The evening world. Newspaper, June 8, 1922, Page 6

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)

~ HOOGH RAIDERS ROUT PATRONS OF FOUR RESTAURANTS pL Na Fifty-Fifty Club and Three } Other Places Closed After i Liquor Search. About 250 diners in a restaurant fand cabaret at No, 201 West 49th Btreet and the Fifty-Fifty Club, No. 219 West 5ith Street, expressed in- @ignation early this morning when @rdered to leave by detectives of In- ‘spector Dolan's staff, who appeared With search warrants issued by Jus- tice Donnelly. At the West 49th Street place the @etectives ordered the orchestra to stop playing and after the patrons had left searched the premises. They found, they allege, a quantity of Mquor and arrested Thomas Lester, thirty six, of No, 871 Knickerbocker ‘Avenue, Brook:yn, the manager. Les- ter was placed in an automobile and the detectives drove to the Fifty- Fifty Club, where about fifty diners ‘were ordered to leave. ‘There the detectives allege they also found more liquor, and James Lien- hard, thirty,of No. 38 West 97th Street, a walter, was arrested, A uniformed patrolman was left at each| — place. Later members of Bolan's staff ar Tested Alfred Kramer, thirty-eight, ot Babylon, L. 1, reputed owner of a restaurant at No. 886 Sixth Avenue, and Timothy Cronin, thirty-nine, a stage wand, of No. 461 West 46th Street, found in charge of the restau- rant at No. 264 West 43d Street, charged with selling Uquor. Six gal- Jon jugs of wine and three barrels of alleged real beer were seized at the ‘West 434 Street place. Federal Prohibition agents Leap, Dunne and Voss early to-day left a summons for Charles Seferik, alleged owner of a saloon at No, 232 East 144th Street, the Bronx, to appear before United States Commissioner Hitchcock on a charge of selling whiskey. According to the agents, they purchased a half pint of whiskey and a half dozen bottles of beer from Seferik. , John Aaron Keillin, alleged owner of the Clinton Pharmacy, Inc., No. School Dance Is Teacher’s Li s License Is Kansas Affair Cehsurée, State Superintendent Calls It “Particularly Heinous.” EMINENCE, Kan., June 8 (Asso- elated Press.—Not counting prairte dogs and Jack rabbits, this Western Kansas village hac ninety-two inbabl- tants at Inst core not consider dav cause she pern: most of whom do ug sinful. But be- +d a dance to be held in the sch. house, the schoo! “marm," Mrs. ¢ ‘a White, has had her teaching certificate revoked by Miss Lorraine Wooster, State Super- Intendent of Education. Eminence {s 30 miles from a railroad and though that is not as far as it was before the days of the flivver, amusements are not yet exactly plen- tiful. What there are the community has to evolve for itself, and com- munity dances were a favored form for that. Mrs. White says, however, that since she allowed a dance to be held in the schoolhouse and attended she has been informed by the State Super- intendent of Education that she has broken Kansas laws and (rifled with the dignity of the Commonwealth. For that reason she has been officially in- formed that her teacher's certificate will not be renewed. ‘Mrs, White has written, saying there was not a thing objectionable about the dance and it was a per- Bhe Specally BONWIT TELLER. &CO Shop of Onpinations, FIFTH AVENUE: AT ‘3 8™ STREEP FRIDAY—‘Bontell’ Specials GLOVE SILK UNDERWEAR Excellent quality, tailored types; vests with bodice top. Flesh only So “Sinful” a POEL MEN WANT HARDING TO MAKE Moped state Superintendent, Call on President a and Others] ; to Stop Hooch Selling known as an bacco, takes a different view. Dancing, she says, 18 particularly Here. heinous in a school teacher, and when om = the offense takes place within the} pectaring violations of the Prohtbi- very portals of the school the offense} tion law have reached a point where| 7 comes pretty near being lese majeste, much excitement in Eminence since} ter, the Hotel Association of New the town was the county seat of old] york, numbering representatives of Gasheld County, tear ee with snot. | 212 hotels, has made a direct appeal guna “ conveniently elose, tof over the heads of local Prohibition pel attempts of eival towns to officials to President Harding, Secre- tarry oft the county seat during the|tary of the Treasury Mellon, and night. EIGHT-HOUR R WORKDAY self-respecting hotel men can no} p! Meanwhile there hasn’t been 80] jonger keep silent regarding the mat-| ¥' stop the eale of liquor in restaurants and other places heré, ‘This action was taken at the quar- terly meeting at No, 385 Fifth Ave- nue, The speakers said New York was “wide open,” and that public authorities apparently were overlook- ing the ‘flagrant and brazen" viola- tions of the Volstead Act, which ‘‘aré matters of common knowledge." Liquor traffic in restaurants, the hotel men sald, was causing a situa- ion intolerable for legitimate hotels which have and will continue to te law abiding.’ The resolutions call on tho President and other officials to “take immediate steps to enforce the existing laws.'* Among those at the meeting were Fred C, Mushenheim of Hotel Astor, President of the Association; L. M. er of the Claridge and McAl- E. M. Statler of the Penns,l- I, Flue gelman of the Hamilton; Mark A. Cadwell, Assistant Secretary of the Association; Edward C, Fogg of the Plaza; Frank A, K. Boland, coun- se] for the association; J. O. Stack of the Imperial; Edward M. Tierney of the Ansonia, and George Sweeney Prohibition Commissioner Haynes to| of the Commodore, FOR THESE STUDENTS College President “Ansures Industry for Undergraduates, SPRINGFIELD, 0., June &.—"A deft- nite eight-hour#lay every day for every student” was the somewhat unusual programme outlined at Wittenberg Col- lege in an announcement at the seventy- sixth annual commencement exercises by President Rees Edgar Tullos, No time clocks or monotors would be used, President Tullos said, standards being prescribed that will require stu- dents to work at least eight hours. ParFAIT CLOTH; ALL WHITE WITH Franklin Simon a Co. A Store of Individual Shops FIFTH AVENUE, 37th and 38th STS. i SPORTS OXFORDS AND | For «Madame and Mademoiselle Twenty-five Different Cfashions in Sports Footwear BUCKSKIN; ALL WuitTE Or WHITE GLOVE SILK VESTS Regularly 2.75 . . «+ + GLOVE SILK BLOOMERS 1.85 WHITE BUCKSKIN TRIMMING OR WITH TAN OR BLACK TRIMMING Another Selection of Men’s Outing Wear to be placed om sale to-morrow (Friday) will comprise 600 Pairs of | Men’s White Flannel Trousers made of a selected quality of flannels; and 500 Pairs. of Men’s Striped Serge Trousers (white, with black stripe) at $7.50 per pair ; 500 Pairs of Men’s Golf Knickerbockers made of imported white or tan linen at $4.85 per pair Phenomenal value in each instance B. Altman & Co, | ie | i] i WHITE WITH BLACK OR TAN Or Faun Or Gray : | BUCKSKIN WITH Madison Avenue - Fifth Avenue, New Dork TRIMMINGS . . . TAN OR BLAcK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-tifth Street | a 1? ee Every model that is smart to ‘ wear—an absolutely complete collection of sports footwear shown in one shop for the first time, and every model of the collection of the first quality. Regularly 3.50 . . 2.85 GLOVE SILK PANTIES Regularly 3.50 . . « « « 2.85 1862 Clinton Avenue, the Bronx, was @erved with a summons last night by agents Bruno Drescher. It ‘was alleged by the agents that they purchased a case of whiskey from Keillin for $90. It was said at Prohibition Head- quarters that agent Buttman, , tho was made ill with alcohol < poisoning on April 15 last while pro- ‘uring evidence of Volstead violation, ‘will be confined to St. Luke's Hospital for a month. eee SHEER SILK HOSE WITH PARIS CLOX 2.25 Superior quality silk hose with Paris dropstitch clox, reinforced with lisle, soles and garter tops. Black only. Leo Winterfield of Newark, alleged bootlegger, who is charged with hold- fing up a truck loaded with $20,000 ‘worth of alcohol in October of last Year, and whose $2,500 bail bond was Heclared forfeltg after he had several Himes failed to appear when his case fwas called for trial, was arrested here terday and taken to Somerville, |. J. His bail was fixed at $5,000 ‘ pfter his recapture. prec 1 MAIN FLOOR Feminine Footwear SHorp—Third Floor BONWIT TELLER & CO, The Spocally Shops of FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET A Special Clearance of Women’s Coats, Capes and Wraps 7 FRIDAY—Specially Prepared Sale of WOMEN’S GOWNS Silk, Cotton or Twill—for Every Summertime Occasion In or Out of Town . 38.00 Actual Values Up to 95.00 Don’t be sc sure about a low price ‘There’s been a lot done and said about low prices these days. People have been hustling around buying the things that are selling for the lowest price. Now they are thinking twice before they pay a low price for anything. Walk-Over shoes have never and ‘ never will be the lowest-priced shoes. ‘They are trade-marked and known all over the world as shoes that fit better and last longer. They have always been 8 good as shoes could be. And today they are priced fairly. People know that they are worth what they sell for, because the name Walk-Over stands for honest quality. Walp-Over Shoes for Men and Women New York City Stores 510 Fifth Avenue, between 424 and 43d Sts. 179 Broad: ‘Broadway at 40th St. ‘252 W. 125th St. Harty toned or haa Brose ‘eae 50th St, 62 W. W8lot Be. 50 take place to-morrow (Friday) when a number of this season’s fashionable Outer- garments will be reduced, irrespective of former prices, to $45.00 & 75.00 The remaining Higher-cost Outergarments are now being offered at great concessions from former prices ; (Third Floor) ROSHANARA SILK CREPE Resort Frocks, slip-on types. PRINTED SILK CREPE Summer Afternoon Frocks. CREPE SILK Afternoon Gowns in light or dark: colors. IMPORTED BEADED SILK CREPE Dinner Gowns. IMPORTED LINEN Frocks, hand-made and hand-drawn. IMPORTED BATISTE Hand-made Frocks hand-drawn. TWILL GOWNS for travel or mountain wear. | Madison Avenue- Fifth Avenue, New Pork Thirty-fourth Street Chirty-fitth Street Rss 55) Meee Ah 149th 81 —557 peer it. conkers, N.Y TN. wey jatereon, N. J. ‘Xiah Marker Be. oughkeepsie, N.Y.—297 Main St. Gekco, Phoenix, and Van Raalte Hostery Brookiya, ear Gates Ave. ad Hanover Place No Credits No C. O. D.’s WOMEN'S GOWNS—SECOND FLOOR No Exchanges 5 Broadw 33%) ee, m8 5406 Fifth It Makes Little Difference What You Need—A World “Want Ad.” Will Go Get Ip

Other pages from this issue: