The evening world. Newspaper, April 19, 1921, Page 3

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| ae oe reatn|Up-State Senator, It Is Cuinmissione: vf New York City, and] Thought, Less Susceptible to ve Willam L, Ettinger, Superin Political Influence Here. acadent of Seh f The} = } Vly con- | ALUBANY, April 1% — nator | a yes Harvard | Charles W. Walton of Kingston fs t and decided New York | likely to be the Chairman of the joint on ten and under, who had|jcgistative committee that will In- © nteeted, most deserved the $1,000] vestigate the Hylan Administration, gold which had been offered by | Although it was virtually agreed sev- Fdward Hateh jr. of the New York] ora) da ago that Senator Schuyler hant's Association, the fly's! M. Meyer of Manhattan, sponsor for @.catest enemy | the inquiry, would head the commit- “or three weeks the essays and|tee, the leaders now are disposed to gecmns for the contest poured into| give the place to Mr, Walton. ui offi, of The Evening World. Mr. Meyer's friends insist that if “Chere were thousands of them, and) he is not made Chairman the legis- +t ch one had to be cure read, | jative managers will be open to the d and indexed. As soon us they | charge of having double-crossed him, e properly classified the con-|put the reply is that in order to butions went belore the judges. A divorce th inquiry from the. possi- constant interehs followed, until! oitity of even the slightest domina- t Dr, Ettinger and Dr. Copeland} tion py New York City political a been able to find which wert] teaders an up-State Republican ¥orthy of consideration, and elimi-| snoutd preside. those which showed less merit “SWAT THE FLY” WINNERS IN EVENING WORLD CONTEST ANNOUNCED BY THE JUDGES ou in Gold | “60 YALTON TO HEAD vacuist, GY INQUIRY IN PLAGE OF MEYER >— tO NDREDS IN THE Lis Contest, Open to Childrei. ts Done Much for Fuiure Health of New Yo Mr. Walton is a legislator of wide experience and a lawyer with a large toin the others, It was not an easy ¢ practice in the Hudson Valley. His sk, of that you may be sure, for it was found that nearly every youth- |? 2 3 t Kingston is former onietbuton janie good iden onl at Sere we eee tae evil which the fy causes and of | /uése A. T. Clearwater, one of the he means by which. it might most|!aders of the Btate bar and infu- tT cily be vanquished ag a New York|€Htial In Republican affairs. Mr. Wal- eit ton is also Chairman of the important Tinally, both judges hud eliminated| Codes Committee of the Senate und | fo \ but a few hundred, and yesterday| 28 @ candidate for the Republican t.uy met to decide which of those| Nomination for Lieutenant Governor yontaining came up to the standard| ‘ast fall. He would have been Gov. ‘lich had been set by Mr. Hatch. |Miller’s running mate on the ticket Phe first contribution upon except for an eleventh hour combina- agreed was a poem written by|tion formed against him in the in-| ght-year-old Anna Sebert of No. 256] terests of Lieut. Gov. Jeremiah Wood. et 44th Street, For the past five} Assembly Speaker Machold and ars Anna has been a cripple, be-| Senate Leader Lusk have left for ise of infantile paralysis, brought|a short rest after their legislative the germs of a fly. In her labors, As a consequence the New thetic little poem she told of this York investigating committee of five fortune and ged others to be Senators and six Assemblymen will vare of flies lest they too become not pe appointed until they return and baa The that this is the simplest, confer with Gov. Miller, strongest and most wppealing of the It was announced to-day that the jot,” declared Dr, Etting: personnel of the committee probably 1 agree,” sald Dr, Cone will be made known April 28 and that 1 meeting for organization probably could have written brings out more clearly will be held the following week, when lon It. Brown will be made chief which » by and. "No anything the ce of the fly the first to be