The evening world. Newspaper, June 6, 1921, Page 2

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te ee a ae ot * 5 a — ; fi fi f Several foct when the crest of the flood from the breaking of the Btrat- ton Park Dam, near Colorado Springs, reached Pueblo. In the middie of the @fternoon, breaking of the Skagway Reservoir and Beaver Dam near Vie- tor, coupled with a heavy downpour ‘f rain in the Arkansas River water- shed and in Pueblo caused another rise, Again last night followed «n- ether beavy rainstorm, In noe of tiie floods of yesterday homever, did ‘the water reach the level of Friday. ‘The washout of raliway tines lead- ing to the stricken area created a Menacing situation to be overcome to- fay. Food supplies in Puoblo were estimated by Red Cross officials as bping less than sufficient fur three days. Roads to the city are impass- able for miles around. Efforts are be- img made to transport food from/sur- rounding towns by airplane. Several machines bave already been sent out With blankets and medical supplics, A virtual embargo on all shipments to Pueblo has been effected by most all rajlroads entering the oity, ‘The only driaking water available to-day is from a jithia spring on a bill at the outskirts of the city. A heavy downpour of rain con- ‘Unued all through last nizbt and the carly morning to-day. | Military patrols were handicapped by the impassable streets, pitch dark- Mess—the city's electric service sta- tion having been out of commission since early Friday evening—and the unrelenting downpour. All persons have been trom the street since Saturday evening. Looting has been beld to a minimum. No one is permitted to enter the city except the military, Red Cross work- ers and State and other officials. With the restoration of telegraphic communication early Sunday, the euf- feting community learned of relief measures undertaken by cities througout the Middle West. } tal, charge of the Red Croes, said that so far he bas been able to feed and clothe every person applying for ald. Hundreds of persons applied to the Red Cross yesterday and Saturday for food, clothing and medical relief, A carload of becf was commandeered from the railroad yards and cooked to prevent its spoiling. Red Crone oMcials expect the meat to material- ly the food situation. Denver, Kansas City, St, Lov other large cities closest to the area have offered material ald im- mediately but are unable to get their Offerings to the community because of the demoralized conditions. The basement of every building in the downtown section ts filled with water and mud. Windows of base- meots were crushed In by the flood and military oficiales say that bodies may be found here weeke | it has been possible to putnp out the basements and shovel out the mud. Fourteen doctors and twenty-five nurses arrived here last night from Colorado Sprinzs Wifteen ¢mbalm- ers arrived from Denver and sixteen from Colorado Springs. Officials attribute much of the flood to the blocking of the nigh waters by railroad right of way in one see- tion built entirely of slag. With the exception of a smal! hole under the tracks, the slag withetood the onrush of the flood and the waters backed up to the city, washing out the levees and leaving the lower part of Pueblo at the mercy of the waters and All the levees were washed out in the flood and restoration of the river to its natural bed presents an engi- neering problem of magnitude. In the vicinity of the State Hospt the nearest the correspondent could approach to the natural bed of | the river, war approximately a half mile. Parts of the railroad yards there had been washed away and the er when | | short. His complexion is guddy and THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1921. CROKER ARRIVES TO FIGHT SUIT OF HIS ‘FOOLISH SONS’ paws” ae Going on 80, but He Feels Spry Enough for Another Fifty Years. Laura Bromwell Plunges 2,500 Feet From Crest of Second Loop When Cushion Slips From Under Her. Although Wamed Before Trip at Hazelhurst Fleld She Tried Tricks—Fiance Witnesses Fatal Dive. Kichard Croker, former Tammany New York, who will be Nov, 23 next, re- turned to this country from bls home in Ireland on the Gedete to-day, sum- moned by the lawyers who have im charge the suit of hie sons to have hin declared incompetent to dispose of hin satate Mr. Croker te now without @ beard. His snow white mustacheh is clipped bom of cighty yearn old An escort of low-flyihg police air- Plants, and also a police ekcort on foot, St wae antounced to-day, will Accompaty the tler when the funeral of Miss Laura Bromwell, tho daring aviatriz, takes place. he carries himself alertnass. Croker. “I'm back here,” he sald, “just be- cause of those foolish sons of mina J don't know how long they will keep me hers. Funny boys, aren't they? with youthful He | accompanied by Mrs. | Saturday, only one day béfore her | tragic 2,600-foot plunge to death at Haselhurst Field, had beth prd- Moted from Lieutenant to Captain of the Polite Flying Repervés, and a | Tiver had established a new channel, virtually covering the entire section | of bottoms known as the grove. | Among the bodies identified in the | south part of Pueblo were those of | Dorothy Mets, Pueblo; T. Hall, Puil- A supply of cots, blankets, lanterns, candles and sweaters arrived vester- | day from the Red Cross in Colorado Springs. Cclonel F. J. Pierce, in! ONE OF SURVIVORS OF 200 ON TRAIN Rush of Waters Carried Women Out of Car Windows or Drowned Them in Their man porter, Denver; Doris Beaher, | Puodio; Frank Erwin, Pueblo; ———| Evans, Kansas City, Mo.; John Fare ros, B.C. Hames and Henry Miller, all of Pueblo, " TELLS OF FLOOD |KIDNAPPED IN TAXI, Seats—A Night of Terror. | COLORADO SPRINGS, June 6—)ting in an upper berth with his Frank Ducray, Sherif! of Mésa|mother, consoling her. She was pray- County, whose home is at Grand |ing. Junction, was one of the survi-| “In the water we clung to the vors of 200 passengers on Denver and | coaches of the train which were sway- Rio Grande train No. 3, which arrived | ing back and forth with the waves in Pueblo on Friday sight at 8 o'clock. |and striking the coaches of the Mia- Jus. as the train pulled up to the} souri Pacific train. bridge over the Arkansas River, lead- | "Screams and cries of anguish rose. | ing into the Union Station, it was|! #aw some people go to their deaths | crushed between the two trains. A stopped, he said. opp . an, |Breat pile of lumber came rushing “We were left there,” he sald. “On| down upon ug, sweeping over us, the next track was @ Missouri Pacific | striking some of those clutching there train. We had been there only a short | They UP capt Pen gia ah] Broal ¥ ey we 001 ent float- time when we heard the roar ofling down to denth, “lanw nm iaen waters and the flood lapped at the break bis way through the top of a coach steps and began rising rapidly. |Coach only to be washed down the “It was soon rushing through the | ‘00d @rs. Some of us went up and a EI Will their win their suit? Will they? There's no telling what sons may do to their fathers these days, but they won't get anywhere with this thing they are waging. I don't know when the cuit is coming up; I have lost track of It since I was here last July. I shall stay at the Hotel Bavoy until it (n settled and then go bask to my home in Ireland.” “IL was never better in my life,” eal Mr, Croker when asked how he felt. "I feel good for another fifty years.” He refused to say anything about politics here or about conditions in Ireland. Newspaper readers here, he maid, knew far more of what was going on in Ireland than any one in phat country could learn. pal sitar nore aa medal had Been pinned on her by | Special Deputy Poliée Commissioner Rodman Wanamaker. Inspector | Dwyer has sent official telegrams to her relatives at Richniond, Va., Cin- cinnat! and Vemey, 0. Aviation épérts at Hatelhurst | agreed to-day that a lddsened safety belt probably was the cause of the | @irl's death, which was witnéssed by thousands of spéctators who had! gathered to ate the exploita of the | holder of he women's record for looping the loop. | HAD ALWAYS OBJECTED. TO) TIGHT STRAPS, | One of her peculiarities was her | distaste for too tight straps, She, thought they impeded her movements | in the air, and as @ result often went up strapped in mote loosely than ts | the custom among aviators. Yester- | day she was in 4 Curtiss JN-4 "To- ronto,” her own plane being out of | order, This is @ Canadian training plane, a type unsuited to stunts of | aviators of such small stature as_ Miss Bromwell. The safety belts in| thre planes are higher than in| others, | ‘There were perhaps 4,000 persons! at the fying field in mid-afternoon when the aviatrice, clad as usual in the bite costume of a Flying Lieu- tenant of the New York Police De- partment-—Dreeches, puttees and a flying coat and helmet—clambered into her machine and strapped her- self in. Her flance,- George Davis, was the last of many to wish her good tock and a pleasant flight and! he kissed her goodby. | After a brief run across the field into the brisk breeye she took off prettily, and, circling above the great flat plain, gained altitude rapidly. In| about ten minotes she had reached a height of 2,500 feet. Then she cx-| ecuted @ beautiful loop, the yellow wings glinting in the sun as the ship turned over. After a single mi ute of straightaway flight she at- tempted the second loop. The upward swoop was exactly like the one she had made previous- + doned Soon, Except Perhaps ly. Aw to the motor, It is certain that in Austria. at the beginning of this particular 4 q @ip-over it was running. The drone WASHINGTON, June 6.—World bust-| or the rapid-fire exhaust was faint ROBBED, SHE SAYS Young Woman Tells Police She Was Chloroformed When She Attempted to Scream. Mrs. Elizabeth Koeber, ninetesn years old, bas told a thrilling kia- Rapping and robbery story to the police. She sald she left her home at No, 11 Old Broadway, Manhattan, Saturday morning to pay a gas bill. At Third Avenue and 114th Street, Manhattan, a taxicab drew up to th curb. Two men leaped out and thrust herainto the machine. When she at- tempted to scream as the auto got into motion, a cloth with chloroform on was thrust over her mouth and nose. She lost consciousness. When she regained consciousness, she said, she was thrust out of the cab, was in Brooklyn and $10 wus gone. She was too dazed to see the license number of the machine. She went to relatives in Richmond Hill. Her husband is there with her now. —————_—_ HOOVER SEES BETTER WORLD BUSINESS Predicts Rationing Will Be Aban- “On elther side of us houses and |Darns and other buildings were swirl- in the cars quieting the passengers, |ing down. Many people were clinging many of whom were screaming and|(* them. I saw two 1 nue f ‘op of a house. The structure struc! moaning and praying. the bridge and crumbled like an ogg shell. I saw their white hands a mo- feat crying. I stopped to reassure Bron and ‘comfort her. She said sho was|, “Morning came. waters bad been receding. Those of us who were from Chicago and sobbingly called |joft—about sixty—wer: able to tread would look after her and it cheered uP ray ‘i ‘Some of the unconscious women her, But—well, 1 saw her swept! ing children wore left in the daric away aa the water rushed into tho Meath, It was awful. Sisdows and doors, “L cannot say what the loss might “an old lady sat in her seat, smile | Ponated vee, tore lecet nee ing, just before the water flooded in| I am sure, were lost off our train and the Missourt Pacific train, though her time to go she was prepared, and |™M0Fe from the last named train were kept on smiling. I reckon she died| of the worst in the history of the wm her ecat. I saw a young man sit- West.” AMITY, KAN., WASHED AWAY, to them. I saw two women on the “A young girl was sitting in her ment on the water. The out ‘Daddy, Dadd; I told her we the ground and walk around in water t owe a scene of devastation and coaches and carried us out through | hundred lives, for at least that many, on us she declared that if it were found alive, Pueblo’s disaster is one The Arkansas River Flood Invades Another State, With Deaths —Ample Warning Given. TOPHKA, Kan, June 6.—Tho first Wave of the Arkansas River flood to- day was sweeping down from eastern @olorado upon Kansas. The river at Gyracuse was bank full at nightfall last night and rising rapidly. Farm- rs and ranchmen living in the bot- toms early Sunday moved their stock to the high lands. Men on horseback are patrolling the river west of Syracuse, warning the people to flee. ‘The Amity dam, five miles west of the city, ts reported to have given Way. The telephone operator re- Ports the town of Amity completely waohed awuy, with a possible loss of Ufe. Four persons who were detailed to keep driftwood from the pliers of Wagon bridge are reported to have Bone down with the bridge into the main current of the river. ‘The Santa Fe Railway Company potified the communit.es on its llae fm the Arkansas valley of Kansas that the rush of Colorado flood water bad crossed the State line and local representatives of the company were instructed to be prepared for any emergency that might arise, “Bee warning has been ample, and there need be no loss of life in Kansas,” said F, C, Fox, General Manager of the Sania Fe. “Tie Banta Fe will co-operate with the communities along its line to keep the property loss down to the mini- um.” _ The Santa Fe last night issued am embargo against the flooded dis- @ict, applicable to Livestock and ger- Already Reported ishable freight. City, Kansas, figure that the flood crest would reach that locality shortly after noon to-day. Heavy rains were reported west of Dodge City. le of Dodge ONE OF HIS CREW A MILLIONAIRE Capt. Bull Also Has a Dentist Wait- ing on Table—Strikes Prevail in Norway. Nobody works in Norway but the rich,—tako st from Capt Ole Bull of the steamship Be. genet jord, which came in to-day. “Look at ory able seamen,” said Capt. Bull. “Fourteen of ‘am hold ¢iret mates lecenses and are competent to command ships. Five of them are captains, just 3 Capt. Theodor shereen & Cristopherse: millionalre—one of the richest men in Norway and a mighty good sallor.’" ‘The skipper mals he had a dentist waiting on table and a bunch of grad- uates of the technical schools shoval- ing coat several executive officers as stowal Strikes are so prevalent In Nomway he but the tele- and mall service has je SI ‘Taxi Runs Down Three. Two women and a chiki were run ae this sftemnonn by = tevtreh at Southern Boulevard and 1634 Street. Mra. Eva Jacoby, sixty years, received @ fractured nose and contusions of the ness is rapidly kmproving, Secretary of as it reached the spectators from Gammerce Hoover declared to-day In 8/10 height, Dut tt was clear and dis- “That there has been a steady eoono- | tinct. mic improvement in Eurepe, outside] Then the wu: ined thing hap- Bolshevik Russia, is well indicated by| pened At the very senith of the loop, the progress made in the repeal of re-lthe very top of the arc, and just strictions over consumption,” Be Ge) a+ the inutant when the wide down- clared, prover) a “With the forthcoming harvest it ts] Ward swing Pave: tenes ship dropped. ‘ted that economic i have proveaned 80 far both in hs. ‘The crash of the ship on the stone P dustin and in ability, to provide fall road fronting old Camp Mills could amount of needed importa that ration: | To 4 distinotly by the thounande ing can be practically counteries, except possibly Austria.” | of spectators, even though they were the better part of half a mile away. U.S. HORSES BREAK ORDERS. Wild scenes, including one of the nly Rem Away With Gen worst jams of motor cars, followed. Carriage and Bump Inte Team. Fort Hamilton, in charge of Private wi never be known what caysed the Lester Sellman, of Battery D, were|Sccident, but there were witnesses walking atong Ridgewood Avemme at 1 aid the motor was still running o'clock to-day, bound for Montank. Wale Street the animals suddenly start- ed to rim, with the gun carriage olat: ven No. 28 Fulton Btreet, driver off the seat and starting another runaway. The galloping six kept on for Montauk, so that there no lost mo- tion for’ Unete runaways were stopped by citizens and nobody was 16 HURT IN BUS CRASH. CAMDEN, N. J. June 6.—Stxteen persons were injured when gn aatome- bile bus was struck by a trolley car at Broadway and Federal Street early to- day. Mrs, Anna Feldman, No. 2725 South|then was Fifth Street, Philadetphia, was injured] performance. internally. Walter Ogden of No. 514] The body North Street, Camden, received @ prob-|morgue in able fracture of the skull. They were later was to - taken to the Cooper Hospital here, ‘The | Jones and later S08 t eg] others went home. pare ea ie wad i“ Girl Daredevil of Air, Killed Looping Loop, Scorned Safeguards Inspector Dwyer mde public to- | President Harding and won thé lat-, day the fact that Mise Bromwell on | ters esteem and affection. AMERICAN GOLFERS BEATEN BY BRITISH IN OPENING GAMES (Continued From First Page.) HARDING AT LAST "—GETSLASKERAS SHP BOAR HEAD (Continued From J inst Page.) Great Britain, defeated Charies Hoff- ner and William Methorn, 1 up. J. H. Taylor ond James Braid, Great Britain, vs. Fred McL@ed and Clar- ence Hackney, America, all square. A. G. Havers and James MoKenden, Great Britain, defeated Wilfred Reid and George MoLean, America, § up and 5 fo play. George Duncan and Abe Mitchell, Great Britain, ve. Jock Hutchison and Walter Hagen, have financed tho latter's campaign “dare | at Ohicago. After the convention, qrasr” nimen Und sodward Ray, however, Lasker alongdide of Hays French and Tom Kerrigan, Atmerica, continued his work for Republican * reas 4 oe. we nes | er conditions were perfec Guccess and was the gentus of the Re won ine first foursomes matches of publican advertising and publicity the aay, that between Jock Hutchison | campaign last summer. In this work and Watter Hage, America. os \ George Duncan afd Abe " he frequently came in contact with Great Britain. was i before 2. Hagen missed a wigchoot pers 20. t first green, while Mitchell failed to Mr. Lasker is prominent in Ilinots hole a five-foot putt. The second hole polities and Yo one of the principal W6 halved. Duncan was stymied at the third, t. British ir lositg the supporters of Senator Medill MoCor- joie. Be aan oa ee the mick. As 4 business man his great- second shot for the fourth hole, which est faculty is quick decision and pene- ise Wr Anodes Gee mhak- trating judgthent. Many a big tusi-/ "Tit the British deflelt ~ { elt was ¢an- hess Coheera has gone to him for 44- céiied at the sixth, where atch ise vice. It is said that at the age of put Heats 8 Se athe pol five was f was squal al e wi ek ct he HST bare 31000 “Mitchell laid nis tee shot within gar ie distance of the cup. The ninth wae rendering @ business adviser.’ was halved and the players tured Unusually alert and keen, President | all square. Harding wants the Lasker ehergy|, The approximated totals of 3 each turned on t6 the shipplng problem. for the outward fourney indicated sound but not brilliant golf. ‘The job ahead is one of liquidation| ‘The second half of the thatch was without saérifice to the Interests of ere ae ani ad itis Mat reg _|lost the tenth an tteén jen. the Government. It is a task of sell Mitchell pulling his drive into the ing ships and salvaging as much a8 royeh at the temth and Duntan slicing possible of the proceeds for the Gov- his tee shot at the thirteenth. In ormment. Mr. Lasker \s a ahrewd ne- /both cason tho ball was unplayable not pla: gotiator and possessed of @ loyally netter shot trom the tee to the four which makes President Harding {eel teenth won the Britishers this hole absolutely safe that he can turn over/and the matoh was squared at the the whole shipping question to the seventeenth, where tse Rays s new Chairman without further worry: | pulled his drive to the home hole into ‘The tales of graft and irregularity | the bush but pitohed within six yards in the shipping situation have come’ of the pin on the third shot, Duncan to the ears of the President, who has, felt that some one who was not tied | up with the shipping interests would have a detached viewpoint and serve the Government better than one who was engagd in the operation of ships, Mr. American Jewish Committee, the first of his race to be summoned to a high place in the Harding Adminis- tration. He has been active in poll-; tics about three years, but tn that short time has come to be recognized oa an asset to the party—a driving force and genius for organization, man who is destined to climb hig! some day in the Harding Administra- tion when the job of selling ships is ended. | ASKS MANDAMUS —_ SO SHE MAY WED. Mt. Vernon Woman Wants Order Compelling City Clerk to Is- sue Marriage License. | Justices Martin J, Keogh of the Supreme Court in White Plains an- nounced to-day that he would bear in chambers at New Rochelle on Wednesday the application of Mrs. Yomma Smith of Mount Vernon for a writ of peremptory mandamus direct- ing the City Clerk of Mount Vernon to issue a licenke for her marriage to Thomas Wren. Mrs. Smith's plea for the writ of mandamus followed the refusal of the City Clerk to grant her a license be- cause she could not offer proaf that her husVand, who disappeared five ears ago and from whom she has not feen divorced, has since died or ob- ined a divorce from her. irs. Gmith contends that under the Domestic Relations Law she is en- titled to consider her husband dead holing the putt to square the match. Harry Vardon and Edwani Ray outplayed the Americans, Emmet French and Tom Kerrigan, in their matoh. The Americans were on the short game as well as on the greens, while the Britishers played eer ient long drives and also putted Lasker is a member of the| we A. G. Havers and James McKenden, Great Britain, by brilliant play were four up on Wilfred Reid and George McLean, America, At the turn the Britishers did not lose a hole. J. G. Sherlock and Josh ‘Taylor, Great Britain, played a nip and tuck match with Oharles Hoffner and Wil- liam Melhorn of America, the British pair winning at the home green, A big gallery followed the first sin- gies match to start, that between George Duncan and Jock Hutchison, the Glen View professional. The first two holes were halved in fours. Hutchison ehould have won the second, his tee shot giving him an advantage of twenty yards, while he was only a yard off the pin with a fine mashie shot for his second, but his put overan the cup, while Duncan holed a two-yard putt. Duncan, with twenty yards greater distance off the third tee, was hole high in two, and sank a two-yard putt for the lead. He fafled, how- ever, to hole his third two-yard putt for ‘the hole on the fourth green. Hutchinson was near enough not to need an approach putt on the fifth, but he missed his short putt and drop- ped two behind. SUES SISTER-IN-LAW OF F. H. LA GUARDIA Husband Acouses Her of Miscon- |ASK INCORPORATION DON’T ORY WORE TI OF ANTI-DRYS.- PAY MORE THAN | $20 FOR A WIFE! That Is Maximum Price Under New Treaty Between Britain and Liberia. League Formed to Urge Repeal of 18th Amendment and Volstead Law. Application for incorporation as INDO! the New York Anti-Prohibition League, LONDON, June | was made before Justice Faber in the Five pounds sterling (about $20 % and no mote is to be tue p> of | Bfooklyn Supreme a A aa e he lea < @ wife, according to a recently | , bsnetie Re ape pg ory Tatified convention between the | “To undertake 4 Governments of Great Britain |cation of the Eighteenth Amend- and Liberia. ment, and particularly the Volstead This convention regulates the | act, and to promote local ie relations between the tribes living | concerning Prohibition, tn order on the border linc between Li- | the manufacture, sale and uso | Deria and Sierra Leone. beer and light wines may be Irmal Women's rigits are to be rec- ‘The leacue's principal office is to be ognized, even in the West African (at No, 610 Pulitzer Building. — The Jungle, for tt is oxpressly pro- seven directors are John O'Connell of _ vided in the convention that no | Laurel Park, L. 1; George W. Green, claim can be made in reepect of | No, 4% 43d Street, Brooklyn; Ba- @ woman except by her husband, [win W. Harlow, No. 1063 Bush- and that no woman can be com. | wick Avenue, Brooklyn; Willlam H. Miller, Laurel Park, L. 1; Edwin w. Tweet OC Winkle, No. 1928 Cooper Street iabelnctcmeopeeen te Brooklyn; Eagerly M. Schwich, No nm 786 42d Street, Brooklyn, and Ger trude L. Yates, No. 79 Tist Street MAJOR A.B. FORAN 78,5 | Se ee ed INSTALLED AORAN ON STAND CHARGES PLOT Says Prosecutor Told a Witness, “We've Got to Get Something on Moran.” Joseph Moran, indicted with Pete: |Stadtmuller recently convicted of ex- tortion, took the stand in his own de- fense to-day before Justice McAvory and @ jury in the Crimina! branch of Naval Officers Quarters Crowded With Many Men and Wamen Friends. Major Arthur B. Foran of Flem- ington, N. J., recently appointed Na- ‘val Officer of thé Port by President Harding, was sworn in this afternoon a crowd of friends and bust- ness and political associates that Packed the big room of the naval officer on the third floor of the Cus- tom House. It was the best attended and most pantry assumption of Ge the Supreme Court. fice that has happened in this ci under the Harding Administration. Moran si that he bed never H. Otto Wittpen, former Mayor of |.promised to settle strikes and that he Jersey City, Major Foran's predeces-| had nothing whatever to do with hir- sor in office acted as master of cere-| ing ten, monies and introduced the new Naval) ‘TE Ce ae ago he ffieer, who was sworn in by Judge | met Jacob L. Kaniman by appoint- alter Gardner of Jeracy City. At the conclusion of the specchmaking| ment at 107th Street and Madison | Avenue. Kaniman, Moran testified, 4nd congratulating refreshments were ny women present. Mas cin Wank away woariic told of an alleged meeting with Stan- ley Richter, Acting Deputy Attorney © men went away wearing bout- toniers from Major Foran's green- General, at which Richter had said that unless he, Kaniman, told the houses at Flemington. Among those present were Collector prosecutor to whom he had paid that $1,000, Kaniman would be put under of the Port George W. Aldridge, Ap- raiser Kracke, Surveyor Whittle, flector William Exwards—about the only Democratic office holder in the crowd; Byron Newton, former Collector of the Port; nator Calder and Senator Edge of New Jersey. $10,000 bail. Moran said that Richter, according to Kaniman, declared: “We've got to get something on this man, Moran.” Nurses Reseae Ho: Patients ROADS BEGIN DRIVE ‘**™ jen FOR NEW WAGE CUT) ewevryport, Mass., June 6.— Ten hospital inmates, including two mothers with new born babes, wor Extra Pay for Overtime and Uni- rescued by nurses during a fire at th Homoeopathic Hospital to-day. Several form Wages Denounced by 175 Lines. CHICAGO, June 6.—Extra pay for overtime and uniform wages for the same classes of railroad efnployess over the entire country were denouncea ana Another CHILDS restaurant their abolition demanded by railroad | has been opened on Fifth representatives appearing before tho | United States Railroad Labor Board to- Avenue, New York, situated day. in the former Holland House, ‘About 175 roads appeared before the board in the second wage reduction) NE@t 30th Street. drive this spring, by which the roads are attempting to cut their labor bill TO RUSH TROOP: AT ONCE TO IRELAND taken down fire njured, wet excapes. — \!| CHILDS DE LUXE The spirit of refined hospi- tality whichmade this famous hotel the mecca of celebrities is still maintained within its historic walls. LONDON, June 6 (Aswciated Press) —The immediate sending of For this new house of Additional troops to Ireland for th« sae S surpose of maintaining order has | CHILDS is an eating place’ ‘been decided upon, it was announced | de luxe, providing the a in the House of Commons to-day by P : bes: Austen Chamberlain, the Govern-| of food in truly delightful | surroundings. Mr. Chamberlain made this state- ment in response to an inquiry. ———>—_—_—— duct—She Brings a Counter Action. ‘Mra, Anita @tagliano, who says she is a sister-in-law of Fiorello H. La Guardia, President af the Board of Al- dermen, is defendant in a suit for ab- solute divorce {led by Leo Btag- ipproached. Aus. eweven tim ‘hich \pped over any: in view of his five years’ unexplained absence. ising DECISION HOLDS IN BLACK TOM CASES nado In the Brooklyn Sup-eme Court. Mew ste no in hel panwer denies her West 89th Stasilano Is @ musician, employed at 5 " | 460 a woek. Ginoe April 1917, she U. S. Supreme Court Will Not Re changed. he has teen absent from home, : ‘ js using t0 fe r and thelr view ‘Work of a uaa im | daughter. es int. bec Damage os Weaney with whom he sllemen: the. Was WASHINGTON, June &—The Su-|pear Ifving 10 “open and notorious” Fe premé Court refused to-day to re-|!attons. - view decisions of New York courts folding the Lehigh Valley Raiiroaa| MONTREAL ENTRIES, Com: able for damages result} iy mig Romotn entre far Coemenae’s tonne certain freight shipments in ‘folkows: {i ack Tom explosion on July 29, | “yy c 30, 1916. DELAY IN RYAN WILL CASE. ‘Trial of Widow's Contest Put Over Until Oetéher Term. Surrogats Cohalan to-day postponed trial of the will contest of the widow | 4, of Joweph J. bn of Thomas For- | ous, tune Ryan, who left $100,000 to Dorothy Tarra Leetiie Whitford, an actress, until the | Sate: Qotoder term. over the protest of ae] [pt halt iment was caused by ars. | pith ta prooure, steamship tions from Naples until May 3. She will atrive in. Boston’ to-morrow. special guardian Nn, also saked for delay 6 will be engaged nthe Stllimas divorce suit in Pough- eopaie three days a week during June. poh i Ba RENT LAW HEARINGS SET. Supreme Court te Pass York Appeals in Octe! ‘To Make Housing Plas Public, ‘The committee of seven appointed by oon Lg 166 La: the City Parlament of Community| jt wag understood by Councils to make an inquiry into the! sna she had housing situation will submit a compre- x Mr. Davis were to be married face, Mrs. Minnie Biderman, twenty- five, abrasions of the left leg and Har- ret Bi two years, abrasions and feed of V Sree were reated 5 jesman Lincoln Hos- ‘Phe last was vativen by” Bam of No. 9M Mast 167th Gtrest, hensive plan for the co-operative hous- | thie summer, ng of the poorer puople to-morrow, 7 Hine pian wil bo prweniod AUS meat: | wot Sirens foe aa ageg Tate ns ing in the Aldermanic per called | Rromwelt's death, ‘ob. ones, chief for § P.M. to whieh all public spirited ~ 2 i veeee citinens are invited. Frede ‘Loe Ack- | 4st pilot of the Curtias Company said erman, Charles Harris Whit Authur an investigation would be by Upham and re Agnes b. “War | experty not connected with oom- beewe wil) make } pany, 4 ‘and emergency housing La WASHINGTON, June 6,—Atlacks on some featureg of the New York State made by the Hagar A. Levy Leasing Cofipany, the ance Substitutes “Disarmament Reselu- tom” Reverted Ove. Brixton Operating Corporation and No.| WASHINGTON, June 6.—As a sub- #10 Wem Bnd Avenue, Inc, will be| stitute for the ent heard in the Gupreme Court next Octo- | amendment to the Naval lation ber under an order announced to-day. | Bill, the House Fo fairs Com- The Stato ht to have the appeats | mittee reported fortey a Joint resolu- dismissed by authority of a recent de- | tion Caf in “the declared pur- ciston upholdi ¢ laws in general, but ee ent Harding to an the court d to hear the cases on| International conference to arma: Shetr merits, | ercenae | SOME, 3 aa Bane . -~ ment leader. freite, KNOCKED OUT BY BROTHER. =a = ‘Thomas Bell, twenty-one, of No. 41 Onderhill Avenue, Brooklyn, was taken | to the Kings County Hospital by Ambu- Jance Surgeon Feinstein suffering from concussion of the brain. According to the police Thomas said something about a veung waren of the nelghborhood ut which his brother James took offense, striking Thomas on the head with a bottle. | James was arrested. Monday, June 6th Chocolate Covered Assorted Ice Creams 24c Chocolate Covered Roasted Almonds The choicest, most care- fully selected Almonds roasted to « turn. 59c Tuesday, June 7th Peanut Butter Chewing Kisses POUND BOX 24¢c Nut Stuffed Dates and Figs The name tells the story, but it takes the taste to reveal their de- liciousn: ss. 59 value 59c value. POUND BOX Our regular Oui la TERS tox i Ketox OIC ‘e also offer: - Atlantic City Assorted Style Loftypops Salt Water 1 ACKAGE Taffies POUND BOX 39c

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