, Tierney struck a match and reached under the bed to drag It forth. ‘The bed caught fire, Mrs, Yetta Kap- lan, who lives across the hall, detect smoke and entered the Tierney apart- ment. Policemen seeing smoke issuing from the windows, ran upstairs and found both women overvome with smoke. Each recovered before the fire depart- ment and an ambulance arrived. Mean- while the cat crawled to safety in an other part of the flat Seneca CROMWELL SISTERS ESTATE. inhed at Red Crom Narses Who Va Gea Left 535,42. In an application filed to-day in the Court for a judicial setcl states of Dorothea K. and H. Cromwell, Red Cross nurses, who mysteriously disappeared two yeacs ago, from a transport route to this port, places the value the property at $645,342. The ing made by the trustees shows share amounted to $264,686, while thea's was estimated at $270,656 Th both instances the aiaters aft queathing certain stuns to relat Surrogate ment of the Gladys Le of account iadys's De friends, leave the residue in trust with the stipulation that it would be equally divided between their brother, Seymour, one of the trustees, a sister, Mary f becea Cromwell, of Paris, and which ever of the testators survived the other The income Was to be paid to Mary Rebecea, who thus far haa r ed $14,000. A {Ki-Year-01d Commuter, Special to The Krening World.) YWICH, Conn., April 8,—Wal- Aikman, president, pany, New York, New York and Now Haven road here, celebrated his ninety- third bicthday here today. MOTHER-IN-LAW’S | SCORN, START SUIT mannii Mrs. Chester A. Jayne, Seek- ing Separation, Names | Husband’s Secretary ASK $6,000 ALIMONY. Correspondence of Prominent Lawyer Is Quoted in Complaint. A red-headed secretary mother in-law who called her a “bad actor” jand a husband who showered expen sive gowns and Jewelry and expended large sums n ler up keep, together with numerous lettera from the fe in an application for alimony of $6 @ year and counsel fee of $3,000 pend titla haired amenuensis e the tur 000 Gay ©eEOeidedy [Ms trial of her suit for separation | | made to Justice Newburger by Mrs Emma Louise R. Jayno against her husband, Chester A, Jayne, a lawyer of this city J jee Newburger in an opinion | handed down to-day wrote ‘at it was Jimpossible to determine what the de |rendant’s income is and he ordered a| reference taken, ‘The plaintiff's mo tion was held in abeyance. Mrs. | defendant on June 25, two years aga Jayne said she married tiv | Ho is thirty-eight years old, a prac- |tising attorney well known socially Jand professionally. During the last |fifteen years he has built up what |Mrs. Jayne terms a “lucrative prac tic He is a member of the New York Bar Association, New York County Lawyers’ Association, New |York State Bar Association, the | United States Bur Association, Law- |yers’ Club, Whitehall Club, Williams |Club, Zeta Psi Fraternity, Absecon |Golf Club, Zeta Psi Alumni A Jciation and the Williams College Athletic Association, His income for thy last from his legal work, Mrs. Jayne said, has not been less than $25,000 a year, and in 1918 was considerably in excess of $30,000 a year. Mrs. Jayne said her husband paid income ten together Mrs. Jayne says their living expenses were from $12,000 to $20,000 a year, A summer cottage at Lyn credit with never having stinted him self and it was not an uncommon for him to sp from $50 to meals, wines and to entertain nd mn her in one evening. He also gave her much expensive jewelry Mrs, Jayne says she cannot pos sibly exist on less than $500 a month and submits a schedule showing her various needs John H, Hendrick, of No. 2 Rector Street, in support of Mrs. Jayne's contention that counsel fee be al lowed in the sum asked, swears that interrogatories of witnesses in. this country and five in France and Eng. land are imperative for the prosecu tion of this action, Already the at torneys for Mrs. Jayne Nave ex pended $1,500 in investigation Mrs. Jayne charges her husband with misconduct by flirtations and |“amfairs with other women,” which resulted in the plaintiff having a nervous breakdown and necessitating her being in the constant care of 4 physician To substantiate er charges Mra Jayne incorporated in her complaint | extracts from numerous letters writ | ten by Pearl Maree Freeman, his sec- yne from March § to Oct One exhibit a cablegram sent to the se wi closing cretary, to by The com was a retary Jayne while he was abroad. plimentary ter Jayne. Miss Pre salutations read “Lave, Ches invariably ter man “My letter, used the and “My umably In an ablegram. sent by Jayn: defendant be She dear Che dear," One pre swer to the upbratd use not returning. wrote And now a cable says “delayed” und it hurts all the little things | around my heart-—-I don't want you to be delayed. No letter from you either, though if you wrote me from the boat I should have one almost any day, Are you well and happy, and do you rfitas me? I want a letter from you so that I will know that you are all of those things, To think that since the 20th of December I have oniy neon you five times—it imn't right, It you were only here tw ” 7? years | of ve Wik Charlie Chaplin and May Collins Silent About Rumored Wedding | MAN |Movie Stars Eschew Press | Agent Publicity in Their “Private Affairs.” LOS ANGBLES, April $.—Charlie Chaplin, unteas his best friends are fooled, is about to get married again, this time to May Collins, seventeen years old, one of the beautifulest beauties that the kilowatt radiance of Broadway ever sent to sparkle more splendidly in the sun parlor of the world out there. It may be that New York never heard of the climate of Southern Cal ifornia, owing to the modest refusal of the Native Sons to talk about it or to hire a press agent, but the fact is that the sunshine in and about this city of angels causes orange blossoms fo keop on blossoming year after matrimonious. Neither Charlig nor May about what will talk verybody else is talking brook, two servants, a higher-priced ——~ aed car and lavish expenditures of money| spend some time with me—I in entertaining at various New York| never needed you so much hostelries were among the minor de-| Another quotation reads tails in Mrs. Jayne's long complaint You said that thoughts of me as to the manner in which her hus-| Were @ comfort to you, and band lived. One hotel charge account| thoughts of you are that to me monthly ran as high as $400. While} 2d much more, Please do hurry living at the Hotel Bellectairp in 1919| back, dear, won't you? the couple's experises were $500 aj And again month, | ‘Thank you for the love at the While the defendant has been cruel| 94 of the cable which you sent toward the plaintiy she gives him| ™¢ 1 was very upset and lone- some yesterday and that word the day a happy one. ring to her auburn hair the ary, in a letter, wrote Keep well and keep happy and enjoy yoursele even to delivering letters to attractive red-headed ladies—but do come buck soon. My thoughts are with you al wa Mrs, her hu jected the plaintiff! to merous usions when her husband's office to inquire when he would return from Burope. Mrs, Jayne also accuses her mother- in-law in having taken sides with her son in the domestic controversy A letter written by the defendant's mother alluded to the plaintiff as being a “bad actor.” Her mother-in- law, the plaintiff alleges, treated her with “scorn. A letter sent by Jayne's mother to him contained this paragraph: | I pray you may not find it hard to step out and away from her and her influence Why she hasn't dragged you down to the | dogs shows me there is much In you of your early training and your fathers influence in life. I {cel mean to even mention him on the same page with her. In another letter the mother-in-law wrote that she loathed the plaintiff. . ae Dangerous Runaway, attached to a 8 Jayne says that from the time band went woread Peart sub- ngults on nu- she went to Policemen Stop A team of horses heavy truck driven by Charles Thu man of No. 287 Broadway, Brooklyn, took frignt and ran away in Flatbush between Sixth and Seventh Avenur Avenues at noon to-day. They were headed for the traffic jam at the Flatbush Avenue Station of the Long Island Railroad, when Patrol- men Edward Dungate and Joseph "lDwyer of the Traffic Squad headed h policeman grabbed and hung on, They were half a block and sustained well ax damage to but the dragged Many bruises as thelr uniforms, runaway, they stoppe’ “T've always found,” said Miss Social Leader, “that at every tea Ancre Cheese suits toa ‘T.’ Its taste charms every taste” AINCRE | WI the Gnnulne Rogunjory /Taxtr> NEESER... COLLINS. an tax of} year, and everybody who $3,719.31, which receipt is now ia her | ¢ gets married | possession, Mr, Jayne complains), The funny-footed comedian ts no | m mmune than the lowly oceu- a sband deserted her | that her husband deserted hy 9) pant of the chaise longue under the] |March last year palm tree, The Weather Bureau) During the period the couple lived | elf at this time of year feels safe Jia the prediction, “Fair and more about, but them seems of much annoyed by the rumors—which they might be if there were nothing neither in the story. TENANTS IN PANG: ~ AARMSENTIN: HARRY COT THE GAS Pandemonium in Upper Park Avenue When Mrs. Abrand- » vitz Screams Alarm. ; Piercing screama were heard at 10 o'clock to-day in the tenement house at No. 1342 Park Avenue, Then things began to happen. The tenants unanimously moved im the diréction of the street. Mattresses, chairs, pots and pans’ were hurled from the windows, Weme en carrying children, canary birde ti cages, cats, bedelothing and the net’ handbags pecutiar to the tenement dis~ tricts fought with each other on the stairs and in the hallways. ‘The crowdy in the street surged bacle and forth In excitement, overturning: pushearts and baby carriages. People trying to run away collided with ped- ple trying to get closer to the =ntre of disturbance, Somebody turned in a fire alarm. ‘The fire apparatus arrived with screeching sirens and clanging bells and roamed aimlessly about while the | firemen looked in vain for the fire, Policeman Donegan and other of- | fcers finally discovered that No. 1343 | had been practically emptied. By that time Park Avenue was packed ond impassable from 99th to 10lst Street. | Slowly the excitement died down. |The tenants went back into No, 1942, learrying their babies and pets and household goods. | What was it all about? | Well, Mrs, Bertha Abramowita | reached her apartment on the fourth floor after a couple of hours’ absence and found her son, Harry, insensible in his room from the effects of gas (leaking from a stove in the kitchen “I have heard the rumor,” said Miss|and she proceeded to Inform the Collins, “I have even discussed it) neighborhoo with Mr. Chaglin, But any statement me should come from him, T think.” | ADMITS AUTO HOLD-UP. Charlie merely sald he did not care to discuss “my private affairs.” His taciturnity is ascribed to the fact] youth Says He that the decree of divorce that Mil- ead Orie deed Harris got from him {a only in- e wiaaial terlocutery and he will not be “com- ba pletely unmarried’ until it ts made Pleading guilty to third degree final robbery to-day before County Judge in Sree cen tm Om, UE Aer Tee May in Brooklyn, William Caldwell, oldwyn people. She was boi Boe ata’ we Wades New York, although she is pretty | ¢létihteon, of No. 76 Windaor Rilo enough to’ be a California product, | 3nd James DUnply, vee ney and she was educated In the Scoville] N°,./28 Aivanopite on March 6 ani school. was two yea Her firet stage appearance 8 ago, when she played one of the six girl leads in Maeter- linek’s play "The Betrothal.”” After that she appeared In a number of other Broadway successes, Her first ppearance in’ the movies was in Wifo Insurance.” She says her hobby Is acting. She likes out of door sports, has a prefer- ence for comedy leads, dives and swims like a seal, and has chestnut hair and velvety gray eyes. If you must know everything about her, let's throw secreey to the winds and confide the fact that she weighs 120 pounds, 500 COLLEENS HERE FROM THE OULD SOD Parents Send Them to Relatives to Avoid the Attentions of Black and Tans Fk hundred colleens arrived here to- cruised about looking for promising: hold-up vietima, They first. stopped Clarence Coolt/ of No. 1104 Kast Third Street, he said, but wore frightened away by Cook's cries, They were captured while driving off after holding up Harry Halper of No. 1425 47th Street, and taking from him cash, jewelry and an omer valued in all at $207, { fed guilty to first de- Jude will impose sentence Monda << —— FAUROT DEMOTED. Remains Depaty Comminsioner but Ranke Only an Captain Third Deputy Commissioner of Police Faurot {s now a captain of police om eave of absence Instead of an Inspector. ; His rank In the uniformed force was re- duced yesterday by order of Commis sioner Enright, The reduction does not affect. Faurot’s pension, as he served over 6 months as a deputy and under the law is entitled to retire on half the | salary of the Chief Inspector, But it docs maxe a vacancy for the appointment as Inspector of Acting In day on the White Star liner Cedric to| Spector Willlam T. Davis, close frie oma hin ci and associate of the Commlaste r nin thix country until conditions| th, oid Buread of Supplies, He was in Ireland become less worrying. Irish| treasurer of the Lieutenants’ Assocta- parents are worried over the attentions| tion while Enright waa president and the Black and ‘Tans are paying young) ROW known UATEATIRRIEY ASTER cho Wsdowekl Irishwomep and those who can afford it are sending their daughters: here until the soldiers are sent away, some of the passengers sald These girls, tt in stated, will live with relatives, Many Englishmen were aboard the Cedric, and John F. Dee, an Irishman, but an American citizen, said they ob- Jected to his waving an Irish Republic flag as the vessel left Queenstown, ‘The Irish refused to represent « tug of-war team called by the English Scotehmen took thelr places and won from the Americans, and then, sald Mr. Dee, the Irish formed a team’ and beat the ‘winners PARLEY ON SHIP WAGES. Noth Sides to Dincass New Agrees ment Here Next Week. Conferences between representatives of the American Steamship Owners’ Association and unions of steamahip employees regarding now working|agree- tents will begin next week, It was ane nounced here to-day. ‘The wage committee of the owners’ | aesoctation met here to-day to take up’ the demands recently made by the men and to formulate a report to be pre sented to the owners prior to the con- ference with the employees, $8 Cammeyer shoes touch to the complete wardrobe. WOMEN’S WALKING PUMP In Dark Russia Calfskin with Military Heel .00 give the finishing ‘Stamped oa a Shoe Means Seancdard of Moxie 41-51 W 34°Se NewYork Nowark Score - 649 Broad 84, ne ne ese pe ceca pees. Oceneen ee a

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