The evening world. Newspaper, September 21, 1922, Page 22

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= “A FORD A DAY. 1} Bpecial Additiona’ Prize Daily for Contributions to This Page for Four Weeks. le OPEN TO: ALi READERS. Rg Name of Winner in To-Night’s Pictorial Edition. MANHATTAN. HIS TREASURE, d He boarded n Madison Avenue car at 59th Street—a healthy-louk- ing youngster about cleven years old, with blue eyes and a jolly smile. He seemed to be in an awfully good humor, After awhile he drew a crumpled roll of paper from his pocket. Ho held it very carefully, ulmost tenderly, 1 thought. I wondered what It contained. While I was doing so, he opened the paper and \qerinned. In the paper was a tooth—one that showed evidence of » it extraction—Efie Dee, care of Goldsmith, No. 102 West 85th Street. ‘i RIDING IN STYLAS. , One Dollar is World, Post Office A SCRAPPY AFTERNOON On 34th Street to-day I heard two] Strolling up Broidway this afte: girls tn a taxicab shouting to the driver Tr witnessed four fights, ‘The firsts al to atop, He drew up beside the curd. Wout 9 gia ie wuckn compa aoityty collaxen, West Third Street, was between an the girls hopped out, their arms full|Alredale dog and a big cat, ‘The cat of bundles. The contents of both their | won after adminiotering three vicde Purses just sufficed to pay hapa Mr swings to the nose, The second bout bi lee Sti teenie: A ett ba was staged between two girls In front ‘us trying to make a splash by driving} Grace Church. They «wung at each home in a taxi before our neighbors.” |other With & parasol and a hamdbag “Yes, £ guess it's shanks’ mare for| Doth preved poor shots, missing thelr us for the ether ten blocks,” agreed }aim, They were reparated by som ‘the other. young mep and it was a fifty-fitty But a kindly pou! in the taupulne | draw, crowd took up a collection, “ind the girls] The third eet-to was caveman stuff were “a on, BROOKLYN. of eight or nine took out himself en route to his destination, {n dhe spinning the top on the floor of the car. No. 1289 Union Street, Brooklyn. weon speeding toward at Mth Street. A young man who had * contented and happy been enduring a tonzue-lnshiry deliv- w No, 170 Kighth Avent ered by a young woman, suddenly tired of ty He swung his right to her Jaw. sites eae. ending her belligerency and her flow of language. ‘The fourth battle was on ‘While standing at thé corner of Park |i7th styeet, between Fifth aid Sixth ‘Avenue and 12ist Street I sew a boy! Avenues, whero two short, slooky men Fiding @ bicycle to whose seat was at-l about fifty years of age battled furlous- tached a pillow. Many persons stopped ty tor about ten minutes. Neither ap- ‘to look at the boy, but he continued rid-| peared to have the advantagp. The img, heediess of the stares.—John Me- |, LETS HOPE 80, Box 185, City Hall Station. TELL YOUR STORY, IF POSSIBLE; IN A TOP IN THE SUBWAY. In the Seventh Avenue Subway bound for Brooklyn a youngster p top and string from his pocket and amused THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, ‘1992. EVENING WORLD PAGE OF BRIGHT, UNUSUAL HAPPENINGS REPORTED BY EVENING WORLD READERS a O make this news feature even more entertaining and interesting “Special Prizes are to be awarded Dail; T paid for every item printed; the pias are in addition. Send them to “What Did You See? WRITE ABOUT HAPPENINGS IN YOUR OWN NEIGHBO! NOT MORE THAN 125 WORDS. ‘STATE WHERE THE THING WRITTEN ABOUT TOOK PLACE. WRITE YOUR OWN NAME AND ADDRESS CAREFULLY AND IN FULL, CHECKS ARE MAILED DAILY, For the best stories each day: FIRST PRIZE, $25; SECOND PRIZE, $10; THIRD PRIZE, $& TEN PRIZES of $2 each for ten next bést stories. These prizes are in addition to the dollar paid for each contribution published. Ht you witners @ serious mecident, the putbreak of what threatens to be a BIG fire, or know of any otffer BIG news story, telephone for the CITY EDITOR of The Evening World. Liberal awards for first big news. BE SURE OF YOUR FACTS, ; WEEKLY PRIZES. RegutarCAPITAL PRIZES for the Best ries of the Week to Be Distributed Among DAILY Prize Winners Other Than Those to Whom the Ford Care are Awarded: FIRST, $100; SECOND, $50; THIRD, $25; FOURTH, $10, ij 2 ! s OUT OF TOWN. NOT SO GROUCHY AFTER ALL, I was in a crowded Hudson River trolley car, sitting at the where the seats face each other across the aisle, when, at Pall Junction, a woman with a tired boy of about five-got on, She down next to me, while phe youngster squeezed into a narrow next a decidedly grouchy-looking man opposite, The little boy leaned his head on the man's arm and smiled me complacently, but the man, annoyed, moved a trifle. The Iii boy only nestled the cloger and his confidence was justified, foi when a curve in the track made the car lurch, throwing him awdj from the grouch, the latter suddenly put out bis arm, enfolded tH kiddie, and held him comfortably against his side untfl he I b car.—H, M. R, No. 615 Monroe Avenue, Elizabeth, No J. y and Weekly. SORHOOD. kman 4000 and ak company of hiswmothe Mrs. G . by day or two later. relyn A. F, Green, iy bs DADDY! DON’T BE DISCOURAGED. If your contribution does not appear on the day following that , on whieh it was mailed, do not be discouraged. All contributions ure read, Awards are made for merit, Recelpt of one prize does not bar the receipt of others. Several contribu- tors have recelved three prizes for one story—the $1.00 paid for cach story printed, the $25 prize for the day's best story and the $100 prize for the best story of the week. Definite time and location of incidents described in contribu- tions count in making awards. BRONX MEETINGS IN THE PICTURES. It may appear a IMPROMPTU TRAFFIC COP. * During the temporary absence of a trafic policeman at Fifth Avenue and|Hackensagk, yesterday, a horse becayd 23d Street one afternoon recently I saw | frightened? at an automobtite. @ motorman leave his car, which stood [animal leaped about, broke sem in thes midst of a great flock of con-|harness and started to run away. gested vehicles and calmly straighten|faces of the two boys in th out the tangled traMc. He waved his} blanched, for the, driver had. lost arms this way and that as a traftle|reins. But one was equal to the oct cop does, When the way was clear ne|sion. Leaping to the horas back, re-entered shis car and went on his|stabbed the reins and stopped the mm way.—Bert J. Garvey, No, 71 Ames|away. Then he got back on the dri ‘Avenue, Rutherford, N. J. seat and drove off. But his companit rode home on « bus—he had had qui YOUTH STOPS RUNAWAY. At Cedar Lane, near Main gtr intreduced a screw driver as »] On Knickerboeker Avenue to-day’ I] At Wirt 2 FCO: enough for one di ‘har! Lean, No. 1179 Madison Avenue. nm and ¢ rn 4 7 aa ait be - = t Fifth. Avenue and 12th ‘Street : aay, TOURIST COMFORT. gh for one day.—Charlsa M FA bs ns er os Re me pere ter taw a fechje old mpny engrossed in| Brooklyn, to-day, T saw a tmotorm At ‘the matinee atthe Palace Theatre to-day, when the “Weekly orhay on Brdad near Market Street, pe 43 Grove Street, Ridgefield How TO CLEAN sproracuns. [iin 'Stroct.., ey eaching a baby of twelve or fourteen | atop his car in the middle of the Mo Review” was shown, T was delighted bdfond measure, during the seclinunt Bollt tia Packart eine] An old man on the Lexington es ‘ sates showing of pict of the i , 1 mei ckard tw! pooner wai knteate ce-eouide months “ take his first steps. * They|during the rush howr and wave hi owing of pictures of the beauty Aageant ut Atlantic City, to see my | COSI” the chassis was Iehgtherod A FREAK ACCIDENT. fremis ‘and, preparatory to reading| In Christopher Strect tecdag 7 sav [%ee having a lot of fun, and when the] hand toward a wind Framed ‘nth mother, who Is a resident of that city, among those viewing thé |four and a half feet to carry’ the long] Near the busy section of the tow: te ema took a worn dottar hill from| a gray-hatred woman Birelrncd Qiong child tired of it his grandfather. took yw T saw a woman of about thir pageant. ‘i Peer, he Spartimnt had @ bulli-is short tine ego 1 was comic. tim Me pocket and polished hid elanses with | adsarbed in a racing ‘‘dapar? ahoot [him ti his arms and walked away, What] ty, a gray tyured man and. worvr But this was only a part of my strange experience while watch- [1a "Sten Smpio roomy “for aloes | small Eade aoekee satan oie ’ mi Sam' hich: ako 0 = . i : the . " z * hae i rs ae geen tee’ pains p Baa pics Blot aan a change a few years wili bring; the a child trying to di «baby ing the review. When pictures of the ceremonies at the bier of fing quarters and luggage compart-| man and child in a Ford delivery, pn ge a Rigen T tried it I] to the stares of pedeatriame, ona [280d man probably growing feebler and | attention to the motormany For thr Michael Collins were shown I recognized among other mourners, one |™ehtsi & ‘oor almost large enough} Quickly turning the car, the man 4 ind” it worked amagingly well.—| without taking her eyes a the [the boy huskier, walking without a8-] minutes the efforts gontint whi f ident. friend Sh o dance ie music a baby | it down the hit, and then TI 1 Pru 3.c AOR MOSHE ame dda | osor wore Dae oe pec the Taixtance and possibly alding the grand-| passengers craned thelr nee ae of my oldest friends. She married an Irishman some years ago and Victrola and all the comforts of home.|the cause of the woman’s $ boarded a street car and disp. ‘Mther—Mrs, Helen V. Taylor, -No. $25) whut it was all about und men delayed | WoW lives in Ireland.—Mrs. M. Welss, No. 946 College Avenue, Bronx. ff velit trom South Dakota to Wash: baby carriage, with the baby in It, amet ared.—Witkam P. Mee, ‘ tanhope Street, Brooklyn, 7 by the resultant traffic block 1 ! : .—M a «, | folled out of the back of the car. ee, No, 43 at and swore. ‘Then the baby sew. thy POLICE METHOD THE GALLANT SHOEMAKER. ington, D. C.—Mrs. J. ishing, No.| tunately, {t had landed on its wh THE EF cor, Norton . MOViIE® IN THY HOME bt Sal en z A A ti Broad 141 Hollywood Avenue, East Orange,| and had rolled down the hill wi traffic policeman near my home pe rete 3 eo ME. man, clapper hy onda an. On Sixth Ayenu this morning T saw Alighting from a bus at roadway tn, y, ‘ wr ie Yesterday afternoon was amswering a THEY DIDN'T BAT AN EYE. T saw n flerce gun fight between two thee pis del used liey ea | neve cops having a little talk when a} and 168th Street at 10 o'clock last night, -_ . Pirie eceaent The baby was Guestion respecting & street number.) In Contrat Park to-day 1 naw on «| masked bandits whlle « Girl was trying ee a eee eth dee ENerHt Tait boy passed and said, “The ‘boss | Young lady caught one of her heels A COURTEOUS KITTEN. Divllod SHLGEL, Send bout which I had asked him, when} iow bush what appeared to be a number eeiecly Ie : ak iy car, ‘The sts rill, No. 604 Sixth Avenus, Broo! esa i Reet 11[22_the step and the heel was torn off! One of my, two kittens waited this ivision Street, Peekskill, N. Y. guddenly I saw his expression become|of puff balls. Looking closer I discov wand both its were wounded, . gen s coming,” whereupon all]She was in a dilemma, as there were nil k fons He put out bis hand and vigor | cron the to he wate ede ue eey. [but none hit elthe. myself or the girl, hree id behind’ showease in a shop |no shoe repair shops open at that hour. | fronmnSyowt that was Got levee onsen nfh RAG CURLERS. qusly rubbed my chin, at the same time | their nocturnal dights, ‘They were} 1 ho was dag bit pienty, of noise, while Ese BARRED, ndow until the “boss' passed. w, | Seeing her dificulty, a man arose from} to permit both to drink at once. When]. A flapper about eighteen pooper ng Ay kindly and reppectflit) sleeping. with their heady down and jie Breit its yelle aves y. : yr Street, between Driggr * NG, 988; Southern Houlevaea his seat on a park bench, escorted the] the one that was waiting thought the| got on a train with mo a few d A you've got vss on your| their fect holding on ton branch, 1] All this was musle to my eark as T at esau’ Avenurs, ts a play rae " Jyoung woman to the bench, removed) other had had its share it announced | as I was coming from Pleasantvill Set “whe ‘Says our police are not] rhook the but they slumbered on.— | *eWing to-day, for the bandits were my trafic being barred. ‘TI save Min OWN E “ her shoe and wént across the streel.|ithe fact by cuffing {t on the head, to Grand Central. Her hair Sthe Fisest?”— Ada No. 206] ae wee fsa No. 366 West sti | M8 aged eight and ten, playing with} fio email boys in a little wagon on DWN SHINE, In a few minutes he returned. The] whereupon the’ satisfled one walked | put up on white rag curlers, T fd 97th Btreet, Street. sic oy pistols, and the girl was my four-] Driggs Avenue. One of them aug- Lust night on Prospect Avenue, near} heel had been adjusted. Kneeling In] away, licking its chops, and the other |all the way to the city, debating: > ib year-old iauishter, her car pelns her| gested turning down AMonitor, Dut | Stat Street, I saw a man walk up on a chivalrous fashlon i replaced the shoe} Kitten breakfasted.—Miss Viola Volk, | myself whether I ought to tell 3 ED. inverted high chair, As I watched them! the other + the |shoo shining stand and watt for the|on the girl's dainty foot. He was %]No, 13 Union St. Ridgefleld Park, N. J. A FRIEND IN N I thought I would not exchange places with one who has quiet and—solitude.— Mrs, H. bk. Spuler, No, 165 Guernsey Street, Brooklyn. . ‘doy about six years old, suspended from one of the pickets of a high fron fence. In trying to climb over, his trousers had become caught and he couldn't get loose, but I noticed he didn’t struggle much. When he saw me, “Lady,” he said, “can you help me down It was with no little difficulty I managed to disentangle him, Hie first question, the expression ofa thought that probably had weighed ~ “heavily on his mind, was, “Did it tear much?” Next he asked, “Gotta pint) Sizing up the situation, I told him to stand right still and let me take a stitch or two—I always carry a needle and thread in my bag. and he was glad to comply. thing for you some tim,” he said as we “Maybe I can do spme' parted.—Arretta L. Watts, No. 501 West 121st Street BROOKLYN. YOUNG PSYCHOLOGISTS, To-day while walting for a car at Myrtle Ayenue, near Bridge Street, J saw two Ittle*giris about six years old standing near a store, As a woman en- tered or left the store the smaller tot would say wW tho other In a tone loud enough for the woman's benefit; “Oh, hat @ pretty lady. T want to’ be ai retty as her whet T grow up.” Most of the women were far from pretty, but none failed to give the ebil- dren a njfkel or a few pennies before walking away with a pleased smile How's that for applied psychology Walter D. Garrison, No. 1642 Madison Street, Brooklyn, THE NEWLYWEDS My husband and I decided +that a ing Tp are us' looking » cl him a group anid tt Her a penn Greene moon. Imagine our surprise when | 8t diun we learned they were a doctor and his wife from Pittsburgh, that Mey had becn married twenty years and WILD WEST IN SUBWAY, T saw to-day a man who must have], * THE OLD HAT. 1 saw a young man come out of » frequen s iy % my Ms come out nd look into the car and] and sped for the Bronx, expecting him | Roemagreal cowboy, I say “must have} hat store at Broadway and Fulton] had two sons, eighteen and sizteen Vie i ook h ‘ = ‘ care a They both enjoyed hen hurry bi to the hous Our}to show up there about a week froin ween’ tae wore the regalia of} Street to-day with a hut bag. \ He took] vere i see. eat Yo, [curiosity was aroused and to-day {next year. Imagine my surprise, upon fhe calling. lc was bow-legged and] off his straw hat, gave it a kick and 687 John’s Place, Brooklyn. happened to sve the actor making one} arriving home, to find his car parked _cbe was carrying under his arm a partly] sent it spinning in the alr. ‘The wind erate snipe fo the chr and & peed} in front and tiny brotherin-taw ennniny rapped-up saddle. And what madelcarried it down the street, Instantly | 1VER\THE HILLS AND FAR AWAY.{{NO couse of thew. | “Ob,” he sald. fmt His had quit sulking di- his Sprearpice evmusing gas’ that. he tree or four mon started in pursuit of | While on a B. R. T. train passing the wae 'n treet Station of the! jt, One caught it and brought it bach | Kings Highway station late last night B. R, 7. during a rsh hour, and 1 won-|ty ite owner win in he eatirige nae | Eaaw a little boy: aying out of an upper Gered if he really expected to get Into} not yet put on his new felt hat, He} window of a house and slide down a ® train with that saddie.—Herman A.|ihanked the gentleman v much, but | Pipe to the ground. wonder whether Kirschbaum, No. 70 Wasex Street, ns soon as his back waa turned 1 was running away.—Iva Dench, No. kicked dt away again, Again it was re- | 2052 nons Avenue, Sheepshead Bay, turned, and then he gave it to a boy, | Brooklyn, re Mary Grady, No. 157 William Street. eae A Brook, INTELLIGENT DOG, T saw oa dog to-day trying to cross ‘the street through a tangte of trafic. He rs Rell, wey and then the rush of vehicles made it too much for him. He]. while awaiting my turn in the moncy| laced officers were standing near. the looked helplessly about, cringing against | order department of the Weatern Unton gungway answering the bombardment the pavement. Then he spied a traftic|!downtown, [ saw an aged Chinaman] of questions asked by disembarking cop and rushing to him he crouched] with bulky package wrapped in aj passengers. I was standing beside an and Ncked his feet. The cop petted him} newspaper come to the desk and ask] Italian workman who had come wboar’ Sud in a moment traffic subsided suffi-| for a $1,500 money order for Callforntn.| to make some repairs and we were smil ciently to permit the dog to cross to the! The order filled out, he opened his ing at the officers’ patience and good other side—Irma Berkowitz, No. 86) package and counted out before an as-| humor. Just then a beautiful Italian Pew sith atrest, tonished group of spectators $1,500 In] girl smiled shyly at one of the vificers #1, $2 and §5 Dilla fn all stages of weal as she approached the gangway to 60 var, It took some time and thenJashore. ‘Tho officer quickly stepped’ for- ng Colcmnly | ward, removed his cap, bowed low and ia took her hand, The workman beside me stiffened and a hard look came Into his eyes, "He fool her," he mutte fool her," The oMcer spoke to the girl in Italian, ‘alsed her hand to his lips and Kiesed it, anced at the workman and saw hiv eyes guffused with tears. T asked him whaf the officer had said to the irl, 4 "God be with you," he answered.— Charles Menzies, No, 860 49th Street, Brooklyn, s ‘THE INDIFFERENT CHILD. T was seated at my desk. in a Queens INFLATING A FOOTBALL, public school, engeged in admitting new : puptis, when I noted that the next in Prat ey small boys playing tn the| jing was @ diminutive girl of seven. Her iow UD thelt: football ta the able to] yea shone and her cheeks wero aglow DRAMA ON A DECK. The Italian ohip Count Kosso's gold- A CHINAMAN'S CAS: SPES ONLY THE mi@GEsT, Whilé cleaning windows in a Ywenty- story building on 26th Street at Broad-| left the office. —<« Way to-day, I saw the largest xhip in| West 18th Street. the world, the Majestic; the largest building in the'world, the Woolworth, BEAL COURAGE. end the largest city in the world, New| From a Lexington Avenue car to-de York—sights unequatied anywhere, and{ at Dist Street 1 was looking at a florist T’ve travelled quite # bit.—-Patrick Suill-| Window in which was displayed a mana n, No. 151 Bast 92d Street. of bittersweet. Just then along cai @ boy with one leg. He had a skate on “his single foot and he was flying along with the ald of @ pair of crutches, against one of which he ca rled a bundle of newspapers, His won- derful cheer and coura + made my eyes smart.—Alice ©. Schuster, No 1469 Lexington Avenu A MODERN INSTANCE, Last night across the way from my epartinent I saw a man in the xitchen wearing an apron and washing the dishes while his wife sat on the window = alll ameking a clgarette.—W. J, Mun- ning, New York. , OLDEST BUSINESS WomAY, YT saw to-day probably the oldest uciness woman in the world. She is eighty-seven years old and conducts a| POW UP thelr football to the necessa hardness, Th had : » sho explained to ine Gry goods business from a pushcart in| toe the football te ane arent <four years old, but I didn't to front of No: 207 Rivington Street. fhe £ " ‘ parked at the curb, ‘| bring her to schoo! ‘cause #he docen't Pema cence meres at she said the spare tire, ‘placed the toct,| know anything. She oan't rend: thn she was in good health, that she is| bail over the nosle’ of the tn can't even write her own name, sho t on no one and has heen in ' ey, tae sand plays all day and in the open air for twenty-six m to caro whother #he has a which, incidentally, she at- '—Krances.M, J. ‘Man- good health.—-Philip Pearl-| Wallace Mondacheto, No, 680 West] ahan, No, 84 Jefferson Avenue, Brock- dbave a lit- “4 FORD A DAY,” FOR FOUR WE N A sign that says it’s a ple no treo 4% allowed?’'—Jacob Goid- {he learned the bootblack had gone to|tion.—Rose Feder, return for an|Street, Bronx. “We're the cle: ‘They were! 4 handsome automobile s his door. Now we he ‘the olock in the car ts th timeplece on the lot.” hid: “Don't gow bootbigek. “He sat flv reet and 8$ some tenements where the all a number of not y children. One» ner than the AN ANIMA penny, remarking cht run *up you hi the ¢ .eross the court. He p: ine) than: évery more the first floor, but stopped at, the of them aire out fo nd and serxtched on the pane, | A penny. This morniy girl opened the s and gay than usuitl und peach. Ife hell it in his mou I hand reached “Endy, dndy 1 ing toward c ich is the fop. He s¢ { home, ind began to ea hea, No. 21 th of them ny.—Anna Warshauer, Street, Brookly THE BALKY CAR, clock. ner time and nearly all day nds out-" noticed ubers of the family though J p la half hour after I did, ing it was (he same way. boro Bridge 1 ntly that m Laurence Wels-|taken a shorte Seventh Street, | me.—Morrls A. 2 yn. Yesterday’s Special Prizes Phi A Gis od oR Ford Car. CHARLES J. O'LEARY, No, 617 East 188th Street, Bronx, (Winners of Ford Prize pi Evening World, for Identification.) First Cash Prize, $25. CH. LANE, No. 168 West 86th Street. Second Cash Prize, $10. MRS. M. F. KARENEFSKY, No. 1038 Hoe Avenue, Bronx Third Cash Prize, $5. MISS ASTRID RUNDQUIST, Mountain Lakes, N. J Ten Prizes of $2 Each. Ff, JUANK No, 117 Park Kow, BERNARD ZYMET, No, 626 West 162d Street EB, J. LYONS, No. 419 Court Street, Brooklyn HAZBL A. LEWIS, No, 481 Fourth Street, Brooljyn MRS. 'T. SWAN Emplre Boulevard, "Brooklyn, W. Iau FARRINGTON, } 16 Ditmas Avenue, Brooklyn. MINNIE BRAUN, No, 20Hf Bryant Avenue, Bronx, JOHN I CONNOLLY, No. 114 Rockland Avenue, New Dorp, MRS. J, NELIMAN, 12th and Van Wyck Avenues, Col Voint, ta I PRANCES GR ONK, No. 16+Mulberry Street, Providence, R , Read to-day's stories, Pick tho ones you think b Winners will be announced In this evening's Night Picto: (Groen Sheet) edition and in other editions to-morrow. EKS ao AO---9 h. ‘course home, ickson, No, 883 East minutes before | shoemaker enjoying his evening recrea- enbery, No. 277 Drigys Avenue, | inner would not Brooklyn, hour, whereupon he got down, opened ie: drawer, took out the shining para- THEY CLE > UP, pherhalia und shined his shoos himself. On my way toh e each morn: |= Lilian B, Elkan, No. 758 Kelly | parently partially paralyzed, to step up BEGGAR, To-day as { stood at my window I saw|to it. the fire escape ed a window | escorted her to the subway and saw her 0 Crotona Avenue, Bronx, My brothy aw couldn't get couple seated at our table at the n the-hands swelve-rooit bungi=Fthan eight miles an hour out of his car Runnymede Hotel, Atlantic City, |1oW with spacious grounds opposite my fas it foygwed mine to Mount Hebron were newlyweds on theirl. honcy. | bone lives w well-known actor, Always! Gemeterm® L. I, yesterday, and a! ed along the road he Return- At Queens- waved goodby to him only decent} rectly after 1 had left him and he had beating ¢ Yeport Immediately to City Editor, PECIAE PRIZE---TWENTY-SIX MORE DAY§ poondag t dder again. He passed the thire floor\and stopped at the fourth, w tched on the window, but evidently there was no one fe then mounted to the roof his peach.—Mary 8.1. not daring to. Just before we the tunnel at 96th Street she cf produced a pocket comb and small) ror and dreased her hair as D if she were at home in her own bot Every one smiled, but she No;~1020 Simpson . A ONE-LEGGED “SIR WALTER. I was about to assist a woman, ap- PAID NO FARE.. On my way here from Elizabeth a man seated himself beside me on the train, slouched down In the seat, pulled his hat over his eyes and pretended to] unaware of ft. As it was a rainy be asleep. When the conductor came] I wished I had cour-ge to do as around for tickets paid no atten-]she lad done, as my bobbed hair tion, but got off at New Brunswick] far from. éurly when I reached without paying his fare.—J, Pollak, | office.—Mrs. Marion B. Lee, Indian New Brunswick, N. J. Koad, Greenwich, Conn, AS THE HEART Is. Last night at First Street, Bayonne’s Little Coney Island, Tf sitting across from the carousel waen I noticed an old couple comin across the floor, She was at Jeast seventy years of age, he look older and both carried canes. She was trying to persuade him to rid with her on the carousel, but he refused to do so. Finally she gave up the argument, and, helping the old man to bench, set off for a side by herselg Did she pick a chair seat? Shi did not. Mounfing one of the horses, she got as much thrill kiddies all around her. Every time she passed the old timer on bench she “kidded” him and threw kisses at him, we ‘The. last I saw of the pair, she was dragging her escort toward the Ferris Wheel.—Martin Schoenhut, No. 503 Broadway, Bayonne, N. J. 8 the curb at St. Nicholas Avenue and 18st Street yesterday when a one- legged war veteran on crutches beat me After ‘helping her, safely to the idewalk this one-legged “Sir Walter” aboard a train.—James F. Poikey, No. 550 West 190th Street, Bronx. RICHMOND. ALL HONOR TO HIM.* As I approached Satlors' Snug Harbor from the direction of Port Richmond, § I saw the attractive grounds and bulldings, In the distance I saw a herd of cattle that furnisies milk and butter. 1 saw the gardens.where the fruit and vegetables are raised. I saw the homes of those in charge, separate from the fine buildings wherein the sailors, live. I saw the chapel, a beautiful building. | And- then 1 saw the sailors,’ a great number of them, altting around the beautiful groun and thought that probably many of them had passed through shipwreck and other perils of the sea, but now were snug in harbor. And then I thought of the man whose kenerosity and foresight had made aj! this possible,—Mrs, M. Brown, No, 764% Amboy Road, Tottenville, 8. I. ATHLETIO GIRL, Two, well dressed 7oune girls na proached onesot the subway turnstiles © waiting Bt at Grand Central Station to-day as 1{® Today T saw a sparrow golting his vas exiting, ‘The first. dropped two}'wnch in a pecullar manner. He would nickels in the slot and passed: throug! | \op on the radiator of an automapile more A RADIATOR MEAL. : - , QUEENS. THE POPULAR UNDERTAKER A silver Toving ‘cup stoag in the aut when the other attempted to mak } nd pick out the insects that were] Jow of an undertaking establlshs 1o "te o-day and pausin oO rem ve cl Bre PANES Me eae one hard on{ caught in the front of its radiator. | tion on it, I learned it had been’ aw laid one hand Rosen ee etn ae ankles fashed in| After cleaning it thoroughly he would the air as she vaulted over. “Darned|fy to the next car. He must hay \f | was going te.put in another nickel bugged” a score of cars while J I_heard her remark.—I, A, Clartus,! watched him.—D, Jay, Culver, South Prince Bay, 8. 1 Schroon, N. ¥. to the undertaker as firat prize »pularity contest conducted by Joterans of Foreign Wars.—W, Ry Elmhurst. WILL IT GET RESULTS? 1 saw the following sign posted the Long Island Railroad station Forest Hills: “We are interested ollecting cigar bands, cigarette ba nd stubs, (newspapers, ete., etc send to heatiien countries so. they se them to litter_up thet r tions and other public. pla: deposit such articles in the recepta easter to collect them that t Hills Civic Committe ‘anaday, No, 6 Roman Avenue, Fo THE CAREFUL SMOKER. Yesterday I saw a man throw a cigar- ette out of hts automobile on a country INJURED NEAR A HOSPITAL. Four of us altting on the fire escape of St. Vincent's Hospital saw @ runa. , a i Huy Torae end tte Age tn tne tant far| road, ride on a short distaitce, then stop attendants to look after persons {t|the car, alight and walk back to see if spilled from the wagon it was drawing. the fire in the fag really was out. Tt seems a bolt which had come loose] Gilchrist, Wilbur Street, Yonkers, } tn the shaft of the wagon kept digg = the horse in the leg, It ran @ THE BLUFJAY's RESCUE. \ % short distance from St. Vincent's} tm New Haven I saw some -children made a short turn which threw the man] playing with a young blueJay which was and boy who were fn tite wagon to the learning to fix, while the parent paving, fluttered frantically about, scream- ‘The horse tutned {nto the hoapitel| (ng shrill Aiscordant protests. A passing driveway and was bir erves by an Bt Itallan iceman stopped his praeon. tendant, Nuraea and internes ran out] aiighted, took the bird from the chil- ° Tate. dl ce tile nandatance of tre man leit wis cer ik acen a porch railing. | Weeent It There he tore pen the and boy, Tho man w “Row. you all go and play nomowhore|8%t Partook of a meal of ment but the boy was uncon else,""j said he, ‘and the old birds they | Pones —J. Aulbach, ‘No, 303 First rushed into the hospital and his cuts} come and get it. ‘The children moved nue, Astoria, ‘ and bruises dressed. Juctantly off and the {ceman drove . Pe peconyt i The man seemed more worrled about faway, the. parent bluejays ven- RODIN'S QUICK EYE. tho Wagon than the Ind.—George Row-|iured down and tho baby. bird, rea: Thad an experience while fishin, wre, St. Vincent's Hospital, West Brigh-| ured, few off with them.—Mrs, C, W.|Orange Lake that 1 believe never been duplicated. I was about to a & cast When a robin flew from the 0 ou, 8. 1, Rose, Camp Blueflelds, Hlauvelt, N. Y. CUTS HIGH COBT OF LIVING, A PICK-UP MBAL ehind me and snapped up\ the c restaurant I saw « wont] I anw an automobile run over ujOn my hooke—Walter Ostrander, an loat'a a tip for tho weltress, Anothor| chicken on Main Street yesterday. ‘The| West flat Street, Whitestono, Noman sat down in the place Just made] chauffeur, {natead of speeding off, — Vacant and wader cover of her hand-! stopped his car, alighted, pleked up the cies Kerehlet slipped tho tip Into hor puree] still fluttering bird, reached into his) On Jackson Avenue, Long Islan Tet her soe I had noticed, but sho| pocket for a knife and allt Ita throat.| to-day, 1 uaw a man wearlng ® vrdered her lunch calmly as if nothing| Then, after letting the blood run out,|#llk hat who was mented In a Fords had happenod.—Mrs, FH, Harkness, | he 4 the chicken Into the car and| driven BY a unitormed colored. Ne. 260 Fillmore Street, New Brighton, |droye away,—M, Hamuels, No. 27 Huck- feur,—D. Swanstrom, No, 111 Cr ‘ ley Btrest, Liberty, N. ¥, Btroot, Asporia, , A QUIET FEED, From an clevated station to-da; w a dog carrying.a paper bag tf REAL CLASS ON LONG ISLA) 8. 1, 4

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