declared a winner And then, down th oun: and Special Deputy Attorney 1 judges went, carefully pick- General Samuel A, Berger and Leon- in, which they considered ard M. Wallstein assistant counsel. to have most merit If Mr. Brown has his way the com- mittee's public hearings will not be-| gin the middle of May as was contem- plated but will be postponed until! CHILD ‘CONTESTANTS FACTORS IN HEALTH PROTECTION. have a ‘These essays and poems about July 1, Mr. Brown, as special great deal of originality,” asserted Deputy Attorney General, represent- Dr. Ettinger, when they had con- ing the State in the litigation over cluded. “L am astonished with the the Esch Federal Waterpower Bill, familiarity with which the children speak of the fly and its habits, On tie whole, the contributions whioh I have read have been excellont work " en. There has been a childish for children. There hae beich waa to, PRISON FOR FORMER declares he will be engaged in the courts with this subject until the end of June, we expected, r dvan- oe epee opinion, is that she ohil-| FIANCE OF TWENTY dren have thought seriously about the problem and realize the menace) _ ee of the fly to the community. These) Small Army of Victims Try to hildren wil soon be adults and they wee Sill better understand, because of a Get to Bliss in contest of this sort, the part whicn Court they must play in the erad the pest, Mine has been a A. ureall: avery ce; womenicel alleged happy duty in reading these childish) ¢4 yo disappointed flancees of Walter eiforts, and I am sure that every | jo. 0° fmn - " a , 1 ies, twenty-six, of No. 133 St. Felix vtentant, whether a winner or not, | contertant, whether a er mye, ded Susis Mee arcade : | Street, Das peated aren 1PiNee SEMIS | se mer soe tn, Genstal Rael son “it is one thing to know that one| to-day when Bliss was arrafgned on a should swat the fly." declared Dr.| charge of grand larceny. He pleaded Copeland, "and another to know why | guilty and waa sentenced to from two the fly should be swatted, The esmays | "04's ‘halt to five years in. the pen. and poems which I read were al ot healthy indication of +h tentlary, sow York which is ‘to be Blies, handsome, debonair and well- dressed, ts accused of getting the $2,190 life savings of Miss Hilda Lindholm. a maid employed at No. 850 Park Ave- has learned more and mor fly, but without the assistaroe of the people of such a great metropolis ours, it ts powerless. ‘The Health De- nue, on the promise that they would partment is an active enemy of the j . fly, and the germ-breeding places in |"® married and. buy a home in’ the * " suburds, He left her wuiting in Grand Which it thrives, put [i must have the, (tral Station while he fled to Toronto, “I am assured that {t will always/ from which place he was brought back, have the co-operation of the peopl The prisoner's alleged victims, about of New York, for the children have! twenty, shouted Invectives and created reflected the attitude, which must be a near riot trying to get at him. to- widesproad. I want to congratulate day as he was taken from the court and thank every participant in this, to the Tombs, contest, for each one has helped make| — New York a healthier city, I know) JUDGE TO TASTE that they will continue thelr efforts! and thelr co-operation, and I assure | each child who did not win a prize ALLEGED RUM AS vhat he or she has done a great and| fine thing for New York. | On Saturday, Mr. Hatch wil! enter-| tain each one of the prize-winners at| a party, and will further reward them with ice cream, cake, sandwiches and candy. The details of the party will be printed in ‘The Evening World to- morrow, a8 well as information re- garling the distribution of the gold coins, which are so well deserved by the children whose names are printed COPS PLY PUMP Will Be Asked to Insert Bicycle Pump Tube in Mouth and Sample “Evidence.” When motorcycle Sbire and Van Pelt policemen come into below. | court at Mount Vernon today to wHiere,l@ the complete list of Prize-| rosecute Francisco Posta, they will ask the judge to insert the tube of their joint bicycle pump in his mouth, close his eyes and enjoy the taste while they pump Winners of Prizes for Essays. FIFTY DOLLARS EACH. John Ciervo, ten years old, No, 66 Bay 224 Street, Brooklyn, inonousl » *. Le Vine, ten years ok, No,| Vigorously. ti tet ae ‘3 Arrested on the charge of TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS EACH, , transporting — liquor, ~— Post Amold Ginsberg, ten years old, No. smashed the bottle on the pave- 1880 ‘Third Avenue, ‘ ment, but the motor-cops Lily Kaimowitg, eight years old, No, 47 St. Nicholas Place, Helen Schreiber, ten years old, No. siphoned part of a half-pint into the barrel of thelr pleycle pump and there it remains awaiting his Honor's taste, on ‘Thirteenth Page.) THE EV AMGCING TONGUES. DAVE MOTHER T TRY DOUBLE GRIME Mrs. Rothman Turns On Gas} With Son in Arms—Alarm Saves Their Lives. | a | ‘Wagging tongues,” a court sum- mops and the fear that the custody of her fourteen-year-old son might be wrested from her were the indi- | rect causes for the arraignment {n the | Long Island City Court to-day of | Mrs, Jennie Rothman, technically charged with felonious assault. she | was held in $1,500 bail by Magistrate Con for examination next Tues- day. BRIRG WOS80S, Tonle iar Ga: President Harding Gives $50 To Lads for Real Swimmin’ Hole Two hours er she bade an affe tionate farewell yesterday to her hus- band, August, shop superintendent of a Long Island City automobile tac- | tory, nelghib sroused by the milk- | man, broke info Mrs, Rothman’s hom, No, 78% Steinway Avenue. | Jouked in each other's arms, mother | and son were found on a bed in aj gas-filled room. ‘They were at the | point of death and an hour's hard work with a pulmotor was required | before *Dr, Steinberg of St. John’s | Hospital could revive them. Rothman, called hastily from his work, found a note written by his wife in the expectation that she would! never see him again. The note said | she had decided to “end it all” be- | cause she had been driven to de peration by "wagging tongues.” Rothman said his wife's nervous | condition resulted from criticisms re- | specting the Irregular attendance of | their son at school, Gustave jr., the | father said, had been in ill health and his school attendance was necessari!s irregular. It preyed on his wife mind, he said, that sharp tongues should intimate she had failed to give | their gon the best care @ mother’s | warm ove could dictat | MARINE WORKERS | PRESENT DEMANDS, Ask Enforcement of the Seamen's Law—7 Ship Owners to ‘Consider Requests. At the conference to-day, between | the Wage Committee of the American | Steamship Owners’ Association and rep: | resentatives of the United States Ship- ping Board on the one side, and repr. ntatlves of the Marine Firemen's Offers and Watertenders' Union on the other, the «unlon presented questa: abolition of the Sea Servte Bureau of the employers; enforcement of the Seamen's Act, especially the} language clause; the preference in em-| ployment to union men for the purpose | of developing efficiency: and the union to examine the man and not to admit to membership anybody for ratings for which he {# not reasonably qualifi The union stated that when 30 questions had been settled [t would be ly to proceed to con the shi s' proposition in re duced wages Chairman Shipowners Comp questions would 1 eral meeting of thi Owners Associntion gard to r id revise working rule ne O'Donnell DIG ‘FOR JANITRESS IN WRECK, FIND HER Not Under Sixty Tons of Coal, However, but Block Distant, Whither She Fled. | Lieut. Simon, at the Astoria Police Station, was notified by telephone at o'clock laat night that the walls of a bin holding sixty tons of coal in the basement of an apartment house at No. 500 First Avenue, Long Island City, had collapsed, burying