The evening world. Newspaper, September 26, 1921, Page 2

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i progress against the inner steel. “$50,000 IN JEWELS ‘BELOW “DEAD LIE.” Use Acetylene Tanks to Get Into “Strong Boxes” at No. 64 Fulton Street. with Expert burgla Acetylene tanks in the Mond and platinum dealers’ building fat No. 64 Fulton Street got away yes-] Yerday with loot that may amount to} more than $50,000. It Included im wash. Detectives who were called sever! hours too iate have pieced the story together from the evide found. Th> building is specially de- + gigned to resist burglars, locked doors |! olosing the entrance to cach separate | floor from the stairway, There is a watchman who comes ,on duty at 6 P, M. and leaves at 6 in the morning. The building |s occupied exclusively Dy jewelry firms and their safes are gaid to contain wealth aggregating $1,000.000 vr more. "The burglars are believed to have Ridden themselves in the building be- fore it was closed on Saturday, It is ‘also believed that they obtained in advance the information that would gave them from working on the wrong eafes. ‘They went first to the tenth floor tackled the stairway door. They removed a wire glass panel, went @hrough and replaced the panel. On floor they appropriated acety- e tanks from tho platinum firm of sting & Kruger, also an asbestos working ten-story dia- t Then they went to the eleventh floor burned open a big safe In the of & Kaplan & Co. diamond ters, where they got $3,000 in ey and a wallet belonging to G. L. yusman, a diamond broker, who bad it for safe keeping. Tt ts not yet known what the wal- t contained, but Kaplan sald Hous- m usualy had $50,000 or $60,000 Worth of diamonds in it. \ In another room of the Kaplan est thing in burglar defiance, a bar across the door, a time lock fireproof steel inner compart- ta. Tb. burglars burned off tho bar una hinges, but could make © pian sa. $260,000 worth of dia. were thus saved. And at 8 jock this morning the Ume lock ed the safe just as if it had ver been attacked. _ The burglars went back to the @enth Moor and burned a sufe in tne} ¢ effice of Ginsbrg, Waltre & Dimen- |1 join, They cut a small hole In the compartment, big enorrh to it a hand, and aro believed ty Wwe got $10,000 worth of d amonds The safe has not yet beeu roughly examined. Ita time lock wuld not work this morning. The firm received a letter from the ym House Saturday announcing arrival of a $25,000 shipment of These would have been in the e safe but for the fact that Mr. insberg decided Saturday afternoon shipment. Robert Woodward, an employee of huler & Weisz, across the hall the Ginsberg offices, went to an emergency order for a $2,000 celet. He sald he heard a noise the adjoining offices, but paid no ttention to it. At 11 o'clock he heard shout from the street, looked out and wa man making signals to som in the building. The police b e the signal was a warning to the t © pursuit. plan office which defied tho best rts of the burglars had been ht at auction, Kaplan has been ald that a new sate will cost less tne repairs needed on the old ‘fone. “But I'm going tc have the old one red,” he said “It's some safe.” H —>_——— ' AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. } AQUEDUCT RACE TRACK, N. ¥., Gept. 26.—The entries for to-m faces are as follows: TOW's | Chive-vear-okis and up hoags | mx Howe, wy Cour V 126) 3057 A. Ham 10T ) Je 12) *Wermenwond 13 SARCOND RAL toree-yuar-oxe and i; one mile and on aixtoenity Home Wi al x those we | Cate Aicork..! Terinacene 108 ) Awtectous . Teo Poet vem. 104 Sy EVES Ting; maiden flies; two. fie. fuclor Hore Wt, Intex Hore we 6 pane . 13 dé Rel Lis bas rae mats rrreenanle Dalkey Piola ovnier. 116 Ae 2 aT Frum dew Tyr Padeone Harridan Sait Wester! 1 yrarclde and up foiverm, ile Soar ¢ er wi, cece Index 12 revolver fully londed with one cai ridge dented but not discharged was found at his feet when Poster picked Ho said the rooms of the “Land Servic TAXI BANDIT SHOOTS VICTIM, N WILD AUTO CHASE Police Fire Twenty Shots at Robber Who Got resist, to- 73d and Second Avenues, and robbed him | of about $700 in bills and allver coin. After that tho robber got into a wait- drawn boxes. and the man fir the young man's left cheek. ‘go bathing Instead of calling for |h:ghwayman to | Bandits $75,000 HOLD-UP IN GRAND CENTRAL FOLED IN BATTLE (Continued From First Page) fainting and there were wild reports that they had been struck by bullets. The shooting was clearly heard on the main floor of the station, flights bell commuters stairway. The way against the human striking right and left with came pouring up stream, their re- volvers and fists and kicking, though | hand to stay | g ho one them In the melee The who had a man of the who was In the Lewis ran with the money ter te Mr. him up, The man suid he was Arthur Mal- loy of No, 241 East 6th Street, “an looking for work.” x-serv man he had an appointment at three w, and In leas time than} it takes to tell [ta swarm of excited the escaping Landita fought their been felled by tay was sclzed by Bergt. 8. A. Fos- New Haven Ratlraad po- room In which A an organization which undertakes to find farm work for former soldiers |and sailors and has rooms on the ny of the station, According y the two other men were ire 1 by him as having hung | around the Land Service rooms and Were amon. those who have been making collections from passengers | Jin the subways. | ATTACK 1S SECOND MADE ON NEW HAVEN CASHIER. Shay was curried to the emergency hospital In the ‘Terminal, was at the surg imtendent @G, where he pspie. While his wound Super- Wilkins of the Terminal, EB Miles, Chief of the Terminal police, and a number of the lawyers and other officials of the road crowded about and congratulated bim on his nerve. He was taken to Flower Hospital to have the bullet removed | from his shoulder, Shay" Is reet, Tarrytown, nded by Dr. vn dresse i J. a home at Main lle was formerly o8 | | 4 pollceman at White Pains and only recently returned from Porto Lice where he was a demonstrator for the Porto Rico Automobile Company Two weeks age he was licensed by’ the State Boxing Commission as an in- structor in boxing. He is twenty- even years old. Mr. Lewis, who Ives at Stamford, was attacked in the same way by three men on the sam Noor several months ago, ‘The special policeman with him caught two me running away but they. v ble convince a jury that the detectives re mistaken in their dentity, ESCAPES I $700, but Only Chauffeur Is Caught. A highwayman who did not hesl- tate to fire when his victim tried to y held up Michacl Ma- chacek in an alleyway that runs from First to 74th Strets, between ng taxicab and dashed off. i Machacek, who lives at No, 1350) Plant thers Is a sisaller safe, the} yiret Avenue, was taking tho $709 | and $600 additional in checks in two | to the Bank of Burope | at 74th Street and Firat Avenue for The latter is manager of | the Bohemian National Hall in 73d Street, between clgar box iis father. First Avenues, and nf the hall, The money represente: Street a man sprang at him with revolver and demanded the Machacek clinched with him id, the bullet grazing The shot caused him to fall the taxtoab, 4th Street. In less than two minutes Detect Clarke and Patrolman Wing of the) Kast 67th Street Station, who were al 4th Street and Seoond Avenue, had cqmmandeered a cab and started In The chas in a commandeered cab, and fo! nearly half an hour the pursult lasted, the police firing about twenty shows at the fugitive. The chase ended a Fifth Avenue and 65th Street, where two men leaped from the fugitive car, took another and escaped, All th police got was the chauffeur of thi highwayman's car. He sald ho wai Joseph Nolan, of No, 401 West 64th Street. He dented all knowledge the hold-up, saying he had been en gaged by two men who leaped from thelr fare Two revolvers were found in the cab, his car without paying |TAXI FARES ROB CHAUFFEUR AND CUT UP HIS TIRES| Take Every Cent V Has and Then Disappear in Broadway. | After driving fve men ground for| several hours in his taxicab, Ralph/| De Mura, twenty-three, No. 836 “ast! Stores Opened for Liquor stopped by thetr order |in 98th Street, between Broadway and 118th Street, Amsterdam Avenue, early | They anked the amount to-da: of the bil and when he told thom §12.80 they all inughed. and Second } als) proprietor of a cinema theatre on 74th Street back and drop the boxes, the silver in one of them scattering about tho alley. The Instantly grabbed the cne containing the bills and what re- mained of the ailver and dashed off which was walting york at 7.30 o'clock Sunday morning | with engine running at the curb in went through Second, Third, Park, Lexington and Madison Avenues and most of the side streets between 7éth and 65th Streets. A detective and patrolman followed covered they had cut holes ln his rear tires as well as his spare tire, to im- | pede his pr —— WOMAN ROBBED BY MAN WHO GAVE HER “LIFT” IN AUTO Declares He Took $250 Fur and Money, Then Pushed Her Out of Car in Central Park. A young woman describing herself as Miss Bessie Winter of No. 160 Bast 118th Strect, ealeswoman in a Fifth Avenue department store, went to the West 100th Street Police Station at 7 A. M. to-day and told a story of being robbed in Central Park a short time before. She sald she started to work about 6.30 and while walting at 110th Street box office receipts. and Fifth Avenue for a bus a ma As the young man was about to/came along tn a limousine a of- emerge from the alley into 74th | fered to take her down the avenue. She ignored him, but when be turned and came back he seemed so kind she accepted his offer of a lift, as no bus was In aight. She said he drove down the ave- nile a few blocks -nd then shot the car into Central Park. Before she could protest they had reached a part of the road that goes through a short tunnel, and selzing her by the throat he demanded her valuables, at gave him a $250 fur neckplece and her purse containing in change, whereat he pushed her out of the car and drove away. Her story was t{bcrne out by bruises on her neck. —— THREE HELD FOR ASSAULT ON BRIDE AND ROBBERY. Perd tt Attacked While tn Hallway of Her Home. Magistrate Sweetser in West Side Court to-day held three men without hail on @ short affidavit charging erim- {nal assault upon a young bride and | Without ball on a charge af robbery, {rhe woman, Mrs. Dermott Perdisatt, Is at her home, No. 7 Ninth Avenue. seriously tl) Policeman McAvoy told the court he noticed Mr. and Mrs, Per- Mra, 8| four suspicious men. The polleeman saw the four follow the couplo into the|® School of arithmotic that I was Cherries enough fe 700.000 quarts | f}balway of thelr home and lock tho| Bever privileged to attend | of wine or brandy arrived in 9,500 | _ | doc MoAvoy opened the door with al “The record of the Republican! kegs from the Mediterranean on one | skeleton key and with revolver in one| Administration is clearly established _ ®hip yeaterda Z hand and flashlight lowed. He over in the other f found one of the men standing Pentisatt with & gun pointed at the husband's head. Mrs. Perdiaatt was lying on the floor a short distan away. McAvoy let looms with night stick and revolver onthe intruders, One of the men escaped. Thomas Shortell, tw est Sth Bireet; J even, No. 628 West James Avenue, > PROHIBITION DEMORALIZING LEGITIMATE DRUG TRADE len @ Menace, Says Ansoctation ATLANTIC CITY, wholesale and retail | being demoralized | Individuals who shops in order to intoxicating Mquors, Sept, The 26. drug business y it by an Invasion of establishing dmg are L. D. Sales said is | age in the sale of | STATECONVENTON OFDEMOGRATS BOOM FOR AL SHIT Country Delegates See Him Logical Candidate for Governor Next Year. Alfred E, star of the Democratic State Con- in 1 th vention in the Hotel Commodore this rmer Gov. Smith was afternoon, and the proctedings re- solved themselves, to into a demand that he be the 1 great extent, andi- date for re-election as Governor in 1922. Incidental to the reception to the ex-Governor the convention had on hand the business of nominating a candidate for Judge of the Court of Appenis and adopting a platform of principles for the State campaign in answer to the Republican platform adopted by the Republican State Con- vention at the behest of Gov. Miller. Preparation of the platform mpeded by objection on the part ot William Church Osborne and other up-State leaders to an expressed de- termination on the part of many del- egates to declare the party In favor of a plank advocating the repeal of the Volstead Act and the Mullan- Gage Act and the enactment of legis- lation to permit the manufacture and sale of light wines and beer, Tho objecting up-Staters were willing to indorse a denunciation of the Mullan- Gage Act and the methods by which It fs being enforced, but manifested fear of the enmity of the Ant!-~Saloon League. Ex-Goy. Smith, as temporary Chair- man, delivered the principal address of the convention. He was greeted with a great burst of admiration ana good feeling expressing itself in cheers. Charles F. Murphy was also accorded a warm welcome when he answ his name on the roll call of delegates. Mr, Smith devoted himself to ar view of the achievements of the Dem- ceratic Legislature and administra- tions of recent years and an analysis of the Administration of Gov. Milley He declared that the Democratic Legislatu ‘wo years In the past twenty-five wrote in the laws the only construc- uve legislation that has been enacted in New York State in a generation. He listed as among the accumplish- ments of the Democratic Legislature alification of the Federal Income indorsement of popular election of United States Senators, enactment of the Factory Code, creation of the Child Welfare Board, preservation of | the People's rights in State water | power, passage of the Banking Code, pabsage of the Direct Primary Law and the Workmen's Compensation | Act, reorganiation of the Health De- partment, promotion of agricultural interests, enlarged programme State highway construction and re: habilltation of the State Barge Canal. The ex-Governor charged that the Republican Party has turned | private corporations and repealed welfare acts passed by the crats, He declared that the allega- tions of economy made by the Re- publican platform and the Governor | of the State are without foundation, | ‘You will note."he sald, “that the joriginal claim or a Demo- | claim made by a | paper of this city, only this morning, of $10,000,000 and an actual claim by In convention the Republican Party | of the Dante Aligher!, which arrived }of only $9,000,000, The fact ts that from Naples Saturday, and announced the appropriations for 1920 amounted that they had seized harcoticn, moatly Vito 2 3, cocaine and heroin, worth $26.00. Ong to $145,219,906 and for 1921 to $148, Ch nas been made, but the name of | 717,0 a difference of $1,592,881.) the prisoner has not been made public en aie eee Anybody who can nmke this differ liaatt wern followed to thelr home bY | ice $9,000,000 or $10,000,000 attended | didute for Mayor in New City Albany.” ‘The following committee frm was selected Edward J, Mo Goidrick, Chairman; Jamea A. Par sons, William Church Osborne, F ), Brady, Norman EB. Mack, National Committeeman; George RR. Namee, Thomas F Smith, Bernaré Vause, Charles E, Treman and Danie! ehan, At 2.30 o'cioek the conven tion took a recess urtil 4.380 o'clock. At the opening ‘of the the outstanding candidate for nomination of Judge of the Court o1 Appeals to oppose Judge who was nominated by the Republi in Saratoga last on plat | cans Frank Irvine of [thaca, former mem which was in power only | of} the shel the same time stopping the car. She| water power of the State over to| saving to the) \owever, had been sufficient for all {taxpayers of $66,000,000 by the cur-|4 don life belts. jrent Administration has shrunk to a| Republican news- |by the fact that we have presented tu us the spectacle of a Republican cane re- pudlating the policy of his party jo ter Van convention | the Andrews, | week, were Joseph A. Kellogg of Glens Falls and LUNCHROOMS GET OVER 200 PER CENT. AVERAGE PROFIT In Some Instances, Massachusetts Armchair Meals Yield 500 Per Cent. Clear. BOSTON, Sept. 26, Average gross profits of over 200 per cent. have been made by armchair Junch rooms in this State, the Commission on Neces- saries of Life reported to-day, In some Instances the prdfits have | run as high as 600 per cent, DOCTOR DESCRIBES INJURY THAT CAUSED ATTEMPT TO KILL PILSUDSKI FAILS Companion Wounded: by Shot and President Takes Him to a LEMBERG, Sept. 26 (Associated Press.)—Gen, Joseph Pilsudski, Presi- Baia) cea dent of the Polish Republic, narrowly (Continued From First Page.) fy ihe witness at Frank ‘Dominguez, Arbucklo's chief counsel after a long fen of tilts between them during questioning by the defense attorney. escaped death by assassination here jast night. THe was entering an euto- mobile in City Hall Square on his way to a theatre after attending a banquet in his honor when three shots were fired at him, Gen, Pilsudskl was not Injured, but Count Grabowski, who was accompany- Many of the restaurant pro- The morning after the party the|ing him, was wounded in the leg. ‘The prictors, replying to question. ‘°48€ Wa sturned ovr to Dr. M. E, Rum-| president directed his chauffeur to naires, said their prices were so Well, according to Dr. Bardsle, who] drive to a hospital, and, after being as- fixed as to represent a gross "id he did not tell his conctusions|sured that Count Grabowsk!'s wound profit, of 100 per cent, As the bout the patient's condition to Dr,| Was not serious, Inslsted on going to Rumwetl, pecause the ik the theatre us he had tntended. He average has been found to be Fumwell, ecwuse the latter did not ; Jee ask bim, Dr. Bexedslee saia he was|®9 enthusiastically cheered by the much higher the commission has ioe ay ‘ qudienoe When he entered, now determined to extend the © Merely following pr Jonal custom | phe would-be assassin attempted b s ‘ope of its investigation. and that he would have passed on his) suicide, but was arrested before he 15 POUND TUNA FISH HELPED IN RESCUE OF 9 FROM DROWNING Bottle of Scotch on Fishing Boat Helped Some in Bringing Round Famished Men. | A fifteen-pound tuna fish that re- fused to be landed without a strug gle was indirectly responsible yestor- day for the saving of the lives of nine men, whose boat had sunk ten miles off the Rockaway coast, mile and a halé from the AmbrosesLight- |Slaughter, but Arbuckle said “That's ship. ‘The nine, struggling in the @li right; I'm ready to go ahead water and buffeted by waves, who, Without them.” ‘The case, however, had been in the water nearly half an information had it been requested Mrs, Bambina Maude Delmont, who swore to the complaint accusing Arbuckle of the murder of Miss Rappe, uiso will be a witness to-day. Mrs. Delmont was the companion of Miss Rappo at the party In the Ar- buckle suite at the Hotel St. Francis at which the girl is sald to haye suf- fered fatal injury. Arbuckle acted as his own attorney ney+ were not in the higher court when the comedian was arralgned on the Grand Jury indictment for man- was put over until Oct. 3 on account SIX CITIES IN ments were h represented could end his own life, io NEW JERSEY FIGHT TEN-CENT CAR FARE. Railway Company Seeks to Enjoin bic Utility Bor ‘ON, N. J Sept 26,—Argu- ard to~lay In the Federal pplication of the Public THE: Court on the | Service Railway Company for an in- in brief proceedings In Superior Court | sanction raining the State Public which preceded to-day’s resumption| Uulity Hoard from interfering with of tha murder hearing, His attor-| the collection of ten-cent fares on the lines of the company, Six Now Jersey municipalities were by counsel, who argued Utility Board to permit the that for the collection of a ten-cent fare would be a violation of the contract between municipalittes and the pany providing for @ five-cent fare. The the hour, were rescued by Francis Rich- es the murder hearing now in prog-|cities represented were Newark, Jer- ardson of No. 115 Napler Avenue, |T€88, and Arbuckle later was taken and Diente ESTE, E Ree e Richmond Hil. The rescued are: to Judge Lazarus's Police Court, vita Were submitted to show Alfred G, Newman of No. 187 Frost| Where & large crowd awalted the in August, 1921, gver tile Street; George F. Newman, same ad- | dress, his son; Frank Nill, No. 238 | Jolnson Avenue; George Schmidt, No, 179 Skillman Street; George | Schmidt jr, same address; Joseph Smith, No, 137 Devoe Street; William McNulty, No. 644 Linden Street; Robert Dorr, No, 821 Metropolitan Avenue; John Hofsoff, No. 737 Met- | ropolitan Avenue, ali of Rrovl: Mr. Richardson, with Willlam | Schaffer, a butcher of Richmond Hil; Michael Steckenger, a friend named Rider of Danbury, Conn, and Mr. | Richardson's son were out for tuna fish in Richardson's forty-foot motor boat Bear. The boat was built fur |tough weather and for blue and tuna fishing. She was headed for the Seventeen Mile Bank, as a fishing hole is known, when trolling for blues one of the party got a strike and found he had a tuna, The boat was being manoeuvred to | land the fish with one of the party} standing up, He sald he saw a man's hand up a distance to the east. The | boat was headed in that direction and | in a few minutes the Bear was on the crest of a wave a half mile off where the nine men were struggling in the water, Fishing for blues was turned Into a | fishing party for men, as lines were cast overboard and one by one the nine exhausted men were dragged | into the Bear, “Thank Providence I had a bottle | of Scotch whiskey aboard which I) had been saving for an emergency,” | suid Mr, Richardson, telling the story | to-day. ‘They were Ii and I shot that whiskey Into them.” i The boat which went down was the motor boat Us Boys, and originally had been a lifeboat of the steam- ship Bremen. Fitted with a motor and carrying a ton of ballast, she started out from Canarsie yesterday with the party that was rescued, In charge of Hofseff. The heavy | weather opened ams and the siyescued people sald she filled and sank in five minutes. The minutes, | | —_— \ m Ship. acting on a this ch | Narcotics on Ital Custom ‘House agents, tip from their associates in Ital, afternoon completed a careful sen -my! fluential. A boom for Robert J. John- stone, for twenty years the head of the Appeals Bureau of the District Attor- ney’s office of New York County, flourished for a short time. Mixs Harriet May Mills, permanent chairman of the convention, in a speech following that of ex-Governor Smith, who sounded the campaign keynote tn an address as temporary chairman, }launched a boom for the renomination of “AL” After commending the Dem. ocratle party, State and National, for its efforts In behalf of yotes for women Misa Mills gaid: “When Alfred E. Smith was Gover- 1 1 |in connection with the death of Miss | sador | vere | Anderson | asked opening of the sesston. “We are satisfied with the progress made," declared District Attorney Brady. “I wish to impress upon the public, though, the fact that we are not trying to ‘hound’ any man or at- tempting to force a conviction of a| person on any charge. All we are try-| ing to do in this case is to get the! truth and punish those responsible for | Miss Rappe's death.” Other prosecution witnesses Mr. Brady expects to have take the-stand lata to-day or to-morrow are Miss | Blake and Miss Zey Prevon, who were guests at Arbuckie's party. Brady expects every woman witness |‘ for the prosecution to be thoroug!ily cross examined by Arbuckle's torneys. he screen comedian his’ sixteenth day as a prisoner in the Hall of Justice, where has been held s nice his arrest on coarges. fs spending Rappe. eee gia ie 50 ROBBERIES IN 10 DAYS STIR L. |. NORTH SHORE, Robert L. ¥ supery on Appenis to Nassaa ors for Protection, bandits have Gangs of become 20] ]daring along the north shore of Long Island, not even waiting for nightfall to hold up their victims, that Robert Low Bacon, of Westbury, son of late Robert Bacon, one-time Ambas- | to France, ppeared to-day b fore the Nassau County Hoard of Su pervisors and asked for adequate pro- tection of the region, which has severui | fashionable colonies ‘and many wealthy residents, Mr. Bacon sald that an attempt was made on Saturday night to hold up 1 the C. Rumsey, the polo player and seu tor, but that he escaped by speeding up his car and breaking aw stretched across the road, The Supe visors promised to consider Nr, Baco request for the Installation of a tele- | phone system by which news of rob. | beries might be sent to Mineola, Fifty | | robberies have taken place in the coun- trooper additional n sworn in, ty in tie last ten days, State now patrol the roads and deputy sheriffs have SR OSS WORKMEN JOIN WOMAN the Slip at Fifth Avenne With $50 Booty. well-dressed N. T. Tate, Blouse Shop, Avenue, sive stockings “for a girl.” He Gives Them A young man saleswoman in the No. 624 Madi- to show him same expen- The kind hand, ao be} silk blouse. | son he wanted were not on for un expen Mrs. Tate went to another counter to wet the blouse, leaving her cash re«- | ister pa: open. She turned around and saw the stranger helping himself to some $10 bills, Then he dashed from | che place with Mrs, Tate after him | blowing 4 police whistle Madison Avenue at that point is be- | ing repaired, and at the whistle, about | ve twoscore workmen joined In the chase, head: ya traf’ policeman. They ran after the fugitive as far as Fifth Avenue and there bh them the slip, with his booty, to between $50 and $10 HOW BANDITS ARE HANDLED IN CANADA A MODEL FOR N. Y. Mech, Sept, 24— hen Judge J. Coughlan of Sand- wich, Ont., sentenced Louls Mor- amounted DETROIT, nor no measure to help the worker, to ald the unfortunate, to protect the interests of women or children failed of his active support. When he is again Governor in 1923 we shall once more see the human side of legislation made prominent In Albany.” ft Two of them jabbed him with what! to-day at the annual convention of the| bers of the up-State Public Bervice The endorsement of this statement |appeared to be revolvers, and one! National Wholesale Druggists’ Asso- | Commission, Townsend Scudder of Wa# enthusiastic and unmistakable, fous Held on Attempted Extor- | gaiq: “Now come across with your ciation, of which he i President. : igereis i was the high spot in t ‘oceed~ tion A reed Nassau, and Justice Victor Dow- ings Qh 95,000 bull each to-day charged with | MAke any noise, either. he wai Phe p cnosarions and | Friends of Justice Dowling said’ ho opened the prooenaings With an Ar #eno, general agent of the Bpantsh and put 68 centa in change back 19) nor made to benef the pubilc but solely Justice Henry V. Horst of Amster- called attention to the fact that this Zola Mad Bicsmabip Company, ‘Tie | Ba eat to enable these houses to build up saiex dam refused to allow his name ty was the first old-style convention , ‘ : | We'll take that, too." sald ons) of sume: vo) to Mfy for th efore the co! held by the Democrats of this State ink fou in thet ry . ume qual r the; go before the cor ntlon ¥ . Pry sath go Lo paid torvarres | bandit “We spent & lot of tnoney | stl of Intoxteating liquors. hare Was cor for many years and that !t waa made nd with that Inu letter sent to Laano ‘ sol] in abnormal quantit ne . me: a4 ent prior necessary by a law passed by a Re Int! (hatmoney or threatening him | AP4 wi! Good It during the week.” | bition lee plucod ‘upon to the calling of the convention for publican Legislature and signed by a ith death, | So they wot tint, too, Wart a eae ety viveat demand in return {the endorsement of Judge Andrews, Republican Governor depriving the lo remain until they were out of | full and adequate protection from the| but this was confined to up-State peoola of the Bias. of the ciate to right, they disappeared in Broadway, Gevermont that the law may be en-| aiiegates from localities in which “‘fecty nominate at primartos ca: Tr mere?) Whon he tried lo d:ive away ¢ ais- forced and the good name of the trad: broserveds" Democrats are infrequent and unin- | aus ee for the bench and State of. and, twenty-three, former Ameri- | can soldier, and Walter Good- | child, twenty-four, to forty lashes and ten years’ imprisonment he inflicted the most severe sentence for assault ever passed in Canada. It was the first ttme that lashes have been imposed for assault in Canada Morand, who wore the an‘form of the United States Army, and Goodchild broke into the home of | John Clee, a farmer, sixty-nine years old, near Amherstburg, on the night of Aug. At the point of pistols they compelled the aged man to show them where te had stored one case of liquor, They then handcuffed him and dragged him into a barn while using the deeade, Mr. |° ate | I B month of “L ieee tear TOTAL OF JAPANESE IN U. S. INCREASES 53.8 PER CENT. In ‘fen Years Their Numb From 72,157 to 111,010. WASHINGTON, Sept. population of the ased 33.8 per cent. during the last which is more than the com- ied increase of all other peoples, na- tive or foreign born, the census bureau wnnounced to-day, In 1910 the numbered witile. the pls at 11110, 106.710, yer. Ave 26.—The Japa- ne United States iner 62 Numerated by the 1 rosed of 3 per 8 per cent. ive whites number 81,108,161 n born whites total 13.7 de the white t and BY 7 epee RKS DOWN TO .875C., NEW RECORD FOR LOW. Open To-Dny Nearly Half Cen Lower Than Saturday's Clone. At the opening of business in Wail Street thix morning the marekt for German exchange showed conside * weakness and the Initial quota- tion for imurks was 871-2 one-hun Iths of a cent, a new record low quotation. On Saturday marks closed at 92 one-hundredths of a cent. The previous low record quotation hundredths of a cent Wh the land finest tea butts of their weapons on his bare head. rallway com- | * The all-Ceylon Tea POT of steaming proves that Ceylon is Seeman Brothers, Ine. Propristors of White Rose Coffee TIED UP GASAGE MAN, ROBBED HIM OF $47. Auto Bandits Do Not Gag Victim, Relying om Speed to Make Getaway. Five men drove up tn a tourlag car te the Jackson Heights Garage ‘at JackBon Avenue and 22d Street, Eim- huret, at 3 A. M. to-day and asked Edgar Krachina, the garage keeper, for gasoline. As he started for the tank four of the men selzed and tled him with ropes end going through his pockets took $1 They showed no revolvers and did not ang him. After they had gone his erly were heard by Policeman Duffy of th: Newtown Station, who released him FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH Four centuries have passed since Ponce de Leon sought the Fountain of Youth in America. Of course, his quest was in vain, but, could he return today, he might fare better, For, like millions of other seekers after health and happiness, he could visit the CHILDS restaurants, And there, with pure, whole- some food, renew his youth like the eagle. Pure milk, luscious fruits, sue- culent vegetables “rich in the mysterious, youth - restoriny vitamines. lAdvt. on Page 10 Notice to Advertisers Tou MSOs ah ee a ee kN eee et pty’ Seat ais ment oh aacetionorers: unt. tect tlhe omitied as con the order of Jaren order provided” abs | Barn discounts of wie, cau D THE WORL ite Rose where the grows.

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