The evening world. Newspaper, July 5, 1921, Page 3

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— ESTIMATE BOARD DELAYS | EXPLAIN WHY NEW YORK 1S BEHIND IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS. ‘SAILOR ROBBERS CARRIED OFF GIRL Records Prove It Can Accom: plish Nothing Inside of Three Years, MANY CASES CITED. Needless Delays in Construc- tion Deprive Children of Education. How long after the Board of Educa. tion hag selected a site for a school does it take for the Board of Estimate and Apportionment to authorize con- demnation and purchase? The answer to this question will also tion, “Why are New York's schools so far behind the needs of the city?" A study of the information relating to school site proceedings shows that if the Board of Estimate deigns to act within three years it is breaking all speed records, And it should be re- membered in this connection that vir- tully the same delay on each item is occasioned later when the Board of Education sechs authorization to erect fn addition or a new building on the cite In a summary showing condi of the gite ions as of July J, 192 first item 1s indicative of speedy tion and intelligence dis- played by the Board of Estimate on matters 14, 1917—after the e Hylan—the Bourd of Educ tion selected a site adjoining P. No. 21, Elizabeth and Spring Streets, Manhattan, 2 playground, ia this densely congested ound was a p situation the school Nov Mayor jon of me necessity. the next day, notice of ac- tion on the site was sent to the Board ot Estimate, which, on Nov, 23, re- 1 it back to the & 12 the Board of E reconsider 11, 1918, the present niinistration again referred it back to tie new Board of Education. This latter board, on April 24, approved of the recommendation that the site be qe-selected and so informed the Hoard of Estimate which, on Dec. 30, . eight months later, again re- rned it to the Board of Education consideration after Jan, 1, 1919. ast month, June & three and one- yeurs after the Hylan Board of oc requested to bur on Jap, halt K.stimate had first rejected the site tain, was beaten and robbed of a ring, the} ~INPARK, Riverside Dri |saulted and robbed night of 96th Street, told | morning that he had i |®ag her and carry leon Richard Kee! tims this morning held Frothingham in the Court on three of re ne years old and West 47th Street, Eecleston ives James Donne! Morrison, who went Ex eston was irt of the city |and guns of the detectives sent them | |fying over the high Burkhardt, an Fifth Avenue, Brook stripped him money, 4 watch and links and some paw Street, who had wa was also beaten and and jewelry. 47th Street, who was es lin Actor Victim of Gang N Seeing Kidnapping. | Max Bur answer, to a great extent, the ques-| urkhardt, one of the men as: in Riverside Park, at sailors scize a girl, apparontly twenty, tracks toward the 96th Street pier. jan, who was identified by three vie 8 the leader of the sailors, was separate ssault and robbery, with bail at 000 on each change, was arrested by to the scene of the holdups. The sail-| ‘rs scattered, but showed fight when | arrested. The clubs} ) The first man robbed was Max, actor, of a Rio Brodeur of No. 510 West 147th tance away while his friend Burk- hardt got a drink, ran to aid him and Bernard Bernee of No. BLANCHE PAGE BECOMES BRIDE. ° OF CAPT. SHUGG terday, HE SAYS — MRS ROLAND PAGET SHUGG | Military Wedding in the Chantry of St. Thomas's Church. an Lieuts. ve Tells of ding of Miss Blanche Page and Capt. | Artillery, U. 8. A., which took place by sailors last the end! chantry of St. Thomas's Church, was 7 the police this) @ military affair, the best man and Who wagered Col, Da seen the mob of | ¥Shers all being army men, and with , PY one exception, classmates of the bride- groom at West Point, class of ‘16. her across the leston, the civil four of uy served in the army dur- “record ing the waf. The Rev. Bernard's Chureh of Bernardsville, N. by Magistrate ceremony THE EVENING WORLD, T UESDAY, JULY 5 71ST INFANTRY AT PEEKSKILL OCCUPIES A CAMP DE LUXE AND IS BREAKING RECORDS (Staff Corresp MP GREEN, Infantry, N.Y. posed of Licut The bride, who is the daughter of fits to shoot at. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Page of No, Strong, the largest peacetime infantry | 182 West 58th Street, has five brothers, Unit to spread canvas at Peekskill. Their shooting, tov, had been of (the Sol. command of the ‘dnance work, is of the va Thomas A. Conover of St. Joseph J. Dat range and all o World.) riety, and in Noted National Guard Regi- | ment Is There 1,114 Strong | —Chow Is Good, the Boys Are Happy and Col, Wells | Is Pleased. By Charles E. Keegan. ondent of The Evening PEEKSKILL, |Y., July 6.—With a record showing for |the present training season the 7st . G., started the sec- ond week of its fleld tour here, yes- A special Fourth of July was crowded | already strenuous schedule and, with impromptu artillery crew com- Col. Joseph J. Daly, Suavett and Allen Fitzger- ald, and Sergts. Tompson unc. Lader,| Appropriately to the day, the wed- the prescribed forty-eight gun salute; was belched from the old naval six~| Roland Paget Shugg of tho 14th Field Pounder mounted on tho fringe of the} founded the organization forty-two camp, looking out over the Hudson. The salute wag-fired in twelve min- at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon in the ites, and quite a few camp dollars changed hands, for there were many sinto that the ece couldn't stand the strain, The regiment, Col. J. Holi: Wells commanding, has set several records for New York's other doughboy out- They are here 1,114 Lieut. 19,000 CHRISTIAN ENDEAVORERS HERE | N. Dr. Francis E. Clark to Pre- side—Head of Society Hurt in Auto. Accident. When the sixth World's Christian Endeavor Convention opens to-mor- row evening in the 7ist Regiment Armory, Park Avenue and 34th Street, the presiding officer will ve the Rey. Dr. Francis B. Clark, who the years ago One of the principal addresses of the evening will be delivered by John Pollock of Belfast, Ireland, a Chris- tlan Endeavor leader of Ulster. He lost a son in the World War and soon {ter the signing of the armistice Mr. Pollock went to Berlin to address a Christian Endeavor meeting there. He said that he had no prejudice against the Germans for killing his son, de- claring that prejudice was one of the causes of war. 8S. D. Gordon will de- old West Side Police | J. performed the ceremony, which SAA NE AiLOne pe dl ish beliiver one of his “quiet talks" when 0 w followed y a sma ece a} = es a ee re eemplaints | tho musio room “of the Motel Bi | There has been no “Sunday on the |the convention opens. farm" for the city's husky doughboys.| William Jenaings Bryan will attend more. He is twenty- = lives at No, 120 arc Den ites Bea, jinspection and review. Weigel, |was the reviowing officer. Detec- Uys ly and William} feach man and compl with Burkhardt | | Wellsfi Lieut Iw wall of the park. | Boys. of No. 4018! Despite the terrific heat, the regular lyn. The robh schedule is being adhered to. ear ers, —_>— of those “Nothing to do till to-mor- small sum of affairs too. Reveille sounds at chain, gold cuff f j q 10 A. M. At 6 there's assembly, ilichetae Mr. Warford Will Keep on with a ten-minute calisthenics drill Riding; It Aids Health, | He Says. ited a short dis- until sounds. robbed of money a trofley car which knocked him of A. Warford, sev- old, 127 West next at the foun- his bicycle, Aaron who has enty-five ye: been 1 740, | They spent Sunda , Commandant of Camp Dix, The Gen- had a little personal chat with Col Col. James Pben, Major Jey Lyons and staff officers on The under Capt, Allan S on it's just one bugle after another when the first drill call At this call the men either move off on the drill grounds or oxt This is the pert.4 i i th | onto the range Little the worse for a collision wi Chav provalted aha (td ith cure’a ay the ain. tint's in the ait going through an Gen. William imented | the excellence of the personnel. nitary conditions too were highly | pleasing to the General, and the whole camp got a rating of over 98 per cent. HEAT CUTS NO ICE WITH THESE altt de dinky, parley roo! ysical drill, preliminary target in- It's one From then the convention on Saturday, but Billy Sunday telegraphed his regrets at be- ing compelled to absent himself owing to his revival work in the South Homer Rodeheaver, long time leader meetings, will lead the cholr of the convention, assisted by Percy Foster, a Washington business man who has led the convention singing sinco 1892. Word has been received at conven- tion headquarters, No. 276 Fifth Ave- nue, that Dr. Dantél A. Poling, Presi- dent of the United C. E. Societies, had becn hurt in a motor aceldent while on his way here from his summer home at Lake Sunapee, N. H. Although there has been a prelimi- nary registration of 14,000 persons at the Fifth Avenue headquarters, from 500 to 1,000 more are expected to regis- ter to-night, when the “last minute istration bureau” is opened at 6.30 o'clock at the Armory, on Park Ave- nue and Mth Stree: a oe : ; ndu- f : han twen-|struction, bayonet drill and ¢lose or: tir a playground, the Board of EdU- g7 gnq cure links, = Heorn,|tiding a wheel for more t \a bay e oF. Cation! voluntarily rescinded its ace $7 ANd Ou MAKS. “Then came George | ive years and hopes to ride for der are all crowded into the morning | peetaton Sustained Denpite Detend- on in selecting the site, for the Salter of No. 853 Amsterdam Avenue) oe a oe laughed over the session, with a respite at 11.80. Then ; Sent. The reason for this action who received like treatment and was eed Rese to| there's’ nothing to do for an ante’ Plea of ilegal Sale. ts because in the forty-two months robbed of all he had. He was the|#ccident to-day and declared it to/nour except eat and possibly scrud| “4 decision of the Appellate Division rich had intervened more PresSiN& worst beaten and had to be taken to|/De his own fault. The accident up cottons or leggins. The ati made public yesterday sustains the hoeds had arisen a hospital meant so little to him that he le’t/noon drill schedule halts at 5.30.14 tnent by Juaticn Seenar at the of two sites for a These were The third ite School for the Deaf. cted Dec. 10, 191%—one at Lex- ston Avenue and Hast 28th Street, other at 2ist Street—and sent to Board of Estimate two days later, latter board at its mecting Dec.! + took the usual course of referring matter back to the Board of Edu- | tion, where it still lies, despite the nt need of a suitable, sanitary ing She Out of a total of fifty. feur et | A man who drowned himself in| Suffered more than 1 did. I've peen| Cieiersto and Apportionment for |Central Park reservoir last evening| "iding since 1895, and now I get out) pew schools, additions or play- |atter attracting attention by queer|t?Tee or four times a week, rounds. the Hylan board, in the [ites and one-half years of its ecistence, has approved exactly nine, one-sixth of the total num- hor,’ Of these nine only two were spproved before the survey of t! nine civic associations was made public, more than two weeks ag: Three wer oe Matimate meeting last Friday, one.,t6 90h Street, entered the park, plodded| "Riding a wheel is one of the best |tent discipline that the damage was| Comptroller Craig. and Charles Kerr |fubsect of explanation to-day ty Cor- ¢ heen selected a8 {@F yp the hill to the reservoir, climbed the | things for one’s health. It keeps me| confined to the small top traps that |s4n, Secretary of the Department of|Nelius 8. and Joseph W. Edwards, at] ae ) 14, 1918, Four others | iron fence and jumped in. Many saw| zood and hard and makes me sleep. | cnint the wiring, Finance, went to-day to the office of | their office at No. 1 Montsomery Street cre approved ‘at the precede | ee ne oe aeed a eneue him. | Aiso it accustoms me to extremes of | "Capt. Lester Stickles, Company D,| District’ Attorney Lewis of Kings | tersey City. The Edwards Brother: : 34, one of which had |The body was recovered a short time| temperature, because I ride all the ~ : Mivai ligaunter 4 who wre brothers of Gov. Bawards ting, June 24, 1919. later by the police with @ grappling | | oar round.” has drawn two prizes so far. The first|County, ‘The Comptroller said he had| [WM he oy ! selected Per coved last. Friday | te The ient to Mr. Warford hap-| '* £0F 100 per cent. atrendance, every | oven asked by Mr. Lewis to appear be-| | arena structure i absolut sites approved Jus ay a | My Ware aP-| man in his outfit responding ‘to the ; fonvavlth ine cherie id Joseph Wo Edward eat. - entendae. a ey rf fore him in connection with the charges | a new school buliding & jpened yesterday at Brooklyn Avenue) -.) ¢or camp. The second is In the was planned by engincers who ktow ull ciotet’ between Longfellow | WANTS TO LEAVE FATHER. | tnd pergen Street when he attempted | © oie, Tie iter king ia [Of frremularity made by him, following | Me ieee ty re ia a nan ed Hoone Streets, in the Brong: for a }to cross ahead of a Hoyt-Sackett rshek, who Was personal;’?nouncement that the city intended | iecause it was all held together. We {dition to B.S. No. 35, Hollis, | Girt Whe Slept in Park Complaina| Street car and allowed too little mar- Uinary attache Of Gene Shmmerail.| Purchasing a school site on Neptune | tested the supports by: puiting on five ie a portable school gin of safety. When an ambulance} ¢! y | os “alll ‘Avenue, Coney Island, at an exorbitant| (on weigats and the effeet ducens, and for a Povardell Ave- of Momhswark: urrived from the Swedish Hospital| Gershek’s menu yesterday consisted) pice | with Instrame is 50 but | lding at Fisk and 20, Richmond. | Bessle Harrington, the twelve-year-| fr, Warford refused aid and went| f Teast beef, “mashed —potatoes,| [twas rumored to-day but denied by! that if It were possit Wie it, : at ec aation ef a site and |old girl ‘who alipped away from her|home, laughing over his mishap, ercamed peas, buttered carrota, fruit| the Comptroller that he will not be a| Would hang all toge All bullgings The important quenian @ aie al baptl G pp aos pita PNG) A ABR Re Bane | salad, peach ple a la mode and iced | candidate for re jon. It was also | will Bway ences ‘a a ney tn school at Coney Island, pene noes Bh ADEs tea, Some chow, sald that he making his de-| the world that is well bui “we in importance on the | Eighth Avenue. Saturday, and slept all! U “IN. U wee VAG OtieAtZ tani partment a sort of a clearing house for| sway. If it would not sway it might pumber one in imnersanee Oh in igen peaus. VangabeuPauwe [CAN'T LIVE WITH ‘IN-LAWS’ Another “de luxe” feature of the) fMormation ‘wouent Wy the, glover no | call to pieces eecteidaration |Hoyt in. Children's to-day jcamp is the daily aeroplane mail ser-| mittee in its investigition of the Hylan | ei friod of consideration. tasicac te a | Juatice Gannon Deplores Castom in| vice. ‘The camp's mail is dropped off | arminiatration SUES TO REGAIN INCOME TAX 1m June tas ihe lust section ot a | CRG. Edel ai AVINGRS. bythe, Albans fiver on its way up, oa ave ’ n adonied as § 2, o aati- |! e| . Color Sergt ell, who has charge o! nition “that “the Mound of Hath: |i the Judie that ‘she When people marry and the male! ;his departinent and has been attach. | 90 DAYS FOR BOOZE WAITER. | Hepaiiva nieien Reval sis ind Apportionm jrather live with her srandmothe member to the contract—in these days/ed to the regiment for thirty-one ee 150,004 Under Durer ire title by purchase | Matilda Connell af Ne one | R15 nder m ed io acute HE PN Pole tol eteaee ee eee UE ON ther member—is able and willing to | 9« an works very well. He| Attorney Say Man Tried to! Bartram) Gardner, Brooklyn, Inter Pees ag ere-| Bessie sald when she stayed ner establish a home for the other member | #Waits each sack with anxiety, how Shield Proprietor, Ravenue (Ca Was sued to-day Teenie With (erundmother, she took singing |Ics604,| shore is no excuse for complicating mat- | Cer lest the daily package of fudge) John Sands, a waiter in the “Holt |the Federal Court by. Frank the Board of Education’ ers by residing with the ‘in-laws’ | ae neh i come eareriat ©4\ in the Wali,” a restaurant at No, 159|No. 191 ¥ on Park ; fish entioned : aaoriiie: othe a i , woken, to. recoy 0.640% and inter ! siten Nore MO naideration aS Thee rounds. Justice irae’, | Compl. Winston Bhrgott has been | Pierrepont Street, Brooklyn, was sen-| ter nid to he the ainount of The. hed o-iy one has received authorization, iatinon In the Brooklyn Supreme ouri | “cused, from the rest of the camp) tenced by Federal Judge Garvin in|eral Income tax he paid De 191s Crown Street and Nostrand denied the ition of Mrs, | !oUr rgott is under orders to re-| prooklyn to-day to thirty days in jai) | Winder duressgnd upon a thre Col ; ; port at West Roint, having been ) e rdner his proy A Hrooklyn, on June 24 i. Brow 114 Warwick = bee Sek A omy syn, 08 Tae a Ps A; wet, (iat for alimony und | cessful in the State competitive and a fine of $250, for sciling liquor aid th had ineluded in his \momiy Istand, Manhattan B Piprer sO: Feary Awe Tsnen, tounsel fe Paration suit/aminations and having passed the| Sands repudiated a statement said | Federal income t nen whine. be hte Hope. (Bronx) and Cs Abe Chairden, twenty, of No vgainst W 2. Mr. Brown isx| usual entrance examinations |to have been made by John Hahn, | Neyrd the correct jing nt sites ASRINEAYSUE, SIMOR 2 PAC EHO income ia $10,000. | jy icut: Nelson Rundlett made what) sroprietor of the restaurant, to Peter TM18, he w n celine | . nile Chats a the $ neome is $10,000. iy probably a range record yesterday | U ' ree hne te - [EES 8 BIER Sinatra, UR Tne | ——— ( scored 100 per cent. wits! Brancato, Assistant United States | BASE SHAUHS OMEAL TNS . police he tried to steal an automebile | eee AUR Bet wit) i bs aun ot noun f SUGAR PLANT GIRLS STRIKE. |r orucr to attend the Dem TENNIS STAR ACCUSED, {0 tise, getting a bullseye at every| Dimnict attorney. Fuderal District] the return for {Nd = - pent fight After pleading guilty to = i| e only casualties of the tour, aved ‘dn rs | 0 ‘protect th gents to round 4 inv Qalt When Wages Are Cat Uitiwrut entry, he waa asked by County | Wright Held on Charge of Driving Fes Mane vente ene siheisal BA he trerarged Spa | oriearealad Recihes nen a 1 From #12 to @1t a Week, | Judge MacMahon if he could play’ a re: an Auto While Intosteated, ball game fn the Fegimental| tence” \ yi tax and luxury. tax ‘ auiem 0 © Leg of a di ! c ‘ red and fift girl sugar as en on the y ight, forty-one! years olk team of @ men and team - — - Ly asp Sore Aiedout at Gan ocd ha leinae nenhoe | teen A oa picked up fram the officer personel, | ARINGS GO OVER a 3 ‘ American Sueur Re ) TH tet you an laiatevecnieeice, ‘oware the end of the fourth inn) om MEYER HE Shot After laughing at DE ten eee Aveniia ‘anac(it gail) (9 ienen) Sot St aveatie i “ithe scorer was overcome trying to} a sprinkling, " mpany at an AN ac | Fudie rate Hous Keep tally of the runs made by the | Its Commael Not Heady fer Ope! Woon John Loclek!, Hiwwiin bire Fourth | Stree eaeadin ne EE oar rl large of f enlisted men and the game was called Seantonn. “ aw John Fox, watohinie «on # strike because their wages | nto} It de ivor of score, as an- I Clinton | Stree ' (peen cut from $12 to $11.4 week for BULLET HITS CHILD. i t ittn| iM haver of them: score, AS N-| ame Meyer committee investigating |4efinkling Clinton Street, Lrook! hours’ work a day. They were At ap-|ieut. Charles Martin had been re-| Mayor Hylan will hold no public hear- | taughe As a result he has a bullet ate Dy ARYL De Me Rete See th (Rereee veers Ole Sie) Weunsed, In Aue David’ cnoved from the field with a broken| ings this week, It was announced to- [hls left leg, while Fox is in jul Ko vie girls wen’ OUl singing jage songs | Chanffenr Arrested. niering « ility ‘ankle, Capt. O'Connor with a split} day at the committee's he Dquartars | 5078) tos TR TAIISH mocked nun! ait ‘Guncing.. They tried In vain to get Y 1 exam in| hand and fo nther officers with | that El counsel to the cor efense. ten or, Af girls wio had |_ Helen Murano, three yeurs old, of No.’ 32h9 ‘bail f : | minor njuri “Hh Lieut Martin's ine Pete te Ae, to fate the Se 0) DENIM: BAERGA MRR NS NGIS SR HnRL BAIN unas) ay Leben ao bs Juries may Pandicap the State ricle| mass of evidence gathered by the invea- | Police © 8. om _ |Sinal Hospital last night with a bullet Dry Warrant Po team in ite August shoot, as he is al tigators for hearings earlier than nex ee Took | Wound in he ulder, Her mother and! Whey Deputy United States Marshal member of it and one of the State's| week. It ia probable that Comptraic Foqnd Danghler Who Toom |r other told Patrolman Kennedy of the | yrbert power went to arrve a warenar (crack shots, He was removed to tha| Crit will be the first witness to tenity.| FP olson Dying. ETO Beesel culation, ines gay : Meokskii! Hospital last night for an| Chairman Meyer and Mr. Brown ef-| request o Mrs. Henrivtta Wetss and her daugh-| Henry Unger, twenty years old. a chauf-| under (ne Ve on Herman ns pect to moot late to-day to take UB the | aeaiteo ompany, Bruter * Yolss, who took ble of No. 439 Bas re the who k a lis © xchedule to-n ealing fr @ decision | , rE ssp A Pe Eee ea eae Wd esa A jadow | 08 edule t eine Division vgainga the | protect forty-two lineme y f meroury tablets in a room | shat from 9 truck ‘we was drivis na ee “Wate! Commodore say} Unger took the d to the hospital) of be pokiyn, ne | ate 0 Y Gommittce’® right to hold executive sex. t have in threatened sin: 100 Feel otaat papart Ising {ang then Was locked up charged wilh | found Boos was B60 hid fled to] latest gas uppilar Uy vel slona tor taking textimony and the rx. |the places ou Fr me a str M enn ts Hos-'felonioux aosault. He de ving |qmany. It was said, He had been in | m sesaton Of gas wa Capi invining of witnesses by sao mu fora tive eo ) ny Uh pital aud ber daughter at Bellevue, fired the shot, died June 2, | Jonn G, McCoy, of one. b insulat , CROWD WATCHES | MAN DROWN SELF | Central Park Reservoir Victim Was Apparently Crazed by Heat— Sister Identifies Him. actions on Fifth Av fied by 153d Street. bave been unsettled Followed by a smal his sister to-day as Adolph n, before § o'clock this morning for| {he > a few cuts and bruises. The bicycle} enue was tdenti- a more dangerous th and nt, which is followed by 75 art S ok.) There's a full half hour then for his home, No. 16 Hart Street, Brook- | Mavlekine’ ac-|Gompany D, found a man yesterday cident, though I wasn't hurt save for} with a big bucket of water and A tooth brush carefully grooming ths ropes of his tent. obeying instructions from Sergt. M nick to shrink the ropes. Talways have little “snipe” hunts and other ride Saturdays and Sundaya, but it! pastimes to make the newcomer fecl k thawvit used |at home. It was a rooki: for guard evening Then they Supreme Court, which directed Mrs. ‘ma Zimmerman and Emil Wormser his ediloriat desk in the offices of Frage, “Then there come the usial | %% Yonkers to pay $5,000 to Louis the Frank Tousey publications, No.) company strect harmony and taps. | spite their “csntention. that its’ sale 58 West 23d Street, Manhattan, They always find time, however, |\Was, unlawful. ae Weel PONS i “he said, {for the litte jokes to be played on| Adler claimed they gave him a T shall keep at my riding,” he said, / 44 rookies. ‘Capt. Lester Stickles, (check for $6,000 and then stopped ‘just as if there hadn't been ans payment on it. We, had acted as broker in the sale of thirty barrels of whiskey to them. ‘Thelr defense was that as no permit was issued to any of the parties to handle liquor the defendants could not be compelled to pay for it. Counsel for Adler brought out at the trial that both the defend- ants and plaintiff had Federal per- mits from the United States Govern- ment to handle liquor, and hence the transaction Was legitimate, to be on account of the motor cars| Camp Green ts a camp de luxe. ‘The rss ge Hsium, an upholsterér, of No. 586 West] which fill all the good roads. The! tents are all electric lighted. The His mind is believed to| Merrick Roud was one of my petimen welcomed this innovation in| CRAIG CALLS ON LEWIS. By: he sheRe Faths, but the automobilists have| camp equipment until the electric | 2 taken it over and the drivers don't) storma caused four fires the other | com, ena i$ ca ptroller to Tell About Alleged i, amused crowd, | .cem to recognize the rights of those night. The fire call was sounded Deal tor Caney sehen site, approved at the Bodrd | the young man walked down the avenve #foot or on bicycles. each time and there was such excel- FOR CONVENTION of the singing at the Billy Sunday} 1921, NEW YORK HEIRESS NOW THE WIFE OF FRENCH OFFICE MME. LOUIS, JACQUES BALSAM |\CAUGHT AS THIEF Man Accused of Burglary Commit- ted a Few Hours Before He Due in Court. A few hours betore he on trial in Brooklyn on a charge, Jacob Sidranshy of No. 85 Stanton Strect, to- to rob the premises of the Woolen Company, No Forsyth Street, Manhattan, Magistrate Cobb Was informed in Essex Market Court Patrolman lung of the Clinton Streot Station testified he saw Sidran- sky and an alleged accomplice run from the establishment, following the ringing of a burglar alarm. The al- leged accomplice got away. Sidvansky was captured after the policer fired six shots, He was held withou bail on a charge of burglary 1 a NEW MAGISTRATES ON BENCH Hatting, Successor to MeGeehan, Welcomed With Flowers and Speechen. was to go burglary twenty-fe lay tried Magistrate Peter A. Hatting, appotnt- ¢d by Mayor Hylan to serve the unex- pired term of Magistrate MoGeehan, made his judicial debut in West Farms Police Court Court to-day. He was wel- comed with flowers and perches by Assistant District Attorney James A. Sullivan of the Bronx, County Judge Gilbert Parker and I, Kattuer, The first offender arraigued before the new Magistrate was Vincent Soccia of No. 2414 Beaumont Avenue, the Bronx, a lad who 5 © working his way through University and helping eto support a family of seven brothers and sisters. He was charged with peddling ice cream with out a license in the Bronx Park Zoo Magistrate Hatting suspended sentence on Soccia and thirty others accused of peddling in the park without # license: Moses R. Ryttenberg, former Assistant District Attorney, who was appointed a City Magistrate last week by the Mayor sat for the first tlne as n Magistrate {1 Tombs Court to-day, He was sur- rounded by flowers sent by friends and wan visited by many members of the District Attorney's staff, Sih dT BIG FIGHT ARENA SAFE. Sway It Wold be Says Builder. “if ie Didn't Dangerous,” The swaying of the fight arena str ture at Jersey City during the bi sey-Carpenticr fight Satur was the ON DAY OF HIS TRIAL I most Avtna | N DUCHESS SUMMER SCHOOLS NOWMIME.BALSAN OPEN AT. Y.U. AND | Former Wife of British Noble- ; man Wedded to French Sports- man in Register’s Office. TONDON, July 5.-As Mme. Bal- san, Consuelo, former Duchess 0: Marlborough, lett London carly to- day fora bridal trip on the Continent With her husband. Lieut. Col Lous Jacques Ralsan, to whom she was married yesterday at a West End | Register office, she will go first to | Paris, whore it ts expected that she {will make a permanent home | At the wedding ceremony bre. the two sons of the Duchess, the Marquis of Blandford, with his Mar- jchoness, and Lord Ivor Spencer- urchill; George Harvey Amuri- an Ambassador; Brig. Gen. Corne- hus Vanderbilt, her cousin; Sir |Charles Russell, her legal adviser, land Col. Faigade of the French Em- bassy here, were among ihe few per= sons present. Ambassador Harvey, Gen. Vanderbilt and Col. Palgade | were tho witnesses at the Hegister Oftice, The Duchess wore a simple frock of dark gray voile. Her hat, of black straw, was adorned only with large white roses, Save for a diamond bracelet she wore no jewels, At tho religious ceremony the an- swer, "I will" by both the Duchess jand Col, Balsan, was perfectly jaudible throughout the chureh, TI remarkable part of the whole jevent was the chaplain’s address to the pair. Turning to the brid |the chaplain said: | “My dear brother, let me congratu- }late you and let me tell you, al- | though you know it already, how Kreat is your good fortune. Our sweet sister here has given all she has to give, and she has given it ‘purely out of teve for you, You {have been selected, of all men in the world, for such devotion, and noth- |ing is so humble as when the love of really meck person ix given to a m who is truly meek. And I know you will always remember the of be- gives Sanctity and enormous privilege such wonderful companionship, cause when a woman like thi he. ilf she gives no small thing. Then turning to the Duchess, the chaplain concluded: Inst to peace, And after all the storms and struggles and diMiculties, which some people have more than lotsers in this world, he has brought you at last to a haven of rest, to new simplicity, to new cheerfulness.” Col. Balsan, who is wealthy and popular in London and Parisian so- ciety, Is devoted to sports. He was a prominent member of the French Aeronautical Mission here during the last days of the war. This Is his second marriage. He divorced his first wife. |SODA DRUM BLAST HURTS POLICEMAN —~-—__——_ Thousands Drawn to Spot by | plosion—Top of Can Breaks | Flagpole on Roof. With a roar heard a quarter of a mile away, the bottom of a ten-gallon steel drum contat blown out and the top, a 75-pound missile shaped like a shell, soared skyward from the sidewalk in front of | the | form of thi Patrolman — Prede ruck in the right | bottom of th | ‘The tank w was re by a ptece of the nd painfully hurt delivered this: moraing At the soda Water fountain of Samuel |Stricker, ut No. 181 Bast 100th Stre jnext. door to the station hou Stricker heard gag escaping and rolled the tank to the sidewalk” Pive minutes [later it blew up. Thousands who heard |the sound assumed there had been a }bomb explosion and hurried to the Dr Silk. | “My sister, God has brought you at carbonic acid gas was | t 104th Street Police Station at , | Stanley s i Gibbous 392F rH AB at 36ST Second Koor-Jake Glevator Will Close Out Tomorrow 300 Silk Dresses elected from regular stock and offered at ONHERBRIOALTRP COLUMBIA TO-DAY —— More Than 10,000 Expected at Latter, Where 1,000 Courses, Are Arranged. The summer terms at Columbia and New York University open to-day John J, C Dir or at Columbia. Predicts that 10.00 and possibly 12, ) will have registered there by the time the roils clos lo-inorrow eve- ning. The Columbia currieuum will com sist of 1,000 courses, representing the entire field of higher learning. The summer seasion has become a college business and professional workers well as a boon to students ane teachers, Among those to take up special studies are mill workers, journalists and advertising men, including sey- eral hundred New York business men. Every attention will be paid to social and intellectual activit Earl Hall is housing the Y. M. C. A. and kin- dred organizations. The | problem has been met by the dormitories and the lodging facilities in the Morningside area Interest is not diminishing though the cost of tuition is increasing, the university authorities say. At the convocation ‘Thursday at 8 P.M. in the gymnasium, Col, William Barclay Parsons will be the principal speaker. Teachers representing all except three States have submitted 1,477 problems for discussion at the educ: tional conferences of the New York University summer schools. ‘The questions are sent in by 264 educa- tors and all of t financial worry. » questions relate to “Hot Weather Stickiness” Removed Make your Summer dress- ing comfort- able with COLGATE'S TALC POWDER At leading stores FLORIENT the new talc, 25c Other exquisite Colgate talcs, the box... . 20c we — Engraved crystal pitcher with sterling silver band 2 qt. $9.00 OME of the most simple remembrances and some of the: richest gifts come from Oving- ton’s, but for one as for the other, the proportion of what you get to what you pay is very great indeed! OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop-of 5th Ave.” Fifth Avenue at 39th St. Tremendous Reductions Dresses of Taffeta Silk, Printed Georg- ette, Foulard Silk, and Crepe Satin. 14:59 19-75 Reduced to Dresses of Canton Crepe, Taffeta Silk, Foulard Silk and Crepe de Chine. Reduced to ses of Crepe de Chine, Canton Crepe, Georgette Crepe and’ -affeta Reét.ced to ie enter inca oem nee apenas, o

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