The evening world. Newspaper, June 6, 1922, Page 15

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e Mother of 400-Ibs. Displacement Nurses “Half-Boys’’ of Moonshine Cargo Aboard Perambulator Raises Question “Is Baby Carriage a Common Carrier "’? CHATTANOOGA, ‘Tenn., June 6 (Copyright).—Is a \baby carriage a common carrier? This question 1s perplexing Judge Sam D,. McReynolds of the Criminal Court of Hamilton County, The Judge is diligently seek- ing the answer in his law books be- cause on it hinges the liberty of va McFadden, a colored person of 400 pounds displacement who played the stellar role in a comedy drama which held the boards at the Court House for one hour to-day, Two focal plain clothes men sus- pected that Eva, despite her bulk, entertained concealed bootlegging pro- clivities. ‘They paid an unexpected and unannounced visit to her home and found her just leaving. Before her perambulated a aice, shiny baby carriage. A well-swaddled and blan- has been arity So ea Gace Ba keted form reposed where children tga So eat. J. White's Ruth, Dr, V.| usually do in vehicles of this sort. ©. Piatti’s Vivante, Mrs, Arthur King] Chattanooga liquor details however Lafiin's Marvel, Wilson G. Boyden’s| are trained to suspect everything, motor boat The Way. E.G: S208) v0, mother love. ‘They held up Eva ata aco Jed volunteers, |and her baby buggy and leaned down to examine the mite of humanity who tugged and pushed al the boats nearest the ways. They magaged to} which seemed to be there. They un- rolled the outer blanket and found— get the Vesper Il., which i ont ht from Thateher P, Laquler, out le not a baby but several ‘*half-boys"’ of moonshine. So Eva, her ‘‘baby’’ and cof reach of the flames.and dragged her ‘‘baby’’ carriage were taken into out several smaller craft. : ——<—<=— SOMETHING ALLURES custody and to-day were placed on] Graduation reminds us of trial. our own graduation of sizes IN GUTTENBERG, N. J. Eva tookgphe stand in her own de-/to fit men and boys of all tense after a double chair had been }1 i146. requisitioned to replace the one that : : usually 1s occupied for that purpose. Roigheey ee Aig but 5 SIX YACHTS BURN ~ AS FLAMES SWEEP GREENWICH YARD Volunteers Save Others and Smaller Crafi—Big Oil Tanks in Danger. and rarely was used on “interstate Journeys."* The court declined to be convinced, holding this was a freight and not a passenger transaction. The original sentence of thirty days in the work- house and a fine of $100 was directed to stand, Eva went back to jail, but her attorney ihsisted that he was not through, “We will roll that baby carriage into a higher court and prove that it was a common carrier and so Eva will eventually go free,"’ was his final word, But Judge Sam ts studying his law- hooks and says he can defend his de- cision If called on to do so. a —————— GREENWICH, Conn, June 6.—Fire @estroyed several buildings of the @ Maoner Bros.’ coal and lumber plant and in the Fred G, Croker boat yard here late yesterday, The blaze was near the Indian Harbor Yacht Club and the Sun Dia} Inn, an ex- elusive summer hotel. Yachts and power boats stored in the Croker bullding belonging to In- dian Harbor yachtsmen and other prominent residents were destroyed. These included the Windward II., ‘owned by Richard H. Monks, which Comp! Trolley Men Delay Traffic. Whether because of excellence and cheapnons of food served by restau- @ rants noar 26th Street and Bergenline Avenue, Guttenberg, N. J. or because Mayor She tried her best to account for the substitution of the “half-boys’’ for in thereabouts : x . . jomething richer than oge-hall of 1 per | One Soe eaee iar eaitg aeecia |, neeueL sizes _ include gent., motormen and conductors Of} ar a the penalty usually attachea)Our *Bigfelo, ‘Shortfelo lic Service Corporation trolley cars } Seung throua Guttenberg desert their | for transporting illicit whiskey in Aaland *Longfelo pajamas— @ara at that point for long periods. | common carrier. Mayor Herrmann of Guttenberg coi Eva had a lawyer on hand. He pro-| all their names imply plained to the Public Service Corpora | r..ceq to be amazed at Judge McRey- ‘tRepistered Trademark: tion to-day that the practice of nolds decision, declaring that there Rocrrs Peer Company n and conductors — obstructs “4, 3 traffic, hinders the movements of fire | was ‘‘a limit to all things'’ and that to ‘baby carriage @ common car- | p, dway aratus from a firehouse in 26th] call a He: ; » e Bireet 4 is a rank injustice to pas-| rier was a direct assault on the sanc- at 13th St. “Four at ashen senpers who have to wait. tity of one of the most necessary of Ne After to-day. | Mayor | Herrmann |i) household appliances." He de-| Broadway Conventer Ane warned, any motorman © en . Corners’ Who parks « trolley cat on tho atreets|manded that “the perambulating cra- | ve Warren at 41st St. the nation’? be protected and in Guttenberg while he 1s surrounding] dle of th a meal or something else will be argued with great detail that it was Tested, charged with various offenses | especially designed for individual use and fined. ——— EE KIPS BAY RESIDENTS COMPLAIN OF ODORS Smoke Also Nulsanee, Memor' to Hylan Sayre. - ~ Two thousand residents of the Kips Bay neighborhood along the East River, including nearly all of the wealthy per- sons who have lately established lux- urious homes on the terraced slope, en- tton Place, Turtle Bay ani jace, have signed a memorial to Mayor Hylan urging the enforcement ¢ the ordinance against public nul- @ Mences. They complain that at this sea- son the atmosphere {s made unbearable ~ by bituminous coal smoke, the odors from slaughter houses and shrieking 1 chinery. ‘Among those who circulated the peti- tion were Joh E oi Beekman Place, Miss Elisabeth bury cf Sutton Place and M Clapp. secretary of the Kip: Neighborhood Association. The com- plainants name the Edison Company's plant, 40th Street, and the New York Steam Company's plant at 59th Street, as well as the slaughter houses as con- epicuous offenders. oe oe FATE OF BRONX BUSES UP TO SUPREME COURT Four Out of Every Five Four people out of every five who pass the age of forty, and thousands younger, are marked by Pyorrhea for its victims. Does that include you? Startling as these figures are, they are accurate statistics which your dentist will verify. When Pyorrhea comes, it does its deadly work quickly. It loosens the gums until they recede from the teeth, which drop out or must be pulled. It forms sinister pus pockets at the roots of the teeth, Germs breed in these pockets, then swarm throughout the system. Tl! health often follows and serious sickness. Don’t sit idly by and wait for Pyorrhea’s coming. At the first danger sign, tender or bleeding gums, consult your dentist and begin using Forhan’s For the Gums. If used consistently, and used in time, Forhan’s will pre- vent Pyorrhea or check its deadly course. It is the formula of R. J. Forhan, D. D. S. Use Forhan’s as a dentifrice every day. Brush your teeth with it regularly. It keeps the teeth and gums ina clean, healthy condition. Don’t put off buying Forhan’s until to- morrow. Remember—four out of five wait toolong. 35cand 60c tubesat yourdruggist’s. Formula of R. J. Forkan, D. D. S. Forhan Company, New York Forhan’s, Limited, Montreal Railway and City Agree to Abide by Decision, Attorneys for the Third Avenue Rail- way Company and Assistant Corpora- tion Counsel Mayer to-day agreed to abide by whatever decision Supreme € Mullan may make in Willlam J. Schieffelin case and to let t apply to the fate of the municipal buses on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx. The Schieffelin case, which Justice Mullan expects to decide before June 26, is a taxpayer's suit to restrain the city from operating present bus lines and to prevent the Board of Estimate 1 b Walter Quinn al engineer for @ ve Third Avenue Railway Company, a) Drought sult several months ago to halt d Concourse buses. “A bezutifully striking picture of landscape art in a bewitching and surpazsing sett'ng.” BELMONT PARK 6 GRAND RACES TOMORROW $5,000 HOLLIS STAKES EARLOCKER STEEPLECHASE GREENPORT HANDICAP THE KING JAMES PURSE And 2 Other Brilliant Races BEGINNING AT 2.15 P.M. SPECIAL RACE TRAINS leave Penna, Station, 33 a 190. : FOR THE GUMS THE WORLD'S Checks Pyorrhea arlem Offic ' Now Located at ly 2092°7th Ave. Near 125th St. WOTEL THERESA BUILD. THE EVENING WORLD, -and felt in the smartest of Summer models, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1922, CAMEE | * Finest candy in the world. 50c Chocolate | Marshmallows, 35c Melt in | The Writer Spent a Happy Day at Canterbury, England, with Canon Farrar, so gentle and | Fresh. Delicious. your mouth, courteous, in his own home, Steamer Baskets close by the Cathedral. | A book, sweets, nuts—sur- prises, Beautifully done up to tempt the weariest sea-goer. $5 to $25, Street Floor, Old Bullding. Elghth Gallery, New Bullding. It is a pleasure to give simply his own words which are so well worth keeping. Here they are, word for word. Cut them out to save and read often: ‘ “Do not be’ troubled, if in spite of all that thou triest to do, the times are out of joint and things go wrong, and thou seemest to do no good. Even thy poor good deeds cannot die, and when they are taken from the hands of time, years after- wards, it may be that they shall rise in golden grain.” (Stgned) Summer Morning Coats, $7.95 _ New, exclusive model of smart simplicity, Cool, white dotted voile, which launders very beau- tifully. _ Fine Valenciennes lace, in out- lining the charmingly shapod collar, sleeves and scalloped hemline, adds an effective touch that is delightfully feminine. Third Floor, Old Bullding. June 6, 1922. Made to sell from $8.50 to $12 A fortunate purchase of moire or gr@s-grain silk bags such as is pos- sible only once in a long, long time. Smart drawstring bags, with steel beads in effective designs. Small pouch bags with charming fancy metal frames, Piano Recital Wednesday, at 2.30, in the Auditorium. YETTA KABRAM, assisted by Edna Beatrice Bloom, so- prano, and J, Thurston Noe, at the Great Organ, First Gallery, New Bullding. clasps. Black, navy blue or brown. Dress Linens in gay stripes For smart tub frocks Handkerchief linen with fine stripes, or heavier lin- en in wider stripes—used in straight little frocks for tennis and morning wear— is $1.35 to $1.65 yard. Plain linen, An the same de- lightful color§ as the stripes, striped linen of lene ae Ga alone—95e to First Floor, Old Bullding. Summer Brassieres 85c and $1.95 Heavy imitation Cluny lace brassieres, so dainty that they may be worn under the sheer-| est’ waists, $1.95. Regulation shoulder straps of lace. Made Softly tinted silk linings conceal tiny mirror. Street Floor, Old Bullding. Formerly A. T. Stewart A surprise! Handbags, $4.85 Large pouch bags, on attractive black and white frames of shell celluloid or well shaped self-covered frames with stunning very long. — Reinforced over diaphragm with firm filet net. * * * Three styles at 85c. Pink cotton figured, hemstitched. White cambrie combined with imitation Cluny lace. All-over| lace prettily inset with pink, washable silk. Street Floor, Old Buliding, . blouse stocks at much higher prices. Glimaree—a new pling frill Sports Ribbon As glimmery as its name im plies—soft granite weave, cotton, part silk. Broad stripes in cool sports tones—soft bay-) berry green, dandelion yello ors spereainkle blue, re with gold, blue with gold, gr ‘ with gold: 7 inches cae SL by the Blouse Shop this season. the yard, | Sizes 34 to 46. For hat scarfs, neck scarf and sash guaranteed wa able, Street Floor, Old Buliding. ; The sort of suits one wears Handkerchiefs at the country elublor on the for vacation links—and wh si Men's Irish_linen havik pte lat chiefs, 25e—$2.75 doz, Quart: inch plain hemstitehed hems Women’s, 12!4¢ each Third Floor, Suits of imported tweeds, $48 IN THE WOMEN'S FASHION SALONS town for the day. with distinction by one of the best makers in the country, accepted styles type; nipped-in istakabl Extraordinary purchase of 800 of the Loveliest Blouses from Porto Rico—$3.35 each Duplicates have been great favorites in our regular Blouses with the rippling frills that are so popular. Blouses with pinafore collars in many variations. Blouses with roll collars—with Tuxedo collars. Fine white batiste, or dimity organdie. 8 The extreme daintiness of the hand-work—the charm- ing ways in which they are trimmed with hand-made filet —make this by far the most important event presented Old Building. motors to Tailored breaste button jacket check start fis; plain, narrow hems in the season’s A ; ems, a for suits of thi Marked in ink 45¢ doz. with the Markings — th: Jacket, through —with the camp and waistline jacket. Twelve s --with the thre writing full —with the two ink. Or, if preferred, and plain jac only, 8¢ each (provided o: The tweeds—u: ders at least vix handkerc are in stunning marked), mixtures, light and dark Street Floor, Old Building DOWN-STAIRS STORE Wednesday’s Anniversary Feature for Women and Miss $5 to $8.50 Silk Hats, $3.45 Anniversary Week in the Down-Stairs Store brings this extraordinary sale of wanted silk hats for women and misses. These hats, as stated above, are today’s $5 to $8.50 gr * * * There are hats for sports wear; for street wear; for dressy occasions—crepes, taffetas and combinations of crepe x * Floppy and mushroom shapes—in white, pearl, tan, jade and other light shades; and « few of the more desirable dark shades. Trimmed, ready to wear—with all the loveliness of the new seaspn, Downstairs Store Second Floor, Old Building Qid Building th Englis in colors, and BOOKS ’Phone for the new book. It’s here. Sixteen different models in French organdies, woven voiles, linen crash with voile. All-over embroidered hand woven linen crash. Cotton Matelasse with voile. Eponge with voile. A new thrill for Miss 14 to 20 Three-fourths of the frocks are made from RODIER'S latest and loveliest cotton creations, whose Parisian chic and quality are as lovely as those of his woolens. French models Pinks, blues, linen colors, The dressmaker who imported | Steens, maize, lavenders, many all these beautiful materials re- |. Combined with white; dark blue cently let us choose, not only | combined with tan. from his fabrics but from his And whitd or linen colored fab- French models, and agreed to | rics with tho latest all-ov r embroi- make up to order for us a group derics. Of frocks which we might sell at prices exceptionally low. The frocks are true to Paris. Simplicity of line. Striking smartness. Beauty and rich- ness of material Colors and designs Will meet every taste. Broadly striped linen crash joni 7 and voile, big plaids and small | Weave, and coloring—at prices checks in eponge and voile and * Ldinirad matelasse; dainty stripes in Second Floor, Old Bullding. Lyons woven voiles, Tenth Street Side. $3 Black Silk Stockings---$2.25 2,400 pairs—rich, lustrous, ingrain thread silk, me- dium weight, full fashioned. High-spliced heels, double soles and tops. Sizes 8 to 10!4. eer The prices Need we say more than that our Dress Goods Salon has Rodier's cotton fabrics, voiles sponses, crashes, matelasse: plain, embroidered, checked, striped—not exactly like the materials used in these frocks but very similar to them How did we get them? It’s a story of a manufacturer who cannot afford to make more to sell at this price, so he let us have these because they were the last of his lot. Stre Floor, Old Bullding. Save on 9x12 feet Rugs $39.50—for $75 Seamless Axminsters 58 of these, heaviest and best Axminsters we know of. Close-out. Six good Oriental designs. $39.50—for $65 Seamless Wilton Velvets 18; closely woven rugs. Serviceable. Two-toned ef- fects in blue and green, with band borders. $65—for $85 Seamless Royal Wiltons 21, the well-known “Artlooms,” in Oriental designs. $60—for $85 Wool Wilton Rugs Oriental designs. 5, the “Larchmont.” , New Bullding. Dinner Sets of American Porcelain, $22.50, $35, $45, $50 20 to 50 per cent. less than regular price 100 and 107 piece sets, service for 12 persons. Fif- teen or twenty different designs. One of the three de- signs illustrated shows a gay pattern like a cross-stitch. Think how amusing and appropriate for a summer bun- galow. The other two show a morningglory band and a narrow roge band. Plenty of brides will be made happy by the practical, ready- lo-use gifts that these excellent, good-looking dinner sets will make. Second Gallery, New Building Boys’ $4 & $5 Wash Suits, $2.35 A special purchase of 4 from one of the leading manufacturers in the Hast. We told him we wanted to give our cus- tomers something special. Being one of his oldest and best customers he said: “Select what you want from this stock and I'll make the price low.” We did. And he did. They're beautiful little suits, handsomely made—Oliver Twists, middy and novelty models, of Palmer, Devonshire and Peggy cloths, and some silks, chambrays and poplins; some’ with attractive touches of fancy trimming: Mostly short sleeves—a few long sleeves, Sizes 3 to 10 years Straw Hats for Boys, $1.50 to $9 Street Floor, New Building Se ema ng eee DS i

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