The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1922, Page 3

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—— MAY BE REMOVED TO WASHINGTON { — ) ‘ Harding Planning to Keep Body .. 1 for Occasional De) “I would rather rent to a family with three Margaret L, children than to a childless couple.” Schabehorn, ‘Children do not injure a piece of property wee in so much as adults.’ ade i Conferences, $1,000,000 “Houses are made primarily to shelter U . , , in. families, not to house a childless couple NEW BUREAU HINTED.| Real Estate, and a toy dog.” President Has Considered Creation of a Department of Transportation. Says “Adults may work more havoc at a single Ce} party than children will work in a year.” By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. In fifteen years a New York girl, Margaret L. Schabeborn, has made one million dollars in the real estate business, and the keystone of her prosperity is contained in the following slogan: “The more children, the merrier!” “I would rather,” blue-eyed, soft-volced, charming Miss Schabehorn told me earnestly, “rent a house or an apartment to a family with three children than to a childless couple. And I would rather rent to a family of ten than to a family of three.” If you want proof of the way in which Miss Schabehorn practises her principles, you have only to run down to Graham Beach, on Staten Island, and see 300 or more of Miss Schabe- horn's bungalows spilling over with youngsters. Miss Schabehorn herself spends every week-end among them, and she is a sort of adopted aunt to the whole colony. By David Lawrence. pecial Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, July 22 (Copy- right).—President Harding's decision be wend for Chairman Ben W. Hooper of the United States Railroad Labor Board may be the forerunner of a change in location of the headquar- of the board itself which hitherto been fixed at Chicago by law. So close {s the relationship between many activities of the Federal Gov- + ernment in the Capital and the work of the Labor Board that the President is convinced the interests of every- body would be better served if the board moved to Washington. Mr. Harding is considering a request that Congress amend the Transportation Act to permit the change. For many weeks Mr. Harding has been trying to keep in touch with the rail situation, either by. letter or long distance telephone. But he lacks in- formation us to intimate phases of the negotiations between rail executives and labor leaders, which cannot be got except by personal contact. @ The Labor Board has made some mistakes—probably its members would be the first to admit it. There are those in the Government who claim wholesale—developing and marketing real estate, and so making two homes. grow where one grew before?"’ Why not, indeed? — NEWSPAPER COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY IS LATEST INVENTION P. S,—Not only does she prefer to rent or sell to paterfamillas, but she hasn't raised his rent since the colony started years ago—she didn't even raise {t during the war. Yet, us you may guess from her present prosperity, Miss Schabehorn is not in business merely for her health. She does believe, however, that a woman can make a good thing out of real estate without being either a profiteer or a rent hog. Viente to Bring Back SCHABE HORN Process. Photo-Engraver Sails for MARGARET : THE EVENING WORLD, SATUNDAY, JULY 22, 1922, that these mistakes would not have happened {f the board had been located in Washington and had the benefit of the counsel and facts which various departments of the Government could give. In the question of seniority rights . Which arose after the rail strike was called, the Labor Board, in the opinion of its critics, put itself on record too rapidly and made it difficult for the railroads to recede on this point. It is asserted that the railroads have in th past used the threat of forfeiture of sentority rights only in an extreme emergency and have constantly post- poned putting it into effect o give time for a reconciliation. Mr. Harding and Mr. Hooper find themselves compelled now to arrange some way out of the present diffi- culty on seniority rights. They might have accomplished this many days ago {f they could have sat down face to face and talked !t out The President feols that the Labor Board ought to be in closer contact if also with the Interstate Commerce} would not only ‘take children’—I Commission. The bourd fixes the] would give the preference to families wages of railway employees—the| with children, and the more the mer largest item of expenditure which the} Tier. It seems to me the other pol- railroads have. The Interstate, Com-|icy 1s simply Inhuman and anti-so- meroe Commission fixes the income of | clal."" {Whe roads. The one bears a close de-| “Of course,” I suggested, “the aver- pendence on the other. The President | age landlord or agent backs up his ia insisting that the two boards ought] rice suicide principlea with the ar- to sit down together occasionally and] gument that children do so much compare noes. damage to his property A general get-together of all bu- reaus and departments involved in] "Children," gently but firmly de- the transportation problem is inevi-|clared their womanly champion, “do table, and Mr. Hooper's conference| Mot injure a piece of property nearly with tho President is bound to be|#S Much as udults. The little dam- followed by other conferences before] 8° done by children—the scratches solution to the rail strike is founa,| and that sort of thing—can be easily Indeed, President Harding is known] fepaired. On the other hund, if you to have considered favorably tho idea| have the wrong sort of adults in one of a Department of Transportation in! 0! your places, they break ites connection with tho reorg..nization of | TREY May work more havoc at a sin- the Government, so that all matt glo party than children will work in affecting freight and passenger ear-[% Sar 5 . Teneo by 1sed? and sen aiENi: Ye What we need in the New York slap otadign | Fea! estate business," she continued, Troven together in a single jurisdic-Jais more women. They would never — put the taboo on babies, as men do. ‘A woman naturally takes the hum: COURT SENTENCES the motherly, viewpoint. She unde: stands that homes are mace primarily 12 SHOPLIFTERS [iy vpeiter families, not. to house a childless couple and a toy dog. Penitentiary and Work- t's always seemed to me,"’ [ sug- i gested, “that the whole business oi fy house Terms Passed planning and building and furn'shing Out to Women. homes, a8 well as of renting and sell- shen : ing them, should be in women’s Sustices Freschi, Voorhees and {iinas, A man sleeps in his hose, Herbert of Special Sessions convicted but a ®oman lives it, A a nt twelve shoplifters to-day on the com-|man, therefore, usually gives her th plaints/of detectives of the Stores] final say in choosing tt, Wouldn't homes made and sold for women by women be more likely to suit than Maud Corrigan of No, 1852 Second} man-made houses and apartments?” Avenue was sent to the penitentiary] "I think 80,"" nodded Miss Schaty for from six months to three years{horn. ‘I should like to seo scorer and hundreds of our high schgpl girls for stealing a skirt priced at $2.98) coing into architecture and rel os- from the Ross Stores, Inc. Murtel tate, Naturally, I know more about Kerwin of No. 354 West 56th Street} the real estate business, and T think Was sentenced to thirty days in the it the ideal business for women. To Workhouse for stealing $24 worth of /syeceed in it a woman needs three fapeateries: from: Lord \& Taylor qualities most of all—determination Rosa Rodereguiz of No. 944 West] tact and a gift for under, rather than tAth Bireat, who mole eHracciet anillaver, statement. “Zhe lastingly. aus. helt priced at $40 from Gimbels.}cossful real estate man or woman 1s was sent to the Workhouse for five}the one who never misrepresents days, Isabel Brutman, who refused] property, who reports it as a littl to tell where she i able than it really is, instead the Workhouse for deen taking a pair of earrings and a box “of face powder valued at $8.17 from] Miss Schabehorn herself entered the the Ross Stores, Inc. Sentence was} real estate business when she was a suspended in the other cases fifteen-year-old girl in business col- The heavy sentence of Miss Corri-]1 ge, by selling a big farm over in gan vas due to tha fact that Jusice|New Jersay for a triend of hers. Frescht remembered that she hud] Then, at the request of the purchaser ‘The genesis of what must seem, to many of her competitors, her truly singular convictions Miss Schabehorn explained to me readily when I asked her. Her New York besiness head- quarters are at No, 119 Lexington Avenue. “You gee,’ she said, with a smile, “T was one of ten children myself When we were little we Ilved on a farm. Then my father died and my mother moved to New York, Even as long ago as that it seemed as if she could never find a place to live Everywhere she went the landlord or the agent said, ‘But, your children! We don't want so many children!’ “Nowadays, of course, the situation is infinitely worse. My little niece, a child of ten, is with me. They didn’t want to take her in the carefully re- stricted west side apartment house where I live—and yet my apartment is far more quiet than others In the same building occupied only by adults. “] just made up my mind, from the time 1 went into business, that I Frank T. Powers of the Powers sailed on the steamship Homeric to-day for Vienna to bring back, {« said, a process in color photograp which would revolutionize the photo graphic and photo-engraving in permitted the taking of photograp in color instantaneously, but also thei) Residents of the bu low, blue and black—from a sinw! | !cfe of a spla! an hour after the taking of the ov inal photograph, newspaper cif} bungaleers from the beach and trated in color. Mr. Powers would] the men bungaleers retur disclose no sclentifie nor mechanical] home Mayor Hylan was at the White] David Lanz Star pier to bid goodby to Barron] OME: used the lose friends, | Wel": No: 48 Ocean Av close Trends, | Everly, No. 48 and sailing on the Homeric, Mr, and] No. 108 Qeean Avenue, G. Collier, one of his neis Nichole Mrs. Martin W. Littleton sailed for a] of petty larceny visit to Par Rome and Milan;] The cha Representative John W. Rainey going to Europe for a study of emi- | Monday, each in $500 bi gration conditions tr Other _passenge Mrs FD. Mekenney of Washington, D. C, the latter a member of the|Saleers bring down their friends United States-Pern Arbitration Com-| Saturdays and Sundays, and that ss were Mr. and| Police Court mich who pay for so7 The aid of the police has been invok to keep the intruders out, but it charged the polic pending for half a century, There will be hearings in the mptter in October, with a British representative sitting as a third member of the commission. Dr, and Mrs. the latter Olga I of No, 36 Central Park also aboard, a fight or something starts. D. Stewart, the actress, South, were ers days declare that they will have their tw day swims, ©» Monday the 1 belligerent of the bunga ocean and the water open to ev not the pavilion people. The ion people declare that the Youth Charged With Pocket-] reasonanic : ing Money Belonging HER $2,500 GONE; Mutual Protective Association eobaraManechanr, $8 Pes Ag ulation Was Legitimate. show at Fox's am Avenue and] Florence 1 them for the pictur Folly Theatre, Gr Debevols street, Brooklyn, he as-]¥OMAaR who says she 8 tu be 350 West sured them he would be glad to dof actress and lives at No ney. He | Street, appeared in V so, and took the pocketed it, howey police, buying hima nt seat magazines and lives at the Hi in the gallery and going directly to it | Princeton, No. 116 West ud then | Miss that she was ve fond of Moers, who represented her that he knew all the big men All Street and had the Inside a the gallery and located Carly A wild nail preposition which we flight and pursuit through the gallery, ke everybody interested rich up the aisles, over seats, around exits Miss Boyd intrusted — §: began. an Ness said he finally cap- | Rog He admits it. The p The boys wai told Special Voliceman Peter Van ad, was sont tof ess des en days forlof a itt Ness of the theatre, and he went te 500 to Patrolman Pr Rueekert of the; he put ihe money in his pocket 102d Precinct, who took him to the} he claims he invested it with all wv up a big fence whieh shut out the on a charge gaiow coluuy on South Beach, the future, he added, would be illus. -sight of the water, Last night when ed to thety they tore down the fence and details of the new invention. took their nightly dip. ‘This morning one of the pagglioh rest of John nue, Howard ‘ge is based on the claim and [that somebody stole the fence. The Stanley H. Kunz were also aboard,} mien were held for examination on 1, by Magis te William Croak of the Stapleton Pavilion owners elaim that the oun- on all ¢ cir bi 2 suits: eh mission, charged with settling the|0n their bathing suits in the bus Landreau claims, which have been [&tlows. and crowd off Mipe elie Boy's New Twist |e Gur eet ta "out 1 + a pretty your aded guilty before him nnder an-|[she divided it Into lots, took her first | “ten in : own money and lost it in a log Binet name for the same oftenen and |eammiasion of $600 to advertise them, 1 an Oiviirenia Cane oP eal sell Vet ae vision . had been allow to gO Under a sus und sold them off with comp e suc. | MY Justice Ryan ren . 1 a a § oyd got a warrant Yor ended sentence. cess, Since that time she hus handied|t!) Next Thursday on the charge ot Lers's arrest a couple of days ago } pe ae _ thousands of parcels of real estate in| Juvenile delinquency. The hoy lives] detectives could not find hin. s Seng MAN Awaraa vacriaG |[Now Jerse w York City and on{at No. 1067 Flushing Avenue, Brook-| located Rogers by telephone yest A victim of amnesia was taken from] Long Island, and bas over half a mil-|1¥" day afternoon and made an app a restaurant at 1 West ioaii]{lon dollars invested in one develop- er Seah E Ment to take dinner with him, Wir Street early to-day to Bellevue Hos-| Cs, alone, on Staten Island. cn DIES FROM AF 7 A wou ol Rogers appeared Detective Fergus: pita), He sald he was George Cohen,|. “Woman,” she summed up, with] Frances Angelo. five. of No, 28 Bed-) of the Weat 47th Street Ntation No. if Maple Street, Chiengo, but could}her pecultarly charming smile, ‘has|ford Street, died at Ss! \ it's Hos] rested him, Rog eave PMaeniber nothing about hinsrif ciweefheen, traditionally a home-maker—a | pital tool njuries shelf tion house ba ich was contin Scania a ; here haf home-maker. Why Hdn't et Avosnabiin| Medes We Mtuasiate Sweet toni " nipet ' tot her business in tora t wears oid, ithe future to be @ home-maker by Wednesday, ‘ou Monday, Proves Undoing} i.) yin es ee Sth Street tured the boy and turned him over] difference is that Miss Boyd chars: look on and! say thar they have no jurisdiction unless But to-day and to-morrow are big at the beach and the bungaleer vs Say make the pavilion people — show As Ticket Spec, |! =i 9's si." to Kiddie ‘ INVESTED IN OIL When three or four iitte boys! Actress ‘Traps Magazine asked Carl Monacea, fifteen, but whol AVyiter Ile Claims Spec- t Side Police cording to the |Court to-day to prosecute Moward Rogers, who says he is a writer 1 x plash. 1 in the waters of New York Bay plate with a single impression witli!) Yesterday the pavilion people put® SEPARATION SUIT BROUGHT AGAINST LOUIS VAN BRINK i Wife of Auctioneer Alleges He Treated Her Cruelly— Married Three Years. Mrs, Ella V. a suit for separation in Court from Tonis Vv vuctioneer, With offive Hiith Avenue, who, she sa income from his bu s wn rrootamasing commany. « ol SQA Fence at South Beach That Bungalow Bathers Defied dustry Tore It Down and Took Nightly Dip—Balked at 10-Cent The process, he explained, not on! Charge fora 5. 1, refuse to pay reproduction in four colors—red, yx) |! cents to the owners of the Greenwood Bathing Pavilion for the priv- Rrink to-day filed upreme Brink, wt No, 242 Was an iness Jf $75,000 fn year, Among various profits made by her husband, nentioned by the plaintiff in her pa are: "880,000 through the sale of the murd ‘1 rseph 1 Elwell effects, $20,000 through the George Kessler sale and $40,000 through the Bob Vernon sile.” Mr old and bis wife snid te ears bisyjunior, They we #19, and Mrs, wes that not long utter jer husband began vily and did not relt home at No. 454 Riverside the early how wong allegations — of inst her hush cd Hirink charges that on Sep n Brink is fifty-seven ye > bw Va the n« nt Dri in M med many married n Brink ir wed Irinkine fo their veut sof the morning itidelity rs. Van By 1 nother man went to the Hotel Maryland with two women in the Van dered the livink limousine and ffeur return for th morning. The ehauff the wecupants of the ear nity of Ninth Avenue On unother occasion tr 10 Mrs) Van Brink say i} fealled her a vile on ita She ordered the ch op and opened the di ip when her husban ges coomanded the driy nthe gas.’ Causing her tr em vorplied orders, she says, a te an n sh ame were driving through to the roadway She sfys s iter a temporary se sod Mes Van Brink mug ence at the Later they n Vest Tith Stre ed 1, where t and raised turtae ne might that a She avers that toned her on Ma > PHANKLIN SIMON DRIVE, Franklin Sion of Fra CoN coepted the. Cy the renal st diviston, lief drive of the He dx ongeniaing tote help ra less by the Arverne fire, BLPS on to a hospital in another vrat in t Car tw pol © their apartment to ir AsyioM nd tuok the vi STN jetober er hus while Central she thrown nM koa Noo. PRALROADBOARD [F#2l Apartments With Kiddies, Says Woman |QMALLEY SUBMIS Commissioner Reports on $1- a-Week Payments to Tam- many Supervisors. Commissioner of Pubtte Hdwin J. O'Malley announce that he has turned over to Attorney J Markets to-day District hn. Ruston of Brook lyn all available records concerning his conduct of the pusheart market 8 tem in that borough &hieh maintained by a $1-a-week hand up to Tammany supervisors, He sald he had forces of clerks working until midnight tabulating formation desired, and that been “heartily thanked” by trict Attorney for his co-o} “Since the publleation Evening World interview wi the In- he has the Dis- peration of The ith me, raid O'Malley, “I have been receiv ing all sorts of letters and messages, many of them open threats, Only this morning I received a which, ar ‘May God have emrey on yo It seems every time. politicl telegram ong other things, said, ur soul.” ans and newspapers want some one to pick on they select me. The Evening World received a let- ter in which it was charged that in the Havermeyer Street pushcart mar- ket in Brooklyn $1.40,a week Is col- lected from ea stead of the $1 1 we k autho cll pusteart peddler in- prized by O'Malley, It was asserted there are over 309 peddlers in. this market and that therefore the “elean-up" is $150 a week above salaries penses: aniel Donovan is the super on who made the ac and ex- rvinor of Havermeyer Street Market, In re y to the charge he said: ‘The per usation labors under a misapprehension. We collect only $1 a week from pushe dlers. Two men make the ce on Monday mornings, not « 8 as charged. The peddle an organization of their own of their own men. collects art ped nliections Thurs- ‘sha and one ) cents every ‘Thursday from each peddler, 1 am told this goes to. the union, which pays one ma week “We haven't 200. pr 185 steady perddiers the new order issu O'Malley last week, T turned plus of $113.45. This week 1 nough to meet the roll a prove every word | say. “Thore is a political fight over way, and the lette m be trying to stir up But my record here is clea fear neither the District Atto any one else.’ l 1 by Comr Donovan was asked whether sput to work by him or Street rtment men clean away Cleaning Dey pusheare market refuse his men do the work Charles H. Levy, attor peddlers’ D a dievs in the Havermeyer Street Market. ‘The are nder the nissioner in a sur haven't nd tT can going on pr writer troul nant 4 mney nor ber He said ney for Brooklyn pusheart peddlers who have applied to Justice Cropsey for an in- junction restraining sup making the $1-a-week collect iterated to-day his asserti visors. from ions, re on that “laborers” paid by the supervisors do not clean markets. He said mere dummies, “payroll pad they ters SPECIAL BUILT AUTO FOR BRONZE CA Funeral Services for SKET Candi- lora Gatto, One of City’s Richest Ttalian Mere In a heavy bronze casket, p 1 platform on am esp structed motor ear, the bedy dilora Gatto, one of, the riehy merehants and manuf this afterne No. 66 ¢ pachim's Ch toosevelt Street. Following falaue were a band af tw pieces, ebtht eaes filed with snd seventy-two automobile his family and friends. After mony at the ehureh by at want, the body was taken t y atte, Krocer and mut ity, was bern his late hom Street, to St Comete Mr. ¢ of mac: old and came to this cor five years age, He was a ine nineteen years of the ke America, the of Italy orgunizations of his comy yetired from business ix. by reason of ill health, and ¢ 19 he died. He lea sons and two daught — DR. JOKICHI TAKAM ni, was sixty-two Hants. placed on of Can Malian ers of the on from atharine urchin the eata enty four flowers earry tt the core » Calvary y thirty INE DIES IN HOSPITAL Had Kelapne Recently Pro: He Didn't Recove Dr. Jokieht T discoverer, who has been tll £ weeks at Lenox Hill Hospital that institution to-day akamine, che He hed been iit from nephr ever of Japan had made yuiries for him. Dr ‘Takamine was orig adrenalin, to meeovery until June, wher litlon became so mueh worse wus compelled to leave his home at Merriwold, N.Y extensive Japar al © gardens 1 hosp Aw but raltiod middle of this week. P Was thought on t ‘ k age he was reports Whiten is What Did You See To-Day? eA HI Write a few lines to THE EVENING WORLD The Evening World Will Pay $1 tor Each Item Printed. The Evening World Will Pay $2 tor Each Snapshot Printed of Some Unusual Scene or Incident With an Accompanying Description. Adirenn “Avhat Did You See! 1 Keening World, P.O, Bos 189, City Hall Station: tke STE Your own name and address cutvfully Send as many contributions as you JOUN, Doaling.” — Gladys Cavanaugh, Ber- I saw a native a St on of Chinn clerking | MMsville, Ne J. Nicholas Avenue grovery, not from 152d Street. 1 had suppe PIERROTT. tin this part of the country at] 1 saw a French poodle as black aa othe business activites of th ul running down the street to-day Chinese were Imited to the restaurant and the laundry. ‘This chap appe be # kood clerk and to en. Popularity ephen J West 146th Street h a great red ribbon tied on top of vis head and a big red balloon kitched to tits tittle stub tail Jane Kirk, box $0! Red Bank, N. J. UNFAIR, Another young woman and I sha a on the wall of which we had @ No nonpERy, Mong Second Avenue, in the 70's.| ror Saturday sees a popular outdoor mar-| small mirror, Arriving home first yes= ket, carts and wagons lined up along] terday To! Mees things around a bit, the curb with attractive offerings off ux girls wM, you know, and amon, fruits and vegetab To-day L say a}other things removed the mirror. This Knickerbocker tee wagon among them.| morning | saw Nell fill the water basin one of the horses helping himself pro-| with water, soap her waah-cloth, wats diguously to the green apples in the} over to the place where the mirror had pusheart In front of him. Somebody | heen hanging. gaze at the blank wall ( Wane to tell the pusheart man, He was p her thoughts were miles away) ound at the back of the tee wagon.| and wash her face. After a few mor Wing, Mimwelt there whity the ieemen} monty 1 asked, “What do you see Kast 83d Street. : Ht She gixgled. ek you TELL me you had taken the giaas OWING IN THE STR sway?"—J, EB. H., Bloomfield, N. J. On way to Coney Island on a — mnklin Aventiegear | saw two men with ble seythes Cutting grass betwee TEN MILER FROM A MATOH. the Coney Island Avent In Fairfield, Conn., at 1.30 o'ctooh Morris) Papush, No. in the morning I saw a man walk Str up to a@ trafic beacon, lft the red globe from the kerosene lanters, light his cigarette from the burning wick and climb back into Ate caw and go his way.—Mra. Al, Little Falls, N. J. GRASS RED siow, A Broadway vatloeville-pleture house has placed a projecting machine tn. the lobby, to show extracts of the photo plays on a miniature sereon, It “draws hig."—-B. H. ©., Morton Str Brook lyn. MERRY LEVEL WAG OF FLEISCR MAN'S. Entering the Town of Flelschmanns, N. Y., T saw this sign: ‘Incorporated Village of Wielschmanns—Reduce Your Speed to 45-Miles an Hour.’ Such an announcement would shock and sur- prise any one. Close inspection showed that the ‘45 was the work of some wag, that the limit really ts 16 miles an jou. There ought to be a special lock up for these roadside jokers,-— William H. Meyer, No, 1025 Summit Avenue, Jersey City. ac HEAD, In the noon hour, at Lafayette Streets, 1 saw woman walking at a swift. p with a tub on top of her head, In the tub wis a cake of tee must have weighed all of $0 pounds, 1 w Her ne she made her wa: the vehleular traMe and kept ane: on her as she covered the next block Not even once was she compelled to touch the tub with her hands,—Irving Leiser, No. 188 St. Nicholas Avenue. pring ined GOODHEARTED GOLDFISH, 1 saw a dog drinking the water from « goldfish bow! in the window of a Newark residen: There were several goldfish in the Wow! As far as I could xeo the fish did not mind the dog's drinking the water.—Elsle Ward, No. 47 jpNorth 10th Street, Newark, N. J. THROWING COLD WATER ON THEY, On arriving home from business this evening, my wife called my attention to the twenty young men who wert shooting craps in the yard. After sup- per Isat at the window and watched the dice roll and fingers snap. Sud- denly there was a terriMe splash and a grand scramble for cover. One ten- ant for reasons of bis own had dumped a tub of water onto the players. They didn't come'back.—H., East 112th Street LOVE 1S BLIND. J saw three little girls, the young- ent about three, walking south in Sixth Avenue, The amatiest girl carried a big doll, ‘The doll had ther fect nor arma and its ain- lock of hair ggood up like a pole. Sho was alt Smiles, held the doll off from her, looked at it, hissed it, hugged it and walked a quite as happy as ‘if her child” were perfect.—Mra, Hud son, No, 266 West 21st Street. AY SPECIAL REQUEST. At the movies this afternoon a rotchety old gentleman who sat near me leaned over to ask the forgetful woman in front of him if she wouldn't please remove her hat. Immediately the jraseible woman back of him piped up with a few words for him, “In the name of goodness,” she sald, “will you stop bobbing your head and sit etill!”— Mins C, Smith, Jessica Place, Monmouth Beach, N. J. BUMBOAT. 1 saw a rowboat travelling up and down the Passaic River at Singae, N. J. with @ top over It on which was painted: Soft Drinks, Hot Buttered Popcorn and Candles."—A, H, Butterworth, No. 286 Highland Avenue, Passate, N. J. SUIT VOURSELE, Within one biock on the Drive: () A woman with a large straw hat, thet short skirt, lace hese, boots high enough for riding, a chiffon blouse and long pink silk gloves: C2) a girl with a vell- hg hat of tight fit, a long draped drews port hose with tan shoes, a corsuge houquet of orchids und a walking stick Lorirl in a loose sweater which ched glmost to her Knees, a skirt two Me three inches below the swenter, Huge velvet hint Copped with expensive tips. ‘This just wore a cape frin with Jet and ined with red. And came to the conclusion that the atyte o the moment is “any old thi St. Amand, Broadway ROOK-A-BYE BABY, TIED TO A TREE. From the car on which I rode to Midland Beach I saw a baby aboud 4 yaar and a half old with @ rope fastened to a belt about its doaist and the other end of the rope tied to a big tree, The little fellow, chewing happily away at a big piece of ginger bread, wasn't more than a yard or two from the car tracks, The nearest house appeared to b about half a block distant on the side of a hill.—Leiyh Sheridan, No. 28) Viryinta Avenue, Jersey City. S CHAMPIONSHIP OF ‘TTI BLOCK, i saw four boys racing around @ grasa plot at breakneck speed. ‘The dfstance Was about a city block to the lap. Four other boys sat on the curb with thelr hikes, ‘The event was a two-hour en~ Atirance cace for the championship of the block. ‘The four boys at the curb were the rellef riders. After each four iis these boys would sprint he team winning the sprint r ertain nuniber of points, No, 1028 Hudson Street, Hoboken, POLLY WANTS A WASHMAY, In Hamilton Street this morning aww parrot init ona fire exeape Polly apparently had but one song She was shrieking “Wash mant wast mant Wash mang!’ Harry Goldtinger on 1 SUrnet. No. 68 Coluy 4 GOOD PROVIDER, of coal that hit irs be 1 saw a wagonload heen dumped on the sidewalk Avenue and 64th Street owas stuMling hii Moller, aver sek diamonds.—Atbert 1 Last 92d strect DISTLEL SLONMENT. I had been bragging to the other fel- ows that the girl | lke best doesn’t uae lipstick or eyebrow pencil. Six of us ent to Rockaway Beach We all went 7 PIESUMPTLOUS FT A new apartment how been built at the cor DAS. has just r of our ieet and a new concrete sidewalk [6 | Aa dive tae von ie around it. The concrote 4a atilt pin the wal the service with two Ma eok that an improvised fence vely shin The paint had) run kerpa the pedestrian off. On mu own from her eyebrewa to form the way to market this morning 1 aaw i preat black cat walking sedately inthe soft wet squares, cach atep leaving a@ perfect footprint—M. M., West 180th Street lost heautifil hand punted blick eyes 1 ever saw—V., Marlon Avenue, tron CIRCUMVENTING THE LAW, Outside the hor-otce of a ith Street MB: GOODY: noving picture theatre T saw. several Hiding down Fifth Avenue on a bw | soungsters of ten or twelve tmportuning Poeaw at 88th Street a man of ab tr f the theatm te take thes fifty wheeling an unusual baby car ey anit ts for then festooned with lolly pops: tana nttl a fatten eae eet on either aide of the buwey wit long and le buneh in ne stich ringed with ts vt Cont of the wagon was piled Nish wd ee reer f ; \ and candies, and on. the it showing of soda bot ne that within an hour ; hundred Hing ros a aettate Hnging With appeals to Ma to Lor reported nickel, Ma."—M, A. St Bureau,” Roane he Noted. for thirty © lista con be teen at uny of The World's Offices, fost and Found" advertise Age Tr sGORs WHPH TH obit KIND. 5 With Square Where Good Feeling Gc a serne any

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