the jani- tress under a mass of coal, He sent three of his husiciest police- men in @ patrol wagon. Cheered on by the frantic spectators, the police- men took off their coats and started shovelling coal. They couldn't seem to find the janitress. Covered with coal dust from head to foot and per- spiring, they at least reached tie bottom’ of the coal. Still there was no janitress, After handling every bit of the sixty tons the men guve up and left. At a drug store on the corner they found the missing woman, She had been In the basement, was frightened when the tin broke, and ran down to the drug store, she told them. TAXI SKIDS, THREE HURT. @ Driver Injured by Twe Wome: Crash Into Auto, Robert Deaberg, twenty-four, of No. 19 West 114th Street, driver of a taxi- cab, and two women occupants were In- ed last night when the machine skidded at 56th Street and Bighth Ave- | nue, crashed into a touring car, north bound on Highth Avenue, and wus over: turned, ‘The women, Mrs. Mary Elias, forty- eight, and her daughter, Claire, twenty- three, of No. 260 Drive, servamed. _Polieesnnn of the West 47th Street Station, with several other men, righted the eab and helped the women out. Dr. of Flower | Hospital uttended mother and daughter | for 8 lacerations of the hunds and took Desberg to the howpital with al fractured right arm, The touring car. | which was also damaced, was driven by John Conley of No. 2 Kast 26th Street. He was not hurt, pal ea Bibs LAWYER WEDS HEIRESS. Marian Stewart of Chic Bride of R. R. Honeyman Jr. ‘The marriage of Miss Marian Stewart, | who with ber sister inherited some | 47,000,000 from her father, the late Joh. kK. Stawart of Chicago, and Robert B. | Honeyman jr, a New York lawyer, on April 11, at St. Thomas's Church, Fitth Avenue, became known to-day Their engagement had been announced the | revious week. ‘The coremony was per= formed by the Rev. Dr, Floyd 8. Leach. | Mr. and Mrs, tfoneyman are’ said to be In Havana, Cuba, on thelr honey moon. JOHNAWACKERMAN CALLS ON THE_ PRESIDENT BARRIS AHO EWING ~ PR THOMmsam —o - Secretary Mellon Adds $20 for 'HARDING GIVES $5,000 Tickets to Help Fund for | TOSALVATION ARMY Capital Boys. | ay <— WASHINGTON, Aprit19unitea | Fongly Indorses Campaigns for ws).—It cost President Harding | Extension of Its Efforts to and Secretary of the ‘Treasury Rural Districts. Mellon just $70 between them to | . CINCINNATI, Apri! 19.—President recall old swimmin’ hole days | tarding not only has enthusiastically | with a group of Wasbin indorsed the Salvation Army's 1921! youngsters. jliome service campaign to extend its The boys, headed by John Wackerman, on invitation of Mr. Harding, called at the White House yosterday to sell him some tekete for a "Swimming Hule | yn a jeter to Brigudier Herbert Rob-| Dance” to be given In an effort to | «rts of Cincinnati, divisional commander get a big pool for youngsters ino; the Salvation Army for Western Ohio the district, nd Kentucky, President Harding says “Well, I can't go to the dance, | “Having seen very much of the useful] but a friend of mine left me $60 to | ind patriotic work of the Snlvation buy tlekets for the awimmin’ | (7%, !" al parts of tne country, and hole,” the President told the boys. | myself with Its work, both here and ‘Then Secretary Mellon walked [broad during the war, Tam very glad into the President's office, reached indeed to give my Indormement to your | campaign for extension of tts efforts, | down into his pocket and added $20 to the fund. The Salvation Army surely deserves w: WOMAN BLAMES - $60,000 MORE TO blame for his death on the product of | Fertig Warns Another $5,000,- a private still operated by Gallegher. | : = u She said that she, her sister-in-law,, 00 Increase Is Contem- plated by Company. work to the rural districts. it was an- | nounced here to-day, but has contribut- | jed $5,000 to the Salvationists toward erecting a $40,000 urmy corps building | his home town of Marion, 0. Mrs. Gatlegher Says Husband Was Shot in Tussle for Pistol After Drinking Bout. LONG BRANCH, N, J., April 19.- Mrs, Viola Gallegher, in jail here charged with shooting and killing Mrs, Isabella Baldwin; * Gallegher, with the children, were visiting at the home of Felix Engle at the High- lands. They had taken with them a| The Board of Aldermen this after. quantity of liquor wich Gallegher had | 200n w imously voted $60,000 to pay made in his junk shop at No, 768|the necessary expenses in connection rhird Avenue, Brooklyn, and both! with the city's fight agaist the New Gallegher and Engle had been drink-| York Telephone Company's $11,000,000 ing heavily. increase in local rates, In pleading for ‘There was a quarrel at the table,|the money Assistant Corporation she said, and Gallegher went into an- | Counsel\ Fertig predicted the telephone other room and found a revolver Company had not yet finished raising which he fired into the floor and then ‘ates, and that another advance of pointed at her, Ths weapon was dis-| about $5,000,000 might be expected, charged again while she wrestled with In answer to the query ofAlderman him for {t, but she did not know he /3. Maiconer concerning employment was wounded for severa) hours, when by tho city of telephone experts at he was found in bed in the home of #190, $60 and $20 a day, Mr. Fertig @ neighbor of Engte, ruplied the city needed these special —eeeEese: === ists In Its al battle with the apé- DEAD FISH proves eerie her weer cele ie OVERCOMES COURT compiny hud what amounts to almost a monopoly of telephone experts and the company considers the city’s $60,000 cutlay as a “meno pittance" ; ; “The City of Chicago spent between Garlic ‘Blossoms, Too, Enable De-|two and three hundred thousand in . rg ty fight aguinst higher telephon fendant to Get $402 Bill rates!” said the Asmiatant Corporation Down to $75, ss N. Minnesota spent $300,000 yracum and Buffalo $20,000 and 00), respectively. New York City fighting a $1,000,000,000 vombina- tion,” ITH a stx-pound codfish of very ancient yintage un- der one arm‘and a wreath of garlic blossoms over the othe STUDENT KNIFED IN HAZING, Leopoldo Avalone of No. 632 F 187th Street marched triemph- SCHENECTADY, April 19.—Northrop antty into the Seoond District Mu- | T. Bellinger of Buffalo wax taken to nictpal Court to-day, Justice Mor- |‘ a earns onder mira mI é rife wound awros the upper part rss waived reading tho complaint | i145 ieft leg suid to have been inflicted and ordered court attendant by James Sinimme of Gloversville in a open ail doors and windows quick- | hazing trucax among “Union College ly. ‘The room was jammed with |W heer wan one of a party. of treshinen which l sald to have taken Smitmo, a sophomore, in an automobile | to a. spot remote from the campus. tn | cut hie hair as punbehinent for tuntallz ling tucties anid to have been tried re peutedly by Smimme againm freshmen lawyers and clients, landlords and the exits soon were full of humantty. Monty Burke, clerk of the court, grabbed a gas tenants and mack which #« nophew had sent | Smimmo struck he Waa being a mnuved fru He wus disarmed. | him from France and which he | The atu dd handy vey, and paddled had handy beneath his dexk adiod Bim etl awera only: ei Gataneo Sinisuaico, an importer ot | Fifteen #utches were taken to close his fish and appetizers of No, 681 Culd- | Wound. . well Avenue, charged Ayulone | Woman in 1 Prom with buying $402 worth of fi and | Houne Roof, garite without the formality of an | Mm Zubrowsk!, thirty-nine exchange of coin of the realm, |7e0re old. & janitrens, was killed Inat ans night when she fell from the roof of Avalone told the Justice the " of the freshest, ht one to prove it cormpromised on $75, and the win- dows were once more clowd > a five-story apartment hous Bast 117th. Str was croming. tnd it?s be wet oune~ t No, 34 way to wn are «1 to ved 6 TOOL of No. 63, slipped on the