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TURNING ON ‘THE SPOTLIGHT But What of Dousing the Glim on New York’s Night Life?-—Farewell Remarks by Mr. Ziegfeld, Who Feels Sorry for Visitors—Mr. Shubert to Keep the Lan- terns Glowing on the Century Roof. By CHARLES DARNTON IDNIGHT saving in the theatrical district, so far as Mr. Ziegfeld M is concerned, begins a week from to-night, when the “Frolic” ends, | This announcement is made with authority, for Florenz Ziegfeld 8 certainly the beginning, if not the end, of that form of entertainment fear to those adventurers of the bright Hghts who hate the idea of getting some when the milkman {s still dreaming of green advertising cards that may help him in his business. Ziogfeld’s name is its own adver- Asement, Barnum, we have been told, rove about the ring of bis circus when he first went to London, paus- ng only to shout: “Ladies and gen- lemen, 1 suppose you came ere to we P. T. Barnum. Wa-ai, I'm Mister gurnum!" Now, Mr. Ziegfeld doesn’t yave to Introduce himself. His name S written all over every show he| sroduves. You couldn't mistake the | show if you saw it in Timbucto or! | ted Bank, N. J. it's just Ziegfeld, ‘ast, west, north and south. Tt was imponsible to believe that) Mr, Ziegfeld intended setting the ‘fashion of going to bed at a compar- atively early hour until! he assured ne: “Yes, I've decided to do away with the midnight show.” You're wondering, perhaps, whether chis ig a wholly voluntary or partly Volstead act. Mr. Ziegfeld shot a rlance out of thé corner of hia eye and put @ sure-fire cigar into bis uth Pefore he faced the quasi “It's a little of both,” ho compro- mised. “T don't mind saying it is ather diffoult to keep people in a ively frame of mind till 1 or 2 in the morning uni they can call the waiter and get what they want. But i do want to say that there has not geen a drop of liquor sold on the roof ince the Volstead law was supposed 0 go into effect. If patrons brought something to drink with them that was their business, not mine, I souldn’t search them. But I disliked quite as much having policemen in- vestigate the contents of glasacs. I decided to take off the show one night ast week when two Canadians were arrested by plainclothes men for hav- mg flasks with them. That was enough for me. I'm not in the l.quor Tt was the showman—the greatest showman of his kind—that came out with: “The roof has been rather a pet of mime, ead I haic to give it up. Bo cause of it I managed to get together « beautiful lot of girls, They didn't faye to get there till 11.90 and they were Fequired to be on band for wily { six performances a week. The rest | of the time they had to themselves. They could see all the other shows ® town and then come to the roof fresh as daisies. This enabled me to ave my pick of the best looking chorus girls in New York, girls who wanted to stay in town throughout the year. They were a great attrs jon, For example, when the King of the Belgians was here he made three ‘rips to the roof. along,” continued Mr, Zleg- fel4, “it has been visitors to New York svho have kept the roof show go- ing. Mostly they have come fron places in this count’, people intent upon having & good time in New York end seeing as much of St as their short stay would permit. I could a!- ways tell by the business I was doing whether the hotels were full or empty. Wour weeks would exhaust New York people, and afier that I had to de- pend upon visitors to the city. They OF THE O,WELL=THERE KICK Ne OYTHE GLIMPSES. CF NEw —-——- LEMONADE") ° ESN SPIR YORK Ss “DRY made up at least patrons after the 75 per cent. of my firat month of the show, And so they, most of all, are the ones that are going to mis it when they aguin come to town,” “Yes.” reflected Mr. Ziegfeld, “I started something when I started the midnight show. It was followed by cabaret performances, all of which flourished till the Volstead Jaw swept the tables of cheering glasses, 1 trea (9 get people to come to dinner t the 9 ofelock show, but failed ev after putting In a $70,000 kitchen In | Paris people go to the Alcazar and Jother places to dine and watch the show, but they won't do It here, And for jollying them up at midnight, i's like expecting a lot of speech- makers to make a hit at a dry ban- quet. It simply can't be done.” Mr. Ziegfeld shook his head and then sagely observed: “Night life in New York is drifting to apartments,” On the other hand, 1 have this from Shubert headquarters: “Lee Shubert does not believe that nigiit life on Broadway is dead. He is aware that drinking had a great deal to do with keeping some people up late at night, but in his opinion there are thousands who can get enjoyment out of restaurants and late-hour shows without the aid of stimulants, “Although the Century Promenade hua been closed for the past fow weeks, the closing was due to aj change in policy, ‘The diMculty was! that people would not come to a roof entertainment at 8.30, conse- quently, the roof theatre is being nverted into @ regular playhous d_will soon be in readiness for re~ opening, It is to be a combination theatre with an attraction early in the evening and dining and dancing until 2 A. M. The Promenade and open-air roof restaurant will be a feature as it was last summer and Will open at 6 o'clock. “Broadway,” according to Mr. Shu- bert, “is the best advertised product | jin the world, Every visitor to New| York has heard of this thoroughfare of theatres, restaurants and hotels, and it will take something more pow- erful and far-reaching than Prohibi- tion to, close New York every night at 12 o'clock.” ‘There is always hope, % et iw OROP SARATOGA CASES. Indictments Aga’ BALLSTON SPA, Y., May 21.— Justice Borst in Supreme Court yeator- day dismissed all indictinenta against OMcials of Saratoga Springs and the gounty which were returned as a result of the gambling Investigation, The action was taken with the con- sent of Wyman 8. Bascom, Deputy At- torney General, who said the verdict of acquittal in the case against District Attorney Charles B, Andrus had con ‘vinced him it would be a waste of time and bags to gO on. ‘The two remaining — indictnote against the District Attorney for grand, larceny and bribery were among ‘thos: | ed. Others wore: Michael 1. | McTy«ue, City Judge, conspiracy; Jolin WB. Gaffney, Commissioner of Public Safety, neglect of duty; Benjamin. W Wilson, reset Cominissloner ‘of Public Safety. neglect of duty: ‘dT. Cur- roll, former Police Chiat” snegioct of | duty, re PAINTED BUTTERFLY’ NOTHING DRY IN | VAN@ SCHENCKS | VOCAL COCK TAILS ~ NIGHT Lint is THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 21, START 1,000 NEW HOMES EACH WEEK FOR METROPOLIS ‘Rush of Building P Proves Tax Exemption Is Ending Housing Crisis. MONEY BROUGHT OUT.! Not Only Are Mortgage Funds Freer, but “Savings” Are Going Into Home Sites. ‘Ten-year tax exemption has pract- cally banished the housing crisis, Builders throughout the metropol-| Itan district are filing plans for more | The proj-| than 1,000 homes a week. ects call for flats to house neurry 700 families and for close to 0 private dwellings, many of the two-family type. Brooklyn dwellings are started at the rate of 100 a week. Queens is putting almost as many under way. In the Bronx the volume reaches 50. Flat builders in all suburban bor- oughs are at work on projects for homes at moderate rentals, Their architects are designing houses in which the $1,000-a-room tax exemp- tion covers the outlay—in fact, the average cost of the five-room suite in new buildings is $4,039, As mortgage ;moncy is getting more plentiful, spec- ulative builders are advancing a |steadily increasing sass of such op- erations for housing tne masses in lcentres recently rendered available by new rapid transit, Brooklyn starts several apartment house operations of the $200,000 to $500,000 type each week. The Bronx, likewise, is producing structures sim- ilar to the best six-story olass in |Manbattan, the leading projects of the past week having been the §450,- 000 house of tive stories for Frank | Begrisoh nd Realty Managers on the x212.56 northeast corner of | Davidson Avenue and tordham Road. |Metropolitan Life Insurance Com- piny announced building loans of | 400,000 on thirteen apartment houses | the greater city to make homes for 438 families, Weekly reports of the F. W. Dodge Company show fully 60 per cent. of ourrent construction throughout the metropolis to be residential, Among 479 projects for which contracts were awarded, calling for $14,448,000, were 329 residential at $9,298,000, In the game week 848 operations were re- ported in the planning stage at an jSatimated cost of $27,911,000, embrac- ing 599 residential at $15,919,000. ‘Tho rest of the country averages 33 per cent. residential work. That New York's tax exemption measures were undertaken dust. in time to start home bulldjpg, ahead of the rest of the country Is indi- vated by reports of Government bureaus In Washington. The Labur Department announces that building materials are 40 per cent, down from the levels of a year ago. Labor itself, although holding off for high war ; Wages, is gradually coming back to normal levels on account of the many men from various lines out of work and the desire of scattered workers to earm @ living rather than to sit) idle in the hope of continued high pay. The Federal Reserve Roarc | reports lumber mills starting’on full |time again as u result of the rush of home builders for materials, The| Census Department reports a great | increase in home-buying and this from the savings of middle 8 workers, thus diverting a strong tlow of new capital into real estate. Fully 6,000,000 families in the United States now live in their own homes, leaving 17,000,000 to pay rent. | Government heads seem (o agree | that home bullding and buying is) | sure to increase and that rents must come down as 4 result of the turning of practically 60 per cent. of the country’s constructional energ ‘ihe production of homes to correct | the wartime housing shortage. In the metropolitan district the! | housing crisie has developed a great new force for Americanization | The home-seeking panic aroused | Wage-carning masses to acute study Jof civic and economic problems a | year or more ago, when thousands of ent-harassed tenants formed ore wnizations for mutual protection. hey held meetings and placed them- solves in the way of much enlighten- jment from substantial American sources, ‘The results have been re- | vealed this spring in the rush for| urban homesites at big auction! offerings and in the private transac. | Mons of brokers dealing in both land | und dwellings, A round 5.000 lots| | have been offered at auction and sellers have b surprised at the jPrepondorance of what might be| jcalied allen Duyers—not aliens at heart, but eager aspirants for the} of netting down in their 5 us model Amertean citizens own A part of them are immigr at jor recent arriv: Others have veen | here several ) some mar, years | Careful se shows 1") heaviest Jhuying in the aggregate vy thos: of aes and German .ncostry, with ne Trish running a atrong third. | ie plentiful at such y put the bulk of as a rule, Ss surplus for land inves Tho other three clasxcs huyers seem to be seoking land as # | place for their savings. They bec sme it once deeply interested In the xel- | fare of clty, State and Nation. Yhue every knockdown of the auctioneers hammer drives one more rivet into the growing hull of true Amer can- m. Buyers on the various nome tracts um form. local ’ owners’ ¢ NENT assool mui! of done Van who en be 1 can lind | engineer, who is at the Waldorf, into | 1921," aw imported coal’ stocks, has been remedied, learned in London,” he at & big British syndicate is be- ing organized to give Jerusalem a first closs hotel and restaurant—some- thing hitherto unknown in Palestine. | ‘This hotel will furnish a modern! haven for pligrims, who can bathe in water drawn from the famous pools of Solomon before they fo out, to! Jean their heads against the wailing | stones, “To get back to the modern world, | Leipsic is contemplating a hotel | which will house 20,000 guests, It is | to be ten stories high, and will cover this si meen Mining Engineer in Russia ‘Makes It Clear Why Rus- sians Fail to Shine in Mili- tary Achievements—Eng- lish Coal Strike Practically Empties London Hotels— Jerusalem 1s to Have a Modern Hotel and] Leipsic went on, re . + 82 t \s y Will Have One Bigger Than | way, wil be ton times av farke ae ths the Average New York Hos-|‘YP!*! New York hostetry. telry, HERE'S ONE FROM NEW HAMP- —_ SHIRE A Dartmouth student, staying at tho Pennsylvania, telis this one and, though he swears to its accuracy, declines to have his Dame attache “Up in Hanover,” he says, “we havo a theory that twenty min- Utes are enough for any visiting preacher to apeak in chapel and, even at that, some of us fortify ournelves with the Sunday papers in the back rows, An epic of Russian military genias ia told by Robeson T. White, mining “While T was in South Ruesia,” he said, “managing a copper mine miles from the Turkish border, and shortly before the Turkish invasion, a Rus- sian General who was stationed there with @ totally inadequate force came to me and requistioned 150 pounds cf} "One day, however, « prelate dynamite, eighty feet of wire and| talked for forty-five n..autes on the major prophets. We thought some detonating caps, “Not fur from the camp was » small, shallow stream, about the size of the Bronx River, which was easily fordable in all except very rainy weather. Over this was a bridge which would support one horseman, or possibly two, Beyond it the path was joined by several trails from Turkey. “The General had decided to mine the bridge, he declared, and prevent any Turkish invasion. They would come down the trail, and as they got to the bridge a watchman, forty feet away, Would set off the mino, “I did not angue with him, but here was the situation to my mind: First, the idea that a battery would be nec- essary to discharge the explosive had not ocurred to him. If the mine did go off, however, it would kill only the two possible people on the bridge and the rest of the army could walk that he was through, but he kept on and went fifty minutes moro with the minor prophets, eventu- all fe) called out: ‘Where, where shall we put Ezekiel id some one got up and said, ‘Ezekiel can have my seat; I've got to “A near-riot followed.” \ «oe “Those who predicted the downfall of baseball have been sorely mis- taken,” asserted August Hermann, |President of the Cincinnati Reds, who {s at the Commodore on a busi- hess trip, “for the growing popularity of the game is unprecedented. More people are going to the games than ever before; the newspapers are de- voting added space to professional and amateur games; and school boys are playing it with increased en- thusiasm. Inquestionably it is our national game, and cannot be supplanted by any other sport. It is the cleanest of sports, makes strong men out of boys and keeps mind and body clean.” hy through the water without trouble. A 8 © dozen treds felled abtoss the trail! “The University of Detroit is de- would have caused much more delay. |veloping a five-year course in “That is typical of the lack of com- seronlautical engineering, the first of mon sense of the Russians and the | its kind In the country,” asserted aeence of . the sense balance Oscar Marx, former Mayor of which, had it existed, would have pre- who is at the Commodore | | Detroit, and here on 2 business trip. ‘The courses will include higher mathe- “A fectsion hanes ten by the matics, balloons, aerostatics, wireless United States Supreme Court some- |teleptiony, weather calculation, safety times is as eagerly awaited and stud-|devices, ‘aerial photography, and led by the legal experts of China and|many other similar subjects, To South America as it is by the legaljcarry on the work special labora~ profession here in the United States,"/tories will be established, wind declared J. B, Bryan, official of aljtunnel for purpose of studying alr publishing house, who has just re-|ourrents will ‘be installed, equip- turned from an extensive trip and is!ment of various types of’ aircraft now at the Hotel Pennsylvania, “In obtained and @ a, flying feld und work- fact the largest firm of American law | shop provided. booksetiers maintains well-patronized | e 8 branches in Shanghal, Manila and! he banking business of five New South American cities.” | York hotels has to look after 12,437,- | debe |000 accounts annually and look up the | “The coal strike practically emptied rating of cach customer. If a man the London hotels for a time,” said establishes a rating at one of the J. %. Wilson, manager of a new hotel hotels his credit is established at the! in Paris, who is at the McAlpin, “but others, where his signature is kept! with the warmer spring days and the in a card index, HUSBAND RETURNS. T=ASEEURHN “SPLASH” WEEK. vented the terrible, even of to-day.” A chanc given every New Yorker to learn how to swim during} “Splash Week"—June Pools | | Best Instructors Will Be Provided | ] ANTIN Wi fF | In City Pools From June | 6 to 12. in all parts of Manhattan will be open {ree to the children in the day, and At 77 “Andie” Strolls Home} the adults in the evening, Tac pest ne swimming teachers In the city, some and Makes Up—Finds Four Jof them members of the Olympic Grandchildren. 6 to 13, | team, will do the instructing. Last season there were 331 accidents on the water, and had a majority of | the victims possessed a slight know]- When “Andie” Fuerpinger of Pear! River, N, ¥., came marohing home cage of swimming they migh!. have in a few days ago, his wife did icon saved, according to the Real not recognize him, Still as R. Van! Gog | Winkle discovered, twenty years ~ ‘This year for ‘Splash Week” the | Now York County Chapter od pinger was away for twen Ay: | Gross, the YMCA, Y. MH. A,| Mrs. Fuerpinger was eating het! y wc. a. ¥. W. 11. A. the Carcoll dinner near the open door when the | guy, Be H. T. I. and other organ'za- old man came up the walk. Her | tions will be associated with the city four children are grown, and she has |in tne effort to see that every one| four grandchildren. She always | jnows how to swim, said that some day “Andie” would! Ry telephoning Stuyvesant 114" any come back, but it was twenty years | person may learn the location of ihe 4go that she stopped scarching hos- | nearest pool. Among those acting as pitals, and advertising in the news. | sponsors are Mayor Mylan, Mus, Will- mi 0 organ, } |papers for him. Then, while she was | ioaaiter, Mrs, ietix "Warbute, Mr at her Sunday dinner, a stranger, sev- | Lioyd Derby, Mra, Whitelaw. Rid, | enty-seven years old, came up the; Mrs. William M, Hayes, Mrs, W. wall Bourke Cockran and Mrs, ichulas dy. “tm Andie,” be said, by way of | Brady are \ | MAKES NEW PROFILE) ing, as she described it, “very queer.” Outside were her sume old flower ; " Half-Hour Operation Transforms | Face of Girl Who Long | gardens and pet geese and grape- vine, yet inside wae the husband ¥ ho ; | Had Broken Bridge. A bit of bone transplanted from) had been away from home twenty- five years, It did not scem natural, | her rip to her nose gave Miss Hannah Kaufinan, meke changes in any mah, and Wuer- | Fuerpinger left home in 1896, be- jcause he was sick of his job and in poor health, his wife said, He was sixteen, a new profile making $12 to $14 @ week thon, but | yesterday, complained that he could not stand| The operation, requiring half an it, After his departure she searched | hour, was performed by Dr. Franc for him for years faithfully. ‘Then! White of the Manhattan Bye, she devoted herself to bringing up|nd Throat Hospital, No, her four children, 64th Street. Fuerpinger has a fob in Middle. |" An accident several years ago de- town, Conn., where he has been for|Stroyed the bridge of Miss Kauf. nieen years, He lives at No.,man's nose. By using the pleco of wer Street, and wants his wife |pone from one of her ribs the doc- eee ee ee ee en’ | tor haw completely saved facial place in Pear! River and gu to expression, The nose js straight and wn, her husband went down /no sear will be left ra to her in tears, she said, fter | Miss Kaufman's first question Airs. Puerbinger refused to #1ve | coming from under tie Influence of | was obliged t back to his job/the ether was, “Do 1 look better?" white wating for it, Meanwhile, ho; She glanced in a mirror and smiled} has written } a etter repeating | happily: [Mis wish to tart over wii her, and| The girl was reported at the hos- jlus sent ne grandson “And pital i night to have no pain. she | birthday nt of “a wateh id | Wil probably leave to-morrow Misa} chain. Mrs pinger han promived | Kau(man is the daughter of teomoke 4 Momerlal ” WaAutmon ond lives at No 4 eu 13 bay We swce . COLLIER 10 SEEK FAME AS MOVING PICTURE DIRECTOR Comedia witt Not Move Away From New York Immediately, However. (Rpnoial to The Eventog ox’ | LOS ANGELES, May 41.- Collier sr., motion picture director. ‘That's what it will ‘be about a year tence if plans mature, The noted comedian decided to change his residence from Long Island to Hollywood, at Mrs. Col- Hers solicitation, but not immedi- ately. He may direct his son as lead- ing Man in some contemplated pro- | ductions, Mrs. Charles Kaltenbach of New York was a guest of honor here yes- terday afternoon at a large garden party given by Mrs. Frances Plerpont Davis in Estrella Avenue. Mrs. Kal- tenbach js visiting her mother, Mrs. Telfair Creighton, here, Mrs. C. C, Culver of New York is to be the guest of honor at a dinner dance to-night at the Los Angeles Country Club, at which Mrs. Marion Churchill McCartney will be hostess. Mrs. Cuiver, wife of a noted wartime wireless inventor, 1s visiting her sis- ter, Mrs, Clara Snyder, here and will return to New York in time to sail for Europe on June 1. Collern Moore's grandmother has gone marketing to prepare a wonder- ful return home dinner for the movie star, who is due from New York on Sunday, “I'm longing to set my feet upon our own Broadway,” says a letter received by the old lady from the actress. Misses Mabel Walker and Oceana Crosby of New York are to share honors to-day at a bridge luncheon in thelr honor at Sycamore Lodge, the home of Mrs, Edmund k. Greg- ory. "They return home next week after @ season at Beverly Hills. New Yorkers at hotels here in- clude, at the Angelus, T. A. Taylor,’ Louis Van Ulien and R. A. Rosen- thal; at the Alexandri Exnest Franken, David B. Manas and Frank Morse; at the Stowell, Mildred Hill &nd Howard H. Gibson. Mrs. Jare Lockwood and Mrs. John Martin Graham of Ne York were guests yestemlay at the 1. of . series of smart luncheons g Mrs. Albert Menke at the Ambassad. ie Hotel. Danie) Elton Duffie of New York was Guest of honor at a tea sere given to-day by Mrs, W. J. Chichester, at whore home he is guest for a | While before going to Coronado, HER HUSBAND HAD “LOTS OF COMPANY” As One Was Woman M Paul Putimann, Exporter’s Wie, Sues for Divoree. Justice F decision in the divorce suit Edith Puttmann of » here ‘has Avenue, against Py: ex porter, of » Weat §7th Str ‘ Mrs. Puttmann testified she mar: o4 the defendant 1898. Two ohildien) were born, Mi acKson, a maid ,em- | ployed by the defendant, said that’ she had seen Puttmann entertaining An Woodman in the Weat Sith Strest house, and that Puttmann had “lots of « Pany." Miss Woodman, nccordin witness, also was 4 mann country home Helen Mehor Drive, testified th 6.30 o'clock int 5 panied Mrs. Putt to Patt apartment in West s7th Street, and, after waiting an hour, saw a ‘young woman leave the defendant's apartment Mark Wisner, of No. 17 Bast Street, attorney for Mrs. Puttmai asked that his client's alimony of $200! a month be increased to $500 « mor and that he be allowed additional cou sel fee in that he had been substit aa the plaintiff's Fineh directed t wwe he taken | jas to the alimony and counsel fee. ARTHUR S. BURDEN AD S. BURDEN ADJUDGED MENTALLY INCOMPETENT. | Sherift's Former Pole Player lojured by Fall, Jury Finds in Case of Arthur Scott Burden, polo player and for y in New York society, wan mentally incompetent yest jury in Sheriff Knott's court. Burden’s condition is the result | fall from his horse in Decemb He has been in Bloomingdale mer ars a leading figure Ajudged y by My since April 2, 1920, but the fact only became known to the public two, weeks ago, when his brother, James A. Burden of Troy, N. Y., applied to have him declared incompetent and a committee appointed to manage his | j estate, JOUR ou se trate their ability to pro- newspaper, students of the School of Journaliem have | prepared an eight-page, elght-column Journal, edited according to metropol itan standards. A leading article ts a report of after-dinner speeches re cently made by Ralph Wulitzer and Herbert Bayard Swope, both of The World, before the mon students at the banquet of Sigma Delta Chi. profes #ional journalistic fraternity, com memoracin birth of Joseph Pullt zer, found: —Vighting continued between British troops au Nationalists} and in Brille cavalry awent the narraw sty e late Seaterias, clearing ¢ We of pevolutiontete, Meus» caueni Use were reported, William; 424) a} “| CONNECTICUT DEER | GIVE “BILL” A SCARE. Was ng One Bie Buck Wil Antlers Ten Fee Across, ONECO, Conn, May 20.—"'Big Bill" Unaworth has heard the many yarns | about wild deer strolling around the rural towns of Rhode Island and Con- necticut, and to-day took a ride out on the truck of the General Raking Com- pany with Loals Frigon to “see the sights’ first haryl All went well with Big Bill until a ‘lonesome part of the road Just east of | the State lino, a herd of wild deor and buck with antlers all the way from four ‘to ten feet across—according to who told the story—came charging dircetly loward the big bread wagon. "BAI had seen enough from the orchestra circle and immediately Jumped for the gallery, perching on top of the big bread wagon where it looked safest, “Lewey.” knowing the waya of wild deer in general, blew a few mpid blasts with his auto horn and the herd, buck Perri! @ all, disappeared as quick as it haa shows Up. | inst orth ia satisfied there is such a ‘thing as wild deer in Rhode Island, and also that the top of the bread wagon \s the safest place to ride when near- i State Mue. SAIL the REFRESHING SUNDAY Newburgh and Beacon, $1.25 Poughkeepsie, $1.60 ROUND TRIPS A cool delightful sail through the most magnificent river scenery in the world, “Benj. B. Odell” niki set 9. sa A. M., rain or shine, and lunchroom. Excellent music. it M. (Day! Sarre Trip PHONE CANAL 9000 HUDSON NAVIGATION COMPANY Middleton $. Borland vere. mee A; Kimerson | Beoetvers. r8 TO ALBANY & TROY ne waving tlie) 25 River Hudeon t M teks \ vuranit New “Atpan tothe York anit Mu i Letween ed adit “ ja | thet nurked t ther Mountain ” rit to West Deshi oe information at ka i Tita! i} Sunday Trip, May 22, to. BEAR MT. AND RETURN eee Str. HIGHLANDER | Palleades fatsr tate Park Coenntsstoners Will leave Battery Pier 9 A. M.; West 132nd St. 10 A.M. FARE ‘we $1.99 § PAN s NEW ENGLAND POINTS VIA THE Fall River Line THE POPULAR ROUTE Splendid steamers, plendi Orchestra on cach Steamer, Pim Onmignt saving Time. Dally including Sundeye: nd tekate at all Treket Opices id service. MANDALAY. |Will Make 3 SPECIAL TRIPS Sunday, May. 22 Highlands nd Keturn Leaving Battery Landing at 9.30 A. M,, 1.30 and 8 P.M DANCING TO GOOD MUS: FARE Wi2 50¢ inal’? RIKEANSBURG Wrenday one St. 9.00 A. M., W. 129th Good restaurant CENTRAL HUDSON Dyckm an St.Ferr TAXI STRIKE NEAR END. UF A settlement of differences caus e strike of ail the 400 Black an White taxicab drivers, who quit Thurs: sy noon, may be reathed to-day when ppresentativ of Local Union No International Brotherhood o! Teamsters, and Nathaniel Jacoby, Vice President and General Manage: of the company, meet in general com ference with the State Industrial Com: mission for arbitration, Prepared from pure, fresh eggs. Halves the cost to consumer, Ex- cels fresh eggs for making cake and pastries. Should be in every Always frente ROD _ PRODUCTS _ OD. Iny Street, New HUDSON OUTING TO BOSTON Direct daily service all the way by water without change. METROPOLITAN LINE Via CAPE cop CANAL DECORATION DAY Short Three-Day Tours Tncludi do Ho Travel Expenses $22.07 up $34.00 up PALOS up 245 Brondway 59! Opp. City Hal! Tel. Barclay 710 Ht) Avenue 400 Tel Murray Hull o17t AMERICAN SHIPS ARE, AVAILABLEFOR YOUR § OCEAN VOYAGE : New Combination an Freight Pa Luxurious Reliable Passenger Ships Steamers, Freight) Ships THE STANDARD OF q THE MARINE WORLD | UNITED STATES Si SHIPPING BOARD Sailings from every port in America to the lead ing ports of the world. TO INTERSTATE PARK Fare 5c SIGHTSEEING YACHT, “pont Fon cH World'a an ha 4000 Renkin Brookiyn Office