The evening world. Newspaper, August 31, 1922, Page 24

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ens OmETe i i ¢ ag | ~ s INSTALMENT NO. 10. Becomes a Fugitive, Daily” and Will Wyvern Among the Pursuers. MPRESS your client maxim of Mr. ger Make a splash ‘was that of Mr. r LT “] hing * was the and keep Henry itt, editor of Fleet Street's new or- gan, the Daily ‘Bringing this principle—indeed it him his appointment—to the edi- ip of the Dally, Mr. Bitt was set ‘Moody and irritable by the fact that The had no opportunity to exercise it per the first issue of the paper. But upon the second night the came. There was no scandal, Ine effective news; but there was mat- for a sensational, semi-mysterious ‘leading story’ in a tiny little scrap news dictated by Mr. David Brun: f, laboriously copied out a dozen 8 by Issy Jago, his clerk, and left by that gentioman at the offices of as (many newspapers | Seven sub-cditors “spiked” ‘made of it a “fill-up par. it a headline and sent it up as an welght-line ‘‘news-par."’; one, in the joffices of the Daily, read it, Inughed, ke to the news editor and finally ‘earried it up to Mr. Bitt, Mr, Bitt’s Journalistic nose gave one iff, The thing was done. Some old fot was actually offering the ridicu- Hously large sum of £100 for the rve- jeavery of a cat! Here, out of the Warren, un-newsy world, suddenly thad sprung a seed that would grow BH a forest. The very thing, The it, three one gay poaily was saved Away sped « reporter; and upon the fading position of the principal page f the: Daily, introducing « column jwnd a quarter of leaded type, those Country House Outrage. j Valuable Cat Stolen. i Sensational Story. } Chance for Amateur Detectives. SAN out of Mr. Issy Jago's tiny little paragraph! f Now, Bill Wyvern had joined the tthe office that night. Employed luring the day, he had finished his at 6; after a gloomy meal had Probation. His appointment to a pérmanent post depended upon his in way distinguishing himself; failed, The “copy"’ he had done for the first issue of the Daily had jot_been used; on this day he had febtained from his subject a wretched ozen words. ~ Thus it was in depressed mood that Youowine morning, bawling from the pheadlines appeared: Huge Reward. jptaft of the Daily, but had not been @ gloomily to bed. Bill was on thus far, he reflected, he utterls fheen sent upon an interview and had 1 on the following morning opened Daily. The flaring “Country House Out rage’ hit his eye; he read; in two minutes his mood was changed A sensation at Valtley Hill! mr. Marrapit's! | ‘Here was his chance! Who better | Mitted than he to work up this story? fr, Bitt was equally enthusiastic ‘Hot stuff.” sald Mr. Bitt, “You've } gt your chance; make a splash. i away down to the scene of the olitrage and stay there as our staff olan till 1 wire you back.” writ was George's the little inn at Dippleford An fnaccustomed weight upon his Jege,.at which he thrice sleepily kicked without ridding himself of it, t morning In Admiral at length awoke bim. This object was the Rose of, Simron, and at once George became actively astir to the surgings of yesterday, the mysterics of the future. ‘Mrs. Pinner, the landlady. a copy of the newspaper under the «idor—George had ordered the Daily on his friend Bill's account—and warned of breakfast in twenty min- utes, Upon “Country House Outr George alighted plump; with eyes, scalp creeping. blood ead through; aghast sank ved. It had got into the papers! pis {infernal reward, which with huge joy he had heard offered, was now he- come the Yroad that would prick into fective search for the Rose every man, woman and child who read the story He was a felon now; flecing jus- tice; every hand against him. Dis- movery looked certain, and what did discovery mean? “Good God!" groaned my miserable George, ‘it means ruin; it means im- prisonment.”” Very slowly, very ab- jiget, he peeled off his pyjamas; slid trembling leg into his pushed a goggle freezing, upon his With GEORGI _BY A.S.M. Hutchinson, «ose If Winter Comes’ Mustrated By W.B.Johnston WHO'S WHO IN THE STORY. LEICKSVER after some difficulties passes his medical examinations and plans to purchase a practice and marry his sweetheart MARY WUMERAY, for whom he had secured a place as housekeeper in Herons’ Holt home of his uncle David Brun }CHRISTOFHER MARRAPIT. Mr, Marrapit, however, denies George the money necessary to carry out his plans, so George abducts THE ROSE OF SIIARON, a beautiful orange cat, hoping that he will win a reward he expects his uncle to oifer. He carries the cat to a hut not. far from the house but, alarmed when Mr Marrapit hire DAVID BRUNGER, a detective, tells his uncle he ha transporis The Kose to Dippleford Admiral PRCF, WYVERN, « neighbor of Mr. Marrapit, believing that George's uncle was unethicaily, if lawfully, withholding money from him, had, by telling of a simnuar trick played upon a German professor, suggested the abduction of the cat. WILL _WYVERN, son of the professor, is in love with MARGARET, Mr Marrapit’s daughter, but, because his dogs once chased The Rose is barred from the house. Will has literary aspirations and Margaret 1s a sentimental poet. MRS. MAJOR, whose fondness for Old Tom Gin had cost her her place as housckeeper at Herons’ Holt a clue of his own and "IT HAD GOT INTO THE PAPERS.” youth! ‘The cold water that splashed away the clamminess of bed washed, not hear a cat. I abominate cats. 1 ‘an always tell when a cat is near me. too, the more vapory fears from|There is no cat. Kindly leave me to George's brain; the chilly splashings} my breakfast.” that braced his system to a tingling] When the Rose had bulged her glow braced also his mind against the pummellings of his position, Dry flanks with the fish and lapped a bow! full of milk, George again imprisoned ing. he caught himself whistling; /her; rushed, basket under arm, for catching himself in such an act| open country laughed ruefully to think how little Mr. Pinner in the bar parior, as ground he had for good spirits. orge fled through, was reading from Breakfast was laid in a little sit-[a paper to a stable hand, a servant ting room over the porch, adjoining} ir] aud @ small red headed Pinner his bedroom, George pressed the poor|boy, Rose into her basket; carried it in.| “1p may be in John o° Groats,* } Chose milk instead of tea By that} road, “or it may be in Tanne eae time he had a plan. He thumigd the bar, “T want to ar- to have this room He gave it speech range, Mrs. Pinner— er teat? W pleford Admira Hi, it may be in Dip- “@ private sitting room,’ he said. “I] It was precisely because it was 1% want to keep it very private indeed. [[ippleford Admiral that hie youns 1 don’t want anyone to enter it un-] inventor lodger fled through the bar less I am_ here, Jeorge mounted | without so much as @ eclvil “good his lie and galloped it, blushing for | morning shame of his steed. ‘The fact ts, nl Mrs. Pinner, I'm an inventor. And! Ay the post office George sent a tele 1 have to leave things lying about 4 gram to Mr. Marrapit delicate instruments that mustn't be|>"7,ia on tncke Must be cautious disturbed." Don't tell Bruner.” me Mrs. Pinner gazed at the basket He fling down eightpence halt- And the invention te In there? penny; fled tn the direction of a wood Right in there,’ George assured |iyat plumed a distant bill, Mear had her this man, “You'll parding my asking, mis gt te Saree ter; but your saying you have to A take it in the open air—is it one of] Gverse lett Dippleford Admiral that them hairships, mister?" Per emg + meee a “Well, it 1s," George said frankly SERN Bene Sever. VROrG Was This was 9 useful idea and he ap. {2° sadness of farewell, There was no proved it, “It is. It's an alrship,”' | Mrewell “Mi-aow!"' spoke the Rose, peuc trating, piercing, r mink the at 7 o'clock to his siting dat inn, melancholy beneath white and h. Mut the preposterous buoyancy of Birth of Harrington Son Bars ts ' Pro-German From an Earldom ’ f, 1922 (New York Evening World) Press Publishing Company @Lonvon, rejoicing in the Harrington family A sep and heir has been born to Viscount and Viscountess Peter- » and by this event Aubre hope, wartime oditor of the Con- ita] Times of Berlin, is removed Aug. 31.—There is again {wom the line of succession to the title of the Earl of Harrington, Viscount Petersham, th)f Earl's * gidest con, ie the next peir, Yf 'Stan- vival of Boy at i Putersieih Mone Keeps Stanhope, Anti-British War Editor, From Title. Mrs, Pinner cocked her head on one] ® hungry and brooding day in the side; looked under the table. I de- | woods with the Rose tethered to a tree clare I thought ' heard a cat he ry th length of two handkerchiefs, puszied he ordered supper—milk, fish, and “Didn't you hear a at. mnie: George grappled the crisi: 1 did M hod im if al would calling him “dirty Ung. and “filthy togue he Harringtons and their friends ad a celebration similar to to-night's t year when a boy wa mn; tal count and Viscountess Petersham it the baby only lived a week, and anhope again came into line for the RADIUM USED IN PRISON, Two Convicts Treated at Sing Sing— hope would have succeeded hu Viscount’s killed in the war younger One Brought 200 Milen James Friedman, Stanhope was correspondent for an A prisoner in Great be all. She and A chapel meeting; the servant girl was out; there would only be a young man in the bar usband were going to George took the news gratefully. Iinmediately Mrs. Pinner left the room he greedily fell to upon the chops The dish cleared, George arranged his prisoner's supper; utepped to the basket to fotch her to it, As he lifted her splendid form there ame fron behind him an exclamation, an agi- tated scuffling In heart-stopping pante George dropped the cat, jumped around, The red-headed Pinner boy whom that morning he had seen in the bar- parlor, was scrambling from beneath the sofa, arms and legs thrusting his flaming pate at full-speed for the door. op!" George cried, rooted in alarm: The red-headed Pinner boy got to his feet, hurled himself at the door andle. repart screamed the flamly head travelling at immense speed down the passage, ‘‘Par-par! It aln't a hairship. It's a cat George lunged over a bani gripped close in the flaming hair; held fast With a backward pull that most horribly “If you speak a word head George said here The pitiful sitting-room. my Ind,” said want your head cut still without a sounc Flight--Immediate flight—that was the essential course for George, Ex- amining the time-table he determined upon Temple Colney—an hour's run He had been there once with Bill, But what of this Infernal red. headed Pinner boy? In agony, wrest- ling with the question, George every way ran into the brick wall fact that there was no method of stopping the vile boy’s mouth, The red head must be left behind to shriek Its discovery. All that could be done was to d that shriek as long as possible. George packed his small hand-bag; placed upon the table money to pay his bill; lifted the crime-stained basket; addressed the red-headed Pin- ner boy. “Stop that sniffing. Take that bag. Give me your hand; come on." Half a mile upon the further side of the station George that morniag had passed a line of haystacks. Now he made for ft, skirting the railway by a considerable diste nce. They reached the haystack.« George struck a match; looked at his watch. In seven minutes his train was due. The ladder George lad noticed that morning was lying along the foot of twisted the red-headed face, Vil pull your “Come up procession reached the “Now, you listen to me, George, “unl you ght off you sit a stack. Uprearing it against one partially demolished, ‘Put down that bag.’ be commanded "Up with you Gustily sniffing in the huge sighs that advertised his terror, the red- headed Pinner boy obeyed. George drew down the ladder. “Stop up there; [shall be back in five minutes If you move before then’ He left the trembling boy out of his own agitated fear to fll the un- spoken doom. He walked slowly away in the direction opposite from the station until the haystack was merged and lost in the blackness that sur rounded it. Then, doubling back, he made for the road; pounded along it at desperate speed. Topping a low rise he sighted the station ligbts below. Simultaneously from behind a distant whistle there sprang to his cars the low of the coming train. This history is not to be soiled with what George said at the sound. With the swiftness and the scorching of flame his dreadful commination leapt from the tortured Rose, terrified in her basket, to the red-Neaded Pinner boy wrestling in prayer upon the hay stack-—-from the roughness of the lane that labored his passage to the speed of the oncoming train that hammored at his fate He hurled himself down the rise with his last breath gasped for ticket; upon a final effort projeeted himself into the train: went upon a seat. Te was awa lt was when George wos teen minutes from Temple that the red-headed Pinner boy, stered up with prayer, commena soul to God; slipped with thud from the haystack par-par (Cony right, 1922, In to-morrow’s instalment our friend Mrs, Major again enters the plot and achieves an important place some fit Colney bol - 1 his painful pelted for aM by the Bell Syndicate PUBLIC SCHOOL NO. 127 rumble | THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, ‘OnceAboar (The Lugger TRAPPED BY FIRE, | WOMAN JUMPS; LEGIS BROKEN Flight Stairs Cut OF; Fire Escape Too Hot to Lower Ladder. by Mis. Bellevue suffering from a broken right received she floor fire es 107 husband, te Simowitz is in to-day les Jusrr ape d Street and burns when 1 from a second a blaze at No. ght, Mer also jumped being treated by an am- for burns and Hie Lewis Philip. who remained at home aft bulance surgeon bruiss Simowitz and his wife did not reach the fire escape until it was so hot ti» were unable to lower the drop ladder. With flaines Neking around them the couple could stand the heat no longer and leaped. Tie fre started from a curtain blowing into a gas flame on the ground floor of the three-story build- ing in the reat of No. 107, Refore Po- ph Cohen of the Clinton ame the rapid spread the capes of the eccu- > upper floors. Heeman Jose Street Station blaze and oft nd Mrs TEC, of the id cut off escape hy te ie ty stairs pants Mr Joseph Balek and two ehildren and Rose, Rix, top floor, were aroused by two boys from the neigh- borhoud, Abraham Helfman, No, 111 Lewis Street, and Natlian Stiegel, No, 110. They were led over the roof to ana botlding Several lmndred persons were in a theatre back of the 114 Cannon noise and excitement threatened to cause 4 panic, but Po- lieeman Rosener ran in and shouted there wax no danger, Some of the spectators had already fled, but m of them marched out in good oner. ie ATTACKS POLICEMAN WITH HATPIN IN COURT Wowa sixteen asleep on the djomning motion picture burning building, at No Streety and the Being Arratcned rand Makes Lounge. Cries When Miss Grace Watson, twenty- seven, No. 1066 Atlantic Avenue, Brook- lyn, was arraigned before Magistrate Short in Brooklyn Night Court on charge of disorderly conduct, a last night, she Jumped from the witness chair and, shouting ‘Liar’ at Patrolman John Murry, who had crrested her, lunged at him with a haipin. Court attendants subdued her, and a further charge of issault was entered against he Patrolman Murry said that when he tried to arrest her on April 10 in a house on Herkimer Street she jumped from a window 1nd escaped. He located her again yesterday and arrested her. Mag istrate Short fond the woman y of the first charge and she will be ar. raigned on the assault sharge to to-da, HIT BY MOTOR, MOURNS LOSS OF SHOE HEELS Bridge Tender Mystified at Their Disappear- ance, bridge tender at River George Bus the Hackensack span tween Secaucus and East Ruther- ford, N. J. toreyele yester was struck by a mo- y and burled fit- teen feet He was made unconscious by the blow, when he regained his senses be startled a crowd of motorists by declaring he was un- hurt “_ guess the only loss T suffered was my rubber heels. They seem to have disappeared,” said Busch, who is more than sixty years old. John TP. Moeller of N Pa- von Avenug, Jersey City, who struck hin, hi 1 Busch a $5 bill and told bin to buy a new pair of hee!s ForSummerComplaints To be taken internally in water) RResay* cacy. elie Sat of C amps, Bowel Pains 1S DAMAGED BY FIRE THE WORLD'S Jojory to Building May Opening of Fall Term Public School, No. 127, at No, S11 West 37th Street, was tadiy dam aged by fire last evenin Opening of the school will probably be delayed several weeku Employees in a #arage across the sireet first saw smoke coming from second floor windows, They thought the janitor was burning rubbish until the smoke became dense Not an wa alarm sent out The fire had gained such firemen were forced te damage to the second and third fie eadway that jo my American pro-Ally paper when the| Meadow Prison at Comstock, was war broke out. He left it to become] brought two hundred miles yesterday editor of the Continental Times, a| for treatment In Sing Aine Prison Ho: Ital to try rave Ute adiv propaganda daily printed in Er As * oe ade ag te, “Radium and Glled with the mont violent rie) T°” # i 2 ice : prison physielan. War used ow onnelations of England nda her Alves | eriodman, who is afflicted with avdornt Stanhope's writings Anatly disgugted| ,, . He is serving a torm {or some Germans and one of them 1 ww ahter 1916 thrashed him publigy an thel tr, squire slaw treated John Roodling American bar of the HotelMBristol in e New York Clty prisoner, with radium, to prevent greater destruction and and the 1 were virtually de nioliehed. “|! Harlem Office Now Located at 2092 7th Ave. Near 125th St. HOTEL THERESA BUILDIN ————— » AM “Lost Advertised in ‘The Wor or r to “Lost and Found Bureau. 108, World Bull PHIL ba listed 9 lists can b Word's Orf Choe 1922, WOMAN FOUND MULL FRACTURED mployed in the 0 Dieinan at No, 6 Palin ver Larchmont, was PEGGING SHOES AT 7 YEARS OF ACE. W. L. Douglas $7.00 and $8.00 shoes are absolutely erp nw NL EN RUE ER A SRL SR found by the Larelimont police late last night lying unconscious in the road at Larchmont wad Beach Aven nes. taken to the Rochelle Hospital where it was found she had fract ds skull, Little hope is held for her recover It is the theory of the police that SHOES ; + thrown from an automobile. regained consclousneas — this morning Just long enough gto give her name and addres A an called the hospitel on the telephone this) morning and in @ strained voice asked about the girl condition 1 refused to give his nam Pollce are trying to trace him. sho we DOUGLAS 00 FOR MEN ND WOMEN HEREBY AFFIRM THAT W.L.DOUGLAS SHOTS, Ww. L. oentes $4.00 and W. L. DOUGLAS | $4.50 shoes forboys,bestin the best shoe values for SHOES AND SAVE quality, best in style, best the money in this country. | AIL W. L. Dou; MONEY. all around shoes for boys. shoes are made of the best| It is worth dollars for you to remember that and finest leathers, by skilled shoemakers, all) when you buy shoes at our stores working to make the best shoes for the price that money can buy. The quality is uns: The smart styles are the leaders in the fas! centers of America. Only by examining t can youappreciate their wonderful value. Shoes of equal quality cannot be bought elsewhere at anywhere near our prices. W.L. Douglas shoes are put into all of our 110 ‘actory cost. Wedo not make one) stores at cent of profit until the shoes are sold to you. W.L. DOUGLAS sfORES IN UKEATER NEW YORK: ® 85 Nassau Str 847 Broadway, near 14th. 1495 Broadway (Times Sq.)- * 84 Third Avenue. #1452 Third Avenue. #2202 Third Av., cor. 120th St. £2779 Third Av., bet. 146th&147thSts. 847 Eighth Avenu Stores marked with a * carry complete lin m| Ply you with W. the name and ri | Write for Catalog Today: \* 250 West 125th Street. BROOKLYN. | 45504 Fifth Av., cor. 56th St. * 706 Broadway, near Thornton St. #1367 Broadway, cor. Gates Ave. * 478 Fifth Ave., cor. 11th St. *® 859 Manhattan Ave. (Greenpoint). *® 449 Fulton Street. of W. L. Doug Do not take a substitute and pay extra profit | Order direct from the factory and save money, WaOeragle YOU PAY ONLY ONE PROFIT. ~| No matter where you live, shoe dealers can sup. L.Douglas shoes. They cost no | morein San Francisco than they doin New York. Insist upon having W. L. Douglas shoes with etail price stamped on the sole, its. President W. L. Douglas Shoe Co., 270 Spark St., Brockton, Maat #434 Knickerbocker Avenue. JERSEY CITY—18 Newark Avenue *YONKERS—19 North Broadway. *HOBOKEN—120 Washington Street. * UNION HILL—276 Bergenline Ave. | xNEWARK—831 Broad Street. las Shoes for Women. [WHERE To ‘30 ‘AND HO mow TO GETT THERE Hudson River by Daylight tor Kingston 1, Including Sunday, ‘Albany. ‘Steamer Catskill, Hudson ane Nes Deabrosece St. Boa. Mes Ve Bby Mu; W. Tuvint St, Uad'A. M4 You 10.13 A.M, (nlso for {Poughkeepsie y day but saturday). Direct bmi vow nection. “All rail tlekets New York to Ab bauy and Albany to New York accepted. ally. including sunday. tor +Beur Moun: tain, West it except Sunday). tNew- DUFEH “and *ougukcepsie, Sir. toe Wit Clinton, leaves West dud St., 30.00 A. ML West auth Bt., 1U.20 A. Mj) Yonkers, 10.00 Daily, except Sunday, holnt and ¢Newbura’, steamer leaves Desbrosses 8t . 42d St, 9.00 AL Ms W . M.; Yonkers, v.50 ALM For naditional service, Saturday Morning and Afternoon, Sept. 2; Sunday, Sept, 3, and Mondas, Sept.'4, see special holiday circular or Friday's newspapers, jKetucn wteaincr same day trom points marked t, Daylight Saving Time. Round Trip rates: New York to Bear Mountuin, $1.1 ext Point, $1 New borgh, $1 epsie, $2.00; Kingston Voint, $3.00 Albany, $5. Ideal One-Day Onting: Day’ Lin ‘ne Further Information at Desbrosses Street Pier, New York. Tel, Canal 9300. Iron Steamboat ¢ €o CONEY ISLAND Wier 1, N 10.15 Catskill, $000; Hudson, 8125; oN Ste | (acs Telephone WHIT Per 1. No Alantle Highteal AIL, DANCLN: Battery 9.30" A. Dasiight 89 Hor Lis. SiGiT pEIVGYACHIS i OCEAN, t Pe kaspy look BAN, Lat, Levturer Refreshments "ONLY 25c OUT OF NEW vores MIipLAND BEACH IDEAL ANUSEMENT VAR SAin ainsi and iouscts snus day’ tor reuy Us 14 Pal halt DAILY EXCURSIONS TO E MOUNTAIN The Playgrowids, ath Rowd: is vs rn Feat c Beautiful. eee Carstetia sent Steet stn Ratters Daily 0.00; We I5ed Sey wu? DELIGHTFUL KULIDAY TRIPS SAT., SUN. & MON, SEPT. 2,3 &4 Steamers Leave Falters 0.08 A.M SPECIAL” FTERNOON OLIDAY OUTINGS SAT., SUN. & MON, SEPT. 2,3. 4 Ste. Lvs, Pier A, NoR. (Battery) PM. Str. Lys. West 138d St, 2.15 1 Round Trip .¥erk2uss de. Children 300, & Hots, si, REFRESHMENTS = MUSIC’ 1 lxndes Interstate Park Co hones Bowling Green 7585 ONE DAY OUTINGS LAKE HOPATCONG. 81.75 Next Sunday and Sept. ow 2 TAT, Ltborty dacki raey Clty, n Ave MAUCH CHUNK, $2.40 Next Sunday and Sept. 10 and 17 Leave W. 2 Jacl st on Ave i liberty Jersey City st 4g A, A.M FOR SALE, DIAMONDS WATCHES | fie SEND FOR: cece ASTLE COMPETE ROapway 4: ray BUSINESS PROPERTY TO LE P RECTOR 8T.— nulet, vool; telep! feet; immed! equip- talled tailed; m 40%, HELP WANTED—MALE, WANTED. MACHINISTS, BOILERMAKER BLACKSMITHS, CAR REPAIRMEN, SKILLED IN RAILROAD WORK; STEADY EMPLOYMENT; STANDARD WAGES, AUTHORIZED BY: UNITED STAT RAILROAD LABOR BOARD ‘ good only on enecial trains tern Standard Time Shown, NEW JERSEY CENTRAL OSTON 62 METROPOLITAN LINE Via Cape Cod Canal at Boston for*Porttana, paneer i Joba, N. B. ate a tile Sundae, fat 8 P.M. (Daylight Saving Tune). Telephone Barclay 5000. EASTERN S. S. LINES DELIGHTFUL LIBRE" AFTERNOON To Bear Mountain %!,,, SAT., SUN. & MON. SEPT. 2 364 Str. Lys, Ple Str. Lae. W Returning ROUND Ti TRIP hie ef rest Judson SAIL “LONG ISLAND sou (ND Ey Daylight Be de i wl! 0 day tie! p worn TO NEW LONDO Steamer Chester W. Chapt Loaves Pier WS Re SN Moo 4 Excellent Bining Hoom servi 10.88, 14 908 or ALM Weausburg & Music, Dausing, Apply to CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY &. E. Chambers, Supt, Motor Power & Equipment, Jersey City, N. J. WANTE: Perman nit Positions are open at the fellowliig rates, pulhorized by the Unj States Ratlroad Labor Boat Eleetriead 100 par bows 1 Hous 4c per hour, Car Repalrere @ [ospectors—83a per hour, Arnis 8.00 A 31 to 8.00 P. Bf. to Super: nts offloe at 1tad Street and Wille ‘ F eM New York CLARK RA ae tt

Other pages from this issue: