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-\ arreaoss ENR SET C.G.N.Y. STUDENTS! Graduating Class of College of City of Of 1922 in Caps and Gowns and Its Only Girl Member GET YEAR'S PRIZES Scholars and Friends | Did 2,000 Years Ago. > the College of the City of New ollege, conferred about 400 de Louis J. Hoefflinger of the R. O. ® commission as Lieutenant Offcers’ Reserve Corps, The exercises were held Great hall of the college and were hundreds of relatives friends of the graduates present. livered by the Rev. S. Parkes gational Church of Brooklyn, New York" “New York and warned them now stands thas yet to produce big men." “Men of Carthage,” he decl: "never said anything the wanted to remember. Leaders the world will always remember. He said he believed that the antagonistic to true religion, told the truth and that even if h he*ought not to have done so.” the commencement exercises at N. Y., followed, Nelson S. Spe ‘16, Vice President of the City lege Alumni Association, admini ing It. late Charles Baskerville, jaboratories. Assistant District torney Peter L, F, Sabbatino, / made the presentation, and Redding Kelly. The announcements of the y the class were chosen to the City @ Wells, Benjamin Konowelow, M 8. Berman, James Barnes Smith fred Angrist, Benjamin Levine, cis Wayland Carlin, Joseph D. vara and Lewis Alfred Scheuer. and certificates was made by Pres! Sidney E. Mezes. seventy bachelors’ degrees Scienc to students of the College of Li! Arts and Science. Th: four in civil engineering mechanical engineering, and School of Education awarded its degree of bachelor of science In the Commerce Building. The Pell ranking in all the studies of the to Milton Steinberg and George E, White. ranking highest in the st fenior year, to Joseph E, W and Benjamin Levine (June). The Kelly Prize for the best que in: the two literary soci (Phrenocosmia and Clionia, Martin, lish prose composition, Achinstein. Im history, to Joseph E. Wisan, The Weinberg Memorial Vogel. oratory, to Adolph Glassgold. The George A. Jacobson, The Roemer Prizes for the and Saul Sigelschiffer. the second best orations, to Wi and Clifford Anderson, Jerome Roman. The neral the vi say Eli Res t ¢ nicoff and Lewis A. Sch @nd certificates and presented where (Carthage stood 2,000 years ago—it ancient Greece and Rome said things trines of Darwin were not necessarily added that Willlam Jennings Bryan reminded him of “my grandmother, who said she didn't believe Darwin The administration of the Ephebic Oath, a pledge of loyalty to the com- munity, which is a traditional part of fwards and Phi Beta Kappa elec followed. The following nine men ot School Technology gave out eight degrees, and four in the best English poem, to Alfre AND 400 DEGREES 76th Commencement Brings Out Great Throng of (GRADUATES NUMBER 377. Warned That New York Now Stands Where Carthage ‘Three hundred and seventy-seven Students were graduated tb-day by York at its seventy-sixth commencement, Sidney E- Mezes, President of the Brews to T.c. in the in the there and The baccalaureate address was de- Cad- man, pastor of the Central Congre- who halled the graduates as ‘members ‘of the higher society of the City of that lared, world 8 of doc- and e did cc. neer, Col- ister- A feature of the exercises was the presentation to the college by the class of 12 of a portrait of the famous chemist who held the chair in chem- istry at the college for eighteen years and designed the college chemical At- Mr. Churchill accepted in behalf of the wollege. The portrait was painted by prize tions Cole lege (Gamma) Chapter: John Arthur leyer . Als ran- Fer- The presentation of tte diplomas ident Two hundred and in Ar p and Social Science were given beral of the first edu- gation and a certificate In elementary iducation as its part in the first com- mencement In its existence. The otier degrees in business administration and accounting were given by the schovl of business and civic adm‘nistration, which includes the evening session at Medals to the students year, Samuel Spindel, with honorable mention to The Prager Prize, to the students erit- jeties both founded in 1855) to Christopher W The Riggs Medal for the best Eng- to Acher The Cromwell Medal for proficiency Prize for a T. The Board of Trustees Prize for Augustus Sandham Prize for the best oration, to Sheldon best poetry declamations, to Samuel Rosen The Freiberg Memorial Prizes for iam J. Ayrutis and 8, Milton Rabinovitch, The Ketchum Prizes for proficiency fm economies, to Abraham Franzblau The Ketchum Prizes for proficiency in philosophy, to Joseph Ratner and Tremaine Prizes for the Clyil War, to euer. The Brittain Prize for the best os- way on a selected topic in moral pholosophy, to Joseph Ratner, The Meyer Cohn Memorial Prize for the best English essay, to Alvin Bruch The Claflin Medals for Latin, to Milton Steinberg und Arnold J. Mal- kan The Claflin Medals for Greek, to Milton Steinberg. The Ward Medale—In chemistry.to ‘ THE EVENING WORLD WITH SECRETARY Edward M. P. Murphy Also Ad- mits Friction Between Mother and Kissless Bride. Edward Mallett Prevost Murphy sumed the stand in Justice Wasser vogel's part of the Supreme Court to- day for the retrial of his annulment suit from his first wife and former secretary, Mrs. Gertrude S. Murphy who, was his wife in name only. Mrs. Murphy, ing for a separation, alleges that the failure of their the Intervention mother and sister sidered her not on their social level Murphy admitted to-di cross-examination of Mrs. he avers, who is counter claim- romance was due to of her husband's because they con under the Murphy's that his brother, Col. ¢ son M. P. Murphy of J. P. Mor Co., objected to his marriage to former Secretary. He also admitted that friction soon developed between his wife and mother when they went to live in East 62d Street after their honeymoon and Murphy's mother ¢ eupied the same apartment ‘The in this morning's papers to a chart of the fluctuations of Murphy's love for his wife word counsel, ay- n & reference which a mere picture yesterday, took definite form to-day when Mrs Murphy's counsel drew a diagram of Murphy's so-called love fluctuations and asked the witness if that repre- sented what he meant to portray in his testimony of yesterday. Mr. Mur- phy said it did not, and the question- ing was dropped. Murphy testified that he married his first wife in 1914 and that the lived together for twenty months without the marriage being consum- mated was The witness admitted that when he|injections to and his wife separated In Decemb r, him, When asked how it was that he continued to want his "wife in name only"? to continue to live with him, he said {t was in the hope that married life might yet be a suc After securing a divorce in Reno in 1920, Murphy married Mrs. Sidney E. Price Johnson, widow of a United States Army officer. His first wife did not defend the Reno action, and claims it is not legal, The present annulment sult was tried few months ago before Justice Hotchkiss, but the jurist died before he made a decision. a William F. Ehret; in Moral Philoso- phy, to Joseph Ratner; honorable mention to Joseph Raskin; in Eco- nomics, to George E. White; in Gov- ernment, to Louls A. Warsoff; in English, to Mortimer Simmons; in French, to Benjamin Levine; in Span- ish, to Joseph A. Corso; in German, to Lewis A. Scheuer; in Oratory, t William J. Ayrutis; in Composition, to James B. Smith; in Logie, to sid ney Hook; honorable mention to Rob- ert I. Wolff; in History, to Milton cinberg; honorable mention to Sum- uel Spindel; in Physics, to Robert L Wolff; in Biology, to Joseph D. White; rara; in Geology, to George E, in Latin, to Israel D. Drabkin; in Descriptive Geomotry, to Harold T Wilson. See Night Pictorial Edition TO-NIGHT Full Page Pletures Com To-Day COLLEGE CITY OF NEW YoRK THURSDAY, New York m3 AYS HIS BROTHER |Bobbed Hair Casus Belli in Gieay ean PPOSED MARRIAGE) "hat May Bring B arbers’ Strike Bosses Want to Show Ladies Special Favor, but All Look Alike to Shearers. Bobbed hair is the casus belli between the barbers and the master bar- bers of the Bronx Barbers’ Union No, 560 has acceded to the request of the Master Barbers’ Association to have its executive board meet with a committee of the bosses on Monday night in another effort to renew the agreement waich expires June 30. Unless the agreement iP rajahs of ultans razors and shears with sharp clicks a week from e the the razcrs and the shears will close to bob the ladies’ hai ot sists that if the shops before the Friday night and the r ladies locks trimmed they must get tnto the doors close. they are in there is no objection to 1777 1. Eee? is renewed! The union in- their want Once ard has been night for o the citizens of the Bronx may go in-| their remaining until their curls are shaved and unshorn and go hang: | clipped and cast into the dis the barbers will go on strike. And A meeting of the untor the union says there wifl be no com-|called for next Thursday promise. final instructions on the strike, orders Woman. lovely woman, is at the having already been given t bottom of the trouble, the question] members to gather up their tools and of bobbed hair being one of the main| demand their pay on the following day Points of contention between the] unless, meantime, the agreement has barber and the boss. Some they shops open after regular unton hours have of the bosses the maintain that right to keep their be made to have failed matter picket the to come to of trimming the ladies’ locks. been signed. Arrangements will then shops which taw on the Gland Operations on Women Are Successful in Chicago Transfer From Bodies of Animals Have Re- stored Youth and Vigor, Physicians Say. . CHICAGO, June 22.—Exper!mental operations on transferring glands from the bodies of animals to women in search of youth and vigor have been conducted by Chicago physicians with considerable success, it was learned to-day ' No operation such as was said to have been conducted on Harold F,/40ses. P McCormick, with the glands of one Me woman transferred to the body of an-| Mra” other, has been conducted here, ac-|Dr. Frank Lydston, cording to available information. sland specialist, Dr. Effie L. Lobdell, woman specia- |°% Women Ust in gland ba? raft operations, declared restores vigor 4 Lobdell said she had assiste: arm generally and is given in three and famous Chicago in gland operations ve seen many beneficial result As in the woman among women,”’ she said, to-day that ‘for women who wish tolcase with men, the glands avoid the greatest discomfort and a] transplanted to any part of a heavy expense, we recommend serum | BOdy.”" een Se ete Members of Legislatures in Califor va % nia and Illinois to-day announced they his extract is §pken from young] would introduce bills at the next sc sows und is (ound ty produce saus-| sions preventing buying and selling factory ilts. It Is injected in the human glands. Oleson Delays Campaign For Senate to Sew and Preserve Offers of Aid Pour In From Democratic Lead- ers as She Is Notified of Nomination CLOQUET, Minn., June (Copyright, Consolidated News).—Officia notified to-day of her nomination for the United States Senate and pr claimed thereby as virtual leader of the Democratic party in Minnesot Mrs. F we: “It will take and dey r Ole herself entirely to household affairs, ast two weeks and campaign that. will le do honor to n declared that she would have to forget politics for tw« then I will open my campaign,’ she| Women of the country. Win or | suid when informed that she was the| Senator Kellogg will know he choice of Mi ota Democrats to} been in a fight this fall.” lead the fight on Senator Frank B.| Mrs, Oleson doesn't look much Kellogg @ fighter. She weighs only Mrs. Oleson wants to make a few] Pounds, but she has fire in her « gingham dresses for her fifteen-year-]4Nd doesn’t appear to be afraid old daughter and preserve some| Mrs. Oleson has been offered strawberries before she climbs into] help of nearly every prominent be her Ford sedun to start her swing}ocrat in the country. Tel: around the State. have poured in upon her from ¢ T is much speculation here section. Senator Pat Harrison to jst vow Senator Kellogg will meet| Mississippi, former Goy. James the whirlwind campaen that rs,] COX, William G. McAdoo and William Olesr pas in min She js a per-[Jennings Bryan are among th sona to be reckoned with in eny| Who have pledged their persona! s olvical ficht and soing to moke! Port p isonal ape to the voters fum| On her campaign Mrs. O'es ' er be accompanied by her hu 1 m very fp be the first | daughter w r one of the Mrs. Oles eleves Jo a8 e.' wald Mrs, cu y ort Presi Oleson to-day. “and. will make @ United JUNE 22, 1922, EVEN BEFORE HE asinine Police Save $117 for Would- Be Detective and Arrest Swindler. The grand idea of Leroy Wester velt, a nineteen-yearold bank clerk, to be a detective and carry a revolver and everything has been all broken up by the poliée, and Leroy has learned something He told all about the plan to his friend Detective Kavanagh of the Ralph Avenue Station yesterday, say- ing that It had been fixed up by ‘an. other friend who was going to get him a job in Montreal with the Board of Underwriters. All that was neces- sary, he confided, was to pay this new friend $117. ‘This would pay for a re- volver permit, an Inter-State license and provide a $5,000 bond. And wasn't It cheap at the price? Sure tt was, and he was going to the bank than to get the money. Kavanagh gave him the necessary encouragement, but hurried to Leroy's home, No. 1117% Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, with Detective Regan and hid in an adjoining room, Then the helpful friend arrived, all ready to get the $117 First of all, he delivered to Leroy a lecture on honesty, telling him how far It would take him in the new job, which, he explained, would yield at first only $225 a month, but® would lead to an increase in six months to $350. Leroy was delighted, but before the money was paid to the helpful friend the detectives appeared and arrested him. The only charge they could make was attempted grand larcen’ and on this he was arraigned to-dé in Gates Avenue Court and held for the Grand Jury He said Cleyelund also Walter Doscher, and two years ago BLACKMAIL CHARGE MADE HERE AGAINST UNFROCKED PASTOR One West End Avenue Woman Said to Have Been Fleeced Out of $2,000, he was Frank Byeres of But the police say he ls Crawford and Walter that he was sentonced in Brooklyn to six months in the penitentiary for petty larceny and also that he was arrested in Buffato six months ago for swindling but was released on sus- pended sentence after making restitu- on. He wet as a out to Mrs. his pocket. apparently was all prepared to the $117 trom the Westervelts, receipt for that amount made Westervelt: was fuund in A made to- threat to kill him on lay sight Donald D. was inst Stew- int, the unfrocked, much-married — a oe minister now under arrest in Los? blackmail urder threat of exposure At for swindling and conspiracy,}and prosecution This proposition, she told Mr. Ban ton, was so repulsive to her that she became il] and had to go to « hospital While she was there, she said, Stew- Dr Park, M. Turner O: by bury Osbaldeston of As- J., the father of Ethel Ideston, Stewart's sec Edwin v ond wife of record. art and his “sister decamped. Then “If I ever glimpse him,’’ Dr, Os-|it was that she began an inquiry into baldeston said, “1 will shoe Sraverre vert, Ee bok 8 nae i 1 will shoot him.|7 oie ‘mater’ to the Rev. Dr. Rich- Could a jury conviet me for shooting] ard W, ‘Trapnell of St. Andrew's ie aman? Chureh, in Wilmington, Del, who br. ¢ deston is 89 years old, 4} igentifled it as that of the woman he British veteran of the Crimean War.| jad married to Stewart. ‘Thus armed, He lives alone in w rented room in} une went to Mr. Banton and asked Asbury Park, having given up thel stewart's indictment for bigamy, practice of medicine u number of]” After the police had sent out tel years ugo. He is feeble and has been] prams and circulars about Stewart, much affected by learning of his] yrs. Osbaldeston Stewart returned to daughter's involvement with the sr, Banton’s ottice, said she had got former minister, in touch with lier husband, and asked For a long time, he said, he had nol that proceedings against him be idea of his daughter's w PabOULS, F stopped. She was told this could not learning them only through news-[ pe done. paper accouuis of her arrest with _ Stewart in California, A charge of swindling hug also been made UNFROCKED PASTOR against \ HAS FIRM FRIEND IN Or. Osbuldeston suid that Stewart became acquainted wih his daughter, Ethel Monica Turner Osbuldeston, on 4 train which was carrying her trom ONE OF HIS WIVES Detroit Woman Declares She @ visit to him im Asbury Park, to New York, where the family had wn- Bears No [ll Will ‘To- ther home. Luter, he went on, tewart rented rooms for himself and ward Stew art. a young Woman he culled his sister, in the N York home of the Os: DETROIT, June 22.—Donald D. b fons. Within a short Ume after] stewart, the unfrocked ininister, un buss matviage. to. Miss Usbuldeston,| 8 @FFest In Los Angeles charged Was uccepted and the murriage took] With swindling and conspiracy and place, Betore the wedding, he de-| wanted by the police of New York, clured, he had turned over’ to his} sgassachusetts, and Indiana for varl laughter all his property. Lt was not 05 after this that the discovery was} °US derelictions, bigamy among them, nude that the “sister” who hud come] has e still firm friend in the first of o the house with stey wus M8] ihe four wives he is known to have sl Se BE ed married, She ix Mary Barbara James, ia take up pagan: sometimes known, ul his request, as point, and it suid t Mrs. Mitchell Assistant District Atiorne » They were married at Wilmington, iat mot only wa an it nent tor igutay pendin ere, but that there Del., Nov. 8 1918 BOG, MORES aR: were charges against tin of having | baby daughter, Marguret the r {tempted the blac uling of a num ult of this marriag: Dire, Miteh er of prominent women of this city, [said to-day that she was aware of h Une worn living in West Bnd Ave- | husband's relations with other women vue he said, had been flecced of }but forgave him several times after he had deserted her and Me The papers on file in the District} return to her \tturney’s offlee show that Stewart bear him no ill-w con was inurried to Miss Osbuldeston on] tinued. “I only sympat th him Mareh 6, 1920, in All Angels Chureh,|in his troubl H ways told me ‘Ist Street apd West End Avenue, by} that he loved me best ul dam Kev. Wil oJ. D. Thoma. there} sure he did net more me for my word of previous marriage to] mone was the cas other Mary Barbara James at Wil-| marriages. ton, Det aN 8, 1918 Our baby Margaret is (he image of Mrs, Osbaldeston Stewart appeared] ner father. 1 hope has his bril at the District Attorney's office one} jant mind and that I can train it in ay with & demand for the punishient!ine right channels." her husband. She told Mr. Banton. | algo lving in this city Is Miss Ger. then Acting District Attorney, that ( h tor the marriage ewart had tuken neue Vem Lopiky art teacher ta the to No. B02 West 135th Street and|PUblic schools, to whom Stewart was there introduced to her x his mater a engaged. Brokel wish. Mim efter yoman she afterward tearned was/ Several Of her relatives endorsed phar wart, wife No. 1. Por] Worthless checks uttered by the for several m No, 2 lived there, she} mer minister suid, Stewart and No. 1 k ne up i the pretense of brother and er FIND STILE. IN BULLE OX iS TRE according to the story she related, that} WATERBURY a moonshine still within ba in y his “sister,” they could make sure] the top of a huge ovk @ dis { Joovery of two Qonr bition ne and Turner with he sing from tt Compromibinx situation and demand’ Marchalonis was arrested. Write a few lines to THE EVENING WORLD The Evening World Will Pay $1 for Each Item Printed. The Evening World Will Pay $2 for Each Snapshot Printed of Some Unusual Scene or Incident With an Accompanying Description. Adarens What Did You See? Editor, Evening World. What Evening World Readers Saw Yesterday: Cur jean PF pyovan. up this way ai the case as follows: “Dirty kida cleaned. 10 cents @ pair.”"—Richard Conway, 292 Delavan Avenue, Port Chester A glove THE NEW BAny. l saw a youngster of about five enter ® Grand Avenue drug store and heard him ask for « nursing bottle. “What Kind do you want?" asked the clerk. “How big a bottle? H. old ts your baby?” “I don't know,” replied’ the customer, “We only got him last night.""—P. A. Kelley, $70 Grand Avenue, Long Island City, IN SEARCH OF A WIFK, ‘The behavior of the gentleman seated opposite me in @ Lexington Avenue surface car was embarrassing. He had appeared to be buried in a newspaper. Suddenly he lowered it to his knees and gazed intently at my feet. When he picked the paper up again and turned it about, the bold black heading over 4 “special article” explained everything. “Choose Your Wife by (he Size and hape of Her Feet," tt suid. Mine, 1 add, are merely comfortable in 7's. len Riepe, 18 Bast 38th Btreet. STRONG MINDED. When # Riverside Drive bus, with all seats (aken, stopped last night on the Viaduct at 129th Street, the conductor called out: “All out! Please take the bus uhead.” There naturally was somo srambling, but, in the New York way, all the passengers—save one—followed orders, The exception was an elderly woman with bobbed hair and @ resolute face. She would NOT budge. She got on this bus to go to 26th Street, she de- clared, und this bus must take her to 25th Street, It took ten minutes for five bus smployees to convince her that the bus she had been riding on had broken down. Thon, when they found, reserved and held a seat for her on top of the second bus, she consented to make the transfer.—fan A. Loewy, 93% St. Nicholas Avenu DIPLOMAT IN A SHOE STORE. My friend wanted shoes, s0 wa went shopping togeth in Aro first shop we entered the salesman who tried on the slippers, observed: You know, Miss, one of your fe ts larger than the other.” My word: but she was indignant. She fairly d out of that shop; 1 followed meekiy. Into another shop. 4 more elderly salesman. ‘One of your feet,” said he, trying on the second alipper, “ia snaller than the other” “Tl take these,” my amiling iittie chum decided.—Misa M. Q, Mineola. STEALING FROM THE BABY, From my window, this morning at daybreak, | saw a stranger helping him- self to somebody's bottle of milk.— Maybel Spencer, No. 267 West 127th Street ENDABLE, The doo: st as a middle-aged man reached the side of a train at Stillwell Avenue station, Coney Island. Pranticaily she rapped on the window with an urnbrella, “Hey, mister,” he shouted, “open the door! I'm a cug- tomer here every morning."—Dorothy Nocks, No. 4 ast 198th Street, Bronx, HB WAS IN A RURRY, 1 saw 4 wagon dashing through 50th eet, When a bly folding bed fell from the back of It. Witnesses7 whistled, screamed, yelled, cat-calted. One block away the wagon was pulled up. The driver, jumping to the street, walked back one block and, with the cheerfui nagiatance of & couple of other dumb- bells, carried the bed to the wagon.— James J. McCarthy, No. 361 Bast 60th treet SO THATS HOW THEY BEGINE 1 was visiting his mother, He 1s two and # half years old. He opened « pop- corn box, removed a toy gun not much bigger than your thumb, pointed it at a fly and sald, “Hands up!"—A, M, Fine, Hushwick High School, Brooklyn. STRAWS ON THE STRAW. Thirty soda straws, sticking up out of the band of the straw hat worn by a young man in Fifth Avenue near 80th Street.—J. H. Moore, No. 26 Broadway, WITH A SPLENDID LINE OF ROUGES. Avenue In Seventh up near 140th Street this sign, in a shop window: “A Colored Drug Store Will Open Here." Mack Rudolph, No. 63 East 99th Street. THE FRUGAL SMOKER. At the 183d Street Elevated Station at 7 o'clock this morning | saw a man drop 4 lighted cigarette on the platform as @ train pulled in and step into a car, He must have found he was on the wrong train for he made « quick retreat to the platform, picked up the same cigarette, resumed his smoke and waited for ¢ next train.—E. Jungermann, No. 678 East 182d Street. bronx. IN THE HABIT OF PUTTING IT UP. I saw a young woman approach the counter of the checking room at the Public Library in 424 Street and, pre- senting @ pawn ticket, ask for her um- brella.—8, Dingel, No. 1556 Minford. Place, Bronx. WE'VE BEEN EXPECTING TO SEB THE FOUR WALLS KNOCKED OUT OF oD 1 saw a woman weighing probably 300 pounds slowly get aboard an already crowded street car at Jackson Avenus and Wane Street, and when the car started with a Jerk be thrown so vio- ntly againat the door that she smashed thi in it, The conductor took her name.—Milton A, Mohr, No. 36 Jackson Avenue, Jersey City. BETTER SIGN THE CoP. Up at the Polo Grounds, while the Cardinals were at practice this after- noon, I saw about a dozen balls knocked into the stand, Within two minutes two of them were slammed into the bleach- ers and both hit the same gent. One ised a lump over his left eye the size of an @ The other bruised his left hand. And he didn’ get either ball They fell down through the stand an@ were picked up by @ special officer,— Charles C. Douglass, 615 Hast 144th Street, Bronx. EXASPERATING. 1 saw an old, nervous-looking gent, carrying a auit case in cach hand. approached by @ aweet young lady who said: “I beg your pardon, will you please tell me what time it tet’—Arohte Weinberg, exe Henry Street. No. THE (MALE) DUMBRE! We were approaching 28th Street ow Madison Avenue when my friend greet @ nice jooking young man with a gmil He did not respond. ‘Why, hello, Leal" she exclaimed. The young man stopped, “You have made a mistake,” he said politely, “‘my name is not L The dear girl was overwhelmed Never s@ long as she lives, she says, will she speak first to any young man of her ac- quaintance.—1. S., East 86th Street. ROME DON'T MISS TITE SPAGHETTI. I saw three Singhalese satlors eating ice cream cones, Where could they have acquired the taste? Certainly not on the Island of Ceylon.—Otto Abrams, 198 Chambers Street, WHEN IN THERE'S MYSTERY IN THIS, LAD, A man came into our shoe store this morning and after he had been fitted to 4 pair of shoes and expressed his satis~ faction with them, insisted on having his name printed on the lining.—P. H., West 116th Street. “OH, LET US BE JOYFUL" On a Third Avenue elevated train I saw a man of about forty. He was hoppy, He sang. He asked everybody to join in the choruses. Then he danced « jig.—Fanny Miller, No. 198 Henry Street MISPRARLE SCOUNDRELS While naviyating @ boat acrose the Sound I saw @ yacht headin for the Kast River. I could see the gentlemen on board violating the Kightaenth Amendment to the Come stitution of the United States,—B, 8. C., West 108d Street, ty 108) STREET. In 103d Street, near Third Avenue, 3 (Continued on Page Eleven.) The coolness of a frosty morning and the sunny fragrance of the Orient mingle in a glass of iced Tetley’s Orange Pekoe. Serve it on a sultry morn- ing, a hot afternoon, or a sticky evening—and see refreshing, princely blend can banish how this fatigue and dull care. Tetley’: 10 Orange Pekoe In SLEUTH’ BUNCOED |What Did You See To-Day? © ‘ ) 4