{ title: 'The evening world. (New York, N.Y.) 1887-1931, April 28, 1922, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-04-28/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-04-28/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-04-28/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-04-28/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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mmr JE; ; THE EYENIfltf \ II ! I I IHI II I 111 II .4 I 9ILIH1I I I I JI& UHMIU14 IU UHLl'l (illvL.1 I I UUIl IIIUUUI MS , L SKr mm m r im nnianr im rnn nrBiTrimrn oaam h a ana i ii 11 p m m ava m w i'i h 'i fii i ki i c i i r n r iti i r mi v i i IjUUjU I U ill UltililL U) I u.i ULli I LllULUI : WAVE-CLEANU- P IN b UOUR 1 S IN DAY Hylan Compliments District Attorney as Board of Estimate Grants Funds. ENRIGHT'S SLEUTH PLAN. Asks $62,500 for Secret Ser-- l vice Unit of 25 Super-Detectiv- es. 'Mayor Hylan'o pinna for a olean-ti- p by the police were laid liaro to-fl- when tho Estimate Hoard at lta weekly meeting unanlmounly endorsed lrt action of the Board of Aldermen which has granted District Attorney Hanton 155, SIB. IS for salaries of ad- ditions to tho professional and ad- ministrative forces of his ofllco. Mr. Boston appeared In person to advo- cate the claim. As ho approached the Tall and faced tho board ho was warmly greeted by tho Mayor, who Bald: \I think the peoplo of this city should highly compliment nnd com- mend you for the excellent service you are rendering them in dealing ' 'With the crooks. In addition, tho Police Department feels grateful loward you. For tho first time In many years tho 'Police Department can now depend upon the Dlstitct Attorney' ofllcc for honest ra tion and aid. With you In charge, Sir. Banton, a policeman who has arrested a crook will not bo humili ated by meeting two or three hours later that rnmo crook on the street. who will tell him he Is out on ball . and then laugh in the face of the man who arrested him.- 'For tho first tlmo In many years there is a progressive prosecution of vicious crlminaln.\ J w3 l thls Plnt thjrt to Mayor jLuiu w ww new rounn-- w 01 in nin ciarm . crooo or wnom m i . poko as dlsparoglngly as bo used to v v \ i Knright,\ said the Mayor, \asking for Ijigh prlcoil men. W.o want clever, well drered follows who can associate with and hobnob with sleek, well dressed violators of the luw. As soon as wo get the little crook cleaned up, underworld, 'JJ 'fC!!?W polished contamlnators of others. If you want some ot our well-dress- high priced detectives to help you, Mr. Dlitrtct Attorney, they will be at your sof-vice- .\ 1 \What you mean, Mr. Mayor, when you speak of well dressed crooks,\ said Manhattan Borough' President Miller, \Is the well, known class that never seems tb get inside' a Jail.\ ' \That's Just what 1 mean,\ said the Mayor. \1 know one man, a big man In this town, who is in close cahoots I with one of the biggest gamblers and the police have other information, \We wlllbe glad to with your office, Mr. District Attorney, and get some of these high class fellows to move out of to,wn, When we do that thoy can't backfire on honest public, officials.\ Mr. Banton replied that through speedy, vigorous, aetton he hod the criminal element, pretty well under control and that he' would be ablo to take up the question of \going after the big fish,\ provided evidence or promise of evldenco was given htm. He said he preferred big fish to little Hah, anyway. the andlitassed 11... .11,, J...,lml. hp iiMlnr him Comptroller Craig reminded Mr. Banton that when the work of makln the next begins he must be prepared to- - show the taxpayers what on expensive job chasing crooks out of New York City happens to be. The appropriation for com- - w,!?A0!!.EnBh \f.CCri Mrv.Un unit wiuim mo iwicumc uuimu u also to-d- before the Board ot Esti mate. Commissioner Enrlght first men Itloned hu secret police plan In a re- cent Brooklyn speech. The men in It would receive SS.00O year, and the appropriation asked is' fdr their sal aries halt a year, beginning July 1 next It Is expected the appropriation will be referred to the Committee of the Whole, and that when It comes up Monday the Commissioner will ap pear in Its behalf. Little Is known of the details of the plan, but It 'a believed his Intention. If It goes through. Is to men outside or the department for the secret work. JAPAN WILL. 2.INL SHIPS TO RUSSIA Protect Fishermen Ousted by Concession Auctions, Chimed to Be Invalid. TOKIO, April 28 (Associated The Foreign Office y un nounced the Japanese Government's Intention of sending warships to the maritime 'provinces of Russia to pro tect Japanese fishermen in control of fishing concessions there. This was raid to be based on the alleged failure of the Vladi vostok authorities to carry out their agreement concerning these conces sion. The Vladivostok Government Is said to have aucUoned the conces- sions on a date which barred Japa nese bidders from attending, contends, therefore, that the auction was TOR COLDS. GKir OR IXFLtmXZA as aa take Uxatlr HHOMO GUININK TaMrU. Th (cnutn btara llw a&aMtur ofCWTV, Grova, (Be aura you c Some of Them Had Been Convicted but Several Plead- - ed Guilty of Violent Crime. Ninety-fou- r criminal, some of them convicted, tho rest having pleaded guilty of various crimes of violence, were by eight Judges and Justices In the Criminal Courts of New York County. Tho sentences Imponod by Judge Rosalsky afimo reach n total of 217 years. Judge Itosalnky sentencod twenty- - seven. Judge Mulqueen ten, Judge Mancuao twelve, Judgo Talloy twenty- - three, Judge Mclntyre four, Judgo Johnstone ono, Ouprcme Court Justice Pinch eleven and Supremo Court Jus tice Devendorf elx. In the criminal branches of the Supreme Court and In the Courts of General Besslons It was an all day Job to get tho crowd of crooks started toward Sing- - Bins and other prisons. Christopher Poppter, John McClrath and Charles Qallagher were sentenced to eighteen years each by Judge Ko- - saisxy ror nn attempt to hold up Charles Umdy, cashier of the Masten Construction Company, at 41st Street and Park Avenue on March 81. Tho pollco had received a. tip and wera ready, but, oven so, there was a ten- - minute pistol light before the arrests were made. John Metr, formerly u soldier In the 09th, was arrested with the other three and pleaded guilty as a nrat offender. His pleaded for him and Judge Rosalsky said: 1 can easily believe that he was a hero in France, but here he has been an associate of desperadoes who aro challenging civilization. He Is sen tenced to Sing Sing for four to eight years.\ , George McCarthy, No. 1618 70th Street, Brooklyn, got ton to twenty yearn for holdlnff up Harry Kavcs. a taxi driver, and robblriB him of $14 vt.H tmi x. no r M. OWIIU lUIUUUUVf A1U. iO uuwur, gui flve t0 ten years for holding up ono or me i enow counirymon, a oio, una robbing him of Sg on April 14. Judge Mulquecn sentenced James Davey. No. 142 East Third Street, to Sing Sing for two and one-ha- lf yearn on his plea of guilty of burglary in the third degree. Richard Jackson, a Negro, No. 10 U?.n P1- - who pleaded .guilty of possessing a gun nnd who Is said to have tried to shoot Patrolman Qrccnberg, who was arresting him, got seven years. Ho had a record of three prior convictions. Judge Mul-quee- n said to Qreenberg: \when a crook points a gun at you shoot him down, and do It first Don't wait to see what kind ot a shot he la.\ Judge Mclntyre thus far in April has disposed of thlrty-flv- o homicide coses In Part W, General Sessions, the largest number ever handled in a single month MUST CAPTURE MASTER CROOK, SAYS ROSALSKY In thanking two April Grand Juries which have broken records 'for expo-- 1 dltlous work In the handling of evl- - uciiua uuu IIIO rciurn Ul luuituutun, Judge, Otto Roxalsky to-d- declared mm new lorn is ui ine mercy hi n band of criminals and that u win noi oe ptwsmio u assure ine cltlscna that the crlmo wave has Ik. ..I.. ... i. 1 -- rne couns,- - sam juage jtosaisKy to ine memDers or mo two juries. rare sending to prison the men you Mr. Banton thanked police until the police have nabbed I budget $C2.600 for appoint Will Press), decision Japan Invalid. prrvoiitivc, captain master - . . , indicted we must bear in minai,M,d mil wnuo we are scnaing oucnao.i away the prisons are daily turning out criminals who will return tol crime they form th6 most dan- - clans \The real, brainy crooks are seldom caught. We seldom read of the cap- ture, except by accident, ot tho per petrators of big, remunerative rob beries. Young men who .commit ordinary crimes merely participate in sporadic outbreaks. 'The author! tits of this city who combat crime aro of the opinion that thoro a band of master crooks, who, behind the scenes, direct the op erations of the men and women who take tho risks. It these men wo must get.\ up CTATK II IQTIPPQ u 5b 1 HIMLi FAUfc HliKE Brown and Devendorf Dispose of 277 Bail Cases in Two Months. Two upstate Justices of tho Su preme Court, Charles H. Brown of Rochester and Warren Devendorf of Herkimer, who have been sitting In a Special Branch of Criminal Courts In the County Court House, have estab lished a record for the number of eases disposed ot during a two-mon- th period. During March and April these Jurists have cleared the congested calendar ot a total ot 277 ball cases, Between 10 and 1 o'clock y Justice Devendorf Imposed sixteen sentences on prisoners who pleaded guilty to charges of grand petty larceny. Justice Devendorf gives much of the credit for the part he has played in establishing the record to the splendid aid given him by As- sistant Dlitrlct Attorneys Bohan, Wlntner Ward and Carl Smith, chief clerk ot Par It. WORLD, FRIDAY, AfrBIL 28, 1922. Here Are This Year's Official Bathing Suits PAU L DESCHANEL LAST DF N. YS GAS? Selected for the Fall Pageant at Atlantic City 1C DAD QUIT FRENCH CASES ARE ARGUED ;, m-m.- . mm t PRESIDENCY IN 1920 N SUPREM E COURT ' 'iY d ' : ,w5i J3 These attractive two-piec- e used this year in Atlantic Cty's J LI DG E PUIS BLAM E UPON BANKS WHEN UNDERPAID SIB IL \Service Profiteers\ Pay Less Than Living Wage, Declares Brooklyn Justice. County Judge Taylor In Brooklyn to-d- aligned himself with formci Judge Landls In reproving banks for what he ohnrnr.torltefl fin 'iinrvinn .pronteerlng - the employment ot clerks In responsible positions at sal arlos. too small to meet the ordinary demands of living. Judge Taylor sentenced Carl Lom holt, No. 1511 Mermaid Avctiuo, Coney Island, a bookkeeper In the Coney Island Bank, to Elmtra Re forrhatory for an Indeterminate term of not less than fourteen months, af ter he had pleaded guilty to forging tho names of oustomera of the bank to checks for sums aggregating about U.OOO The testimony suowea mat iomnoii rccolved only J22 a week 'This la an example of service profiteering,\ Judge Taylor said. \It mnv nnt hn lnmllv Dreventable. but u !g certalnly morally reprehensible.\ ' \It la time we gavo some attention to theso 'service profiteers,' who tako ,. ,1nm tn onm \\.hn n,nv it on. J m.n . n.rnnM m.,lnvn r. , , , .,. ., responsibility for his downfall , ,,, i. r, ,,.. w. m,nnn ir.nn in iha - It ,would ldca for thB Bankers Association to establish a vwv ....... ... w., , v,i. t.ira HOLD-U- P SLAYER . IS GIVEN 20 YEARS AS TEST SENTENCE Supremo Court Justice Finch in the Criminal Branch to-d- Imposed n 'test sentence\ on Frank Pcchota twenty-fou- r, No. S30 East 74th Street, who pleaded guilty of murder In tho second degree. 'Thirty years to life,\ said the court. And immediately Pcchota's counsel, Ell Rosenberg, was on his foet with n protest. \But Your Honor, the law provides only twenty years to life on such plea. You can't impose a sentence Itke that.\ Justice Finch replied: \I bellevd that I can. At rate. the sentence stands and you may test It It you please. Under a sentence of twenty years to life, with the pos nihilities of reduction, I think thin man would be Inadequately punish cd.\ Pechota ana ieier LuUuanlla, u resident of Hoboken, indicted together for murder In the first do gree, but Guardla was discharged on Pechota's story. He said ho and La Guardla, both drunk, entered the candy store of Herman Pollock, No. 428 East 76th Street, on tho night ot April 6. 'La Gupardla said he was going to get some clgurettcs,\ Pechota de dared. \I followel him. Then I had a sudden and Irresistible Impulse to hold the place up. I drew my re volver and fired. I didn't realise what I wan doing until La Guardla grabbed my arm.