The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1921, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, MRS. STILLMAN'S FATHER MAY SEEK TO SETTLE CASE neiniitaate Potter Likely to Lend His In- fluence to Adjustment Out of Court. FAVORS A COMPROMISE. Clause Providing Residence ,. Abroad for Wife Is Main : Obstacle to Peace. The arrival in this country of James Brown Potter, father of Mrs. dames A. Stillman, so long a time after the disclosures in the Stillman Wivorce proceedings had reached sen- Bational heights; is believed by many fAnons familiar with developments in he case to mean that he has come to add his influence in behalf of a settlement “out of court.” His influence, it was said, would be brought to bear on his daughter to recede from the position she has taken and meet her husband at least half way. As the case now stands, both Mr. Stillman and ‘Mrs. stillman have made demands and both of them have de- clared these to be final. Unless there 1s receaston on the part of one or the other the case must continue before Referee Gleason, who has set next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday for resumption of the hearings be- fore him, It has been learned that Mrs. Perey Rockefeller, sister of Mr. Still- man, was one of the first to urge a settlement of the marital muddle otherwise than by court proceeding. In response to this Mr. Stillman made his proposal to give his wife $75,000 a year, she to take care of Baby Guy, and a separate mainten- @nce for the other three Stiliman children. One clause in the demand exacted that Mrs. Stillman reside abroad for at least five years. Subsequently, when Mrs. Stillman Geclared that she would not consider the five-year term of residence e@broad, her husband reduced the per- fod to one year. Upon the heels of this came the report that Mrs. Still- man had been approached by a mov- ing picture concern with a view to “screening” her and also that she intended to utilize he> Hterary talents toward an exploitation of her side of the divorce case. Mr. Stillman met this brace of re- ports by inserting a new clause in his proposal to the effect that she must ebandon all thought of going In the movies or of writing of the case. It was his belief, so it is said, that enemies of his in the financial world had something to do with suggesting @ publicity campaign to Mrs. Stillman. When, with all these amendments,’ the proposition was talked over with Mrs. Stillman, she balked and later declared that she had finishea nego- tiating; that it was for Mr, Stillman to accept her demands or continue the case in the referee's office. Al- most immediately after this she en- gaged the services of John F. Bren- nan of Yonkers as her “personal at- torney,” and Mr. Brennan has been in the case ever since. On May 27 she went to her other attorneys, Stanchfleld & Levy, ace sm- panied by Mr. Brennan, and told ‘hem that it was her terms or no*h-| ing, and that was final. The r-ply of Mb Stiliman's attorneys to tam! ‘ultimatum was that their client was “prepared to go all the way.” And there the matter stands to-day. In postponing the hearing until next Tuesday Referee Gleason said at Poughkeepsie the hearing mus: proceed then, and that he would countenance no further delay. ‘The postponement was on motion of Mrs, Stjllman’s counsel, and was granted only after Mr. Stillman’s lawyers had made a vigorous protest against .t, Some of those familiar with the ease saw in Mrs. Stillman’s success- ful attempt at delay an indication of her desire to effect a settlement. One report is that Mrs. Stillman’s attor- neys are divided among themselves, some of them being in favor of her accepting any reasonable offer of settlement One reason for this, according to the story, is a recent Court of Ap- peals decision holding that a wife adjudged guilty of misconduct js not entitled to a legal allowance for sup- port, though her husband is proved equally guilty. Under this decision, if the divorce fection resulted in a deadlock, Mrs, Stillman would be without resources other than what her husband chose to allow her, The grounds on which @ continu- ance was granted were the illness of Mrs. Stillman, and that John B Stanchfield, one of the principal law- yers for the defense, was engaged in another case in New York and could not appear. Mrs. Stillman’s illness, it was stated, consisted of a bron- chial affection and a severe cold which had confined ner to ner home At the home of Mrs. Stillman, 910 Fifth Avenue, it was said to-day that she was much better, though still confined to bed, and that all danger of pneumonia had passed, It was expected that she would be up ‘and about in a dew days. NEW AMSTERDAM BLAZE PUT OUT ASSHOW GOES ON Audience and Even Actors Unaware of Fire Near Theatre Stage. Quiet and efficient work by stage hands prevented a large audience, and even principals and chorus, from knowing there was a blaze in the New Amsterdam Theatre in 42d Street, just before the last scene in “Sally,” about 11 o'clock last night. The fire was in the property room on the south side of the stage, in the rear, The inside walls of the room are lined with asbestos and there 's a steel door. The rising temperature set off an automatic alarm. <A fire- man stationed in the theatre sent In an outside alarm, which brought thre engine and four hook and ladder com. panies, Meantime,Stage Manager Derley and ‘his workers had put out the ‘Ive with extinguishers and opened an outside window that let all the smoke escape. The members of the company were unaware of the fire until they| came down from their dressing rooms | for the last act and found some of the | flooring wet as firemen had run in a| line of hose as a precaution through | the rear in dist Street. The first the audience knew of the blaze was when {t filed out after the performance and found the fire apparatus in the street. aentaidpmates 20 FAMILIES FLEE FIFTH AVENUE FIRE Policeman, Nine Blocks Away, Dis- covers Blaze by Reflection on Park Trees. About twenty families were driven to the street early this morning by a fire starting on the second floor of the five-story apartment house at No. | 1210 Fifth Avenue, near 1024 Street Miss Marion Tiffany Is Bride . of Martin Brown Saportas MRS. MARTIN BROWN SAPORTAS. Granddaughter of Late Mr.| portas, The ceremony took place at Because Mt. Sinai Hospital was only 150 feet away a second alarm was| turned in by Battalion Chief Grif- fiths as a precaution. | The fire, in an apartment occupied ‘by Max Kiselstein, was discovered by Patrolman Thomas Dolan, on duty llth Street, nine blocks away, b who saw the reflection of flames on trees in Central Park, and comman- | deered a taxicab to get to the! scene. The ten families living in the house left by way of the fire escapes, while as many others from the two adjoin- | ing apartment houses also left their homes. ‘The patients at the hosp.tal did not know of the tire. ee TELLS OF DEATH THREAT. Bomb Suspect Describes Hap} in Police Headquarte: Giuseppe de Filipis, now out in $5,000 bail awaiting a hearing next Tuesday on the charge made by the! Department of Justice that he drove | the Wall Street bomb wagon, harbors| no resentment against his accusers other than that they have kept him away from a hungry wife and two hungry children for fifteen days, De Filipis said that on the second day after his arrest, while he w: held in the Bayonne Police Hear- quarters, a man in citizen's clothes took him from his cell in the base- ment to an office on the feurtn floor and, in the presence of a Department jof Justice oflcial, placed his hand on the accused man's throat, called him “a big bum" and thréatened to kilt him, ‘This man later drew a black- jack and again threatened him, de Filipis said, He does not know’ the man's name. “T cried my eyes out for days in jail," he said, He received congratulations all day yesterday from friends at his home in Bayonne, —__—>—_—_— DRAMATISTS IN MERGER. New Organization Embraces Nearly fifteen Be All Writers for the Stage. Through the amalgamation yester- day of the Dramatists’ Guild of the Authors’ League of America, Inc. and the Society of American Drama- tists and Composers, it is said the strongest organization of writing men and women in the world hos been formed. The new body will be known as the American Dramatists. Its m eyaberal ip will