The evening world. Newspaper, July 14, 1922, Page 14

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| | 14 “THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 14,.1922, ° ros STRIKE OF 400,000 18,000 MORE RAILROAD WORKERS IMITATED QTHER © Uncle Sam Now Teaches Girls PRESIDENT WHO DIED ~ WOMEN, ASKED |, Mow 40 Dress on Halt the Cost me TRACK WORKERS | WILL JOIN WALKOUT ON MONDAY NOW THREATENED) sow me TGA FRAUD” - HUBBY TO FORE , " ‘ ‘ w ‘replying to Mr. Started Innocently rele bee vane Neg to Parc jgetd Gas appeiited vooslved ter CHARGED IN SENATE conform to inevitable changes 1 i Sai nm ans for the railroad by a United States Court, a mic co! ions. “- a in Heartaches, Said Alleged Confer ee ms HUN Sraaing 1c Calvan, FOcSVaL WOPAEGT. Republicans are themselves divi st Wife. ry on the merits of various schedules! Letter Written by i sion, declared that “in case the State ) wiher:aow bald detmeae be a CINCINNATE, July 14.1. 6, Car not formally before the Senate. Mr, , coaatig authorities are unable or unwilling to maintain law and order the Federal Harding may have to be the arbiter roll, President of the General Chair-| Government is ready to afford protec- of these differences. Some of thé men’s Assoctation of the Maintenance] tign and will take action if necessary] (Continued From First Page.) eb are so serious that many Re- of Way Brotherhood, announced on} as soon as you have reply from the ° the tarttt until ieee the eletions leaving for Louisville early to-day| Governor,” Indicates it to have been worth many| ‘Hse Cation for @. Soldier montis that he carried in his portfollo re-} 1 was emphasized to-day that the! another Law is undiminished and the chame quests from a majority of the General Chairman of the Brotherhood of HARONG IN TANGLE 4 OF BIG PROBLEMS LEADERS IN PANG (Continued from First Page.) Department of Agriculture Enables Young Woman to Cut Wardrobe Expenditure From $210 to $108. WASHINGTON, July 14.—Uncle Sam's Department of Agriculture does work of many interesting sorts, ite ramifications extend in divers direc- tions, and one of the most helpful of these is aiding in the subjugation of the still high cost of clothing. A recent publication of the department declares that the business girl can use part of her spare time to such effect that she can cut in half her clothes bill. The business gifi may claim, ays, Uncle Sam, that she has not the time|'timming, $11.09. A. tissue gingham n° | dress, with organdie for trimming and or energy left after a strenuous day's also hemstitching, cost $6.33; with work; but a skilled sewer who enjoys scraps and a remnant she made an- sewing as an interesting and profit-Jother gingham dress for exactly 45 able charige of occupation can always|°°h'®- air we a sie ¥*| For $16 she bought materials to nd time and energy. In this con-|maxe a pussy willow taffeta and nection, the department cites the case | georgette crepe dress, which, she said, of a girl in a Government department who, with the aid of the circulars and A remarkably» frank letter was submitted to Supreme Court Justice Cropsey in Brooklyn to-day by Rol- and ©. Kessler, in connection with his dpposition to the motion by his wife, Maude C. Kessler, for a rea- sonable allowance of counsel fees and alimony pending his action for di- illustration of how, he said, “great agencies of the Govern- ment were victimized by the dye she could not duplicate in quality at a store for less than $35. Her busi- ness dress of serge and crepe de chine action of the Government in this in- pions of the measure want to see ag~ stance was taken because of its re- tion, no mater what happens to the vorot, ‘The letter was alleged t0|sortment, was very aucceenful in keene] Would have been priced at $40. or Maintenance of Way and Shop Labor-| sPonstalties vt ang there, wan no] Takers of the country and our pub-| Se. etme Prectaent torpee Uneae have been written by Mrs. Kessler ling her wardrobe supplied at compar- more if made of the good fabrics she ers that he call a meeting of the} omcia indication that It was to be re- Sriparananse: he: Wenkiee ieee the Bhip Bubsldy Bill ae oot to her husband, making a plea forjatively low cost, one half, in fact, | >OURht for $18.39. Her evening dress, General Chairman's Association at] garded as a precedent determining the correspondence destetied to show that] tive achievement. Mixed up in the forgiveness for her alleged miscon-|What the same clothing would have| ls? “tamer and Bliver lace, cont which plans could be perfected to call| Polley to be followed in other cases of | EecTeronuencs covered fo shew thatl pvobiem is the fight over the sale. of @uct with another man, and begging | Teady-made. eae Ohé abbh At 8 AHODT AUN GHUOH it off the Job 400,000 maintenance of| Violence interfering with ‘He move-| Chicago, Philadelphia, Rochester, | !@uor on Government vessels outalde To begin with, she got a department circular telling how to make a dress home. In one part of the letter Mrs./form of pasting layers of gumed Kessler was alleged to have written beige) wrapping paper over a tight- bought that she “did nothing more than|ly fitting vest on herself as a model. * foment Arnelle) Ole thousands of other women-—started|When the paper casing was cut oft] $108.34, Is not elaborate, though suf- out innouentiy, and wound up in such [484 fastened together, she hed a tight,| ficient for the needs of the wearer, 1 heartach stiff and perfect reproduction of her|!t was sald, and, having a variety H ‘The! Kesslers were married in|form. So it was not necessary to pur-|f clothing, she was able to attend i August, 1915. They have no children, | Chase a store figure. many social functions she otherwise Mrs. Kessler is said to be now living} The girl reported that her latest| Would not have been able to. to be taken back to. the Kessler Washington and other cities and|the three-mile limit. higher price. way workers. merce, against which President Hard- This wardrobe, augmented by two| ***+—*> arm Oey venee | Mr. Carroli has the power to call) ing save warning in his proclamation, now in the National Museum. here I etittandt dresses for which materials were such a meeting when, he e ad been financed by the dye makers, . brought the total up. to MATTHEW J. CAHILL. Generel Chalemen can by © sumicient 3 _| having been prepared in the chem-| Senate to pass the many bills already vote decide to call a strike of the} JEWELL RESPOND cal warfare section of the War De-| @cted upon by the House. Should the members of the Lower House come Se a tee TO RAIL EXECUTIVES | P2rtment. back and find little accomplished dis~ At Louisville to-day he will meet Senator Moses declared Read bh sattataction s bound to grew, fMctals of the Louisville and Nash- people, through advances from the . Cille in an attempt to reach an agree-| CHICAGO, July 14—A statement] ineaerai Treasury during the war, “not | Opportunities for decisive action and, ment on the wages and working con-| was issued last night by the head of only financed the du Ponts In the tre-|aggressive leadership on the part of at No. 104 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, | Wardrobe cost her only $108 for cloth-| Without the dress form, the girl DIES SUDDENLY AT igri the maintenance of way fi the Chief Executive are numerous. the rail shopmen tn reply to the ultl-|mendous extension of their business, : ; Congress is drifting along lin although elsewhere in the papers her|ing conservatively estimated to be|Feported, it was doubtful if she could i rh ved from | matum of the executives. He said: |but were also muicted by the du Ponta least ‘Feststanos, If it could. ava rien address is given as Elmhurst, L. 1.¢worth $210 at store prices. With the|have duplicated her achievement in a See ee reecterue tra| URbe latter atiribated (8) they four) (0) 0n eTeae BRINE eann ee tre Oo [way it would petal) Ub tne TKHieraee She denied her husband's charges, and{aid of her paper form she made for|the time at her disposal; but she not STATEN ISLAND HOME 3 railway executives addressed to Mr. cman hastily, the bor decision was reserved on her applica-| $24.61, a tan broadcloth winter coat|only had time left over for other country show the sentiment of the admitted $220,000,000, while at the }hastily, pass the nus and adjourn’ (Continued from First Page.) Pre we] which in one year amounted to $129,- | Palgning. ‘An affidavit was submitted, sworn| priced at $50 in the shops. A blue|forms for other girls and to hold Le Ce eared aa! th tithe understand the cet , eerie! 0,000," M The President hak to by Benjamin Rasch of No. 98 Un-|volle dress with a slip cost, including | classes to teach many others, y ge p Ree see the attempt of the big ins AESIGIMINE that the. Government | call! CORETEAN fon Avenue, the Bronx, in which he BetlGBIt OI Sere 28 re) Cee veneer 1d Stripes and tO} tne Textile Alliance to distribute Ger-| Subsidy measure. He cannot afford | signed a joint note with other craft|@found the Stars an : . af Te a ere A ly different in shade orgunization Presidents that if their| attempt to lead some one to believe|man reparation dyes in this country, |to retreat and his party does not dare bik The last official act Canit!| members voted for a strike they would] that they are not responsible for the|Senator Moses charged that the al-]to administer a defeat to his leader- Nearly every Saturday, and occa- official act of Mr. Cal liance, originally formed to eliminate | 8h!p Just before the elections in which 1 Mrs. Kessler would meet a strange had, in the handling of the dyes, ‘re. |@gain ask for support. man in Manhattan, going with him Cel ciate Chale eau. Lee pesiaett errand sake to ab pene now standing Ce aaa teers sorted to the ‘most unfair business| Industrial strife, political dissaties to motion picture shows and other missioner 6: OU On! orough on ‘4 the oppression 0! . faction, legislative tangles, midsum: a 4 .| tion not quite two years after its eleo- ; he expected to have the decision «o|the organization into their hands and tiway shop crafts are not fight-| committed its dye interests to a com t } a Mr. Samuels, leave a taxicab, MALBECHIA KOGLINCANHEA Go cue: otlccll A AIMSSWRELDEN OF EDD GS ter Herd Raveena mittes of seven members, Senator|tion. Primary results are being ana- eaduess ie Dean Mian ceatalee en Wet Papen (Continued From First Page.) | Telnstatement. going to sleep on these requests and| “Let it be sald now and for all time, | Moses sald this committee, which in-|!y!zed to discover national trends, 2 Continu ‘rom ec. Bs ————— ‘? ° 6 01 ‘o he future holds in store politically, January 2, Just after taking office, and the men will not be ordered back | tives of the du Pont Company and the|t . Hetoned cecaipatt inte the house, and} intermittency in operation, and with-|slysee toward the President's resi-[ said Minnahan, “and told me he| CHICAGO, July 14—E. F. Grable,| until justice has been ordered, and| Aniline Company, also had been con-|the facts of to-day's crisis force the they had entered, ‘The door had been | OUt, 8reat diversification and distri-} gence, Soldiers and police formed a| Wanted my job, which pays $4,000 a] President of 400,000 maintenance of] that the railroad managements can, |stituted as the advisory committee on} conclusion that the Harding Admin- INDIANAPOLIS, July 14,—Non-|Cfdon around the house. hav t " ali { he had received word from all of] “It must be apparent to the think-| ‘Thus, he added, these two dye con-| what it does in the next three or fou! He telephoned Kessler, who {8 em-| inion coal mine owners of America| Gaston Bouvet was released from| rmrs*® have been trumped up against bi General Chatvinen (hatitherinen ing Atnerican putlic that there is}cerns had constant representation in} weeks of its political life. Pr sdeyd &Alaem see cLine teeny protested to President Harding to-| Prison In April after conviction on} fr, Cahill had already demanded|were insistent upon calling an im-| some force directing the policy of the hing that was done concerning —- fi obedience. In addition he was under apap, ; ts, do not want a settlement, |cess t» the private information of the tan, and Messler and others came to] Dunne ll Noe charges of clreulating » Anarchistie| missioner’ of buble Werke by tocar] suai, but & temporary truce waa rec| but are demanding « continuance ot |War Trade Board. OF TWO BROKERS sonal ty Se Thane MINERS’ TRAIN RUNS) Propaganda. Bouvet was founder and] Rorough President’ Van Name. He|cently effected by the United States] the strik ats € Willi C. B a Needed . illiam C. Brower Nee ON DYNAMITE TRAP; | paper. ho bad weeved ‘f been fighting every day| interests of the American public. } O1 ‘ Kessler scantily clad. Other affida- *.| The attack on Millerand was anticl-| 39 Commissioner at Sater ed ae to dete tne en ee eenk tinze Weyl which it is obligated to serve, and as Govt. Witness in vits were submitted in collaboration! ONE KILLED, 10 HURT | pated. Paris newspapers yesterday | pairc, promise to the labor board to with-|!f it 1s so dull of comprehension as of Rasch’s affidavit. Fe ee ihe ot the Pedieht rentempt | ‘Tho manner of choosing a successor| hold ‘the strike order," said Mr, |‘ even have a faint hope of crish- Satinds waa Huabendod Wey Two Cars Blown to Bits, o the life of the President was likely] or the Borough Presidency is pro-|Grable. ‘The men are clamoring to| !"& the employee's org SIRI C Ge EE ATER tion for alimony and counsel fees. with good lining, such as she saw/activities, but also to make te: rank and file 1s in favor of a strike,'’| Hooper must be amusing to those who|same time taking out net profits|by Sept. 1 to give time for cam- told of following Mrs. Kessler f Ce desire despite the fact that Mr. Grable|f the country to wrap themselves}. entered into an arrangement with|once If it falled to act on the Ship: ‘old of following Mrs. Kessler for sev- other. Both had red hair, only slight- ai take sterd: , | Sanction it. yooal law-abiding, God- rt een ian rappers ogaaelder 9 10 KILL MILLERAND lattes ac trial NG suepantedvsona E, “I regret that Mr. Gable and his feaniig SAaHGLS, citizens who are|unfair practices in the textile trades, the whole Republican Party will Places of amusement. On June 18 : charges of incompetency, neglect of|as criticising him or them. I feel, on] ment and directors of railroads are| practices of which there is any rec- Gubh: -tariperdturee-<4lly’ com GREE ikaky Sie aids Havkaw SES “Kaeser duty and absence without leave.|the other hand, that the Generallaghting their Government. 3 bring the climax of the Administra- and the same man, identified only as Minnahan dented the charzes but said|Chairmen should not take the law of| “~ne american public knows that that the alllance had e ame CeO pemerrs chensur Street, Manhattan, Rasch said be “President Cahill came to me on|see how I feel about them later, that the strike will not be called off {cluded in \ts membership representa- | but, without attempting to say what inadvertently left ajar, Rasch said, | ution of mines. year. I refused to leave and so these|way workers, announced last night] if they wish, settle this strike. dyes for the War Trade Board. istration will be made or broken ot ‘at No. 313 East 95th Street, Manhat.| 02%, 2#ainst his plan for settling the} charges of suborning troops to dis-land obtained the resignation of John|mediate strike. Mr. Grable's union] railroads, which, for their own selfish |the reparation dyes and also had ac-| SUSPEND SENTENCE anicbe! caries ot, iand RBA OMFS, Proprietor of an Anarchistic news-lajso obtained the resignation of John| Labor Board. “It that force is so blind to the Morse Trial. peice 9 heath ‘. to-day, followivy inflammatory ar- 0 .|that force or group of people is due Big Hole Dug in ticles carrled in the radical press. Se predate that TELE cae Con NC: | So.cut: (Cam on my way to WAShIBE: Teo i reosive e,auddan aWaxenlog| 64 law, Herbei’ R. McCory, members 55% DIVIDENDS 382 provides that when a vacancy|ton to see if I cannot find some way y, o —_—_ the American public should charge : Roadway. occurs, either through removal or|to bring the entire matter beforelinem with the responsibility. the brokerage firm of Hebert R Mi E ARIMA INCI tack |). warroevion, reece i GALA PARIS THRONG otherwise, u successor for the unex-| President Harding." puslydiach| Se neaU ne Peeciaccie eau ri nieae ee tente REG OR YOU: ‘ Tlsdladd le otherd| oo CRATES PALL Vests vrs ta. seate testaiceence RR ET ERS desire for a strike. They have dono ’ failed in May, 1921, wien they wei of Wylde Estate Against |—One miner was and tai F THE BA 4 everything that honorable mew could ———_ invralgnadiitotdayehetore vudese ta y from the same borough who are of the 5 Widow’s Protest. prelate (Subs RATIOURLY: te tay whee same political faith us the formar fo fo avold a strike. Now that they} (Continued From First Page.) |! General Sessions. Each prisone: The New York -Trost Comp eae abt eb a cul PP Reviewed by| President. Under this proviston Lol arta peas eg all peter yaeail oes Thad pleaded guilty of maintaining ¢ New York Trust Company, as roops Reviewed by 3 effective in a legal bucket shop. near Mordue, ran into a dynamite} #%;' P' Y] Mayor Hylan will call a meeting of i executor of the large estate of Edward} +1, ana was destroyed. The mine, President and Cabinet _ | the three Staten Island Aldermen, all manner ae eats be continued to @/ haa not been filed and the record of] The complainant was August Het Wylde, who died at his residence, No. ed ey the Mordu Collleries Com. i c of them Democrats—Walter T. Wur- Successful conclusion.’ the issuance of the license made pub-|nen, a manufacturer, of No. 159 Pros. ‘ * * low! irdu “4 Nc, Judge Newman declined to make|pect Park, Brooklyn, who stated that iii 200,000 MOTOR CARS any comment. He simply stated that in Oct., 1920, he had given the ri the certificate a een sent .0 | $5,450 to purchase fty shares of Amer. OFFERED FOR MAILS) grenton. {ean Telephone and Telegraph stock that the order had been busketed, Air and Sea-Planes Also —— PLAYED NO CUPID and that all demands for the stock o1 Available in Event of the money had been ignored. Strike Crisis. 1 East 56th Street, in June, 1920, to- day petitioned Surrogate Cohain for directions as to the disposition of the stock in the Elevator Supplies Com- pany, Inc., In order to ‘adjust differ-|tratier cars up w steep grade to the ences between the executor and ex-| mine on Big Elk Run, opposite here, ecutrix,” the widow, Elizabeth White] picked up the miners at the foot of Wylde of the Plaza Hotel. the hill. The train had gone but a Wylde bequeathed $40,000 insurance, | short distance when it ran into the at Longchamps. ren, Edward J. Atwell and David 8. Rendt. pany, has been operating under pro- tection of a Federal Court injunction since June 1. A gasoline truck pushing three It will also be necessary to choose PARIS, July 14 (Associated successors for Mr. Cahill as Demo- Press).—Soldiers of France from the|cratic leader ‘and State Democratic land, sea and air forces passed in re-] Committeeman, The State Commit- view to-day before President Miller- | tee meets at the Biltmore on July 27. The office of Borough President and and a crowd of hundreds of thou- | carries a salary of $10,000 a year. sands of persons at the Longchamps|Until the Aldermen have acted the IFRS ROUND (Continued From First Page.) ROLEINGOULDCASE | meccory turned State's eviden SAYS GROSSMITH |*#2!"*t t's partner. Counsel for Mo Cory stated his client had made res ters on three greens. He took three an apartment house at No. 200 West | trap, © WASHINGTON, July 14.—Automo- ais Tia tution of twenty shares of the stoi Race Course in the annual fourteenth |duties of the office will be in charge} putt: " the first, ninth and i y Qc 92d Street and the income from two-| The explosion blew the first two of July” euititel ent th pay: of Acting Commissioner of Public| Puc. “ac? On tne t dt feat biles of 200,000 members of the Na-| Manager Didn’t Introduce] Judge Nott said the Department thirds of his residuary estate tb his|trailers to bits and badly damaged y ry pageant, the chief Bailey. tenth, but sank a twenty-footer on Works Robert FE. ‘widow for life. the one on which the eleven miners |feature of Bastille Day. Mr. Cahill had lived on Staten|the seventh. His wood shots were The trust company says the elevator! were seated. The explosion blew a] The celebration passed with no|Island most of his life and was in|played, short purposely but he company stock has yielded 56 per cent.|hole in the ground “big enough for] other incident than the shots fired|the meat busin@ss until 1898, when|always left himself a perfect lie. in dividends, of which the widow has|the basement of an average hous at Naudin, he started his political career, to} Jesse Guilford, amateur champion received $200,000. Due to this, the] A detachment of State police, with | ai. aarshals of Fri . which he devoted all his time. He has} was erratic with both wood and iron executor claims the widow has resist | plooghounds, soon reached the scene ‘ance, Foch, | sorved at various times as Coroner,| and the best the Boston ‘Siege Gun’’ The Department has ready for use| that he ‘had played the part of Cupid] Judge Nott suspended sentence ed its efforts to sell the Wylde inter-/and started on the trail of the} Joffre and Petaln, were present to seo| Deputy Tax Commissioner, by &|could do was 38-89-77, while hisl1si planes of the Army Air Service, | by introducing Mra, Vere Sinclair to] Brower, stating that after the Mo ests and that a change in busirless | dynamiters. the Marshal's baton presented by the| record-breaking majority, and Dem- Ai rti Eddie Loos of ie itted, how-j|trial in the autumn, Brower must conditions might injure the estate. - playing partner, le es Chi-}each capable of carrying 400 pounds] George J. Gould. He adm! l. tional Motorists’ Association were of-| Actress to Millionaire [228° Tiepetiant’ pieces ane aries W. Morse. Brower, it said, was a member of the firm Childs & Brower, in which Morse an interest. fered to the Post Office Department by Fred E. Caley, Secretary of the As- sociation, for use in _ transporting United States mails, should the rail strike situation grow worse. He Declares, LONDON, July 14.—George Gros- smith, In an interview to-day denied baipapm pay nabaemceaniad MURDERED WOMAN head of the State to Generals Fayolte| ocratic leader. Last year he defeated | cago had 37-38—15. of mail, with a daily capacity of 52,400 ]ever, that he might have been guilty|arraigned again for disposition of ran 01 mwell, Ri ' and Franchet D'Esperey. George Cromwell, Republican, for the} Black's card was: pounds. of understudying Cupid, because Mr. | case POLICEMAN STOPS y. General Navy hydroairplanes with an even} Gould met his bride when Grossmith i —_ oo greater capacity are available for use| took to New York, in 1913, the Lon-] RUSSIAN MONOPOL between points where most of the fly-]don Gaiety Company of ‘The Girl ing is over water, as between Boston]on the Film,” in which the second] GIVEN GERMAN FIR « oA? Borough Presidency, His official ca- Fives 5 RUNAWAY BY LEAP| A “BOOTLEG QUEEN” | Lyautey, who came from Moroces| ee; wince his election has beealte’..... i 3 . Sag ate for the ceremony, was ill and unable| stormy, and on some points he was Police See Plot in Killing of to attend. at outs with the Hylan organization. Girl Who Had Fled A big yellow dirigible, three squad-| The flay on the Borough hall at and New York and Los Angeles and| Mrs, Gould then was playing. This, 7 From Fairmont. rons of military airplanes and an ob.| St. George was lowered to Tif mast San Francisco, he sald, followed a succeastul run of 999,990,000 Gold Mark I eS servation balloon hovered over the| tMi8 morning. the play in London, Bibasetl , BALTIMORE, July 14,—Although fully 2,000 persons visited the city eeong te g Jumps Fre Animal in A leap from the running board of an automobile to the neck of a run- away horse was the only way Patrol- man John J. Wall of the Kingsbridge station, could stop the animal which eae naw s me $3 43-38 Yast field, while on the green lawn | The funeral probably will be on : S44 Sass, °| SPEED BOATS OFFERED Althou ¢h ue did not introduce] land Waterway Corpo! racecourse, in the mid Monday morning at 11 o'clock from 3 YY THE M. them," Grossmith said, “I heard, ‘ eg HEE Boulogne S0,09] St. Mary's Roman Catholle Church, was intermingled TO CARR E MAILS | Sieve’ time later, that they. bad tael tion Launched. epee) e through severat | Morgue to-day in an effort to identity | men, with a mass of war material, |New Brighton. pe She SArly Dey OF to-08y a Tounees July 14,—Commodore} nd that she had found Gould a most} PETROGRAD, June 19 (By Mail) caree! ugh several . oe Clarence Hackney of Atlantic City was charming and ocourtecus gentleman,|/c Bronx streets this afternoon. Wall] the body of the woman found mur-{ marched for an hour and a half past BOARD OF ESTIMATE [tte *rst to turn nine holes in par 34, | Garwood of Detroit, holder of world! itn’ tne time came for me to take German private capital and the So had pursued the horse a mile and a] ered on the golf links at Catonsville toe stands packed with | cheering Beo- HONORS M. 3. CAHILL |s24. minute ater “chick” vans, | motor boat speed records, toulny an-lthe tompany: back, fo. England, Mrs, | VeMMment have launched a corpo half. yesterday the police are convince! rh ode Chicago amateur, reached the first] nounced he would offer to the Govern-| sinclair told me she was going to re-| tO? Which bids fair virtually to The horse, attached to a Sheffield} that she was Carmelia Sairoca of] that soniraied she Gel and darkened —_ turn in 85, three putts on the ninth} ment, for use as mail carriers in the| main in America. biti nopolize the inland water transpot Farms Dairy wagon and driven by| Fairmont, W. Va., known to the po- | ‘Me Surrounines Sunes The Board of Estimate adjourned] putting him over. event of an emergency due to the shop ‘Why should I return to England| t!on of Russia, Harry Spanginsberg of No. 290 Dyck- | ce there as ‘the bootleg queen” ani| The Daher Veterans nar” many | to-day's meeting out of respect for the} George Duncan, British pro, was| crafts strike, sixteen of his speedtest | where I have had only two-line part the singing of the R man Street, became frightened at| that she was the victim of a bootie. | thousands of veterans nema te the! memory of Borough President Mathew] playing badly, turning in excess|craft. The announcement camelane uid to me. $o we returned with-|“erman treaty at Rapallo an ag: Webb Avenue and 188th Street. Af- | ger's plot. rface Re ee ane bands Cahill of Richmond, who was one| strokes being accumulated through] through the American Power Boat As-| out her and I have not seen her since.|™eAt was signed on behalf of ter a block, Spanginsberg was thrown | A Fairmont despatch said that the] Strack Up the ‘idtseiliaise” a» Presi. | o¢ its members. Mayor Hylan intro-| wildness on the fairways and missed | sociation, following oe re une to de} “But I am delighted at the news| Soviet Government with the from the swaying wagon, his face and | Sairoca woman left there about three Lagi Tite ait pidare ig rhe f! duced the resolution. The Board will] putts. On the fifth one shot was vise ieee for aniding the Government] 1411 knew where they were honey-{™an firm of Robert Wenkh arms being slightly lacerated, Wall] weeks ago. She had had trouble with ipa rove onto the field, while the | Meet, Wednesday, July 19, at 10.80 A.| against a fence and he had to play| MMe et to et ages their speed | mooning I would send them a con-|f Hamburg granting concession then commandeered motor car and|a man there, and had warned the au- |Nemor, Genre Sain oe lee on a. °|M. The Sinking Fund Commission, | out one handed. Rept ate aventiice ae erisia’ on tia leratulatory” (aeKrasn: th transportation through the Baltic 3 set out after the runaway. thorities that he would “try to get’ | res" patey veer ad hed he Presiden-| which also adjourned, will meet next| Thirty-six holes will be played to- | ratiroads. Elsewhere in theatrical circles It was| the Caspian Sea and the Marleen ‘The chase went across the 207th | her. eee ete to tip eae cen | Tuamay at AP. MS, day and 36 to-morrow, —_—_ learned that Mrs, Sinclair, as she be-] Canal system. ; Street bridge into Sherman Avenue, —_—>— . There were fully six hundred pres- TOLEDO DEPOT WORKERS |came known after ie left England, syndicate will be formed wit! Manhattan, and a block from there] PLEADS TO CHANGE pan eee DOS ORG | Ne Own) ent when the members of the Board| Fer complete list of qualifying IN SYMPATHY STRIKE | © of © good old English family canitel st 300,008,000 gold marks to Wall made his sensational leap and PLACES WITH DOG|sne’ the songs te: which they hag | Slowly filed into the chamber. Mayor} scores and firet round parings see fe) , And Is now not much past thirty years] Pld by the Soviet Government brought the animal to a stop. His marched during the war. Premier| Hylan was pale and appeared to be|page 11. zi old. It 1s sald here that she hoped, | tiirman capitalists... The firm un uniform was badly torn, but he was| co RATES Poincare and the other Cabinet mem. | Visibly affected. All seats in the BP BPS TOLEDO, 0. July 14 (Strike)—In| when she remained behind in America, | (ith te arrange a own for the So not hurt. “Please let me go to jail in place}) were present, together with | Borseshoe circle, with the exception of HAROLD M’CORMICK sympathy with striking ratlroad shop-| that Gould would finance a show In| {iovernment tarennl Gistman buni Seer tar of my dog," pleaded Charles Btrick| hundreds of notable men f; Mr. Cahill's, were taken, Acting Com- IS NOT GOING ABR men, 180 baggage handitrs, mail truck-| which she would be the star, but so 000, 5 ‘rom all £, OAD aid 5 Bs cat INJUNCTION IS ASKED of No, 229 Park Avenue, Hoboken, | walks of life and most of the foreign | ™!ssloner of Public Works Bailey of —__—— ers, common laborers end @ ther work-| far as is iowa here this hope ARRESTED FOR SETTING IN B. AND M. ELECTION |1o-dsy to Recorder Carsten in the eerendoat ” MALh a Ree hee Ponte cet fee win .d ros Savenier Fe Pare eal bares quit work (SES ery who remember her stage} In Yorkville create day Louis oe Raat Noboken Court, who yesterday had] Presiden| lerand conferred the} is (ate ‘ ‘ Mat Sell for Eerepe. to-day. Other shifts, the strikers de-| career sa; ve ; ted vac chair the ¥ . y thaf although she was very 4, fort: 5 fent the animal to the public pound | baton upon the new Marshals as soon |e an cliatan it wan a shorts] COpectal to The Evening Werid,) | clared, will not report'for work. ‘They! Oretty and charming she never: would| way. a trunk imanufactiseh seoel fer twenty days’ observation, The y y crowd cheerin; : iat say thal men in . ‘ BOSTON, uly 14,<Petitien tar an in- {dos "Bpert, ne We Heelon Krug offas the President gave them the prin simple recital of the fact that Cahill CHICAGO, July 14.—Harold McCor- ‘all will be involved in the walk-out. have reached stardom had she re-j suspended sentence from Magist eae Ryttenberg, on a charge of disoi ‘ “ death had just been announced and|mick denied here to-day that he or his ae mained in London, Junction restraining oMcials of the New| No. 227 Park Avenue. lade a SS conduct. Patrolman Guthrie aj York Central and Boston & Maine rail-| “I'm willing to go to jail if my dog] The parade through the Bois de|that the board would adjourn out of {daughter Mathilde were going to Europe] INDIA WINS DOUBLES 1,400 DEPUTY MARSHALS | Diswond s night when he f roads from carrying out an alleged con-|1s8 released, He was only playing| Boulogne was past densely packed | Pespect: Before doing so, however, |either for Mathilde’s marriage to Max FROM SPANISH TEAM|?* him seated on the lawn in Central apiracy to elect Alfred H. Smith, Presi-|with her. I'll. go right away, only | throngs. the members acted on one of the 727]Oser or for any other reason. He said REQUESTED BY OHIO] with his wite and two children, dent of the former road, Chairman of|let the dog out. He is pining away. ee items of the business calendar, the}his son Fowler and his daughter Muriel " 2 BRISTOL, Eng.July 14 (Associated Board of Directors of the Boston|He is used to music and good food.|NOV. 11 BELGIUM'S NEW NaA-| largest in the history of the Estimate|Were !n New York for a ten-day trip + Daugherty : uf NA} +”, pt y Gets Plen After HK Maine, has been filed, Edmund C.| There is no music where he is and he ‘TIONAL HOLIDAY, Board. This was done because it was| "884 & change of atmosphere. Press).—India won the doubles match Fy ‘odman announced at @ meeting of lis not getting the food d., 18 . 4 in the Spanish-Indian pr ke Rietn, stockholders of the Boston & Maine] Please Int me xo te Jai My a a BRUSSBLS, July 11.—The Belgian] legally Imperative. It was the award in the Sp ph ste ed JERSEY TRAIN HITS AUTO, K MAN, INJUIRES NIN! PHILADELPHIA, July 14.—One oo 12 DIE IN MINE BLAST, ae “i TOLEDO, July 14.—Attorney General . . owest bid< for the Davis Cup here to-day. A. A. was killed and nine serlously in, to-day. ER RS pabeconter C raten sald he was worry Feiarasak nas and Nov. U1 as the fa a Le bindery, $8 aie STIRLING, Scotland, July 14.—|Fysee and R. Ramaawami, India, de-| Daugherty has been requested to-fur-| when @ West Jersey and Seasvore The . Mr. t that the decision could be] national holiday In (he piace of Aug, 4,| Rehaler Contracting Corporation, od Ci le and Eduardo! nial ; 2} ro Bee: frat the eection af Mr. changed, and strick, ta he left court, | hecause “Nov 11 woh the diy of| the drainage snd yough plumbing} Twelve men were killed and five in- tee te Ro mnatee inves Re A tmeeaa, maraseia 100 Gat pend toe, A would give the New York Central il-|said that he would appeal to the] liberation from the war and from the} Work on the new Court House. The] Jured tn a firedamp explosion at the United States Marshal George Stauffer] early to-day. The crossing is five set match 3—6, 7—5, 11-9, 8—10, t—4. fega! control of the Boston io Maine. ! higher courts. amount is $82,700. Plean Colliery near here yesterday, ' of Cleveland, announced here to-day, ‘have been unprotected,

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