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‘ \ ' ' eS Se ASKS $1,909,479 |He INGREASE TO RUN FIRE DEPARTMENT Most of Boost Will Be for New Apparatus—Would Raise Telegraphers’ Pay. at $18.820,107 t Fire ¢ mates { UA the Fire Departine inerease of $1,909,479 over the 1922 ‘budget Most of the increase is due t poked new appar t sioner wants $929.4 fire-fighting machine of the present yenr, it is « thé last fire horse « feared from the aye only ninety es now In the de partment. Most of the fog apparntus, the Fire ¢ points ont. is for the re Rnefvice-worn machinery Serve apparatus t asked for consists of fifty oline Ongines. twenty trucks, ten hore wagons, forty battalion chiefs’ cars und five heavic deputy ehiets Five mew engine opened next year Commissioner wants seventy firemen and twelve lieutenants He also asks for thirty additional fire prevention inapectors at $1,500 euch, twenty ad ditional combustibl at $1,500 each. five electrical Inspec ats h, eight telegraph de- spatchers at $2.493 each and four tele perators at $1 » is an item of budget which repre ommiss 1 it will mt in 192i, an nivsloner aeement of snd for re The new macl inspectors whose minimum salaries, in accord i ate of wages a par in 1923. Al- though these men hold positions o Breat responsibility ent time they have in only $1,708 a year. They are de pended upon to send in accurate alarms and their records for accuracy total 100 per cent Even with the 1923 increase the “Sienal Corps men’ of the city’s fighting forces will re- e@ive $507 a year less than is paid in Chicago and Boston The Fire Commisnloner nake for the creation of a new 35.000 a year job, that of explosives expert. His reason for asking this will be the unsolved mysteries of the Washington and Jane Strect fires, It is not likely that the Board of Estimate will grant this re- guest, when for $50 a day, when yeally needed, !t can obtain the ger. vices of experts in the employ of the dre underwriters. The Commissioner title of Chief V ¥. Doyle, Dy V hold that position, His salary was $5,500 and he was retired on half pay. AGED MINISTER DIES IN MT. VERNON PULPIT The Rev. Dr. Granger Stricken a* He Presents ew Pastor, Stricken with heart disease, the Rev. William A. Granger, seventy- four, President of the New York FHtate Conference of the Baptist Church, died In the pulpit of the First Baptist Chufeh, Second Avenue and Second Street, Mount Vernon. yésterday as he was introducing a new pastor to the church ‘Two physicians in the congregation were called, but Dr. Granger had éfed instantly. William F, Tilton, a trustee, announced Dr. Granger lind died, and the congregaton filed out with bowed heads, ° Sears SEeaeen et BOBS HER HAIR, GRIEVES, THEN DROWNS HERSELF abolishes the inarian. William enty-o1 de by drowning in Horse and one half miles on Friday night, ‘The In her clothes wea found a note ad- Gressed to her brother, containing the wentence: ‘Since my hair ts gone my looks are gone too, and it makes me 80 nery Bhe had possessed long curly hair, but recently had it bobbed. 20-26 West . Was the last to] * FLINT & HORNER CO., INc. A few yards from 3th Avenue Whose Breath z oR a AIR, fe ts os nry Ford Will Fire Any Man Smells of Booze Motor Mugnate’s Foremen Will Sniff and Observe and Out Goes the Tippler. DETROIT, Sept. 11.-—Henry Ford workmen in Detroit to obey his edict will enforce this rule by a system of ¢ Mr. Ford denies abso at he will install any s-cal stem in lis factory but will ent th ue ugh Iie facto! met, whom he numbers by the t and Mach foreman will he instructed 1 ve the men 4 superintendent to under bis control and it will not be necessary for the foreman to by to say that a man is drunk to him from Ford's sery The trace liquor on r rhe mote FISHERMEN SIVED BY IEBOX RAFT AFTER TUG SNK magnate Nas long been iple of the Votstead tiaw Castaways Adrift Many Hours Rescued by Steamer— Wrote Farewell Notes. ft — NEWPORT, R. L, Sept. U.—Cling- inz to an Icebox on which they had fe Lyon and Edward W faven, Conn,, were niles off Block Island just as they vad about given up. They had left West He jay morning on a fishing t wower bout Ino when, while about 100 milgs off Block Island their bout be- gan\to take water from & leak whieh ould not be checked. .Both men, who are more than sixty years old, work- od feverishly. Looking about something to save them, thotr ¢ ested in the icebox. The ice was jniokly removed and the box ‘carried orward and lashed to the bow of the sinking power boat This quick thinking saved them, The icebox served pontoon, and Mthough the Ino was wholly sub- verged, the buoyancy of the box pre- ented it from takifg a final plinge, this, improvised pontoon cling Lyon und Labse. As the hours ed by without a vessel in sight nen began (9 give up hope, Phey scribbled on the Icebox what wed were their last words otify Mrs. L, 1 Lyon, No. Street, West flaven, “We are writing this In the without hoy Good by, ma and brother.” “It 18 now neon and nothing in sight." e 2vs good by to Lulu snd the boy.” There were also other sentences giving the name of the »wer boat, wore exhausted and ready to their hold, the: 1 aiter- . when Engineer Joseph Church f the fishing eteamer William A. Wells saw a speck on the ocean and urned his telescope on it. The steamer gave three blasts to cheer he castaways and soon picked them wut of the water Thetr waterlogged hoat sank while an effort was being made to tow It in, but the leebox re- mained afloat and was brought into Newport ee 3400 DIAMOND IN FOWL’S CROP Woman's Find Makes Her Sunday Dinner Cheap. GLOUCESTER, N. J,, Sept. 11, A diamond pin, said to be worth $100, was found in a chicken which Mrs. Michael Kelly of No. 107 Middiesex Street ing for dinner ‘ell messi Lahse of West sirten th saved several y 1 from a fowrk was purchased bateher Mrs, Kelly thought the pin was of no value, but an expert pro- nounced the stone a diamond of fine quality. Sisccensse of purpose! How much that achieves. By concentrating upon the one task of good values in good furniture, we are en- abled to know furniture and furniture values, Examine the furniture and examine the valuesand you'll seehow our specialization results in lower prices to you. 36TH STREET starting to-day, will foree his 72,000 that none siinll use intoxicants. He ‘servation in lis factories, and ve time ft has been a stri rin his factory that ity to be using liquor, wine wuld be immediately 1 sald to-day that he did not nyey the impression tut n would be required to “smell the breath’ of every man in the factory, bat almply to use a little Iservation Will, observe — the miah any of the ts ter," and an investi {be made to determine how men spend their leisure hours Alno a strie f police records will be kept, an y man in Ford's employ. ed for drunken- ness will be dism Ford alse ha his. for in elaborate inapeo flon system for observing living s men, and the Hquor dealt with in’ the zh these Inspectors, these methods the entire Ford factory police system wil! he used to enforrs orders. conditions of Inf tained! by Ford com pany officinis shows that Federal and State authorities. have been only partly »asful in enforeing prohi- bition and restricting the production of intoxicants In Highland Park and te newel where the — principal Ford plants are located THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1922, I MILLER. (; New York Paris Of fice—10 Faubourg Poissonniere B. Altman & Cn, America’s Foremost Specialists OPPENHEIM.CLLINS & C 34th Street — New York The Wool Fabrics Dep’t has now ready for selection’ a remarks ably attractive collection of the fashionable A Special Offering—Tuesday Our Own Recent Importation of \ Suitings and Coatings for Autumn and Winter Paris- Beaded Blouses in which the textile movelties now being presented in the mew outer- garment models (imported and other- wise) are prominently featured, as well as the rich colors and color com- binations just being introduced. A Rare Purchasing Opportunity at 15.00 Overblouse models of Crepe de Chine richly beaded. The newest neckline and sleeve-lengt hs are featured. Bleck, Navy, Brown and Barberry. Especially interesting are the smart and effective two-tone boucle brocsdes; the mew duvetyns and miatelasse; the movelty check tweeds, in soft, warm shades suggestive of the moors im Autumn; the supple broadcloths and wool repps. And quite worthy of particular mention are the mew. fur cloths, so inestimably chic for the popular jaquettes and wraps. Among these are broadtail, ermine, i 1 karakul—the latter nable in the modish tan and plati- num shades so much in demand. (First Floor) Madison Avenue - Fifth Avenue 34th and 35th Streets . New York as interpreted iG in the slippers (a hy 1 Hiller dames MeCreery & Co. FIFTH AVENUE 34TH STH nnouncing the } Ul Openin iy nee ie td shows a distinct advance in.the Art of Shoemak ing and in which rare Beauty and finest Quali- ty join in an irresistible appeal Sale! Boys’ Chinchilla Overcoats speciat at LO.OO The Chinchilla in these coats ts of a qual- ity which is known to wear well. A qual- ity which we certainly could not offer at this price had we not gairied’a special concession. Every coat is entirely of wool, even as to‘lining and the shades: Blue, Brown, Gray and Sand. are guaranteed to be fast color. Convertible collar and 4 pockets. Sizes 3 to 10 years. [Third Floor] Brooklyn Chicago REAL ESTATE ADVERTISEMENTS FOR SUNDAY WOPLD "ret orem : ; THE UP Bs §) fash,