embrace virtu ly evedy man and wi an in Americ writing for the s The officers of the new organiza: | tion, elected yester are: Owen | Davis, President; Anne Crawford | Flexner, Vice President; Edward Childs Ci | council Erio Executive + and Henry Erskine Smith, Treas: wren, ‘An advisory council sting of William Gillette, Jane Cowl, John} fmerson, George M. Cohan, John Golden and Winchell Smith, was ap- pointed ee ANARCHIST IS CONVICTED. The workman turned the poster over MH aie toreman Of she plant, who had ianko arrested, iarge number of rere found in his room. COP OFF ON LEAVE 2.30 o'clock in the Church of St. Ig- natius Loyola, Park Avenue and 84th | Street, and was followed by a re- |ception at the home of the bride's | cousins, Mr, and Mrs. Louis W, Noel, 130 East 80th Street. Mrs. George Tilton jr. was her sister's matron Mrs. Saportas is a grand- of the late Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Havemeyer. JUDGE ON BENCH ACCUSES ROBBER FILLING AMAN Rosalsky Calls Horodner No- torious Criminal—Sends Him to Prison for 10 Years. and Mrs. Theodore Have- meyer Led to ‘Altar. Miss Marion Tiffan: former marriage of Mrs. Henry Fletcher Godfrey of this city, was) married yesterday to Marun Brown Saportas, son of Mrs, R. Brown Sa- daughter vy a H of honor, daughter BATTLES IN DARK AND GETS BURGLAR Thrills in Pursuit Started by) High School Girl and Taken Up by Crowd. Jacob Ghurien Mouimidecnd No. See Geiton|| Us Sentencing’ Horodner, Street! Boston, who was caught, ac-|twenty-flve, No, 80 Willett Street, to cording to the Brooklyn police, after /Sing Sing Prison for ten years on a an exciting chase over roofs, down on of robbery to-day, Judge HERO LIFE GUARD, APOLLO OF BEACH, WEDS RICH WIDOW Manhattan and Brighton Swim- mers Discover Romance of Eddie Zimmerman, Eddie Zimmerman, the Apollo of the Manhattan Beach hero and all that life guards, war sore of thing, Is | about to move from his comparative-| ly humble home at No Place, Brooklyn, to an cstate so big that It provides work for four garden- ers and a house with half a dozen ; Servants directed by a splendid butler. Eddie's friends have just discovered that he was married Monday morning at St. Mark's Roman Catholic Church, Sheepshead. Bay, to Mrs. Cornelius A. Lane, widow of a wealthy Phila- delphia publisher, and that they are fhoneymooning at Atlantic City. For fifteen years Eddio was a life- ‘guard at Brighton and Manhattan beaches, excepting during the war period. Then he enlisted in the avia- tion corps and was loaned to the French as a flying instructor. He came back with the rank of Second Lieutenant. The Brighton Baths had been burned down and he became a guard| “8? at Manhattan Beach, where he first met Mrs, Lane and her six children, whom he taught to swim. came his enthusiastic admirers and soon he was @ frequent visitor at ths big Lane manson at No. 41 Falmouth ‘Street. | Saturday the beach was short one| life guard and nobody knew what ‘iad become of Eddie unti! to-da: It was learned that Mrs, Lane had also left home on Satumlay, and then the news |of the marriage was learned ‘The ceremony was performed by Father McCarthy at a nuptial mass. The priest told a reporter to-day that only intimate friends of the couple were present. The marriage license gave the age of Edwin Zimmerman as thirty-one and that of his bride as thirty-six, ELEVATOR FALLS 11 FLOORS; TWO HURT ‘Lift Operator and Clerk in Cloth- ing Company Suffer Probable Fractures of Spine. Two men were probably fatally in- jured by a@ fall in an elevator ear jfrom the eleventh floor to the base- ment of the loft building at No. 41 Bast 11th Street, this afternoon, They are oseph Weiss, twenty, No. 1843 624 Street, Brooklyn, a shipping jelerk, employed by Levy & Schilt, | wholesale clothiers, and Luc} modor, the three, a negro, living at Gist Street. ; The Levy & Schilt concern jcuples the fourth and eleventh floors ; Weiss got on the car at the fourth ‘floor to go to the eleventh floor. As e car reached the eleventh level Comodor stopped it and r to open the door, The cables parted and the car dropped, Com- tor, twenty 0 West elevator ope! oe- thrfugh stairways, through crowded : 5 streets, and into an apartment! SarOM the Mabeta Neel ar he ash was heard’ throughout house cellar, by Patrolman Ryan of S9MS8 bench accused the prisoner of | the buildings. ‘Tenants summoned the Oak Street Station, Manhattan, | the murder of Joseph Cohen in Coney was arraigned on a charge of burg-| Island on Sunday, Aug. 2, 1919. } to-day in the Gates Avenue) «yon are not only A notorious Court. He was held in $2,000 bail for | criminal, but a murderer,” said the examination on complaint of Miss| judge, “Phat Is a broad statement Sadie Davis, seventeen years old, of|¢,, a Judge to make, but I know No, 1462 Pacific Street, a student at) what 1am talking about. Assistant Erasmus Hall High School, | District Attorne Joseph Edelson aus Davis Givery spray. pa performed a great public service with large brown eyes, told Magis=| when he procured your conviction, trate Reynolds to-day that when she for although you have been arrested returned to the family apartment] | several times for felonious crimes late yesterday afternoon, where she! .44 have, heretofore, been convicted and her brother Joseph are Hving| Gniy twice of minor offenses.” alone, in the absence up-State of their] Cohen was a straw hat manufac- parents, she saw a man rifling the] turer at No. 707 Broadway and lived drawers in a bedroom. She screamed! at Rockaway Park. On the day he and the man knocked her against was kil He ran up-! phone ed he ‘om hi was summoned by tele- home to Coney Island Korman. He met Street and Surf Ave- a few minutes later a man wa 1 as she s stairs, and on the floor above Richard! py seal Richard A. Russiend, Health Oftice| Korman at Inspector, a middle-aged man, struck} nue, and hima, one him several times on the head with} walked up to them and began shoot- a billy, but the burglar f » the ing. Cohen fell dead with a bullet roof, pursued by Russlend, while Miss! in his heart. Korman was shot four Davis ran to the street imes but recovered. Horodner was A crowd had collected and soon the} {ndicted for the murd but the evi- fugitive, who had been chased | dence was insufficient and he was the roof arotind several chimneys and aed on ti lown through the house again, broke) G.. 45, . through the crowd and ran up Pueit in Deo, 15 1 Horodner and two Street h the crowd if hot pur uthers robbed Philip Ente, of No, 92 Patrolman Ryan is on vaca Lev reet, of $900 In a card game. He was sitting in his home, No. 1532 tp a dispute with his assistants over |Paciflc Street, when he saw Schmidt) tne qieision h Jart into the cellar of the upariment | Wis Ge ton ct Peau dy Horeanes| Rouse Bt oe Pl ct ens anaiad led to his arrest, ‘Two of the bullets the dark cella He was fel are imbedded tn his spine. around when man called out it om at coalbin va hill FRENCH ENGINEER HONORED olver and a he got} The Roard of Awards representing Paul Manko, thirty, « holer, of No. bute his f US iee claiborne aT AT ast 100th Street, was found gnilty him to the station. In mnesallrgical, ‘mechanical: sad ‘elses of criminal anarchy by a jury in the|the cop lust the diamond fro: slr i nited States Bronx County Court He|he wore, He vi at $14 BWardad tn8: fon! rite idole was remanded by. J sen-| In Schmidt's p according Medal to Charles Prosner Eugene tence June & penaltylio the police were two diamond + r for “achievement in metal- for the offense imprison. | \ 200, and $1 irgy of Iron and steel; for deve ment or a $10,000 fine, or both. | valued at $600, and $124 In bi f iron and steel; for develop- While employed at the plant of the | rubber band, All were identified by “f ordnance, expecially the Ralka Company, at 150) Street and the | Miss Davis gun, and for notable patriotie Harlem River, June 1, 1920, Manko gave| Schmidt denied having been even. cor ition the winning of the n poated to a fellow worker. The poater\ near the place of 1! Nn was “A Proclamation by the Communist! rk wa |Party of America,” and anid, “So: The medal will be presented to Mr, wernment must be our lm. such aper Co. Offers to Strtice inalae ania’ Bade | Government jot be estahi ‘the lnternauonal Fe or hi) 18 ame the at. Prepare for revolutionary | srered to eettio a atrike of ita tim n @ party of distin action,” jOree. 