The evening world. Newspaper, July 18, 1922, Page 3

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$000,000 GRAFT PROGE STARTED IN ~ DEPT. OF MARKETS ations Supervisors Charged With Appropriating License Fees ’ From Peddlers. TWO MEN_ DISMISSED. O'Malley Charged Hirshfield ) Defeated Arrests by Giving Ii Out News. Assistant District Ralph ©. Hemstreet in to-day fpaved the way for a thorough probe Into the use of city funds obtained through the payment of push peddlers’ license fees, sald to amount @o $500,000 annually. Mr. Hemstreet twrote Aloysius Molloy, Confidential Inspector of Public \ of names and « visors of publ County. Mr. Hemstrect's letter was the out Browth of a complaint received some fime ago, alleging that all of the Yarge sums received from this source Attorney Brooklyn cart for a Ilat Adresses of all super- in arkets, > markets kings are consumed in salaries and ex- enses of these supervisors. It is Mr. Hemstreet's purpose to call these men singly to his office and question each as to the “expenses Recently Justice Cropsey in Su preme Court, Brooklyn, referred to this practice as ‘nice plunder." The supervisors are appointed by the Aldermen in cach district, and the appointments are considered im- portant political plums. Edward J. O'Malley, Commissioner of Public Markets, charged to that David Hirshfeld, Comm ner of Accounts, by prematurely making public yesterday fragmentary details Of graft in the Department of Markets, wrecked an investigation that would have exposed all the Rvatters, Mr. O'Malley made th @ Mstement tn announcing that he hi peremptorily dismissed Joseph J Helfenstein of 733 Hughes Street, Brooklyn, collector in Ganse- Yoort Market, charged with misap Propriating collections, and Thomas F. Duncan of No. 6109 Eleventh Ave- nue, Brooklyn, collector in Wallabout Market, charged with insubordination According to Mr. O'Malley, he dis- covered weeks ago that collectors were holding out and started an in- vestigation. He suspended Duncan on June 14 for thirty days and had made arrangements, he said, with a suspected grafter who had agreed te turn State’s evidence and expose the whole system and the men engaged in It Finally, Mr. O'Malley said, it be fame necessary to th cess of the investigation to us power of sub- poena, which lie did not have. So he took part of evidence to Mr Hirshfield, who has the power of 2 #nbpoena, and sought his co-opera- tion To his astonishment, Mr. O'Malley said, he read in The Evening Worli erday afternoon that Mr. Hirsh- field had ie statements accusing Helfenste and Duncan. Mr. Hirshfield said Helfenstein had ad ynitted to him that he held out about $15 a da Duncan was given a hearing bs Commissioner O'Malley to-day. ‘The collector admitted that he did not al- ways glve receipts personally to larmers = and uckmen occupying space tn the market. M Hirshfield’s state ms issued esterday, carried the Infercace that it Was on evidence gather: 1 by his of- fice that Helfenstein had been ac- fised and ordered to appear before Commissioner O'Malley to-day for trial on July 18 On July 14 Helfen $tein wrote h gnation and matled it to the Commissioner, who refused to accent it, and when Helfenstein failed fo appear for trial to-day he was sum Marily fired by executive orders. re H —-- ‘ PARK CONCERTS TO-NIGHE, yncerts under the auspices of the Park Departme and the Mavor's Grounds will be given this evening 48 follows: In Ma At Mecrentic Pier, Kast Third St by the § Cleaning Department: Band; Reerea!tor SH Band, tteereation 1 " by Golub’s Bond R 1 lice Department Band. — = BATHING BEAUTIES AT ROCKAWAYS TO RECEIVE PRIZES vening World Photog raphers to ‘Take VPic- tures on Saturday. t beautiful The bathing stume at the Rockaway beaches next Maturday afternoon which {s brougtit to the notice of The Evening World will win for its wearer a prize of $50, The next prettiest sult will win $25. 7 five next comeliest costumes will receive awards of $9 eacl World will be at the Roekuways under conspleu' signs. All that is necessary !8 to find the photographer, await one’s car pose und give him a correet name and add The § the mont names ¢ lers fat tie the News Pictorial Edition of 7 Evening World Cl G Paper) Monday evenins, | ‘ THE E Two Rich Young Women Smash Theory Racing Stable Is Only for Wealthy; $5,000 Syndicate Stable a Success mRS R- PENN SMITH Je PRADLEY 3Ty. Nine Yearlings Moderate ners as Will Now Be Sold and Bought All Price, a Win- Two - Year-Olds, Ex- periment Repeated in Larger Scale. By R. R. Batson. When in the ancient past ho racing was called “the aport of ings’ the characterization was given prob ably for the reason that it was pop ularly believed the expenditure of iim- mense sums of money were necessi! to establish and successfully main tain a stable. At any rate, this has been a popular view for a great many years. The poor man or a person of moderate means might look on, or should he possess more pronounced sporting proclivities, cold become directly interested by placing wagers on race results, But that was the limit of his participation in the sport It has taken two of the wealthlest young women in the country to de- molish t i theory. They have demonstrated that a person ¢ erato means, possessing proper men- tal a:lity, can after all successfully compete with men who expend stu- pendous sums on their stables, the conclusive manner of the onstration has 1 tin owners gasp with amazem These two young women %. Penn Smith jr. a daught te E. H. Harriman, and Mrs. brose Clark, wife of a multi-mi mad Just about a yeapago the? of yearling horses still + the two-year-old mark, was a of widespread comment, A person siring to purchase a likely yearling found that have to pay as high ne that gave particular pr ere Was much complaint ar intending purchasers. But what c one do about {t? Mrs. Penn brose Clark friends many peep! tdentified with f acing often heard the prob But no one seemed t he or she w as $10.90 Mrs among mith jr and numbe who are ac we So they « just empt to show what cow Penn Jone time see ue, a down bottom figu profit AS a result of the venture was an ennul dispell Move than that, it prov of accompli ject seemed to many old time ra Mis. Ambrose Clark to the plan without 4 Mr. and Mrs rey, But the ng inte tor held forth nment of tnsurmoun ng owners whieh ny partic also take Rgbert out o e partnershiy ’ and to Mrs, Smith Jr mediately bexan yearlings original iny $5,000 And pay not mo Mra ly They decided to limit ailment in the farth able good-natured raillery on the of the gh price ng experiment was converted ests Clark im bid te wing stock t And Mrs Am- lion- ould ) fo: nis nong ould Am It table ular nin Liv have part MS R.PEN SMITH OR AND MRS EF AMBRODE CLARIS ST THE . TRAC, their friends they succeeded in ob-[ The reason is that the once despised faint nine yea s Some of these | Scareerow soon won $2,000 In stakes cost on tween §200 and $300. Last month at Belmont Park he was 1 hewly founded stable, | {Vo-¥ear-old race, and in the betting But one track hat n telling his | W@8 a 20 to 1 shot. But he won rather cronies of the am pald for the | casils Ile was recently or yeaulir named it the and 1) | $2,000, and through his winnings and Qont ‘stable: svlifely pestilted In Jou price he returned to the syndicat and appreciative guftay It was [Practically the entire unt of Lc name that st + many months. | original investment but Is heard no more Mor Suspicion there was paid on $500, To da horse has wor $1,600. In starts he ha almost the the fund had | + he ) decided t the next move was|credited race. 7 to secure the service the best | plus the sale p trainer uviala And to have the] brought t « henetit of 1 Inment of a really | to nearly. $7,000 high-grad wis, t realize - 4 Vital element in the success of thel Mrs. Smith ind Mra hind venture. Fortune smiled on them, solved the biem of extortionat they found that w ould sign up| pr for ye s, and were able t T. Simon Healy, an old experienced | return in ater measure the ehaf horseman who once trained for H. B | fing they ca ud received fror Duryea and for Capt. Cassatt; whol their friends leveloped P Fairy, one of “the} But the experiment tvet ato greatest mares the country has everfend. It has been ton f amu: produced, and who last year irained| ment and interest not to carry ¢ Exterminator, considered one of the} Mra. Smith and Mrs, Clark plan ¢ ‘eatest ot the greatest, geldings | repeat their performance on a some yet devel in this country what larger sc But fortune was not so kind to] The seven horses they have re them thiz when the stable | Maining tn their stable will be sold hecame afflicted with the coughing | (MmMediately after the elosing of the chidemie and other illnesses that be. | Mect now being held at the Vinpiie came x0. pre + Wor a time the| City track, ‘The two partners hia ‘ sh. Rut Healy |e desire to race them as three-ye if pull his charges | Olds. What they plan to do is tot oad: wine the winnings of the hor und t Ue deeper inte ind originally Rubs Bak nthe string. Fup tor tu hment of the rac us nt & toss, inel-T stable. With this total fund t € i naining ctelt | nect to enter the yearling market nex med Scarecrow, because off inonth and form the nucteus i hased; Sus-| stable that next season will have ¢ Biter dor Syndl-} greater success than the string r 5 1 Tom-] yearlings purchased last y " te , ere then] had this season ng Under thexcombined icnl But there will be no doris Sinith jr and Mrs. Clark | marks next month from expe onal tark-blue body. hardened horsemen if Mrs. s sleeves and a canary cap | Mrs, Clark ehooxe to con t at r ts of the syn-] popey of nut paying more t 81 wore with considerable | for a yearling. These old ment. But this amusement soon}admit that these two ine ' ed to Keen tand then to] novices hove taught them a surprise they might well remember Radiophore Mutilates Music, Says Edison, Denving Wireless Alfeeted Phonograph Invention) Thomas A. 1 he brought the 4 his invent "Radio muita It 1 ver eproduee musi we y that vit 1 i as be There ave at least 1b, on this, the forty-fifth anniversary of the day whe sph fuio being, said that the radio had no effeet on he said.pbaunks in the United States. Over proposition tof France they are all stocking bank he radio. ft jyf TNE Stocking banks in the 1 Fimake two Rules ere in full blow a) c ’}ventar suid this with a chuckle.) c nearly per The coal strike and the rally at the 7 strike haye not affevted an he-[plans, Hoover, with his ¢ at of trucks, should be able to cut f the business of the country, H «hard man to buck re are [the ontomobile shoule care of ' 1 workmen. | Kensington Museum in Lon 00,000 stockings! ‘The poopie arvund here," he suid, VENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 1 NARCOTIC ‘FROM BROOKLYN PARKWAY BENCH eae rower Moran Said to Admit He Took in High As $50 a Day— Heroin Is Found. A drug distributing centre which has cost the lives of several addicts is believed to have been located on an exposed bench in the Bastern Mark- way of Brooklyn, near the corner of Troy Avenue, where the police of Brooklyn yesterday arrested two men. carrying more than 7 ounces of heroin One of the men admitted. according to the police. that for two years he had been selling drugs from this bench. Within a short distance of this spot several months ago an unl- dentified young woman was found in an unconscious condition from an overdose of heroin, She died in Kings County Hospit without regaining conselousne She was never identi fied. Several months later Patrick Durkin was picked up at tt ame pot, unconscious from ‘the effects of morphine. He too died at the Kings County Hospital Patrolmen Douglass and Arnold of the Atlantic Avenue Station yesterday arrested John Moran, twenty-nine, of No. 19 Goodwin Place, and Lawrence | Jacobs, twenty-eight, of No. 2196 Ful ton Street, both of Brooklyn, after they had watched the two sitting on this boneh for some time Whe wehed at the station, ac cording to tho police, twelve two- ounce packages, forty-elght two-ounce phiais and several cardboard boxes, all containing heroin, were found on Moran, Jacob 1 three two-ounce phials of heroin, the police sal y Ac jing to the police, Moran told them he had been peddling narcotics in feom $85 tp $40 a day trom addicts to Whom he sold heroin for $8 per two ounce ‘shot Moran, according to the police, has twice before been ar- jation of the Drug Act, so has heen arrested be- and Jacobs a fore for possessing narcotics In Gates Avenue Court this morn- ing Magistrate Dodd held Moran in $1,000 bail for examination on a charge of selling and possessing na eotie Ho sent Jacobs to Kings County Hospital for treatment as a drug addict PHONES. WOMAN TO EXPECT PARCEL, THEN LEAVES BABY Mother, Concealing Identity, Abandons Infant at Home of Former Co-worker, The telephone In the home of Jo- seph A. Dyas, No. 663 40th Street, Bay Ige, #ang at 1 A. M, to-day and a voman's voice asked for Miss Eliza- eth Brower, Mr. Dyas's sister-ln- uw, When told she was not tn, the volee continued “Tell her a package will be left In An hour later Mr. Dyas heard an fant erying, and found in the vesti hule a week-old boy baby. It was Jressed in white, wrapped ina blanket ind vested on, a woman's blue serge coat finned to the baby's clothing was an envelope on the outside of which was Miss Brower's name and the words "I ealled to seo you several mes but could not find you at home note inside, according to the po. Dear Elizabeth: It with che greatest sorrow that I have to do ything like this. 1 am just out of te hospital and have not seen my usband for three months. 1 scem to know that you will take care of the hild, I worked with you and tried everal times to find out where you ved. I stood on the street a tine before 1 did this. 1 have ing in church all n put d ive the mind to speak tu the priest Viease have him baptized, Wor n't turn him out. 1 will make myself known to you and will call on u in a week. The baby is a week | "Phe letter intimated the writer was % to work Miss Brower, end.” Station wer to and and reimburse signed "A wou was of the Fourth notified and hy to the King's County Miss Brower said the sie held Was in a plac 8 were employed, but she their names, The troubles to her, and while she confident the mother of the baby ne of them, she has no idea which. Honan was assigned to | nd the mother to-day and expects to Avenur took the Hospital posttion eight did not always touk Detective so by getting the names of the | guls who Were employed in the place t the time Miss Brower was, and inding the one he wants through yination. fidn't seem to care much about 1, but now they are trying to set | back and the museum won't ve them. up. me. 1 look forward ty what 4 | sabead, 8, 1922. SOLD What Did You See To-Day? 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 On my way home In the rain 1 saw a Die automobile at the side of the road The chauffeur helping himself to bay from a haystack and stuffing It], Into a tire, —Hisle Rotherants, N 7) Cru Re Churehill Street, Beacon, N. Y ‘The crow hop in end you a check,” he called out Paul, No. 148 Fifth Street, Ulmer F GA rie FA DROWSY in front of a Broadway, CHERUB. stationery Brooklyn, served as » magnet and I was drawn over to see the THERE'S MYSTERY HEME, MEN. T saw a hondsome 140-foot yacht big pleture in the window. The life- Had walecd roupout weaned butte Nesripavery one whe awed: fanamupine come alongalde, take of (Continued on Tenth Page.) shore, He disappeared into the _ = troode and did not retun.—riehart |CANDIDATES READY FP. Cooper, West Wharf, Madison, Ce WISE JENNY WREN, T saw a wren's nest bullt In one of a pilr of rubbera hanging on a nail near the back One of the rubbers had hole in ft. It the other rubber Democratic Nominee — for Governor of Wisconsin Is First to Enroll. and lifelike pleture of a yawning " TO ATTEND “SCHOOL” CHAS. R. MILLER EDITOR OF TIMES FOR 40 YEARS DES Lingering Illness Fatal in 74th Year—Was Decorated in War. Charles Ransom Miller, editor of The New York Times for forty years, died to-day after a linge iliness of many months nn : A ‘ Mr. Miller was born seventy-three Some Unusual Scene or Incident With an years go In Hanover, N. H. He was Accompanying Description. graduated from Dartmouth College in Addrems “What Did You See? Editor, Evening World, P.O. Box 185, City Hall Station. 11879 and went to work for the Spring- vine MEME BOM oun, aie and addrene carefully, Send as many contributions ** 41 veg Republican, Koing to the Times Ron 860) DOLLS, Brighton Beach: “Boda Lightful"—g, |!" 1875, He was noted for his s:holar- Passing a dry goods store, I saw a] Nathan, No. 244 «Kings Highway, | ship and agressive setting forth of his n In the window, reading: ‘Woolen| Brooklyn. views on politics and finance. He be- ables’ = Uniderwear.—Miss Dorothy - 8 Stutaman, No. S61 Seneca Avenue, Hive CENT) WORE came editor in chief in 1883 Brooklyn, ‘the downtown Cortendt Street] Dartmouth gave him the degree of —- Station of the H.R, T. I suw @ man{Lt.D, In 1905 and Columbia the de- A BAND.OF-MERCY BOY. lrop a nickel which) missed box, fell sa gree of Litt. D. in 1915. France made I saw an capress wagon drawn by an] io the platform and rolled out up upon oli white horse atand:ng in front of af {he tracks, Immediately there was a|him a Chevalier of the Legion of Mount Vernon residence, ‘The deiver'a] Ody battle. the “echonpe what: Honor and Belgium made him a er you call hin insisting th helper was walking round and round) rie wag entitied tof ce te ang | member of the Order of Leopold for Wielding a fly sw atter i i eg ty Bool Job | hadn't Kot it, and the customer deciar- {hin work during the World War. He 25 South Firat. Avenue. waan't golng to pay 10 cents. of the Century, Pipl = ah Shad thay wiangled, uix Gr seven other | Waa & member of the Century, Piping _ . Kents walked past the box without giv-|Rock and Metropolitan Clubs EXPLAINING THR ABANDONED |!!s !{4 tumble, Tho train came in and} = Mr, Miller was Vice Prosident and the original holder of the lost nickel a " FARM. climbed aboard with the others, “I'i|Director of the New rk Times Company and a Director of the Tide- water Paper Company ried to Miss Frances Daniels of Plain- field, N. H., tn 1876. His home In is city No. East Ninth He was mar- at was Street. GRAND JURY GETS M’MASTERS BOOKS Investigating Operations of Brokerage Firm ‘That Failed in Mebruary. books be- of R. A truckload of account longing to the brokerage firm the wren had selected an the home for I, MeStasters & Co., which went out her young.—Jean Mnelean, No. 87 EAPOLIS Waa ’ 2 South Bicest; Stanford enne MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. July 18.—-Jo¢ pusiness at No, 82 Broad Street, Alward Indrehus of Foley, Demoeratic|iina into the hands of a recelver on CLIMBING TURTI. candidate for Governor, was the first! pep, 16, were to-day delivered to Dis- 1 saw a Ford sedan pull up in front} pupil at the Democratic “school for|yyicc vttorne sah Bye BOb of a house on John Street, Port Rieh that ay Laplante: to St 1 \tturney Banton by Robert P, mond, and saw the occupants, home|! itt t ‘ i State and | stephenson, the receiver. from a fishing trip. go into the house, | United States Senatorial oMces in the Ten minutes later a twenty-three pound turtle climbed ont of the window of the be tone y sedan and traveled almost a block November election, which opened here The books were placed in the hands of Ansistant District Attorney Schreiber and taken before the Grand c The various candidates will learn fore the fishermen learned of its ercape The turtle was recaptured nnd tied to|the latest arguments tn political Jury which is investigating the op- of the seats of th en C.,| campaigns from Mrs, Halsey B. Wil- Jerations of the firm. pkinsville, S$, 1 fon, national director i education The trial of H. H. Lowy and his —T for Democratic women, the “teacher” aI DESCENDANT OF ONE OF THB] f 5) the three-day course partners, Martin Schlessinger and GUNPLEMEN WHO WENT TO Mrs, Wilaun's suluects to-day were] Herbert Friedman in the defunct SEA TN A HOWL, no Principles and Policies of the| brokerage firm of H. H, Lowy & Co., Right out here in front of the house 1 pemacratic Party,’ “the Tarite’ andfof No. 198 Broadway, under indict- naw a aerious faced boy of elght Sallis "Women in Politics,” ent, wnt February for grand Qe a md Td te ee EMT “Among those who will _take| larceny, was begun to-day before 8832 if SETS hy eee sons" are Mrs. Anna Dickie|Judge Nott of General Sessions, Mrs ny PAT TET FECHA TET Olesen, of Cloquet, the party's nom- | Jennie Brolles and Mrs. Babette Beck ; oe Fees e Eighth {Ine for United States Senator; Mro,[itllege that the firm robbed them of saw a young woman In an High! States Senator; Mrs, iy 1 i Avenue eurface rar hand the conductor |Lillien Gault, of St. Peter, candidate | $8,000 each which they had given for a green and white pass and heard him| for Congress from the Third District | {he Purchase of bonds. asl What fs it?) A clreum Ueket?"’ land John BR, Cogn, Minneapolis, who ic he enulen She explained that the ticket man inthe! geaks the seat now held by Waiter] SSUASCE OF FORER p keaitoae subway, where trains had teen put out|ty Newton, Itepublican, representa. | FALLS OFF NEARLY $2.000,000,000, af commission by the heavy rain, had tive from. the ‘fth Congressional WASHINGTON, July 18,—America given her the pa nd told her it was > site foreign crade, for the fiscal year ended good up stairs," The Iighth Aven District June 30, resulted in a favorable trade conductor properly insisted on his -—>—_ balance of $1,162,000,000, a decline of nickel. T explained to the young lady nearly $2,000,000,000 from the favorable nickel, # expiatned) to the sone MILAW YER AND WIFE || netiy tiie reavious vent ansorcine been good on an “L" tra She said to reports {ssued to-day by the Com- “on!'—Frances Lowe, 3th Stree DENIED DIVORCES merce Department. Udgemere, L. 1. i" . — Neither Weiffer Nor Mrs. YOUR HAT : . 7 ——————EEEEEE KEEP THIS UNDER Keiffer lave Proved A alight noise caused ie to drop + * tho newspaper for @ moment and L Charges, Says Court. plainly saw my brothers new straw A Auer Kat moving up and down the length Vice Chancellor John . Backes to- of the sofa. For a moment I was Toi, aed an opinion in Newark deny- y simply paralysed with fear, but T teoovered and investigated one of |ing # divorce to either Paul Kieffer the kittens had yot wr or the hat lor Rutherford, member of the New and was having the time of its York r, or to his wife, Mrs, Jo- young Wfe.—Blizabeth C. Nuss, Ge | ing Vv. Kieffer of New York, Kief- | Head, L fer's suit und his wife's countersuit TOUCHING THR POCKETBOOK [tuve been In the courts here for u BRAVE. ony time On the highway inn Hite town on] One of the incidents of the case was the way honte trom Alboay thie sees |the alleged kidnapping by Mrs, Klet- et A ctalata, Drive at 15 Miles an fer of their two-yeur-old daughter, Hour through this Town ami Save $19." | Grace, from the home of a relative of James Rosenthal, No, 76! Ann's) ieffer's ut Rutherford, — Kieffer Avenue, Bronx, brought contempt ings, which sow So RRA automatically dismissed by) Vie is od x jor Backes's Uecision to-day, E While pented BN ie ere child is now with her mother ve rop v gir) wigwasging to some ae \ Re oi ne wan made in the situa- motor boat. They had quite « ion by the cour eph PF, Wald, No, 200 Uo «| The Vice Chancellor held that Kiet-] GW ens reet, Brooklyn f charge against hin wife was not De Es prov He made no comment on DODO WAS CLUMSY AND S Kieffer's charge against her hus. I wan stopped on a F lyn street ty ne. Kach charge the other with avor know W by a woman who wanted t time it was, I couldn't tell her, nfidelity ILLINOIS WELCOMES Lala sanaet enere walk aia blocks Bil for my watch, | Whatever atall t s..| HARDING MINE PLAN tion and’ ypention trip,” 1 auwee <5 5 that she step into the drug store eo “| Many Union Men Expected corner and telephone back a request : for somebody to bring t h to her to Respond to Govern- We entered the pharmacy together and when he camo out of the telephone ment Appeal. booth she reported that a boy wes on the way. Then she opened her handbag] CHICAGO, July 18—Ilinois coal to ket. a handkerchief and the Sr) operators will welcome the plan said thing she saw was the missing #0 “Well,” she sald, “ain't [the lod to be under consideration by Premi- —E. M,, East $8th Street, Flatbush dent Harding for ordering the mines — reopened under Government protec- GENTLEMAN'S TEETH FOLLOW|tion, Dr, F. C. Honnold, Secretary of IM TO THE MOUNTAINS the TlMnols Coal Operators Associa- After considrrable excitement my tion, said uncle left on his first vacation sn The question remains, however, as forty years. Hia daughter went to | to what extent the plan would be a Grand Central with him to eer 4! success in lilinois. In some districts sale oF LE Aas auttor aia duwre union miners probably would respond joing to take on weiyht up there, to the Government's appeal and re- you'll eee; your cheeks will Mu ome » work, coal operators here be- like balloons.” ite turned pale He but in the 100 per cent. orga- was all for commy back to i nized camps the response probably house again. Her encouraging words | w cute tight reminded him he had forgotten hi Au Be altehgS teeth. To return for them would Gn DEFEATS RYAN. mean missing the We * LOUIb\ LLE, Ky. duly 1.—Willle matied the teeth mM Green of Piihielphia was awarded (he Kr on tied {ecision aver ‘fonuny Ryan ar eis 1 Pa. at the end of their € i bout here dost night SODA Leiots dae Ryan was knocked down for a short On « boardwalk retresnment atand at+count in the fourth round. Heinz Vinegars—fine, mellow, aromatic, yet tangy and zestful—de- velop the natural fla- vors of all foods they touch. This is due to the choice materials used, the skill and care in preparation, the long aging in wood. Four kinds—in bottles filled and sealed by Heinz. EINZ PURE VINEGARS

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