The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1922, Page 3

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ee a ae ee a on is ” % : i METHODS TO PROPLES cae cas. “2 » Everywhere Else They Are] BRAVE POLICEMAN Making Cheaper Gas and | WHO FOUGHT PISTOL SCIENCE IGNORED HER THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 5, POLICEMAN FIGHTS [Girl Who Shot “Pertect Lover” Gs Says She Was Fiftieth Victim; “I Love No Woman,” | He Told Her + Slayer Quotes Anderson as Having Admitted That He Was a Devil--“I’m Not Sorry,” Braves Buliets to Subdue Man She Adds, ‘‘and Want to Die.” SSS e Who Had Attacked Two Women and Boy. KANSAS CITY, June 5 (Associated Press).—Peggy Marie Beal, nurse of Policeman Daniel Kavanagh of the| Springfield, Il, and Dayton, O., who Fifth Street Station received the| Saturday shot and killed Frapk War- ren Anderson, war veteran and di partment store welfare director, be- cause he could not marry her, and then shot herseif, will recover, doc- tors at the City Hospital believe. The young woman, hearing that she stood a good chance to recover, turned her face to the wall. want to die,” she said. Then she beckoned to a nurse, “I'm not sorry I shot him," she gasped. “He deserve: it. I did right 10 o'clock this morning. The injuries}to shoot him. { should have killed the poligeman received, a few cuts|him before I did." from broken glass, were slight and At Miss Beal's request, visitors ety ie eet en nkht and Rl nave been barred from her room to- ie. C2 UUEr ae ale SOR. day. Physicians to-day said that the Danley was more than six feet tall] bullet passed through her lung. and weighed 245 pounds. Kavanaugh} Anderson's body, which awaits di- weighs 145 pounds, Shortly before |fctions from relatives in Collings- WAR VETERAN SLAIN BY WOMAN WHO SAYS SHE IS 50TH VICTIM praise of superiors and comrades to- over his twenty minutes’ work in subduing John Danley, twenty-eight ars old, a giant motorman, living at No. 664 East 13th Street, who fired many shots after knocking down two women and a boy. Kavanagh shot Danley twice in the abdomen before he could conquer him. Danley died in Bellevue Hospital at Oil Companies’ One Object Is to Make Gas Consumers Cal Pay for Gas Oil 4 ”. FOURTH ARTICLE. The Evening World's Inquiry into why New York City consumers pay . exorbitant prices for gas—$1.25 tu $1.50—has developed these facts: 1, The present 22-candle power is unnecessary and very By Sophie Irene Loeb. “f % costly. wood, N. J., was not without vis 2. One of the biggest items in midnight Danley, the worse for drink, [tors Women came to see the body making gas is the oil gas needed. went home and said he had been heldfof the man declared by Miss Beal 3. The interests that sell the oil up at Second Avenue and Tenth|t® have been “the perfect lover,” gas to the gas companies are in- Street and was going to be revengea, | ‘"® man who, according to the girl, boasted to her of his conquests, told He slipped a big pistol into one} her fifty, women loved him and sai pocket; a box of cartridges into an- “Peg, I'm a devil. I love no othe: 1 woman. other, and clad only in trousers, un- ‘A possible echo of another romance was seen by the police to-day, in the story of a woman who called by tele- phone to the hotel where Anderson terested in both concerns and the Standard Oil Company the main beneficiary. 4. More than 200,000,000 railons dershirt and shoes went out. The of gas oil are used annually in street wag filled With pedestrians and beats As ain vebiciee, the frat persons who got in| ooo ative Beal had lived as tam and RAPA Tic atlak his way, ‘a woman, was kicked and] wife, This telephone call came the thus utilized. sent spinning several feet. Another|night after the tragedy, and the 5. The City of New York has woman, who remonstrated, was slap-| Woman asked for “Mr. or Mrs. An- FRANK ANDERSON had an option to change to the Pealinto the eutte derson."" ‘The hotel clerk told her British Thermal Unit standard, Lai what hhd happened, and the woman Then the man seized ten-year-old : f screamed. f ee te t Sinai Louis Feldman, whirled him over his] “‘Dead!"" she cried, BOs 0 en RogEs os Romane aca give all the hea’ can't believe it!” and undying love. Letters from An- a much lower cost. head and flung him with such force] “She asked where the body had been| derson to Miss Beal spoke of the pos- 6. Thirty-five States have al- IMMENSE VALUE OF ONE COAL-]¢©° the sidewalk that he was knocked DP KAVANAGH. or better performance for every usw to which gas is now put. “All of our gas is now made elther the distillation of coal or by first king blue water gas and then en tiching It. This is an awful waste of good material and a needless drain on our oil reserves tentions, and they ruled togoth “Oh, taken, and to-day a woman about| sibility of honcymooning In the South ready adopted this method and GAS BY-PRODUCT. unconscious, By that time a crowd based wee pret to give Age ager eer teeta tee giet, Nad ‘ " aske io see the corpse. She sal Anderson, accordl .o the girl, ha other processes for reducing costs, “In 1911 I pointed out to the Royai} menaced Danley, who shouted that he/she had been a friend of the dead|toid her he had changed his mind— was Jack Dempsey and could lick the world. He drew his revolver and fired. His first bullet grazed a woman and his second a boy, continued |Automobile Club of Great Britain and to some of the gas officials that if all of the gas made in the United King vice. dom was made from coal and then Since 1916, when the Publ'c Ser-|was scrubbed to over the conden- vice Commission gave the gas cor-|sible oils, the United Kingdom would porations an opportunity to change|not have to import a gallon of petrol, from the present 22-candle power|®M4 could moro than supply all of tha petrol demands from this supply of system to the British Thermal Unit} 4) which nas no greater value to tho system, nothing has been done by/gas consumer than an equal number them to take advantage of the option.Jof the Britis Thermal Units in ths Why? POE EOS __ | he was trying to batter it down, Anderson, it 1s indicated in his WON'T LET PEOPLE KNOW I elie ay lee ing in} The policeman ran to the yard.| papers, was an officer in the Air owas last of all. CHEAPER GAG 18 POSSIBLE. |itiized by new methods that have | soe, the fire escape and tried to! Service during the war. He was never ‘Will there be more? T asked him. a ag oe the pahlle tear. ;deesloped. velnawhare nave|peer into the apartment through a} sent overseas, apparently, but he I don't know,’ he sald, ‘maybe Bevanse the demanys) 0! » eens, idexelan here, people | window. He could see no one and| prized his army experience greatly. It|there will. Maybe I'll go back to at that time and now are such that}could enjoy a gas rato here as raised the sush, Still meeting no op-} was the one streak of romance and]|some of these Pean't tell” the people would insiei on lower Beno : 2 position he jumped inside and crouch-| adventure in a workaday existence. , “Then I killed him. I ought to prices in proportion to the lowering|,,Fo" ¢xample, New York State ined low on the floor. Denied any service more exciting] have done it before. All I'm sorry for while New York hi this costly and high-priced that he couldn't marry her ater, per- haps. He had not divorced his wife yet, he said, according to Miss Beal, It was the second time a wedding had been postponed, she said, adding that she had come here in February and there had t no wedding faith survived that," she sald “T ought to have known then. But 1 didn't. I believed him, I thought he ared for me. And then he told me there were fifty others and showed me their names written in a diary, and the cities where they lived, And my man, and had known him in depart- ment store welfare work. She was permitted to sec the body, gazed at it a long time and shuddered. “How could she!'’ she exclaimed, “What devils women r= Kavanagh came around the corner] and added, at the sight i ‘orm Dan- | #te." and at the sight of his uniform Dan-|*"Es ane tet, ley fled ‘nto his rooms. The police-| ‘Letters from Anderson's father in man, gun in hand, went to the door] Collingswood, N. J., found after his and found it barricaded. He could} 4th, spoke of a woman, referred to 3 as “B,'’ who might be following the hear furniture piled against it while] young’ man. fn 1918 produced from {ts coal gas plants] From a bedroom Danley fired six] than campaigning in bevialf of Liberty] is that I didn’t kill myself too. ‘There of the standard. This the compantes}oox@ amounting to $1,063,879, but if| sho him, bond drives, the aviator-department] is nothing more for me."' have teen loath to do, They want|New York State used coke-oven gas,| Kavanagh crawled across the floor.| store employee solaced himself after] Anderson, who had been here only to eat their cake and have it too, [the enormous production would he| keeping out of the line of the fire as|the war by writing romances. In one|a few months, bore the reputation of most significant, The coke made| glass and plaster fell around him, At from coal gas plants in the United| the fifth shot he thought Danley‘s re- volver was empty and jumped up to set him, ‘There was another shot, which also missed Kavanagh fired tow; of these the hero was an army flyer] being-quiet; reserved, interested in his who achieved undying fame during} work, tennis and motor cars, Dur the war and fell in love with a girl] ing his working hours he was a who scorned him because of his} figure of no particular distinction—a father's wealth. But the flyer found} young man getting ahead im the rd the last] her at last, living in the South Seas.| world. It was after working hours They would be willing to change to the cheaper method of making £45} <tates in 1918 amounted to 1,800,000 tons, worth over $14,000,000. In if they could continue the present high price or with very little redud- same year over 25,000,000 tons of made in coke ovens and repre were a ,|sented a value of over $193,000.0uu, flash and at™his second shot heard al where she had fled to escape his at-! that romance emlled him, As it is, the same Interests that are} A iother item is the tar produced us| thyd. He tiptoed into the dark room making the present high-priced can-| by-product and the percentage of| when he heard a man groan, and with pistol in his right hand, got out his flashlight with his left. Danley had been shot twice in the abdomen. His wife, Mary, was cowering under a bed. There was still trouble ahead for works was an appreciable factor in]ghe policeman. The indignant youth the coal-tar business in 1917 and 1918,]of the neighborhood had organized but the output at the works was|and armed with anything they could materially less than that from coke-| find started to avenge the two women oven operations. For example, in]and boy. As they came up the stairs 1918 only about 53,000,000 ions of}they ture away the balustrade for tar was made ut coal-gas works,|weapons. Just as the policeman whereas more than 260,000,000 gallons} threw open the door and faced them was produced at coke ovens. the clang of the patrol wagon with stated, has been developed tre- The average price of the tar varied] peserves was heard and the crowd mendously by other States because] widely throughout the country in| gave way. of the enormous by-products. 1917 and 1918, but the average for the Another method is the Dayton pro-| country as FATHER AND SON SLAIN IN STREET cess, which, it is estimated, can pro-|slightly greater than in previous Police Seek Another Son duce gas to-day in this city for about | years, 45 cents per thousand cubic feet, as “The average In 1915 was 2.8 cents Who Fled Wounded After Bullets Killed Two, against $1 to $1.50 now charged.]/a gallon, including coke-oven tar; in Hosp! that made from coal gas as compar id to coke-oven gas is also most inter- esting, The Bureau of Standards has this to say about it: The production of tar at coal-gas dle power gas also are interested in the enormous amounts paid for gas oil and the money gves into the same pockets and the newer processes Caring for Flock of Love Birds— Well, O’Brien Wants Another Job! Quits as Deckhand After Nursing Monkey Twins and Hopping Bells for Boa Constrictors. Any reader of ‘The Evening World, the way to Boston, to Join the Sells- : loto circus looking for a reliable party to {ak “Four nights they had me sitting care of the baby will do well to com-| 7, With a sick boa constrictor,” com- municate at once with Mr. Micbacl| plained O'Brien. “When Kopo, a W. T. O'Brien, in care of this neWws-] Mother monkey, kicked in, two days paper. ‘Through no fault of his own] Out. from a combination of nostalgia, coh in his job us{Reuritis and the namby-pambles, Mr. O'Brien has blown his they gave me her twins to bring up. principal deckhand of the steamshiP] mut the lovebirds! Suffering skee- Hansa of the Samburg-American line, | zix! which reached New York yesterday] “You never had the care of a flock of love-birds, 1 suppose? You don't know your luck It's mething 32 other passengers. betwixt being the only lone and single 1b wound In his back,| ‘After hopping bells for two weeks| male passenger on top of a Fifth pears few ite asrontaa par-| Avenue bus on a starry night ta ki ay ee in ugust and being locked up in a tele- ona charge of shooting to death] rots, elephants and monkeys," Sait} ee eee et ctwoom two Rizzuto, forty-eight years} O'Brien, “I'm free to state that 4) other booths in one of which John is his son, Giuseppe, twenty-|Job as nursemaid in Yonkers; New| talking to his Jane and in the other 431 Marey Avenue, | Rochelle oF Wes AS s9ne swapping £ »s with her ‘001 e toe y y - more tempting to me day han a} Jol Bee tA a aoa : vin teeon nave second-class postmastership. _| “1 could tel you a fot more, In- other son, Pasquale, twenty-one, and| “And I'm not fussy. If there's any cluding how a man by the name of will charge him with murder, undertaker in Williamsburg looking Michael Wolfe Tone O'Brien came to Marcy Avenue, near Walton. Street, |F @ night assistant I'm his man and) be in Hamburg and landed a job on a was filled with children yesterday af.| 0 auestions answered ierman ship, but to sum it all up ternoon when Rizzuto and his two| The cargo that gut the deckhand’s Ne done and 1 want a ale young sons ran from their home goat was made up of co ;|J0b_98 some. lonely, and deserted jazuto appeared to be upbraia-|condas, pythons and 812 specimens 2 Cat ; : on ing Pasqui Suddenly a shot was| the species he named consigned . won cers uy the unsa sale rien heard and the elder Rizzuto crumpled | 1ou!s Ruhe of New York and now ¢ rin German ip on the sidewalk, Then came an- other and Giuseppe fell beside him, dead 5 As the children and pedestrians raced, ser ng, down the block, Pasquale darted into his home. Pa-] yewton, N. J Res trolman Steinfetd called the reserves Detective Cupt. McCloskey found would require less olls, As has been set forth in these columns, there are other means of reducing the cost of gas which have not been adopted in New York. Among these methods there !s the coke-oven gas, which as has been (More about this gas in a later 8.3 cents, and in 1918, 3.9 cents. article). The total sales of coal-gas and coke- What 1s most important {s the fact] oven tar in 1918 were 218,000,000 gal- that New York City has done nothing} tons, valued gt $8,000,000, in contrast as compared to other cities and States, | with a total of 186,000,000 gallons, / but has carried the matter to the Su-| valued at only $5,000,000 in 19 preme Court to fight for the present “The sales of tar from coal-gas high vate. Works represent approximately 90 per MAN ON THE INSIDE REVEALS] cent. of the total production.” THE SECRET. If coke-oven gas were used in ® ements | Greater New York and every resid- Just how the present requirements} 10) as a by-product, would reduce of the average consumer would be met] the Cost a few cents, it is readily by a change to the British Thermal| soon how the cost per thousand -feet Unit standard is well stated by % Well | Ooty thus be prenortionntele reduced known man of high scientifle knowl-|)PUn cou y je hloportions ie edge, who has .handled large public ¢ le by-products must’. be Utilities, especiaily electricity and gas. |t#ken Into consideration in fixing the a ae price of gas consumer great optimist on the gits business HAS 33D CHILD BY SEVENTH WIFE with a rgo of circus animals and a are watched to-day for a man with and !f ke for boa constrictors, babboo Zier iieats r We have been handicapped in the gas business by working under standards created for another day and age and having no more application to our business of to-day than rules fora] Mother Is 85 and Has horsecar line have to do with a great oe b street railway. Eight— Man Forgets Name of Latest. “The gas business was originally founded solely to furnish illumination The only means of getting {llumination HARLAN, Ky., June 5.—The in those days was by use of hydrocar BURGLARS BLOW SAFE | icctiuion. “About su0° members ofthe 200 the IN RAILROAD STATION | regiment were killed in action or died of wounds in the World War. ‘|FOUR DAMAGE SUITS em AEMER CO IRLARR: AGAINST AUTO OWNERS ‘Thieves entered the Lack bons, breaking the hydrocarbon in the} DTH 18 announced of a child to }-a blood-stained coat ald shirt, which | tion at Newton, N. J.. early this 1 $40,000 Anked hy Parents of flame and trying to maintain the car-| the wife of Robert Baker, dairy- | Pasquale had discarded bstore Ne | ing and blew the Goor off of the oft! jured 0 4 cande: an, o 0 fled from the louse, They were] safe with nitro glycerine, Stat! . a Boys bon particle in a state of incandes-] man, of this town ened, indicating that Paaquaie has| agent Snyder was unable to tell # Four damage suits are involved In a cence as long as possible without Baker is eighty-four years old how much money had been taken. | trial begun to-day before Justioe Wag burning it to its gaseous products and this is his thirty-third child, |® Af wound a Ueket blanks and a lead half dollar, re-] Con) OO Lona Heo ae ae “Many decades ago incandescent} ‘The’ new mother iw thirty-five Se aH Jected by the robbers, were neatly fendanra are BM, Moxner and Relber gas lighting was developed, and wa| years old and the seventh Wite of | SEIZED CON TO BE PAID FOR ON] out on a table beside the bursted Brow, who are axsuciatod in the whole perfected to a state where people , BASIS OF LOSS TO OWNER, The only clues are fingerprints oF sale neat. businens Baker. They have been married fourteen years and Mrs. Baker has presented eight children to her husband Baker says he expects to live in good health until he is at jeast RICHMOND, Vn. June 5.—Coal seized ansit during the war must he compensted for on the basis of the lors owner because of the confiscation «nd not on the basis window through which the thieves « Canes tered, by the d 12TH REGIMENT MEMORIA! y injur aG a ob Wiksing, each nine years old, in At the 12th Regiment Ars nest | eee a eeper each pine ‘old. in Thursday the Veteran association Will] are those of the could not afford to burn gas in an open flame. “Practically all of our gas is now sold for fuel purposes. None of this gas is fit to be burned for fuel pur- by railroads wt t Duncan ‘i poses in the ordinery house appli-} a centenarian Eo ct Nena Benn ines or] unveil a memorial tablet to chose of | hoy. who sues 1 dnmaxen a 2) ances except by first diluting it. Non- In announcing the hirth of the | ora’ hen to. An GRADLGA Bhs | Seen cee mee mane: the aupls rian of lie me luminous gas such as carbon mon child Baker sald he had t Rounoed hss dud bp. Jude Woods| George R. Dyer will unvell the tat father of the: ot jer f by ; guide and hydrogen, would give equul ten the little one's name, concurred, ‘Alter the unveiling Gen. Dyes will re eng, brings w slinil4r clu, } ~ { 1922. WANTS TOKILL SELF WHEN MOTHER AND SISTER DIE IN AUTO ania ‘ ar Avoiding Anothe; Crashes Into Telephone Pole in Jersey. LILLIAN RUSSELL MAY RECOVER, IS REPORT TO-DAY COP FIRES SHOTS AT THUG; CAPTU | HMO BROADMAY Cries Frighten Him and Come federate From Apartment | They Were Robbing, — j When he learned that his mother ter had been killed after the automobile he was driving skidded PEDES and TRIAN IS FELLED, Returning Tenant Hurled Down Flight of Stairs * by Ex-Convict. into a telephone pole in Millburn, N J., last night, John Aldez threatened to kill himself at the Overlook Hos- pital, Summit, where he had been taken suffering with a sealp wot and possible internal injuries, accc ing to the police. The sister, Dorothy Aldes, fifteen, died instantly from a fracture of the skull The mother, Mrs. Florence Aldez, about forty, died Inter in the night at the Overlook Hospital Cries of “Police!” and “Thiegt™ started Detective William Reilly éf the Safe and Loft Squad after one of two men who ran at top speed from No, 518 Pearl Street, shortly Bee fore noon to-day, the other having leaped down the stairs of the Worth) A police guard was put over Aldez,|“«§ ‘ Street subway station, i who is about twenty-two, to prevent Sucng nba tor Hope, As.he ran, the man Sung aa him from killing himself, He was} Says Physician—Crisis efit tals Mente, ae charged with manslaughter, and witl Believed Past. a veitatider tothe aitewalnien 0 arraigned © Millburn Police Court when released from the hos-| PITTSBURGH, June 6.;~The con | fred reveral shots to stop the may Dita, dition of Mrs. Alexander P. Moores] sivat fnalle : a M inwe tthe passengers in the auto-| formerly Lillian Russell, who last] avct Pnally caught, him in Bi way, near Thomas Street. mobile were injured. Eugene Rud-| week was stric! ri ia r 3 Ger, about twenty-one sor tne Honk: icken with serious tl He was James Guggino, nineteen, blower Avenue, Belleville, was taken] [°*% Was regarded to-night as en- to the Overlook Hospital with the| CUrasing, She Is under the constant others in a serious condition, Borden|*#are of Dr. L. W. Swope, who has Cusp, about the mee aee sees told reiatives of the patient that, bar- he same address, was slightly In-| ring compli, e re jured, and released from the hospital] 7® complications, there is ground for strong hope of her recovery. shortly after he was taken ipto it According to witnesses, Aldez was| Mrs. Moore, whose condition was : threw him down a flight of stairs driving west in South Orange Ave- pronounced alarming Friday night,| fled without the borte It wee mie nue, Millburn, wheng at the intersec-| is believed to have passed the crisis in | cries that brought Reilly. tion of White Oak Ridge road he 4 Pheidetactive tecouhines Cole met another car, driven by William] her illness yesterda a youth, fe Hat arceatea Goloe aaa B. Carter, No, 111 Vinton Road, Madi-| Mrs, Moore's tilness in traced to] # Youth Ne had arrested, ree n, who was going south. To avoid] what was viewed as a trivial acel- Bimirnfor a year, 6 ven a collision, Aldex swerved around the Monge eae Eee ee tnt ct miekdded Inte a cards| returning home after her tour of F ‘The man struck by the flying jimmy pie aby rope, where she investigated imm\-] was William D. Jones, an insurance ip . 4 gration conditions for the Govern-| broker of Ng. 25 Church Street, live The Aldez family lived at No. 1059] 5" ‘ : South Grove Street, Irvington, N. J.) '™°"* wie lng Eid: 208 Broad Stren —— N. J. His leg was badly cut. a » |WOULD OUST ARMY are mates oe FROM PUBLIC BEACH| MRS. STILLMAN’S BRIEF IN, Raids by New York Enforce- (LILLIAN RUSSELL) of No, 85 Catherine Street, and Reilly, learned later that he and a fellow robber had jimmied the door of Mirm Ellen Coleman's apartment on the top floor of the Pearl Street house, eol+ lected apparel and other things and were about to get away when Cole man returned. They set on him and dent while she was on board a vessel ae spy p{ Jon, Brennan, chtet counsel Citizens Also Oppose Gift of} sis. "Stiiman. in. the. suit ‘or ivan ate Hata brought against her by James A. Stille ment Agents May Bring Riis Park, Rockaway, banker, announced yestersaiaaas cS) ° to Navy. has filed final brief and papers for the Many Changes. In addition to opposing the Navy | Sir pe wridag, “at Be anawered, Mf af, After “lzzie’’ Einstein and ‘“Moe') Department's request for about 95| Coples of the documents were served. i nae STIR . . upon Cornelius Sullivan, one of the laws Smith, Federal Prohibition ‘agents acres of Jacob A. Riis Park on the] 0h) or Mr. Stillman. Mrs. Still Rockaway peninsula, a large deloga-| attorneys are now waiting for “the raids in Brooklyn yesterday, arrest-] tion of citizens will appear before oe. her aged speaking, from the huse and’s_ 5 ing fifty-one saloonkeepers and/the Board of Estimate Thursday] "Mr, Brennan filed his brief with fourteen bartenders, members of the}morning at a public hearing to urge|eree Danlel J. Gleason of " : County, who has received the o a word, charge ! staff of Willlam B. Lord, in charge} that the city request the Federal) yi Mack, guardian for Baby 4 of Prohibition enforcement in Brook-|Government to surrender the bath-| stillman, whose parentage was quese lyn last night made five arrests in] Ing beach that ts now par of the 300-| tfoned in the divorce sult. from Manhattan, made spectacular that borough acre military reservation adjoining} ong DEAD, ONE DYING FROM the tract wanted by the navy. ING FROM FIRE ESCAPE, The fight to open the beaches to oppe Lerro, forty, No. 298 Bast civilian bathers will be led by]tith 8 was killed, and Henry 806 Fifth Avenue; Cornelius Mc-] the Committee on Non-Partisan Facts, | Glick, twenty-one, No. 7 102d Aventey Sweeney, owner, No. 494 Fourth Ave-}of which Herman A. Mets is Chair- | Woodhaven, Is dying at the Brooklyn oI, owner, No, 668] Man, and a vigorous effort will be} Ho*pital, as the result of a fall at Bos Palate made to convince the board that thel {ney were members of & Bank wrecalnap land 1s not vitally necessary to thelan old bullding. They were on @ fite owner, and James McCaffrey, defense of this port, as stated in afescape at the second floor when ft cole 20 Third Avenue letter from Secretary Denby. lapsed. five were to be arranged to-day before United States Commissioner in Brooklyn, on char s of the Volstead act It was predicted in Trooklyn that there would be drastic changes among the twenty-five men on Lord's staft, who have made less than fifty arrests in the borough during the past month. At four places the men arrested were Lawrence Conboy, owner, No nue; James Car Seventh Avenue tender, violating ————— Snores Reveal Youth Asleep In Candy Shop fe Tampered With, but Sleeper Doesn't Know How He Got There. Harry Lebber, manager of the ‘ United Candy Company's shop at the corner of 14th street and Fourth ave- nue, opened the doors promptly at 8 this morning, took a few steps to ward the reur of the shop and stop ped in his tracks. Some one was snoring! Fast asleep under one of the count ers, Mr. Lebber found a youth who claimed to be John Lemel, twenty of No, 636 Hast 14th street, Lebber called Patrolman Me the Merce MeGuire of pet Station and Lemel was awakened with, some difficulty Oa ay ow aunty anol ~=Nd tired— eo with attempt- showed that the outer deer of (he safe was open and the inner door had been tampered with by a jime Nearby the candy man picked 1 flashlight @ and transom pair of glove ° a Fourth venue entrance was ope! Police suggest that the snoring Lemel may have been picked up by cracksmen while unde of alleged Haque and «because © stature and lack of welght boosted through the transom and used as a door opener. Angry when the break netted nothing, this t ta. the “opener” was left to bis fate But it cannot be pr i by Leamel, Pressed by the police for an expla ue prsnane ant The all-Ceylon Tea nfluence tion of his presence amon sweets, t rut one “Daianed if 1 know)" | te Oe sucinqnagonnciths chitig Oe | — —_

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