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WEEKS ORDERS Mrs. Loft, Po THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAY 13, lice Depu ty HELD AS POISONER ARMY INQUIRY INTO Af $7.@ Year, Says Kindness OF FOUR HUSBANDS, Will Save Erring Girls MINERS WARFARE Troops Neils NS to'Move to West Virginia as Battle Is (Resumed. ONE MORE IS_ KILLED. Machine Guns Used in Heavy Fighting Along Seven Mile Front. WASHINGTON, May 13.—Follow~ Ing the Cabinet m retary of War Weeks announced he had directed Major Gen. George W.. Reed, Commander of the Fifth Army | Corps area, to investigate the gun fighting in the Mingo County, West Virginia, coal regions. OAMP SHERMAN, 0. May Orders were received to-day for Fed- | 13.— eral forces here to be prepared to|to welfare work, and we are going to | work out the same plans and see that move into Mingo County, West Vir- ginta, to quell gueriila warfare. i commander of notified commander, to iment in Major Gen. the Fifth Reed, n Army Corps Col. Herman Hall, hold the 19th Infantry readiness. The regiment's strength is 6% men and includes rifles, trench motors, howitzer, motor and medical sections. Trains were waiting here to trans- port the troops on a moment's notice. WILLIAMSON, W. Va., May 13.— Mountain warfare which raged all of yesterday and intermittently through the night over a seven-mile front in the West Virginia-Kentuoky coal etrike region, was resumed with vigor this morning. Reports sent to Capt. J. R. Brockus of the State Police at Headquarters here said heavy firing was in prog- ress at MoCarr, Ky., the eastern end of the trouble zone, and at Merrimac, ‘W. Va, where yesterday's shooting started. Sporadic rifle fire could be heard along the West Virginia and Kentucky borders at Matewan. area, ting to-day, See | “Runaways, or Those Who Through Ignorance Have | Gone Astray, Must Be Met| Half Way and Given aj} | Chance to Get Back Into | Life and Decency.” | “We Shall Keep No Records of | the First Offender—Noth- | ing That Will Blacken or Spoil Her Future—They | Should Not Be Treated as| | Criminals.” | i} By Fay Stevenson | "Lam going to keep things just tfie way they are in the Women's Pre- | jeinet. Mrs, Mary KE. Hamilton, di- | rector of the precinct, will be my chief of staff, which consists of sixty | Police Sergeants and Lieutenants and twenty-eight police women assigned everything runs right along as usual.” That is what Mrs. George W. Loft, wife of the millionaire candy manu- facturer, a well known society woman and philanthropist with keen inter- est in civic affaire, who was sworn | in yesterday at Police Headquarters | as @ Special Deputy Commissioner, at} a salary of $1 a year, as successor to Mrs, Ellen O'Grady, who received $6,- 500 a year, told me at the India House. Both Mr. and Mrs. Loft were the guests of Mr. and Mrs, D. W. Cook at luncheon, but Mrs. Loft graciously agreed to pose for a camera mag and to be interviewed before the luncheon As Mrs. Loft stood before the camera} in a graceful blue satin gown which | fell discreetly to her ankles, Mr. Loft laughed and said: Yo une wants to snap me. It's the ladies now who get all the limelight.” Then seriously: “And it's surprising what they do,” and he looked admir- ingly at his wife. Just two hours before that Mrs. Loft had been installed in her head- quarters in the Special Duty Division and Women's Precinct in West 37th Street, near Ninth Avenue. She will An unidentified man was killed on the bridge leading from McCarr to the ‘West Virginia Bank of Tug River this morning, bringing the known casual- ties to three kiNed and two wounded. ‘This includes the member of the at- tacking party reported killed at Me- Carr last night. C. W. Smith of Alburn was killed early to-day as he stepped from @ train, according to word received her ‘The report has not been confirmed No attempt has been made to reach the body, which is lying in the line of fire, it was stated The fiercest fighting this morning eccurred at McCarr, where, according to Capt. Brockus, sympathizers of miners and men on guard at the mines are heavily with equipment, which include a half-dozen machine guns and automati rifles. Thouhands of shots have been fired at MoCarr alone, Capt. Brockus said. Capt. Brockus ordered his men at MoCarr to refrain from becoming em- armed projled with the battlers, Asserting that both sides—the men concealed nm the hills and the guards at the mines—had been “itching” for trouble there, he said he would not expose any of his men on that battlefield News that Gov. Morgan of West Virginia had call on President Hard- ing for Federal troops, and that a similar request had been mabe by Gov. Morrow of Kentucky, was hailed with relief by the State police, the co-operating Deputy Sheriffs under assume her duties next Monday morn- ing, and her hours will be from 9.30 to 5. WOMEN’S PRECINCT TO BE A SIGHTLY SPOT. POLICEMAN KNOCKS OUT MAN IN RIVER TO SAVE HIS LIFE Plunges Into ‘ee Water Storm With Full Uniform and Rubber Boots. in Philip Mulcahy, a patrotman tached to the West 30th Street lice through at- Po- the Station, plunged murk of the early morning to rescue a drowning man, and after a struggle of fifteen minutes, during which his own life was constantly in life of Patrick 109 danger, saved the Keane, thirty years old, of 3 Charlton Street. Mulcahy was telephoning from his box at 12th Avenue and 34th Street, when he saw the conductor of a grosstown 34th Street trolley shaking “at present I am in our country home at Baldwin, L. 1," said Mrs. Loft, “but I intend to motor in and out and think that the fresh country air will be splendid for me. But peaking of fresh air and country, ve you seen the red geraniums and window boxes which | Mrs nilton has placed outside the Women's Precinct “And have you sden the dormitories and rest rooms we have for the wom- én and girls who come to the st tion?” continued Mrs. Loft at my n of approval and appreciation of what feminine hands have done to the old precinet in so short a time. init is very attractive and appealing, this feminine touch," I said, “and T know that with your interest in way- ward girls much good will be done: Twas thinking of the kindly Influ- ence, this young, energetic woman ave over many lives wit Cort has decided ideas in re- | gard to wayward girls and girls who Fun away from home. She is strong- | ly in opposition to treating first of- | fenders as criminals and believes that | kindness will bring many girls and women around to the straight path NO “RECORDS” TO BLACKEN FU- TURE OF FIRST OFFENDERS. “One thing which I think part us | Sheriff A. C. Pinson and by residents .f the embattled towns. The combined force of State police and deputies available to cover the miles or more of mountainous industrial hostilities year is scarcely Of this num- maintain twenty country centred for ixty where a men. nevessiry to nd garrisons at points which at present are quiet are regarded authorities as scenes of pos- more than he re- serve but by the Capt. Brockus said to-day that yes- erday’s fighting was waged by the mountain gunmen with discipline and decision The at Merrimac,” he said, “was controlled by a man with a lusty «x horn, When he blew one jong jlast firing commenced and when he w three short blasts every gun was There were rumors at noon that a jing his rubber boots. |cled his neck a sleeping passenger. The passenger, hardly awake, steppe * door and buttoning his coat about his throat, walked west, breasting the slashing rain and Mulcahy, wondering what doing going in the river, followed him as soon had hung up the ver, he was om of the as he rece! but the ~ storm and darkness had swallowed ‘specific revord of the attractive girl him up. Then he heard eres from the river but could not locate the man in dis- tress. The cop threw off his rain- coat and cap But did not wait to re- move the rest of his uniform, includ- Guided by the voige of the man in the river he plunged from the pier. The water filled his hip boots and pulled him under and he attempted to work out of them. A pair of arms reached out of the dark and encir- with a grip of death and again drew him under, Mulcahy fought the drowning man while he tried to slip out of his boots, re- irily hurts the heart of the young |, “ae Aes eee SE ae ae ea ceed keep {flizing that the lives of both were eecord of her past offense,” said | in jeopardy. Mrs, Lott ent a young girl| ‘The cop rapped Keine on the jaw who has a first offense | with all the strength of his right and realizes t as she is down on nee broke his hold. Then as he grasped lear ‘Theretore we shall{him by the collar, he worked off the keep no records of the girl who has|rubber boots, The swiring current offended but once. of Ratha fos [ayrent both m around and beyond may have a private record and notes | +), e as ane ag clutched rey will help us but it will be| me Pier Hpens: ipealne olutenet Which Wihieh will blacken or spoil {the policeman about the neck, Mul her future.” lcahy kept both fists working antil “put if a women or girl is an old | Keane was unconscious, ‘Then hol otenet ees ds then," re-|'2& his head above the water with irate wi recor en,” re- (‘ne 2 a x phen aise Loft, “but runaway. girls [one “hand, he caught @ pile axainst pad girls who have, through ignor-|which he was swept, and circling it ance or youthful inspirations, x ne | with his left arm, cried for help. astray, r ue Ds moe Dei pk apes His call was heard by a number of etris ye given a room i © : Bo ei et yack to their home| workmen, who lowered a rope, Mut- tawns or provided positions if they cahy in his weakened condition stiil belong in New York. It has been | had sirength enough left to tie the said tha ‘omen never forgive other A ants sald that Womelve sinned but now, | pe about Keane's body, and the un- rhaps, it is the women who are] conscious man was hauled up to the P Q coming to cach other reac Sure- | whar he rope was lowered again ly many can be helped if we givel oy stuicahy sollowe = Ow By cae ortunity and chance to {ind Mulcahy followed. Dr. Renfrew get buck into life and decency.” | was summoned from the New York PLEASANT SURROUNDINGS FOR, Hospital, and after he had treated the GIRLS WHO HAVE GONE ASTRAY. And when one considers Mrs. Mary E. Hamilton, and the red geraniums | and Mrs. Loft's kind blue-gray eyes and her cagerness to give her services t ght for $l a year, and roseate Mrs. Loft has been fo! iss meeting of miners would be held | | on Tate tne ne charity are afternoon and conferences | welfare work, She has been particu- ny union leaders were held this morn-| larly interested In Catholic organiza with that end in view, alth tions dealing with the problem ng with that ee he | Wayward girls, but her activities ) definite announcement as to the! that direction have also extended ime of the meeting was anade | the aid of non-sectarian movement Z id Peterson of the State} During the war she was ‘Treasu eret. Dav a quad of men to {2% the Mayor's Committec of Women police, who led a squad n tO] on Reconstruction and Relief, and was sprigs, told of the plight in whieh | in charge of diversions service veral hundred passengers on a nat the Knights of weyers 4 ape 4 ey | in Longacre Square al! rain found thems lve when they activities of tha nit cached the battle zone. "Bullets were peppering down from the mountains when the train got In,” he said. “Women and children | screamed and cried in terror, while | virtually every passenger on the train fell prone to the floors of the coaches for protection. I don't know whether any shots were aimed at the train, None of the passengers was lature” ctive in the management of the « teen of the Cardinal Farley Club, An recently she has been prominent on the Coinmittee of Milk for New York | City's undernourished babies. Mrs, Loft was selected by Mayor Hylan from a list of more than 800 women Who had been suggested as. worthy successors to Mrs, O'Grady. | The Mayor has been closely associ- | ted with Mrs, Loft and her husband | in welfare work and is a great ad mirer of Mrs, Loft's executive ability and business judgment, men both were sent to their hom Keene had intended to leave the crosstown car alt Seventh Avenue; but fell asleep. When he stepped ou’ at the avenue he was bew ed by the darkness and the rain and wind and walked against the storm til 18 foot hit the pier stringp and he tumbled into the river Mulcahy was appointed to the Lorce on Aug. 26, 19 He is thirty-fc years old, was born in Ireland, is ma ried und lives at No. 722 Amsterdam Avenue. He has a food record. > FARRELL HASN'T ACCEPTED. oration President Will Head Shipping Board, James A, Farrell, President of the | United States Steel Corporation, de nied to-day reports in morning papers that he has obtained a leave of ab: * f rporation and will vet as Apo! chairman of the United States Shipping Board. Mr Farrell sa! T wish to reiterate in the strongest possible terms that I have not accepted the chairmanship of the Shipping Board and neither am I considering he position,’ storm | into the blackness of the North River | from the rear | sweeping wind. | SHE DENIES GUILT Mrs. Southard § Says She ¢ Prove They All Died Natu- ral Deaths. WILL BE EXTRADITED. Arsenic Said to Have Been Found When Bodies Were Exhumed. HONOLULU, May poison my four husbands. 