The evening world. Newspaper, April 1, 1922, Page 3

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x HYLAN'S “JOKER” IN TAXICAB BILL HIS OWN OFFICIALS Corporation Counsel Put in Words That Brought Mayor’s Veto. SET BACK FOR REFORM. Chances for Curing Taxi Evils by Legislation Grow Slimmer. This is what Mayor Hylan did tohen he vetoed the dill transfer- ving the Taxicab Bureau into the Police Department: Postponed @ much needed ctty reform for tear Lost the opportunity to clean up the taxi evil In the city of New York. Mayor Hylan vetoed the Steinberg vill, which would have placed the ‘Taxicab Bureau under the Police De- partment, insisting that it contained a “‘joker.’ It developed to-day that the ‘joker’? on which he based his veto was placed in the bill in the office of his own Corporation Couneel. And it was this very ‘joker which the Mayor accused | ‘hief Justico Mc- Adoo, Sophie Irene Loeb, and other proponenta of the bill, of putting in and trying to “put something over on dim.” And it was this very ‘‘joker’’ that the Mayor stated that he would con- sult with the Corporation Counsel about. {ha now the question ts asked all around, “Has the right hand ceased to know what the left hand is doing in City Hall?" His own Corporation Counsel draws the bill that would put the Taxicab Bureau under the Poltce Department, sives it to Chief Magistrate McAdoo, who had urged the Corporation Coun- sel to suggest some legal means to curb the taxi evils, the Judge turns it over to Joseph Steinberg, Assem- blyman, to introduce, and then it comes back to the Mayor. The Mayor then finds the ‘‘joker’’ nnd proceeds to cast aspersions upon every one who tried to help to pass the measure and put the needed check upon the taxi bandits by giving the police jurisdiction over licenses. ‘Most startling, Indeed, is the fact that this self-same bill, ‘‘joker’’ and all, was introduced in the Legislature @ year ago and failed, was introduced again this year, a whole afternoon's hearing held in Albany, and no one found any ‘‘joker’’ until Police Com- misstoner Enright enlightened the Mayor that there was such a thing, although neither he nor any one from his department appeared to oppose the bill. ‘Among the people who journeyed fm the public's interest were the rep- yesentatives of the National Highway "Yraffic Association, the Merchants” Association, the Hotel Men's Asso- (ation, the Fifth Avenue Association, ihe Forty-second Street Property As- yociation, and the Broadway Aasocla- dion of Property Owners, to say noth- ing of a presentment from the Grand Jury presented to Judge McIntyre. ‘And what was this ‘‘ghost’’ or buga- hoo that Mayor Hylan feared and which his own Corporation Counsel placed there? Tt simply transferred the Taxicab Pureau to the Police Department ond guve the Police Commisioner meneral supervision over it. It gave him power to abolish any unnecessary po- sitions, and with powers to appoint any successors of the present Chie? of Bureau, John Drennan, who, tho Mayor said, would be made a “Czar” hy the transfer, because he would jiare the power to grant licenses and revoke them under the supervision of the Police Commissioner—a work that he actually earries out now, evory day ‘n his present position. The mere transfer of a man whe has given twelve years’ faithful ser- vice to his job, who has been desig- nated by Justices as an ‘honest pub- ile servant," who could be removed for cause, as stated in the bill, was the big “Joker” which the Mayor ac- cused everybody but the right person, his own Corporation Counsel, of put- ung In. ‘But that isn’t the worst of it,’ 8 Sophie Irene Loeb who, backed hy The Evening World, establishea the present taxicab ordinance, which as been sustained throughout the courts. "The Mayor, by his veto, has given great comfort to the crook Chauffeurs who fesred this law and a3 disappointed the men in the tax: ness who really want to see a cleaner service tn the City of New York, feel that some fool- to the imagination who per- said Miss Loeb to: “Phe abuses have become intolerable n the taxi busine: stated that in this The Mayor Drennan would wave the power and the Police Com- miasioner the ‘odiunm.’ If that is so in the bill, It is so now “The Police Department already has the ‘odium,’ whether Drennan's bureau is in the License Department or in the Police Department. The Po- lice Gepartment is charged with en- forcing the city orainance, but seom- ingly has failed to provide sufficient protection to insure clean cabs and honest chauffeurs to the faxi-riding public, to cure the evils complained of. “After ull, the ee DD. hoped to give him ian legal © 2 @emer Louch with the taxicab diyision, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1922,' Ge) EVENING WORLD TEN-SECOND NEWS MOVIES F. Scott Fitzgerald, Novelist, Ge) “New York is going crazy. Since Prob bition night life qees on as never before.” “Everybody is drink- ing harder, Possessing liquor is a proof of respectability.” Let's GO!" “The attitude of the young is: ‘This is ALL. What does it_ matter? “Our American women are leeches, They Wominate the American man.” “They are a useless fourth generation, trading on ploneer great-grandmothers,” Our ‘Younger Marrieds’’ . Outflap the ‘‘Flappers,’’ a Young Author’s Thought F. Scott Fithgerald, Writer of “The’ Beautiful and the Damned,” Also Thinks “New York Is Going Crazy” Since Advent of Prohibi- tion—Young Married Women Largely to Blame for the Own Lives. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall “New York is going crazy! When I was here a year ago I thought we'd seen the end of night life, But now it's going on as it never was before Prohi- bition. I'm confident that you can find anything here that you find in Paris. Everybody is drink ing harder—that's sure. Possess- ing Mquor is a proof of respecta- bility, of social position. You can't go anywhere without having your host bring out his bottle and offer you a drink, He Nquor as he used to display his new car or his wife's jewels. T'ro- hibition, it scems to me, is having simply a ruinous effect on young men." It |s a young man himself who is speaking—no clergyman, no so- cial reformer, but a “regular”? young man. Most of you know his name—F, Scott Fitzgerald, who wrote “This Side of Para. dise,"" a book that matiaged to be both brilliant and popular, when he was just out of Princeton. two years ago; whose second novel ‘The Beautiful and Damned," newly published, (A reader of both suggests that, in view of the first tale, the second could been called, consistently, Stop Is Hell!'*) The frank Mr. Fitzgerald un- doubtedly set the fashion of hold- ing the mirror up to the flapper. Some of us, in two yeurs, have grown a bit weary of studyir her reflection. So we welcome the fact that, In his second novel Mr. Fitzg to other representatives of generation—to the ‘y in the locution of the so- ried: ciety columns. They out-flap th flapper! With youth, health, beauty, love, friends, money pleasure, his Anthony and Glorii typifying the prospero newly married couple in New York, ure hopelessly, —_ irretrievably “damned,"? broken in body and which the Police Department has com- plained of as one of the reasons why it can't clean up the taxicab condi- tions in New York City. Assemblyman Steinberg the following statemen’ that the attitude of the Mayor showed that he really did not want any real information as to the intent and pur- pose of this bill, but insisted on veto- ing it before anybody was heard. “Nor did he scck a proper interpre- tation of the bill, In fact he did not one into his counsel also made “T must say seem to take a except the Police Commissioner he- fore the certainly none of te people who appeared in favor of tt hi, From now on the taxi situation can only be charged to the Mayor “(think Tam safe in saying that the Mayor had a glorious ehg to show the people o: the City of New that he is anxious to correct the abuses He was given tle opportunity bot ion unt of a mole hill rea~ compored to the big reform: in volved Another question Tam anxious to yw is what iv the big smoke sereen behind the veto, since the bill was ed to me by Chief M. Adoo end came from the Corpo fon Counsel--all of whom are in the City Administration T doubt if ich # the T bill will AY more pot ent of this city ase of the splendid @ way to cure this evil. “Damnation” of Their spirit; one an accomplished, the other an incipient dipsomaniac, before the end of the story. “But why? ¥ asked the young novelist, when I met him at the Plaza Hotel, where he and his wife are staying for a few days. ‘Chetr home is in St. Paul, Minn. “In some ways your pair were a special case, But we all know scores of young men end women here in New York who marry un- der the happlest auspices, and who, in a few years, manage to throw away all their chances of lifelong happiness and security together, What is the matter with our young married couples?"’ “First of all, I think it's the way everybody is drinking,”’ re- plied the blue-eyed, frank-faced, fastidiously dressed author. His stories are world weary, but he himself is as clean and fresh and boyish as if he'd never had an idea or a disillusion. Then he gave the candid, impartial impression of New York life of the present quoted at the beginning of this interview: “There's ‘the philosophy of ever so many young people to-day,"" he went on, thoughtfully. ‘They don't believe in the old standards and authorities, and they're not Intelligent enough, many of them, to put a code of morals and con- duct in place of the sanctions that t en destroyed for them. They drift. Their attitude to nt be summed up: Then what does it mat- 2? We don't care! Let's GO!" A little nervous movement of Mr. Fitzgerald's cigarette finished the sentence. The young wife in his book re- mark, n before entering the e of matrimony, that she does not want to have responsibility and a lot of children to take care of. jently,"’ observes her creator, With a nuance of sa casm, ‘she did not doubt that oj her lips all things were good. So T asked him how far he con sidered the young married woman to blame for the "damnation" of her own life and that of her hus- he's very largely to blame,’ he respondel promptly, ‘Our American women are leeches: The: an utterly useless fourth generation trading on the accom- plishment of their pioneer great- grandmothers. They simply dom- inate the American, man. You should see the dowagers. trailing and this hotel with their de- pendent male ‘o Englishman would endure hth of what an Ameriean takes from his wife. asked my: the To what is a woman en titled from lite The un rr. obyionst y he cun get! And when she marrie the whole (ii man love her, tl hog all his emoti the money out of him to keep him at her beck and eall § 4a monkey of him, in many and he has to stand it unle wants @ eontinnous verbal battle Mr Witagerald took another whiff of his cigarette “What chance have they, these men and women of my generation who come » families with pme anoney!' le exelaimed I'm not «em, What chance ha oung man, un lesy he has ork tor his living? If he were in land there would leurs tradition he hind bim end a ound. H he ts born in Liddle Western town, Hts 4 va perhaps. oa He—the \hrough he knows everytning every boy ever knew and every chorus girl in town. His ideu of happiness is to have one of them on the back seat of a limousine. Then his family resolves that he must go to Yale. He goes thero to raise hell. When he's through —it he gets through—he's abso lutely ruined “He ought to do something. But what can he do? Suppose he thinks that he might try to help govern his country.” But what he would think next is so perfectly summed up in “The Beautiful and Damned” that I shall quote it word for word: “He tried to magine himself in Congress, rooting around in the Miter of that incredible pigsty. with the narrow and porcine brows he saw pictured sometimes, those glorified proletarians bab- bling blandly to the Nation the ideas of high school seniors! Lit- tle men with copy-book ambitions who by mediocrity had thought to emerge from mediocrity into the lustreless and unromantic heaven of a government by the people— and the best, the dozen shrewd men at the top, egotistic and cyn- fcal, were content to lead this choir of white ties and wire col- larbuttons in a discordant and amazing bymn, compounded of a vague confusion between wealth as a reward of virtue and wealth as a proof of vice, and continued cheers for God, the Constitution and the Rocky Mountains!” “Nevertheless,” I said, “all our younger married set cannot be ‘damned.’ Surely you can suggest some way in which they may be at once exclaimed Mr. zgerald, his blue eyes earnest. “Work Is the one saivation for all of us~even if we must work to forget there's nothing worth while to work for, even if the work we turn out—books, for example— doesn't satisfy us, The young man must work. His wife must work"— “How?” [ interrupted, “At bring- Ing up an old-fashioned family?" Scott Fitzgerald IS a boy, and married happily, and not too long. “Lr think, confided, Ingen- uously, “that just being in lo really in love-—-doing it know- ols enongh for a wo- man, 1 keeps house the way it showid he kept and makes herself look pretty when her hus band comes hor in the evening and loves him and helps him with his work and encourages him—on, I think that's the sort of work that will save her. It's not so yon know, belng in love and y the young ny atever the va MeO) holleves in keeping its heart In the same old place! 3 FUR ROBBERIES, 4 OTHERS, IN DAY Thieves Get $28,500 in B glaries in Various Parts of City. Three burglaries in the fur reported to-day, netted thicy 500, and four others resulted in losses of about $10,000, Burglars bored throug a wall S. Braunstcin’s West 291 Street, and selected $10,000 woit Hudson seal and ¢ coats glass door of Aurwa nity & } ® . n thirteen Hudson seal capes an A hole w nthe tle Lothstein & st Ave dresses wort! “0 8 from S. Wictit 143 Went 26r r silka from the Allen Gown Corpora tlon, No. 44 West 47th Street: $9.00 from a sate in the Curtis Shoe ¢ pany, No. 102 Delancey Str $1, from the Woolworth 1g1Kt Street and Third Avenue, t similar robbery. > STORE SLIPS INTO HOLE DUE TO JERSEY RAINS 4 Pol BROTHER OF GIRL FINDS HER SLAYER Spartan Must Go Back to Greece Charged With Killing Sweetheart. Vor seven years Peter Houvouran, of No. 2685 Kadzie Avenue, Chicago, has sought for George Mavrogean, who in Sparta, where the Houvourans and Mavrogeans lived, is charged with having killed his sweetheart, Flora Houvouran, Peter's sister, in Tuly, 1915. He located him yesterday at his soda stand, at No, 23 Hanson Place, Brooklyn. This morning George was arrested on a warrant issued June 26, 1918, by the Department of Labor, and will be taken to Greece to answer for the murder. In Police Headquarters to-day George admitted he killed Flora, but declared it was an accident, tho police say “T loved her,’ he suid, “‘T wanted to marry her, but her people objected. I was at the station getting ready to leave and she was with me, I wanted her to come along. Her I wanted to frighten T fired and the bullets people came. them away, hit Flora." Peter sent George's photograph to the police all over the country, He served overseas for thirteen months, but on his return renewed the search and got a tp lust week (hat Georgo was here. ae - SIREN AND BULLDOG FAIL TO HALT RAID Detectives Find Elaborate Alarm System in Opium Den, Detectives Graham, Hackett, Murphy and Wolcoff went to a Chrytie Street tenement house to-day to raid an alleged oplum den. As they reached v third floor a siren set up a deafen- ing screech and a ble bulldog sprang early at them, The detectives broke in the door and rushed into the apartment, the dog leaping at them all the thme until Hackett knocked It out with ls revolver. Three Chine ested in the it in np it below a Quantity of opium and several layouts » found, Here also, the dotectives say. hidden ing under the floor was trical arrangement slgnuls in the hall. > 18-YEAR-OLD GIRL KILLED BY A TRUCK Body Lies In Street TH Mother Identifies Victim of Accident. Miss Anna Pale us elec- off alarm vno, eighteen Killed Instantly nea bome on Lith Street, Newark, today when she was strick by ® neavy. truck, Her body lay In the street fifteen minute before tt was identified by her toother, iitracted the scene by the crowd. ne mother heoare hysterteal and was carrie} hon Daniel J rrett, truckdrlyer, w ted on a techinteal change of bor Thy staten that the ¢ epped from behind a& wagon, parked on the wrong side of the etl, was borated by wn eyewltnes, ‘LOOKS AS IF THEY DOUBT ENRIGHT’S SAFETY ASSERTION Wall Vi irglar Agar 4 Headq Thinks City Stolen—t nm r Enright sald: * York the cleanest and safest wity that ever stood beneath the sun—yeu will be as gale en any street ant midnight as noon" and yet ‘When Tom, night custodisn of the City Hall, looked up and dis- covered that the dome was dark, he yelled for the poliee and told them body had walked off with the searchlights that furnish 1] the radi The cop told him they had been taken y for pairs, And A burglar alarm has been in stalled in the Information Bureau Police Headquarters where » are always fiity or more the tous floors. ‘The connected with the eell k heneath, where prisoners are ' pending arraignment. Vos y Mp, Pineight ts afraid fiends of prisoners may nish the heepe take libs f Io gong in time to escape “A woman's entitled to _‘all_she can get— when she marries she gets the whole thing.” for all, even if “Work is salvat work to forget there's nothing to work for.” “Just boing in love, really in love—doing ft well—ix work enough for a woman,” ion we Girls’ Hotels Pay U.S.$60,000 Profit in Year Landlords Fight to Abolisit Them, but Clerks Answer With Statistics. WASHINGTON, April 1 (Copy- right).—The war is not over yet— between the landlords of Washing- ton and the gir) Governinent clerks The former are trying to have the Government hotels abolished. These were opened during the in an effort to solve the housing problem. Since then they have been regarded by their girl occupants as a haven from the avariciousness of profitecr- ing boarding house and pro- prietors. Landlords have succeeded in clos- Ing_one of the twelve hotels, Now they are appealing to Congress to shut up the remainder, The Coun- cll of Twelve, Fepresenting the hotel residents, has dug up statistics which ts contends definitely combats the assertion that the Government will not get {ts money back through the operations of the system “During the last two years," sald Miss Bessle Henderson, Chairman of the council, “a profit of $60,000 and $40,000 was shown. Last year the appropriation was $1,005,000, This year the appropriation will be only $900,000. These hotels protect the girl clerks, make it possible for them to live on their salaries and report for work 100 per cent. efficient.” The girls pay $45 a month, This Includes a single room artisticully furnished, maid service, scientifically Prepared meals and the use of co recreation roma, electrically equipped laundries, and kittnenettes to cook “late snacks,” plenty of bathrooms and an unlimited supply of hot and cold wal A _ CALL 26 WITNESSES IN NURSE'S TRIAL Prosecution Will Attempt Mon- to Refute Miss Stone's Testimony, The ordeal passed on t Ollvia Stone, lis Guy war hotel day through whieh she Rave killed night in with the nur Kinkead, a Raymond Street Jatt to take than rolls for b highly At sumed stand who bad he was un a uble tor kf Nervous state the District Attorney's offce it aid that when the trial rs Monday the prosecution will Wo the first of twentyode witnesses rbuttal, Among them will be a lawyer and two detectives from Cin cinnati, Miss Stone testitled the de cofter and was in a All forenoo in HONORS FOR 200 DEAD “Old 6th Parade To-Morrow. Capt the 166th Infantry, the old 69th, the ceremonies over the of the Rainbow Division at Army Base, Brooklyn, to-morrow, asked that it ington Avenue at 12.15 P. M. Col. Timothy J has been published, joined to-day in a requost that ¢ Join the ranks. Jersey and mander John present. Brooklyn, under McCormack, will iia “WOMAN OF MYSTERY” therine Fitzhugh, of N hington Square, © Ww held to-day in the West by Magistrate Cobb without bail examination Monday on the of having attempted to rob Miss F nie J. Gray, of No. nie, West 46th Street This in Mrs. OF THE “RAINBOWS” to Make Bie Display ta George Ashe, in charge of the arrangements for the participation of in 200 dead the be emphasized that members of the regiment are to leave the Armory at 26th Street and Lex- Moynthan, who will Brooklyn, in 1.30, not 3 o’clyck as Both Capt. Ashe and Col. Moynihan ry veteran of tho 165th able to march Warren Shaw Fisher, national com- mander of the United Amesican War Veterans, announced that at least four posts of his organization, from New Com- be HELD AS CHURCH THIEF 63 who admits she hin fifty, but looks much younger, was Side Court tor charge n- Seventh Ave- while the latter was praying in the Chureh of St. Mary the Virgin in Fitzhugh'’s second ar- rest on a similar charge, having been . 1 RAS — SHELOSHNSEL | FROM POLICE FIRE a ey Patrolman Breaks Down Door to Capture Negro Who Had Shot Two. “Don't shoot through the door, of- ficer, he's holding me in front of bim and you'll hit me."* This was what a woman's voice an- swered to the threat of Patrolman Henry Seibel of the West 68th Street Station at the the door of an apart- men on the fifth floor of No, 230 Wgst 68d Street this morning, whither he had pursued Solomon Alleyne, a N gro, living In that who had shot two other Negroes, mortally wounding one, on the sidewalk below. Seibel's answer to this was to brace himsolf against the wall and foree the door, When he plunged into the room he found Alleyne struggling in the grasp of Violet, his wife, who was preventing him from reloading a re- volver. Seibel, pistol in hand, ar- rested Alleyne and disarmed him. He was locked up in the West Side Prison charged with felonious assault and possession of a revolver Six Negroes were standing together in 638d Street west of Amsterdam Ave- nue when Alleyne came upon them and fired into the group. He put three bullets into the body of John Foster house, be in command of the Brooklyn con- | Cf No. 240 West 83d Street. A stray tingent of the 166th, veterana, an. | bullet wounded Joseph Simmons of nounced that the hour for leaving | NO 226 West 64th Street. Foster Rsth, Street. and Fourth, Avenue, | ¥&8 taken to Hellevue Hospital dying, Simmons to Roosevelt Hospital. In the W th Street Station, Alleyne sald he had shot Foster for ruining his home. News of the shoot- ing caused the calling out of the reserves of the net, but by the time they were on the scene, Patrol- man Selpel had done all the police work necessary. It was he whe, when held up by three thugs in Central Park two wecks ago, shot all three and arrested them. One dled later. FOUR GET THEIR MAN IN ALL-NIGHT CHASE Escaped in Auto After Shooting Moskowitz, Who Sought to Elude Them. Four men who had been following David Moskowitz, twenty-five years old, of No, 1227 Union Avenue, the Bronx, around the east side all night, cume up with him at 8 o'clock thie morning in front of No. 26 Broome accused of taking $550 from the hand- | Street, 2 delicatessen shop operated bag of Miss Dorothy Misk, daughter of [by Michael Calice, Moskowitz saw Pliny Fisk in St. Hartholomew’s|the men, who were in a touring car, Church. . and ran into the store. Mra. Fitzhugh is known as the} sp op A PF “woman of mystery," because she re- ee, AEG a SAO pe a fuses to speak of herself, Her police] Pleaded. “Sneak me out the back record begins in Washington in 1911,] way, Save me."* In 1918 she re a suspended sen-| ‘The astonished Calice saw three tence for grand larceny, and in 1915] ion rush into the store, One ef a ie » house ie See FEN copaunt the workhouse} tiem struck him. Another knocked In refusing Mrs, Fitzhugh bail, pasate ea Phe tid Gane Magistrate Cobb declared he consid See eR alee ohn Tate 5 Lat me finish the snite drew ere her a dangerous criminal be- 4 revolve nid “shot. Moakow ead. se of her “notorious record.” Bd ENGb MORK OILS CaS > BARON DE ROTHSCHILD HERE TO STUDY BANKING The Baron de ing the ax in the French avia- tion service, was a passenger on the steamship Paris which arrived to-day: ectives asked her to give them thy pistol she afterward to kill Kinkead > HOUGHTON SAILS FOR GERMAN POST Hopes to Re-Cement Century of Friendliness Ruptured by War, Ww Honghton, Amerion fleet tie off reli today on the Alas Amibavse Magny, th ad sinew by tions in 191 sitet uicing Diroetor rin war we Pranspartation a DEATH OF ADIN HAMILTON, Mradden Tarnfiton, a lawyer and. aut time on Tpleopal clergyman In New York City, died to-day at Rivernend Lo 1, He owned touch property in Sut folk County, Up to a short tine ue he had Myed at the Hotel Bletman in New York — YOURS 817,000,000 TOR WAR HOSPIVAL. WASTIINGTON appro April LAr lon of $1 in pre GoW goes to tne Denale. Rothschild, who dur- Then the three ran to their automo- bile and rede away A man in the crowd told the police he had seen the dead man in a candy store at No. 12 Jackson Street. The proprietor, Joseph Erlichsman, said to thom: ©] That would be Moskowitz; he was in here last night selling tickets to a Vhe Baron, who ix twenty-six years | ball, Four men followed, looking fo old, is Reve to study American bank-|] him. They came again this mornin ing and will remain three months. Andlenid they were wolnig to kill tian Another passenger wa M. Re erlichaman said the body was th villon, who id Paris is now able tol of Moske tz. id buy cheap furs, as th prices have} ——_—_<p— cnt dropped with the American demand ‘ea t Rk aS MONTE CRISTO” MOEN, R. Rides, a French leather manu MAN OF MYSTERY, DEAD facturer, said there was every indi - vation of fancy shoes lo match gowns |Get Mere Than Half a W LJ s to color coming into vogue in From the “Barbed Wire King.” Varix, He said the war caused. the viWitkan OMReniUUKHawe Sixteen wearing of sombre colors, but. this £0 ne Doe’? Wilson, the “Monte year wonld reaction ‘of Rhode Island, is dead of old The Paris brought 406 passe re, a at the Newark City Hospital. In _ — his youth he wos a hostler and pro- BATTELLE MUST PAY WIFE] prietor of a roadhouse near Providence. $250 A MONTH ALIMONY mer toiie hota tren hitteee ‘Thomas Parkman Battelle, memive » wealthy Boston family, and conn vith the bond departinent of the Pith enue Branch of the Guaranty iat Company, today wae ordered by Jus tice Trying Lehinn, in Supreme Court hie wife, Mrs Mary Gitdng £250 «youth alimony and So el, Martin W leper Philip L. Mo who admitted from fusion THE WORLD’S Poultry, Garden \ AND — \ Farm Products 1922 ANNUAL vuluabie huok of its kind ever publishe \iunual now ready for dise “bution es may be q vtiices of The send lve cguts for poslages WITH BODY OF WIFE t ing hin as much as $500,000 In the lgkreRate, but insiited it was volun tur Nobody learned w money was Hven rth ath of Moen, ‘ u tarbed Wire,” the name of Hou from the estate, GIRL DIES AS HOyS GIVE BLOOD, 1 transfusion fulled to save the > ’ win, twenty hose te ar the hip ¢ when Hay ut the byes eg: } | é {

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