The evening world. Newspaper, May 31, 1921, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 31, 1921, Dowbtless with our allies also in the isteldt we could realize some receipts, But the situation would change if we ‘went in alone.” Benator Poincare smiled cynically M. Briand said that had he or- the occupation he would have fe hig maximum popularity “for 3 set i days.” Be he would not be responsi- fer the policy of permitting the world to believe that if the present | German Government failed to keop its promises. such 4 condition would ad gamed to Brance, he added: Jong as we possess force we Will secure satisfaction. The force fe maintain on the Rhine, which I | Sa aaa will do nothing to diminish, will not Mutual ‘inder in any way the German ad- _ministration.” ‘ In answer to @ question M. Briand he would aot renounce any ‘of the sanctions already in opera- Companies From Exchange Here Do Business at Loss to N. Y. FUNDS IN SPECULATION ‘The Foreign Office states that no an i ‘@edision has yet been taken on the of accepting the British Investment of Reserves No Insurance Exchange ON VERGE OF WAR ——— of rates, fixing brokerage London Considers Ultimatum to) sions and iblagkiisting mutual insur- Angora and Prepares to lance companies (which return their veloping in Anatolia. It will be re- oalled, says the Daily News, tbat dur-, img the London conference in March | the Turks, represented primarily by Bekir Samy Bey, then Foreign Min- | ister for Mustapha Kemal Pasha, the | Nationalist leader, were offered by the terms which constituted very | modifications of the Sevres | ‘ "5o were given one month to ac- opt or reject the terms, but since thén there has bees no sign of uec- ceptance, and Bekir Samy Bey has given way to a much more irrecon- @ilable successor, The pledge to re- British prisoners bag teen and other agreements viv- lated. In consequence of these acts, Britain is considering the despatoh » of an vitimatum to Angora and pre- paring to back up its protest by = SPEEDED TO BURY HIS DOG; FINE $100 sy Went Through Yonkers,at, 45-Mile lip but Court Showed No Sympathy. > « » %& “What prompted you to driye an automobile through the streets of our fair city on Decoration Day at the rate of forty-five miles an nour to the peril of life and limb?" asked Acting City Judge Boote of Edmond Lewis et No. 163 West 132d Street in the Special Sessions Court in Yonkers to- day. “Joage,” replied Lewis, who is a “| was hustlin’ to bury a dog.” drives a car for Henry Michaels of New York. Michaels was im the car with the carcass of his dog, Which he wus about to inter in the animal cemetery at Scarsdale. fearing he would arrive late at the eetetery he urged Lewis to hurry and Lewis obeyed orders. ‘What the dog was worth when it Dei cont Sreheete gion, {the Pawtucket Mutual Fire Insurance state ot fine inflicted om his|COMPABY of Rhode Island, was re- oe _. - si called as the first witness. He told of STILLMAN HEARING. GOES ON TO-MORROW Mack Has Asked For an Adjourn- ‘ment, but No Action Has Been Taken on Request. Although John EH. Mack, guardian for Guy Stillman, whove disputed legit!- macy is the chief point at issue be- ‘tween James A. Stillman and his wife, thas asked for an adjournment, counsel committee, contends Many witnesses were present under subpoena to be about asked the use five insurance companies make their freedom from State supervision over investments. Mr, that Untermyer revealed to-day the fire insurance companies, carrying “unrevealed profits’ due to sums eived from salvage, bought speculative securities. When Purchases turned out badly the com pany's bookkeepers made a showing of “losses due apparently to un- profituble premium rates. If the Investments were profitable increased dividends were pald to stockholders. Mr. Untermyer said an examination of fire company invest- ments showed a “mass of investments which are far from liquid and could only be turned into money to meet losses with great difficulty and heavy los: Fefore going Into the investment phase Mr, Untermyer showed that the New York Insurance Exchange, May 26, sinee the inquiry into its methods by the committee, has changed its rules and offered the u of its