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\ , That Production Price Is Near BIG DROP EN BREAD LOAF MAY SOON RETURN, OFFICAL SAYS ecretary Wallace Points Out) Pre-War Figures. IN COSTS.| ‘Loaf Has Fallen but 10 Per Cent. While Wheat Is | 56 Per Cent. Lower. WASHINGTON, June 6 (United Press).—Return of the five-cent loaf bread now is a near possibility throughout the United States, Secre- tary of Agriculture Wallace sald to- didy, Production costs are nearing the pre-war rates. The question of the cheaper loaf soon will be directly p to bakers and grocers, Mr. Wal- Dace warned. } “The average value of the wheat egded to make a one-pound loaf of read now is one and seven-tenths ‘eents,” said the Secretary. “The| Verage retail price of a pound loaf Whroughout the country is 103-10 ‘ents, \ “Farmers are receiving for their ‘Wheat only slightly more than’in pfe- Wat days, when bread customarily wold for five cents a loaf, Flour prices are largely deflated. The big difficulties in the way of the five- vent loaf now are high freight rates and high wages, When these factore re reduced and the labor, cost of| nsportation, milling and baking| deflated there will be no justification for failure of the five-cent loaf to| reappear.” Bread prices at retail have been re-| luced just 10 per cent. through the| country in the last six months, ac-| cording to the price data of the Labor | Department. In many cities master | bakers already have deflated the) wages of their employees According to the computations of Secretary Wallace the average retal! bread price throughout the United | States in July, 1 8 119-20 cents | per pound, In the same month the) average cost of wheat needed for one pound of bread was but 39-10 cents, | while the aver: mer for a bu: was $2.536-10. Since that time the aver-| ‘age. price paid the mer for his! “wheat has been depressed regularly | ‘month by month until it now stands/| at°$1.10 7-10. ‘The pre-war price was| $9 8-10 cents per bushel | In the past six months, therefore, | the price paid the farmer for his bread wheat has decreased 66 per yoent. ———— FAT IN THE ANKLES, | a | elly, I Is Charged, Did Fine | \’ Hooch Business Until Iz Linsteiir Got Him. | After a jen Inzy © A y period of inactivity . the Prohibition Agent, nstel resuined operations to-day, aided by Moe Smith, ex-heavyweight prize fighter, and Peter Regal. Putting on Dutchers’ aprons and caps they in- vaded tho west side market district at dawn when meat pegins to move fiom the refrigerating plants, In Henry Grothner’s saloon at 14th Street and Pighth Avenue they de- clare they bought whisley from Will- iam Wohliers, the bartender, who put up a fight when ihe was arrested. Smith knocked him out with a smash on the jaw. ‘The agents then went pstairs to Grothner's living apart- nent, made ‘him get out of bed and dress and arrested him on a charge of possession of liquor. At 6 o'clock they entered Thomas Kelley’s saloon at No. 288 Ninth Ave- eue and arrested Kelly and bis bar- fender for selling whiskey. Kelly, it was found, had thin flaaks of liquor stuffed into the tops of an ample pair $f socks held up by ingenious gar- ters. ‘The agents had been foiled in their search of the hoooh supply in the saloon until they got Kelly out sidewalk and noticed how fat about the ankles. WAS NOT ENTIRELY GUILTY. Savino Dismissed on One Count, but ¥ined on Another, ‘The Hyening World on April 14 last reported the arrest of Michael Savino, @ real estate broker of No. 156 Prince Btreet, on a charge of violating the Mann Act. It wns claimed he had sent money to a gir in Italy for her steamship passage to this country and that when she arrived here, March 25, he falsely represented himself to the Immigration Officials as her uncle and took her to an apartment in Harlom for-{mmoral purposes. \ Savino was indicted by Feds Grand Jury on two counts, thet Charging him with importing the girl for immora! purposes and the second with immoral conduct after expediting her release from Bilis Island. Justin learned Hand on June 1 dismissed first count. The accused was found guilty on the second count and fined $50, in addition to a senetnee of one day ‘in custody of the United plates Marsnal ———— WILL WED IN OLD ST. PETERS. Helen Gertrude Scanton and John J, Ryan will be married at 8 A. M. Wednesday in old St. Peter's Church, Barclay and Church Streets. The pride ta the daughter of John J. Scanlon. Mr, fiyan is tue secrelary w Park Commis: sioner F. D. Gallatin and a former member of the Assembly, a wm em tmtemmennnee te ete T The Royal Road to Child Perfection, As Proved by the Prize “Perfect Baby,” IsR LUCILLE OMAR fst PRIZE 1) TO2 YEA SSAgey Seb ne Mother "of “Bernice Wein- thal Gave Her Child Both and Plenty of Fresh Air, Whether Awake or Asleep, and That's Why ‘Her Daugh- ter Scored 995 Out of a Pos- sible 1,000 Points in the Har- lem Baby Contest. Dr. Steinhardt, Who Judged the Kiddies, Gives Through The Evening World Some Valuable Advice and Rules Which, if Followed, Will Re- sult in Children Grading Far Above the Average. ‘The royal road to perfection in chil- dren—Care and Regularity. Everything else being equal, any child, regardless of its enyironmen', can attain physical and mental nor- mality if the parents use common sense and persist in feeding it regular food at regular intervals and insist upon the infant being in bed at a regular time, both for its pap and its nightly slumber. This, according to Dr. Irving D. Steinhardt of No. 252 West 78th) Street is all that is needed to make| any child, not born deformed or or- ganically defective, at least attain those standards which authorities ‘have set as the mental and physical) normalities for certain ages. | ‘And Dr. Steinhardt should know, | for he has just finished examining| ;more than 2500 babies from three! weeks old to five years in an inter-| borough contest for perfect babies. It} was his seventh such contest, held by! Me Parents’ Association of P. 8. No.) 93, Amsterdam Avenue and 93d) Street. Not only that, but Dr, Stein-| hardt did find his perfect baby—995| points out of 1,000 perfect. 01 slight weakness in Bernice Wetntbal’s | right ankle kept her from a perfect core. Bernice was born Feb. 10, 1917, on the third floor of the tenement house at No. 301 West 125th Street. She had no more advantages to start with than the vast majority of babies born in the congested sections of this city. An elevated line rans past her crm; trucks speed past her front door; she lives more than half a mite from the nearest plot of grass—in fact, she has none of those worderful advantages which faddists insist are essential in order to bring up a baby properly. PRIZE BABY HAS AN INTELLI- GENT MOTHER, Nevertheless, she won the first prize in the baby contest in her sec- ond year, again in her third year, and a third time last week. Not only did she win in her particular class but ehe so far surpassed al] other chil- dren, relatively and comparatively according to Dr Steinhardt, that she was the prize of prizes, And why? | Simply because her mother was in. telligent enough to know the child needed proper food properly pre- pared; that this food must be given at reguiar stated times, and that after that the baby needed as much fresh air and as much regular sleep as it could get. “although I do ail my work my- self," said Mrs. MoiNe Weinthal, Ber- ice's proud mother, “I never let this work interfera with my baby's health.” ‘And Mrs Weintla! hes a little girl, Lillian, the blond counterpart of her prize-winning sister, who also takes lp some time. Lillian last year won. the first prize in the infant class, and this year, at one year and three months old, won an honorable men- tion, “T have always given my children plenty of fresh air," the mother con- tinued, “even if only wheeling them tn the street. Rut I try to get to the park. They always sleep with their windows open and go to bed early, I insist that they eat at regular times, and I baye never let my own pleasures interfere with their bed RISSEY Omos. FINE HEAD OF HaIR. EAL MOULDED OREHEAG. INTELLIGENT SYMETRICAL EYES. INTERNAL ORGANS. EVEN WELL i FORMED ARMs. BESL WEL FORMED PPER LEGS, INTELLIGENT Bi RALN « SYMBIRI ~~ CALHEAD SYMETRI CAL LumBs. aM NER Ja HE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 6, Y921.— re Sey 28S EMR ATRL OCR NOR STREAM en eee a we aN HARLEM RIVER FIRE (CHURCH TREASURER MRS. STILLMAN Blaze on*Bronx Side at 151st Street. | Fire that was watched by a crowd that lined the Manhattan bank of the Harlem River for more than a mile Jand blocked traffic on the Lenox and | Central bridges did damage estimated Jat more than $200,000. | Seven hundred thousand feet of | Balsa wood belonging to the Ameri- can Balsa Wood Company, 1424 Street, Exterior Sarcet and the Har- }lem River, went up in flames, and |the adjoining plant of the Central {Structural Iron and Steel Company | was burned A strong north wind, In the opinion 4 the firemen, was all that saved ‘the whole of the Balsa plant, which included several buildings, and another immense store of lumber to jthe north. The Balso Company's plant jtends 400 feet along the street and river from 151st to 152d Street The jsteel plant adjoins it on the south, | At the junction point 1s where the fire jis said to have started and although this is dénied, it is sald to have been due to the explosion of an acetyline |toreh, In an instant the lumber in the yard, lighter than cork, was a jroaring furnace. It was seen firs t from the Man- hattan side and the first alarm was nt from 144th Street and Lenox wi Avenue. Before the apparatus arrived Pht land jforty men of the companw had man- HEIGHT aged to get eight streams of water NORMAL. |}/on the piles of lum A second No and third alarm was turned in call- SUPERFLUOUS ling two fireboats. 4 ‘At its height the flames ran a hun- sre eirecd dred feet in the air und the roar was Were like a blast furnace. It was imp SIAPBSA tee || |e ble for the firemen to get clos> |enuugh to do really effective work. WHY LITTLE BERNICE WEINTHAL IS THE “PERFECT CHILD.” Com- plant, saved | ‘the Noonan Building Material pany, to the south of the steel was in lineof danger and was IF YOUR CHILD CAN DO AT LEAST THESE —” THINGS IT’S NORMAL, Dr. Irving D. Steinhardt has com piled for The Eevening World this test for normal children at various ages: First Six Months— She el Sits alone. Balances head, Looks in direction of unexpected ni Dr, Stands for a moment unsupported. Walks with support. Repeats few simple words. Plays with things. Knows parents, broth-| ¢, ers, sisters or other has with far |mind, ihe reporter found, quickly and accurately teeth und speaks better enunciation than most grown-ups. She is perfectly pro- portioned and detail and her we puted from her w height is in exact proportion to this weight, | BABY EXPERT'S SUGGESTIONS rfect ht mmetrical t birth: AND RULES. Steinhardt, in drawing up some cleansed If baby is given nipples to feed ‘rom, a condition of the mouth known familiar} as ‘sprue,’ one of the most common worked | in every t is normal, com: ‘The “Remularity {n feeding, and at| properly spaced intervalg are of vast importance, properly im- faces. Year to Eighteen Months— Stands firmly and walks about. Begins to try and finally say in surroundings and happenings. Gan be taught simple things like ,2us* % lo hand clapping, &c. pictures of common domestic an- imais or the amimals. By Two Years— Runs and jumps about mepes. Likes to try to use pencil and paper. Can accomplish sim- ple commands. Can pati pictures and in better de- By Two and a Half Years— ‘Talks fluently in short sentences. Points to various parts of body. Calls of the family and) rods by name. ‘Tries and follows copy of circles, squares, &c.. with pencil and paper, In- terested in self in mirror. By Three Years— ‘Talks very distinetty. Memorizes short sentences. Counts a few consecutive figures. Knows name im full. Describes Mm detail sim- ple pictures. By Four Years— Koows boy or girl. Enlarged vocabulary and recognition more things. Recognizes dif- ference in length or breadth. Knows squares, rounds and other forms. By Five Yeare— Counts and does vinipie kinder- garten games. Copies simple fig- ures or forms. Recognizes heavy and tight’ Memor} ery rhyme or recitation. Both girls are charmera Although not classically be great attraction ning ways, ‘Th both their char the baby are exceedingly well behaved without giving tho impression of be- zl Dre s lost, but almost t avoided. | hile ‘The Evening World reporter | mediately, ropla prope: tea bedifie may mean the was at the Welnthal home. the) Rent growth. ef ta’ bowlegs, mother asked to be excused until she| SCOWtn may be due to being * knock Knees Gnd other bony deformi- could get some pins for the infant, | Of on t wk of the head th ties in the thorax and else- Quick as a flash, but entirely unob-| the child's ition not being ch !where, aud may also cnuse internal trusively, Bernice stopped into the ad. | often enough, Very often improper | maldevelopment joining room and Kave feeding will help cause baldn “Aa babies grow older we expect the packet At other times »| the older child. them at weeks to ho'd op Indications of assisting in the work.| “While the new-born baby ta not| their head and at six months to ait and in respons @ query Mrs|to be handled continually, shitty o¢|aone | We expect tham to grad- Weinthal said: | position are grateful, and as the baby | UHly ETOW 10 reccariize thowe con. “She always car:.os up the bundle: ws older being taken up and car-| Unvally prcnnd a ee to follow while I carry the yy when we come TY to good digns.| DTIBNt abjects with ir eype and home from the store.” thrive, as ts also being gradually make au tempt to grasp “Would you like to go to school | laid down on a couwh or bed ang po} them. At about six months wa ex- Recognizes movies, Imitates ‘simple exercises or special move- | recognize of es short nurs- they have for Bernice and seases, results. ‘Every baby should sleep alone and “a well-aired room, winter and in summer. short sentences, Be interested ,aqpVOry baby should have a daily and also a daily outing, lasting possible. Their taste by the department ‘The fire was under contro! a little more than an hour after it had start- ed and an investigation was begun jimmediately by Fire Marshall De | Malignon to determine its cause. The | steel company officials said the ex- plosions of #as occurred during the fire and did not cause it , | ———— | BOY HANGS SELF IN HOME. a Trivial jOnly Reason Kaown & er Brother, | Quarrel With @ You Hyves’ follow Srlent advice for mothers, cautioned against a Panto striving to attain a set weight. ‘iabach, thirteen years old, Reaches for objects, grasps and | Everything is depentont upon ‘the | Leopold Fiabach, thirteen yoors olf holds on to them. Endeavors to| weight of the ohild at birth. In six|#00 of Josep ‘ seed make sounds with the vocal| months, he said, the weight should | No. 315 Wayne Street, Island Park, @ sards be doubled, at ‘a year tripled, and | suburb of New Brunswick, N. J. . 80 on. Here are Dr. Steinhardt's| ” ‘i 1 * Six to Twelve Months- Tutes for mothers with young ohli- | commited suicide yesterday by hang ing, in the attic of his home. He was a junior in the New Rrunswick High School, and Saturday his parents had bought him a suit of clothes in which he could be graduated with his class. No reason is known for the boy's act, except that he had quarrelled Shortly before with his younger brother, Max, over a broken bicycl degree must be penalized also. Fat does pot mean health and ofttimes denotes the opposite. In my expert- for amusements does not include|ence the baby that gains too fas! meri -rounds and like|comes to grief very quickly in th Sports, nor do their appetites re-| form of an indigestion, and, in cases, Giire tastes of anything but milk |*They are best off unkissed, and the fewer children who come in contact with them the better “xcitement should be unknown to them, as should the mysteries of pic- |nics and excursions and the like Rich, uncomfortable clothing is not appreciated, nor is jewelry, lout Mother is wofully ignorant who |puts a so-called ‘pacifier’ into a baby's mouth. “The first six months of a baby's life form a very important period and the child has therefore u sufficient use for all its mental and physical faculties without fond bat mistaken Parents trying to make it a ‘show- off baby, so it will appear brighter than the neighbor's child.” Dr. Steinhardt emphasized the im- portance of the first six month inna child's life, and has written the fol- lowing for the benefit of mothers un- informed, in the hope it may help ere- ate better babies. For in the first six months the child builds the foun- dation for its later physical develop- ment, and if its physique mal its mental process wi: - mal Ite ? 1 also be af. RULES FOR INFANTS MAY BE FOLLOWED THROUGH LIFE, It !s polnted out that all the ad- vice in regard to care, regularity and proprictary medicines agp! y result eventually in an easier time for the mothers. Not only will the child soon require leas unneressary care aa a result of avoidable ailments, but it will also learn self-control and self-help much sooner. The mother attentions, The doctor says: “The new-born baby is born with 4 certain amount of har. most of whioh ‘i the reporter asked the black-haired| ing allowed to kick about a bit. 1 girl. ‘Yes, str,” she replied, her twinkling and the most’ entrax little dimple playing in her left check. time. When 6 o'clock comes they go to bed. I have aiways given them the best of food that I have been able to afford, have prepared it myseif, aud they have never been sick a day.” - And while the reporter was explain- ing the new idea in kindergartens to Mrs. Welnthal, assuring her that the CS id pha, hot/overtax eyes ne netiwd uf leaching did jipasn tis ie 6 young mind, Bernice! So much for the physical endof tt, was ragerty taking mall details. Her baby have seen very young babies a this immensely pets “Properly fed bables gain a, certain amount each week, 60 that by the ‘time they are six months of age their weight has doubled and at one year {tripled A baby that fails to accom. subnor-|! will then be relieved of many trifling |‘ | usually | 7 ny had heen marked down for under-(.t1 has black hal weight and yet, on the other band, Acs wae ereoer ta: “who exceeds fits to any marked &n/ ad red necktie, lof many diseases of the young child, | fachadinve those of the respiratory tract; itdoes not put up the good re- |sistance of the baby that has just gained normally right atong without ‘Stomach upsets’ from time to time. WHAT AND HOW BABIES SHOULD ; BE FED. | wwnat ta the proper food for | papies? The food ‘par exvelience’ te lthe milk of the mother. No other food can match good mother’s mill, with the feeding of the mother on a proper basis to keep her milk right for the baby, That is the food which the baby’s stomach was made to digest. proagh It, ‘The mortality of babies tinder six months fed from the breasts of the mother !s very much Jose than those artificially fed. “The next best food for the baby whose mother has been unable to hurae it would be the milk of the Goat, impossible to obtain in large cities. Other milks are also good and that which is easiest to obtain a the proper quantities and, there- fore most universally used, Is cow's For the young baby pure cow's milk. lk is too strong and therefore, under the direction of the doctor, \t should be properly modified. His jon has taught the stools and other things which tell him if the modification la the correct one and when it needs to be made stronger. educa tion rather than the vy that eannot take |properly modified cow's milk, prow prietary food advertisements to the contrary notwithata These t be against. » by tar loo freely used and nt of many babies vree physios—Castor Vilk of megnesia—all pect to see the first two lower teeth.’ Boy Lost at Coney Island, i. ‘The Soclety Cruelty to Child: ‘oney unable No other food can ap-) him to watch | |Large Crowd Sees Spectacular|Siver Admits fdentity After, Wig Is Snatched Off by Constable in Vermont. Prosecution on a charge of embex- zlement of Shubell K, Siver, former Treasurer of the First Reformed Church of New Brunswick, N. J., will be pressed upon his return from Fair Haven, Vt, where he was arrested in company with Adele Gouin, a@ youthful Perth Amboy waitress with whom he disappeared more than a month ago. According to the Rev. Jasper #& Hogan, pastor of the church, evidence has been uncovered which ts alleged to connect Siver with the disappear- ance of Liberty bonds worth %,200 froma the safe deposit vault of the church im the National Bank of New Jersey. As tar as has been made public Mr. Siver was accompanied by Otto O. tillman, chairman of the finance | committee, on his last visit to the safe deposit box, and according to Mr. Stillman the bonds were in the box when it was locked in bis presence at that ume. Henry G. Purker, President of the bank, sald at the time of Siver’s disappearance that the missing treas- urer had not visited the safe deposit box after his vieit with Mr. Stillman. Siver's arrest in Falr Haven re- suited from information received by the Rev. Mr. Hogan about two weeks ago that the missing man with his companion had rented a hose there for the summer, purchased furniture, and indicated he might settle there permanently. He used the name of Willlam Hamilton. No trace has been found of-ihe missing bonds since Siver's disap- pearance, as fur as is known, and Mr, Hogan indicated to-day he did not know if the bonds» had been dis- posed of since their disappearance, Siver and his bride, it is sald, bad lived ip a cottage at Sunset Lake for two weeks. Last night Constable John J. Brown of Pair Haven called Siver from the cottage, smatched a wig from his head and said: “You're Siver and you're my pris- oner,” Mrs. Siver also was detained and the couple were taken to the Park View Hotel, where they were kept all night under guard. Constable Brown will claim the $250 reward offered for Siver, Brown said he had identified Sliver from a circular photograph. Siver left a wife and two children in New Brunswick. The Rev. Joseph Hogan, pastor of the church, filed a complaint against him, charging em- bezalement. a ‘STORK SHIP’ BRINGS 90 SOLDIERS’ BABES U. S. Transport Cambrai Here With 206 U. S. Soldiers and Their German Brides. A “stork ship,” otherwise known es the army transport Cambral, came in from Antwerp to-day chiefly ten- anted by 206 American soldiers from the Army of Occupation in Germany, each with @ German bride and ninety with babies ranging from three to aine months. Gixty-aix of the babies were bottle- ted and the ship's doctors and nurses had a lively Ume taking care of thom all. All the mothers, aij the fathers and all the babies looked fine. sie alate 1,525 DEAD FROM FRANCE. ‘The bodies of 1.5% American spidiers who died in France were brought home to-day on the transport Cambra!, which docked at Hoboken. ‘The bodies are from seven army divisions and from widely separated parts of the United States, In addition there were the bodies of Col, and Mrs, Charies Pierce. Cot the removal of bodies. His wife was taken {Il immediately after arrival and died in a few days Col. Pieree diva two weeks later On memorial Day there were services ing, U. S. N. retired. made the prin cipal addrea BLACK EYE HALTS DEMPSEY TRAINING FOR A FEW DAYS Crack by Sparring Partner Opens Old Cut and Champion Will Rest It was karned to- tha Jack Dempsey has been forced to “let up? in big training tor his fight with Carpentier by a “black eye.” His sparring partners will have a few days’ It appears from the story that the chatapion received a cut above the left eye from the Jamaica Kid at Toledo, and tt has been tender ever since. Yesterday Larry Wil- liams, one of Dempsey's eparring partners, bumped the eye and re- opened the cut #0 that it had to be stitched up @o the boxing is off for a fe INHUGE WOOD YARD} WHOELOPED WITH WINS NEW DELAY IN egularity and Intelligent Care TIFS UP2 | BRIDGES WAITRESS CAUGHT | Why She Should Not Have Time to Amend Answer. divorces sutt were stayed to-day complatmt, ‘This order was signed at noommto- day in chambers by Supreme Court Justice Keogh at New Rochelle . Mra. Stillman motored up to Yonkers from this city early in the forenoon and there met her new chief aftorney, Jobn F. Brennan, who made the ap- plication. The order is returnable before Justice Keogh at 10 o'clock next Saturday morning. s One of the pleas Mr. Brennan made in his application was his unfamiliar- ity with phases of Mrs, Stllman’s case. It ia his reported intention #0 to amend Mrs. Stiliman’s answer that the names of various alleged women friends of Mr. Gtillman may be In- troduced in the case for the purpose of strengthening her side of it. Hearings before Referee Gleason the signing of the order automatically halts them. Attorneys for Mr , Still man opposed the new delay. There is likeMhood that within a short thme a court apphiostion will be made tn Mrs. Stiliman's behalf to send a commission to ‘Three Rivers, Quebdec, to examine certain witnesses. ‘The order substituting Mr, Brennan as oblef counsel to Mrs. Siiiman was filed to-day in the Putnam County Clerk's office at Carmel Detectives in Mrs. S(@lman's em- answer to Mr. Stillman's charges, and it was said tls search had extended to Long Beach Frtends of Mra. Ssttil- man are sceptical regarding the let- was being cared for by a community of Catholic women. The defense amend Mrs. Stiliman's “affirmative defense” by naming nine women in addition to the one already specified, Mrs, Florence Leeds, The motion to amend the answer is to be made be- fore Justice Morschauser at Pough- keepsie, probably next Saturday. Most of the nine women have been referred to in previous stories, An- other rumor ts that only one is to be named, ope known as “Clara” The affidavit naming her has, it is said, Further bearings before Referee) | Gleason of testimony ‘tn the Stillman] to in sixty-nine years was the basa an order to show cause why they/made to-day by Mrs. should not be adjourned unti) Mrs.|Gwathmey against Archibald B. Stiltman ehall have opportunity to Gwathmey jr., wealthy cotton broker, jamend wer answer to Mr. Smarts; were to have been resumed to-mor- row, Wednesday and Thursday, but ploy are enguged to-day in @ search for Mrs. Korence Leeds, named in the ter recently published which stated that Mra. Leeds, “in repentant mood,” is reported ready to already been drawn. involving conduct true name fendant and Mr. It charges mis- “Clara,” whose is unknown to the de- Stillman “upon numerous occasions between the full of 1917 nd July, 1920," This “Clara,” the affidavit con- tinued, lived at No. 243 West 49th Street, No, 200 West 86th Street, and at various other places at different times. ————_— 4 DRINKS FOR HYLAN! BUT ITS ONLY MILK. Mayor Toasts Dr. Copeland at City Hall Reoogniang First Day of “Milk Week.” “Here's hoping every baby in New York City will have plenty of milk for the rest of the year and in all the years to came,” was Mayor Hy- jian's toast to Health Commissioner Copeland to-day, given in City Hall Plaza in the presence of five bun- dred people. After the toast the Mayor and the Health Commissioner |drank heartily, from sanitary cups, of milk served them from one of the | Straus pasteurized milk station wa- Pierce went over in March to supervian| gons which have been taken over by | | the city. ‘Whe Mayor itked the mfk so well he drank four glasses. While he dia | so the crowd was free with Its com- |menta. The event marked the open- at sea, at which Commodore E. N, Den-|ing of “Milk Week” the purpose of | |whioh ts to encourage milk drinking “Guess your stomach ts all right,” called out one onlooker. “We'll have to give you four years more for that | stunt!” ' “and another bankbook,” another voice in the crowd ee AUTO KILLS WOMAN, 82. Oar Ran om Sidewalk ts Je) City, Kaocking ‘Twe Down. wohoed ey Mra. Susan Bing, eighty-two, No a2h Jewett Avenue, Jersey City, Med at the City Hospital Jersey City, yesterday | from injuries suffered #widay wh: was knockeu down by an automods driven by Mra, J, Steelman of No 1 Jowett Avenue, Jersey City, the potice Mro Blue with Atrs, Bula Bu: t No. 6% West 77th Street, Munhattan, was walking on the aidewalk on huason boulevard, when Mns, Steelman tam wt her car ‘nto the boulevard, | machine became unmanageable and ran up on the sidewalk, knoc'cing down bot), of the women, Mrs. Bunce, sixty-two suffered a broken wrist No charges were made against Mrs rae ene Stectman' at the ime and ale was aot ‘WIFE FIGHTS PLAN Gets Order to Show Cause{Invokes Old Law to Block Transfer of Divorce Case *, From New York Courts. + A law that has not heen resorted ©f an application for an injunction Teabelle C. | to restrain him from prosecuting # divorce suit g charging desertion | against ber in Florida, where hé | claims to have established = legal | residence two years ago. ‘ | Bdmrund Ll, Mooney told Justice Donnelly that Mr. Gwathmey had lived with hls wife in this city within two years and had been at his New York office daily except for sboyi ten days. At the time of his absence, Mr. Mooney said, Mr. Gwathmey told bie wife that he had been on a “fish- ing expedition” in Florida, Mr, Gwathmey now asserts he has ac- quired real estate in Florida with am- other man and has purchased $10,000 worth of furniture, but Mr. Mooney said Mr. Gwathmey in his answer does not say that he ever lived im Florida or intended to do so. Mr. Mooney also charged that Mr. Gwathmey told his wife he would givo ber one-half of his fortune if she would go elsewhere and get @ divorce, but that she refused. Mr. Mooney also pointed out that all the Gwathmeys' marital difficulties took place in New York. He told of Mrs, Gwathmey being ordered out of her father-in-law’s apartment in 1919, and said her husband's acqutescence in this action proved that he and his wife were residents of this State at that time. Mr. Mooney then told the court that hin application was based on a aimilar proceeding in 1 when a man named Forrest, said to have been an actor, went to Philadelphia and tried to get a divorces on the ground or desertion, but the Philadelphia courts refused to entertain the application. Col, William Rand appeared for Mr. Gwathmey. Hoe said that a man's physical residence is not his legal residence, and that if Mrs. Gwathmey, who was served by pubilcation, wished to oppose her husband's mo- tion she could do #0 by applying to the court where the action was started. Both sides will submit briefs. 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