80) d he empl * gute engineers, headed urning to the wage scale between May 1, 1919, and May stated to-day, ‘The scale would re- resent @ cut of about 21 per cent, y 2p, bY Ambrose Swarey, Chairman of the i d of Award, and Its Secretary, Charles F, Rand, olman Frank Roth, who sent for a fire truck and the firemen removed Weiss and Commodor. Roth took them to St. Vincent's Hospital. It was found that both are suffering from probable fractures of the spine and internal injuries. The superintendent of the building ‘said the elevator was regularly in- spected and certified ax safe pA cb INVESTIGATE DRY AGENTS. U. 5. Grand Jary in Jersey Takes Up Forged Permit Charge. TRENTON, June 2.—Thomas Arrow- {smith, Assistant United States District Attorney, to-day confirmed from Newark that a sweeping gation was to be made by the Grand Jury of alleged misconduct Prohibition. enforcement agents He sald that subpoenas had been is sued for the appearance before the Federal Grand Jury in Newark next Wednesday of nineteen present and former Federal Prohibition agents, In- cluding two from Trenton and six or seven from Nowark. * The investigation, he said, grows out of an inquiry w the Federal Grand Jury conducted into liquor casex in which forged permits j were alleged to have been used. So PLEADS FOR IRELAND. Mina MacSwiney Spenks to 3,000 at reports Hoboken Meeting. Miss Mary MacSwiney, | late Lord Mayor of Cork, |audience of 3,000 In the School last night to urge recognit Major Bugene 1} ward Kissane sister of th app 1 ton Hoboken High upon Congress n of the republic of Ireland Kinkead and of the old 69th Resi nent, New York, also spok County Clerk John J jovern jded, Before the meeting M Swiney received the freedom of the from Mayor Griffln ae teeeananaaee GETS SUSPENDED SENTENCE, | age ‘Scores Rosen for Changl Name to Manning. Judge Talley, n General Sex pended sentence in t eof | Rosen, of N Aven “ hind plendes gut lie $ Pies eribie * @he court eriticts Jing hla naine from Rosen to Ross Man- ing, defore his arrest. 20 Glenada | | They be-| floor | 1921, ~ NOVELIST HAS LOVE STORY PLOT; ITIS A CORKER Too Goal for a “Baek ( Overton Appropriates It for Himself. of came to town to- Grant M. Overton, Patchogue, L. 1, day with his bride, who until + terday was Miss Clara Wallac Mohawk. And thereby hang umes of love stories—none which are to be told here, on “We met at Pate novelist mt of vol- of save ogue one day,” sald Mr, Overton, do talked plots—plots for love stories. First I told one, then she, and 60 on. Finally she told me one so strange that 1 used it in a novel.” And he told her a personal one so thrilling that she anarried him They arefit the Must Wear More To Swim Than Dance, HerPlaint i) Pennaylyania Girl Diver Protests Atlantic City ch Order to Dress From Head to Foot: ATLANTIC CITY, June city’s anti-flirt “copettes,” The nifty | bathing suits, will begin their dunes polic within two weeks, according to Beach | Surgeon Charles Bossert. The doc:or prescribed the bathing sult regu- {lations for the season to-day. Like signs bearing them will be placed om all the beaches. The regulations a “No’ one-piece suits for either ses “Women—Costumes must extend from feet to neck, No socks or bare legs will be permitted. “Men--Bathing sults must ex- tend at least half way to knee All shirts must be of proper length.” Girls have to wear more clothes for swimming than for dancing, Miss Ada ‘Taylor, Presbyterian Sunday school teacher, declared to-day 1m protest against new bathing regula- tions here . Miss Taylor, a champion high diver herself, Is President of the Ambassa- | dor Swimming Club, an exclusive or- ganization of young women, several of whom have been driven from the WIVES GET ONE DAY TOANSWER ‘DOUBLE - DIVORCE’ CHARGES | Justice Warns Sisters, Sued by | Brothers, to Come to Court | To-Morrow. | | \ | ‘The “double” divorce suit of John | 1 Henry Letbrock, brothers, who na of whom | sisters and both named the same co-respondent, was | on trig) to-day in the White Plains Supreme Court, The wives failed to appear and Justice Seager them | until to-morrow to come to court or lose their cases. Patrolman William Bohan testified went to the Leibrook home at No 105 Mt. Pleasant Avenue, Mamaro- neck, at 1 A. M, Aug. 11, 1919, and found a man there. Asked by Justice Seager to deseribe the dress worn by Mrs, John Leibrock when she opened the door, Bohan said jshe wore a “kitchen dress | "We do not know a woman's kit- chen costume as -vell as policemen do,” said the Justice. “Well, it was a Kimono, or dre something," night explained the i) OT on the stand, was of his Henry Leibrock, asked if there was any issue marriage: “She burned it uj ness. His attorney explained that iby “1s- sue’ the meant ehildren “Oh, | thought you meant the mar- riage certificate," sald Leibrock, , “I have boy! [think he is about [ayes years old ‘MOTHER ARRESTS | RUNAWAY GIRL Mrs. Adams Plays Detective and Finds Girl Missing Since January, | Mysteriously missing since last Jan- uary Mary Daley, enteen years old, of No, 338 West 83d Street, was taken the West 123d Street Station last night by her mother, Mra, Mary Adams, raplied the wit- to b | | who made a complaint of incorrigibility | against her. Beach: /ere by: Hae Seuears | Mrs, Adams walked through Sth Ave- Miss Taylor has protested to DF.) nue in the vicinity of 126th Street, Charles L. Bossert, ehlef beach) watching restaurants for several hours censor. before she finally saw hi ughter ap- “Atlantic y regulations require proaching arm in arm with another girls to wear more clothing when) girt they go in swimming than when they, Not since Jan, 25, according to the po- attend fashionable balls," she wrote, lice, had Mrs, Adams seen her daugh- “As one who enjoys swimming, I ter. On that day Miss Daley, a tele- have no patience with stockings, Phone operator, walked out of her home They become water-soaked and filled| Ad did not return. A few days ago the with sand, and are not only a nui-| mother got a tip that the girl was liv sance but a real source of danger.|!0¥ In West 126th Street. At the sta- mming hazard: They make sv tion house the girl refused to answer “As one who likes. tinds 3) Westone, have no patience with stockings, Tt —— [tors not “take "much ‘observation a RED CROSS PAYS LAWYERS. realize that stockin porticeula ~ - those 8 transparent silk ona3—= BaeService Men Who Need Legal | ars wool als. doctor, unfavord and who Ww n the fail to improve mor In all) candor, tracts the really tion, the girl bather with bare or milady who rolls along the walk with legs crosse costly silk st knee? “Only and bathhouse propric the rule you seek to enfe Submitting a photograph of club's swimming costume: Miss lor said it was less extreme than those worn on the Pacific coast, which attr no attention save from. yis- {tors from the prudish ——— CON ECLIPSES MAYOR. Hylan Cots Ont Review 1,000 Children on Outing, who le att board- . showing her okings at least to the Drs profit: by the Tay te Speed As a feature of their outing to C onex Island, more than 1,000 orphans poor children, Kuests of the 20th tury Brown and White Taxicab Com pany, were to parade befor lan In City Hall Park yest When the sightseeing bus cabs arrived there a band Hall, the Gang's Mayor was summon rday sand taxi layed “Hail, legs | the stocking manufacturers | Mayor Hy- | beacht~ p WIL Get It Free, New York County Chapter of the Amerlean Red Croes announced yester- day that it had made an arrangement whereby the Legal Ald Society will e the cases and appear in court aif of mentally Incompetent ex- men when such pro 6 Is to obtain the payment of the n to which they are en- titled, ‘This procedure necessitates the wppearance of an attorney of record and there are unavoldable expenses for which the court allows proper charges. ‘The serv provided by the Legal Aid iety wil be paid for by the Red | Cross. The assistance rendered by the Red |Crosa to ex-servi men in presenting their claims against the Government will. be provided by the Red Cross di- \rectly and without coat pee | WOMAN IS 100 YEARS OLD. service necessary compensat cxcellent Health. | Mrs, Frances M. Wright, born at Lau- L. 1, 100 years ago, widow of Dr, Clark Wright, celebrated her birthday yesterday at the home of her grand- gan to clamber {r¢ | anv Mrs. Walter B, Goodfleisch of ing to le wed by His Hb No Avenue, Patchogue, dy Temty rand wee, the | Mrs. Wright has relatives and de- cuting: ie dctaly | scendants all over Long Island, and They are Interested About 100 of them and friends from Mayor, with cha’ Jove OF Coney Riverhead, Greenport, Patchogue and calling ther ¥ othe clilldren resumed their r places gave her a surprise party, trip. ‘The. Mayor toon. the nany rin handsome presents and steps of the City Hall and waved a wonutiful ern. Mra. Wright has all Boodby to the her faculties, reads With glasses and Quarters Desiuned After Intertors of a Hundred Years Sac When the mi of the Uptown Club were we 1 yester nto their new quarters in the National City Building at Madivon Avenue and 42d Steet by President Jonn HH. ‘Towne they found themselves transplanted jit fe wentiemen's club of New York of 100 earh AKO. the ‘cub occupies the entire f Noor und part of the Aft ‘ ' | MRS. VANDERBILT AIDS FUND, Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt has becom yne yen Stad}um , as wanounewA ye toy i ' nent: Cart ¢ les and Dunleavy M is in perfect health, iy and © FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Final Clearance WRAPS: GOWNS : SUITS, WITHOUT RESERVATIONS ‘venty-Five Dollars PARK AVENUE AND FIFTY-SEVENTH STREET, NEW YORK Hercules Need , Not Wash Dishes; Do Man’s s Work at Failing to Obey Cour Court, He nk Hustle Now or Go to thé”: Workhouse. George “Watson, the Long Talia City Hercules, who was sentenced @ week ago by Magistrate Kochendovtar to do house work to help support his family, was before Magistrate Mifler in Long Island City this mornitt@? ta the absence of Kochendorfer, chat#ed _ a probation officer with failure te obey the court a “What have you been doing daring: the week?" asked Magistrate Miller, “Looking for work,” answered Wate son, ~o “What is your business?” (4 ’ m a private detective.” Wh Pretty soft,” returned the cotirt “Well I'm not going to give you"any hou! id work, I'm going to tive you a man's job.” Watson was then told that He ‘tad to look for a reai job, make « 1st of the places he visited, the persons saw and what they said to hint and report In a week, “And if you haven't got a that time, and you can't show factory diligence in trying to get.eme I'm going to send you to the work+ house for six months. Now get out of here and get dus SAYS KIDNAPPERS ". GAVE HER OPIATES Brooklyn ‘Woman Enters Charges. Against Husband in Divorce! Case. Mrs. Nina 8. Foster of (No. 30Eiéwe® thorne Street, ‘Brooklyn, entered counter charges against her Husted before Justice Callaghan in Supheine Court, Brooklyn, to-day, and estee@ for $125 a week and $2,500 cousel fees to fight his suit for divorce, She said she was a victim “framed up" evidence, and that tm order to get this evidence private de tectives put opiates in some Hqwor which she drank, and while she, was in a drugged condition, took her @ a hotel in Manhattan, She aywolbe there in thed, fully dressed, she said, but there two men in the room, ene an ex-convict in the employ of # Brooklyn detective agency, and, #he other a Boston lawyer in the employ © of her husband, Mrs. Foster accused her husband of misconduct at Boston. fmebbiathsike niaiabiatls 7 Fallin in Month jovember, Tho tide of business failures com= tinues to recede slowly, according. to reports received ‘by Bradstreet'’s for the month of May. these showed 1,838 failures for the month, a decrease of 7.4 per cent from the April aggregate and the smallest total recorded singe November 1920, pet hs Mme. Carle Off for Grand Can: Mme. Marie Curie, accompanied ‘by her daughters ene and Eve, ‘and Miss Harriet I. Eager left here to-day for the Grand Canyon, where she will rest for several days. She will gail from this city for France on Jurte 26, PURE WATER | Water is absolutely necessary to life; in fact, it constitutes nearly 60% of the human ig needs re ga per The average from three to day, taken as a drii The purest water in the world is contained in all fruits and vegetables; And the most delicious fruits and vegetables in the world are served at CHILDS— Fruits that are ripe and bam aes

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