rate cards to non-member mu- tual companies at $60 a month, Mr. La D. G. Purmort of the Cen- tral Manufacturers’ Mutua! Company of Ohio was asked If ihie really opened Now York City to the mutual companies, He sald it did not. Q. Haye exchange brokers received permission to write your policies? A. No. Q. Is it just 4 camouflage for keep- ing up the monopoly? A. Very much 80. York Insurance Exchange, setting on a front bench, seemed suddenly inter- ested in the ceiling of the Council Chamber. Mr.Untermyer frequently looked around at him. Mr. Robb's eye was invariably fixed on the cell- ing. f Frank Bishop, General Manager of unsuccessful efforts to get into the Buffalo and Syracuse fire insurance exchanges. The application of repre- mutual companies was rejected on the of premiums to subscribers by mutual rebates.” F. L. A. Cody of Buffalo wrote to Mr. Bishop saying the mutual com- panies would be allowed “inside” if they “did not make dividends to policy holders in Buffalo territory.” These dividends amounted to about Bishop said. ‘Will be resumed to-morrow morn- before Referee! Robb of the New York Insurance Exchange in May, 1916, with Mr. Barber of the Berkshire Pittsfield, Mass. They made a for- mal request for admission. ave been summoned and oon no notice of post- been sent to them. Mr. deen in direct communi- for Mr, Stillman ené Mrs. Stiliman. His request for an t was made over the tele- last Thursday to George W. of Taft & Wickersham, attor- Mr. Coggiti that the exchange at a regular meet- to “rebates from established rates" grave evils.” with Cornelius J. Sullivan of counsel for ‘Mr, Gtiliman, but thus far Mr. Sulli- wan bas heard nothing from Mr. Mack. grave evils? owe, Pawtucket Mutual has entered New York Exchange under an agree: WHAT IS DOING TO-DAY IN CONGRESS policy holders in this district. Q. What will you do with thi Charles P. McClelland, Chairma the Interstate Commerce Committee Vebeelaasn Tot the Punile sant, Scrvice. PROFITS OF FIRE INSURANCE IN THIS CITY PAID IN REBATES Barred| Py, high + with the grip of the Mew York Mire on the making |and commis- of these | Willis Robb, manager of the New! sentatives of the Pawtucket and other ground that “the return of the surplus, companies was, in effect, a giving of 26 per cent. of the premiums, Mr. Mr. Bishop said he went to Willls Mutual of Mr. Robb's reply was read, saying ing ruled against opening the door as “establishing precedents for very Q. What was the nature of these A. Competition, I sup- Very recently, under the changed rule of the New York Exchange, the the ment not to return surplus profits to money thus withheld from your New of the U. 8S, Board of Appraisers and @ trustee of schools at Dobbs Ferry, told how the schools of Dobbs Ferry were driven to companies outside of the Suburban Insurance Exdhange ates from The schools secured Insurance the Meliens Mutua | Company at about half the rate de- manded by the exchange companies, La D. G. Purmort, se: Manufacturers | Central Mutual 0! Ohio, said his company charged the | prevailing rate in af cummunitic 0 per cent. of premiums’ to poll holders; in previous years they 1 { turned 26 and 20 per cent pany has accumulated assets of $2, guggestion for the meoting of the) Restricted by State as in 000,000 and @ surplus of $900,000 Boulogne conference of the Supreme Ca re < ins protect its poliey-holders. a. | Jase of Life Companies. The Central Manufacturers Mutua Council this week. A new note re- Life Companie ‘e The Central Manufacturers Mutua questing Puch « meeting has been re-| SORE We hange, Mr. Purmort said, found it oslved. The hearing of the Lockwood Com- | was forbidden a memper to divide ae ee ‘ profits with cus 8 here and fo BRITISH AND TURKS | mittee at the City Mail to-day dealt | Pint out again. Mr hsome State supervision. ex to purchase to be patd to agents as commiss' be saved to the policyholders except retary of the but for two years had been returning The com- Purmort named thirteen States in which rates are fixed by the State eral more in which there ts Ioverywhere tin New York and some South- ern States his company is permitted rating-cards from local | Most Important Witness Dis- PI | appears and Police Can't Locate Him. Side” From Pulpit Is Angrily Turned Down. 4 | Subpoenas were served to-day upon |@ half dozen witnesses in the investl- | mation that has been begun into the wreok of the Third Avenue north- (of The Evening World.) MARLBORO, N. Y., May pulpit of the Pr .—The yterian Church at ft Marlboro oe le tw bound elevated train at Westchester |) ee by Pee \Peewenme ne Avenue last night, when a s¢ of td 4s - RUE ton a, senior yi purbeha Gale iced GRK hi | side’ of his marital relations It bad wun proposed by friends of his, he 600 placed in perl dy hurel that he tell his story sed deacou sald ne the The main Investigation js under the : but 4m-fa direction of Assistant District Attor- | ae Sere ney Frank Oliver of the Bronx, who said to-day that he expected to ex- amine several witnesses before night and would very searching. Other inquiries are being made by the Interborough Company the police and the Transit Commis- to-day ; “don't think that White ft the inquiry be pack up and leave the mountain sion exchanges. Back Up Protests. profits to policy holders) @. Do you know any reason why} The towerman, who is said to lave pramble and huilt . i ees . . | fire Insurance could not be bought|been J. Broderick, 18 one of most d a oe. fr Publishing Uo, The: Inchsase In/the cost of bullding |. an owner: of & BUNdINE direct l important withames: The police have weet ne fea New York Evening Worki.) in New York City ts Increased by) without the interposition of a broker? 4 LONDON, May 31.—A grave situa- ALN been searching for him. He disap- fountains found their transporta- Gem tavolving the British and An-|™@PY Millions by these method! Couldn't a. great part of the|peared and Detective Dolan of the . | Samuel Untermyer, counsel to the | $170,000,000 taken from policyholders | Morrisania Station said this afternoon gota Governments appears to be de. with White, bought He told them that he . ' le hin he had been unable to locate him road with fie’ property the .| for the arbitrary rule enforced tor|_ Of the Injured persons taken to ang would do as he pleased with it. | the benefit of the brokers? A. A great Lincoln Hospital last night there After a talk with the Justice of the part of It, The broker has his uses.| were left only two this afternoon. peace he made a detour of the 1 But in a great number of cases he| pyey are Mr. and Mrs. Hirsh Mar- : h = could be eliminated without loss to anybody except himself. /11 ARMY AIR MEN INJURED BY BOMB | Missile Explodes During Removal at Aiberdeen Proving Grounds. WASHINGTON, May 31.—Three |oMcers and eight enlisted men of the Army Air Service were injured by the \explosion to-day of a bomb which was bing placd aboard a vesl at th army proving grunds at Aberdeen, Md. Reports to the War Department said the bamb was dropped as it was being placed on the ship and ex- ploded with great force. ‘Dwo of the | officers injured were Captain Joseph |B. Hall and First Lieutenant Lewis | P. Reese. The name of the third was given in the despatch, but there are | several oMfcers of the same name and 4t was held uotil identity had been fully established. Two of the officers were seriously |injured, but first reports did not say which ones. } ———_————— “WAR CRIMINAL” | FOUND INNOCENT | Accused of Sinking Hospital Ship— Trial Is Promptly Stayed. LBIPSIC, Germany, sociated Press).—The Lieutenant Karl May 31 (As- trial of former Neumann, who was charged with sinking the hospital ship Dover Castle while in command of a German submarine during the war, has been stayed, as a preliminary examina- tion of the case resulted in his com- plete innocence being established, The case had been placed on the list of trials of war guilty for a hear- ing on June . lO, Mr. Untermyer to Arbitrate Strike in Building Trades. Samuel Untermyer, it was announced to-day, had been elected by both sides , to arbitrate the difference between the men in the building trades and the Master Builders’ Association of West- chester County. Mr. Untermyer will be alone in the effort to bring the men and the bosses together and end the strike that has been in effect since April 1 and has held up construction in the county since that time. The strike was cafled when the builders an- | | | | | $8 for men in the trade, GREAT DRIVE ON TO FORCE REPEAL OF VOLSTEAD ACT Movement Begun to Test Senti- ment Spreads Rapidly Over Pennsylvania. PHILADELPHIA, May 381.—A movement to destroy Prohibition by forcing the repeal of the Vol- stead Act, which was begun here recently, has spread like a prairie fire over the entire State, It be- gan as a tentative organization with headquarters in the real estate offices of Dolman, Mauran & Co., in the Liberty Building, to test public sentiment. Clergy- men, physicians, lawyers, educa- tors, business men and artisans have rushed to sign as members by the thousand, and larger head- © HOUSE. 7 quarters soon will be obtained. York policy holders? A, We plan to eeeeeiiauie debate on pecker {distribute it among our policy hold-| | The methods the drye used to “SENATE. ers in other districts | force Frombiiea gn the country penne Rereies of “sue @, Bo the rule of the New York) The ssened political donth to al Navy pill Exchange not only robs the New York + pas _ = ages and Elections Com- | policy holders of what is due to them | candidates for piles bagies ag eontinues Ford-Newberry ius it also divides this money among| ‘hem, and, conversely, the new or- pate gp lt resumes [Policy holders in other communitios? | ganimation will fight at primary n| and polls every aspirant for pref- erment who does not declare for repeal of the Volstead Act, The new organization is against the re- turn of the old-time saloon. i nounced a reduction in pay from $9 to around his house. When asked what might have hap- pened had he not opened the road in this fashion, one of his neighbors said to-day that they wouldn't have had to chop any wood for kindling the next winter. White told an Hvening World man that tt was his overalls and horny hands that led to hig marital troubles, “I tried to tell poor,” he sald, “but she didn’t like the surroundings and the overall scenery. I found when I opened here that 1 had a temperamental golis of No, 485 East 172d Street. It was said they were suffering from shock and possible internal injuries, but it was thought they would be out in a few days. The accident occurred over the “hub of the Bronx,” where four per- sons were Killed In a mishap two years ago. The most remarkable fea- ture of last night's accident is that no one was killed. The seven cars were packed, When tho first car jumped and broke the coupling it went one way and tho rest of the train went another, the grinding and pyrotechnic display that followed the crash attracting a crowd that soon reached 10,000. One of the strange things was that the person most seriously hurt was not in the train at all, but in a taxi- cab in the street fifty feet below, when falling debris bat ered his cur and a brake shoe struck him on the head, fracturing his skull. He was identified in Lincoln Hospital as Isa- dor Saltland of No. 888 Fox Street, the Bronx. The train was packed with home- going holiday crowds standing in the aisles and holding to the straps. It pulled out of the 149th Street Station, gathering speed in the block betwesn her that I was their habitat. “T married this girl goodness of my heart. out of ihe laboratory, tuberculosis. where she got incipic tains to cure her, to make her place in the world.” The prediction was made to-day that “anything is likely to happen” to Bouck White, if he does not leave this locality within forty-elght hours, tt and the point where the West-, Resentment against him for his treat- chester Avenue tracks, used mainly; ment of the girl wife he brought from for storing cars, branch out to the| France is growing. right. Incidentally, it has become known The passengers received their first| that on the committee's first visit, intimation of something wrong when, Wien he was whipped and “stuck there was a grinding crash as the UP.” he made such a hard fight he firet car ewerved to the right, break-| ad to be banged on the head with ing its coupling. | the butt of a revolver. To “cool him Motorman William Murphy stuck to Of” he was ance Soe a Oranee his post, although his car left the Lake on the way to Newburgh, near rails and with scarcely abated mo-| Which place he was put out to walk mentum lurched forward, crashing | "0™* ‘ F across the iron ties, For almost ono; hundred yards this car careened 400 FLEE FOR LIF along, bringing up so that it stretched | AS BIG DIKE BREAKS diagonally across the tracks with its | front end pointed into Bergen Ave-| . nue. Much of the iron railing along | Pumping Station Swept Away— this one hundred yards of the ele-| Damage to Property Put vated structure was tofn away, fall- ing to the street, | at $300,000. The second car continued on the} WOODLAND, WASH., May 31,—Be- ‘Third Avenueline but jumped the rails, | tween 400 and 600 persons, farmers and lurched along the ties twenty-five | their families, were believed early to- feet, and crashed into the signal day to have escaped to safety as the tower, a two-story steel structure | resuit of warning given last night when containing an operator who was in-|, sis. near here protecting « nea ‘pace p errr debris about | 7 area of 12,000 acres broke under the structure and precipitating a Pope ce Peet waters frora se Coe - Damage to farm prop- shower of sparks to the street. The |r va; “estimated by observers or signal tower was knocked down and 259,009, left hanging over the street. The pumping station at Bureh Slough ‘There were about 500 persons in the | was swept away within thirty minutes weven-car train. Scofes of them were | after the dike broke. The area is ap- thrown to the Moor and there was a wild rush to escape. In the jam about the doors several women and | three miles wide. It is feared that most of the district had been inundated, TTOWERMAN GONE: WHITE 1S BARRED MARION HOLLINS FOUR INQUIRIES ON FROM CHURCH AND PUY HOLDERS nesses an of Radical to “Tell His (Special From a Staff Correspondent erson to come into the Lord's house. | jing, White came here three years ago! Her house enth hole. was blown to pleces by the war und and they made the turn all square. she had to take work in a chemical Mrs. Barlow won the eleventh and nt twelfth holes and halved the thir- I brought her out here teenth and won the fourteenth. to this home in the beautiful moun- Players bunkered on the second shot inarriage has but each got | vows to resp. times acted toward | faithful, tionate wife, and this respondent fur- can golfer two up. On the sixteenth ther says that the denial! of relations her at the fifteenth hole, healthy again so that she could take | Well out. proximately nine miles long and bwo to| |*' LOSES GOLF CANE TO MSS LETH (Continued From First Pare.) ng { Miss Hollins. for a half at the second hole, nother four-yard putt at the fourth ind an eight-yard putt at the *h champlon’s wooden club hots wee brilliant, while Miss Hol- lins Was equally good on the green. ‘They were all square at the ninth pole. | killed, two mortally wounded and ware making the turn all square | twelve slightly wounded when they Leitch at the tenth drove to the green, a distance of 280 yards, but took four putts, while Miss Hollins holed a four-yard putt to win in three, Miss Hollins duffed her drive at the eleventh and took three putts, losing the hole in five to six. Miss Leitch holed a six- Yard putt at the twelfth and won in four to five. At the thirteenth, Miss | Leitch was bunkered, while Miss Hol- playing perfectly, won the hole he best thing that he can do fs to/in three to four. ni Miss Hollins played two wooden jtiigq’ club shots at the fourteenth, winning jteenth hole, Miss Hollins ‘only haif- A bought thirty wcres of rock and) nit her ball on the second shot, put his house in the'the third over a wall and was tuo The mountain. | strong with the fourth. Miss Leiten, cers who haul their logs from the playing wel, won the hole in five to seven. in sight of a half. At the seventeenta Miss Hollins put her tee shot on ¢ sixth green and lost the hole by five to seven. At the elghteenth sae missed her second shot. Mias Leitch played perfectly to the green, wasie Miss Hollins was bunkered, She played two shots but couldn't get out and lost the hole and the match, The score follows Miss Leitch: Out “4 Miss Hollins: Out ..6 4 Miss Leiteh In ...4 5 4 Miss Hollins: In ....38 6 q Rain during the 3435 6-46 night made the wife and a nervous cow who had just &reens much slower than they were been separated from her calf, ant [ yesterday. had to show them both that this was Barlow and Miss Lobbett attracted a yupg. { SPAU The match between Mrs, good gallery. Both played steadily. Mrs. Barlow was two up at the s She lost the next two Both Miss Lobbett won the hole in six or seven. This left the Amert- hole Miss Lobbett laid a half stymie, which Mrs, Barlow negotiated and won by three up and two to play. In the third round Mrs. Barlow will meet Joyce Wethered of Worplesdon, Miss Cummings will play Joy Winn of Aldeburgh, Mrs, Feitner will meet Janet Jackson of Island Malahide, and Miss Fownes will play Mrs. Caut- ley of Thanet. | Miss Wethered, who beat Miss M.} B. Fitz-Gibbon of Greystones, 7 up and 6 to play, will have a harder task to-morrow when she meets Mrs. Bar- low. Mrs. Temple Dobe of Brom- borough, the former champion, beat Mrs, Dudley Charles of Stanmore in the second round by 3 up and 2 to play. enter 5 MEN DENIED CITIZENSHIP | About 500 Residents of Fore! Birth Made Americans To-Day. Supreme Court Justice Martin in the Bronx to-day refused citizenship to Withelm Fellesian, fifty-five years old, No, 2124 Jerome Avenue, shown to have made derogatory remarks in 1918 about | soldiers leaving on a trans- foreriGigo ‘to. John J. schmutzer, No y6 Hast 178th Street, who tried to be sent to. Germany in 1914, Charles Dingerdiasen, No. 324 East 167th Street. was rejected because he had served a term in Sing Sing for assault. Otto Winderlich, No. 32) Bast 168th Street, and. Henry Warnckers, Went 2gist Street, German: far tavoring Germany during the war. Thout $00 men and women of foreign ‘were admitted {to citizel it was said that about a day for six days will be admitted, pe tall laaT aessaisils i | Noted War Bishop of Mesux Deed. PARIS, May 31.—Msr. Emmanue Jules Marbeau, Bishop of the Dineess died to-day. He was n in Paris Nov. 12, 1844, While the Germans advancing and threatening Paris in 1918 ‘Marbeau took the place ‘of Meaux and, in full vest- the Germani Bishop. of the Mayo> ments, faced children were trampled. Scores of | slightly injured persons in these rear cars went home without waiting to be | attended. Many left purses’ and valu- | ables behind. _————s- DORVAL &NTRIES. The entries for to-morrrw's races are as follows : AST LACK —-Pvsttee @800; dar taro taidem: tive furlongs, Moneta, 105: 14) 7 arth, Special Values in Organdie and Voile Dresses Many $15 Values— Now $8.95 Be fet jorbo ier summer materials, includ: ing Models in Ginghams. Linenes and Dotted Swiss. As Low As $5.95 0 ' co - Gren, ain; tear Nok, 112, | | 350 Silk Dresses at $16.95 °K Te entry | end FIFTH RACE—Pee $1,000: for s rar. Fubar oky ex Caley, “7 {SE Giateune, {80 « "Sonnwor, 06; Homisztere, 101; Sere! bec iC E- note, ee eee Toes atuets 08" ‘nally ble: 185; 1 rumo 8000; for four-year Near 3ist Street A large variety of other HANNE TOS 307 Fifth Avenue Our Entire Fifth Avenue Building Exclusively for Women's Wee: Organdie Dress, $8.95 Or a, TROOPS AMBUSHED NEAR CORK: ROADS She holed a lons Fourteen Wounded, Two Mor- COKK, ciated were attacked at 8 o'clock this morn- ing while marching from the Youghal barracks to the rifle range. Near the golf links the road had been opened on thé soldiers, were replied to the fire of the attacking party. } A curate who was driving to cele- brate mass got into the line of the hole in four to five. At the fif- Irish Constable Shot From Ambash.) i BELFAST, Ireland, May 31.—An . : . WASHID y Bh ficer of the Irish Royal Constabulary |. SSHINGTON, May 31. — Liew Was shot to death last night during an] Smiley Ames, pilot of the Curt hour's fighting between. a number of| Eagle army airplane that crashe constables and ambushing party.|near Mo . i The constables were cycling from Blat= torgantown, Md, Baturds ney Castle to Monaghan when the am- Miss Leitch duffed her second pushers attacked them tion thus shut off and remonstrated shot at the sixteenth and never ws ALIA cH Sean dent in the fort report of the board of investigation ’ | ‘Phe accident, in the opinion of tiv board of three army tation officers \was absolutely unavoidable and wa |due entirely to the storm into wh! Langley Field, Va to Washington The report was submitted to Maj: ’ 1 and his staff left the flying fleld fo . " Washington to attend the funeral of Lieut. Ames (Continued From First: Page.) A special investigation. b; " es — spector General of the Army supposed to be interested in the ae later. tocday ‘Gy Bhorela {s of gambling resorts at Bia Weeks. This Investi on will be j and Deauville and the owner of wl dependent of the action taken by ByePle net Greroannies Air Service's Board of Inquiry BARTON FRENCH—From good lamily; one of New York's leisure class B. the ¢ Pri with no principality and no money, | Joe Pani—Keeper of restaurants. ti tt Tu affai said with in f Joye th in ady tion paragraph e and untrue.” The ansy Committee administration |REPORT ESPERANTO CREW ALL SAFE No Direct Word, However, From Vessel That Stood By When Champion Fisherman Sank. HALIFAX, N. $., May &1—The schooner Bisie 11, was reported to- day to be bound for Whitehead or Canso with the crew of the American schooner Esperanto, MINED, #KILED winner of the international fishing craft race, which foundered yesterday off Sable Island No direct word had been received from the Elsie II, but a radio message reaching here last night from Sabie Island said she was standing by th Esperanto, which was submerged. nearly to her crosstrees. The Esperanto, which defeated th« Canadian schooner Delawanna in tiv races last fall, was believed to hav been wrecked in the gale which swep' the coast, She was in charge of Cap Thomas Benham of Gloucester, Mas AIRSHIP’S PILOT HELD BLAMELESS ally; Curate, Passing, Is Shot; Driver Slain. Ireland, May Press).—Four a soldiers (Asso- were mined and an intense fire was Bombs aiso uninjured soldiers used. The fire was | Mvestigators of Crash in) Whic Seven Died Report “Abso- lutely Unavoidable.” wounded, His driver ni ht with a loss of seven lives, ‘The ambusbers exonerated of all blame for the acc JAMBS—Sought tor by Scotiand {DING—Constantly company of petitioner nee Viora-An Albanian seen in} Prine: rning w the. 3 with respondent petitioner at culfilled ent, her and him chaste dutiful, affec- the s veral 13 persons mentioned of said answer is| wer also charges that when nd Pegs#y went to Bur 1 honeymoon she had arrange ance a meeting with Frene), The All-Ceylon Tea “Picked clean, packed clean, shipped clean in an air-tight lead. foil package Rose ‘Wile Tea kapert sO Se each Case Goen Over. greement to-day betw O'Br 1 to the invest arguments npel Deputy Pol ch to show cause t be sent to jail for con jon Cou! coun Meyer Ie & the on the to ‘by Supreme Court Justice McGibbon & Co. 1 AND 3 WEST 37TH ST. ONE DOOR FROM FIFTH AVENUE SPECIAL OFFERING OF “OLD BLEACH” LINEN TOWELS At Prices That Represent Substantial Savings Hemstitched Guest Towels, size 14x24 inches. are $10.50 doz. Hemstitched Towels, plain weave doubie huck, size 22x38 inches..... Hemstitched Towels, plain weave single huck, size 22x38 inches....... Hemstitched Huck Towels, damask border, size 22x38 inches Hemstitched Huck Towels, damask border, size 24x40 inches Hemstitched Huck Towels, damask border, size 27x43 inches. . 22.50 doz. 25.00 doz, 27.50 doz. 37.50 doz. 42.00 doz. pay you be b you What Cost of Living Changes ditions as they affect the average man or woman who has to earn and scarcity of jobs—the changes in wholesale and retail prices of the things uation and the outlook for the future. understand unless they are explained simply and clearly, as they will edition) for the benefit of its readers. —as compared to the period when the cost of living was highest—what Mean to Your Pocketbook A series of articles on present-day business and economic con- for a living are now appearing in The World (morning edition), ‘All on practical topics of vital importance—the cost of living—the have to buy—profiteering—the changes in wages—the present sit- ‘All things you want to understand—all things which are hard to 1 these articles. The result of an investigation just completed by The World (morning Shows you where you stand as compared to the “normalcy” of 1914 can hope for, and where the coming difficulties lie,

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