\ . OLD PEOPLE Sttd tht cure food tlemtnli which Fithtr John's Mtolcloe ceutalaa. Me drusa. XiiU tVM tnat the laborer Is worthy but and Is is two and and No. Inmr bad any were k:r i II nil II i mm mt bathing suits, shown with Annette Fall Pageant If OMAN AIDS TRAP rnurnAi n mm An rUliLitrlL DU ULHIi, NEW T E CROOK Miss Fischer Finds Him at Work in Flat While Tenants Were at Cemetery. Now enters the Funeral Burglar. Toseph Harris, thirty-eigh- t, of No. 166 Chryatle Street, was so described In the Yorkvllle Court to Magistrate Swetser y, when Aaron Deutsch a of No. 256 East S2d Street complained ti -- t Harris yesterday ' entered hlB apartment on the grouKd floor, while ho was 'in Brooklyn attending the burial servlco for Mrs, Deutsch and was caught rifling the place of valua bles. Miss Elizabeth Fischer, nineteen, of No. 42a East 79th Street, testified sho came In to clean up the apartment after the funeral procession left and found Harris there bundling up Jewelry. I m the undertaker,\ she swore ho said. \No you're not; I know him,\ Miss Fischer stated she replied and Harris, she continued, ran through the house, Jumped from the window and rnn toward Second Avenue. She followed, crying \Stop Thief.\ A large crowd Joined In the pursuit, among them Detective Vincent Durnlng of the East CTth Street Station, who fired two' shots and overtook Harris on tho 80th Street \V\ station. In Harris's pockets tho police say they found six addresses, among them the Deutsch's. Investigation of the others, It Is said, showed they were houses at which funerals weie scheduled for to-d- or On tho recommendation of Assistant District Attornoy Jones, Harris wile held In 15,000 ball. LADY ASTOR TO LEAD WILSON PILGRIMAGE Believed Now That Crowd Will Exceed 5,0Q0 First Estimated by Promoters. WASHINGTON, Aprit 28. Lady Nancy Astor and Bishop Fallows of Chicago will lead tho pllgrimago to tho home of Wood row Wilson to-d- I 'resent Indications are that participa tion by 6,000 women, estimated by Mrs. George E. Sovey, sponsor of tht movement, will be greatly surpassed To-da- y tho gathering will sing Onward. Christian Soldiers\ in ap ureclatlon of tho., fight made by Mr, Wilson at Paris tor the League of Na tlons and for the world peace. The Impromptu programme calls for short addresses by Lady Astor, Mrs. Sevey and Bishop Fallows. Included among the many luncheons y, was one tn honor of Lady As tor, given by Senutor Claude A Hwanson, of Virginia. For the occa slon, a Senate committee room was itrippcd of Its heavy furniture nnd converted Into a dining room where more than 100 guests were v enter tained. At the conclusion of the luncheon Lady Astor made a brief address, in which she expressed her pleasure at being \home\ again. She was then escorted to the floor ot the Senate by her host. FAMILY OF 18, A7IOTIIRR OV 13, A HE WILSON AWARD FOUNDERS. A family of eighteen In Andover, N. J and one of thirteen In Newton, N. J., have become founders of the Wood row Wilson Awards for I'ubllo Service, according to an an nounccment made by Hamilton Holt, Executive Director ot tho Woodrow Wilson Foundation. p Kellcrman, have been selected as BAN S- -l PENMAN OF CHECK KITING AN RUN DOWN McKenna and McGrath Trap- ped With Paper of Various Banks in Their Rooms. Peter J. McKenna, said to bo a re- tired saloonkeeper rind to havo served two years ofa ten-ye- ar sentence for grand larceny, was held In 825,000 on charge of forgery by Magistrate Irvine In West Side Court He also was held without ball on a cha'-r- of violating the Sulllvanylnw. With mm Hector ttaroia aicuratn, twenty, No. 251 West 121st Street, who snyes he Is a mcchanto but looks more like a student was held In 825,000 foi forgery. The men are sold to havo been tho brains and one ot them tho \Jim the Penman\ of a gang of forgers, who, according to the police, have passed hundreds of forged checks, which also bore the certification of banks. When they wero captured last night In McKenna's rooms at No. 149 Man hattan Avenue, by Detectives John Cordes nnd James Sheehnn of the West 47th Street Station, acting with Capt. Vaughn of tho Burns Dotectle Agency, there were found blanx checks of various banks and a t-U- - fying stamp for use upon checks mado out on the Irving National and the Corn Exchange Banks. The arrests follow that of Charles McMann, twenty-fou- r, of No. 449 West 49th Street, who was taken in custody on ror passing a forged certified check upon Raymond Crump of No. 57 West 49th Street. This check was 857.C5. McMann Is now held for the Grand Jury. It Is said ho got 813 for cashing the check, the balance being turned over to McKenna and McGrath. Tho charge upon which the pair wore neiu iiuh morning was tne casn Ing of a forged certified check drawn upon the Irving National Bank for 8285. It looked so good that William Ryan of No. 640 E. 149th Street had no hesitancy In passing out tho cash for It. McKenna claimed to have a permit for a revolver and blackjack found In his rooms, Baying he obtained them while working as a detective for a railway company, Tho detec tlvee said It was the ordinary permit giving a watchman the right to cam a revolver while on duty and had ex pired months ago. McKenna, they explained, war sentenced In 1912, but whether he had done time on. that sentence they could not suy. He was pardoned In 1916 by Gov. Whitman according to the detectives, on the 1914 sentence for ten years. According to the police the forgei' checks with the forged certifications oegan turning up In March never foi very large amounts all cloverlv done and the description of the man who passed them seldom was the same. Tho ringleaders obtained some out aide member of tho gang to get the hecks cashed for a percentage FINE WILL REMIND HIM UNTIL 1939 HE ONCE RAN A STILL Freed From Jail, He'll Be 200 Months Paying for Mak- ing Hooch. SANDUSKY, O.. April 28. Stephen Morgan, father ot six children, was released from the Erie County Jail on agreeing to ' pay a One of UfOOO for operating a still. He Is to pay It In Instalments of 85 a month, covering a period of sixteen years and eight months. He will be making monthly pay- ments until about Jan. L'lS19, 3. . the official bathing attire to be BOARD 0 F ESTIMATE HECKLES AS HELP Fl I IDLE IS ASKED Hvlan and Craifr Contend Brooklyn Commerce Body Is Controlled by B. R. T. Members of the Board of Estimate took turns y heckling James I! Fisher, Chairman of the Unemploy ment Committee of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, and Mayo Fessler, Executlvo Scscrctary, who appeared to ask the board's :tid In al- leviating the unemployment situation In this city. The board took this at- titude, as It developed during he de- bate, because of the contentions of both the Mayor and the Comptroller that the chamber Is controlled to a great extent by the B. H. T. I waa further claimed that the organization could not be acting In good faith Inas- much as the city, according to tho Mayor's own figures, has oiado pro- vision for the expenditure of 8127,000,- - 000 In publlo improvements to aid the unemployed, Comptroller Craig wanted to know from Mr. Fessler why the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce doesn't corn pel the Transit Commission to start work on the proposed .812,000,000 Nassau Street subway. Ho said the contracts were approved more than nine years ago, but that because of B. R. T. opposition tho work has never been started. Asked to furnish proof that the Brooklyn Chamber Is a B. R. T. con- trolled organization, Mayor Hylan said he heard the jAllway company had paid the Initiation fee of twenty-flv- e members. This Mr. Fessler em- phatically denied. On the contrary, he said, the B R. T. Is \sore on the Tlrooklvn nhamher of Commerce.\ Miss Myrta, M. Hanford, Chief of the Division of Employment of the State Department of Labor, declared the peak of unemployment has passed. William F. Kehoe, represent Ing the Central Trades and Labor Council, criticized the Federal Gov ernment's handling of the unemploy ment situation. He said the estimate of the number, of unemployed In this city, which had been Axed at 380,000, was too optimistic, and that there aro actually twice that number out of work here. Although 827,000,000 worth of public work has been au thorlzed by the 8tato Government, he said, not a Job has been started to date. He announced that In tho opinion of labor men President Har ding's unemployment conference has failed. REQUEST RELEASE OF LEBAUDY BOND Three of Four Sureties for $5,- - 000,000 for Administrators Would Retire. Three of the four bonding compan les that put up the 85,000,000 bond of the administrators of the estate of the late,Jacques Lebaudy have asked Surrogate L. D. Howell to relieve them from their shares. None gave any stated reason., They are: the National Surety Company.'the Amer- ican Surety Company and the Fidelity and Casualty. Although there Is no court record of tho share of each, It Is believed the share of the National waa 83,000, 000, of the American, 8500,000, and of tho Fidelity and casualty, ituo.uuu The administrators, are: Charles U 'Samuels and Ernest S. Suffern, A. L. Carr. representing me ia dellty and Deposit Company of Mary land, the other bondaman, told Sur roirntn Howell his company would take an additional part of the bond and get other companies to take what remained. Forced to Resign After Fall From Train a Few Months After Election. PARIS. April 28 (Associated Press). Paul Dcschancl, former President of France, died this afternoon. JM, Dcschanel was taken ill with In- fluenza a few days ago. Complica- tions, 4 set In almost immediately, and his weakened condition, duo to a nervous, breakdown ho suffered while ho was\ President, contributed In les- sening his power of resistance. Death came In .his homo In Paris at 6.80 o'clock this afternoon. Paul Eugeno Louis Dcschanel, tenth President of France, entered upon n seven-ye- ar term on Feb. 18, 1920, after having been chosen by ,v-- Na tlonol Assembly tho preceding Janu- ary by the biggest majority' since iho election of Thiers, the first President of tho present republic. Georges Clcmenccau, then at the height of his power as the French war Premier and one of the negotiators of tho treaty with' Germany, was until a few days before tho election believed to bo the only candidate who had a chance. Catholic nnd Socialist votes PAUL DESCHAHEL. In tho French Parliament, however, combined with those of tho political enemies of tho \Tiger\ and elected Deschanel. On May 24, 1920, a few months later, President Deschanel, on his way at night from Paris to Mont- - brlson to dedicate a monument, fell from a 'moving train while attem.pt-- ng to raise a window In his sleeping compartment. He was supposed to have been only slightly Injured. After weeks of convalescence in Normandy, he returned to Paris In June to preside at the Council of Min isters. Later, it was announced that he had suffered a complete break down. The following September, the President resigned nnd Premier Mil lerand was elected as his successor. After his resignation' from the French Presidency M. Deschanal lived In retirement for several months. His condition Improved steadily, and lato that year It was announced he had completely recovered, In January of last year he became a candidate In the Senatorial elections and was re turned from Oure-et-Lol- re on Jan. 9, He began attcndlnug the Senate ses sions the following May, and In Jan uary of this year was appointed a member of the Senate Foreign Af fairs Committee to replace M. Poln- - core wnen tne latter succecuea m. Briand. M. Deschanel was born In 185? In Brussels, to which city his father went utter being exiled tn 1851 for having published a pamphlet entitled Catholicism and Socialism.\ When he was two years old the boy re turned to France wtlh his father, who was pardoned following recantation of his views. Mme. Deschanel was fprmerly Mile. Germalno Brlco, daughter of Rene Brlce, member of the Chamber of Deputies for masculine: sonnows. (Prom tho Houston Post.) Miss Spinster As you know, a beau tiful woman can make a man get down on his knees. Old Bach Yea, and so can a very small collar button. nteoJarJatflaWOrta'' Bali- - Bearing 0OYCYCLE with New Departure Coaster Brake V MJt J CATAL rr- - akowlna lloycycl. \Co umbta\ Pwil-Crc- l, Pwtl-Cs- r, Cjcl.t. 81x1 wtlh Coulrr Control and lUbj CarrU(. Met on reauest ASK YOUIt DEALER to hjw you Ins \Columbia Family \ , Staji e.. bfoi.. 116 W. 32d St. N. 1. Eight of Them Dealing Prin- cipally With Challenge of ' . Master's Fees. , WASHINGTON. April 2S. Tho last of tho Now York gas cases, eight lrj number, were orally argued y In tho Supreme Court. The cases l elude nrlpenlp brought against tL& Consolidated and the Now York and Queens Gas Companies by the At torney General of New York to chal- lenge the compensation allowed tho Special Master In those cases by ,tho United States District Court at New Yrk' ?&1 In six other cases, those agalnpJ.tfSJ Central Union, Northern Union New York Mutual, Standard, New Amster- dam and the East River s Cdi panics, the Attorney Gonoral of New York was only Interested to the extent of challenging tho master's fees in each. V Corporation Counsel O'Brien at- tacked tho decision of tho. lower court holding tho statutory rato confisca- tory, insisting that the facts presented! in the cases were different from those decided by the Supremo Court in Gas Company case, In that the period covered by them was;, for the entire years of 1919 and 1920.. Counsel for tho gas companies con tended that virtually all of the ques-,- ' tions involving tho statutory ed In the cases had already been passed upon by tho court, and In the matterof the Special Mastor's compensation, whlio not directly In- -' tcrcstcd, jhoy presented a brief argu ment Intended to emphasize tho. Im- -. portanco of tho work ho pcrformc BROOKLYN MAN THOUGHT LOST IN SENECA LAKE' Ilornce Itltch nnd Rdward Liver ay, Baltimore, VnnUh After Taklusr Canoe. HORNELL, N. Y., April 28. Hor ace Rltch, Brooklyn, and EdwfJ Llversny, Baltimore, guests at a hotel hero, are believed to have been\ drowned In Seneca Lake. They went' out In a canoe yesterday afternoon and have not been seen since. Theyf were reported missing this morning after tho canoe and their hats wero found In the lake. Rttch was connected wltti tho Met-- 1 ropolltan ' Insurance Company. ELECT PAWL PATTERSON CHIEF OF PUBLISHERS. Paul Patterson, ot the Baltimore, Sun. waa elected. President of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association at Its annual meeting here y. T. IU Williams, of the Pittsburgh Press, re tiring President, waa elected to the Board of Directors. Others elected were: S. E. Thomason. Chicago Tribunal John Stuart Bryntti Richmond News-Leade- r, Secretary; Howard Davis, New York Tribune. Treasurer. Directors were: F. a. Bell, Savannah News; Harry Chandler, Los Angeles Times, and Charles H. Taylor, Boston Gcobe. DUN JpOMTnr Tra4 Uar Advt.on page 16 Notice to Advertisers DJfpUf tdmtlilnc rte ropr nd rtlrtw erdtft for cither tin neck dn Uornlni WoUd or TD Lftnlnjj world if rrceliM iitrr 4 i u. in f7 prrcfduil publication can be Inirrtrd only u iprf mtr permit ud In order of receipt at Tht World Office. Copy rcnulntw rniufluii to b, made byiTtf world sum b rrcelTtd. bj 1 p. iL, Display adrcTtislui type copy fct tht Supple, vent Section' of Tb Sunday worio must Ci, raratawl tw 1 T H Thin-ari- r orrLdlo Dublin uon ua rejeiw mun d recrirra vj WriAmr Psm Mntalnln nffraflnci tO Of Bin. -- ik. by Tt Woild muU c rtcelied by Tbured-- y noga, RimdaV Viln KfaMt nnv. ltM COPT which kuX. not Deta reotirea Di I r. ' naar en, irarini py which ha a not bwn rtcmd to tlw publlratloa offlcaj by l r M. Friday, and oo.lt Ire. Wrtlon orders not rerrtmt by 3 IV M PrldiTt, win Im omitted a conditions require. rlldl in thtt order of latest receipt arid posJtlra rele&M order. Dliplay ropy or order rrleaird later than M nrorldtd a.bnr. hrn nmltted will not aeno til earn discounts of in Aharaiter. contract or othut . THE WORLE& oiko, IIIMAN. MLMAN. CAMPUELL FUKCRAI. CHURCH, Baiuraay, a i: u. HOCSMAN. JACOB I. GAMrOEL.1, FU NE11AL, CHURCH, Saturday, 2 P. M. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. 'When Death Occurs Call \Columbus 820O FRANK K CAMPBELL \gte guwrat ehurchVc. (HON'PCCTAaiAM) BrotdwrjratOtthSt. HELP WANTED MALE. JOINKIIS Ship Jolnr. at N.w Vork llarb. ' Dry Dock Corporation, Itobaak, BtauMP