The evening world. Newspaper, March 20, 1922, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

— eo — i | ' i } dmc ears { hi 18 FOUR-ROOM me a HAT woman in New York can iay out and de practical and convenien: four-room apartinent The Evening World, in a competitic: which opens 1» day, gives every housewife an opportunity to show what her apartment would be like if she had an opportunity fo dictate ils plan. The woman who furnishes the plan-found most acceptable by a jury of practical experts will receive an award of $50. The makers of the three next best plans will receive $25 each. The women who make the ten plans considered best of those semaining after these four awards have been made will receive $10 euch for their plane. The plans will be examined and prizes awaraed by a committe: made up of— r Miss Marcia Mead, Architect, No. 248 East 3 Miss Martha P. Sanford, Household Editor of the Women's Home Companicn Mrs. Christine Frederick, ilousehold Efficiency Expert All plans for the competition must be mailed or delivered to the Apartment Plan itor, The Evening World, on or before Frida March 31, h Str ater part of the population of New York lives in UCH the ¢: ments, And women do the work jn all of them Each one of these apartment homes is a sepirate comme dustrial estabiishinent. A woman is the general manager of it eral managers usually plan their places of business, But the apart- ments and apartment houses are ¢ slened by men. Men know little nothing of the operation of the busi ness of an apartment or of the doing of its work. How can they appreciate those fine points in arrangement that make the apartment more convenient for the woman who keeps it or muy Jessen the work she has to do? Every woman does know the things she wants in her apartment that will make it easior for her to keep it run- ning. She knows how big a kitchen sho wants und how the sink should be placed in relation to gas range and how both should stand with relation to lighting and how far the cupboard and icebox should be apart. She knows how a bathroom should be arranged so that all the members of the family may have most con- venient access to the room's appoint- ments, apart ial PARLOR 2) 12-0 * 15-0" And, above it, every woman knows just how much closet room she should have in proportion to the floor space covered by bedrooms, Lesides, she knows how to locate them for the sake of aecessibility and general con- venience. Then why shouldn't a woman de sign the apartment best suited to her own need: ‘The Evening World. offers to all of its woman readers an opportunity to show what they consider the most convenient four-room apartment, and will make cash awards for the four- teen best plans submitted There isn’t much required for this competition—a ruler, a pencil and paper and AN IDEA, It is the idea that is going to win the prize, not Just what is done with the paper and pencil, . When the husband has gone to business and the children are in school Is a pretty good time for the housewife to begin work on her plan for the competition. © e DINING ROOM at et To THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1922. What Woman Can Design the Best APARTMENT? $225 in Awards—and a Chance You’ve Always Wanted. $225 For Women Who Can Lay Out an Apartment. To the'woman who sends the best floor plan for a four-room srertwent to The Evening World on or before Murch 81 The Bre ving World is going-to pay an award of $50. . For the seeond best plan............... For the third best plan abby For the fourth best plan For each of the ten next best plans, each CONDITIONS. All the plans must be mailed or delivered to the Apartment Plan Editor, The Evening World, on or before March 81, 1922, Plans may be drawn to any scale, but the maker should indicate on her plan the dime of each room and closet and widths of doors and windows and their locations. Each plan to be for a four-room apartment, the total floor space utilized to be not than 330 square feet, the legal minimum floor area for a four-room apartment, No architect or builder and no employees of architectural or build- ing firms may submit plans in the competition. No employee of any edition of The New York World and no member of any employee's family may submit a plan. CHAMBER Ios rs" KITCHEN p48 DINING ROOM: (20"x 1720" PRIVATE SRE are two floor plans of four-room H apartments for typical building spaces. Competitors may lay out their floor plans on outlines traced from these designs or they may make their own original plans. It should be kept n mind, however, that in making room arrange- mente to fit the available floor space the shape of the buildings must be considered. The shap shown are thase which are typical of many New York houses, and tracings of the outer lines may be very convenient for filling in by the housewife making a plan for competition, They are printed merely as suggestions and for convenience of competitors. Other plans will be printed as the competition progresses, for the same purpose, PARLOR Weer nieea" CHAMBER Oreo" jpeech Failed Mayoras Woman Pleads for Girls At Hearing on Jamaica School Site, Mother Says He'd Use Auto. Up Hill legation of ‘There are printed to-day along with this article some plans of apartments, chosen because they are all of the four-room type and because they are for buildings of different shapes—the shapes that are mbst frequently met with in New York. Those competitors who do not care to spend much time on drawing may find it easier to trace the outline of one of these plans and change the interior arrangements to meet her ideas of the perfectly satisfactory apartment of the same style. The drawing, as has been said before, is not what is xoing to count. It is the ability to arrange for convenience. No woman need be afraid to sub- mit a plan. Every original idea Is going to be worth while and the prac- tical working housekeeper will prob- ably be most prominently represented in the st of prize winners. No womun need hesitate if she thinks she has an idea that is worth while, Plans may be submitted at any time before the closing date of the com- ition, If your plan is ready to- morrow, send it in, And if you have a second thought that you think is a A del nuwica culled on Mayor Hylan fo protest selected by th that women from Ja to-«lay nst the high school site Hoard of community, aducation for ents and other relatives of the pubils declaring the pa that the site was on top of a hilt and that to reach it required a half-hour Walk Up a steep pathway. It wasn't so bad for the but they boys. they admitted, did not intend that the girls should make (he elimty hetter one, send that along later. But} 9 you know why country boys be sure to get it to The Evening basen te ih ak ri World on or before March 31, 1922 Ge ae A DR RIDVON: -AMEML The plans will be examined and the i then answered his question by «wards made 4s soon as possible ufter the close of the competition suying ‘Because they run up and down 4 good many hills.’ The op: ————————__—_. .DRIDGE STREETS “sim Is|Ponents, called the “Board of Educa: DEAD. tion crowd," cheered at this “Jim,” seventy years old, known to all the residents of Eldridge Street, none of whom knew his full name or address, was found dead in the rear yard of No. 178 Hldridge Street to-day, The police reported nothing suspicious in his h “You wouldn't want to see your girl climbing half an hill, though, would you, Mr mended a soft the rear hour up a Mayor? voice from motherly “Wouldn't you--as you do carry her up in your auto” The M applauded Comptrotler Craig success, to have the Ti tion's selection of a rejected, Inasmuch us it does nto come within the “ten or the station'’ provision. But Hylan opposed this, and had his way Whereufon the women in the rear, or was speechless, but he RECOVER $175,000 LIBERTY BONDS TREASURY LOST Stolen Saturday, Located Sunday, rd of Back in Vaults To-day, W Arrest of Two, who were the most outspoken, de- WASHINGTON, Mareh 20 claved that ‘all isteut and dried’ and Recovery of all the Liberty |thut the Mourd of Education site will be the one built upon after all Bonds, amounting to $175,00 stolen from the branch office the Treasury Department Satur- day night was announced to-day by the Secret Servic O. Wamsley, a B. U. GAS ASKS MANDATE Seekn Release of ®2TI.41t ded by injunction, formerly 0) high school site fifteen minutes of Mayor FROM SUPREME COURT WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF LOCAL by Special Muster . ward Hermann, of -= tave Rickert, of No. nue, Jers Clty Former Gov, Jumes M, Cox of Ohio will be the princtpal speaker of the Na- tional Democratte Club at the annual Jefferson Day dinner at the Hotel Com- modore April 8. Friends of Capt. recently placed 100th Street Poll # dinner this Gabriel W Sta- Police of the Greenpoint tion, Brooklyn, whether it “Romeo” who ent of Isracl Cooper at No. Street, Brooklyn, quantity of powder Avenue were won was drug store 138 Franklin last nicht and atola a ed the Joseph ‘Thompson, command of West Station, will give him ning at Harlem Palace, Is, dealer in rare books, has paid $200,000 tor a new definitive de luxe edition of Mark Twain, PB. Collier & Son being the seller, according 10} Jewish inmates of Sing Sing Prison mmand of the [have received permission to celebrate q|the Feast of the Passover Sedar. The § Army placed 9,048 for- mer so! d swifors in Jobs last year in New Tork City A eulogy of American women’ for their Work in the World War will be held to- choice perfumery and face “Three-card monte operating on the ferry East 24d Street, Vi point Avenue, Brooklyn, Capt. John Holmes, inc boat. He snye that the men to stop the game rs have been boat vhattan beiween and Green- when he orde they told him: to mind his own bus Joe Cupolo, of No. 78 Johuson Ave Frank Yorimaus, forty my five, of No. %1i Jersey City, died sud- Boyle Belmont Av CHAPTER XVII. IN DRY VALLEY. KIRBY had been » properly authenticated detective of fiction he would have gone to his uncle's apartment, locked the measured the rooms with » found imprints of finge door panel, carefully into an envelope the ashes from the cigar his uncle, had been) smoking. ‘Lhe data obtained would have proved vonclusively that Cun- ningham had come to his death at the hands of a Brahmin of high caste on account of priceless gems stolen from a temple in India. On one of his visits with Rose to the Paradox Apartments for evidence they met James Cunningham coming out. “U've been sitting alone for an hour in the room where Uncle James met his death—been arranging his papers," he explained. “It began to get my nerve, I couldn't stand it any longer." His left arm door tape-line, on a gathered and hung limp, Kirby's RT By Willitm Modcleod Raine @utnor ef “THe Yuxon Trait’ “THe Bic Town Rounp-Up” ere. . @WILLIAM MACLEOD RAINE + DEVELOPMENTS IN THE STORY. eee LANE, rough rider, of Wyoming has come to Denver to see his uncle, JAMES CUNNINGHAM, a wealthy promoter, to tell Cunningham, for whom he has a violent dislike, what he thinks of him for having wronged ESTHER MCLEAN, his stenographer, a sister of “WILD ROSE” McLEAN, Lane’s closest friend, also a rough pider, who has come to Denver on the sanve errand, after leaving Cheyenne with a broken arm, sustained in a riding contest, Lane calls on his cousins, JACK CUNNINGHAM, a bond salesman, and JAMES CUNNINGHAM, an oil promoter, and tells them of his intended visit to his uncle in his apartment and his errand. Going to the heuse he Is surprised at the intense excitement of CASS HULL and his wife, in directing him to his uncle’s rooms. He finds the apartment dark, hears some one move, grasps a woman by the band and is struck on the chin ‘and knocked out. Recovering, he finds a glove belong- ing to “Wild Rose” McLean and a note from Cunningham's valet, HORIKAWA, saying the Hulls had catled and said they would return later. In an inner room Lane finds Cunningham’s dead body, bound to a chair, a bullet hole in the head. There is a ring at the door, he leaves the room by the fire escape and is seen by , CHUCK ELLIS, a reporter. Lane phones the police of the murder, The man described by the Hulls and Ellis comes first under suspicion as Cun- ningham’s slayer. The Hulls lie about the time at which Lane passed their door, but identify him and he is arrested for murder. A woman in black ints at the hearing, Lane identifies her as the original of a portrait signed ‘Always Phyllis” found in his uncle's rooms, Lane’s cousins secure his re- lease on hond and join him in his efforts to solve the mystery. Rose Me- Lean joins Lane and his cousins in their efforts to clear up the mystery and s her story to the Cunninghams. Her reference to the odor of violet perfume she detects in Cunningham's apartment appears to have much interest to the nephews quick eyes noticed it. I look like I could buy registered] “By your handwritin’. I've seen “You've hurt yourself," Lane said, |stock?” he asked sourly. three specimens of it to-day.” “Yes,"" admitted James. "My heel{ Kirby made a remark that sect the} ‘'Where?"* caught on the top step as I started to walk dow I've wrenebed my arm, Maybe I've broken it."’ The janttor of the Varadox came out and joined them. He was a little Japanese well on toward middle life, a smail-featured man with smail, neat feet. “You feelum all he asked, directing eyes toward Cunningh: “Yes, I've got ov thanks, Shibo."’ right yes now?" his slant, oval ” the nausea, ‘ames turned to the ranchman off. looked as though they needed water. Inside of five minutes he had heard the story of the Dry Valley trrigation swindle. : which welled out of him toward Hull, fine! Hull for it! he ¢ Hull “One at the court-house, one at the jbank that holds your note, an’ the third at the office of the ‘Enterprise.” You wrote an article, urgin’ the Dry Valley people to fight Cunningham. He said that the crops The death of Cunningham had not] That article, in your own handwritin’, apparentiy assuaged his intense]is in my pocket right now." hatred of the man or the bitterness} “‘You've got a nerve to come out here an’ tell me I’m the man that killed Cunningham Olson flung out, his face flushing darkly “I'm not sayin’ that.” “What are you ‘Cunningham got his! Suits me Now all Task is that they hang vindictively. doubt. whether ems to be some in’, then? others, ‘Shibo was at the foot of thé did it,” suggested Kirby, to] Shoot it at me straight.’ stairs when I cought my heel, He|draw him on. “If T thought vou had killed Cun gathered up the pieces. T guess I] ‘That so? Maybe there's evidence|ningham T wouldn't be here now. was all in, en't I, Shibo?"" you don’t know about.” The words} What I thought when I came was The Japanese nodded agreement “You heap sick for minute. “By the way, I'd kinda like to go over Uncle's apartment again, Mind if tT do? 1 don’t reckon the police ssed anything, but you can never said Kirby James hesitated. ‘'l Chief of Police not to in. Tell you what Vil do, I'M see him about it and get a permit for you Say, Kirby, U've been thinking one of us ought to g0 up to Dry Valley and check things up there. We might find out who wrote that note to Uncle. Conld you go to-day? Kirby could and would He left the train at Summit, a small town which was the center of activi- ties for Dry Valley There had been times in the past when Summit ebbed and flowed with promised the t anybody else rip-roaring tide of turbulent life. Now Colorado was dry, Summit was quiet as a Sunday afternoon on a farm. Kirby registered at the office of the frame building which curried on its false front the word HOTEL. This down to the shack which bore the inscription, “Dry Vailey Enterprise.’ The owner of the paper, who wus also editor, reporter, pressman, business manager, and circulator, chanced to be in printing some dodgers announcing a dance at Odd Fellows’ Hall, He desisted from his labors to chat with the strange Kirby found it no trouble at all to set him going on the subject of James Cunningham Senior. “Who killed hin done he wandered the editor asked rhetorically.. ‘‘Well, sir, I'll be daw if I know, sut if L was guessin’ I'd say it was this fellow Holl, the slicker that helped him put through the Dry y steal, ‘Course it might ‘a’ been the Jap, or it might ‘at been the nephew from Wyoming, but Til it was Hull, We know that cuss Hull ap here, He's one bad package, that fat man is, believe me Cunningham held out en him, an’ he laid for the old crook an’ got him Don't that sound reasonable to you” Swed got caught in that irrigation fake of “He's a big, fair fellow- Harry 0. Ay ¢ denly at the Public Appraisers’ Stores, in ut th yorhood No. 641 Washington Street, to-day. Rare eieie tis 3 ‘The cornerstone of the new home of RateeE ot Gane GhiieeTe ‘Temple Isracl on S1st Street, east of ine Leh Sid De He 5.000 in ets hiyae Broadway, w laid yesterday. werved decisio: c he did not] Plans are under consideration for new ike “thene : 4." and that [quarters for the Canadian Club. “she is better off than her husband.” _-—- The will of Riley W. Ross, fled for prokate io ihe. Aveviaeatey Coun DOMESTIC. Surrogate’s Court at White Plains to his . a x day, bequeaths $5 hh to three ehit ie fling of @ petition In bankruptey diper nd gives the remainder of «|i Boston by several creditors disclosed 0.0 sg remainder of the Tine fact that Burges $20,000 estate to his widow, who was wang & Co., Bos- ries second wits Wr WHO WOS Deon brokers bankers, were in trouble. ‘The liabilities are estimated at Fifty-one gowns, Valued at $2,000, | $1,600,000, were stolen between Saturday night and. Sunday atte sie ate URa, | New York State came protectors tn ‘ om the shop tthe fast eight 2,589 of David Weisberger at No. 61 West ast eight inonths prosecuted 2,589 Soh Stre . “* [violations of the fish and game laws with recoveries of 352,051, according to he Grand Jury returned an indict- [Announcement at Albuny ‘by Conserva- ment to-day charging grand. larceny [ton Commissioner Alexander McDonald. Arrested in conmection wiih the etlored | giZt® ,eatimnated at $250,000 reaulted building in McKeesport and for a the threatened the entir 5 located. ploy Buidw Mexander & block in which it *ascuale wenty-aix years ol¢ = Washington, was arrested by Se Wa ATON, Maret) 20. —The | uued' dome ny wen ale teats. 8 —- cret Bervice operatives in Che: vn Union Gas Company asked] ai Asal A Lk FOREIGN. lottesville, Va., and charged with | '! Hourt today to t wi ge of murder before Bu- | complicity with Charles A. Clev “ bie Ao fhe _ Pany's cus Ah on eats tau 4 _Napoteon asad enger, an employee of the Bond | \‘, Nasa yh (paaoirl Meret Nast Thayne tens Department of the Treasury, al- Joo ; iv cupied edowa slack veady im custody ip connecti y § bg i hee w a t . ry . Py with the robbery, Secret ve i 5. peda ins Seta prawians ; zroun oMclais said. The officials sa ; Loi aie camAT el eb entiation tak é : ; asom of fit both have confessed. the higher rate charged by thegompany, Sircet, Me Ani Was (o-Giy StAniad Leake EAU Rie ae at his visitor. you might know somethin’ about it. [didn't come out here to trap you. My {dea is that Hull did it. But T made un my mind ‘you're hidin’ somethin’. - I'm sure of it, You as good as told mo so, What fs it?” “CUNNINGHAM GOT HIS! SUITS ME FINE! NOW, ALL ! ASK IS THAT THEY HANG HULL FOR fre straight into the asked the ques- Kirby looked ranchers eyes as be tion nue, Brookly, wir held without ball in Hotel Mi n by the Amer- | Lane put in an hour making him |had come out in the heat of impulse] “ld be likely to tell you if T was, the Bridge Pinza Cour lay lican Women War Martyrs’: Memoria! |seif persona grata, then yead the} Kirby fired a shot point blank at| Wouldn't 1?" jeered Olson amination Weidieasday harge of | Association jatest issue of the “Enterprise.” Hel|him, ‘*‘Nobody can be des of] “Do you know who killed my grand lnreeny, M © Geld, ¢ he headiess skeieton of what \* be- lfound several items that interested | that unless he saw him do it une! demanded Lane point-blank. teen: of No. tl Brookl Neved to have been a buffalo was foun J nin among then tiis Maybe some one saw him do it.|“D!d you see it done”’’ anid that as she entered the haliway of gewerany. bs lniarera: Singing! 4° Pitt Gye 0 Volks don't tell all they know.’ 0} Olson's eyes narrowed, A crafty her house this mor ‘apollo enatehod | Epes ee 7 Sounely ofthe Knights Petia, son looked across the desert light shone through the siitted Hes her pocketbook containing $2 and rav.Jof Columbus will graduate $0,000 stu- ek road “Be, SURU Se Goneh meeastinies con eS eee NCRseE eae wie He was caeht by Patrolman John {dents In technical courses next summer. | erie editor knew Olsen only: slightly. | BRECeNt People, too, knew a thing. Not a thing was “Ts it?’ The farmer looked bieakly | stringin’ you Seems to me you takc IRBY knew he had overshot the Huil and Cunningham, Don't know [4 |¢t of interest In this, Who are you, mark. He had been too eager what he was doin’ in Denver,” the ]892 00M) is asirby Lane and alarmed the man. He newspaperman said ‘Nephew of the old man?" was annoyed at himself. It would déciaci ould wec| “"Yes."* take time and patience and finesse to be esol : ne Dow tae ” “Why did you come here?’ asked| recover lost ground. ‘ Olson and have a talk with) 1. scandinavian, his eyes bard and| ‘Well, whatever it ix you know. 1 him, Incidentally, he meant to] Ganant. hope soul tell tha: ‘Satiiamass see all the Dry Valley men who had] “] wanted to have a look at the|said, ‘but that's up to you, not me been in Denver at the time Cunning-]man who wrote the note to James|[f Hull is the murderer, I want the ham was killed, But the others he|Cunningham threatenin’ to dry-gulch|erime fastened on him. I don't want saw only to eliminate them from sus-|nim if he ever came to Dry Valley] him to get off scot free. An’ that's picion, again about what's goin’ to happen. The Lanv rode out to Olson's place and found him burning brush. ‘The cat- ter, am I? but we can t a “I'm the man who wrote that let he lips of Olson were fellow's gulity, 1 believe prove it, I reckon Hull will ay written the Board of Mstimate con —|to the rock pile—with his left hand. “Convict him! They enough against him even to make arrest. They've got a dozen times Much agdinst me an’ they turned loose. He's quite safe ic he keeps mouth shut—-an’ he will.’” { Olson flung @ greasewood shi a pile of brush. The mun’s anger barked at “Well, what you waltih’ for, asked harshly. “Nothin’. I'm goin’ now. wrote his Denver address on a “If you find there is any e against Hull an’ want to talk it perhaps you'd rather come to me th the police, I'm like you. If Hull @ it T want him found guilty. So lone. He handed Olson his card. Ti man tossed it away. Kirby turm his horse toward town. Five jt later he looked back. The seulnd walked across to the place where had thrown the card ond was appa ently pieking it up. The man from Wyoming smit He had u very strong hunch t Olson would call on him within week or ten days A detail jumped to his mind. Ol had picked up a stone and thrown CHAPTER XVIII. “BURNIN’ A__ HOLE IN POCKET.” OLE SANBORN through the Welcome Ai at the station carrying imitation-leather suitcase, did not take a car, but walked Seventeenth Avenue us far as Markham Hotel, Here he register left his luggage and made some quirles over the telephone, Thirty minutes later he wa: ing hands with Kirby Lane. id “You dawg-goned old hellam. what you mean comin’ down here gettin’ throwed in the calaboose?"” demanded, thumping his friend on shoulder with a heavy brown fist.) “I'm sure enough glad to see y Mr. Champeen-of-the- World,” Ki ini falling iato the easy ¥ cular of the outdoor coun “Come to the big town to spend t thousand dollars you won thir day?" a ih betcha; it's burnn’ @ holt in pocket," “rm gonna be busy as a with flees,"" said Kirby. “I got find out who killed my uncle. § picion rests on me, on a man nar Hull, on the Jap servant, an’ on Rose.”* “Hell's be! sense a-tall Kirby, looked at his wateh, * headed right now for the departny ! Ain't they go! where my uncle was killed, Gi look the ground over, Wanta c| along?" “Surest thing you this to a fare-you-well, I’ take yore dust.’’ Five James Cunningham, x) know. I’ Go ah had got the key of his uny apartment. His cousin given it to him a little retuetai Sanborn applied his shre: ad mon sense to the problem as listened to Kirby. “Looks to me lookin’ a bet, son," he said, “V about this Jap fellow? Why dir light out so pronto if he ain't in thing?’ “Well, the police are after ‘They'll likely run him down o1 these days. Far as I'm concerne got to let this trail go for the 3 There are possibilities right hei like you're o the ground that haven't been ii down yet. For instance, Rose m man an’ a woman comin’ down it stairs while she was goin’ up. cr were they? th “Might ‘a’ been any, o' the ter here w “Yes, but she smelt a violet | oo fume that both she an’ [ noticl Mm 11 the apartment. My hunch is tha hy man an’ the woman were comin’ my uncle's rooms. I'dd like te ¢ who they are.” A fat man rolled out of the & ing just as they reached the #| He pulled up and stared dow Kirby. “What—what—??"" hung poised. “What am I doin’ out o’ jail Hull? I'm lookin’ for the mai killed my uncle," Kirby ans quietly, looking straight at him “But" ra “Why did you lie about thy when you saw me that night?” Hull got excited at once Hir began to dodge. “I ain't got a to say to you—not a word—) word!" He came puffing dow steps and went waddling on his ‘What do you think of that His qui package, Cole?" asked Lane, hil J, : following the man, i SR “Guilty as hell,"’ said the “pe buster crisply ri “I'd say so too,"’ agreed Ki nar don’t know as we need to look far further. My vote is for Mr Mi aq Huli—with reservations.’ tleman explains] that he was from|drawn back in a vicious snarl with it--if he really did it.” (To Be Continued To-Morro| Wyoming and wanted to sell some] “You're the man.’ “Don't you think it,” Olsen pain registered Herefords rou can prove that, o'course snapped out. "They've pretty nearly | Copyright, 1921, by William Macleod Olson looked over his dry, parched] “Yes."’ ot enough now to convict him." pated vy OL ee crops with sardonic bitterness, “Do How The rough rider laughed cynically, | ‘rangement with Houghton-Miftiin 00 ed alienation | BUSES DAMAGING RICHMONE| building detected smoke issuing, WIFE ASKS ARREST suing for $25,000 for alles’ A allenatia noi Ee cate Pee act cn that wenen tent RESP ENT |° the attections of Henry Clay Silver eae eae citer atchmona|the building and notited the OF CO- SPOND In a recent divorce action Mrs, Silver aN eto . oa John H, Schier, an architect, whg Charges Young Woman Ent Husband Away From obtained an interlocutory decree. ning the condition of certain roads Tilghman as co-respon. |i, BI borough. He wants an sppro naming Miss Tilghman as co-respon- | priation of $88,400 for Bradie, Jent Avenue between Richi ) Home. Mra, Silver said that Miss Tilgti- | Mano ae The manman induced Stiver to leave he cliy's trolley bus » doing the Mre, Bertha De Yourge Sliver 9 7 with Miss Tiighman ae her||smase. There will tig on and a repor . SHAN Salt ANS Waa se HESDREDS OF LETTERS BURNED. eiian . . and hea nothing excey Fhe tn th mail box in the Ge to whe ens as V scons in Huildis 245 Weat 5ith Biree order for 4 eV oarreat oof Misthin a by 1 denied she enticed himtio-day, resulted in the deatruetion of |krances EF. Tilghmaa, whom she ta away from his wife. hundreds of Tenants in hint letters. the pies offices on the fifth floor. Mr, telephoned ay) alarm, but before rival of firemen the mail collect arrived and discovered the blag extinguished it enero COTTON REPORT # ONL HALF OROP, WASHINGTON, March 20.4 foy 1921 was equival 7,962,689 600-pound bales the Bureau announced to-dey in 1 FIVAL praduction ginning report of the seneon. production wee 14,689,603, ¢

Other pages from this issue: