The evening world. Newspaper, March 7, 1922, Page 2

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, 1922. THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAROH 7 tans te aelier-eomptete inden ’ “ATH EAVING PRINCESS FATIMA, i cM SING f Ou RY STARTED GERMAN iNVENTOR == ONS ESET LEUNG, RSS RASS [SE TU 2a, qlariberoush Military Barracks. The six counties would retain the they how ponsess, having their own legislature, functioning sim- ilarty to the légisiatures of the Cana dian Provinces or the States in the States, with certain restric- Thus, any act passed by the Legistature, if contested, would eventually come before the Supreme Court for all Ireland on tho question of its consonance with the Constitu- TD PLEASE BRINGS ¥ ment on Fund Commission ‘The ‘Civic Guard” is the title given ~ * the new Irth Free State police body Starts Conflict. which ts to replace the Royal Irish —— Constabulary, it was announced to- day. The main part of the show- grounds of the Royal Dublin Society at Ball's Bridge has been taken as temporary headquarters and training omntre until the evacuation of the Phoenix Park Police Depot and the gressmen to Appointments May Now Be Settled. — By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, March 7 (Copy- right, 1921).—President Herding and ‘The total strength of the force out- tion meanwhile, will be 4,000. BELFAST, March 7 (Associated Press).—Rioting in Hanover Street this afternoon resulted in firing into a crowd by the milftary, killing two Smoot and Burton’s Appoint-| Great Britain Cares For “Sul- DAUGHERTY CALLED IN. Question of Eligibility of Con-| Weinberg Tried to Sell Great NO BIG DIAMOND tana,” Now Impoverished and Disillusioned. $ Y NOW SOLVED. MYSTER Gem for $350,000; Best Offer Was $25,000, Her dream of an American pare- dise ended, Princess Fatima is going home on Friday. The “mystery” of her visit was cleared to-day, while Weinberg, who intggduced her to FROM U.P. SCHOOL, inquiry Into Absence Shows He Lost in Speculation With Failed Firm. PHILADELPHIA, March 17. — Search is being made for Walter A. Unger, clerk of the U, of P. Dental School, and for $150,000 ‘In bonds which were supposed to be in the strong box of treasurer of certain University funds, It has been. re- ported that Unger was a stock market operator and had an account with a firm that recently failed, In connection with the missing te- curities, $12,000 in cash belonging to $150000 GONE TOD More Than 44,002 Bodies of Sol- diers Have Been Returned to the United States, WASHINGTON, March 7. Official figures of the War De- partment show that 44,085 bodies of American soldiers have been returned to the United States, that’ 1,108 more are to be sent home, that 479 have been or are to be sent to foreign countries, end that 31,400 are to remain in * Europe. There are 640 graves not registered. ‘Tho total deaths in the Ameri- can Expeditionary Forces, includ- ing thos> on transports, between bed 1917, and Dec. 31, 1919, were Kee the present time the bodies remaining in Europe, which in- clude some yet to be shipped home or to other countries, are distributed as follows: France, 31,796; Great Britain, ee gium, 424; Russia, 85; Ge BY MADOO INTO GOTON EXCHANGES Complaints of “Bucketing” ‘Cause Banton to Request an Investigation, Chief City Magistrate McAdoo be- gan to-day, at the request of District Attorney Banton, an investigation into the transaction and disposition of busi- ness on the Cotton Exchanges of this efty. , ‘While the American Cotton Ex- change, of No. 82 Beaver Strect, is the direct subject of the inquiry, this institution is not named in the papers which have been placed before Magis- trate McAdoo, The papers are a series of complaints to the District Attorney Nary bill appropriating $350,000,000 fer ents in All Countries to Protect Process. LONDON, March 1, Herr Prueckner, noted Germam ~ Inventor, has discovered synthe- tic coal, he announced In an in« terview with the Daily Chrom- ical’s Munich correspondent. Prueckner is seeking patents i every country in the world for his process. He ,declared the necessary minerals were to be found in all countries, and that the cost of production was aur« prisingly low. IRRIGATION MEASURE, $350,000,000, REPORTED Senate Committee Acts Faverahly on McNary Reciamation @ttl. WASHINGTON, March 7.—The Me- the fund had been drawn by Unger | @nd Luxemberg, 30; Italy, 203 | 6 tne «bucketing’’ of orders and al- development of irrigation and reclaima- and wounding another. The|the Senate are in the midst of a con-| president Harding, ocoupted @ cell in . Spain, 1; Albanla, 1. Total, ¥ “ln tae Tord Mayor announced that the im-|troversy which may result im an um-|4 Brooklyn jail. The British Gov- on the day preceding his disappear-} 32 954. leged irregularities in transactions tion, Including swampland draining, ance, on the alleged pretense that it and methods on the part of members reported favorably to-day by the “\written amendment to the Constitu-|ernment ts helping ber return to as wi he’ of the Exchange. Irrigation Committes, tiom amd may vitally affect the con-| india, for which she will sail, dis- aati for theschool payroll. The investigation was held in the} ? , i. : —ke—_—_—_—_—_ stitutional system in the future. appointed, disillusioned, and de-letal city place that samo “upsct’| Vt" mney nor Unger ap: basement of the Criminal Courts | the University, it was said. Unger was formerly an errand boy in the Girard Bank and is said to have SHOT WRONG MAN, A sub-committeg of United States | ceived. Senators has just ruled that Presi-| ~The Princess has gone in a few value on it named by the Princess. It is reported that eventually she re- ceived an offer of $25,000 for tlic stone, Building, there being present morc | Saag than 200 cotton brokers and their at- torneys. Among the latter were . both Mr. . wer arena a ere on the New York Cotton Exchange, v beanye'gg eager “vn cyanea ata bie She atl {iret opened their doors|that with his approval the relief Tee ce ie of ae nally meee in vba about $15)/iut Mr. Marsh said this was impos- get tired of eating the! be ((Continued From Page. Congress required confirmation by the/to the duk princcas with the{amount asked had been lowered from| police Headquarters, aye - M., that he wanted to see Henry|sinie of determination. “We've tried ase , baad > |q@enate, did give the (mpression of a|sapphire-studded nose. In all her| $5.000,000, and said he viewed tie AC atmineHaplatitnertan aris 35vaus: ted to mend. fon shalt severe), times and had’ to) give iit!’ some old things day afe| aivil office though it probably ditfered| vicissitudes of the last few months, | Dill as It now stands “quite a reason-| prominent citizen, a price of $8 | police, ‘but Mr. Bagel, a good-huc|oPr, RO added. "Wa have not the ye enforce. -|Fatima has never once thought of| ble” one. “The bill more nearly i i » 5 “hu-! same control of members as the New SE eI te Te aera {tata had in inind, He ‘wae aaked| parting with the Blue gem that adorna| meets my approval than any: other| (41 ® quart for Scotch and gin, |mored man, liked by all employees, York: Stock Exchange has,” terday. With a bottleof Rane ee as te oR TE Ihab bern by the President Yor an official opinion.| her rather large right nostril—the|™easure submitted to me,” he as- eis fgain rate of |thought he could get the boy away| «why not legislate?’ the Court dent Harding's appointees to the Al-| months from the splendor of a White Med Funding Commission, namely} House reception and auai-| sentative Burton of Ohio, are ine! gible to hold office on that comm! sion because of @ constitutional pro- | east vision which reads as follows: “No Senator or Representative/tion found she was neither a part of shall, during the time for which he}, movie stunt nor ® bogus princess. was elected, be appointed to any efvil office under the authority of the|The story of how she came from United States which shall have been| Afghanistan with the curious expec- created or the emoluments whereof] tation of a grant of land from Presi- shall have been increased during} gent Harding to make a home for her retary Hughes, to side poverty. the squalor of | orous. twenty minutes, day or night, the jines must provide..enough cars to train. are the same except that there must not be more than ten-minute f{nter- such time.” The sub-committee hokis that the appointment of Senator Smoot and Representative Burton is to *‘a civil Office’ which has been created during the time for which they were elected. machine-gun fire. The gunmen rapid- ly took cover amé casualties therefore were light, if any at all. ACTION IS TAKEN TO GIVE SEATS 10 Legal opinions galore are belng quoted on both sides of the question, and when Attorney General Daugherty went to the Cabinet meeting to-day he gave what he termed a ‘‘curbstonc opinion” to the effect that he be- leved the office was one which hardly three sons, how she hoped to sell a big diamond for $350,000, how she fell into the hands of impostors and finally became a charge upon the community, dependent upon charity, is now told for the first time. Fatima, ‘Sultana of Kabul," landed in New York eight months ago, ar- rayed in Oriental splendor, When she sails, the three princely sons go with her, but the family jewels and ALBANY, virtually put the seal of his approval to-day on the Brundage bill now be- fore the Legislature with American | Tegion appropriating | which she declined. ‘ By this time the hotel proprictors Senator Smoot of Utah and Repre-| ences with the President and Sec-/ and other creditors had become clam- | Wednesday, The Princess seemed to have no other visible means of support The United | shan the sparkling stone. ve States Government wpon tnvestiga-jmond was attached—not once many times. (Copyrighted, 1992.) —_— MILLER APPROVES $1,000,000 AID BILL. Relief of Disabled War Veterans by the State Cut From $5,000,000. March 7.—Gov. indorse-nent, So the dia- Miller but Then one of the sons negotiated a loan of $2,000 additional on the stone, which is in the keeping of a trust company. been advanced rapidly, The theft was diseevered last when a committee of the trustees opened the strong box. All of the securities with the exception of three mortgages had been stolen. Unger was not bonded, the Board of Trustees having made him Assist- ant Treasurer at the request of Vrancis B, Reeves, Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Reeves, who is Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Girard National Bank, is seriously ili jat his home in Germantown. BOOTLEGGERS NOW ORGANIZE TO BOOST | PRICE OF LIQUOR |Police Say They ‘Are Helpless, as the Plotters Had No Hooch With Them. SPOKANE, March 7. BOY SAS, AGERE BY HS DSHSSAL (Continued From First Page.) the boy from having scen him about the doorway during luncheon hours. Although Karp had been dismissed on Feb, 11, after about a year’s em- ployment, he refused to accept dis- missal and worked another week thereafter, quitting then of hia own accord. He lived at No, 639 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, with his mother and sister, who told the police to-day that he was mentally unbalanced. He left home early yesterday saying he was going to look for work. He went instead to the building in which the Engel & Kraus firm is located, and George Gordon Battle, representing a committee of members, and State Senator L. M. Black, representing claimants against members of the ex- change. It was announced by Magistrate McAdoo that he would hear witnesses and that counsel would be heard, but that there would be no cross-exam- ination permitted. The question of immunity, he added, rested with the District Attorney. The first witness called was Arthur R. Marsh of the board of managers of the New York Cotton Exchange, formerly a professor of literature at Harvard. He described how cotton was traded in on the exchange. About 85 per cent. of the trading, he said, ‘was im futures and about 15 per cent. in speculation. His chife testimony on the New York Cotton Exchange who had not an abundance of mone “He should have at least $50,000 free capltal before starting in to trade,"’ he explained. “In other words, the game is s0 was seen several timex during the : ara wtae could come within the meaning of tho} good part of the royal wardrobe B In:deflancesof the laws awainet. (dae dangerous,"” commented Magistrate Constitution, since the action of the| wi remain behind to be squabbtea| $1720%000 for relief of disabled World © laws against /day. a guspected fromfhis actions 2CAdoo, “that producers ought not Funding Commission would after all be the action of the President. He ad- mitted, however, that the fact that ALI SUBMAYS equipment, without forcing rouds into bankruptey. The general standard for subway and “L” lines is that during every This ia not « Mew question. It came up during McKinley's Adminis. tration when Scnator Hoar argucd that Mr. McKinley was wrong in ap- pointing members of the Senate to negotiate a treaty. The McKinley ac- headway between trains but varying the number of cars to a treaties at the ‘There was a disp Arms Conference. ite at the time as to whether Mr. srding was violatin.s the Constitution, but It was insisted that stnce the members of the com- @ission didn't require confirmation Ly the Senate and didn't receive any " The general rules for surface lines last days in America in a rather com- se Pin : 4 to-day held in Jefferson Market Court | made no denial of his identity. He TOMATO KETCHUP, a could be called Ain- Justice Platt of the Supreme C * oe 2,5 of -|™ Ht lp gael ou "| fortable little two - room - and - bath| tn White Pluins has granted wn intere| cde OF S000 On tho chargo of homl-} von tid Muller it was he who had WRECKS 2 TOWNS Now, however, the desire of Mr. Harding stili further to please Con- @reas by giving the legislative branch of the Government a voice in the ne- gotiations whereby payments on the allied war debt interest and principal are to be arranged, has developed an laid dows that “standing passengers must not be carried in buses.” Chairman McAneny sald: point where we shall be justified in New York Bureau of Missing Pr day dented that she had turned him phich ¥ planers much stronger measures than | unforeseen conflict of opinion. Tt I8| wiut she wanted. She did so and| ‘Thomas Hell, an mventor connected |to fl the relatives. of Jack Seeney,(from the house. She said he was al Warrensville, 8. C., two small cotton} f! 3 FX te metal erin Teal Naan specaidie in the immediate Ri party. orcka enticed &| the letter was forwarded to the State | With the automobile trade, who took an | thirty ‘sold, a painter, who was|quiet boy who had nover been in any| mill towns near here, early to-day ers aa al ieee te . @ first place, toward get-| however, ond revolves entirely upon] nesartment mt Washintgon. dome| Verse of veronal tn hls apartment at] asphyxiated accidentally with @ girl| trouble, Many house were Wrecked, Gilg, Weaadlalae atin theo Recap! the Interrupted etand-| the question of whether the American] imeiat in Washinton wrot | the Oakdale, No. 36 West Soth Street, | Known as Dora Cunningham, last night,| Mfr, Engel, who was reputed to be 3 id . constitutional cystem will permit close | |), hi Ti . 2 junday night, was said to-day by Mrs.Jin a room at No, 20 School Street, en ire, made his home with nado was accompanied by a heavy rain fhe services, A considerably further in setting up|co-operation between the executive AMiia cevetenant ould see hee ai fo Us cs deneee, Newark. i Pin ae dane ‘at the Hotel | The Joss of life ts reported from Lang- | gOTCHRISS.—At his home tn New ” ws The will of Herbert C. Cl 7 —— Hes % ley. | Gity, Monday morning, March 6, iprctarte Soe US ree sam enid| arn erparation aus. intendan tv thal ® rant ee tape glod om Feb. 20, slveg Na entire estate DOMESTIC Herkeley, Tah Street and Columbus "Fire communication is interrupted |p. 'taloved musband ot Allee 6. strwee fh ‘in. ‘O’Ryan’ “in addition to pie de-| fathers of the Republic. The cece Wasa there Pigeatbgs to his friend, Jennie M. Kimball of No. Avenue. Ho was @ 1 1@ ut-j/and information is meagre. Langley | and father of Florence Strong Hot : sqme mistake Is and wi termination te get better service un-| Should the sub-committec’s report to his wifo because he had been slack Stickney: City Physician, |Cultes with any of his employees. | Warrensville is em Notice of funeral upon arrival of der existing conditions, ie the fact|be ignored oy the Senate itself there| «nought she could fix things up satis. (estranged from her. for twenty-five | jas inited te cealiae her ainbition to be: | ii# firm has been long established in _——__—— | Hotchkiss and Ors, Bhlermana that there oan be no permanency un-|is a strong Probability that members| ractorily. The Washington authori-|¥ears He gave nothing to three sons| come the first woman yor of a New|thw manufacture and Importation of | DECISION RESERVED IN “DURA- | purope. til we change the old order of things} ot the Senate and House will serve! ties heard no more of her until she|®"¢ & daughter. England city. As the nominee of the| lace trimmings for women’s wear. BLE DANES" ANNULMENT SUIT. | gy:ane—March 5, Eddlo O'Hare, and do away with any motive on more often hereafter on executive] appeared upon the scene one day, ac- Park Commissioner Gallatin sald to-| Republican Party in Saco, Me., she was > In the suit for annulment brought by | son of Bridget O'Hare. part of any oper @ agency to|comminsions and particularly in the} companied by the bogus naval officer | 487 % new site would be chosen for the | defeated by Wajter J. Gilpatrick, Demo- BITTEN BY DOG FEB. 20, Pete Hartley, the boxer, known as the{ Funeral at tho residence of his atster, skimp service.’ negotiation of treaties, Weinberg, the “unknown” Crowp nasnees oe wenciee observatory in| crat, who served Mayor in 1911. CKJAW TO. D. "Durable Dane," inst his wife, Marie | 70th Street, at ¥.30 A. M. Thurs Transit Commissioner Harkness to- Rice arama Prince of Egypt, immaculately dressed | tur Mihe Belvedere Brent struc} Mra, Lola ‘T, McKiever, heading an in-| DIES OF LO! DAY | Eisenhardt, Hartley's real name. belus | rch, Requiem mass at 10 A, 3, day made public eater fo Des Bor ARTHUR BALFOUR —a silk topper and arersitioacaad Rese pent te omens see could eat|dependent ticket, was defeated for — Eisenhardt, Justice Glegerich of the Su-| from the Blessed Sacrament Church, witz, President the treet DEFENDS COALITION Merchants’ Association of Brooklyn, which is to have a meeting to-mor- row ni inst the over by a lot of disappointed creditors, including the managers of some of New York's most fashionable hotels, wem that gave Broadway and Fifth Avenue a real thrill last summer. Since last November she has been cared for by the Salvation Army for a time and since then by the Travel- crs’ Aid Society. The British Government was finally Fatima a sort of British subject, it was the duty of Britain to send her home. So during the latter part of her stay in New York she has been the ‘‘xuest of Great Britain.” The British Consulate here has supplied her with funds, and she is living her apartment in a Lexington Avenue boarding house, Princess Fatima brought to Amer- ica a small amount of cash, She had @ plan of settling down on a princely estate somewhere in the United States, and had an idea she could get Central Park and thought that all that was necessary was to ask for that if she could see the President she the three sons. The Princess at that time was a sight for the gods. The weather in Washington was some- WORLD NI Secretary Dr. that i¢ would deface the beauty of the knoll ‘A seven-story bullding wii be put up serted. War veterans. He said the measure had been sub- mitted to and considered ——__—__ » ST. AUGUSTINE EXPE DENT ToO-monROWw, ST. AUGUSTINE, for this city, Fla. President Harding ts exp Washington to-night on a special train according to information LOCAL. locutory decree of divorce Zella ©. Corby against Robert L. Corby, of the Vletschmann Company and part owner of the Corby Baking Company of Washington. No alimony ts stated. Adolf Loreng will hold bis last elinie at the Health Departinent, No. 605 Pear! Street, on Friday, March 17. TS Prost. March 7.— ted to leave to Mra. Yeast 676 Riverside Drive, and leaves nothing EWS combinations in restraint of trade, to say nothing of the Volstead Act, bootleggers of Spokane have three quarts for $26, was agreed upon, it was stated. American whiskey and fancy liquors, it was explained, would some higher. The polic& said they were help- less in the matter, since the members of the associated retail bootleggers of Spokane, as the IN BRIEF J., at 234 Street and Sixth Avenue, was Arthur Reavill, fifty-two, of No. 15 Kosciusko Place, Brooklyn, a workman at the factory of the Royal Baking Powder Company, No, 539 Kent Avenue, fel! down two flights of stairs at the factory to-day and was killed. His neck was broken. The Newark police to-day asked the Mayor of Bath, Me., by one more than an even thousand votes by former Mayor Joseph Torrey In the annual city election. The vote was 1,339 to 338, that he was armed and warned mem- bers of the firm, In the meantime he was concealed on the seventh floor. without causing him trouble and went out to talk to him. Karp stepped into view, and according to some within hearing, said: “Put up both your hands! What did you make me lose my job for?’ While Mr. Engel was raising his hands there were three shots, One bullet struck him near the was carried to the New York Hospl- tal, a short distance away, and died ten minutes after reaching there. Karp came back to the sceno of the shooting shortly after 8 o'clock last night. Patrolman Muller discov- ered him skulking in a doorway and placed him under arrest. The youth shot “the fellow upstatrs."* ‘When arrested Karp had, gripped in his pocket, an automatic pistol con- taining four unexploded cartridges. Muller twisted Karp's wrist and got possession of the weapon without fur- ther trouble. The boy's mother, In Brooklyn, to- most good nature and never had diffi- Lad Attacked When He Went er a Baseball im Yard. Joel Erhrenkranz, fourteen years old, to play the game."’ The court sought to learn the amount of business transacted daily asked, and there was no reply from Mr. Marsh. “Couldn't the information be ob- ined from a clearing house?’ the agistrate asked. “A clearing house couldn't be insti- tnted until it was made impossible for the largest amount of cotton traded tt here during a day was about half a million bales. The annual crop, he went on, was from nine to sixteen million bales. a TORNADO KILLS 6, South Carolina Communities Iso- lated and Information of Casualtis Is Meagre. AIKEN, 8. ©., March 7—Six per- sous were reported to have been killed by @ tornado which struck Langley and has a population of about 2.000, while preme Court, the Bronx, to-day served decision. Hartley admitted that he knew of his wife's first marriage In 1914, but thought it had been annulied jht to protest , . where in the hundreds—it was mid-|at No. 447-449 West 49th Street by A. died in the City Hospital to-day from|Mrs, Etsenhardt testified that her hus- “ ooke of the Sm™% + trotiey|Country’s Interests Best Served) juiy—put the Princess had on go|l. Erlanger for the building and More) The trial at Waukegan, Ill, of Gov |lockjaw. He was bitten by a dog, when| band told her he had “fixed up” the line. by It, He Says at much gaudy and gorgeous raiment |!me of theatrical equipment. It will|Leo Small on charges of conspiracy to|he went into the yard of the home of|annulment of this first marriage. She Commissioner Harknys wrote that z Ys that as she swept from the Willard|°Mt#in @ complete stage, to be used|embezzle State funds was postponed) Frank Clements, No. 85 New Street, in| gave her present age as twenty-three, no decision has been reached to scrap Luncheon, Hotel lobby to a waiting automobiie| {0% Fehearsals and the assembling of | until April 3. pursuit of a baseball on Fob, 20, - which would have made her fifteen at the Smith Street line, but that the! ponpon, March 7 (Associated |S8he.looked for all the world like a|*°7e': Shipments from the United Staten ot| The boy lived at No. 3% New Btreet. the time of the\frat ceremony. was that no one had a right to trade| | | | 0" d business ot y @ive. every one. a seat, or give the}:ien has been tuken as justification |Comsulted and the tntimation was) received here to-day. His train is| Organization termed itseif, failed |heart and the others went wild. As Fe eee etenes Mts ie : . maximum service the line capaeity|tor appointment of Senators Lodge | broadly given both here and in Wash-| scheduled to arrive here at 10 o’clock| to atke with them samples of |his victim sank to the floor Karp es-| answered, i everything tastes good | wit permit Service at different} and Underwood to the executive) !mston that inasmuch us Afghanistan | to-morrow night. their wares, caped by the rear stairs. Mr, Engel] Later Mr. Marsh said he thought , hours: should -be.varied not by de-| commission which negotiated the|W&! 4 British protectorate, muking —eEeEeE— | CUTLER,—OTIS IL CUTLER. re- | sy “Nothing to eat but food”, That’s the way you sometimes when you Heinz Tomato Ketche up on the table it’s » different story—your appetite takes a spurt, and eating is a joy. DIED. ‘The funcral services of OTIB H. LER will be held tn Christ Chureh, fern, N. Y., on Wednesday, March 8, and Helen Hotchkiss Ehlernann. Street and Broadway, Interment at © Cemetery, Auto cortege. report of the engineers suggesting the line be eliminated was made pub- le for the purpose of getting criti- cisms and suggestions looking to future decisions. The meeting of the association is just the sort of an ex- pression of public opinion the com- mission desires, said Mr. Harkness, A reception will be given to Mrs. Wil- Mam Atherton Du Puy of Washington, National President of the League of American Pen Women, by the New York Auxiliary of the leazue, at the studio of Miss Vera Simonton, No, 24 East 40th Street, to-morrow evening. Anthony Viskwolich, No. 547 West 39th Street, Willlam Froelich, No. 2396 Second Avenue and Joseph Cippollart, No, 466 West 33d Street, were dis- charged nm Yorkville Court to-day when arraigned on suspicion of robbery. ‘They were arrested Saturday on belief arma or munitions of war to China nave been prohibited by President Harding In an official proclamation issued in ac- cordance with a joint resolution ap- proved by Congress Jan. 31, 1922, Bonds and other negotiable securities, valued at more than $150,000, have been stolen from t Thomas W. Ev museum fund of the University of Penn- sylvania Philadelphia, Walter A. Unger, assistant treasurer of the fund, is being sought by the police in connec- tion with the case. Preas.)—Sir Arthur Balfour deciared|Talnbow ship in full sail. ‘The most aaa marvelous part of! er costume was Tee tae eerie ever im the Pere lan exceedingly short skirt beneath the ; . flowing outer draperies, which ex- ‘I am emphaticaliv of the opinton| posed a wide expanse of cerulean blue that the country's interests are best | cotton stockings. served by tho Coalition,” he said, in ad-| What she said to Mr, Harding dremsing the Carlton Club at its lunch-| About the grant of land is not known, eon in his honor. He would remain a but in any event Fatima returned to member of the Conservative and|New York empty handed and almost Rei cee ae empty of pocket. ‘This did not alarm . her. She had brought with her the This was we Arthur's first public} great diamond which had been in her since TETLEYS + Makes good TEA.a.certainty Lost, FOUND AND REWARDS Si, March J, below 44th st. & strin Real tea strength combined 3 KILLED, 9 HURT IN AIR TANK BLAST ut ‘pink crystals. Buitable r Isworth, 142 B. 18th, N. ¥. Olty, Soeeeeseeas appearance the bestowal upon! family for centuries that they held up and robbed Michael with perfect flavor and clear, him of the Order of the Garter, Bir i : Dempsey, cashier for Hornthall & Com- Explosion in Kansas City Car Barn | Laming Worthington-Kvans, Secretary |, Weinber® took & great fancy to the| pany, undertakers, at No, 697 Lexing- FOREIGN. deep color—these are the for War, presided. diamond and entered into a contract|ton Avenue. Mr. Dempsey stated that reasons for the popyarity Tears Out Wall and De- |e. with the Princess to “‘sell and con-|none of them figured in the holdup. Three German states, Saxony, Bruns- of Tetley’s Orange #ekoe. waite Gack. MAYOR'S SALARY BOOST |?" the stone. The contract stipu-| ‘Tne Hotland-amoric, Lane eteareahip wick and Thuringia, contemplate estab- hing # union to further their common | lated that he was not to sell for less} Ryndam arrived from Rotte " Ma | KANSAS CITY, Mo, 1 Rotterdam to-day S mPtCMe! Eeveuth Avenu, Wee Avw Tork, J: amo! an : H interests without impairing their sep March 7.— PASSES IN SENATE |tnan $850,000, ‘With that tidy sum three and a half duys overdue. Capt-| arate independence, @ccording to Dras- Tetley’s Orange Pekoe Three men were killed and nine in| 9 = a Ah the Fri ce alt phe might buy that |Willlam Krol said tne weather was|den cables. In 10c, quart d, N “ mu FP 15,000 te) princely eatate—if she so wisned—or | stormy most of The ti ue and it was one he st from the Aqultania on | half-pound and one- Buses Cee » soremronne v7 tank at $20,000 a Year. that she might convert the 260,000 of the hardest voyages in his experi-|,A%,ne mroned from ine Aauitania on saad the Kansas City way Company's! ALBANY, March 7.—The Senate to-| Sold dollars {nto @ million or so In- | &"ce alias Rocco Drippo, wae arrested | edvertised In The World or reported yarn ‘here expteded thig morning | day passed the Downing bill intended | dian rupees, return to her native! Joseph Brown, twenty-one, French special police on # charge fo, te “ast hat Feund Berea.” Room Twenty feet of brick wall of the! to increase the salary of Mayor Hylan |®ate- and live happily ever after West 63d Street, died at warded from America of having cot 290 Wesld, Bat ine, Sih be Wate plant was tore out and many strest| of New York City from $15,000 to $20,-|_ "he diamond, however, did not find pital today, froin a ie ‘ teem at any of The World's Office care standing on nearby tracks were | oo...) vs We) ready market, nor did the diamond {19 nook Hey , “Lost and Found” advertisements derailed The wi apprainers of this intensely commer- | . vs ; ‘ 1 cam be left at any of The World's ea eae pees 8 ey Advertising Agencies, or larly the Aveniit, Harvisin, nai ‘ felechoned. ditectiv. te The Werte, WARD OFF PNEUMONIA | #4 to raise the salary of te Presidg Nee Deed Net Mase a ota ey w Orie HOM & ies. ‘T suet in me hte 6 Board of Aldermen trom $5,00 vo Cali 4000 Beckman, New York, oe 10,000 & year, Brooklym Office, 4100 Malm Taves « red gull beyond recqgpition, Get rid of your ¢old end build Waking Father John's Meaicine.. te shen vou fee! the. fi Cold coming on.—Advt, tre aay i ote \ 4

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