The evening world. Newspaper, August 9, 1922, Page 3

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AND QUT OF STATION HUMAN FLY CLIMBS DOWN HOTEL FRONT Broadway Crowd Watches Thief Elude Pursuers in Daring Swing. CAUGHT AFTER CHAS! Casually Walks Out Under Noses of Police After Arrest. Police of the West 30th Street Pol- fee Station to-day are uncommunt cative on the subject of the mystert ous from th station of an alleged burglar who taken into custody last night during a hu- man fly act at the Herald Square Hotel. The prisoner pulled one of those “Now you see me, now you disappearance _ Serta rites al WASHINGTON GIRL WHO IS TO MARRY BRITISH DIPLOMAT oie Miss Mildred Bromwell, daugh- Gon't” things, it ‘being the prevaling belief that he Just casually walked out to freedom First reports were that the man had slid down a telephone, wire which skirts the rear of the Station, This story made the police appear less sheepish until it was ascertained that the nearest telephone wires are ut Jeast two jumps from the rear win- dows, und that they could not pos- sibly be reached by a person in the station. Several days ago a man twenty- even years old registered at the hotel as George McCraig of Australia. Early last evening Joseph Nichols heard some one tampering with the lock at his room and opened the door. McCraig was outside and -excused himself with the explanation that he had made a mistake ‘Nichols was suspicious. He re- ported the matter to Manager Plume- ridge. who started an ‘nvest!gation. About that time Bennett Bruffey couldn't get into his room, 6 Plumeridge and the other em- Ployees let themselves into room No. 205, which connects with No, 206 They found the bureaus of No. ransacked. A window was open and from it swung a bedspread, down which McCraig was scrambling Running to room No. 105 on the floor below they found the door and window open. Reaching the lobb William H. Mackey, Negro bellboy eaptain, saw McCraig running teward stre the t Mackey followed and grappled with him. McCraig broke his Brasp und reached Broadway Meanwhile a crowd gathered on the corner had seen MeCraig's daring swing and had notified a policeman The cop grabbed McCratg as he flashed by. After his pedigree had been taken at the West 30th Street Station Craig was left alone tn a room while the detectives went to look for his record. About an hour had been consumed in the search when they went back for McCraig. The room was empty. , Search of McCratg's room at the Herald Square Hotel revealed several expensive travelling bags but not aj acrap of ‘identification. ter of Mre. Charles S. Bromwell and one of the most popular members of Washington's young- er society, whose marriage to Capt. Sidney R. B tache of the Washington will take place | the honie of he mother, Mrs, Matthew The marriage is of ley, naval at English Embassy at Aug. Interest and the coupie immediately for South America e Capt. Bailey goes as a rof the British delegation to the Bra bration U. S. GIRL HURDLER | HURT IN PARIS RACE Flora Batson, Team Captain, Sprains Ifer Ankle. PARIS, Aug —Miss Floru Batson of New Orlean: captain of the American girls’ athlev competition in the in- ternational games, and champion girl hurdler of America, suffered sprain of the left ankie and was badly bruised in taking the hurdles at the Colombes jum this morning accident, which occurred in the m, caused rable gloom among the young Amer n uthletes, as it was feared the mishap would keep Miss Batson out of the championship competition. — FIRE DISCLOSES STILLS IN FULL OPERATION Three of 50-Gallon Capa Darrels of Mash F Police and Prohibition enforcement agents are investixating a fire which caused about $3,000 damage to a three- story frame building at No. 312 William Street, Harrison, N. J., early to-day. Firemen found three 50-gallon stills fn operation when they responded to an alarm. Thirteen barrels of rye mash were found in a rear room of the build- ing. The owner of the building is Sam- uel Lupico, No. 314 William Street. The building had been rented about a month ago to a man whose name the police refuse to divulge ian Centennial cele- 9 (Associated Press) team here for Th opening practice of the tex consid ty and 13 and. Woman, 60, Confessing Purse Theit, Faces Thirty Months in Prison F Mrs. Abrahamson One of the Most Deceiving Studies in Criminal Psychology, Police Say. A \ttle gray haired woman, Mrs. Anna Abrahamson, bent and gray, pleaded guilty before County Judge MacMahon in Brooklyn, to-day to a charge of attempted grand larceny in the second degree. She looked all of the sixty years she confesses. On Monday when she will be ratgned again for sentence she may re ceive as much aas two and one-half years in Auburn Prison. According to the police she Is one of the most de- ceiving studies in criminal psychology ‘with which they have had to deal in recent, years. Mrs. Abrahamson, the police say, is known also aas Sophie Shapiro and Anna Hanken. She gave her address at first as No. 195 Sotith Fourth Street. Later she said her address wasa No 243 South Second Street, Brooklyn. On June 20 laast, when ar ralgned before Judge Haskell on a charge of petty larceny, Mrs. Marie Mahon, Probation Officer, spent many weary hours running down fictitious addresses given by the woman who was trying to conceal her identity. On ar that occasion, because of her age and sympathetic appeal, and on her prom- ise not to get into trouble egain, Judge Haskell let her off with a fifty-dollar fine. To-day Mrs. Abrahamson admitted stealing @ pocketbook from the hand- bag of a woman shopper tn a Broad- way department store in Brooklyn. She offered no explanation and made no plea for clemency, A year ago Mrs. Abrahamson, with her eighteen-yeara-old daughter, came to Brooklyn from Erte, Pa., the police say. In Erle she had owned her own home and had conducted a boarding house during the war. In Brooklyn she has been employed as a cook in a restaurant at wages of $40 a week. She is a widow. PANTOMIME Brave, Resourceful Girl Sees All the Metropolis and Has Many Adventures as She Does Big City All by Her Lonesome, Little Miss Sidney Snook, a girl tewspaper reporter on the Eve ning Sun, in Padueah, Ky., Old Irv’ Cobb's home town, has paid New Yor the compliment of com- ing all alone to see the sights of the metropolis without a guide or protector Thie plucky miss, still in her teens and looking even younger, has in one week covered the ity as thoroughly as she would a atory back home, and without a single unpleasant erperience. When Miss Nnook’s vacation time arrived she packed a suit- case, told her parents she “reck- oned she could look out for her- self,” and started the thousand mile trip. On arriving she went to the home of a oirl friend on Morningside Drive, who has classes at one of the universities, she dabbed a little fresh powder on her nose, and was off She had prepared tn advance a ist of the thinos she had read about and wanted to ser, and made her start from the Battery In the following she tells some of her impressions: By Sidney Snook. T reckon there is something about a newspaper reporter makes him or fearle and independent. Maybe sor would call {t nerve, others "g: Whatever it is, I suppose T have it T came to “do New York alone," without any misapprehensions as to the task. I simply made up my mind to succeed. | figured I'd come into collision with a lot more veople than I'd ever seen before, but they'd all be human beings. And I found New Yorkers very human. In many ways they are as simple and manageable as children, One of the firet things I noticed was the tearing hurry everybody always seemed to be in. I asked about it and some- body said the reason was that “they are always late, that's why." Wonder if somebody was trying to kid me! her feel One of the other first things I noticed was the New Yorker's pride—pride in his vast, amaz- ing city and all that ts in it. Just let the average New Yorker know that you are a stranger and want to know some par- ticular thing about some object in his wonderful city and he'll stop to explain, no matter how great his hurry, It becomes a personal matter. New York is the greatest city in the world and everything in it \s the greatest. HE lives in this greatest city YOU want to know something about “his town"? WELL! He smiles and looks proud and happy and tells you. ‘At first I was uncertain about my line of attack—whether to pose as a “wise guy” and a reg- ular inhabitant, or a helpless stranger in your midst. Take 1t from me, be the “helpless strang- er” every time. Try to act as it you are “one of us” and you'll get no quarter. But a8 a stranger, people will often go out of their way to be kind. But to get down to brass tacks, I bought a pocket guide. I had a Mst of some of the wonderful things I had read about, so I knew all about the better known “sights.” I headed for the Bat- tery and came near never getting away. To me it was fascinating. I saw a lot of excursion boats and during the week have been on them all except the “deep sca fishing” craft. I had never seen a big ship, and I wanted to see one. I noticed the sign of a famous company on one of the’ big buildings and went in. The man who asked me what I wanted struck me as being rather tired and dis- couraged. I told him the truth— a country girl reporter seeing the sights alone, had never yet seen a big ship. He grinned, then seemed sympathetic, but said he'd have to take it up with a ‘Mr, Some- body. He went over and sald some- thing to the other chap. He looked incredulous, then smiled and came over. Did I want to see a ship? Never had seen one? Remarkable! Surest thing you know, 1 could, He wrote me a pass to go aboard one of the big- gest ships that comes to port and yesterday I went all over it I know now for the first time what a ship really {g; what an im- mense, wonderful thing the word will always mean to me hereafter, when I see it. I always ask a policeman when fn doubt. I have found them adorable, One big fellow grabbed me under the arms and lifted me out of the way of an automobile on one of the busy corners. He frowned as he did !t, but T has- tened to tell him I was a stranger and he melted instantly, held up his hand and took me acro: Looking into the big lamps of that automobile, though, was one MISS SIDNEY SNOOK, Miss Sncok, Girl Reporten |[HOISANDS HELD From Irv Cobb’s Old Town, Finds New Yorkers [luman THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1922. BY DERAILING OF N.J.&N. . ENGINE ~ No One Injured, but Block at Carlstadt Delayed Com- miuters, The locomotive of a filled wit ten-car train early ning commuters bound from Ifa straw, S ng Vat- ley and other points on the New Jor sey and New ¥ ‘oad jumped the t A switeh one mile south of Carlsta at 7.30 o'clock = this morning at the junction of the New Jersey at York and Susque hanna T id tracks The train was proceeding slowly at the time and the engine did not over~ turn, None of passenger coaches was de yone was injured. Rot! of New Jersey and New Ye uin line wereyblocked for everal hile the engine was put back on the track, ‘Five other trains which pulled up behind the de its train were backed the Susque- \uters were de forty-five Poll Aliso Di clos' s That 7A Per Cent. Di arriage While in College. Eobbed Hair Losing Popularity Among ColumbiaSummer Students approve of Pretty, but Her Garters, Oh Boy! i Plush, Spangled With Pear! Buttons This Is Why Milanese Beauty Attracted So Much At- tention On the Liner Colombo. All way over from Italy, aboard the one liner Colombo of the Navi- and New York, of passengers followed Teresiti Cantint of Milan, about the deck Whe briak skirts, or sat a Generale Italiano, plying between Naples, Genoa crowds she stood by the rail ifting her FRANCE PRESENTS |" MEDAL TO WIDOW icc OF GEORGE KESSLER] jeamer chair, crossing her | whieh Were perhaps # bit tired of men and women, particu-| larly men, who stared at her grew Teresitt wondered what it was all about, but it wasn’t until the Colom- bo ocked this morning that she They were looking at her garter: Teresiti is a modest girl In Milan she is @ fashlonable millinery design er Her mind runs to hata, not hos iery supporters. Dazzlingly prettey hair and eyes and an fon, {t was natural that hould attract attention, But that garters should, as everybody aboard agreed, make her tion of the voyage—-Oh, never! It was the newspaper reporters and tographers who enlightened her They spotted her as she crossed the ck to ga ashore one else did For that matter, ev The Captain left his accustomed place and the band which had been playign enthustast! cally, loosened some very perceptible discords Teresiti gla agreed to answer ind have her picture taken Tt was while she was posing that an question obliging breeze lifted her ski ‘Oh,’ said a photographer, we take a picture of your garters?” It was a daring question. Teresita blushed, But “Why not?" interpreter. Disembarking of passengers ceased New Yorker Posthumously Honored for Relief of Blind. she replied through an olixes, that It haw been honored by the rest- dence of the fictitious Bourbon, now better known as Harold Schwarm. lector of too many wives ling. washer and the sensa-|headplece nad tuxedo sult, quickly applied for the job. control stranger explained money badly. President even the blood of a former chief ex- ecutive of the United States demanded some ceived only $15 a week $14 of it in the barber shops. Scherer says he ‘bummed’ man to tip the barbers. ing, dishes, he put on his tuxedo and went out to court the ladies In recognition of the work of her] while the pretty Milanese took a chair Bobbed hair lost its popularity with siudents, ‘That 4s, at least.) nusband, the late George A. Kessler, | crossed her limbs. The garters | with the students of the Colnmbia University Summer School in founding the Permanent Blind Re- [Proved to Be Of Olea eather. by’ they 74 per ce f the student Het War Fund, Mrs, Cor arsons |of-pear! buttons, three in a row, set | sity daily news-] Proved of 1 ago. wiitlée-tt Kessler of New York has been pre-| perpendicularly, These details are | ; Which leaves only 4 per cent. of the] sented with the gold medal of the Re- { positive World reporter made a| be in disfavor! marriage wh : ‘These must] Connaissance Francaise, The presen-] close examination. They were worn cent. of the stu-| heen among the 18 per cent, of [tation was made by Paul Strauss, ) just below the knee eriis cpmored (ie shorn iaeka and udents voting in favor of| Minister of Public Health, at the un-| “But why,” sald Teresiti, “why per cent. of them were in favor of} the students who were engaged. Fif-|velling at the Vilage of Orly, naer] should these excite the people? them) with 6 percent: neutral per cent. of them voted as] Paris, of a statue dedicated to the men| Every one is wearing them in Milan. . bs favor of being engaged dur-|of Orly who gave their lives in the]! am surprised that any one should Another interesting fact revealed by student pertod war, stare at a girl who Is wearing some- the poll was that 22 per cent, of the ennis is the favorite sport of the —— thing that any one may ha myjg | Students. Football comes second anc Miss Cantini ts going to San Fran- ee vac Jas he a se baseball third “TEST LAW FORCING cisco to visit relatives living at No. of course, left 78 per cent. unmarried. More men than women took part in 1208 Kearney Street, that city. She Voting then disclosed the fact that the bailotin AUTOISTS TO CARRY is twenty-five years old. Veteran a a ship reporters agreed she was the of the biggest of the million tnrills Thave had Would you believe it, L didn't know how to get down into the subway T had heard so about” When [ asked thought I was joking, app but when he saw I was in « he insisted on leading me muel man. he rently, rnest to the Kiosk, as I believe they call the opening into the cavern. I love the subway because it gets you to places so quickly For a day or two I kept my neck out of joint looking upward. Then I hit on something diff 1 began going up to high places and looking down, instead of staying in people's way looking up. I have seen lots of your New York from the tops of skysera pe You New Yorkers have many ways of getting to p Ther {8 such magnificent pride in ti tone of a man when you ask him which train or car to take some certain place and he rer with a proud wave of his h “Oh, just take any of them; they all stop there You get jostled about a lot, but one of my exciting experiences was when I suddenly felt myself hurled several feet. It was a pr Meeman running after somebod I heard a shot and ducked, « saw the crowd running and fol lowed. But when it was found nobody had been shot every turned away in disgust On the other hand, so People seem to have do, Every time [ pass throug! City Hall Park I see loads stand ing on the outskirts of Civic V tue watching the men build walk or whatever it is they ar doing. With so many real inter esting things to see 1 wonder how people can waste their tim watching workmen build a ment. But maybe know. I have run New Yorkers who did not know exactly where the many nothing t new they ACTOSN BEV Battery wa There was only one thing [ found that I was afraid to do. I couldn't get the courage to go t the very top of the Statue of Liberty, and look through crown. I was all right until | got to the winding stairs aud then T balked. If I had had soiebod with me I'd have risked it The Aquarium accident. the a lot of going into a funny looking build Ing and followed. [ didn't know there were so many diff kinds of fish in the world. I ¢ tke saying what they say t farmer said when he wt giraffe in the circus, “There a no such animal,” It was in Rattery Park that an odd thing happened A lot children went marching thr apparently on their way to sor sort of an outing. They verre singing ‘Old Kentucky Home went along and listened and t asked one wf the larger air's y were fr tuck ‘Where's tha whe found out it just ened t Mificance for u Ker T have heard a lot about Ne York bluff, but 1 don't think you bluff here. 1 saw thing, though It down on the river nt and it looked th a box oar, But it puffed along and finally whistled, and | saw it was a switch engine in its queer make-up, [ asked some bystander why it was all dolled up that way and he said: so it can slip up on ‘em bet- ter, suppose.” Then he laughed ave to t eu was 1 told me they called that reet “Death Avenue,” because so many were killed by the trains. Ome nice thing about seeing New York all by your lonesome s that there is nobody to stop you trom showing your erithu 1, You can have all the vocal outbursts: aving your They'll you want to escort say: think without “Sh-5 you are a hick.”” But, really, I've found every was so willing to be kind theatre I climbed away up to get a better view. When the usher came to demand my check and IT told him what I was doing he became all attentiveness and explained how much the building that it held more than and that the projection pictures to the screen was the Jongest in the world—almost as long as a city block He pointed out everything of interest And everybody has been that way 000 persons There would be no use in try to tell all I have seen doing New York in a week by myself. I've been from Staten Island to Van Cortlandt Park and Bronx Park and everywhere else in every direction, I don't see how iny one in New York ever could be bored. Many of the most in- teresting things were not men tloned in the guide books, I've Jen everyth ‘om r n cab to an elephant st tina theatre by bh t own und down, it looked ce a mile of steps, and helped.a in catch his when it blew away a ferryboat » been every ot hosp. r nus diseases, and I tried in that ean and neat and up-to-date men almost without excep were polite and helpful. 1 of them offer w abway and be! re not surprised to en smoking in some of t taurants, but T wag to see them noking {mn automodiles in tlic A and on the Drive. They ned to be not only enjoying it t used to One of the moet 1 sights of my visit was th n king across Brooklyn Bridga et. If I lived tn New la be tempted to do tt ening. If there is an » T believe I cou Evening World's Did You See To-day” { a month prettiest girl they ever had see land in this port Passengers pretty twelve with her par relatives. in ship. Three girls were aboard the Co- lombo who came to this country to joln flances gained through war ro- mances. Their sweethearts came nead of them rie Buratti, twenty-two of No- VIOLATIONS CARDS voted Doro Barone, a ear-old girl, who came 8 from Italy to visit Brooklyn, queen of the One Submits to Arrest and Association Helps Him Fight Case. ntest of the new ordinance requiring drivers of all vehicles within the cit ylimits to possess identification and license cards was started to-day in the Centre Street Court when Eugene A. Bofinger, a sign manufacturer of | M No. 3310 Broadway, who submitted to | vara, Italy, will go to Los Angeles to » Was arrafgned before Magis-|be married to Mario Bisettt. Irene McGeehan. Attorneys for the |Pento has a husband waiting for r Amreican Automobile A tion and Jat Newcastle, Pa., and Marta Petrint others interested in the case charge | will listen to wedding bells in Chicago. the ordinance its unconstitutional. Cavalier! Francisco Ansaldo, port Boflnger had been attempting for]eaptain for the agazione Generale some time to get arrested. He fi was taken in custody by Lieut. ney Vlood of the District Attor office, on a charge of having violate Chapter 24, Section 42, of the Traffic Ordinance, which has to do with the new cards, William B. Brice of Merrill, Rogers and Terry, No. 100 Broadway, ap- peared as counsel for the A. A. A., and H. K. Maples, field secretary of the association, also took a hand. They declared that in their opinions the ordinance was unconstitutional tn ally |Ttallano at and Dr. Caesare tar-|Servadia, Vice President of the line, ‘s}arrived on the Colombo ho as to be here for the docking of the new boat, Giulio Caesare, two weeks hence. TWO ARE ARRESTED ON HOLD-UP CHARGE AS THIRD IS SOUGHT Prisoners Admit $800 Rob- bery, Police Say. that it established local license and : dj that {t conflicted with the State au-| Michael Starace, No. 160 Summit tomobtle laws. Street, und Nicholas Burnetti, No. They added that in the event of a conviction before Magistrate Met han they would appeal to the Court of Special Sessions and if unsuccessful there would bring the thruogh the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court, necessary. Drivers of all vehicles are required to carry the cards, which are punched by police for every violation of the traffic rules. A ce nm number of punches ends in re the driver's license 147 Van Brunt Street, Brooklyn, were arrested to-day at the former's home by Detectives Croak, McKenna and McCarthy of the Hamilton Avenue Station, charged with holding up Harry Topalian yesterday afternoon and taking from him the $800 pay- roll of Louls D. Karp, manufacturer, No, 359 Columbia Street. According to the detectives, both men admitted that with another they held up Topallan, Starace’s share of the booty was $26 and Burnett's $100, the third man keeping the balance, the detectives said. Topalian, who lives at No, 46 Col- umbia. Terrace, Weehawken, put up a fight regardless of two guns at his stomach, when two men Jumped from an automobile on Seabring Street and demanded the payroll He was struck on the head with an iron bar. a WEATHER TO STAY COOL case vocation of —_ $50,000 SEIZURE, 4 NARCOTIC ARRESTS Kederal Agents Buy 200 Ounces of Coke for $1,000. alers in a Four alleged wholesale narcotics were arraigned in the I eral Court in Brooklyn to-day ch with violation of the Harrison Narcotics valued at $50,000 were TO-DAY, BUREAU SAYS scized. Spectal Officers and Pacetta of the Feder ote |20-Degree Droy in Temperatare Squad with a letter of netion Since Yesterday. FOR Boston net iuettannol There was @ drop in the temperature renting of Ne , Vresl- or 29 degrees between the maximum tent Street and Gionor B ‘lof 80 degrees yesterday and the tem- No. 1 President Street yesterday. | perature of to-day when at 6 A. M. After dickering, the Mederal agents| the mercury registered 69 degrees. The cool weather, according to the put up $1,000 for 200 ounces of “coke to be delivered later Near the Orpheum Theatre la» her bureau, will continue all to , {day and will gradually warm up Thurs- tay and Friday night two men alighted from an aut mobile to make the delivery L pair turned over the and aveested. They | them 1,50 meine. The c} of the car vbandoned it a. ’ In e car wer two revoly With Agents He » and 3 pair returned to the President address and arrest! th with a The tw ing the stuff gave ¢ r 8 Frank Abetr oO 6 Btreet and the former of No. 48 Pres dent Street. IMPOSTOR PRINCE. WASHED DISHES AT $19 PER WEEK — oe Spent $14 of This in Barber Shops, but He Wielded Efficient Rag. Like New York and other metrop- Trenton, N. J., learned to-day Prince Louts 4e of New Britain, Conn., col The Prince,’ while tn Trenton. was a dishwasher at the Hotel Ster ling and just as gay as galllance with fiction as he has been elsewhere. Herman Scherer, Chef at the Ster- says he advertised for a dish Harold, attired in a $20 Scherer nearly toppled over, but got of himself when the dressy that he needed Schwarm hadn't then gone into the prince business and at that time merely represented himself to be a Dr. Buren, descendant of former Martin Van Buren. But exhiliration, Although he re- he spent about cigars off the ice In the even- after he had finished washing He left after four months. Scherer said he really hated to see him go, be- cause he fictent dishrag. wielded an extremely ef- EW BRITAIN, Conn., Aug. 9.— No matter what may be said of the fictitious ‘Prince de Bourbon,” his mother, Mrs. Emelie Schwarm, insists he ix smart and not to be censured for what he did to stir New York and elsewhere. While Harold Schwarm, bogus prince and seif-styled crony of the late Czar, was muintaining a wife, a valet, a Russian wolfhound and a monkey in his apartment in New York, his mother was slaving at a washtub tn her home on Prospect Street, here. She was still at it this morning when she sought to excuse the ‘Prince.”* “Harold is a ‘smart boy. He always was, although he never went further than grammar school He is conversant with all subjects and car. talk intelligently,” his mother sald. She sought to excuse his eccen- tricities by explaining that he mar- ried Hthel Abetz of this city at fifteen, and when the girl left him became a changed boy. Harold may have inhertted his pe- cullarities, she also said, from his father, who deserted his mother when Harold was a baby. He always boasted that he was a scion of German no- bility, and that his children would some day come into great wealth. Another chapter in Schwarm's double Ife was revealed when Miss Catherine Lynn of Roxbury, Mas: his alleged bigamous wife, admitted he was the father of her son. Miss Lynn says the baby was born two montha after Schwarm, who married her as “Dr. Henry Van Buren of the Russian General Staff,"’ deserted her and eloped with a Taunton woman, Schwarm has never seen his son. DIMPLED KNEE BANNED AT BEACH Any bare knees that appear on the bathing beach at Far Rockaway next Saturday or Sunday will be covered with a police summons immediately. Capt. Thomas Myers of the Far Rock- away precinct has made up hia mind. “['m tired of telling them to roll tem up,” he said. ‘Now I'll lock ‘em Pand if Magistrate Harry Miller feels the same way about It as he did‘thie morning, when seen at the Far Rock- away Court, each summons will cost the barer of knees §10 or ten days In fail. ‘The bare knees, of course, must be feminine bare knees. Men are still exempt from stockings—although no- body in authority at Far Rockaway could explain why. A reporter axked Capt. Myers, but the Captain waved the question aside. It ts not debatable. Women’s knees are indecent when bare tn a bathing sult and that's all there te to it! Stockings rolled below the knees won't do! Cover them—hip to heel! That's the Captain's order. —_ TWO SALOONS RAIDED IN NEW ROCHELLE Prohibition Agents and Seaman took a jaunt to New Rochelle thie morning, and as a result two bar- tendera were arrested and two propri- etors of saloons were summoned on charges of illegully selling tiquor. The quartet will appear this afternoon be- fore United States Commisstoner Hiteh- cock ‘The proprietors are Patsy Marano with a saloon at No. 129 Union A and C. B. Zimmerman, with a saloon « No. 51 North Avenue, Those arres were Andrew Novello, bartender fo. former, and Joseph Danlin, barte Cheatham for the latter. with Piccadilly Little Cigars today. We. take | all the risk—your money back -e not satisfied—- guarantee in every package. 10 In the package Clare—Colorade Ciaro—Celorede ry ee ee a A ee ee a ene ee ne eee ren ne

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