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>eSEDY DAVIS HERE + INMOVE TO AVERT GREAT COAL STRIKE cepeaion Anthracite Miners Likely to Join Bituminous Walkout April 1. | TIE-UP NOW SEEMS SURE. Neither Side Appears to Be Violently Opposed to a Shutdown. . Strong prospects of anthracite min- ers joining bituminous workers in a walkout on April 1, to-day drew Secre- tary of Labor Davis to New York, where anthracite miners and operators are in wage conference. “ “I shall not in any way interfere the work that is now being Gone toward a settlement of differ- jenees,"” Secretary Davis said this afternoon. ‘‘My function as a Gov- ernment official is to let them work a it out themselves. Should they fail ¢ then I shall take part in a purely 69 advisory capacity, but that is all.” nl Up to this afternoon, Secretary th Davis had not communicated with of the officials of the Miners’ Union an concerning the proposed conference, < Philip Murray, International Vice ie President, said. His proposal to hold 2 @ conference was considered by Mr. Murray as unlikely to' remove the he difficulties between the anthracite op- ore erators and miners. ha The conference was temporarily ad- te journed to-day while operators con- sidered the demands of miners for a ae wage increase, extension of the eight- ty hour day and the check-off system. of Operators will present their counter gn Proposals, expected to call for wage : juction instead of an inc:case, to- se Ww. — Dr. F. G. Davis, an observer for the Government, to-day asserted that a brief shut-down is certain because of the fact that the miners, after re- ceiving the operators’ reply, cannot take action in less than four weeks. This action will be by referendum. A short strike will not ineonveni- ence the public, he said, as a seven- weeks’ supply of domestic coal is and even more ‘of a buying stam- shortage. pede could cause The miners, Dr. Davis said, would welcome aNshort lay-off as a vaca- tion following a year of steady work. The employers, too, judging from the view of those interviewed to-day, would not in view of the recent slack in the coal business object to a shut-down of short duration. NEGRO SENTENCED TO 40-YEAR TERM Jenkins Convicted by Two Juries of Robbing Drivers of Taxicabs, James Jenkins, a burly Negro, thirty-six years old, living at No. 70 fest 133d Street, will have until Mon- to put his business affairs in shape preparatory to a forty-year so- Journ in Sing Sing. ae He was convicted by two juries to- oto Bi aay of highway robbery as a second ®* ff offender and will get twenty years on 18 Hi each conviction. His specialty was to hire a taxicab and rob the driver. He was arrested by Detective Miller, who was‘killed by Luther Boddy the Negro. ees EX-COP ON NOSE AND RAN; IS ARRESTED Row Follows Effort to Sell Bridge Stand Privile: Park Commissioner F. Matin has been for several days auctioning off privileges for conducting candy and fruit stands In the parks. The last of the six concessions to be sold to-day covered the stand conducted now by Alexander Howrt, once a police: man and the terror of Park Row push- cart and tray peddlers. This stand is the Httle triangle of sidewalk under the Brooklyn Bridge entrance. When a bid of $15,000 was offered, Howrl made a remark which was construed as un- friendly by the bidder, who struck the former policeman a blow on the nose, Howrl, with a shout of defiance put up his fists. His assailant, J. D. Antono- poulos, ran and was caught by Police- man Gleason on the floor below, but Gleason refused to make an arrest, not aving seen the blow struck. Howri re- to his rights as a citizen and in made the arrest himself. Gleason acted as escort to the Oak Street Station. All the bids of the morning were can- evelled on the ground of suspected tn- timfdation, collusion and bad faith and wil Ibe readvertised. Kisses “Kick Up” California Professor Says He Can Tell Extent of Vari- ous Kinds of Osculation. March 16.— kick up your W. Breit- of Califor- He SAN FRANCISCO, Kisses, some of them, jood pressure. So says J iser of the University ‘s Department of Education Measured the ‘kick.’ Given one man and one woman who I kiss, Mr. Breitweiser told the San rrancisco Advertising Club, he would jure the linear extent and milli- resulting mu Oe) EVENING WORLD TEN-SECOND NEWS MOVIES Ge) “Thrift is a habit. It_is also a matter of good luck.” “In order to save @ a man needs to have a healthy family and a thrifty wife.” EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAROH 16, 1922, “No man cai who io has a constant drain of doctors bills nh save “Every young man ee should have a good, solid foundation _be- and an wite.” extravagant fore he marries.” “He not trast fo natural abile ity, bat specialize along a certain line” shonkt GIRL ENDS LIFE j WHEN SWEETHEART DIES IN HOSPITAL “Cherie, I'll Look for You,” Stenographer Writes Be- fore Suicide. Miss L. Runkle, whose family lives at Washington, D. C.,, was found dead, sitting up in bed and dressed except for her outer skirt, in her room at No. 144 West 82@ Street to- A tube which lay over her shoulder and ted from an open gas jet showed how she had died. “Otherwise he will “Thrift is a habit “Sometimes the Sy a She was facing a dresser on vhieh find himself a cox in which one man out small-salaried oman stood a large framed photograph of the wheel when he ofa hundred ac. reaches the well-to- John de Bacourt, twenty-six, son of % 3 Assistant Professor of Erench Plerre ought to he _pros: do_ stage.’ de Bacourt of the School of Journal- pering.” ism of Columbia University, Young Thrift, With Luck, M akes- One Manin a Hundred Rich When He Is 65 Years Old And Luck, in Form of a Healthy Family and Saving Wife, Plays a Big Part in It, Says Samuel Milligan, Insurance Company Ac- tuary, and Has Figures to Prove It. By Fay Stevenson. Only one of a hundred men, al! starting at twenty-five with good health and equal opportunities, will be wealthy at sixty-five. This is a statement which has appeared in print from time to time, and frequently been on the lips of thrift lecturers, who point to the moral of “Save Your Money."* “Lucky one out of the hundred. How does he get that way?" ‘That ‘s what I asked Mr. Sam- uel Milligan, Assistant Actuary of the Metropoltan Life Insurance Company. “He gets that way because thrift is a habit,” replied Mr. Milligan, ‘‘and unfortunately It ts a habit which just about one man out of a hundred acquires. But Mr. Milligan broadly points to the fact that thrift is also a matter of good luck as well as being a habit. “In order to be the lucky one out of a hundred who actually be- comes wealthy at sixty-five."’ de- clared Mr. Milligan, "I think you might add that besides making thrift a habit a man ioust have good luck to succeed. By that I mean not only excellent business opportunities, but he must have a healthy family and a thrifty wife. The moment some men save a nest egg and plan to deposit it or put it into a business venture a doctor bill comes along which simply swamps them. Their fam- ilies are unhealthy and luck is against them. “Then, too, an extravagant wife can spoil the future of her hus- band and keep him from the thrift habit. You go to the average man who has succeeded in life and he will proudly point his hand to his wife as he gallantly says, ‘She helped me do it. If it had not been for her savings and careful watch upon the larder and house- hold expenses I could never have been where I am to-day,’ Then Mr. Milligan took out a chart, which he keeps in his office, illustrating the point that only one man out of a hundred, start- ing at twenty-five, will be wealthy at sixty-five. The chart shows the following results in epochs of ten years: At Thirty-five: 6 die. 10 are wealthy. 10 well-to-do, Blood Pressure And They Can Be Measured, Too The stolen kiss, The expert kiss of flirt. The soul kiss. . Brettweiser suld the Instrument he uses is so sensitive it will register the domestic kiss, the degree of frigidity in kisses one woman gives another she does not like, and so forth throughout all grades of oscu- lation Breitweiser calls his instrument the kissograph. He gets a man and woman who will kiss, he attaches wires to them, then they kiss. The machine acts automatically, He also said there is no difficulty in obtaining couples to carry on the experiments ‘The instrument is an adaptation of the spyhgmanomometer, which is a machine psychologists in criminology use to detect lies. the finished 40 live on their earnings 35 show no improvement At Forty-fire: 16 died. 1 wealthy. 8 well-to-do. 65 live on their earnings. 15 no longer self-supporting. At Fifty-fice: 20 died. 1 wealthy. 4 well-to-do. 45 live on their earnings. 30 not self-supporting. At Sixty-five: 36 died. ? 1 wealthy. 4 well-to-do. 5 living on théir earnings. 64 not self-supporting. “Probably one of the great rea- sons why so many men fall down, and only one remains wealthy out of the allotted hundred, is the fact that few young men realize the importance of a good, solid foundation of bank rolls before marriage," pointed out Mr. Milll- gan. ‘Once a man gets on his fect he can keep things going, but if he gets hitched up in his youth it is pretty hard to c&tch up to the game. His luck may be against him at all times, “Then. too, a young man should not trust to his natural ability. He must specialize along A certain line and become an ex- pert in his own subject. I know many men who might have gone ahead in life and been very suc- cessful if they had given thelr business extra study instead of just staying put In one place. “In order to be this one man in @ hundred who rises to the top, or even the four who are listed as well-to-do out of the set, a man must be on the constant lookout for new things. He can't depend upon past laurels. He must study and keep up with all the new in- ventions and modern methods of his time. Otherwise he will find himself a cog in the wheels at the very age when he ought to be prospering."” To illustrate how few men save their money, Mr. Milligan told a story of how a rtain concern changed its pay day from Thurs- day to Friday every spring and then switched it back aguin in the fall. One spring the auditor for- got to give the men notice that their money would not he given to them until Friday. As a result every man in the place was try- ing to borrow enough money for his lunch. “All the finest opportunities in the world will fail to make a man wealthy unless he acquires the habit of saving.” concluded Mr Milligan, “And that Is why, sometimes, the small salaried man gets ahead and reaches the well- to-do stage. I know 1 man who during the early part of his life never earned over $35 a week. To- day, at sixty-five, he probably draws a salary of $50, but he is well-to-do, He owns his own home in the suburbs, owns a car and has saved quite a nest ese “How did he get that wa: “He got it by saving, by having a frugal wife und a healthy fam- Ny of children who are all self- supporting and saving. just like their dad."’ M’NAMARA, BICYCLE STAR, NOW AMERICAN CITIZEN Winner of Six-Day Race Takes Out Papers Newark. Federa) Judge Cha F. Lyneh held A special naturalization court in New- ark to-day to wecome to American vitizenship Reginald James MeNamara, of Austrian | »wn to hicyele fans as “Riggie McNamara McNamara and Grenda won the re- cent race at the Garden and they will lenve shorily for P where they wil compete tn the blw six-day bluyele race. McNamara wished mpete under Americ! lors and the naturalization court wae held to make that possible. THUG WHO KILLED POLICEMAN TWICE LET GO BY COURTS Woman He First Attacked Said to Furnish Bail Bonds for Certain Prisoners. District Attorney Ruston is investi- ing to-day the circumstances in ich Anthony Rabosovich, the gun- man, who killed Patrolman John H. MeMail of the Liberty Avenue Station while in flight from the scene of attempted hold-up yesterday, obtained two suspended sentences on assault charges within thirteen months in Brooklyn. He is also making a thorough in- auiry into the activities of Mrs. Anna Moisshek of No, 266 Watkins Street, jrownsville, whom Rabosovich and a companion attacked, determine whether she figured in any way in obtaining or providing bail bonds for a certain type of Brooklyn prisoner The police records show that unde the name of Anton Robsevitch the assailant was arrested March 17, 1916, on an assault charge and given a suspended sentence by Justice Salo- man in Brooklyn Special Sessions. He was arrested again April 27, 1917, on a similar charge. This time Justice McInerney, in the same court, alse suspended sentence. The records show each arrest was on a warrant, but the name of the plaintiff or the nature of the assault was not stated MeMail was killed by F the latter was running fron of Mrs. Moisshek, No. Watkins Street, Brownsville, whither he had gone with a pal, known as “Casey the Cowboy,"’ for a purpose the police have not yet learned. Mrs. Moisshek is reputed to be wealthy. The police have two theories—on¢ that the intent of the visit was rob w an to bosovieh as the home bery, the other that it was to force he woman to return $20 which “Casey the Cowboy" is alleged to have paid her recently to get a bail bond when he was arrested for carry- ing narcotics and which she failed to obtain. District Attorney Ruston said to-day he intended to proceed against Ralos ovich with the utmost vigor and to the limit of the law, adding, “even if he is in hospital with what may be a mortal wound." “I do not know whether Rabosovicl had a permit to carry a pistol, but 1 shall find that out,’’ he continued “Judges and Justices of jurisdictions outside New York issue such permiis to persons they know or should know are citizens of this community. Some times the persons obtaining these per mits are aliens and sometimes they are former convicts. “It is high time the judic outside of this city should I issue of revolver permits to Ne citizens to the Commissioner ce of New York. I do not th Legislature ever contemplated, whe the law governing the carryir weapons was passed, that citizens 0! this community should be able t such permits in another county “The intention of my office is to prosecute a firm policy against sur yen, and [ do not intend that t) riffraff of this city shall go about « walking arsenals. Gunmen chall | remanded without bail pending mediate trial and, upon conyictivr shall be punished to the exten! the law, When the Kings County Jury dasembled to-day to report ip dictments, Judge J. Gratton MeMa hon, after referring to the killing of MeMail, said: “It 18 a critical hour in the alfa of our city when 1 officers ave 11 Gran kunmen, robbe burglars and murderers are floutin the law as perhaps never before in your lifetime and mine, We musi uphold the police. The policeman a@ witness s worthy of our belief Hu story should always be believed 4 against that of one guilty of a 1 crime. The Police D. men weigh t thy greatly underpaid when we duties they perform and they must accept." Business men and of the Brownsville plate organizing a benefit 4 ance at @ Brooklyn theatre ir of the widow and two « Patrolman MeMail stood that Mrs, MeMail js not happiest of financial circumat owing the recent ilinces o other res mee te | Slain Patrolman, His Children; Man Who Quickly Avenged Him Mr. de Bacourt died yesterday eve- ning at New York Hospital after am operation for appendicitis. According to Prof. and Mrs, de Ba~ court, their son met Miss Rvuaokle about two months ago at a ec lege dance. they understood, School of Bacourt was grea girl and they had WIFE SAYS DOCTOR SAW 100 MUCH OF Her brother is or had Leen, a student at Journalism, tly the Young de taken with the n much of each other. No engagement between them had been announced, but the de Bacourts were quite sure that their soa before long would bring Migs Runkle to them as his intended wife, She had visited the family at their home, No, 103 West 81th Street, with him several times. She spoke Fronelt and Spanish fluently and they had become very fond of her. Late last evening, Prof. de Bacourt said, Miss Runkle came to their home and said she had been at the hor ital and learned of John's death. She was in almost hysterical distress. Ths de 1 rts begged her to remain with them overnight, but she refused. She must see John's face once more she said, and arranged with them to have Mrs. Fettes, Brooklyn Heiress, Makes Charges Against Husband and Girl. Trial of a suit for absolute divorce brought by Mrs. Rita Hammerschiag Fettes against Dr. David S. Fettes of No. 1402 Avenue P, Brooklyn, was started to-day in the Supreme Court in Brooklyn, Mrs, Fettes named ax|his younger brother go with he: to corespondent Miss Ruth Hutchinson, |the undeptaker's at 10 o'clock to- lay. twenty-one years old, of No, 493 47th] The spread of eas throuch the apartment in which she had a 1.0m aroused other lodgers at 3 o'clock this morning. Apparentiy Miss Rv akle had taken bichloride of mercury ag well us asphyxiating herself; a bottle half emptied of tablets was found on the dress Under John de Bucor rt's photograph was a note “Cherie: 1 do not know where I will meet you; but I will look for you.” It was not signed, JURY RAISES HIS RENT FROM $25 TO $122 A MONTH Its Street, Brooklyn, who formerly In Fifteenth Street, in the rear of the physician's home and office. Miss Hutchinson, an unusually pretty girl, is making a separate de- fense against the charges of Mrs. Fettes. Dr. Fettes is acting as his vw attorney. Mrs, Fettes, rom her fathe in extensive 1 estate, lived who inherited $100,000 » Mark Hammerschlag, operator in’ Brooklyn and another $100,000 on Jeath of her mother, charges that ly in April last year the doctor vegan to waever in his loyalty for the first time since they were married on July 16, 1908, Miss Hutchinson, she charges, made long visits to his office, after having consulted him in his profes- sional capacity, and accompanied him to a house in Argyle Road and to the Hotel St. George, Dr. Fettes also calls, Mrs. Fettes Hutchinson's home, the wife's charges. Mr. and Mrs. Fettes have a son, David, eleven, and a daugher, Mar- “SS = 24-Room House, Near Vem Cortlandt Golf Course, Heres’ a case in which the Ju y'a sympathy went exclisively to the landlord, and Anthony Speciarteh, the tenant, who has been paying $25 a th for years, has got to mak+ if or else Reto! is a twenty-four Aver 1 made says, Both protracted at Mins deny all room house at and It use! to days of the old track. a Hyely Jerome Park i The owner, Saul Davidson, say. ought to be a money-maker now #! It Jjorie, eight. is tear the last hole of the Van Cotte landt Park golf course Counsel for the tenant sald the ee STICK-UP OUTFIT CARRIED BY SLAYER OF POLICEMAN It Is Dee lared the Most Complete Ever Taken From a Single Prisoner. ‘Tony Rabosovich, shot after he had slain Voliceman John H. Me Mull, had in his pockets hands the most complet up" outfit found on a prisoner in yours, according to the police. It consisted of One .4 libre Colt revolver, wo -calibre one One ¥ One ide (or, when mixed key, “knockout drops All the guns were r the safeties being weapon k jack, pair children which proved family resources tent to provide 1 for the widow was disclosed to-day when MeMail's comrades on thy 1 collection in heh: They were told om family large lertaking Was afoot and that anne \ few Ap $50 for Mrs collected to-day among pectators in the rooklyn. ntemplated honor to Cohen, hosevich. Mail ie the here in tne en montus Greene Avenue, en seven years on the blemish on fays It is er niedal of ninth disch: He nut a his r seven years old police neement of It would be lived at Brooklyn force record, aves a Widow and two girl The man who k scribed by the police as one alibre Leuger revolver aitomagics. 7-inch unused dirk of new handcuffs. vial of cocaine hydrochlor with whis ady for use off fund — of child eral of ce dis of the run formal made in MeMail wax lawyers New Jersey and Avenue also to present a wl of duty No. had wit and ten and 1 Me the worst of t new type of criminal, the beotlesger. He was literally a walking arsenal, and be sides being wanted for other alleged fenses here, 1s eaid to be suspected of shooting @ policeman in Boston > - TGBONE TURNS ovER, Two DROWNED, SATI, March 16. —1 w ar'y to-day Capt B ker of owp was drowned. FLYING BOAT IS OFF FOR NEW AIR RECORD What was sald by officials of the Avro Marine Flying Boat Corporation to be the longest flight ever attempted in this country was begun to-day. A slx-passenger boat left B2d Street and JENRIGHT’S LODGE back to this city. P. BE. Easter, Baltimo: 2. Hayens, engineer, and Lyman 1. Collins, passenger. The flight is ex- pected to take about two months, mee Rail BOSS BEGGAR EMPLOYED CRIPPLES AT $3 A DAY bul! ing is run down, hard to heat, and that “there is running. water only, when it rains, —_ UP TO DATE We know of three kirids of vitamines. Dr. Funk fount the “ Water Soluble B.” Dr. McCullom discovere-t another that he called “Fic Soluble A.” Now the English scientists have still another, labele:! “Water Soluble C.” is pilot; C. “No Permit, No Parade,” Said Policeman to Elks on Way to Initiation. ‘Atter: the police had. w talk A delegation of 590 members of to-day Cees | hrookivn Lope No. 2 ep, o, F,4With John Stefan of No. 419 Kast 22a] All three varieties are founct came out of the subway at Pulton[Stert. Brooklyn, who pleaded guilty to] in abundance in the PUR Street and! Broadway last night about| “{sTancy in Adams Street Court, they! fresh milk servedat CHILDS : FREES amires BN NOU] sald he confessed he had a man, two OOS ney) Were ee oir Wa9T vomen and a boy all eripples, working For health and leagevity, ai’'< to Union Hill to do the stiatory}for him as beggars and that he pald chould be riven s preminans ¥ for Lodge No. 1857. them $3 a day with all the whiskey place im the diet. and. beer they wished. While ining up In parade forma- When Stefan was arrested as he was tion for the march to the Coithundt]pinclng John Sehinchter, w blind, arm- e Street Ferry, a rookie policeman hap- [less and , ni ; Hoyt Stre the had tn pened along. He consulted his book iis pockets $63.92 In amall coins, $11 in nf rules and discovered that all par-[bIlls, two bank books showing large wit and a bottle. Sehlachter had iM s must have a permit ' t collections of a few hours. Frank Copper of Brooklyn The two were sent to Jall pending in- who got lost in the subway Neatinettion, where between Nevins St ir yn, and Fulton Street, Manhattan, to the new memb of the Police De- urtment who replied “No permit, no parade,” or wo lo that effect yes, refull Then the lodge members got im Fine tea leaves, ca : y patient and shouted for marching} ehosen and knowingly orders, The rookie policeman com manded: “If you guys inove, Ull lock blended, account for the ip the whole buneh, Guess Ill call perfect cup quality of the wagons now Exalted Ruler John FP. Lantey ap Tetley’s Green Label Tea. pr the policeman that his men a didn’t want to break any rules but he Tetley’s Green Label was quite sure Police Commissioner Enright, who if a member of No, 22, In 10e, quarterpound, half would allow the parade in an emerg pound and one-pound y of this kind. But it was neces- packages. ary to convince the policeman by telephoning to Police Headquarters 9 ind also getting in touch with the Comtaissioner, In jig time every- ing Was smoothed out and nobody was compelled to spend the night in a 1922 Worle Almanac, the ready reterans 3) cents ver cory on otande, Chis: $e conte ore Olly. Makes good TEA a certainty