The evening world. Newspaper, April 21, 1922, Page 32

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Oper 18% 48) Ady Rumely Aev Rumely pt + Ajax Rubber . Alaska Gold . Ailis-Chalmors % 60% t Ailte-Chaimers pt 96% ; Am Agr Chem .. 20% ; Am Beet Sugar .. 411% : Am Bosch Mag.. 46% Am Brake Shos.. 6! Am Can . au Am Car @ Foun. 162 Am Cotton Ot .. Am Drug Bynd Am Express Am H & Leath pf Am Am am Am Allied Chern Am Saf Rasor Am Ship @ Com . 17% Am Smelt @ Ref 51% Am 8m & Ref pf 97% Am Bteel Foun .. 38% Am Bugar ...... 75% Am Sugar pf .. 100 Sumatra Tob 54% Atchiaon Ry ..... Atohinon Ry pf .. AU Birm @ Atl Atl Const Line .. atl Guf @ Wi Auto Bales Corp . Atantic Frutt Baldwin Loco Halt & Ohio } Barnsdale B ..- | Ratipolae Miniog. B'kiyn Union Gas 9815 Burns Bros A . Burns Bros B ... 1 Butte Cop & Zinc { Butterick Co :... Chandler Motors Hien 1S 48% 17% 50% 96% 89% 41% Low Open, High. Low. 1 RY Tndiahoma Petit I 4% 48% Inter Cons Corp li Inter Conn Co pf. Oty % Inter 95% 50% Inter Mer Marine 20% 06% Inter Mer Ma pf. 50% Inter Nickel .... 41% Invinelbie O11 “% Inland O11 61 6L_/Jonen ‘Tea .. 41% 48% 49% [Int Comb Eng 26% 162 162% | Kanaaw City Bo.. 28 Kan City 80 pf.. 58% Kelly Springfield. 48% 49 Kennecott Copper. it Keystone Tire . 10% Lack 65% Lake Erte & West 1% Lehigh Valley . Loew's Inc Loft Ine Loose-Wiles Lorillard .... Man Elevated Man Shirt Martin Parry .... Maxwell Motor A 67% Maxwoll Motor B 20% McIntyre P Minew 18i5 s | May Dept Stores, 114 Mexican Pot 182% Miaral Copper 9% Northen Pacific Oklahoma P & R Ontarto Silve: Otis Elevator ... Pacific Gas . Penn RR .... Penn Seab Bteel. Pere Marquette Phila Co ...... Phillips Petrol... Pierce Oil .. Pitts Coal Pitts @ W V Pond Creek Coa! Pullman Co ..... Punta Aleg Sugar Pure OM ...... Pub Berv N J..,. Prod & Ref... Rall Steel Spee.. Ray Copper Reading .. . Rop Iron & Btoel. Repub Motor .... Royal Duteh N ¥ Texas & Pacific. Pex & Pac Coal. ‘Tidewater Ol Market wet. Open. High, Low 4%] Va Caro Chemical 34 84 84 By R. R. Batson. 3% | Vivandou 12% 12% . bash p! ae 3ay +~o—__ ber & Hei 13% «18% 1 ~ . : Maryland te 18 U. S. Steel an Indication of fic Corp oe 20% ~~ . West Pac Corp pt oma Greatest Prosperity Coun- Wheeling @ Ie Je. 10% 10% try Has Ever Known. Wheel & LE pf. 0% 20% vhite Motor ... i” 4 dil rable oN. 384 When United States Steel common Wickwtre Bteol .. 15% 154g stock crossed par yesterday to the Daiveovceaneet Se! cas highest price in more than two years, and the preferred crossed 118 to the highest price since 1917, these two issues alone showed an appreciation ‘Wilwon @ Co, * Px dividend CURB. Opened irregu: nd in market value of $200,000,000 com- off 3-8; Ph. Morris, pared with their low prices of last yeal There ts probably, no better illus- tration of the truth of the axiom that it is the function of the stock market -8, up 1-8: Radio Com. off 1-8 to unchanged; T. P. ; Retail Candy, 6 1-2; Marac., 21 3-4, off 1-4; Ang-Am. Oil, 20, up thy " 3; Pet to discount events from six to nine 20 Le ge eget 16 TS: Salt Creeks |eonths in advance than Is furnished by United States Steel. Last July, when the stock touched its low price for 1921, it had fully LIBERTY BONDS Liberty 21-28, opened 99,40, up .06; Ist 41-48, 99.84; Middle States 14% 2d, 99.50, off .04; discounted the depression in business Midvale Steal 34% 3d, 99.64, off .10; 4th, 99.90; Victory] which reached its most acute stage Minn & St Louis, 11% 43-45, 100.76 with the beginning of 1922, This de- Mo Pacific we FOREIGN EXCHANGE Pression was the worst in the history Lindl ee had aga sine a f the steel trade in this country Mont Ward 2% Opened firm. Sterling, demand, |” ‘ hae : National Aome .. 15% 18% 18% 15%] 4.411 cables, 4.417-8, up 2-8. [E%t United States Steel stock six eu eee tae. o% 8S lirench francs, demand, .v92$1-2;/™onths previously had accurately National Discutt. 141% 145° 141% 145 | oiiuw 0999, up .0001 1-2. Lire, de-| Marked out its extent and duration National Condult. 8% 8% 3% %% fps B41: 12 - FA - From July to the end of the year Nat Enam & Stp. 30% 98% 90% «sy |mand, 0541; cables, 0541 1-2, UP yusiness conditions in the steel trade, National Lead PR% 98% 99% 9354 /.00041- Belgian francs, demand, a : ry as in all other lines of industry, grew New Or T&M... O 69 oo fo =|.08661-2; cables, .0857, up .0001. y Kk Oe 2 2 'e steadily worse. But as the depression New York Central 92% 92% a 92% |Marks, demand and cables, .0036, up New York Dock. 8% 94 Bite 34 | O000 4.8 Drachmas, demand, dba, | Prostessed steel stock gradually NYNH@H.. 4 My 23% HL ass, a.” Swisg| Worked upward. It made a top with N ¥ Ont & Woat ty [Cables, .0465, unchanged. Swiss} ech succeeding month. Its market Norfolk & Wont, francs, demand, .1944; cables, .1946, course was in a directly inverse ratio to the course of incoming orders and earnings. The stock has crossed par at a time when the company, while having ex- perienced sharp improvement in in- coming business, continues to operate at a deficit. The report for the first quarter of the year, to be tssued on the last Tuesday of thia month, is not expected to show interest and charges for depreciation, &c., fully earned. If any balance is shown available for the payment of preferred dividends, it probably will be comparatively incon- sequential, What United States Steel and prac- tically all other stocks have been dis- counting is a return of real prosperity later on in the year. By many compe- tent experts it {s believed that this prosperity will be greater than the country has ever before experienced. It will differ from the war boom in that it will be built om a solid founda- tion and not be due to dangerous in- Quilders, demand, .8792; cables, .3797, up .0006. Pesetas, demand, .1652; 1664, Swedish kr., demand, cables, .2600, off .0004. Nor- way, kr., demand, .1895; cables, .1900, up 0005. Denmark kr., demand, -2120; cables, .2125, up .0002. YALE’S GOLF SCHEDULE INCLUDES MASS. TECH. NBW HAVEN, Conn., April 21.--The Yale Golf Team schedule, announced to-day, shows the addition of one new opponent, Messachusetts, Institute of Technology. ‘Three veterans of last year’s they being Capt. A. : J. S. Bush, 1923, and . T. Lovell, 1923, ‘The schedule follows Columbia at Greenwich, Conn., April 3%: Williams at Hartford, May 6: Pennsylvania at Apawamis, Rye, N. Y., May 13: Princeton at Garden City, May 21: Dartmouth at Bridgeport, Conn., May 33: -M. 1 ‘T. at Boston, May 26; | fation. Harvard at Boston, May 30: Intercol- legiates at Garden City, June to} Although the upward movement has July 1 CORNELL INVITES COAST ATHLETES been under way for eight months, the public is only now becoming inter- ested on a large scale. Less than a month ago, when daily transactions were bumping against the million shares mark, most of the large commission houses were com- plaining about the indifference of the public. But now that the market has had a turnover of well beyond a million shares on sixteen successive trading days, and new high prices are being recorded almost daily, large commission houses, particularly those with extensive wire systems through- out the country are handling the larg- est business in several years, It Is at Jast a ‘public’ market. It was an insiders’ market for eight months when business conditions University of California Team in Dual Track Meet at Ithaca May 20. BERKELNY, Cal., April 13.-——Uni- verity of California has accepted an invitation from Cornell University for a dual track meet at Ithaca, N. ¥., May 20.- The Californias are to spend a week in Ithaca as the guests of Cornell while preparing for the national championship meet of the Intercollegiate Association Tobacco Products. 49% of Ama-|were going from bad to worse, and "Tranecon Ol .... 11% 1% 12 |teur Athletes of America at ilarvard| when the average stock market trader jokes ae & Pap 63 63 63 | University, May 26. was too discouraged by the outlook to inion Olt 21% 21% 4 —— = make purchases, An age long prece- Lise ee patts 138% 139%) HASTY PUDDING PLAY. dent was religiously followed. non Pacific pt. 10% 76% via ac SE atl United Alloy . 38% 34 ‘i Cates Fruit Mays 4 Cetleme is : Sige * only! SMITH STANDS PAT ON : Natural” at Playa. Un Retail Stores, 49% 80 peat ADVICE HE GAVE HYLAN. Women in purple, green and red wigs, with highly peveloped muscles and rumbling voices, a movie man in 4 black and white striped sweater, an English philologist and ‘The Drunken That One Spirits Tell Him What rt Authority Is. of U 8 Bteel pt. 18 8 118118 oA Former Gov. Alfred E, Smith was in- Utah Copper ..... 8% 06% 05% 064} Sisters” wearing red and whitelvited yesterday to expound further ‘Utah Becurition .. 16% 16% 164% 16%} spotted rompers, were some of the what he had meant when, speaking at Vanadium Bteel.. 43 43 48% characters that decorated the stage of ee , the Hotel Plaza ball room last night | Woinedas: econ es Miway , Association New York. cular to BANKING AND FINANCIAL, ‘THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK t will sell at his office in Room 530, in the BANKING AND FINANCIAL. Municipal Building, on . Comptroller of The City of New York. Tuesday, April 25, 1922 at 12 o’'Clock Noon $45,000,000—414% Gold Corporate Stock of The City of New York, Principal maturing April 15, 1972. Exempt from Federal Income Tax and from the Income Tax of the State of New York. Bids must be delivered to the Comptroller in sealed envelopes addressed to the Comptroller of The City of - A deposit of 21-2 per cent. of the amount of the pro- posal must accompany each bid. Such deposit must be cash or certified check upon a New York State Bank or Trust Company, or any National Bank. For further information see “City Record,” or consult any bank or trust) company, or send for descriptive cir- CHARLES L. CRAIG, I Wednesday evening, he sald in effect, one of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's spirit friend# alone could teach Mayor Hylan anything about the Port Auttrority, “IT must decline to be drawn into any controversy with the sfayor,"" sald Mr, Smith. “TI safd all I intend to say at the dinner.” His remarks follows “I would seriously euggest that che Mayor get hold of Conan as soon as when Harvard's Hasty Pudding Club presented its annual spring show, “It's Only Natural “Histrionic Blues,” sung by BE. 8, Webster jr. and four other clog- dancing chorus girls, was the hit of the first act. J. Alger and F, B. Taussig had to repeat their specialty number half a dozen times, Exeep- tionally tuneful music was written for the show hy Alexander there were recorded us Steinert and} he possibly can and induce Conan to Howard Elliott jr. bring back somebody from the spirit Among those present were Miss An- d—nobody on earth can do it—and stins de Veau, Mrs. Cornelius Bliss | “*PI8n to His Honor what the Port Authority is. Conan Doyle might tel them that the New gersey Constitution will not allow that to take any property from Ne BELL THAT SPOKE WITH HUMAN TONGUE. Japanese Legend of Stolen Chime— jr, R. J. H. Powell jr. and Casimir de Rham. KID BUCK IN TWO RING ° ENGAGEMENTS SAME NIGHT. BATTLE CREEK, Mich., April 21.— Kid Buck passed successfully through two ring engagements here last night. As Jobn McCrumb he was married. at 7.80 o'clock to Miss Ceci! Oleon: as Kid Buck, an hour and a half inter, he went When Restored It Resnmed Its Normal Lang into the boxing arena and decisively de- ) cl e (From asta) feated Frankie Mason of Fort Wayne,| Belle are venerated in Japan, and nd., former fiyweight champio: F America ht champion off about each beil there clusters « legend or two. To many Japanese the sound of a bell hung in some shrine ta the voice of Buddha. ‘There ts, for instance, the famous pel! of Mit-dera, and the story of the giant Genke!, a fighting priest. He set up headquarters on the forest heights of Hiel-zan. This was in the long axo, when in Japan—as in Burope—knights Journeyed through the tand on missions or on adventure be Benket lay in for the travelling knights and oha!) ed each to combat. Hie ainbition was to collect the swords of 1,000 knighis, One day he stole the bell from Mil-dera. Carrying it on his back he plodded through the woods and we the hills until he came to a temple ere Buddhists priests lived. They gladly offered their hospitality to Ben el. ‘When he had finished his dinner he MOVE TO PLACE TAYLOR ON SUPREME BENCH George H. Taylor jr, of non, President of the County Bar Association, the support of lawyers in the 9th Judi- cial District, and will have the Indoree- ment of all the Bar associations for the Republican nomination for Justice ta the Supreme Court to succeed Justice Martin J. Keogh, whose term expires Dec. 31 because of age iMmit. Mr. Taylor has Mount Ver- Westchester as receiving by Mie-| was in such kindly humor that he of- fered to pertait each priest the honor of take, Net 0 Danger. sounding the bell once, The first priest i iiintory of event. human vole: ‘ choo’ ad more than 100 E t to} ore , f ) back to Mif-dera entered thad The ot priests aud even Benke) Bes previous meet, himself Wied jo draw from the bell ® Sidelights | oy, THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 21, STOCK QUOTATIONS (1922, BACK IN THE GAME. sid (a lost Hellesfleld, Mr. clared “Owing to Democrats ?'’ “Certainly.” “But why is that influence exercised against me?" Tallente demanded. “'T am thankful to have an opportunity of asking you that question, Dartrey, Surely you would reckon me more of & people's man than these Whigs and Coalitionists 2” “Very much more," Dartrey agreed, “So much more, Mr. Tallente, that we don’t wish to see you dancing any longer between two stools. We want you in our camp. You are the first man, Tallente, whom we have sought out in this way. We have come at a busy time, under a pretext of a holiday, some two hundred miles from London to suggest to you, temporarily deprived of political standing, that you join us." “That temporary deprivation,"’ Tal- lente murmured, “being due to your efforts."” “Precisely!"" “And the alternative?” “Those who are not with ns are against us,'’ Dartrey declared. “It you persist In remaining the doubtful factor in politics, it {s our business to see that you have no definite status there."* Tallente laughed a little cynically. “Your methods are at least modern,’ he observed. ou invite a man to join your party and if he re- fuss you threaten him with political extinction," “Why not?" have lost any seat north of Bedford,"' Dartrey de- the influence of the Dartrey asked won- deringly. ‘You do not pause to con- sider the matter, Government ts meant for the millions. Where the in- dividual might imp: ood govern- ment, common sen: uls for his ostracism. No nation has been more slow to realize this than England. You are not one of those, Andrew Tallente, who refuse to see the writ- ing on the wall, You know that in one form or another in this country the democracy must rule, They felt the flame of inspiration when war came and they helped to win the war, What was their reward? The opulent Portion of them were saddied with an enormous income tax and high prices of living through bad legislation, which made life a burden. “There is so much of truth in what you say," Tallente declared, that I am going to speak to you frankly, even though my frankness seems brutal. I am going to speak about your friend Miller here. Throughout the war Miller was a pacifist. He was dead against killing Germans He was all for a peace at any price.” “Steady on,'’ Miller interrupted, suddenly sitting up in his chair. “Took here, Tallente’. “Be quiet until I Tallente went on. cerned in no end of Austrian and German Socialists for embarrassing the Government and bringing the war to an end. I should say that but for the fact that our Government at the time was wholly one of compromise, and was leaning largely upon the Labor vote, he would have been impeached for high trea- son. Miller, who had been busy rolling @ cigarette, lit it’ with ostentatious have finished,” “He was con- intrigue with carelessness “And what of «ll this? he de- manded. “Nothing,” Tallente replied, “‘ex- cept that it seems a strange thing to find you now associated with a party who threaten me openly with political extinction unless [ choose to join them, [ 1 this junkerdom, not Socialism.” “No man’s principles can remain stable in an unstable world,” Miller pronounced, ‘I still detest force and compulsion of every sort, but I rec- ognize its necessity in our present civil lite far more than I did In a war which was, after all, a war of politicians,’* ‘Tallente winced a little and Dartrey hastily intervened “We want you to remember this,”’ he said. ‘The principles which we advocate are condemned before they are considered by men of inherited Principles and academic education such as yourself, because you have associated theth always with the dis- ciples of anarchy, bolshevism, and other diseased rituals. You have never stopped to separate the good from the bad. The person who dares to tamper with the laws of King Al- fred stands before you prejudged. Granted that our doctrines are ex- Tallente, as you woull}ANDREW TALLENTE, M. P INSTALMENT NO. 6, WHO'S WHO IN THE STORY. seat through a speech made by MILLER, Socialist M. P., whom ‘Yailente meets way to his country estate, where ., defeated at Hellesfield, losing his at the station on his TONY PALLISER, his secretary, is discovered in collusion with his wife. Tony disappears mysteriously. STELLA TALLENTE asks her husband what he has don Tallente orders her out of the house. e to Tony, LADY JANE PARTINGTON of Woodhanger, daughter of. the Duke of Barminster, calls to find Tallente in the deserted house. She remains for tea. They are interrupted by the arrival of a police in- spector. The inspector from Scotland Yard demands to know what has become of Tony Palliser. Tallente divulges no information, but at midnight descends the cliff to search for the body. Police hiding on the grounds suspect Tallente of foul play. Tallente lunches him and encourages hi “AND WILL YOU TELL ME AUTHORIZING YOUR SECRETARY treme, are we—let me be personal and say am I—the class of man whom you have associated with these doc- trines? We Democrats have gained great power during the last ten years. We have thrust our influence deep in- to the hearts of those great, sinister bodies, the trades unions, There is no one except ourselves who realizes our numerical and potential strength We could have created a revolution in this country at any time since the Premter’s first gloomy speech in the House of Commons after the signing of peace, had we chosen,”* Robert came out and whispered in his master's car. Tallente turned to his guests. “L cannot offer you dinner,” he said, “but my servant assures me that bh can provide a cold supper. Will yc stay? I think that you, Dartrey, would enjoy the view from some of my lookouts.” “1 accept your invitation,” Dartrey replied eagerly. “I have been sitting here, longing for the chance to wateh the sunset from behind your wood.” Miller too accepted litt graciously. The little party wander off down the path which led to the seashore. Miller detained his host for a moment at one of the “By the way, Tallente, “what about the Palliser?” “He has disappeared he disappearance asked, of Taliente an- swered calmly. “That is all | know about it.” Miller stood with his hands in his pockets, gnawing the end of his moustache, gazing covertly at the man who stood waiting for him to pass on. Tallente's face was immovable ‘Disappeared? Do you mean t that you don't know where he is? “T have no idea. During the service of the meal, on the terrace afterward, and even when they strolled down to the edge of the cliff to see the great yellow moon say vith Lady Jane. political career. She is strangely attractive to WHAT THE DEVIL YOU MEAN BY TO WRITE THESE LETTERS?” ne up from behind the hills, scarcely word was spoken except on political subjects, “You see, “T have tic m * Dartrey said, en a practical poli- ; are say that accounts fo: rather peculiar position to-day.” “How can you say that,” Tallente argued, ‘when day by day your power in the country when every- thing points to as the next Premier? “Pre ," Dartrey replied quietly. “That is why 1am here. The head of the Democratic Party has a right to the government of this country, but you know, at this point I have a very sad confession to make. IT am the worst politiclan who ever sat in the House. 1 am a poor debater, a worse strategist. Again, Tallente, that is why you and I at this moment walk together through your beautiful grounds and watch the rim of that yellow moon. It js yourself we want.” Tallente felt the thrill of the mo- ment, felt the sincerity of the man whose hand pressed gently upon his arm you “1am your man, Dartrey,"’ Tallente promised. “Tf will do what I can.” THE PRIME MINISTER. HE Right. Hon, John Augustus T Horlock, Prime Minister of Eng- land through a most amazing fluke, received Tallente, a few days later, with the air of one desiring to show as much graciousness as possi- ble to a discomfited follower, He ex- tended two fingers und indicated am uncomfortable chalr. “Well, well, ‘Tallente,” he said, “sorry I wasn't in town when you passed through from the north. Bad business, that Hellesfleld affair.” “It was a very bad business in- agreed, “chiefly be- that our agents there incapable.” The Prime Minister coughed. \edged. “You think so, Tallente, eh? their point of view is that ¥ Miller make all the running, make his points and never got swer in—never got a grip on ple, en?” | “That may do for the offict planation,” ‘Tallente replied “You did not sympathize with my defeat at Hellesfield underrated, as you always derrated, the vastly growieh, and dangerous popularity into whose hands the gove: this country will shortly pass,” Mr. Horlock frowned portent “You refer to the Democrats} vaturally."” do T understand you to at} your defeat, then, te the the Dem tic Party? “Tt Is no question of su Tallente replied. “It te a Cf “You felieve that they greater hold upon the coun’ we imagine, then?’ am sure of it," was the answer. Horlock smiled indulgently, “Tam glad to hear your Tallente,” he said, “I have member, however, that you smarting under a defeat infil these people. What I cann gether understand is this: How that you were’ entirely depri: their support at Hellesfield. yourself are supposed to be py a Socialist.’* “T can quite understand you: Puzzled at that,’ Tallente ac} I was myself at first. then I have received an The Prime Minister re antly. “I am very pleased to be able to tell you that concerning which I have been munication with your the last two months hres tal expectedly favorable turn."? “What the mischief do you Tallente inquired, puzzled, “T mean,"’ Mr. Horlock with a friendly smile, “that than be deprived of your services, His Majesty has that you should go to the House. You will be offered a within the next fortnight.”” Tallente stared at the though he had suddenly, his senses, “What om earth are you about, sirf’’ he demanded, Mr. Horlock somewhat resen vinitor’s tone. “Surely my statement wa ficiently explicit?” he said, « stiffly. ‘The peerage, com which at first, I admit, I saw ¢ ties, is yours. You can, without |) be of great service to us in the Howse and—" “But I'd sooner turn Tallente interrupted. “If I that it {s your intention to peerage, let us have no standing about the matter. fused, absolutely and finally.'* The Prime Minister stared visitor for a moment in a Then he unlocked a drawer! desk, drew out several lette threw them over to Tallente, “And will you tell devil you mean by au secretary to write these lette: demanded. | Tallente picked them up, req through and gasped. “Written by Palliser, aren’t| Mr. Horlock demanded, | “Without a doubt,” 7 knoweldged. The amazing however, is that they are unauthorized. The si been discussed between B. myself. I am exceedingly he went on, “that you shoul’ been misled in this fashion, bi only give you my word of bi these letters are entirely, lutely unauthorized.” “God bless my soul,” Minister exclaimed. ‘Where ser? Better telephone.” “Palliser left my service a more ago,” "Ballente replied. it at a moment's notice, in quence of a personal di concerning which I beg that ask no questions. “One moment,” he Prime Minister's forefinger! upon the button of the bell, may I tell you just why T pay you thie visit?” “If there is anything mor ‘be said," Mr. Horlock conced| an air of exaggerated patieno ‘J “There is just this,” Ti clared. “If you had had offer me or @ post in youd should have been compelled td it, just as I have declined that ; lous offer of a peerage, Ih sented to lead the D tf in the House of Commons.” (To Be Continued.) But none suc i kicked t > hill, shout- ( struck as it sound less astonish ceeded In a rage bell, and it rotied dc ing ita wish to the | tumbled, Benkei realized the only thing he could do was to restore the bell to tho temple from which he stole it. As soon as it was back at Mil-dera ft lapsed once more into bell language. ~caseeaiieietiione BIG JUMP IN EMPLOYMENT. WASHINGTON, April 20.—A decided and continued upward trend in employ- ment throughout the country during the past thirty days was reported to-day by the President’s Conference on Unem- ployment. For every 100 jobs available there are now 160 applicants @» com- pared with 226 applicants tn January, | the statement said ‘In othor words,” the zonference's staternent id, ‘where there was work for only 44 per cent. of the seekers three months ago. there are now Jobs f re Based on an estimate of 3,600,000 jobiess, this means employ- mpent for £30,000 individuals,” Ne VOLCANIC ISLANDS RISE, THEN VANISH. Up (From the Detroit News.) Volcanoes often break loose on the fioor of the ocean, and sometimes they build up considerable niountains, If such a mountain be tall enough it ap- pears above the surface and forms an island, The Mawallan Islands were themselves created in that way. Bometimes these volcanic islands rise up, only to disappear later. Here and there in the Pacific that very thing has happened within historic times, Mariners often have come across » or they have discovered to wise the absence of @ charted verve firma. In the neighborhood of the Aleutten sland the | eens two mountains lfted themselves out of the ocean a while ago, with much fire, steam and smoke. They are called Bogislof and Grewingk. Having slowly grown to great size they now are dis- appearing gradually. chain ee POLES BACK PADEREWSKI. pport Emigrants Raise Funds to Him fer President. WARSAW, April 21 (Associated Press).—The report of the Committee of 600 that ts raising funds among Polish emigrants to the United States to support Ignace Paderewski as can- didate for the Presidency of Poland gives assurance that Paderewskt will return and participate in the cam. paign This news has caused Poland's first Presidential campaign to take on added interest, and the Peasant Party has initiated strenuous efforts to tenet postpone the election until of 1923 instead of October oi as sone ees | ee VALET’S IRON STARTS SCARE IN 5TH AVE. } Smoke From Burned © Blaxe Is Out, Causes to Sound Alarm, A valet was pressing an electric Iron on a table fh ment of L. D, Deaumont en floor of the Hotel Langdon, nue and 66th Street, at 7 0% night, and when called from forgot to turn off the curremt, retarmed in « few minutes garments were burning ephoned for help, Employees put out the and then opened windows to smoke, A pedestrian sew carling from windows and a

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