The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1922, Page 2

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DECISION District Attorne driver in this city $2,500, was to-day Hongh, Manton and ting ‘as a Federal | | ‘ An appeal will be taken to the United States Supreme Cow The courtroom was crowded with spectators, a majority taxi drivers, and there was evident disappointment at the decision. Elijah J. Zoline and ‘The court did not Myers and Deputy Adams unreasonable, discri ' to Enforce Law for One Week. Motion for an injunction against the operation of the law, effective at 12.01 o'clock to-morrow morning, re- quiting the bonding of every taxicab Tt was on the application of William A. Packard, a taxi owner, to have the newiaw declared umconstituional sed an ‘Injunction granted, that the case came before the Federal Couri. Ar- ! gument for the plaintiff was made by The principal points in the avgn- ment were that the law was arbitrary, APPEALED. y Agrees Not in the sum of denied by Judges A. N. Hand, sft- Statutory Court. rt. Louis Vorbaus, consider it neows Attorney General iminatory an! a violation of the Fourteenth Amend- to the Constitution. They said the few law purported to pro.ect t passed to protect t public against the negligence of taxt operators, but no act had ever been he public against the operators of street cars, buses, or automobiles. Judge Hough stated the only way in which the court could entertain the motion would be on a showing that the new law was , obnoxious to the Constitution and quoted decisions as to the constitutionality of other laws alleged to be discriminatory. ‘ Following a conference in the Fed- eral Court this morning, where an agreement was reached before Judge Hough, between Assistant District At- torney John C. Myers and a repre- seritative of the Attorney General's e, not to press the criminal in the law for one week. Dis- trict Attorney Banton called up Po- Nee Headquarters and instructed the . police to act in accordance with the -- agréement. Mr. Banton said: e; “At the expiration of a week, those a who have not obtained bond will be subject to arrest.” — The following statement in behalf of the Allied Taxicab Owners’ Asso- mn was made herty of the law firm of House, Grossman and Vorhaus: “Bteps will be taken immediately by the taxicab men to comply with the statute, but, under a plan now being formulated by former Magis- trate Moses H. Grossman, pected’ that the exorbitant charges by Joseph F. it is ex- of the insurance companies will be avoided and a more moderate rate than that embodied pool obtained, by the insurance “Meanwhile, we will make every ef- fort to obtain a speedy and final de- termination of the constitutionality of the law in the United States Bupreme Court.” ee HAGEN’S WELCOME DELAYED BY FOG ; Aquitania May Not Dock i Until To-Morrow—Big ‘Reception Plans for the reception of Walter i Hagen, brilliant American winner of i the British open golf championship, were disarranged Steamship officials Mi Cunarder Aquitania, on which he ts returning, was held up by fog. Planned. to-day when the declared this af- ternoon that the big liner will not 3 dock until to-morrow morning. + Golfers who expect to participate in i the reception are asked to keep in touch with the steamship company and report ut the Biltmore an hour be- { fore the ship docks. The committee in charge has arranged Cor a fleet of automobiles to carry Walter's friends to the pier. The police will furnish a motorcycle escort and the 7th Regiment Baand will sound some notes designed to plonship ear. After the recepti: to death over chaffipionship. A honer will be given at the Westenes- ter-Biltmore Count: party will go tot the City Hall where Mayor Hylan has promised to tell Waiier that the whole darned coun. try, Brooklyn included, is tickled Please the cham- ion at the pier the his winning the dinner in Hagen's ry Club to-morrow night. Those wishing to attend the Purlderford at the a cireuit of used a blaze the firemen tive row 1 —S BROADWAY CROWD SEES INTER GARDEN BLAZE to the big electric sign across the of the Winter Garden in Broad- dinger should communicate with J. C. club. current in wires at- this afternoon which and ® great Inquiai- spark flashed to a tarpaulin cov- of metal letters used in a pile ing the sign attraction fwo| minutes and, away. fey Ihe perhaps. to suit the current and this up. out the fire in about the crowd melted stored in the Anchor Warehouse. (THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDY, JUNE 30, 2922, Believed indictments by Fed- eral Grand Jury Will Lead to Further Disclosures. Indictments were found to-day by the Federal Grand Jury against Sight Individuals and a corporation which, in the epinion of Assistant Dis trict Attorney H. L. Falk, will lead to revelation ef the identities of men high tn political circles im this city who are said to be identified with smureiing optum and @eposing of ft in New York and other Attantic sr0- board cities. The indictments are the result of weeks of work by special Treasury Department agents. ‘The corporation indicted is the An- chor Warehouses, Incorporated, No. 231 East 47th Street. The individuals: are ‘Themis Paviou, &® manufacturer of embroidery; William J, Bardo of Havana, Cuba, who has been arreste? and is under $25,000 bail; Imac Et- tinger, Castom House storekeeper in the Anchor Warehouses; Bernardo and Gregorio Uriarte, drug dealers of Havana; Morris De Lacca, President of Anchor Warehouses, Incorporates, and Steve Valliadis and Nick Taraca, who are mid to have played minor parts in a conspiracy to defraud the United States Government of duties on opium. All the defendants are charged with Paviou, Sardo, Vailiadis fod with sel'ling opiam without a Meense, amd Paviou is charged with concealing opium and fraudulently removing {it from 4% bonded warehouse. The jury reeem- mended that the Anchor Ware..ouse, which has been a Government de- pository, be no longer used 68 such. * It is charged that the individual de- fendants were implicated in the im- portation, through regular and lexal ehannels, of twenty cases containing 2,800 pounds of optam in th: spring nd summer of 1921. This opium was In April of this year, it is charged, with the connivance of the owners of the warchouse and the Government agent on duty there, the opium wa: secrety removed and offered for sale. in this city, As cover for the re- Toval a shipment was made to Ha- vana on April 6 by the steamship Es- peranza of twenty cases alleged to contain oplum upon which the regular duty was paid. But Government agents had been suspicions, The ship- ment was traced and opened in Ha vana. Each of the cases marked ‘opium’’ was found to contain stone: “We haven't got to the inside of the conspiracy,"” said Mr, Faik, ‘It is our belief that the prosecution of these defendants will serve to bring to light secret influences behind the ‘appalling opium traMoc in this city. peste eres Se Even Eve Would Balk at the Cost Of These . Apples Gussie, Suing Matrimonial Matchmaker, Wants Re- fund on Love Fruit. The Old Testament contains no record of the cost of the apple Eve gave to Adam, but to-day the price of ‘apples for the stimulation of love has gone up with other things, it was at- tested in Essex Market Court when Miss Gussie Frankel of No, 712 Sixth Street told Magistrate McAn- drews that one of the reasons Mrs. Annie Gordon, matrimonial match~- maker of No, 162 East Houston Street, advanced fF the high tariff tor getting husbands was “the high cost of love apples.’* Miss Frankel, who seeks the return of $160 she paid the ‘‘schatchen"’ t: got her « husband, alleging the monev was obtained under false pretenses. Stated that the matchmaker told her she fed these love apples to the pror- poctive groom to make him love Gu4- sie. Gussie has come to believe the apples were entirely unnecessary and secks the return of her money. Mrs. Gordon was not on hand in court to-day in answer to the #sum- Mons obtained for her app arance. The court was informed that she has suffered a nervous breakdown as u re- sult of the publicity attaoned to the cane, and gone off to the moun tains to recuperate. Hearing on the summons was therefore adjourned until Aug. 81 Mise Frankel hereeif has been Griven to distraction the last faw days, she told the court, witn tole- phone calis from people offering ms: riage or movie contracts, She showed a more kindly attitudy toward Maurice Goldstein, the young man to whom the matchmaker presen*#d Fer, but who Gussie asserted a few days ago had one serious defect—"‘he didn t lke to work,.”’ Since then he has joined the army, it is reported. Gus- sie told Magistrate McAndrews she still loves Maurice and is willing to marry him, “But all that depends on alin— now," she said shyly. Maurice was not in court, clecaeeelinenaeraas MAGISTRATE HARRIS RETIRES. After a continuous service on the bench for fifteen years, Magistrate Charles N. Harrie retired to-day to re- fume the practice of law, No ceremony marked the closing of his judictal career, but after the last case on the calendar had been disposed of, & small Broup of friends and the court attaches gathered around him to wish him auc- ceas, He was appointed by Mayor Mc- Clellen, TA BONDING LAW HIGH POLTICARS |ADDS$32000000 |*"eyor Hutan Giving Grandson, BY COURT | MAY BE DRAGGED | TO BOARD'S VALUE | agg ETON ENED! TO GPM RING) OF SURFACE LINE yners Fail to Show Provi- sions of Act Are Un- N. Y. Railway’s Estimate $62,- 189,538 Against $29,457,- 143 Made by Commission. Thirty-two million dollars ‘stand between the Transit Commission and the New York Railways System's ac- ceptance of the proposed plan of ant- fication of the transit lines of the city. This te the gap between the financial estimates of what the commission's valuation engineers recommend the New York Railways property is worth ona basis of original cost and what the company’s experts say {t is worth on @ basle of cost to reproduce as of 1921 prices for materials, labor, &c. Hearing into the value of the Ne York Railways property began to- @ay before Commissioner Le Roy T. Harkness. John H Madden, valua- tion expert for the Transit Commis. } sion, testified that with the Fourth Avenue, the Fighth Avenue and the nth Avenue lines out of the sys- tem, as they haye been turned bac to their original owners by Receiver Hedges, the New York Railways are worth $29,457,143 ae original cost, less the expense to put the lines back tn_ first class condition. The company claims for the entire system as it stood when Receiver Hedges took It over two years ago, $91,351,638, but with the Fourth Av nue, the Kighth Avenue and the Ninth Avenue lines out of the system, the estimate is reduced to $62,189,538, after allowing $29,162,100 as the valuc of the Fourth, Eighth and Ninth Avenue lines. Counsel for the railway company declared that in the ten months end- ing April 30 inst the New York Rail- ways carried 146,000,000 revenve pr sengers, an average of nearly hulf a million a day, thereby relieving the rapid transit lines, underground and overhead. He said the lines were in fairly good condition and he repudi ated the statement that ths sto2! holders were trying to foist off the lines through the Transit Commis. sion’s pian of unification. state with emphasis,” he said, “that the property of thé New York Railways is not junk, nor is it to be valued as such, The owners of the property are entitied to compensation on the basis of a going concern, serv- Ing the community in a public ser- vice. ———_ NEW CAR STATIONS ON THE FLUSHING EXTENSION O. K’D. Public hearings on the proposed ad- dition of three stations to the Flush- ing branch of the subway line, and the proposed modification of the size of the Queensboro Plaza Station to accommodate both Interborough and Brooklyn Rapid Transit cars, were held by Transit Commissioner Mc- Aneny to-day. Former Public Service Commis- sioner Alfred M. Barrett appeared for the Queens Chamber of Commeme ani said while Queens was anxious to travel from the Queens stations direct to 67th Street, Manhattan, before changing to the Interborougn sys-2m, they realized that it was too i.agnied ous to travel in wooden cars through the 60th Street tube under the Bast River. He said residents of Quecns were anxious to see the dav soon when the size of the station piatforns in Queens would permit 6f dua! oner- ation by both the I. R. T. and R. R. T. cars, as is provided for'in the dual contracts, : Commissioner McAneny declared that until the statjén platforms were trimmed to permit the wider B. R, T. cars to fit into the stations, Queens passengers would have to change from the wide steel cars to the narrower wooden cars at Queens Plaza, John W. Paris, also of the Queens ‘hamber of Commerce asked if the $160,000 necessary to change the size of the platforms had been ap. propriated by the Board of Estimate, because he feared, he said, there may be delay in obtaining the improvement if the money were not on hand. “I don't think the Bourd of Bsti- mate will add its chronic touch to that matter," said Mr. McAnony Three new stations on the Flushing extension were approved. They will be at Tieman Avenue and DePuyster Street, Willetts Point Boulevard and Hewitt Avenue and Main and Amity Btreets, the Jatter to be the terminus of the line. Chairman McAneny vx- plained the desire of the Commission to induce the Long Island Railroad to construct a deck of two tracks over its present line to College Point and Whitestone, to provide rapid transit ubove the freight lines. oo THREE ARE ACQUITTED OF SWINDLING CHARGE jasee Complaints of Ob- we Money Falsely, Complaints of obtaining money under were dismissed to-day rate Harris i) the Municipal Term Court against Henry C, Wolff of No, 84 East End Avenue: Morris Hers, address hot « and Carl Bohenck, of No. 411 Kast Sst Street ‘The complainant was Hyman Gracfman of No. 2 Lelmore Street, Edgemere, L. 1 Only the summonses were on file. jn the court, but It was said the charwe grew out of a complaint that the de- fendants were officials of a lodge which held itself out to be affiliated with the Mason: oe FOUR KILLED AS TRAIN HITS a AUTO, CHICKASHA, Okla. June $0.—Four unidentified persons were killed here to-day when A Rock Island passenger train smashed into an automobile. The bodies were mangled beyond recogni- tion, but papers found in the pocket of one victim indleated «|1 were from Dal- las, Texas. STOLEN BOND SALE) BY 29 TRANSFERS} BELIEVED SUICIDE Prisoners Accused of Nation-|Chief Magistrate Orders Big-|Cape 6f Miss Phoebe Allen wide Conspiracy to Dispose gest Shift in Years for Found Near Lagoon in of Half Million Loot. “Good of Service.” Chicago Park. waa wan a clever bit of detecti “For the good of the service,” Chief] CHICAGO, June 80.—A dark bias pa + five men are undér attest in] City Magistrate William McAdoo or-| silk cape and a vanity case sald to ‘ is city and one in Boston, belléved | dered to-day the greatest shake-up in| belong to Miss Phoebe Allet +f ‘0 be the nucleus of @ band enkased! the personnel stafts of the vatlous| Roanoke, Va., who, accorfing t@ let+ in marketing securities, partioularly Magistrates’ Courts in mar ra,| ters: expected to marry a New ¥ Liberty bonds, stolen trom Post Of F ot aig] Duysician, were found on & rr fices and banks, and to-day Assistant | crore creone ae eta er Of six over n Ingoon in Lincolh Park United States Attorney Motes Polakott| out Clerks: five assistant court clerks] and the lagoon was dragged without {fasta and eighteen court attendants, three avail. 1s preparing the cases for Drowecu-| ce ene tagt grotip OIdInH the rahk of The vanity gase contained 11 cents, tion. aplaia.. Th some keys, newspaper clippings tell- The men arrested hore are Willlam| een nn Tne transfers become effec- tive to-morrow. ing of two suicides and fifteen adver- J, Pletwe, who had an olfies at No. 400 tisements for stenographers, A Pe: . » who hai office at No. book contained the addresses of 6m- West 424 Street, said to be ring.| The Chief Magistratp had no state- leader; Thomas F. Lamon, connectea| Tent to make. The only reason known to Jay Finn, Deputy Chief ployment agencies and business houses, visited apparently in #é@rdh with the Trans-Coast Finance Cor- é | poration, room 1807, No. 860 Madison | Clerk, was "'the good of the service.” of employment. Private detectives told the poliee” they had been searching for Miss Al: Avenue; Robert Burns of No. 144] The men transferred are a8 follows: | i6, in an effort to persuade her to West 76th Street, Abraham J, Rosen-| Clerks of the Court—Joseph A.| go to New York. that of No. 978 Tiffany Street, Bronx, | Doran, transferred from Tombs Court] A telegram Tuesday, the day Mite . to Jefferson Market Court; Edward] Allen disappeared from her lodgings’ with offices in the Longacre Bullding, |‘ 1¢ Ge NO Tene hort oenlno-a Cane and Alfred Fitzroy of No. 269 Hant|7: Tyrtéll, from Jefferson Market} hi ° 14, 25th Street, Brooklyn, Court te West Side Court; Isaac Rice,| your wire frightens me. I eam't The man under arrest in Boston is] {rom Haeex Market to Harlem Court: | come now. Practice has beett bad ai; Max Sonand, who is under $12,000] to 7 ‘anan, ftom Yorkville Court] year. Be sensible and come home,’ 0 Tombs Court; Frank B. Masterson,|” prom letters and telegrams, polleo bail, as yet unfurnished, charged with} from Harlem Court to Yorkville sald they were able to patch out the seeking to pass a $1,000 registered| Court; Harry Mera, ag Acting Clerk, girl's story, indicating that she left # end oh w dewelten, trom the West Side Court to the Bs-] Govoted fiance in New York t ete Pierce has been arrested before, | "°% Market Court. here for a careet as a story writer and Assistant Clerks—Danlel Quinn. having been placed in $5,000 bail on] from Yorkville Court to Women’ bel Seawinh ine Suen tneae May & by Commissioner Hitcheock| Court} Thomas A. Church, from Har- only as “Wayne."* for attempting to dispose of $6,000|!em Court to Night Court; Mortis!” goores of stories and scenarios were worth of stolen and forged registerea| Schwartz, from Harlem Court to] round in the girl's room. Liberty Bonds, Rosenthdl ts a Brother West Side Court; William A. Gannon, One telegram from New York, from West Side Court to Essex Mar-| ,,, of Sidney Rosenthal, a lawyer, ket Court; Samuel Greenwald, from| wiict “ame after the gir! disappeared; Capt. John 8. Tucker, {a charge of| Night Court to Harlem Court. ar the New York Division of the Secret Japtains of Court Attendants— on iatey, aoon And Get AoaHanGee Service, told to-day the ‘detective| John Clarke, from Jefferton Market] near Aunt Em Back. to story’’ of the capture of the.six men,|/Court to Night Court; Michael Mc-| itoanoke Saturday, Disgusted at fail- keeping secret, however, the name of] Cormick, from Essex Market Court] grey to land case. Lovingly, the Secret Service agent who did the|to West Side Court; George H. Hall, ; HAL" work. He sald: Acting Assistant Clerk, from Easex dirtecceailiioensin clan “About June 1 one of my men met] Market Court tu Harlem Court. " —_ acquaintance ‘hal ia mot Court Attendante—August Daum, WOULD FIX PROFIT now he was connected with the|from Essex Market Court to Night oo Secret Service, The acquaintance|Court; Michael Jordan, from Essex ON IMPORT G DS made 8 Proposition to my agent for|Market Court to First Richmond a: ff tho disposal of vast sums of bonds. |Court, Staten Island; Joseph B. Gor-] Senator Norris Offers ‘The agent fell in with the plan and don, from Yorkville Court to Harlem A i 1 is Lt Fane fag, @ twas planted in @ big stock broker's |Court; John J. O'Brien, from Harlem| — /Amenc ment Limiting office, where he was supposed to have|Court to West Farms Court; William Profit to 25 Per Ce charge of the securities cage. Kenny, from Harlem Court to Wash- a “The negotiations led to an intro-| ington Heights Court; Asher Fleming,| WASHINGTON, June 30. — First Give Home and Job to Orphan Boys |2:::33, fres.wie,otetee ices | trom storeinante "Court "to "Harem | stom to prevent proteering om Court; Edward J. McGuire, from] foreign good: r) 2 66 © 99 | Posal. Lamon grew suspicious, how-|Morrisania Court to Yorkville Court.|..., rae a = ae ee ake — It's Up to Him to “Go Straight?” isi. ccrs, sate tt acne Cas Manan | Assan roe er Neanea Chas withdrew from the deal. Clerk; Charles J. Schaefer, trom Weat | Senator Norris, Nebraska, Chalrmian Hi ee ba eb ried er Side Court to Essex Market Court;]|of the Agriculture Committee, intro- i a . lerce to our agent. Plerce arran| Horace Marangelo, from West Farms| duced an amendment to the Tvriff Bill Society Members, Interested in His Cases|te ring $0,000 worth of bonds tol Court to Morrisania Court; Louis} making it isd ae 4 : the agent at the broker's bousd on) Roth, ‘trom Night Coult to Barox|ronign goods at more thea, sérper Take Chance He Won’t Go Wrong Again.|Tcstay. He showed up with only! Market Court: Joseph Aronstein,| Cont. in excess of the import value, $10,000. He sald he would try that] y, Night Court to ° Jeff There are a number of “if's’' in the)children to care for and there wasn’t] first and if it went through all right| Market Court; Antillo. Geen [jis ccpiaining nia amnentenegt Norris story of Ralph Kay, a homeless, pen- , wae SO enough for another mouth, unless the| he would bring the other $40,000 the lr,om Washington Heights Court. to cay a 1a feed them : ent profit to be made after the import nileas boy of seventeen from Phitadel-|°WMEr of It could work. So Kay got}next day and then would fe Yorkville Court; William A. Podolak, | Cnt rons t) be mado a Job at $8 a week with a printer in]in at the rate of $50,00. a week until trom Municipal Term Court, Manhat- Rayor Hylan and Grandson <lohn phia, If he had not been so we@k|Philadelphia. For some reason or would be more than $500,000. |i. to gd District Court, Staten ae from hunger he might have been abte other the printer discharged him threo] | “But Pierce and bla mea wanted |isigng;” Charles F. Mohrbeck, trom DIES IN FALL FROM AUTO. ‘ ne hi weeks ago and the boy determined to] money and we did not have it, so wel iT tuct Richmond to Besex Mare pelle rent ee eae ema. [run away and come to New York srabbed them for the $10,000, whieh set Court, John Moyer: trom 0. Dis: IN FERRY BOAT CRASH -|" He beat his way to this city, riding] proved to be part of the loot taken scence bile in front of Wanamker's twolon any vohicle that afforded a foot.| from ‘the Firat National Bank of|fict Richmond, to Muntolpal Term,| ‘rhe Central of New Jersey Railroad Manhattan. ferryboat Sommerville this mornin he could beg|Claysburg, Pa., some time ago. - err; a ride. He tied to get work here] “In the mean time the agent who een Prarie races ides crashed with great force againat the and failed, and two days before his| had been skadowing Pierce connécted Maine, designated Magistrate John ¥. | Piles of the slip at Cummunipaw Aye- arrest his last cent was gone. He} him with Burns, who was arrested) can to be ‘Acting Chief City|"Ue. Jersey City, and threw Theodore slept in doorways and in the parks, | Tuesday. Skocvymos, of ‘No. 18% Ludlow Street, And when hunger got the better off ‘Burne eald he was employed by|Masistrate for the month of July. | Cer’ on a Loft Candy Co. truck, to he tried to steal the suitcase, | Rosenthal, Both Burns and Pieree the deck, ti thete facts “were, corroborated} had been heard by our agents engaged] TINY MAXWELL DIES weeks ago. If he hadn't spent all|rest, on any in which save two years and six months of his life in homes and orphan asylums everything might have been different. And, lastly, if ith ad not been for a passing reference District Attorney Bantom made to his case in a speech he delivered before the United Irish Counties Association, the boy would never have known the good fortune which came to him to-day. This good fortune means a home for him, and employment and the pledge of half a dozen of the mem- bers of the Association to start him off all anew in the right path. From the yery first, Kay's case was a perplexity to Judge Robert John- stone, of General Sessions, and Mr. Banton, They didn't know what to do with him, It was the members of the Association who solved the prob- lem. Kay pleaded guilty to the attempt to steal the suit case and then, re- luctant under the questioning, he had told the short story of his seventeen years. His mother died when he was two years old and his father, a sailor, put him in St. Vincent's Home, in Philadelphia. Four years later he was transferred to St. John’s Onphan Asylum and remained there until he waa eleven, then he was sent to St. Joseph's Home, being an inmate un! six months ago, ‘When he came out of St, Joseph's it was to be sent to the home of his He died an hour later at the Jersey. fractured skull, by the probation officers and were so| With Rosenthal in telephone conversa- City Hospital of a reported to Mr. Banton and Judge] tions about disposal of the bonds. We OF AUTO INJURIES Johnstone. They talked it over, won-| went to the Longaore Building and ar- w dering what to do with the boy, nd] rested Rosenthal and Fitzroy, who was a then Mr. Banton went to the Irish| with him, Counties meeting and, in the cours i AP cg A of an address on crime, spoke of Kay.| FINED FOR ATTACK ON BROADHURST Once he paused and said: Symon Said to Have Settled “TI think there's any amount of good im that boy, Is there any one her‘ $50,000 Suit Out of Court. who wants to take a chance on him? Is there any one who'll give him a home and work and gamble that he'll go straight?" Half a dozen arms went up in the audience, and President Patrick J.| BALTIMORN, June 80.—John B. Collins of No, 205 East 38th Strect,| Symon of San Francisco, who was ar- rie rested here on the arrival of the steamer Columbia, on June 2, for an assault upon George H. Broadhurst, playwright and theatrical producer, uilty before Jui Rose tn up for sentence, Me. Collins and Mr, | Pesdet sullty ats day and| 108,14 not become critical until yes- Banton were invcourt, and the former |*the United States Court to-day and/terday, when fever and congestion of said he had a job for the boy in the| was fined $20 and costs. the Lung tn chi Conley Tinfoll Company, in West 25th} ‘The nominal fine was said by the laxwell, wi 5 alae wae 1 m Offi Herat, and home tor him with om gue cy ave reauvod, because Sy-|mUnty-elght years ago, where bis HEMGLE 2 © c Thin was eminently ‘natiotactory. to | ™08 had already made reparation to} noise, live. He came into promi- Now Located at (a) Judge Johnstone, who suspended ven. | 2roadhurst. This information was} onoe'in 1902 as a guard on the Uni- 5 pe, Who suspended sen- | the first that the sult ger $50,000, filed chines eect ee tence upon the youth, requiring only], \in, Broadhurst against the San versity o! cago foot eam, bu Vee Sports Editor and Veteran All-Around ° Athlete. NORRISTOWN, Pa., June 30,— Robert W. (‘Tiny’) Maxwell, former All-American guard, weight thrower, sports writer and one of the best known football officials in the Eas' died in a hospital to-day as a result of injuries received in an automobile crash early Sunday. Percy Sanderson, golf writer, who was also in the, wreck, Is still uncon- sclous. Maxwell was sports editor of the Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger. Although he had seven fractured ribs and dislocated hip, his condi- 11 guarantee that he'll be well provided for with work and a home. Tl take a chance that he won't go wrong again.’ So, this afternoon, when Kay came aunt, Mra, Genevieve Kerns, at No.| that a probation officer call on him won his gratest honors as a member 826 North Lawrence Street, Philadel-| now and then to make sure that all Near 125th St, phia. But she already had three! was going well WANT MRS. BURTON TO SETTLE ESTATE Arguments to Have Widow Francisco contractor, had apparently| \y ine siarthmore College football been settled out of court eleven in 1904 and 1905. While in ST T college he was one of the foremost weight throwers in the Eas After leaving Swarthmore College Maxwell became connected with Chi- cago newspapers and came to Phila- delphia about ten years ago. In the THERESA “FATHER BILL” DALY SEPARATED FROM WIFE tain matter relevant to the case he ing been allowed, a stenographer pre- pared to take notes. Although George I. Hurd of the firm representing the heirs was willing that the evidence brought out be made public, the ob. Jection of Mrs, Burton's attorneys was DIED. Gi last few years he officiated in some|CHENEY.—On June 29, 1929, Gmongw Ol) of the most important football games| P- CHENEY, at his home, 470 Prospect William C, ('Fathera Bill’) Daly, Made Administratrix of veteran horse trainer of Brooklyn, was sustained by the referee legally separated to-day from his wife % Funeral prival $1,800,000 Property. <ncaeteneettfinnesenes ss n Ella Daly, by an order signed by WHITE HAIRS WIN KLINE.—MARY. CAMPBELL FUNMRAU Attorneys for Mrs, Claire V. Bur} INCOMPETENT HEIRESS Justice Benedict in the Supreme Court, CHURCH, wntll Friday, ton, widow of Frank V, Burtén, Who Brooklyn, The order marks the end of VER YOUTH IN MERRIMAN.—MYRA KINGMAN, wite of died sebsitly and left $1,800,000, TO GET $25,000 A YEAR |o long series of disputes between Mr. 0 tt . J. ©. Merriman, and mother of Mra, nnd Mra. Daly. ‘Father Bill is about TY CONTEST | = opened their case before Referee John clghiy 3 BEAU pep ir ivco lr gas tishiy years old, He and his wife have ; Theress Horden, Worth Millions, [ion living together on Linden Avenue, on Wednesday, June 28, 1922. in the Bast, wt., South Orange, N. J eee 3 . . « BB. Mackie in the offices of Green & ‘ wih ve With Relative. Brooklyn, Woman of Ei hty Queen Funeral at W Hurd this morning in an endeavor to] Theresa Borden, of the Gail Borden} justice Benedict announced that he f ” Blond d flowers. cause him to allow their client to be[fmily, wealthy Incompetent, who re-J would Itave to @ referee who will be! 0) Queens,” Blondes an Long Beach ( made administrattix of the vstate.Jcently applied to the Supreme Court ROE e ae ee eee rai mutr le to ree Brunettes Lose. —=—— or 5 ear expenses, an Sl be 7 . Noble & Scannell of No. 116 Browd-| (or eee eee ee lomtnes witi{celve. Mrs. Daly won the separation LIEGE, Belgium, June 80. FUNERAL DIRECTORS, way were opposed by Green & Hurd.|inake hor home with Mrs. Jeanne Mcc,]on allegations of cruel and inhuman tiseeladh atte fashion ia ite No, 48 Exchange Place, who repre-| Borden of Lakeville, Conn., who Was tment and accused pay of being rs) rent Burton's heirs, John Hawes Bur-|to-day appointed a ‘committee of her|Penurious. | Daly deviled the clavecs) annual beauty contest this year, ton, Frank V. Burton jr., Van Duzer|person by Justice Morschauser at nese the ton a aly Ri | crowning as “Queen of Queens Murton, all sons of the deceased, and) White Fiaite, she ia maid to be worth) Tica ‘tat her humband’s Income was] neither a blonde nor a brunette woe Sgambes S38 % Howard F, Clark, a former business he hi been using an income of ar, but “Father Bill’ denied but a white-haired woman. FRANKE. art ogee mutes ‘ ine! $25:000 & year for her living and tray. aa The new Queen is Madame "The Fu eral Church's rs. ‘urton’s peGtion to examine’ ejing expenses. While she will be per- = by - and. record the contents of a number mitted that much in. the. future, her] FATHER JOHN’S MEDICINE] Pirard, aged eighty years, the fo edierry! of letters and a book declared to oon- travelling Limitations will be confined, Bulids you up after illness, mother of ve children,

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