The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1922, Page 3

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)

\ picted the difficulties encountered in 7 week the programme of new rapid THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1922, SNEW SUBWAYS |Zqual Rights in Love and Happiness for All Men and Women! PLANNED BY TRANSIT BOARD Commission t6 Publish Pro- posals for Trunk Lines in Few Days. HAVE A BIG WEEK Body Makes Marked Prog- ress in Bringing Order Out of Chao: The Transit Commission will release COCO CCC CE CECT SESE CESS OCCORT OSC CEES SS f . ui 6 t “Woh at ‘woman's woman, like a man, “Seli-determination in “There are as many ata 186 aie ot pee s Seo ONE «| ERS Ste ao ey prea tee trunk Ale piece The rights’ means, above has the right to live — happiness—that's what feminine misiits in of- : Peyeed LS Lh AE SRR re! hh Rl Soe I ll NL proposed new routes are said to be: 1. everything else, Is the cheerfully, no matter a woman should enjoy.” fices to-day as there West Side line via 10th, West End ‘Right To Be Happy!” what LG has done.” used 9. be in the home,” and Ft. Washington Avenues; 2. Long Island City to the heart of Brooklyn; 3. Under the Narrows connecting the 4th Avenue, Brooklyn, line with Staten Island. Partial revelation of the plan came last night at Town Hall, where the ‘Transit Commission gave the first public exhibition of its motion picture. “Mr. S. Trapp Hanger," which de- JUST UKE A HOME WAS WATER TANK ABODE OF 2 BOYS Pictures, Writing Desk and Mattress in “Apartment” on Top of Building. travelling in New York's rapid transit lines and also showed what is pro- posed in the way of relief. The exhibition of the motion picture closed a week of marked progress by the Transit Commission in its task of bringing order out of chaos in the traction muddle, both operative and financial. Some of the outstanding features are: 1, Issued orders dn Interborough Company for better service and more cars, 2. Ordered hearing into service on “L” and surface lines. 3. Revealed overcrowding of B. R. 'T. lines and showed up improvement in B, R. T> finances, thus guarantee- ing a 5 cent fare. 4. Showed up an overvaluation of Interborough property of $111,000,009. 5. Prepared for publication next Policeman Shafter of the East 67th Street Station was sent to 215 East 84th Street early to-day to look into a report of tenants that burglars were prowling about the roof. In a discontinued water tank, 8 feet by 6, and 9 feet high, in a corner of the roof, Shafter found a rentless apartment for two. On a mattress let down by a hinge from one wall, two seventeen r-old boys, Ray Forst- hofer of No. 243 East 84th Street and Timothy Murray of No. 2888 Wash- ington Avenue, the Bronx, were asleep, A neatly built wash stand was in one corner. Empty grocery boxes had been fitted up as shelves on which clothing and towels were neatly piled. There was a mirror over the wash stand and there, was a shelf ‘which could be let down as a writing desk The walls were decorated with pic- tures, for the most part photographs of persons eminent on the base ball diamond. When Shafer waked them the boys explained that they had been sent out to find work by their families and un fratd to go home. Before Magistrate Cobb to-day they pleaded guilty to vagrancy and were committeed for study by a probation officer until May 9 GIRL, 18, ROUSES SIXTEEN FAMILIES IN TENEMENT FIRE transit construction, 6. Obtained favorable action by the Board of Estimate on most of the 14th Street-Eastern » subway con- tracts. 7. Released motion picture of sub- way overcrowding and brought pro- posed plan for unification of the traction systems to the eyes of the public through the medium of the movies. Punching holes in the Interbor- ough's claims as to the value of its property was a big accomplishment. ‘The company claimed a valuation of $399,000,000, and the commission's ex- perts placed the value at $17,000,000. Judge Clarence J. Shearn of coun- sel for the commission has developed the fact that under contract No. 3 the clty has the privilege of recapturing the entire railroad in 1928 on pay- ment of the net cost to the Inter- borough, plus 15 per cent. The com- pany's claimed investment under con- tract No. 3 is $108,000,000; 15 per cent. of this is $16,000,000, making a total payment for which the city can acquire this property of $124,000,000. ‘The company claimed the present value to be $174,000.000, which is $50,000,000 in excess of the amount at which the elty can recapture the property. lt was also shown that the com- pany’s total claimed cost under con- tracts Nos. 1 and 2 for the old sub- ways was $54,000,000, while the com- pany |s asking a present value of $99,900,000, or a profit of $45,000,000 Putting the two together, Judge Shearn showed that the Interborougn Company was asking the city to pay $273,000,000 for an investment of $162,000,000, or $111,000,000 more than its investment {n subways, and in addition is asking the city to pay $68,000,000 as the value of the lease. Judge Shearn also showed that the company’s clalis are based on index numbers for present prices developed by using quotations for important ftems for labor and materials greatly in excess of the actual prices now Helen Ryan Sounds Alarm at Hudson and Beach Streets. Sixteen families living in a five- story tenement house at the south- west corner of Hudson and Beach Streets were forced to flee to the street early this morning when fire started in the cellar. Its prompt discovery prevented it from gaining hei $ Special Patro n Anthony Arnold was passing when he detected smoke, Running to the second floor, Arnold awakened the family of Mrs. M. Ryan and asked her to rouse other tenants while he sent in an alarm. Helen Ryan, eighteen, clad only in a nightgown, ran through the tene- ment house and roused the tenants, the majority of whom fled to the street in scanty attire, The tenants huddied in nearby doorways until they were assured by the firemen that all danger was over. ‘The police were unable to learn the cause of the fire. —_—_~»— HELPS SELF TO FINERY; MISTRESS CAN BUY MORE Negro Mala Makes Unusual Excane for Stealing Employers Best Gow! Mrs. Winna Schwartz, No. 1052 $7th Street, Brookly: on her wardrobe bout the time her ald by large subway con- [colored maid, Addie Clarke, twenty-four, pees pei by Ie Cd was leaving to accept another position peer s fo done of her best evening Kowns It was shown that, due to using ex- cessive prices, the company's claim for one item of tunnels under contract No. 3 is $13,200,000 too high. It was also brought out that the company has applied index numbers to interest profits, which it claims as an invest- ment, so as to overstate the present Value $5,000, 0,000. and 4 number of pairs of silk stockings missing. Later, she told the police, she located the missing articles in \ddie's trunk In Fifth Avenue Court, this morning, Mrs. Schwartz did not want to press the charge of grand larceny against Addle who told Magistrate Brown that she knew’ the clothes didn’t belong to her, but she thought Mrs. Schwartz had money enough to buy’ o Magistrate Brown held her without bail for the nd Jury on a charge of grand larceny. — SAILOR BLINDED BY LYE, YOUNG WOMAN HELD Gtet a SS JAMES A. OUTTERSON, PAPER MANUFACTURER, DIES OF PNEUMONIA James A. Outterson, President of the New York World Paper Mill Companies, died suddenly to-day in his apartment at No. 180° West End Avenue, Mr, Outterson, who was sixty il with bron widow and a daughter, Mrs, David W. Balmat, survive him Mr. Outterson was 4 ploneer4m build Jing up the paper industry in Northern York He wat President and mal owner of the Carthage Sul Pulp & Paper Ce Threw 1 Gustav Wehman, thirty-two, a sailor, is in Bellevue Hospital, where he may lose his sight as a result of his visit to the apartment of Miss Tekla Rann twenty-four, at No, 425 West 224 when the young woman threw the c tents of a can of lye into his |» Miss Ranne was locked up in the « West 30th §freet Police Station charged With felonious assuult. ‘The police say she told them that Wehman had been paying attention to her for two ye ff and on, and yesterday, upon th arrival of his vessel in port, call threatened to break down the de gehe didn't open it. Fearing him. opened the door and threw the conte of the can inte bis face. i oy \ will be from his home there neat week. Tyler, in a note of dis umph, “during the last few years more and more womeg have been claiming that right--which is why men have been so shocked and@ alarmed and excited over our ‘dangerous radical tendencies’ is a daughter-in-law of President Ty tation in her own right as novel- ist and short story writer, be- cause her newly-published book, “Children of Transg strong and unusual plea for a keep my happiness in my own name—not in that of some man, Byen her own love ness—that’s what a woman should enjoy,” continued Mrs, Tyler, “In the past women have allowed men to determine the form of hap- piness which for them. Stop and think if that ided to ‘check up new ways of doing busine invented. There « writer, Theres came the ur,had been hial pneumonia. His wpany in his native town of Carthage, N.Y, Buriat) hay “Women’s Rights’ t to ‘Joys As Well as the Miseries Is Mrs. G. Vere Tyler’s Aim A President’s Daughter-in-Law Makes a Tell- ing Argument for Sex Equality in All Things—“Resolved, That Whatever Hap- pens to Me I Am Going to Be Happy,”’ Resolution She Commends to All Girls Just Starting Out in Life. ‘ By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. WV Sor have been campaigning, agitating, working for years for the right to vote, the right to a pay envelope, the right to a latchkey; the right to this, that and the other thing—— “And they’re just beginning to find out that the most Important right of all—— “The right which everything else In creation, from a kitten to a man, has taken as a matter of course—— “Is the Right to be Happy “And,” added Mrs. G. Vere tinet te Joys of economic independence, the thrill of self-support, the bliss of being a business girl. The soft pedal was put on domestic hap- piness as a desideratum, Increas- ing swarms of women tlocked out 4 of the home to hunt their happl- ness where the new oracles told I had called on Mrs, Tyler, who them it would be found. “And’—M Tyler paused im- —*the are at least as many feminine misfits in offices to-day as there used to be in the home. Some women honestly do pasion,” Is a find happiness in a business ca- ¥ any another woman would and who has made a repu- pressiv ne pier e old-time new kind of sex equality, for be much happier in the old-time “ a ” feminine roles of wife and mother, Patel cents nde marely Habel: but this conception of happines tics or business but in love and fe noslongar ehcodraged: by: the happiness. older men, who want a supply 0 female labor, and the younger “A woman ts a woman, even men who do not vant to marry as a man is a man, with a right — to live cheerfully, no matter what “How about happiness through ‘ : lov I ‘suggested. ‘Don't you she has done or what has hap- SRT MEHMET LHI Se Heres taleD; pened to her’—that is the text womey have suffered from sex in- of “Children of ‘Transgression.” equality and from men's ideas of And at her New York apartment, what constitutes their happi- ‘ 5 3 Snes ness?” No, 105 East 1th Street—Mrs, My do, indeed Ava; ‘Tylor wes Tyler {sa Virginian by birth and sented, warms upbringing, but she has lived in “Instead of taking love lightly, a ous 3 takes this city many years—I found gayly, joyously, as a man . : it, women have let love make hanenmee to), Glas uae Shia, Ate them miserable. A woman in love esting theory of “woman's rights.” fs unhappy, first because sh = thinks the man may pot care “I¢ I were a young girl just be- about her; then, after this doubt ” “ has been resolved, she is unhappy ning life,” she said, “I should pinning z: because she thinks he won't keep make one resolution—only one. on caring yout her then, sho Thijs Is it: ‘Nesolved, that what- has q s to wh he thinks ever happens to me I am going to of he her he resp fiat her, 41. am going to whether he ever loved some be: banpy: And ne * other girl, whether he won't love some other girl in the future somehow “Self-determination in happi- mixed up with miser She con- siders it a privilege to ‘sacrifice herself’ Yor the man; she believes that she annot truly love him unless she ‘suffers’ for him.’ the men consider fit “Ra 1 exelaimed, trrever {sn'tso, For centuries, white men eee Sarasa atte. Guler were fighting aud exploring and Phi ¢ ‘tyler Mee aasanal that sort ut you know perfectly well Lages| Earn dimple aldn't want that many a woman's idea of be- eon Women would ing in love with a man Is mak ing herseif ‘perfectly miserable get In the way. Men, to use a BAS hea colloquialism, ‘couldn't use wom- S095! ttm busin ‘ Sens Mdn't. ‘They told Then she spoke of how men women--all women—that a wom~ conception of feminine happine an is never, never happy has ruled woman, even in loye ner own home. n did eve “The custom of sutte: she thing they possibly could to fos’ observed, “probably arose fro the cult of domes' , to man's belief that, with her hus exalt the joys of for band de: ho true woman could women. (The me at find happiness elsewhere than in home any too much!) ‘Home- death—self-destruction, In the keeping hearts are happlest,’ as West we never carried the idea the poet put it quite so far; yet, in many coun ae tries and times there has been “Many women found happiness a widely held belief that a widow by the fireside. Others wanted found true happiness only in ‘con to seek it elsewhere. They were secrating herself to her husband's not allowed to do 60, in moi memory,’ making a sort of hn cases. Until about fifty years man weeping willow of herself ago, Just after the Civil War, as It also has been thought very every one knows, there Was a tre- swe 1 touching for the un mendous business expansion, and ried girl, if her flance die ad her life anticipating their heavenly reunion phone. Men discovered that they “Does man mourn love forever? COULD ‘use Women in their busi He dues not! ‘Men may die ar ness’ Therefore the current of the worms may eat them, bur women began to flow into the NOT for love.’ ‘Shall 1, wasting shops and off Thevetore the in despair, di wuse a Woman's doctrines of a new cull of feminine fair?’ The men poets knew thetr young girls heurd about the lu luve tur wien : ae SOC CC CSE S CESS C CCUGTE SCE SSG SSCS OSSS SS cLnstend ot LARing Ios joyously, like a_ man, women let love make hem “miserables* of being in love phe a tN EL AL with a man is to ‘suf. Pi ne De TEL fer’ for eg forgetting.’ A New Emancipation for Gentler Sex Predicted to Be on the iA STUDIES SUBWAY « = “Equal rights in love “Cigarettes and knick- for men and women erbockers are among mean equal rights in the modern woman's ex- periments in happiness” JOHN G. SPARKS, Wife When Girl He Cast Oft Killed Herself. of John G. Sparks, veteran actor, was held to-day at St. ‘The trial on a charge of bigamy of Julian Mayo was con- cluded to-day before Justice Finch in ‘The last witness Wilhelmina Meyer, complainant who caused the finding of and the holder of $100,000 against which, he testifled yesterday, he Virginius St. t, Brooklyn, He died Wednes- at Coney Island Hospital. Actors] hoard actresses and managers, some of whom had been friends of Mr. first attained of Harrigan and’ Hart, fol- lowed his body to Calvary Cemetery. although only fifty- ears old, was a veteran of the American stage. His first appearance was at the age of eight years, when ‘An Irish Guest.” was in Geoghegan’ saloon, when walters wert also song and dance performers and between serving Many a celebrated old-time comedian began that way. Sparks’s cleverness songs became known to Harrigan and Hart, and in 1884 they engaged him for their famous company, the Theatre Comique, No, He remained years, playing Irish juvenile roles and Then he had the Supreme Court. popularity in] the indictment never satisfy, Mayo was the first witness called His defense ® has been outlawed by the statute of limitations. F of the prosecution is that the statute f limitations does not run , Yecause he has not been and is not a esident of this State, he made his home in Brooklyn. ‘The defendant examined by Assistant District Attor- He said that de- clans to be Mayo claims spite the fact that he shin ana resident of this city and that 90 per leading roles in “Leather Patel ses, and in 1890 he joined | Product ts sold in this city so far as he knows, has nev for a certificate Country Sport." several years. ,He lived at No. He was with Dailey 1490 East Second e was a member of the National Vaudeville Artists and quity Association, PORT ESSAYS WIN SCHOLARSHIPS 7 Boys and 7 Girls of High Schools Awarded Prizes in Contest. seven boys were scholarship testified early the week was rees emphatically was married of the Actors’ knew Mayo “When did learn that he prosecuetor. “When Lillian Cook, who was cast New Haven” id you eve omising situat find Sim in Seven" girl ana found him locked When I tried to force an the room he ‘aid up in bed un ‘or a week. for this on his knees,” The witness sald of Mayo's home In Brooklyn said, when York with him, showing how the development af the Vort of New York would affect their localities and the cost of living. hundred essays wer from the Metropolitan district before » following winners were chosen: Manhattan—Evelyn Wadleigh High S DeWitt Clinton Goldberger, Irving Waissar, City College. Morris High Howard Cameron, toosevelt High School, Queens-Richmond--Elizabeth Boet- tiger and Reed Hartel, town High School, rooklyn—Sophie Commerciat , Bushwick High § New Jersey— umbia High Sel 1 doctor's care implored my pardon they stopped at » denied hav- with servants or ter by his first marriage. BOMB FOUND NEAR THEATRE IS DUD Was Only Harmless Piece of Aerial Fireworks, Police Discover. Mayo's daugh- both of New- , South Orange; verona (N, J.) High nd William Me- found last night hallway of No. adjoining the Comedy Theatre ‘own of Union, Weehawken, found to contain six ounces of black gunpowder, and to dealers in fireworks as 4 ind women mean equal rights In Mrs. Tyler Had it exploded would have caused a fairly | “Do you know,” think this whole conditic fuirs fs changing? it wus considered e done in the things for which they d—are simply ext last few years, Jan Italian had the brate one of the wanted to be rid of it for fe rest so he dropped it in the hallway, MAN AND WIFE HELD ON FORGERY CHARGES knickerbocker the greater nd other social ure just the result of ‘oping around Secing that men sing Name of N.Y. Ba ly are trying out some » to men’s joy ing forgery in the second emancipation pope A forgery in the nece all pending ar- re going to free raignment and tria tw Babylon und Lolip. MAYO STRUCK HER |TELEPHONE GIRL, VETERAN ACTOR, JAS SHE TRAPPED HIM) MISSING 5 DAYS, BURIED TO-DAY} MISS MEYER SAYS} SOUGHT BY POLICE Comedian Rose From Bowery] Fifst Found He Had Another Song and Dance to Broad- way Popularity. Margaret Henry, Jersey City, Believed Detained or Vic- tim of Accident. The police of New York and Jersey City have been asked to find. Miss Margaret Henry, twenty-four years old, No, 210 Van Nostrand Avenue, Jersey City, who has been missing since Monday. Her father, John Henry, is connected with the Eagle plant of the Standard Ot1 Company in Jersey City and she has a brother who represents the United States Shipping Board in England, . ‘The last seen of Miss Henry was on Monday when she started for New York, where she was employed as a telephone operator. Relatives believe that she is detained or has met with an accident, She is nearly six feet tall, weighs 180 pounds, and was dressed in black. She has blond nd blue eyes, GIRL IS CAPTIVE ON FARM TWO YEARS Kept in Sheet Iron Shed, Be- cause Unbalanced, Father Declares. BUCYRUS, O.. May 6.— Irene Menges, twenty, is free to-day after being in prison for at least two. years in an abandoned gheet-iron smoke- house on the farm of her father, Jacob P. Menges, near Crest Line, Sheriff Knappenberger, with Mar- shal ¢ rles Crawford of Crest Line, arrested Menges yesterday after lib- erating the girl from her prison. Investigation of the case began several days ago, after neighbors had informed the Sheriff of the situation. Menges and his family declared the girl to be mentally incompetent, which necessitated her being placed under restraint, but officials at the Toledo State Hospital say that the girl was discharged from that insti- tution, June 30, 1915, as mentaly com- petent after eight months’ treatment, Taken to Bucyrus the girl ts being cared for by the Sheriff's wife, She made no attempt to speak and mere- ly smiled slightly when spoken to. She ate heartily. The prison, a 6x8 structure, is hid- den from view of the road, being di- rectly back of the house occupied by the family. The building has no windows and ventilation and but little light comes from small holes near the room. Its furnishings consist of a cot, small table, an oil stove and a lantern LEGION TO HONOR ARMY AND NAVY DEAD MAY 28 1 Services Will Be Held at thedral o Jobn the Divine. Memorlal services for soldier . and sailor dead will be held at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine at 4 P. M. Sun- day, May 28, The arrangements are In charge of the New York County Com- mittee of the American Legion, and have been planned so they will In no way conflict with Memorial Day ex- ercises. An address will be made by the Right Rey. William T. Manning, 8. T. D., D.C. L of New York, and the Rey. John Mock ridge of Philadelphia, former chaplain and a member of the Chureh War Com- mission, will deliver the sermon, Members of the Legion are requested to attend in tniform, but will be ad- mitted by recognition of their Legion badges. Gold Star Mothers and others who desire to attend may obtain tickets from the Memorial Service Committee, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, El- mendorf L. Carr, Chairman. Officers of the Army and Navy and members of the G. A. R., Spanish War Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, patriotic so cieties. and diplomatic representatives of other countri ve been invited. > - JUSTION LEHMAN HAS BRONCHIAL TROUBL BALTIMORE, May 6.—Justice Irving Lehman of the New York Suprene Court came to Raltimore yeste medical treatment, He bee ing for some Ume with bronehial dia order, Which caused a alight deatness, Protestant Episcopal Bishop CHICAGO'S MAYOR AND SEES HARBOR agit Thompson Entertained at Luncheon by Hylan Before Trip on City Boat. Twenty of Chicago's leading city officiats, headed by Mayor Wm. Hale Thompson, were guests to-day of Mayor Hylan on a trip about the waterways of New York. When Mayor Hylan visited Chicago several weeks ago he was royally entertained by the Chief Executive of that To-day Mayor Hylan repaid the compliment, It was announced at City Hall that yor Thompson spent the greater part of the morning studying the sub- ways. His trip was unofMeial, it was explained, and for that reason no reg= ular route was mapped out for him. The understanding was that the Chicago Mayor was to wander under- ground where he pleased. If he got lost, all he had to do was to remember the number of Mayor Hylan's tele- phone, Cortlandt 1000, and call up. Assurance was given him that the Mayor's car would find him in time for the beginning of the day's official Programme, a luncheon at 12.30 at the Whitehall Club in the Whitehall Building. The Mayor of New York was host, After the Whitehall luncheon the guests, led by the New York and Chi- cago Mayors, marched two by two to the city boat Correction, which took them on a trip around the harbor. During this voyage, which took up a good part of the afternoon, Mayor Hylan showed Mayor Thompson the various points of interest, Including the site of the proposed Narrows tun- nel, the new piers at Staten Island and the site of the proposed Jamaica Bay development. The water trip was to end at Bay Ridge Avenue, from which point the party proceeded to Villepigue’s Inn, Ocean Avenue and Sheepshead Bay. There Mayor Hylan again acted as host at a shore dinner The published report from Chicago of a rumor that two indictments bad been found against Willlam A. Bither, attorney for the Chicago Board of Education, an appointee of Mayor Thompson, will not interfere with the plans in this city of the Thompson party, of which Mr, Bither as a mem- ber. State's Attorney Crowe, a rebel from the Thompson ranks, according to the story from Chicago, submitted to the Grand Jury the alleged con- fession of Henry W. Kaup, a real estate operator, the result of which was, the report says, two indictments against Bither, said to include charges of larceny, embezzlement, larceny by bailee, conspiracy to obtain money by false pretences, operating a confidence game and attempting to commit em- bezzlement. Kaup is reported to have been indicted on a conspiracy count. “I don’t wish to discuss this,"’ said Mr. Bither this morning. “It's the first I have heard of it.’" Mayor Thompson sa.d that the re- port was news to him, but that he had heard statements bearing on the charges. ‘So far as I know,"’ he said, “there is nothing to these charges. I asked Mr. Bither about them and he denied them, Further than that I have noth- ing to say." Asked if there was anything to the rumor that he had asked for Mr. Bither’s resignation, he replied that he had heard nothing about it. O'BRIEN WELCOMED BUG EXPERT, NOT MAYOR OF CHICAGO Entomologist Was Deliver- ing Essay on Worm, When John P. Came in. Corporation Counsel John O'Brien yesterday went to the Hotel Pennsylvania to welcome the “Great- yor of Chicago,” according to the “Greatest: Mayor of New York.” Dr. John Dill Robertson, one of Chi- cago’s most distinguished entomolo- g’sts ws delivering to the assembled newspaper men a most interesting essay on the worm, when Mr. O'Brien breezed in a high hat and a frock coat. “Ah!” exclaimed the genial Cor- poration Counsel, extending a hand to the entomologist, who wears whiskers, “Welcome to our city Mr, Mayor.” “Tam not Mayor Thompaon,” re- turned the bug expert, “but I'm pleased to meet you just the same. The Mayor is in the next room."* “Oh, ah," returged Mr, O’Brien, “Well, don’t let me disturb your In- terview with the boys, I've no doubt it is very important. “Yes,"' rejoined Dr, Robertson. “T was talking about a worm, You know the life of the worm is thirty days, but | have a method, which I was just explaining, to prolong his life to 865 days.” “Ah, yes,"’ declared the Corporation Counsel, the wisdom of Solomon lighting his face HERE’S DAYLIGHT SAVING BUT NO CLOCK MOVING Just Go to Work an Hour Earlier a the Trick In Done. WASHINGTON, May 6.—Government departments and the business com- munity of Washington will inaugurate what is In effect daylight savings on Monday, May 15, by going to work an. hour earlier, but without moving for- ward the hands of the clock, Secretary Hoover announced to-day, The conference was participated. in by himself, representatives of the com- mercial organizations of Washingtem aod President Harding cae me eee

Other pages from this issue: