The evening world. Newspaper, November 17, 1922, Page 31

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)

SLR ISCAS PORT TN OTT — — ~ " : "THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 77, Teas.” TWO DOLLARS will be paid for each item printed om thie page. Checks are mailed daily. The weekly special awards, announced on Saturdays, are in ad- dition to this payment. Open to all readers, T HE EVENING WORLD pays liberally in cash for FIRST hews of really impor- tant happenings—FIRST news of BIG news. Call Beekman 4000. Ask for the CITY EDITOR of The Evening World. Every reader a reporter. MANHATTAN, TEN DOLLARS, Seonted- ton tadinr We fas Aan Comenie @ ee varine, READERS OF THE EVENING WORLD BY READERS Taewr ta the day 1 vistod the Povt Otoe again and ons ot the unt. OF THE EVENING WORLD BROOKLYN. POLICEMAN HANDS OUT TICKETS Y WIFE AND I left Brooklyn for a call on Dr. Breitenstool, i= Weat 57th Street > Just before 9 P..L, we were on our way te a train for Lynbrook. We were passihg Carnegie Hall. Albert Spalding was playing there with Damrosch’s Orchestra. The next train for Lynbrook would not leave until 10.23, * * * We saws poe formed officers told me a boy had notified him of the loss of a $10 bill ‘ ‘ Neeman in front of Carnegie Hall. He was a big, good-natured-look- but had not left his name or the name of his employers. He had been New Program of A wards and Special Prizes ing chap and, by way of saying “Good evening,” I said, “Couldn't get went to the Post Office, he said, to buy stamps. *© * © The boy is = : us In there for nothing, could you?" * * © My dear wife told me te Shows by tight to two of the officers in the building, having spoken 990 DODGE TOUF ING CAR FOR THE BEST STORY OF THE WEEK. $100 in Gast “stop bothering the policeman,” but—what do you think?—that offieer to them about the matter, and if he will apply to either of them, or at for the Second in Merit. $50 for the Third. $25 for the Fourth. TEN stories adjudg took out two BOX seats (they were selling at $20 apiece] and handed the office of the Assistant Custodian [next to the Registry Depart- Next in Merit, $5 Each. Competition open to all readers. them to us! You could have knocked us over with the proverbial ment], the money will be restored to him. * * * If you will print S 1 A ai Fi Hi a S i 1 S d t feather. * * * When we entered the bo. we saw men and womem thle om the “Whet Did You See Fo-Day?” page, I hope it may remit in ; ; pecia wards for fiigi choo tudents ne in full dress, I did not know what to do with the brown sweater I one little fellow’s having a happier Thankegiving.—C. A. Montgomery, will be divided weekly.among high school pupils contributing to the “What Did You See To- wore, but we braved it out and chuckled all the time that for once we Post Office Box 888, City Hall Station, Manhattan. $1 00 Day?” page. or the best letter of each week sent in by a high school student, $50; second were sitting with the Four Hundred. it was just too grand for ange thing. Inclosed find one of the stubs. The other I shall ke p to the end of Coomsday.—Max Rosenhaus, teacher at Bushwick High School, Bleecker Street and Seneca Ayenue, Brooklyn. best, $25; five next in merit, $5 each. Special Awards For University and College Students $1 00 will be divided weekly among university and college students contributing to the page. For the best letter of the week, $50; second best letter, $25; five letters next in merit, 85 each. School and college contributors MUST name their schools. Wait for the worth while Incident. Do not try to write every day. Bei mind the question: “WHAT DID YOU SEE TO-DAY?" Not what somebody else saw, not what you heard and not something that happe ed last summer, What did YOU to-day? Contributors to the page should write of subjects with which they are familiar. Choose, preforably, things that happen in your own neigh- 4 WHITEBALL STREET PRUIT THE SHOOTING AT CRANFORD, borhood. Teli your story, if possible, in not more than 125 words. State WHERE the incident took place. Write your name in full. Write STAND. fi wae practteing with’a #9 Winches your aodress carefully. Address your letter to ‘What Did You eee To-Day?” Evening World, P, O. Box No. 185. City Hall Station, New York, On Armistice Day, which a!l Ameri-|ter last Sunday while spending the cans should have celebrated, I passed alweek-end at Cranford, N. J. I had foreigner's fruit stand on Whitehall}roken some bottles eae OUT OF TOWN. BRONX. 1, strolling to th i ay Peeets 3 was clebas ane It wes! & ksamanship st some trees. Suddenly HIS BIT. CUB REPORTERS. ONCE AN EVERYDAY OCCURRENCE] fiero ix one thing at least t can't un-| of Publie School No, 112, Brooktigm. sign reading: “This stand wil! be closed/the air was rent by the shrilling of being mo i ee ever | derstand and that is why girls @moke.| heartily thank you for the thrift aim@ : a h © read oO Armistice Day in memory of the World| police whisties, and my namie was culled, HAD OCCASION to-day to spend a few minutes in front of the Court T see ench day that the high school], I have read of house War. Prop.""—A. MacDonough, No. 243] 7° attract the callers T fired in the ai House in Newark, and while I waited I glanced about at the statues | Students are contributing generously, to ido | 14 It because, us they say, it quiets] happiness vou have given them by ge t. It was use they are con-]cepting their contribution Nov. 3, We at Mohewan Aw eal Dow Avenue, West Brighton, ai by in: in front of that ‘mpressive structure, The finest of them, in my | {he “What Did You See?” page, Many ; ° several things, hid no. license for the ayy timbers in the middie of the} vinced (t looks smart? ln coffee shop| are buying « beautiful picture for ome re Staten Island. a hearty laugh have 1 enjoyed In read Se rifle an h x license , ate classroom, thanks to The A. Poor. rifle and no hunting lcense; it we terday | clanaroom, | thanks, te. the i ! In THE Y. W: aginst the law tto shoot on Sundays. e nbout twice ax many men] now Is devoted to “What Dia opinion, is that of Abraham Lincoln, I have been told that this is one | ing about (heir school incidents and 4] girect, It was ull there, even (he steps of the best figures of the savior of the Republic to be seen anywhere | "umber of them have put me in mind}and che curtains on the windows wit the sroimming prot of tho Y. And last, but not least, 1 had been] in the land, * * ® While I waited, more or less in reverie, a kid y eating lunch, Not one man] ‘To-duy?” stories, and neediess te es : : ing, but I saw three women|it is a live lesron.—Maria. Strugtia, of similar occurrences experienced dur-Jeverything but the cellar. I asked the] there w fedoy 1 saw a pirl in the moimming |MHooting parallel with the road when! came along with a box over his shoulder and called, —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_———— ~— ) SMOKE, 1 WAS A SPLENDID PIECE, 1 do not think Tam at all passe, bul] The boys and girls of the § A gmale eo and i ting on a foundation] their nerves or by was surruu town's police foree! Then I learned OF Montague Street at noon y chman where it was being taken] 4 W ne told me a plot about # mile} WAS ar ing my own schoo! days. Go to it, boys] w, “killing” bottles, and one of the bullets Shine? Shine and girls, keep your eyes open all the] ay ‘our ” eo . o!—d ) FP No. | no " . arp! o | Putting aw at clenret One a] 3. No. 112, 16th Av goel learning to float, Ske had @ | und emtered a bedroom in a farmhouee| Your boots * I gave the boy less than no attention until 1 |{™me!—Mrs. Jeanette G. Pakula, No-}norih, When 1 expressed surprise, he | PY Ke ne wa 0, 112, v and Tet clothespin on her nose to keep owt cp hed roenateatad Grad z & 1944 Loring Place, Bronx. answered: "Why, that's nothing; back} '¥e!\ sok s—Bertha . the waterHdaa F. Manning, No. he Groce tat ponetratad 6 Ee, saw him stop in front of the Lincoln statue. Ho doffed his hat, stood in 1900 that's all we saw up here Wall, No. reel, Brook: AT BURGLARY AS EVER WAS $11 183d Btreet, Belle Harbor, Lot, [iy aived down the cellar. The trouble} ‘here for a minute or so, and then, climbing up on the base of the FORCE OF HABIT. houses being moved from one lot to] !" comMITTED. 4 ay finally was ironed out, but only after # statue, began shining Lincoln's shoes, It was a “dry” shine. The bi My little brother Wddy, aged nine,|#other when the people moved ; C Returning to-night to our apartment OENT'S WORTH OF FUN. wettlement with the farmer—Jullus] was wise enough to use no polish. Simply gave th ; OY. | had: basal uttestig: loud lainentatloria for er Rabinowitz, No. 1402 Park Ave-| ONE OF MANY WHO REMEMBER, [after a three-hour absence, we found Durtng lunchtime yesterday I heard| Metz, Livingston Hall, Columbia Uni- polls Simply gave the boots a good dust- | a. ural days because of a toothache, but . Opposite my home tx a «mall park |e door ajar, I'd heard much of tm terrible shout from a group of bors versity ing off, then climbed down and was away again, calling, “Shin to-day the tooth was drawn, much to — : nielaloe . memorial tablot to the sol-]liht burglaries in New York and at the 23d Street entrance of the Met- - . Shine your boots?"—-Gerard I. Canivan, No. 144 Academy Str . | his own rellef and that of the neighbers. I1GH BUT NOT DRY. diers who lost their lives in the war,[certain we had been robbed. ropolitan Life Building. This was re- ONY DAY AT THE ORGAN Sate Why y Street, Belle fo night I saw a look of pain on his| On Sunday my family went to plenic| aM there nre two trees planted for two[evidence appeared when a closet @épe peated again in a few moments and |] Arriving late this morning for servi Re ha face, he pressed his hand against his}for the last time this year at Rye] ye men from this block. On ¢ yjin an adjoining bedroom, which we went over to investigate, One of them|in Union Theological Seminary, I learnc check and wailed: “My tooth: oh, my|Beach, My father and mother were | Memortul and Armistice Day a muan| never. leave open, was also found would place a cent on the sidewalk. In/that it was not the preacher who Is t! ® moment a pedestrian would spy {t.]busiest man in chureh, but the organist. ‘and as ho leaned to pick It up the boys|'The only vacant seats were in the chan- would shout. Then the ‘fish’ would|cel and I wax given a seat directly b start, look up, see the grinning faces|hind the organist, The keyboard brto and with a sheepish smile get in line to} the player was an intricate thing to me. watch the next victim.—Jerome Rosen-|His fingers filtted over the keys and thal, No, 659 West 162d Street. his hands leaped from one set of keys at — to another every instant, finding time, tooth!” I saw mother turn pale. Then|reading on the beach and my slaters| Who lives in the block, but who te no] My busband put his hand suddenly Eddy dropped hia hand, looked Jand [ were romping In the sand when}Kin of either of the young men, deco-|slouet door-and something fh bit sheepish and said, “Oh, 1 forgot |We heard toud shouts. Perched on some | rates each tree with a new fh In] moved on its other side. Then, brat my tooth was taken out and doean't|bish rocks that can be reached easily at] thie quiet way he shows uo all that he] he yanked it open and the “bu hurt any more,”—Misa Dora Albert, No. |!0w tide were some two dozen ploulok r sworl-[foll out. It was the mactress we 621 Hast 138th Street, Bronx. era who had Just noticed that thy tt 68 Macon | nights on a folding cot and which je was rising and that they were cut off tolled end sired th the. slams a from shore. All but three plunged 5 hastily Into the water and waded ashore, Unrolling, it had fallen against AT THE BOOK AUCTION. IRL TAKES A ¥ ‘ e many stops. Scene, 01 Jan- | a 4 s he door.—Mrs, Hanna Berkow! Ron TAL WINDOW. |however, to manipulate the many stop ne, an auction book store on Nas-|yie remaining three se 1 the only s t rkowlts, N@ lens . eel eke Bt. Luke's {Yet with all his engrossing and tutri- sau Street near Beekman. ‘Time, noon ones who had the common wense to take] cay a kind gee ne 1092 President Street, Brooklyn, Hospital Se ‘eee Bouth Field of |cate work he never appeared te hv pour 3 tee cess Key TA, on off thelr shoes and stockings. —tirace matehe aie! Happer to ay al a ue i eect ed onderful that ‘1 “ . tloneer and emall freckled-faced offic: 4G Jo, 88 Po venue ronx. © rl happy he stands at Bel> EVERY © ri ‘e Columbia University. There on one At seemed «wonderful (HAR. DOG WITH A SWE en's v ¢] Wesstrom, No, 8 Port Avenue, Bronx LAVanUR ent Bee ates VERY CONVENTENCE. in could regulat boy, book-lovers, — bidders, — buyers 1. A bie To-day aa my Kittle aon end & side students are playing tennis, Near At the Pelham Station to-day, on my When we er our economics class jovements that produced a swee idlers, an audience, yours trul HAPPINESS ON ROTH SIDES. mowilne drove up and a gentieman © in @ omall store on re others playing basketball. still |” s way to Mount Vernon) 1 : og of | this morning we Flenank . " , a! stepped out and asked he ; ato Henry cord of sounds. J. Dintruff, No. y n rnon, T saw a dog « w chalked across th Camera! A book Is held up Girls wearing bright colored paper © for two large et, near Pacifie, we noted others are playing soccer and football. |{05 riverside Drive. the “inutt? type standing with his fore-] Mackboard in large letters the word " ‘ " Carultog, oho “did uot. have chem, but - b asks the auctioneer. Joana were just flocking from the arm g Island College Hospital and to my ear como the sounds and the 7 . eee “ y. Si 0 * Tih tre they agreed to wait until ahe got ther bbting é 4 shouts pecullar to each sport, awaken- PROM THE TOWRE OF CITY puwa testing on a alot. machine: Ita] CONGRATULATIONS! Most of us ae Mp eee. eee at Lexington Avenue and 67th Strevt 98) tn a “tow minutes. she was eta was velecting’ eomal ether Mende ing in me an unutterabie longing. ‘The cate master inserted a penny and as a pleco] Watted for an explanation of It, and soon .” pipes the boy, but ho te outbid. [iyune menoclogtrin and had been having | Wien Mey asked her how much shel and my aon wRe has been forbidden dootors say I have heart trouble. Yes, : Aoent) REE Didi cxou of chocolate canie out the dog reached} (he Instructor walked in, saw it, smiled Again and again this te repeated, then}, school party in the armory, Suddenly | %¢ be iq them, she pinyfully to eat candy, with the injunction ee ee eee titted | page. tte J. W. asks where any one | Paw Into the machine's Innards anal NIU H mixture of uinbireassment and auctioneer, noting the boy's wistful [there were ahrill eries from chikdeon in Aye iy Tha gentieman handed her that it would make him sick, looked inger, St. Luke's Hospital. Fget a better view of New York City | Milled Mt out, Sefaing It between hla] Measure wud suid “Thank you. He vs] face and leaping back In memory many |ihe yard of the orphan asyliin across] count gut. the haven he tori ee 1c] Moegitt, ond, velced Ma aurprian, ‘ Lees and ite surroundings than from the| teeth be tore off the paper and gobbled] jan iva Athen: Metin, ay, yeure when he, too, was a small boy /the street. A group of children were! keen (0) mut Twas only ings atc | afelher, that NURGH wae cotiap THE JANITOR'S COLLECTION. | windows of Curtis High School, 1 wieh| the | che ‘ He siege tia) See r hia jeans, helgs us picker tae) teat far reine ite a innbent dhe repeated over and over, Howe! ha] cusing, and? pameed befe si on. During my lunch hour to-day a man| he could have seen the view of the city | sat f the confection In that nisn~ SHE. MOAAT WE Stein ie Chk WIE, Caton Howe Loe ae ee sine of their, poy] insiated she keep it and teats of Joy) swered? “OA, | ouopene Oke Gaoalial aang in our courtyard. When he had| from the tower of the City Colle n 1 1. Howard, No. 44 South Strect, Sunday, 1 much Ve cents.” “Sold! The lecnoad caps and “etving them to those | “reamed down hor fice. he reluted| mind if ahe pete sek.” Ho theoohy told the people all about | T naw it to-tax. The view stretches b \ Mount Vernon, N.Y. J, Ath the ether | laat two words uiergo in ¢ he lad |Sutidesh and soon avery. orptien bet & bisa) ai eu dent to ail over that a moment. "Nooo he ne rar veteran xn é from bad ee Be ae Sap ea OUT OF KILTER ah a f the street start moving down th vals Browaly [sront ths ® oe and aie cap. 1 noticed that ths SU OreAS Habe hee Bae nitte hi Srnil aurend, she Wega be a hoe him, Immediately he picked them up| tery, Morris High School and Colum} On + way to the Contral-Trenton| meting: A hs girl Who was near the} tthe of the book under his arm is] piness was no greater than thi P how . Leen, Mo, mont Avenue and hurried away. elr thoughtfuln 475 Henry Str Ww our Janitor, omplly grabbed hold of the |/"Poems to my Mother. Curtain.—|to the girls by t » Brooklyn. too, {s a war veteran, and he, looked | Dit University are two prominent i=) cine thy reday fomet a tame man| spare ti ig to be able te atop] Luke J olle, No. 1921 Morrix, Ave-| Hi Accurso, No. 290 1%. Wid Street _ up from nig werk wwialte) the fallow was Si De Scerning Visine ae FINN eC. ho: pni ms wotden Ye Nea af rs Be aoIne. Ora i uh : Ries HKG ae BREAK=AST FOR FIVE HUNDRED. dpeaking. He was still standing there| The Palisades and the Hudson can. be ; sulng, ra Frac Rahat ao) Va , Nhen the man” disappeared. Tnatany fyeen for a long distance. ‘The H Jhe would elfint the twels 1 wap with a AG KM QUEENS. AW THE SEA GULLS breakfasting on the beach at Coney Island, a shower of cended about Mis Flats look like a piece of cheek rather miei! bie shot wi “ENDS. There were more than 600 of them, on the water, in the alr and on thrown apparently by persona who had Sinan” WERT cwithe tearm otiad ai Abe aa : peels ry ane sped and curt ” « teac There . *s sone to get some change. and who | SoMls. Downtown. tay welce aitter that, frou ny the ing t usked th FIRST AID. he bench. ‘Thero may have been 1,000, * * © While the tide eae planed thaw Op with a amile,| Bronx, New Jersey and Brooklyn arel wall, then slips Laibach ts FAS aaa ed HILE SURVEYING to-day on Webster Avenue, in Long Island 1s high last night great numbers of little silver fish came in and thinking he also had a right to them, | all within the eye's range. 1 refer u thached ty? Htle) enn MWNGH: svi tural Aas tool MIneN. everouIne. tor City, where considerable grading and filling is in progress, I when the waters receded they were left on the beach, These Osh, ko fast, hc Me sate | EM te te Colegs Toker | ine 9 adam tnt a saree Gator ies saw a crowd gathering on Sunswick Street, one block away, | called sandheels, are ubout seven inches long. * * * I suppose « Broadway. i‘ J bend upon the spectat charity, Hist tance! Penal ( fon rant Ws ji ler) Tran over, In the middle of the erowd a man was lying flat. Some gull “scout” sighted the fish and gave the’signal, for the gulls came im THE “BIG FELLOW." NOT ALL WHO ASK ALMS Ant vb alg His Oty did f t bis} Gone, Ne (44 WO Ghat said he had fainted; others, that he had had a fit. * ° © First aid great numb and went straight to breakfast. Their screams were EL . b ALL z, 4 = RE) ehinnine t twelv 1 wall tober rt N . Most of us remember among | our UNwortny, aa fii Manual ‘Crating: Fei | eae J was beng administered by truck drivers and teamsters. One man heard many blocks away. T stood not more than 100 feet from the Mower cboye was noted. for his y Hall Park to-day f encoun 4 SAND EP EL AUGH PES THEE MSY pulled the patient's logs. Another slapped bis face. A third worked barbecue.” A gull would swim in‘ fr the water, run up the beach, streng fh, There Seee pal oboe ey te sd ag Le Prolepoati ae DOLCE PN Ore Tr Nor Ww . his arms up and down like a windmill, A fourth “bird” threw salt in grab one of the sandheels, plunge back into the water again, wash the ts, and because of his prowess ho Wag eee eee nee etl run. me ‘4. \to-] bis mouth, His alm was bad. There was more salt on the Invalid’s sand from the fish and swallow the thing -vhole. Then, back again for ree Pee anzod'to Mish to fhe, | He was blind, while she waa bent with] ‘t vo nave | BOER 1) "1 eyes and neck and in his bair than there was on his lips. He was be more. ‘They raced back and forth in this way for half an hour. Noth come, man “he would undoubtedly a Dune Ge walkes the ud [put ste , yo pee sm a ela sinning to look like a snow man, * * ® A mounted policeman ing disturbed or wnnoyed them. When I approached they Paid no ate be. He moved away. To-d of the pal hout any one giv=] of motorists on ' tsldy Hart | deek ' ; 4 ; wea the hema: nene hen RRTHIAe, NO NGeRGL COW fol tore rp Dhasioa Paso i ‘1 came along just in time, Seeing what was going on, the cop cried, tention to me. It was Gull Day at Coney.—Ira Hull, No. 663 49th few cone to nay OF tt AB nt tories published about | q yee hy it iw 1 “Hey, cut that out! Let the man alone! What do you want to do kill Street, Brooklyn he might kno vim. | gare owing Mmousines and living in| ‘ i avaiy of h Soa shattered idols! Tt did POR- | hotels. These stort aut } of Koes him? The oMfcer placed a box Jer the prostrate sian’s back, thus Gible nuts ta wi i. areca u es sloubt b , w i vod natu i Ny here al me-giond | oreju the public agalnat peutile | tc RAIN Korat Al atari Seana 8) jowering his head and bringing the bjood in circulation to his bead RICHMOND, ny shoulders, He appeared even s whe forced te live upon the gpod-| wt Wine ¢ © the | izing the lust « In less than a minute the man began to show signs of Iife and soon he [FP WOLED Be «SIN Cave THE 8-CE er than the boy I had known ness of their fellow-beings. Not all ert i . wert ‘ould Sait i an am » na q ow signs c 0 i oie c een CENT FAR friendship was renewed, and it {9 pleaa-| them lave limousines. Not allot then |autuy yon WRI id icy revived. Satisfied that he had teen saved from his benefactors, 1 re Pr be 4 s end, boarding at Franklin Avee Seba tb a Kol tas West {Toth Street, | are Unworthy.—ilbert Price, Nu. d them t rin th f ' ment rhe re 1 k 1| turned to my work.-Harry Larsen, Topographical Bureau, Municipal | ice t ane tne I Kichniond Turns) nue, Weat New Brighton, the tretley emp sew ay BORE Ea al faint” es 4 hes ilding, Long Island (it of a pole tying 4 i budde | On Which was riding to the terry (itp HE SAID IT $0 POLITELY. —— 9 W tn | friend afar? 2 who had fainted ay thocked ay | morning, handed the conductor HELP THE POOR ARTIST. ( , } 4 Bro: who had fuinte eon shocked - & dime, Pers Peony Tyrell obi edd This afternoon in Morningside T° re inn oH M See nlewaiieal ee ena and was told, “Step in there with Shown to me thie evening. A young [#&¥ an artist painting a picture of | M cet, Porrin ONE WOMANS Fanny Nd he wes lowered 40 4 bed real of them: you'll have to walt Silla President-to-be (maybe!) had apread [Cathedral of St. John. A smail croup ‘ While thes, were reviving hin| [ach the ferry for your change.” fii jhe mewapopers out on the sidewalk | interested watchers were asking ques " Huckens r kindly Woman who lived neahy qp-] MOM Passengers entered at Westerweay near Broadway and 48d Strect, |tions, which w gruffiy answered by WREEK ED AND SAvD ki t peared with half a tumbler full of rye] Avenue and gaye the a ction, People awarm over every |him, interfering with his work. Sud i ’ d tavdit Ua of ir tor forenailGuenicnbel et eae Hasn't anybady avaslable inch. A very asdate wom- |denly he arose, assumed a pitiful ex ‘l n a y wom 4 thy the ma |; | Rol any pennies?’ he demanded. A yang @n stepped plump ona pile of tha |pression and began tcgging, hut on ve las aft at Sived few | AK0, before the fare was raleed r4 boy's newspape: He turned to he hond, The crowd melted like snow L " ‘ " I me nit any sppenred. the {to 4 cents, trolley skippe: md acid with artremo poltteness, | Augu: That was a new m o were beoker wner |! 1 Wie " wa pat te i taken the [they were handed pennies, When aap “Beg pardon, lady, but can'tcher [dispersing a bothersome crowd. wd t use ' * whe ' ' ) , he forry all wh ; 5 wa, and Hey ; CHASING A omtEDY ' , all who had see where th’ whereathia yer goin’? [was ighty — effective.—Anthon | ‘ * garde ' i 1th . tt ning were tuld to get into —David Kedstone, C. 0. Y, Elser, No. 319 Weet 14th Str ' ' ¥ ah rere Aa Aras aiTetaeed ten tet a ' \ ry Mull : er in order to rake the Comores @ eolle Ff ehildrs ' hawk bein ch 0 nei ! wel tek ‘ t Hrighton, 8 aie Florenay Chappe ls ¢ ne owned > u" Avenue . 7 flag lide F by - rS NLY A YOUNGSTER would think of attempting what I saw ean 7 1 4 ’ re tte u Do UP seatye “pulled” to-day in a New York bank, and only a youngster tt xe Helehts, N nadie * iy As tap HEPORB DAYLIGHT, would get away with it. And not every youngster. He would thay THE DOG AT Ween Potr c Palncucpan eidk byestheo Rios? whlck uf Heouring the toud drone of a imate haye to be a bright, clean, likeable sort of boy, as this one was i F stood wasian over 0 ” Mad sae Aeaniies ; 7 ; AE ten tRre ihrunne feo bed and. trom ee ae * * © The bank is the Chelsea, at Broadway and 48th Street. I Pu, At e h " F ‘ ppr 1 » He f a u's largoat 4 stood there in the line at the paying teller's window, waiting to get a and daclared he didn ps rk tt bith rida nee elope ye a * ' bipee Ua ated Hattie A. No. 0031 Ambey, check cashed. Immediately ahead of me was a boy about fifteen years wreck w wn rt “ ‘a Awah In unity there is # Rertran Hist aw the Y aks i . Roud. Sunudgle, 8, 7 ‘ old, When he presented a check for $10 he was asked if he could iden HoGloshayy Cgaida,’ ¥s-4 nd. Nat a ieat aermod Mt NOM Hee RA cee tee (hens tuner tte pre! Manian fh, We \ Guns OF THE sea, tify himself as the person named on the check. * * * Ag he dove RUSTIC LATER HEP pie. plod Banner” vose inevivin | nnd row f wat i Gallaw 4 : f (ni Sandy Hook to-day we paoe@ @ into pocket after pocket for the something which would identify him DIVTELY he aiv and floated tow j THE OWALL STRERT CHOW?" [the driver upproached fe veriis / Heed ;. ining from the sea with toe he became more and more embarrassed and more and more frantic in . TAS s i" ad. Hs ae mn i : ma Ay saa] “| 1 if hime Abo myner. M REPENS ON DINS BK he wa ee “Heck, of ote the search. He was about to leave the window when, finally, he found | 1)0 ft s A usted 1" wetur - ry Mart N Dre a by a re fying about the aeewa, “something.” He pulled it forth half sheepishly, grinned, and said t te cad at ' bilities teach wart] Mivedings oon td Sry Rae ani tee “AMT have is this." Looking over his shoulder I saw a printed 1 A ; rae Sy ean : Serarnayenn ' rt wp the Of refuse that ween elty called the “Liar's License.” Ever see one? It reads i ‘ \ nyt re on the midew eal r ming t ny When ing from the hoppers. Homa nd reads something re rates . ns | as ' ' pid birds dropped tannin like this: ‘This is to certify that is hereby licensed to ; i ede ' a cows and fed Me at all times,” &c., and is signed by the “Liars’ Association of North en ath 3 | “s tat t ad pe! ee Ms : ha I dlbia escaped thers i America,” The teller, the boy and I laughed in concert. The kid got | day held Weaynearsy Se eM a { sain as eee aren aie ' vy ’ ' al aM anetroine teas meen Br Ble ten.—Davo Aaronson, care State Drug Company, Broadway and | /nt® reoms 4 Hy NOG: away ab burn ied toward Rrowdw Nett This is just ¢ an n ed ' De ment ward M. 0 Stren, Schoor § Miller § Valent ‘ No. 6& Muurice Avenue, Elm held Grace Mot I W. N. Vee 1 Kichmond Terrsee, Wappingers Falla, N. ¥ Brome. ng Avenue, Blenrurel. Mariners Harpur, 5 | 4 . “ { \ { H

Other pages from this issue: