The evening world. Newspaper, August 24, 1921, Page 2

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| | | . —+] , | Sans were on board when@Mhe grat Bervice men who were instructing the Aniericans in the handling of the Giant bag, preparatory to starting the flight for the United States within © few days. Capt. Maxfield had not yet officially taken over the ship, which was technically in charge of Capt. Wann of the British Air Force,‘ untti the Tests had been completed. Other American officers on board included Lieuts. Little, asterdy, Moyt, Bieg and Cuil. The other Americans were picked mechanics. LOST DIRIGIBLE IMPROVED ON R-34, ONLY AIRSHIP TO CROSS OCEAN, LATER BROKEN BY WIND + New Craft Bigger and Faster Than Historic Predecessor Which Reached Mineola on July 6, 1919, in a Little Over Five Days. The British R-34, the first dirigible |defects of the R-34 in the ZR- to cross the Atlantic, started from | which was 41 fect longer and seven East Fortune, Scotland, July 1, 1919, /feet greater, It also had ‘a gas and landed at Roosevelt Field, Mine- |capacity of 2,700,000 cuble feet as R-31's 1,250 and a cruis- ing endurance” of 6,000 miles at sixty miles an hour, The R-34 had a cruis- ing radiue of 4,900 miles. ola, L. L., the morning of July 6, cov- a&ainst the efing the 3,200 mijes in 108 hours «nd 12 minutes. She jeft New York on the return trip to Scotland on July 9 oni reached her home port a few ‘ays Ps ard the Pave dutta ti ‘ . fe historie| Ve, cars suspended from the ai Mater. On Jan. 2%, 1921, the historic | ening frame work, the living condi- craft, which had cost more than} tions were not so comfortable as than $1,000,000, was cut almost in (wo| provided on the ZR-2. The R-34, ‘ : however, had sleeping accommoda- 1 d left a w by a violent _— ita Ali pure, | HONS for the officers and crew and outside her aerarome near Edinburg). ay electrical pparatus whereby It is recalled that despite elaborate) meals could be cooked. Hot wate arrangements iwo years ago, the men| Was obtaned from the radiators on -34 pas ; harrow .| the motors, gee ee eats, thre atthe, Al the gondolas were inclosed and ing hours when the leviatiian of th) tne men were able to keep warmer clouds ran into shallow atmos-/ than if they had been flying in an phéric depression off the coast cf) airplane. A wireless, set in the for- ward car, with a range of about Newfoundland. They were then with- ta a few hundred miles of their 0 miles, enabled the R-34 to keep Boal) in touch with shore almost the “The weather was terrible,” said entire way across. A. still str er Major G. H. Cooke, igating ofticer apparatus had n installed in the of the R-34. “It seemed as though| Me ine aR sely re- the atmosphere was haunted by 5.000) complied her sister ship, the Ite’. bul devils, We were shaken to the core.) her improvements were concealed That night we hit everything—heavy amid a bewildering confusion of rain, thick fog and tow visivility. The em UTE Eid IT aie ship seemed as though she was g0INE jays and a iiscellany of guy. wires, to break into bits, rising and falling control valves, pit swivels and ike a cork on a heavy sea. At times ne ral ae i6 apeee eleplone system connected up @he aeemed to stand up 80 degrees! ine entire whip so tat. Commander “Mito the air. Maxfield at the wheel in| “Al had ibeen fine sailing up to that, his cabin, bad every part under his time. The most unusual thing abor caret cont i f oe ae sae the entire trip was the extreme vio- | i NoWOEE treaty: Ueed ns where I con a device that enabled | at a mooring mast} her gas, oi!, water} lence of the ‘bumps’ in reg they were totally unexpected nd and replen SeaRE(e aiinobi H iniracle that wt he {t almost a iniracte that wel ing “fel containers through huge completed the trip successfully after Dies Riviere otnlIL Los oaeey | what we went throvgh. With the fourteen Lewis guns, a one-pound) 520 four of ofo and bombs: homb R automatic pounds ench pounds each. ‘The hangar at Lakehurst, $4,000,000, gun, ne ve limited weather information we now, transatiantic air dangerous” It was sought FEATURES OF ZR-2 WHICH RADE IT WORLD'S GREATEST DIRIGIBLE Airship, With Maximum Speed of 75 Miles an Hour, Planned to Cruise 9,000 Miles on One Fuel Supply. ‘ Here are some statistics relating to the size, sp) ef the ZR-2: Resting on the east plaza of the Capitol at Washington, the dirigible would have hidden all bus twenty-five fee of one wing of the immense building. Standing on end alongside the Washington Monument the ZR-2 would have been 150 feet above the monument's t The maximum speed of the ZR-2 Her cruising speed was ffty miles an hour, and at cruising speed she could have travelled 9,000 miles under normal conditions with a single supply of fuel. The propeilors on twe of the control cars equipped with reversing sear which would have enabled the dirigible its cost remedy certain to and equipment was seventy-five miles under the balloon were te move backward, The equipment incluved a radio set with a sending radius of 1,500 miles, and a wirele: The stays and bra wire. Quarters for the crew and officer feet wide and seven feet high, extend nished With bunks at intervals 4 tables and benches and phonographs, Cooking was done in cach power car by using the exhaust flames as fuel, “HUMP” ON ZR-2 WAS DUE TO STRAIN Engineers Had Found Detects on) Banker's Wife Loses Long List of Airship, but Believed Th Jewelry While Spending Summer Were Remedied. Brookville, L. 1. telephone set of the ZR: were made of sixty miles of piano were located in the keelway, eight ng the length of the vessel, fur- comtortable chairs, the side: ong $10,000 GEM THEFT IN STAHL HOME in A London despatch of Sunday last] Jewelry valued at more than $10,000 quoted the observer as asserting that, Wits stolkn yesterday afternoon: trom @uring the first trials of the “It ne of Mr. and Mrs. Lionel A. a tendency of the giant dirigibe to Brookvilla Le I developed, and tat an in-} employees in the house epection revenld the faci that eer ny one enter Mr, and M tain girders |ud bent t ere out, Mr. Stall is a bar Mt, a lee at No. it Pine . Work had buckled under the strain oe Pine | Remedial measures were taken, ihe aU RGaran at MOA GAC te Mewspaper said, including con ally, ‘ able reinforcement of the framewe th} Jost a Kold mex ba along most of the ship's length, In APS Mee pet ne ais addition to the structural trouvle, ¢ EOTALIA OBO: nion¢ Observer asserted, the ZR-2 had been pn rantreeestruceenet ey handicapped by engine difficulty Ong sold clgareiis sane wiih dlumand phire and diamond pin, two pear- DENBY IS SHAKEN shaped pearis, a vanity ease with an enamel bird su BY NEWS OF FALL ine’ winmnon —_—_—__ | 2 ; ._ | DEAF MUTE’S SENTENCE Secretary Gets First Word of Dis- | WRITTEN TO HIM IN COURT. aster From Press | vunded by diamonds Dispatch. Comin Gadia, a deaf mute, was sen: tenced by Judge Bayes in Kings County WASHINGTON, Aug. 24.—Seerw- | Court to two to five years in tary of the Navy Denby was ie wentence was written Mapewad’ ‘when he read a pres of paper and handed to him despatch on the wreck of the ZR “This 1s the first word we have ba ms it," he said, adding it was imposs! for hi mto say how many Am-ri sulla val ht y wing at No 4405 (Third Avenue, Brovklyn, NEW STOCK BREAK SETS LOW MARKS FORTHRTY SUES Nine Securities Sell for Lowest Price in History as Liquida- tion Continues, Liquidation in the stock market was continued to-day in such volume that approximately thirty stocks, listed on the New York Stock FE tered xchange, regis- new low marks for the r wateh officer, Clearwater, Fla.; Lieut. ohn B. Lawrence, watch officer, Lin- coln, Minn.; Lieut. Marcus H. Ester! radio officer, Washington, D.C; Lic Joseph B. Ander on, meteory- logical officer, Hyattsville, Md.; Chief Machinis. Shine $. Halliburton, as- sistant engineer officer, Macon, Gu; Lieut. Clifford A. Tinker, publicity officer, Westficld, Maes tn addition two watch officers: of the U serve force were conditionally scheduled to make the trip, Charles G, Little, Newburyport, M and Lieut, Telford B, Null, Denver, Col The non-commissioned personnel of the crew was to have been com- posed of ten riggers, sixteen mechan- les and two radio men, as follows: iggers-Charles I, Aller, Denver, Col; Arthur Carlson, Juliaetta, Idaho; Hans Christensen, Newton, Mass; James H, Collier, Oklahoma City, Okla; Charles W. Frank, Way- Okla; Charles A. Heckbert ckiand, Me.; Maurice Lay, Greens- boro, N. C.; Ad Pettitt, New York City} Sylvester F. Shields, St. Louts Norman 0. Walker, Commerce, Tex. Mechanics—Charles H. Broom, At- lantic City, N Jacksonville, Fort Worth, Te: Owensboro, Ky. South Caroll Binghamton, N. ¥ erson, London, Eng. Los Angeles, Calif.; tL, Loftin, Louis; Williai Ind; Liewellyn , Ga, and George W Lester K. an, Robert M. Coons, Lloyd Crowel, James W, Cullinan, Thomas D. Dick- Ralph Jones, William Julius, K Moormann, Radio Men—John Smyrna, Fla.; Jon Paso. Tex. In addition to the above two chi machinist’s mater, William A. rus: and William A. L Jiyn, N.Y re to have among tie mechanic: power of the ZR-2 permitted, Commander Maxfivid us a native of t. Paul, Minn. Appointed to the val Academy from Minnesota in 908, he graduated with the class of 1907, He was one of the ploneers United States Nava) Aviation, having received bis designation as (an air pilot, heavier-than-air branch, after (raing at Pensacola during the pre- war period In 1917 Commander 1o Akron, O,, where he in lighter-than-air fled as a pilot Robertson, New been inclu the lifting Maxt 1 went was a student ft and quail- For several months during spring and summer of 17 he in command at Akron In 1917, he went to Burope and ed in command of the United States Naval Air Station at Paimboeut, — His next assignment |was in the Navy Department, Wash- Jington, where he was lightér-than- Jair uld in the office of opcra, ons. He |was subsequently semi to England, where he was the commanding officer of the airship detachment at Howden. THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1921, Men Now Keep Girls ‘on Their Mind’ By Pasting Their Pictures in Hats as not P committee. As a e wished to say t z was going too far, He pointed a menacing Mr. Wallstein and amid applause from the audience said it tme for a show roan Meyer d stall owner Market? t A. L have known him aud-his- father Washis j.on for twenty-live years, He bought becf trom packing houses and iucchers to | resell at a profit. TELLS OF ARRANGEMENTS TO TAKE OVER STAND. shouted finger si ected Mr. We Jommissioner at his request what i tes Commissioner at jie toa ueal \ you tell me what a grand man T am fig qnade and that we Were | ing now lovely everything is--and sed. - | then you go on the stand and pull this ou hear from the Commis: | PAU NER EA De Onna itt 1 know very weil that 1 beer ates ihe deparunn ned that perm t because your Pres- ent, Minon, asked me to, and .or no two Weeks and saw Mr McC ee Be sud the Comimssioner was out, but & 186 wold ine the stand had been trans- » Commissioner spoke more in th anger. Mr. ‘continued ead, with many ges- 1 Mr. O Malley sadly regarded silk American flags which encir- cles the lower edge of the dome and said no me A Serg Haslo» n to in (eried to Advipit Kahn the day be fore ‘A& Mr, Meade was excused District Attorney Swaan ente and the hearing Was suspended for a moment, Mr. Swann (ook # scat to the lett of Chairuan abeye Richard Manager of t Hote: Kel tfled to recording telephone r it at Arms a few mo ments later notified former Senator Brown that the District Attorney | wished to speak to htm on the tele- irom Mr, Kahn's apartment; so did | phone. Mr. Brown was in a telephone Miss Reardon, an operator Linen | booth ten mu t When he emerged enneta New York Tel. phone | he (Chairman Meyer, Senator Eon Tdtaished the’ namve of | Douglas Re binson, Mr. Wallstein and subscribers with whom Mr, Kahn’s| Deputy Attorney General Berger into tment Was connected. ‘The a consultation, which continued for od the 'T. J. MeManas nearly an hour while the committee tion and the 1th Assembly ind impatient audience waited, we Association. we ln was sworn, He said bel yay | ep | nyed with Kolblein to take N QUARREL stand a year ago, The ar- OVER $1 LOST AT DICE. not closed — until Police Sheppard, Assists District year, and was foi ¥8,000, Mr. Kalin said “My fricnds advised somebody—-somebody a citizen or a Shiclds Assailant; | ay Prinoner ¥ with the beard, |Orehard Street, between Schiff Park t 3 wont on ahr A, He agreed way and Rivington Street. He refus 9 Meet me and eet me at the | 'a¥ ™ anata a ae Municipal Building April 11 10 toll Whe had Babbar Dim Seuok Mr. abn identified a cheak for | ler was arrested last night and Is al- $3,000 he cashed before going to the|!eeed to have confessed that he and Municipal Building Lewkowits quarrelled over one dollar . What did you do with the | Lewkowitz lost playing craps. Lewko- mene A Gave it to 1 Goldberg, | Witz demanded the goltar be returned , 1 ote nd drew a knife. A scuffle followed, py Beahersibiew, who met me at) {7 \iich Lewkowitz Was stabbed, 5 —$ @. Before you went to the Munici- | pal Building you got rid. of the | Haye Comes Out for the “Ope Hoss |money? A. Yes, sir, to L Goldberg. ay.” my brother-in-law WASHINGIL., Aug. 24.~That the We shall see about that,” said Mr Wallstein, Mr, Kolblein met Senator McManus and himself at the Municipal Building and went up to the offiee of Secretary ancient “One hoss shi is a safer method of travel than the modern auto- mobile, was declared by Postmaster neral Hays to-day on his return to McGrath of the Markets Department, was AP a A ork per iiae ne suid. was hit by 4 taaicab i Commissioner O'Malley was not in York oD | alga 3 thal ie nee ae a t stein to proceed with the examina-|WASHINGTON, Aug. 24—William lirin had wceupied ? tlon Bloch sat down. M. Adoo, former Director-General of th We agreed to pay $8,000 when peruits -, Before, the comma tee etaembled Railroad Administration, took sharp were Gnuneterted by tie Conmnissioner sinh op Paes "City Hall issue with President Harding on the any a Heener en eaNenUtaey: a stairway by Christian Haslob, Atma ation Fine ‘ extern financial icine spies en da one of yesterday's witnesses, Hasiob |feliet to the railroads, n letter read eyes Hoesen ant went to obviously wanted his market permit [In the Senate to-day by Senator Stan- pheation in. writing, which we did, |weard MYoureet ups dinngr | Peay 42: Rew mepta tan atiney Bates April 1. in the conversation we 1, down t 28K 8 he principal ian, Tee eEEee: guest, postpor. itso Lcan be present; | TRENTON, Aug. 24.—Nineteen appli- politician [laughter] and get them do{ gamu uckler, a peddler of No. intercede for abn ibid, [2027 West 28th Street, Coney Iatand,| f€ssional baseball in American The witr id he went to see |i: he apraignod to-day charged wits | f!fe, the Chicago Tribune to-day Senator Thomas McManus, an ac- | bedichAn tad auras lied BUnictAnce Ande Ouatames mortelly stabbing Louls Lewkowitz of| announced tha: ad curtailed its Q. Sure it n't. iis brother |Ne 17 Avenue 4, who died yesterday] bas-ball reports In favor of other Alderman McManus? A, 1 don't) {n Gouverneur Hospital. sporis, particularly amateur {know which is which, It was the one| Lowkowitz was found yesterday on| games, “NTHEATRE UNDER GARD OF POUIGE Outbreaks by Strike Sympa- thizers as Trucks Move in Jersey City. Scenery of the Columbia that Amuse- ment Company started to the Majestic Theatre, Jersey City, landed there this after- noon, It took fifty mounted police- from New York eee M’ADOO TAKES ISSU j WITH HARDING ON ROADS. Attacks Admin stration Bill in Let-| ter Read in Senate, cations for approval by the State Pub- Ne Utility Commission of new jitney routes paralleling tracks of the Public Service Railway Company in Camden County were denied to-day. Operation of three autobuses bétween Butler and ‘ewark by the Butler-Newark bus line 8 approved, but it is restricted to points weet of Verona within the City of Newark. Sane dee Chatfield Slightly Better. Federal Judge Thomas I. Chattield suffering from typhoid fever in Owego, N. ¥., has improved slightly, according to a letter received to-day at ais home. No. 31 Linden Avenue, Brookiyn, CURTAILS BASEBAL REPORTS IN FAVOR OF OTHER SPORTS Chicago Tribune Points Out Time Spent Watching Games Won't Reduce Waist Line. CHICAGO, Aug. 24. Declaring that an active doubt existed as to the value of pro- “The Tribune is down to about half a column now for games in which the home team plays, and to @ bare statement of vital statis- ties regarding other clubs,” the | announcement said. “That 1s enough. “Two or three hours in a bali park do not take anything off ‘he | waist line of the spectators or add | anything to chest measurement, | Professional baseball is a stimu- lus for boys, but journalism has overted It with space. “Amateur sports seldom duce the ability of protessiona! pro- 'SCENERY LANDED [WOMAN'S PROFITS 'He expects thac there will be many | |RACE OF AUTOS PUTS 6 IN HOSPITAL | | Machines Crash at South Beach in | AS A BOOTLEGGER Race to Beat Each Other PUT AT 5 000 000 | hi ig ’ A | One automobile on Sand Lane and | another on Old Town Road, at Souta | Beach, Staten Island, shortly before |noon to-day tried to get to the cross: (Continued F Page) ling first. As a result the car driven Ea |by John Destasio, thirty-five, of No driven by ¢ . who had Mary |975 Bay Street, Fort Wadsworth, struck White as a passenger, Kissick and the one driven by Capt. Samuel Beggs, Davis had assembled a corps of en- |terty, of No. 319 Van Duzer Street, forcement agents, who surrounded | Stapleton, amidships and turned It over, throwing Destasio's its occupants to the road. the automobiles machine was going so fast Cassese immediately blew a potice ‘that the sudden jolt threw its passen- whistle, A patrolman ran up and! gers out also. All six were severely Cassese demanded that he arrest the |{njured and were treated at Staten | Isiand Hospital With Capt. Beggs, a New York and Sandy Hook steamboat pilot, were his ather-in-law, apt. Irving Van Albert, Véderal officers on various specific charges. ‘The Prohibition men siowed their shields and credentials and the Nine of these stocks sold at the low- men, ffty on foot as an escort, and | policemen went about his business. | tour, ‘vetired ak captih, ah est prices in their history, In numer- @ hundred thore scattered over the!‘nne truck and ita cargo of iauor|Witian A. Smith, fifty-five, of No, 160 ous other instances to-day's bottom line of march crowded with sympa-| wore seized Fueecker Street, Manhattan. With De- | prices were the lowest of the last five thizers of the striking theatr A searen of Mary White and Cas-|stasig were Ernest Wagner, thirty, No years or mor: Vaal eyed bth sexe ealed tat they wentiy |61 Richmond Turnpike, Tompiinsville, To-day's market weakness, foi- Once the crowd broke through the) vied wil the records ani accounts|and Dominick Traganio, No, 208 9. lowing the recent prolonged déctine, police and selzed one of the men} i. Husiness in Cassese s pockets | Avenue, Rosebank, Smith and gave bith th variety of alarming guarding the trucks and dragged him Ue, Wout tarde unis ag, {Wasner received concussion of the brain, rumors, all of which are known to be into @ park, Mounted police rescued nn een usual ot case. = without the slightest foundation, 11! HEW PLACE FoR HER Pic ne? and ao euan aud Dy a detective |“! Mauor, orders sro rowun sus, BRITISH EMPIRE as become a well established fact ‘en men furnished by a detective | Wie aygeihs RARHERL, a hCeltil . fae Wallie. 36 (aOR SE Wi forded A checkroom girl in a Broad mothers inside the, crowns of their | agency went to Jersey City early this ae b ebersr cated \NEEDS CONSTITUTION Character, aid OFIMAKGS amon way district hotel told the story Tae , Morning tosHiind! Up the teste toe alt See oes u cue || = " , 8 a & 4) and the photographer verified it— The new stunt not only cnabies Jeioks that were stopped on Friday, |‘4UNs Scores vs persons were Lous © . number of individuals who a year i @ man to keep the subject “on his Y {Lord Mil Says Instrument Is h 1 8 : anu appropriates. Lord ilner Sa strur ‘ ere's the result. New York men : when an effort was made to cart tht ’ | ) cr so ago counted their personal for- mind” but also serves as a sure fi a, He f, Ini a LiNae GY" (has IAINIBha vot danaed RUE ptures of thet: and casy means of identification, |scenery from the ferry to the play-| aU, sMarese, Bart und Bruno,| Necessary for United Kingdom who, through disastrous speculation Sp a ae ea HOUBEY 7 PIRAOL, OnE) Cen nEsceh eect ne (ear Cae canta tae Uae eae ary and Dominions. é f a » situation, |apparentiy suiesmen ana aclivery ieee a f i a good daylight line on the situation, | apparen yf . ; 1 COMMOOIESE) MUSE NOW “CIBpOES: OF The party had to wait two hours for | gecide return to Manhattan. ‘The|agents, in tnew pockets were iouag) LONDON, Aug cael Mela tat their security holdings at the best him, peace Sulcus i ; ih f introduction to, Constitution, which would include with prices obtainable, regardless of real “Senator McManus introduced me| four who stuck were ex-service men. | numerous letters of introduction tul iy ity scope the United Kingdom and values, to the Commissioner.” said Mr. Kaa Fifty mounted and fifty men o8|;oadhouse proprictors and Wowl andl ty British Dominions, is necessary, de- In BRO MAINE AB OORIAY AL a IN UIRY BY PROMI Q. What did the Commissioner say?| foot were sent to the Rink stables.|saioon keepers reading about as to1- | clared Lord Milner, former Colonia! ; eeu darnd A. Nothing. whe after 11 o'clock this morn- Secretary, last night (fie WER CHOWN NAL LE wl 3 OF che | Mr. Kolbiein? | WHETe soon after 11 o'clock this jows | Secretary, last nigh y Si aL AT SE Q, What did he aay to Mr. Kolblein? | 1 nu tour men took the horses and,| Dear Sir: ‘This wiil Introduce my He added that a Constitution in some port in the shape of public buying. A. He told him, “You know of course Ieee ft Broke { long expericnce asserted ou cannot sell this stand to Mr./under escort, started for the gar browner-in-iaw (or cousin), air, | form: Sigua cee inevit- nee AMER : ‘ ; ial yo only sel! tures. | where ak eunieiy. hat ace wuao lately say fable. id it might not be a written Sd TNA WRGAT GATOS HACE KEES Fe Ta eA GReuO uasuiirsue | Cicre, te) trucks and) scenety “had)) Hie 1s auavlately! allvrignt “| Ar a et WULTLNeC IE Battal seue seen such a lack of public interest in the privitege T wilt revoke the | 24 Teposing since Friday and can do anything tor your IE | 5” something more tangible than the the murket. The fact that many high 3 One of the four, Who waid he Was) you can Uo anything ror bit Will | present agreement { eT : yas issued, the witness}hired tor a guard and not a driver! appreciate tv anwietie Seen grado securities are jarent'y on by PS rap lees the burgain counter haa nol atiracted| (Continued From Fret Page) I Gav togben prrnnidine tye geienietoe| cues Coy ereree ae nen 2 Ce Venn | MakyY WHITE. | MRS, HAZLETT KIDNAPPED f D| t | town together and he gave a check f ata t diniver;-retusea’ lol Gener pre rounU wu t ¥ investors, Margin business is at a | 0 to Kloblein, ‘The check was|7#0 “nd not a i | Other letters were found guaran’ | Standstill and the so-culled “inside| Brown said, “arrangements have been in evidence. |nave any part in drivin A negro. ig tue quality of the inerchandlis AGAIN, AND COMES BACK. interests” display no inclination to|made that certificates of immunity} .& Why didn't you give him $8,000) an ex ROS) MUMeckwor |i Ueets ircenun yy tue agencs. Mt. Collins | jend market support to the stocks forl signed by the committee Chairman |: 1, (eld him it cost me too much 10) and the other three acted as KuArds./ sq taut cue Whie woman wicnin a | SOCkMst Speaker Dete se which they are sponsors. fix the stand up. Hight thousand dol- | ; nee wa Speak in Mason City, lows The following table gives the stocks| 274 the District Attorney will be] lars was too much A crowd of from 3,009 to 9,v0y lined | Fe eee ee ee eee ero Sa SGN Ginive lan Aig a eatterd that established new low marke tg-|given to any such witnesses, and will} @. Did Klobiein ag A Wefthe streets and the police manned) iin one cnousand cases of whiskey. | Bena) alg, Goclaline asekear’ Re day, and the year in which the pre-|be given to the two witnesses, or| battled for two hours, but he couldu't| the iets and railroad trestles. Wo-]| ewOUGH BILLS TU FILL WATE. | Touch Hazlett. He ie (Le lo vious low mark was registered: a tie CHES 7 veal ket but $6,250 out of me. a are: dered into the houses | Was taken from the city last night by « three, as the case may be, who testi. | 6°, Dut $6250 aut t and he naa| men Were ordered in PAPER BASKET. | bund of men when she endeavored to fled yesterday.” nen HMitentngreementcko he: tnd’ to| ong, Mercer Street Mary White is a stout woman with | speak here, returned to Mason City te- The early session was devoted to|accept $6250 or nothing. A. Yes, 1| At the theabre the uniformed por) vasthy complexion. Her vight| day and announed that she would de ie ond Wa) getting on the record the circum. [bargained with him for less money. | ice, aided by detectives, (wok care! robabiy 1s not Mary Waite.! liver an address to-night. Literature Mier Sina SABI! stances under which the transfer of | ¢.( After that you a a forlot the hooting crowd. the acenery| Several of her front teeth are miss-| she leit behind when she was taken to 1 fits |@ West Washington Market stall wasjyou, : ATiiac is tert im the garage wid bey Mg and eho docs nos dress like a/a lonely spot on a country road nea fenied to Steers & Menke, provision) «Q. But you didn’t use A. No.|taken to the Pennayivania treight] Woman Who has. as ff Seco eee Noe Springs was burned féwlers, and given to Adolph Kahn, al @. Y. reconsidered it? of wut | Stition and shipped cut of town, and! Mr, Collins sali that When the col- | Taead OV daana RELI te He crows (Nett delbai! WARM aaL be Hewes Street, Brooklyn, stenographer | . Y have told me you bet the this afternoon. wie iper basket, They would! that Mason City was no place for her n the office of Commissioner of Ac- | eon ue ne eek check on the) Word that an attempt to move the atiajy iC in and she would count it to appear MAXFELD AT HEA counts Hirshfield, was the first wit- apse ase jn yaman') scenery was to be made veacned the| water and bank it the next day i ee ne ness. She identified a transcript of | ET RL aU STOMA Bel New York neadquarters of the Inter-| ‘foe woman appeared to be undis- ; H Taliban} CAUEA RRIOTe ME ian | ater ter Tie $1 national Alliance of ‘Theatrical Stage! turbed over her arra.gninent before | ENGINEER KILLED AS TRAIN f - y ae uy | yeahh aber OF limployees and Moving Picture Oper- | Commiss.oner McCave. One of the | GOES THROU field regarding Market Department | Where you | keep ators, and 4v0 member. left this| .cporters referred to her in her hear- T GH BRIDGE. conditions. Hine betere <the oon adjournment |Morning for Jersey City, marching | as “Queen of the bootleggers. -— Pa) Pe a A Mr. McGinley, called, did not an- | tno wt attempted to, explain }e® Masse trom the terry to local) I wish to hell Twas," she re-| Twenty-Five Pai swer, Hrederick &. Men's of Beech- | Qinething about the complications of |Neadauarters at Montgomery and| marked, turning and smiling. “Don't | Wreck in € urst, Long Island, iweasurer of | yi« ac nz of Kloblein’s privilog BEY Gre vant cele ask me any questions because I have! GRAND JUNCTION, Col., Aug. 24.- ‘a/ | steers & Menke Inc. commission | 54; ofderéduiniimn’ to wail |(e nue, coeeaton: Hardly had’ Hine to) nothing tolsay | Engineer Douglas Armstrong of Grand merchants in poultry, pork and veal] j.. jw, get settled when mounted police ar-| Mr. Collins believes that the White | [neinesr Douglas Armstrong of Grand at West Washington Market, then GLATADIGMAN Bloch |Fived, escorted them in a body to| woman's syndicate has been furnish- | ve SU eu beseenaers aoe Ses was culied. The firm sells to whoie- ean demanded {the Pennsylvania ferry and started/ing the major part of the flood ot; imured when Denver and Rio Grande salers and retail butchers and not to | s ae them back to New York. W4..a them| whiskey that has been enabling the | Western passenger train No. 1, west- (Continued Fron First Page.) — | Zonsumers. Met geo gah; | went some of the men who had come|thirsty of Greater New York and/|Qound, went through a bridge ten _ : | @ Do you know Albert Kolblein, a! Taree jover to drive the trucks. Long Island to purchase unlimited | miles cast of here at 3.15 A. M. to-day _ | quantities by the case, bottle or glass.| A hospital train has left here for the scene of the wreck. According to reports reaching here the wreck was caused when the train struck a bridge, the supports of which had been swept away by a cloudburst earlier in the evening. are ja the The engine and four ca: foe creek, it was reported hy HE CLEARS POLICEMAN. Patrolman William J. Moran of the West 47th Street Station has been ordered to report back for duty to- day, following the withdrawal of the charge that he shot Edmund Clayton, a war veteran, Monday evening. Clay- ton said he was mistaken in thinking Moran shot him while he was standin: in the doorway of a poolroom u . 1313 Third Avenue. ns Moran produced a certificate showing he was on sick leave at the time and id his revolver was in his locker at station. more arrests and also revelations which will implicate business men of high standing An Evening World reporter sought information of Mary White at No, 3 West llth Street to-day. He was! informed by the Superintendent and| by tenants that no one of the name of Mary White was known there. “NINETY COCKTAILS SWEETENED WITH SALT! THAT'S ALL! Host Mixes ’Em Himself and— Has to Give Guests Some- thing E} SOUTHAMPTO %4.—The saddest news this town has known for many weeks con- cerns ninety cocktails, A man whose hospitality is fa- mous gave a dinner and decided to mix the cocktails himself. He did, He tasted one. It was awful. The head waiter tasted ono and wept. “ir,” he said to the host, “you have used salt for sugar.” After a moderate period of la- mentation the host, a man of re- sources, scurried around and got something other, so that his guosts should not suffer too greatly. But the ninety cocktails were wasted. 8 Days*91-%—9 Days $96. ort. Inctudig All Expenses for Steamer, Hotel and Side Trips 25% Vayment Insures Reservations; Balance 10 days before sailing. Bermuda is Cool in Summer (Overnge Summer Temperature 79 Degrees) All Outdoor Sports Golf, Tennis, and Salling, Bathing, Motor Boating, an Fishing in cnebanted Bays and Talets, Riding: Weriving or Cycling over smooth white coral roadways or vislting Berniuda‘® wenderful Crystal Caves and Sea G. No Passports—— Sailings every 5 Days Vie Pulatial Twin-Screw Steamers “FORT VICTORIA"and “FORT HAMILTON” This Advortisoment Authorized by THE BERMUDA GOVERNMENT, Scnd for FREW do tuze Summer Tours booklet to FURNESS BERMUDA LINE 34 Whitehall St., New York Tel. Bowling Green 78OU jardens, sports, but they produce sound itisenry,”

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