The evening world. Newspaper, October 21, 1922, Page 3

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THE BARONESS WHO BECOMES BRIDE AT WEDDING TO-DAY FLYNN TO EXPLAIN CONCOURSE PAVING AT BUS HEARING Bronx Commissioner Acted for People’s Best Inter- ests, He Says. HIS GARAGE DESERTED. | Left “High and Dry” by Bus Company, Losing $2,500 Monthly Rent. Commissic of Public Works William J. Piynn of the Bronx will be the principal witness before the ‘Transit when Commission next Monday Clarence J. Shearn resumes for the commission the hearing into the general bus situation for the pur- pose of ayy determining what shall take in the reorganization plan of the 1 tr situation Coniunissioner Fiynn is undor sub- poena now and will In all probability be asked pertinent questions relative part buses % Baroness OLGA SONIA EERSOBIN O by PAUL PrOMPgON, gener ton Baroness Olga daughter of Sonia Serdobin, ul Michel 3uroness 1 to the direct testimony taken yestet-| serdobin of No. 262 West 33d treet sometimes as Acting Borough Presi- | Married at 4 o'clock this afternoon tn dent of the Bronx, in the matter of | St. Thomas’s Church paving the Grand Boulevard and] ‘The uride’s father was a Russian fitent te Be ceaniuatten city a who made home in New York for garage at Inwood and Cromwell Ave- |™Many years. Her mother was for- ues at 170th Street, the Bronx merly Miss Marie Estelle Willams of Contrary to the general impression | Staten Island that Flynn is enjoying # rental of} Mr. Disbrow and his bride will live $2,600 a month from the Concourse |at No, 883 Park Avenue. Bus Lines, Inc., Flynn will tell how ae Wmil Leindorf, owner of the Con- course tines, ert Flynn and his | LAXNESS IN TAX LAW garage “high and dry’ after four DENIED BY MELLON months and Leindorf returned his big moe double decked buses to his own Secretary Tells Frear Stand- garage at 136th Street and Madison Avenue. where the headroom had are H iwide i been deepened sufficiently to permit ard Oil Dividend Did the double deckers to enter without Not Evade Levy. injury. : Commissioner Fiynn would not talk] WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—Seeretary about the matter to-day, preferring} Mellon has made public a letter to await his appearance on the witness |ty Representative Frear (Rep,, Wis.) stand before the Transit Commisston . and there give his side of the matter | @cnying that the Treasury Depart- under oath. A Bronx politician close| Ment had been lax in enforcing the to Flynn, however, said that Flynn's] 1921 Revenue Law provision for reach- ofaetai conduct will be shown to have x dodgers. been in the best interests of the Bronx Mellon at the same timo sald and its traveling population in a fast ‘ ‘ gremag community which ¥ orely andre Ol Company sou New in need of bus service, Jersey, in declaring a 400 per cent. As for paving the main highway | dividend, hdd not evaded the law, so in tho centre of the Concourse, it] far-as the Treasury authorities had was explained that this improvement] aiscovered was Imperative whether a bus line| oY re i operated there or not, as the generat| The See Y NEOUS) LOL ESAT motor vehicle traffic on one of the] “It would seem that you are under a longest, if not one of the most beau-| misapprehension concerning the situ- tiful, drives in this section of the|ation as to this so-called stock divt- country had increased to such an] dend extent that some improvement was “Taking for istration the needed to give independent drives to} ard Oil Cov w local as distinguished from suburban | which you holder of its Wehicuiar trattic stock after he has received the new Mayor Hylan to-day issued anothe certificates or . has, altogether of his daily tucks on the Transit more than he had before, and Comm jon, he only new note herefore, so far as the holder is con- his reiteration of the allegation thit | ser there is no income to tax." the bus inqui: # political smok = > - Screen raised to confuse the voters Just before election, is a comparison ENTIRE DRY STAFF with the investigation of the Mever| HERE TO BE OUSTED Committee last year. DUKES ON VISIT TO MRS. VANDERBILT Yellowley to Replace All Political Agents. 5 ‘All local political strings will be cut Sir Paul. Says Romance|ana att tocat Prohibition agents will Began in Motorboat. be replaced by others from Washing- ton when ©. Yellowley takes office PAR 2 ssociater *ress) EATS: Get at (Associated Press) Tas Acting Director on Oct. 81, ac- air ale «dy Dukes, the latter] coraing to plans heing laid to-day by formerly Mrs. Ogden TL. Mills, were} ing successor to Prohibition Director happily ensconced to-day in the Paris | yay home of her mother. Mrs. W. K. Van-| imnese plans were sald to have been derbilt, who warmly greeted them 1 conference in the was attended by Sen and William M agreed upon at pital, which or Wadsworth when they reached here last night on noon trip from New York their honey “Mrs. Vanderbilt is simply over-] Ward, Chairman of the Executive Joyed over our marriage, and she] Committee of the Republican State Wants us to remain with her in her] Committee. Mr. Day, National Direc- Paris house just as long as we pos-|tors Haynes and Yelloyley also are sibly can," Sir Paul said to-day. "T] said to have attended, have decided to make my home in the] Separation of the field forces from United States and we have accepted} all connection with director's offic Mrs. Vanderbilt's invitation to live]is among the plans. The fleld forces with her in New York t is understood, will be in charge of A motorboat, at Nyack, which Sir Paul had|General Agent G. J. Stunon, N. Y., last summer a[been divisional chief in the factor in the ramance which led to section, One agent declared fully "99 his sudden and secret marriage two per cent.” of the local agents owe weeks ago, he sald. their appointments to politics PANTOMIME =| who has southern AUTOS KILL FOUR, |$11,252457 UMP URT SK, THREE | NCITY BUDGET FOR One Man, Hit by Truck, Left to Die— Four Caught After Crash. Tentative Figures Voted by Board Total $361,768,981, Biggest Ever Proposed. Four persons are others are mobile accidents of dead to-day from and] The ter budect for 1924 auto-|as adopted by the Board ef Dstimato totals $961, 768,891.59. The final budget ative city three dying yesterday. Hit by a commercial automobile in| must be adopted by midnight Oct. 31 front of his home, three-year-]and betwen now and then reductions old Jack Benns of No. 116 West} may be made but no Increases, As 68d Street died while being taken to] adopted last night, all proposed sal Roowdvelt Hospital James J. Ken-]ary increases were eliminated, In edy of No. 390 W! Brockiyn, the aver Wane tela for bee ls La aaa de homicide, : ak pen aes An automobile on Avenue A Knocked down at Third Street Albert Horn, nine, of No. 84 Avenue A, who died while being placed in an ambu- lance. Patrick, Brazozio of No, 2126 First Avenue was held. David Bauer, seventeen, of No. 12) Leslie Street, Newark, N. J,, was killed near his home when Hook and Ladder Truck No. 9 collided with his automobile and threw him to the pavement, No arrest was made. Struck by an automobile and left This increase over last year is $11,- and this budget fs tle largest ever proposed for this city The final budget is expected to ap- proximate the constitutional debt limit of the city, which has been expanded each year by adding to the assessed valuations on real estate and thereby the borrowing capacity, About $700, - 000,000 was added to the assessment lying on White Horse Pike, near|rotis for 1928 Hammonton, N, J., an unidentified.| 1 budget no well dressed man was killed by a Bue ptopeees * eget Se 2 motor truck. He carried letters ad-| fore the Board of Estimate for public dressed to James Stewart of Tona-|hearings and final action. Public wanda, N. Y. hearing have been set for Oct. 25 Mrs, Amelia Klein, thirty-six, of No, 151 Avenue C, was injured, prob- ably fatally, when she pushed the carriage with her infant daughter from the path of a five-ton motor truck which ran over the curbing at Avenue C and Ninth Street. She was internally injured. sSam- uel Goldberg of No. 623 East Nintn Street also was internally injured They are in Bellevue Hospital, Ste- phen Vasco, a shipping clerk, who was being instructed to drive, wa: held for reckless driving and oper: ing a machine without a license. Losing his way on Pelham Road near Willlamsbridge, the Bronx, George Lassoix, No. 738 Eighth Ave- nue, dashed his car against a tree, injuring two women occupants and a male companton, They wer and 26 at 10.30 o'clock Addressing himself to a group of newspaper men, a nandful of city em- ployees and members of the board— all that remained in the chamber for the final formalities in connection with the budget—Mayor Hylan defended the board and himself in measured words and a propitiatory tone. “I can say that the proposed bud- get for 1928 provides for no increases in salary—unless an error has crept in somewhere—except mandatory in- creases passed at Albany. That is true of members of my departments, those In the offices of the Borough or naeline O'Connor, twenty-seven.| presidents and in that of the Comp- ceived a possible fracture of the skuil| troller,” he said. “There have been and lacerations. She was taken to] Some increases put in the budget on Fordham Hospital. the claim of certain employees that Lillian Hyan, twenty-six, of No.|tbey are entitled to them under the military law. Of course, if it is found this claim is not proper they will }) cut out. “There was a bellef that the he of depargments receiving only $7, ny are worth more than that to 185 enth scalp and knees, Avenue, lacerations of nd George Hagos, thirty-eight, No. 738 Elghth Avenue, lacerations of head and nose. The last two left for home after being treated. _ = the cit Those positions have not CITY FREER OF CRIME, had a raise for twenty-five years. 1 reiterate there was a desire on the SAYS ENRIGHT REPORT Per part of the board and myself to give sincere and earnest men and women Arrests for Felonies Show 21 Cent, Decrease—Accidents Fewer, |!0 ti the Reno Ons Uist ‘A sharp decrease In fatal accidents a PURI WANE REE SOS in the streets and in felonies as com- oousidesinieiany amattare: pared with one year ago is shown tn] when it became clear that such in- a report made to Mayor Hylan by] creases would make the budget too Police Commissioner Enright. The| /#T&e tt was only right to curtail.” SOCIETY GIRL EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OOTOBER 21, STOPS WEDDING TO BRITISH FIANCE International Romance Knded by Miss ‘Thompson of Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA, Marie Louise Thompson, Mrs. Charles Trotter popular set, has broken Capt. Lionel George ¢ O., Lar Indian Army ors, Miss Thompson's mother announced 8 and society internas An elaborate wedding 1 to have been contemplated, of the was engagement April interested in romance « ‘Thompson was Americans presented to June § NO SOCIALIST CON ‘There Will be no Socialist candidate for Congress from the Twelfth Con- gressional district this year. ‘The peti- tion nominating BeyJamin Gitlow hav- ing been thrown out on the ground that he has lost his citizenship by con- viction of crime (criminal anarchy), the Socialists sought to substitute Louls Engdohl as their candidate, President Voorhis of the I stitute has been refused. Oct another RESS 21 daughter Thompson member of the young social her engagement sth KG King Hlecti nounced to-day that the petition to Miss CANDIE figures given out yesterday show that ing the third quarter of 1922, end- ed Sept. 30, there was a decrea of 21 per cent. tn felonies and a decrease of 14 per cent. in street accidents. A similar decrease {s found in fatal automobile accidents. The number of persons injured by automobiles dur- ing the three months" period Is, how- r, in excess of the filgures for the same period a year ago by more than 800. The figures for felonies and misdemeanor complaints follow Complaints, Arr ‘Lhe women want ‘em short. 1023” 302, 1992 | Ikewise adopted ut the co-operative Feioules 6,945 5,880 4.725] Women's C! Misdemenii . 8487 2407 26,881, 38.409] Women's Clubs at t uventie delit Juvenile elit aot 288 1,501 1,390] Tt wan Mrs. A Vice conditions are shown to have] dent of the Rainy Day Club, who tn- been somewhat more flagrant this} troduced the resolution yesterday rests for the third , : year are 2,208, as against 2,209 for|Passed It all tho other cities would the same period last yi follow. ‘Then, she said, all these ee dressmakers and designers ‘who are OUT OF WORK, TURNS OV GAS. Sick and out of work, Emil Klenment, forty-nine, turned on the gas in his fur- yoom at No, 801 East 63d Street to-day, When other roomers smelled gas and broke into the room he was dead. TWO MEN RISK LIVES, ONE DIES TO SAVE A DOG Would Be Re seuer of An- foisting upon us foolish little hug- tights (or to that effect) that dust the sidewalks would find we had a mind of our words own." Mrs. Palmer led the sex with all her old fire. She ts proud of her Rainy Datsles who, with a jood deal of courage and common sense, lifted women's skirts from the mire and was {n no mind to see them let down again, § was applauded enthusiastically The resolution scouted th tion of the dressmakers and « revolt of her e domina- gners: meeting of the City Hotel Astor {s any indication to-day M. Palmer, Pres|- and warned them their r whose lower edges v quite sweep the ground, laden dirt to the home. urges all women in health to insist that y ficlont material to p dom of all parts of the body ne full delegate body eration will meet Friday at t It is predicted the repre: 100,000 women when tives of approximately will decide unanimously tor the scis sors amd the Rain Club. An old-timer bre the faet that the first abbreviations of the Rainy Daisies were Mintted to five inches, but ety of silk stockings tien the new rinit per Keep Silk Stockings In View, Vow Of Women Opposed to Long Skirts Federated Clubs Want nt Them Short ar and Frown on Fangled Tabs and Little “Doodads.” That is, if the resolution requiring skirts to be seven inches from the ground and all the little tabs and “doodads” Federation w garments, nearly or bring gevm- ‘The measure interest of garments, including draperies and panels, be no nearer the ground than seven and cut in such manner and with # nches the fed- Astor, ta- imal Who Escaped Death Is in Critical State. SCOTTS BLUFF, Neb., Oct. 9 amie wi ot w= cs | When Greevy Couldn’t Keep Date houn, motion picture theatre manager, Wag taken from a —— wi fame ae coe Government irrigation ditch Hapless Suitor Is Also a Cop and Sweetheart Had to eb dekacat lh nc carota dc te ie Wait While He Made Arrest. which, disregarding his in- ability to swim, he plunged in If somebody will tell Probationary Policeman Robert Greevy where to rescue a favorite game dog. Calhoun had Killed a duck and the dog In retrieving it had wrote “A polle: beew caught in the swift cur- Greevy had a date with his girl rent of the canal, The dog last night All such dates are im portant This one was e 80. swam to safety. Ha waa to balk aes, no more, no less as y te In This Case the Do Dies, have two or three friends thie to Rescuer In Near Deat! show them how prompt he could ber SEATTLE, Wash., Oct, 21 and how good looking and how lucky she was —It was in vain that Vincent ‘All right Campagna leaped into a peat Greevy was whistling on his way down Third Avenue fire and rescued his setter dog, reached 65th Str¢ arenas Paddy, for Paddy 1s dead here | Timothy O'Leary of No. 316 Want in a veterinary hovpital, _| 84th Street in a in whieh 7 were Patrick O'C " ber; Campagna himself 1s at the | were Larrick © nelehon point of death from burns and = | nue, and Edward O'Gorman, No, 190 does not know the effort’ to Paddy ran down Jolie Avqnue Avenue A. O'Le: Renotch of No. 12 save was the one time well known music publisnaers Gilbert a he will use his next day off to tell them they man’s lot 1s not a happy one.” said a mo Grieve for Lover’s Grievous Fate 4 Sullivan hang out uithful when they of a“ to four George b> ew of Greevy ordered stepped three s stopped them to busy When O'Leary $1,000 bail und the other owas 11.80. Gree for duty at midnight no telephone. He wa until By t time had whtow! curb and O'Leary evy fred O'Leary of int was to 1 loose report off duty rh 1922, GIRL BLACKMAIL LURE FOR BOSTON BAND FACES TRIAL Charged With Victimizing Yale Men, Confesses, At- tempts Suicide. SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Oct. 21.— Bleanor Barnes, alias Marion Saun- der, and many er names, who tried to commit suleide when ar- rested here Oct from the Sprin, 16 has been released eld Genera) Hospita: and is now In Hartford, Conn., to face charges of bigamy and blackmail She was arrested in a Hartford lodging No. 70 Hopkins Street on complaint of Harris Levy, father of Abraham Levy, a former Yale student, whom she Is alleged to have blackmailed She was released (n $100 bail, but she fled to Springfield where she was arrested Sunday, Wailing in her sul- cide, she made a confession in which she says sho was a lure of the most highly organized blackmail gang that ever existed In New England [ts headquarters was in Boston According to her confession, sie and Mrs. Blanche Paul vere used by the Boston blackmai! ring to mtik Albert Victor Searles, a millionaire Boston artist of $61,000 two vears ago. She also spoke of Frank K. Mane- field, a wealthy New York silk manu- facturer; of victimizing two Yale students, and also of many gay pav- ties and Mngerie parades with stu- dents of Yale. The Boston blackmail gang, slice said, was composed of Boston law- yers who found the legal profession not remunerative enough and took up blackmailing as a side line. When Searles exposed his fleecing court triala followed, and it was proved that of the $61,000 res paid for silence Willlam J. Corvoran, then the honored District Attorney of Middlesex County, received $51,000. Corcoran was disbarred for his par- ticipation in the affair, Two other house at Boston attorneys, William J. Kelly and William J. Hartnett, were al: implicated. Following the expose, Wieanor Barnes and Mrs. Paul fled the city Since that thme, they have been ve- ceiving $80 weekly from the Boston headquarters of the gang. ‘The en- velopes in which the money came were marked, ‘from John W. Harve: Highland Ave., Somerville, Mass." eanor Barnes became acquainted with young Levy and other Yale atu- dents, Levy proved to be her down- fall. One night while in a lodzing house with him, she had a fake yatd made and he paid $800, all he had, for silence, but the Ring demanded more from Harris Levy, the father He became angry and investigated, with the result that he called a real raid at which Mrs Barnes waa arrested In the company of yong Levy me WALLACE REID, STRICKEN ILL, MAY BE BLIND Sereen Star Breaks Down and Quits Picture. LOS ANGELES, Cal,, Oct. 21. Wallace Reid, film star, has suffeved a breakdown and ono report is that he may never appear for another ple- ture, His relatives to-day admitted his illness but withheld {ts nature One report is that he had « stroke of paralysis, another that he has lost his sight, a third that he suffered a complete has has nervous collapse Ho hes been absent frow the Holly- wood studios for several days and Jack Holt has Leen substituted for him in a plet he was to have started next weel Mr. Reid's wife, Dorothy Davenport, and a physteian have tuken hint to a mountain resert for cure and treatment. T story of Reid's blindness suid it came from lights used {n making pie- tures, but at the Famous Players Lasky studios it |s denied that his iit ness is serious. ———— W. C. POTTER ABSENT FROM DIVORCE TRIAL Wite Yells arin Court Her Ke for Sal PARIS. Oct. 31-—Willlan ¢ Company, falled to appear yesterday for a conefilation apma tof his wife for divor Mrs. Potter, afte: he cus- tomary time for hie °, Wan nwed to #tate to t rea 9 for asking divores c J that fifteen years or more af magginge, In 1902, whe and Mr had a happ ried lf t ad now become so sbaorber business affatra that Le kave lens and eam time to his farr 14 attitude vd led her to seek ¢ ‘ Mr. Potter's non to mean that he appearance {@ taken {Ml not contest the sult _ TEN JURORS NOW CHOSEN TO TRY MRS. ROSIER Expeet to Complete Panel in Mar- der Cane PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 21.—With the ee of five more jurors yesterday, king a total of ten, the prelimina les in the trial of Mra Ro: slvr, charged with killing } Oscar Rosier, advertising Mildred Geraldine Reckitt pher, Inet January is expected the pane to-da Highty-two veniremen h amined and twenty-six re whom two jurors required to complete (he panel must be chosen f d the end. It be complete Persistent Woman Writer Wins Evening World Ford Miss Helen Lamb Wrote Many Things, Serious and Gay, and Finally “Landed” on “What Did You See?” Page. Miss Holen Frances Lamb, winner of the Ford awarded for the best con- tribution on yesterday's “What Did You See To-Day" page, has a pet hobby and a certain C‘iaractoristic that helps explain wuy an Evening World reporter went cheerfully out to her home, No. 378 &th Street, Brook- lyn, with the happy Information that she had been awarded the capital prize Miss Lamb's pet hobby is writing and she has done a lot of It upon sub- jects ranging from the serious to the ludicrous, from essays upon economic and clvic matters to movie scenarios. And always her contributions were rejected. Not once tn the years that she bhi been writing has she ever succeeded with a single effort. Discouraged? Not a bit of it. Her certain characteristic is a combination o. New England fortitude, Yankee tenacity and a degree of cheerfulness that accepts misfortune with tran- quillity of spirit, resolving only that the next effort would be better than the one that had failed. When Miss Lamb was a schoo! teacher in Frank- lin, Mass., she began to write. When she was unable to make a success of | to four boys and two girls it she thought perhaps it was because Here's the story that w the restrictions of a small town did | for Miss Lamb not five her a broad enough outlook HELP WANTED upon life. So ahe moved to New York Wishing to engage a housekeep Tt wis the same old story. For bread and butter Miss Lamb er, we placed an advertisement in Miss HELEN F Lame. inspired by Miss Lamb, gute of opportunity is opened to them. Thus far she has furnished this education the na Ford and her sister, Mrs. Emma te Hus, | the Sunday paper and waited all ton, founded the Lamb Business| 42¥ for an applicant. Early in Training School, which to-di has the evening there was a ring at 200 students, and ts and has been| the door and the son of the family highly successful, Miss Lamb ta a| afwered it. Two rather smartly raduate of Colby College, Water. | dressed young women were stand- ville, Me., and well qualified in every] ind on the steps. The elder said way in her profession they had come in anawer to our The humorous outgrowth of an| advertisement, and “Son’? went to error made by one of the small Brook. | €a!! his mother (my sister), Mra. lyn vers tn printing an ad. for a H. To his own sister the youn: housekeeper so impressed itself upon] Man said, “I'd hire them both Miss Lamb that she decided to write * © His mother, Mrs. H.. the "What Did You See was not so easy to please. “I She has been watching} think," she began, “you are rath but the incidents she saw er young.’ * * © The young did not strike her as quife what she women looked puzzled, ‘Don't wanted to write. ‘Then ehe wrote her] You want a position?" asked the pri winning effort, the firat sue. spokeswoman. Then it was the cesstul bit of writing she has dem turn of Mrs. H. to be bewildered. and se’s mighty happy xplanations followed, Instead of Incidentally, The Evening World] being placed in the “Help Want learned ina casual, round-about sort | ed’ column. our advertisement of way that Mixe Lamb makes a| had appeared under the heading practice of bringing deserving ye ‘Situations Wanted.’ The tadios men and wemen from home town called to engage my sister os of Waterville and giving them us maid! They went down the stens ness training, with all living expens » their waiting limousine. O paid. Left in Waterville with its] ra waid the son of the hous Inadequate equipment these desery hold, “and | thought we youngst much tg never vould sin ite. Tr hope | going to haveone pe. ed and | this time. h of suce Husband Beat Her ior Wee aring Flapper Clothes, Girl Wife Says Tried to Throw Her Out Window Because She “Dressed To Suit Herself,” She Assert Because she said she “dressed to suit herself Me May Athi 2. 4! Sutton Street, Brooklyn, was beaten with a silver candlestick Uy Ausband, Abraham, who threw dishes at her and attempted to hun! he from a third story window, Mrs. Allie told Magistrate sic nh Waa Plaza Court to-day when Allie gras arraigned on a cuargo of feloniows assault Allie denied he attacked her and w *- —— held in $500 bail )|U. S. WITHDRAWS Mrs. Allie, who is seventeen. the Magistrate her bh and said ye terduy he was going on a two-da IN SANTO DOMINGO busines trip When he returned from a dunce late last night he was] Py isional Government to waiting for her, He said he would not aie tolerate her use of cosmetics a Take Office To-Da “wearing flapper clothes," WASHIN: ON. Oc i clared, and became infuriated when E % she suit she did not dress to please of uw Provisional Govern him, ‘The attack followed, she si the Dominican 1 to-du Her screams brought Patrolman} jowed ty w “ An Frank ‘Toomey of the Greenpoint Sta mitts ; ed tlon, who arrested Allie a: : a Mr Allie was treated for cut nye ante MI y ¢ « her face and hands by I Herzog | M€ “ of the Greenpoint Hospit me 2 DEN HAS B160,000 FTE headed by Juan Hat Oct ire gutted| and a Cabinet sele brick building of the s.[ With — the Withdrawal Company, soap man- pany: pb man cording to 3 ean CAMDE the six-story rrins of 1 Faverson ufacturers, here Jast night. The lost ta} oo. a Boas Mpa estimated at about $100,000 to machinery] 4 jtobinson, Military Glovernor, will and atock and about $10,000 to the build-| ye in te aoon as the Provisional P nite fighting the blaze Assistant Fire] Ment has rari executive or Chief ‘Thomas Nichols fell and Injured} ders and laws the American at his back. ministration in the island. — = a OFFERS OWN CHILD MRS. SCHLESINGER SUES, CHICA Schlesinger, 9, Oct. 21.—Mre, 1 wife of Elmer Schiesiiixe TO PARENTS OF ONE HE KILLED WITH CAR Siated Shipping Moura eda to : ye iver Ac-| was deserted, without cause, in Suggestion of Driver A tember, 1920, She asks for the cu cused of Manslaughter — Jor two children je were married in 1911, H ‘oxty Is Refused. in a nephew of the late Levy Mayer ara are and a prominent attorney 2 AN IRANCIBCO, Ost, #1 {daughter of the late Joseph Schaftne: Charles Buckley, who while in. fof Hart, Schaffner & Marx, clothing manufacturers, No mention of alimon charged, Marion Newton, toxicated, ran down and killed police ie anes four, in his automobile Wednesday night, to-day offered to give his own child, Isabel, five, to the par ents of the dead child. The offer was refused Mrs, Buckley, wo was in the car with her husband ssid she agreed to Buckley's offer, made ‘Ghtcee 8 attorney, “1 oul: Lowe ‘and Found Uirough his attorney, “uf it would < taut and Found” advertisements sufficiently compensate the othe aap We INE Or Ray OF Ee eee ther fo! at she had 10! t directly to The World, mother for what she had sost tei votly ta. The World. Buckley is in the City Prison Flexion Offiee, 4100 Seth, awaiting tial on a charge o manslaughter

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