1 did They natural deaths and I have physicians’ | certificates*to prove this.” | Mrs, Lydia Southard, not died twenty-eight, alleged feminine “Bluebeard,” under | arrest here in connection with the, |deaths of four husbands and a! MRS J | brother-in-law, made this declaration | ve day to Detective Chief McDuffie. *recautions to prevent the sutcide FS Mrs, Southard were taken to-<¢ The Honolulu police said they had information which tiem Mrs. Southard take own life. According information here, the husbands alleged been poisoned were: | al caused might to} her! received | to ha Can bisque dolls, THOUSAND DOLLS AT BREAKFAST OF EUPHONY SOCIETY Some Will Be Alive, Some Electric and Some Bisque—All Pretty. thousand dolls at the A Waldort-— hundreds of electric dolls and two dozen chic Ittle live dolls, all in violet and gold—will greet the guests of the New York Euphony Society at its Robert C. Dooley, William @. Me- |Seeond annual violet and gold break- Gatfey, Harlan C. Lewis and bork g age ll Pleas tabtaa andi Rats L Racal a tila seh) . Meyer, ‘The other man was Kd-, Will mark the close of the society ac- eae Dooley, brother of her first hus- | band. | Mrs, Southard, who was arrested Wednesday a boarding house} where she was living with her fifth |husband, Paul Vincent Southard, j chiet petty officer of the United States monitor Monterey, is specifi- ally charged with the murder of Meyer, her fourth husband, in Twin] Falls, Idaho, on Sept. 7, 1920. | She is being held incomunicado in| the city jail. | at Mrs. Southard arrived here from! Los Angeles on Jan. 13. She had made numerous friends here, who characterized her and “nice, quiet peopl TWIN FALLS, Idaho, May 13.— | From the role of “Maud Muller’ to that of an alleged femine “Bluebeard” is the career olficers to-day said they | will try to prove was followed by | Lydia Southard, A few months ago the farmer lass | was a waitress in a Los teria, She was pretty, dark-eyed and vivacious. | To-day she is under arrest in Hon-! olulu, suspected of the murder of four husbands and a brother-in-law all in the space of eight y Southard as Angeles | tivities for the season, will be given in the grand ballroom. The guests will be received at noon by Mrs, James J. Gormley, President, and a tion committec, after which twenty- girls, as dol will escort the guests of honor to their ti HELD AS ASSAILANT OF DR. HARTUNG re four costumed William McAvoy Accused of Beat- ing aml Robbing Hylar Friend and Physician. William McAvoy, a homeless man, was arrested to-day as an alleged jassailant last August of Dr. Emil F, Hartung, former Coroner of Kings County and the friend and physician jof Mayor Hylan. Dr, Hartung was held up and beaten by two men whom he had been called to treat in a furnished room at No. 227 Marion Street, Brooklyn. McAvoy, who was heid in $6,000 bail in Gates Avenue Court for a hearing on Tuesday, was picked up at Canal and Ludlow Streets, Man- hattan, by two detectives who had | photographs of a man listed as Will- This, the authorities charge, is the| iam McAvoy in the Rogues’ Gallery ‘The photographs had been identifi In 1913 she married Robert C./by Mrs. Marilla Gerndt, Dr. Hart- Dooley of Twin Falls. He and his|ung's sister, as one who had been | brother, Edward, took out a joint in-| calling at the physician's office for a |surance policy. Both became ill in| week before the decoy and assault, in pected EELS died, then which Dr. Hartung was robbed of In 1016 she married William Mor | Sakvay deninren titielwan noe la Gaffey of Twin Falls, In 1917 he took jthe city at the time. out a $5,000 insurance policy and Oct. oo 1918, he died in Billings, Mont She became the bride of Harlan ©. Lewis of Billings, in March, 1919, He died after insuring his life in July of the same year On Aug. 1, 19: ward F , the girl married 1 eatello, Idaho. He | nce policy for $10,- hospital here in 000 and died September, No attempt was Meyer's insuranc Meyer disappeared husband's death and was Los Angeles, where it was she had married Paul Vincent South- ard, petty officer on the U s Monterey and had gone to Honolulu, | She was arrested there Authorities pictured the girl as a cold and calculating siren. | Handsome and witty, she had Uttle difficulty in winning successive hus bands, She lived with each, appar ently happy, ministering to his wants | until he became ill and then nursing him carefully until the end. Officers alleged the woman arsenic to cause death, The bodies of Mrs, Southant's four husbands and her brot ia have been exhumed, auth said, and nination revealed p tithe of arsenic The woman be brought for trial, the County Attorney said to-day. ‘He is making arrangement to have her returned immediately from Honolulu, | WHY PFEIFFER I IS HOMELESS. bat ina made to officers sa shortly collect Mrs. after her traced to wrned. attractive | exa au will here Wants nt > Get ourt Into Cannot Pfeiffer, Apart Mia N der Hast home not at to No. we Avenue Munt Harry B. 1 Justice Tlerney to-day Md the by denying appli an injunction Fustice alent urt, As executor ( Ruffetto, sublet Vfelffer untll Oct. 1 denied him entrance a le Oct, 1 Ju cause the landlord, vt him. reme Cour anus, the for of Muni estate na) for Tart anew at $4.00) for $2, ruled calnat 00. at being put but suggest 8 Tiern: rights Justice has no as Pfeiffer ut 1,000 Silver Dollars (o Charch Fund An anonymous member of the congr K of the Church of the Incarna tion donated $1,000 to the Episcopal Fund, it was announced to the Episcopal convention to-day ephen J. Take President of the Manhattan Bank asked whether it waa to be in he Rev. H. Percy Silver, re the church, ‘replied, “as the coming through Silver, {t should si and thereupon had carried tc che platform in old Synod Hall 1,000 silver dollare, ' ae ee ee ~ used | * |FIGHT FOR SENATE SEAT GOES OVER Cammittee to Formally Take Up Katlin-Carroll Struggle. Enti Indications thit the Joint Legislative City Investigation Committee to which has ‘been submitted the claim of Ex- Senator Daniel J. Carroll, Democrat that he was elected by 152 votes Inst November over State Senator Abraham, L. Katlin of Brooklyn,, the sitting member, will decide in favor of Katlin were furnished at the meeting of the commitice to-day by the Chairman, Senator Schuyler M, Meyer. He de clared that the ballots submitted as having been cast for Carroll and al Jtered to ‘be counted for Katlin are froudulent John T. Dooling, counsel for Carroll | protested against the statement on the ground that no evidence had been sub: miited. Chairman Meyer said that Dooling, himself, will admit that they wre fraudulent when he has examined the committee prosent An ad ndanc entire conimitted HELD FOR. CHILD'S DEATH. Auto Said te Have joy in Brooklyn Street. Veogeert's Kined James Frugazzi, 69, father of six eh dren, was held without bail to-day in Adama Street Court, Brooklyn, for ex « tlon next Friday on a charge of homicide On last Tuesday night while deiving An automobile at Nevina Street and At lantic Avenue, it was sald, he ran down Jonn Reilly, eight years old, of No, 8 Nevins Street He put the chid in his cpr and drove the Holy Family Hosptt Ther was said he put the child down in An ante-room and left hastily without Kiving his name. The boy died at 10 o'clock Inst n Frugazzl was arrested early to-day Seana Hospltal Fand $722,644. and interest for Hospital Fund sek poor in non-munieip hospitals Lrookryn and B lve months 1.644, it was ney J. Fisher airman of the fund are at No. 195 Fiast bequest of $560,000 fr aw 1 United Subscripts 1 United the care of seven the for tif ns May. Manhattan, ering the amount ¢ r f without ts net idea bequest. was or tion oF stipulation th int restrice 1921. A ‘SUFFRAGAN BISHOP WHO HAD LIQUOR ASAIDTO | Second Authorized by Convention. Arthur Coadjutor ltev Selden Lloyd, | former Bishop of Virginix and President of the Episcopal Board | of Missions, was this afternoon elected one of the Bishops Suffragan, aiding Bishop William T. Manning of the Episcopal Dio ot New York, Rishop Lloyd lected on the third ‘ballot taken by the diocesan convention, He received 116 clerical and 581-2 laymen's votes, ‘Tho elec tion was thus made unanimous ‘The convention at once proceeded to} balloting for the second Bishop Suf- was fragan. ‘The Rey, Dr. J. W. Sutton, who had all through been second to Bishop Lloyd in the voting, and whose | strength had constantly been in-} creased by the dropping out of other candidates, was regarded ertain to be the choice of the convention. Before the polls were actual voting, the Rev H. Pott, rector of St Rosebank, Staten Rey, Duncan H. Christ's Church, Staten Island, med most likely drew their candidates, was that act of b tive ork The first ballot resulted in no e! tion, as no candidate received a neces- as opened for Dr. William John's Chureh, Island, and the Browne, rector of Brighton, | candidates who of election, with- names from the list of The reason they gave they would consider it an| d faith toward their resp parishes to take up any ew two her | ‘The result of the discussion was the passage of an amendment to the resolution requesting Bishop Manning to appoint a committee of three to consider the matter with similar com- mittees of other dioceses in New York State After reading of sev reports, announcemein of election of standing were announced as Standing Committer William M. Gilbert, Si Justice Vernon M of 1924, Thomas 8 Trustees the 1927 Dr. eral committer f the result comm. tte follows The preme Davis, lay, C. Lane Cathedral, class H. Perey Si.yver Butler and Thoosevelt. re-elected. rd of Managers, % Rev. Dr. Court of The Rey Nicholas Murray of Dr Pranklin D. » Mi pn Society the Rev ery Rey. HOw Allen, A Harris Idueation » Rey. Dr the Rey Stephen PB. Bayne Diove P, Nichol Robb 5 and Robert. 1 dof Religious c Dr. h and Fish Synod The Rev, Dr the Rev, W. W. Davis, and Hams wah -_—__> —— LURE OF STAR PART Aitred FL Provincial class rown Deputy Stanley 1994 Serman Baldwin Sherman S$. was h 110 Wes 12d Str Talley in the Court of Gen COST HER $7,000) Man Who Promised to. Produce | Play Is Held in $10,000 | Bail | | | Sessions to-day charged with steali about $7,000 from Miss Helen Gill No, 260 West 78th Street, an actress She said she advaneed the + Jto him in various amounts 0! |promise to invest it in a play | |rhe Green Jade,” the movie t Jto which he claimed to own, She w }to be a star in the product | Kreelberg told he \ J After she had advanced mone | she said, Kereelt noon | her she could sue im om aint and ind t followed = > FINAL DECREE TO DUCHESS. Marlborough Divorce ade bao | Inte by Britian LONDON, May 13. ‘The ve | Duchess of Marlborough, formerly Cor suelo Vanderbilt, which dissolved he marriage with the Duke of Marihoroug was made absolute this mourning, Ur |der the provisions of the British law six months must intervene between he granting of a divor jeeree and th | issu «© of a judicia’ mak t divorce abso Died Por 4 Louis Goines, | el in the stewar Aepar Hotel MeAlpin, shot and killed hile 1s West 1 \ ° r Jietter recetved We sy by Com r a love affalr which had not prog | Irsntred " nding t Cristostomo Clarte So. 99 Roosove Gtreet, the sulcide’s only relative here Balloting Is Continued to Pick | Ruling ne Be fly N Ce charges of lle: than one pint of liquor on a doctor's | prescription, pe re hi Ja sic! lor mer, held that a physician had the} ri ti ph Pr hi pe w of wi c- | Mel R Near) Puts a Limit (Quantity — “Evidence” Broken, Case Dismissed. on Charles W. Dumont of Mount Voe on, President of the Ame yok Publishing Company n, by can Law Srook- Was disohar olan in Jeffer nurt to-day Mag son Ket Police when arraigned “uly possessing more on and legally orting liquor Mr. Dumont was sted last week in Carmine Street in 8 OWN automobile, which contained y and a case of port of trans case of sher ine. He had a prescription from his piy- jan entitling him to the possession the wine, Magistrate Nolan, instructions issued by Fed- Prohibition Commissioner Kra- quot ght to preseribe wine in any quin- ty he deemed necessary for the cal well being of his patient Dumont presented a letter from h Mr. rohibition Director he had ai legal the wine to his a preseriiption attach ing his name, the ail prescribed O'Connor telling right trans- home if there d to the the nature nt im to ort us ackag the hich it wa The ainst rman, e liquor and tor charge of possessing liquor laid Michael Shields, former Al- who has a saloon at No. Avenue, the Bronx, was to y dismissed in Morrisania Court by As, held Sary majority of votes. In the con-| Magistrate Schwab, The Court vention there are 230 Clerical votes,|that the policeman making the selzure 116 being necessary to elect; and 101| had no warrant to do so, In the second lay votes, 51 being necessary to elee-| pla there was no “evidence,’ tion, The ballot was as follows: | whereby hangs a tale Bishop Arthur iden Lioyd, When Shiclds was arrested, April clerical, 82 lay. | 28, a bottle containing alleged whiske Rev. J. W. Sutton, vicar of Trinity|was taken from behind the bar and Chapel, 47 clerical, 18 lay deposited, with the § ner, in. th ‘These two candidates were far above| station house, Hugh Doyle, a friend any of the others, The votes for the /of Shields hastened there to give bail other candidates were: ind asked for a snife at the “evi Gray, 17 clerical, 14 lay; Chorley,|dence.” While he was sniffing, the 6 and 3; Hulse, 4 and 4; Smithers,| bottle, in some way slipped from 24 and 9; Sunderland, 1 and 6; Ship- | Duyle’s hand and broke on the floor man, 12 and $; Owen, 13 and A hasty effort was made to gather Pelton, 1 and 2} Gilbert, 13 and the “evidence with a sponge, and nominations for the two Assistant | DUE it was not sufficient, to bring Bishops requested by Bishop Man- | at rite ta Mi par he oposal ‘to give women mem-| Was going to have with a cro beratipe in the Veatrice of the pia. | , Twenty cases of alleged violation of copal Church ts not popular in the| the Mul e law Which were to Diocese of New York. When the] hive by 1 to-day by the Bronx measure was brougnt forward yes-| Grand « e put over until Tues terday there was strong opposition | day beeaus y Chemist Kelly was to it and it was defeated too busy to ar to-day — ELATIVES SWAMPED HIS HAPPY HOME Says He Didn't Marry En- tire Wife’s Family—Will Go Back If They Quit. Charges of cruelty and abandonment by Mrs, Josoph Neary, a pretty twenty-two-year-old wife, and counter charges by the husband, Frank ©. ry, that his wife's relatives swoop down up ly M M ba 23, th hu n his home, figured in the $25 and $150 counsel fees 1 brought before Justice Supreme Court, Brook- Nearys were married have ehild-en, rs, and Muriel, eight ary charges hus: rin th Hempstead, okly tion acti nulimony par alla, n, whan in th to-day. The 2, 1916, and elville, three y eeks, Mrs, Ni nd abandoned t Bedell Street, 1921 In anawer to the ay two her ir home, No. separation complaint e husband said that he was living ppily with his wife when suddenly 5 mother-in-law, his brother-in-law d sister-inlaw, a sister-iniaw and her usband and two children invaded hia ©, Prapared to remain, Neary sald marvied his wife—not family ling to return h if truct all the “in-huw Record Low Prices § LLOYD ELECTED COURT FREES MAN EMPLOVEES OF CITY | | ‘MUST NOW SIGN UP J MANNING ON PRESCRPTION DAILY TIME BOOK | Mayor Orders Ma Men. on Pay |Rolls to Be on the Job Prompts ly at 9 and Stay on Until 5. | | City employees who have had they fling as to time of reporting for duty for the last three years were startled | to-day to see time books in city offices, | They had to sign them, too. In ane | tleipation of the coming investigation by members of the Legislature the Mayor has issued explicit instructions 18 to how, when, why and where City | Government might be improved. H@ gistrate | | has also asked for suggestions along | this line from city employees. ! One of the first moves of departe | ment heads was to check up on the | | stragglers, take stock of supplies om hand, hold daily conferences witlt | bureau and division heads and others wise “lay down the law" to the boya who have not, in. the last three years at least, had the experience of being “present y." which means pres cisely at 9 and staying on the joo until 5 o'clock each working day. “Spruce up"—that has been the official slogan since it became knowm, that a searching investigation waa imminent Widows drawing pensions from various city d asked to submit partments have beer affidavits that they not remarried or have no other source of income, Political secretaries and deputies on whom the firm hand of discipline not fallen since Mayor Hylag took office platnty Irritated to day when they found the time books shoved at them with orders to “sigm dotted line. has: were n — Ouryears of making good withmillions of smokers suggests that we knowhow. 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