ide Drive. The mother told the court that hor | ‘daughter from no strong, healthy, | athletic girl of 130 pounds from the | Wreck. Mra, Weldon “¢ 6 [Omen om NO HUGS OR KISSES FOROLE, MOTHER OF RS. CULEN SAYS Lived With Her and Never! Saw Her Indulge in Such Indiscretions. After flatiy denying that her daugh ter, Mrs, Katherine H. Cullen, whose hu@and, James H., contractor and head of the Cullen ‘Transportation Company, No. 17 Battery Place, is su- ing his wife for a separation before Justice Bijur, ever Kissed or humgeed Ole Bockelie, Mra. Katherine Weldon ended her testimony to-day by declaur- ing that Ole from 1918 up to the pres ent time was a welcome and constant visitor at their home, No. 460 River- | | | Abuse she received from her hushind ly now a mere shadow and a-nervous sald that her | daughter begged her to live with her. She, Mrs. Cullen, told the witness that | was “alone and had nobody.” | “Mr. Cullen criticised my daughters and the manner in which I brought them up,” testified the witness, “| tolerated his criticism of his wife, but 1 told him I would not stand by while ‘he found fault with my other daugh- ters, He ordered me out of the house on one occasion, but the next morn ing he kissed me and apologized However, I left his house, and have not returned sin : Mrs, Weldon vehemently denied the detectives’ testimony relating to the manner in which her daughter conducted herself with Ole at Sex| Gate, Q. Did you ever see Mr. Bockelir | hug or kiss her? A, My daughter Ii too much respect for me to do any thing like that, Q. Ever see any kisving? A. Never Q. Either in the house or outs! A. (Never. Q. Did you ever discuss with Nellie Coyle the actions of your son-in-iaw during which you called him an ordi nary frishman; that he humiliate your daughter by marrying him® A. I positively never did. > Mrs. Cullen is a graduate of Vassar, ass of 1906 —— CAN'T GET BACK PRESENTS TO GIRL. Harvard Student Loses Suit to} Recover $389.50 When En- gagement Is Broken. | Efficiency ts the motto of Joseph M. | Nesaon, @ Harvani student and the son of @ clothter of Cambridge, Mass. He empects to be a busines tan after he! is graduated and he puts down his | Menmlzed expenditures tn @ Mttle book. | ‘The book was produced in the ‘Third | Municipal Court of Brooklyn to-day b fore Justice A. Dunne in the trial of a suit brought by Nessun against nine ten-year-old Frances Ludwig, of No 105 Havemeyer Street for the recovery of certain gifts made by Nesson to Miss Ludwig while they overe engaged to be married in 1919-20, Here Is a Mat of the gifts: One diamond engagement ring, $200; one twin diamond ring; one fraternity pin; ong Harvard insignia ring: string of imitation pears; one founta ‘one $2.60 gold plece; total value one The testimony brought out that Nesson and Miss Ludwig entered into! a formal written engagement to marr at Nesson's home in October, 1919. ‘The t was broken off in Novem Justice Dunne ruled that son could not get his presents bw dwig was only sev n sho signed the nd could not legally terma of the contract teen years old w gagement papers he bound by the _— THRASHES MAN SHE | ACCUSES OF THEFT) Girl Also Arrested on Complaint of Brooklyn Woman Who Employed Both Charges of grand larceny were pre ferred to-day against Wilfred Hartivy, | thirty-six, of Philadelphia, who dects he is @ dentist, and Mi Anna ‘ von, twenty-six, of the mume city |) latbush Court by thelr employer Mra Mary Bryan, No. 1164 19 Hartley and Miss Thompson were ar rested when Mri, Bryan missed jewels | cond Street, | valued at $1600 and became sutton | of her two rervants. Before mhe hw | Hartley arrested, Mr. [ryan adeninis tered a smund eating to the aman, the oferta it which were plainty to be sovn | in court Examination wus walved ly | enycaasita | me time ‘after the men's om uppeared und offered t Kive buck part of te Jewelry mld to! ave bean stolen. Mrs, Bryan then had | F arrested arres >- Mes, Beradotl Order 2 Incurred at Hee Tr PHILADELPHIA, April 19 ¢ Supreme Court yesterday de- | creed Mra, Emina J. Bory nust ty counsel fees of $19,000 incurred \ defending her Federal Imerges of aiding her si ver C. | and krwin, to evade the dratt Law. | She fought the fees as excessive Mrs, Hergdoll was convicted on th Federi) charges, and an appeal 1s | pending. —— | MeDonald, Honkeu Referee, | Judges Chatt int Federal « noment of t X the late Virtus L. Ha 1457 Broadway, for $15 sion for finding a purchaser for the |” ee jold Herald Hotel, No. 114) fered upon, hin. West 24th Street 0,000 Hors | evoning ywits alleged t jacked ous) Vivian! [Ar the deal, an agteemen “ od Chat the mibaalon is therer v payable r Raward! 4 WOMEN URGE WIFE Tne OF ROOSEVELT FOR HIS ASSEMBLY de FIRST WIFE 10 ~ | GRAND JURY ABOUT HER RIVAL TO-DAY Mrs. Andrews Called to Tes: tify—Connecticut Must Wait for Broker, | If the State of Connectici wants tu prosecute Herbert Thornton Andrew on the warrant sworn out in Green wich charging him with perjury and attempted bigamy involved in his wed ding to Esther Marte Tatnall while hy | had a wife in Jersey City, it mat await the conventehee of Mr. Andrews unt) late this week, bis lawyer, J. J Lavaroe, intimated to-day. Mr. An drews has business engagements at his office to-day and to-morrow, the law yer said. Meantime, Mrs. Maud Haynes An drews, whose objections to having Mas. THEODORE ROOSEVELT,ue. | Mr. ether Marie around the house caused the disturbance of the pe Want Mrs. T. R, Jr. to Enter Field| cular domestic schedule of the for Nomination From Nassau broker, is expected to appear before This Fall the Hudson County Grand Jury to- a a day to give evidence nat her rival Mra, ‘Theodore Roosevelt Jr, prO- | ¢or violating the New J tava viding It meets her approval—and | carding ordinary morality Bugent bravidh d the women yoters of Nusa A, Donate, of Gounwel for" WE ‘ounty can arrange it—will follow] wou aw ae ooh a her husband's footstepa to Albany had been made toward a orn tia! " member of Assombly from tho a: District tion between his client and My. Ag Mrs. Roosevelt took an active part | (rere: " *, mene tobe h pe * In the campaign last fall, making] 4s Stl wiliog Mie a many speeches for her husband, then | ¥*¥ set LE . up for re-election. White It has been | The wherewbouts c known for eral days she could, it| Marie have been co ed 1 she wished, be nominated to suc. | but her family since T ceed her husband at Albany, she] '# reason to believe she Is ett knows little about it and in commun tion w M A his is all news to me,” she said | 4 a. Her mother ' ‘ iae@ night when asked abont ft jaald yesterday hh Jaeur would 1 would feel highly honored, of] stick to Mr. Andre aly ‘curse, but before 1 could say any-|Of her marriage was est bills |thing T might bétter wait until f am Sa asked," she added TO DECORATE WANAMAKER. Sho said she intended going to} - Washington to reside as soon as the | Made the Freng Colone! returned from th South, vhere he has gone to inspect part of : the Atlantic Fleet, bic for Commission on Hotel Deal | Max Horowitz, real estate broker, | UOn* © filed sult in the Bronx Supreme Court to-day against Robert new size package LUCKY STRIKE 10 cigarettes for 10 cts Handyand convenient; try. them. Dealers now carry both sizes: 10 for 10 cts; 20 for 20 cts. it’s Toasted WH Meanionr, eos? * 10% to 50% Less Until the Day We Move ~ a As the time draws near, ¥ when Ovington's will be A hh at Fifth Avenue and 39th i] | | Street, you may purchase anything which Ovington has at 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, and 50% less than the usual prices. Nothing is reserved, everything is included from a tiny boudoir lamp to the most mugnificent dé» dinner set. included in the sale. OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of Fifth Avenue 312-314 Fifth Ave, Near 32nd St.

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