-wyfnyiimM THE WASHINGTON TIMES, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11; 1919.' ought not obther me much. I guess," he told the gathered throng. And so he started off. But he was stopped and told that one elevator was hauling sixteen persons at & time up the fifty-eight stories. And "Bill" waited. An emergency shift succeeded la rettlnr four ear one hi eaek tea lami what! mejud? of the Jatldisgrgr fen at power gave out and three t had to be stopped. fctft A Handy Man Around the House Copyright. 1919. New York Tribune. Inc. By Briggs ears -: -!- NIX! SAY STE It te ynr latere yi rttnr Xjthtrtr d4 tntrrrmr hy.t.i. ELD KEY And So Girls in Fifty-eight Story Building Go on Strike. 0UBLECR1 r..i ' - -l----;-w - NOG BUFFALO. N. T.. Sept. 11. An at tempted blackmail hold-up Is the the ory advanced- now for the murder of Normaa "V. Shear. Buffalo garage man, and his fiancee, Miss Mary Eliz abeth Messmer. on Ensmlngcr road. Tonawanda. The road -where the double crime was committed Is known as "Lovers' Lane." It runs off the river road, the main highway between this city and T&nawsada,' and is frequently used by motorists, especially those living In the Black' Rock section of Buffalo. Sheriff -Bradley and his deputies ate of the ppinion that Shear and )Mlss Messmer were killed after an attempt had been made to blackmail the couple, 'who were found seated In the automobile at a late hour. The sheriff bases his opinion on the num ber of reports received by him of late. telling" of bogus officers who flashed badges and demanded money of motorists under threats of arrest. ' Believe He Resisted. -Shear and his companion, it Is be lieved, were the victims of a bogus officer. The dead- raan, it is held may nave been approached by a p&eudo officer, -who threatened arrest. Shear and the girl were engaged and were soon to be married. Shear ra!ay have resisted the attempted blackmail, possibly recognizing the GJjnman, and was then shot down, the authorities believe. The fact that the -woman -was iouna aeaa on tne roaa sune distance from the automobile t$nds to show that she got out of the so&chlne during the argument and 4as trying to escape. JTo CIhcs tJaco'Tered. -Although more than two days have passed since the deuble murder, not . a, real clue has been unearthed that "would tend to run down the slayer of the young couple. Sheriff Bradley is working on the blackmail theory and expects to get more definite in fermatton from motorists who re ported the attempted hold-ups on thei JSnsmmger road last week. Keiatives and friends of the mur dered couple refuse to accept any other, theory than that they were lulled by a thug. Shear was unarm ed when he took Miss Messmer for the automobile ride on Sunday night. In fact it Is said he never owned a gun. The dead girl. It is said, never bad any other admirers, and it is de clared a Jealousy motive for the dou ble slaying is unfounded. - ' I j ' : rT r. : " FRiGwD -h PlTZHUH- n ' ' ... -J. I WIFE (vvont You go O R II Pi " i - -Arvu Empty ThE ,j JJf JHM-HA1- ",.."' TMe ice-box- ia tva jtjza it5 so full' Tva TV- Gee.! I x- v V ' - Should m rzt. UH-hum) 7 i-v r J FULL-,, I s- J$k2? ; ... . , i ffWV r GERMAN PASSPORTS ON WAR-TIE BASIS MIKE'S BACK AGAIN; ; WANTS A US. slgian Waif, adjfof Craps, Arrives In Nero York for Fourth Time. i WXEW TTOKJ .Sept. 11. If anybody 3 "ants to adopt a Belgian by the name ; Mike Gflhoole-. the same Is at Ellis Island, clothed ia slop-chest garments afsd a recepfci mood. ,'Mike. though a Jittle unconventional, nhght prove an asset to some family, for he has swatted the high cost of living and travel. .. .In fact, thiss the fpurth time the lid has been "acres." "-j "He came first just after the armis tice, picked 'up a collection of $150 w!lth his sad tale of an orphan's lonl ness and was sent back to France. Mike came right back, got another collection and wafted a second good-by kiss to Miss Liberty of Bedloe's Island. The third time he stowed away a fjvnpathctic woman, touched-by the plight of a boy whose. Irish Tather had dfed years ago and whose Belgian mother had been killed in the war. adopted him. Mike lost his foster mother, however, when he was caught Ja a craps game and was again sent back across the sea. Yesterday he arrived as a stowaway on the Kroonland and was taken once more to Ellis Island, which is begin ning to seem like home to him. On one trip over he picked, up a sympathy fund of $S09. BERLIN", Sept. 11. The camel try ing a squeeze through the eye of a needle had an easy assignment com pared to the German who would get by the passport officials and allied authorities to spend a holiday abroad. The camel and needle trick might be possible, provided the camel were small enough and the needle big -enough. But the. German: traveler ty.'S" -Hf-Jjrwho would zeroes the frontier throws nis nanus up. sacspair anq mutters: "It can't be dgic "' " ' " " During the war, while Germany was still a monarchy. It was difficult to obtain a passport. The republican government has made it impossible. Passport regulations that in their severity surpass anything ever known in darkest Russia, have been prescribed as a link in the one great idea that today engrosses official Germany to catch the tax dodger. Good Conduct Eentlal. The first step of the passport ap plicant is to obtain a certificate of good conduct from his local police station. If he is unknown to the po lice that is a comparatively easy mat ter. If the cops know him too well , POST.1X CARD TRAVELS 13 JEARS. BOSTON", Sept. 11. After being en reutc from Fort Ethan Allen, Vt.. to Boston for thirteen years, a postal card has been received by B. H. Macy, of 370 Atlantic avenue. The card was mailed at the fort July 31. 1006. by Macy's sister. Hazel and it was addressed to her father who died a few years ago. his task ends at the police station. He'll get a bad certificate and no passport. From the police station he is sent to the tax collector. That gentleman will take a week or two to look into the applicant's record. Perhaps he will make a secret investigation of his income, and If the tax return filed is too low no passport will be granted. Nor will any passport be Issued unless the taxes are paid in advance. If, however, the applicant succeeds In getting the pdlice certificate of good conduct and the tax collector's permission to go abroad, he may ap ply to the registrar of dwellings for' a statement officially certifying that the address given the polico and tax collector is correct. Thus equipped he proceeds to the passport office at kpol'ce "heaquarters,. '. it theyould-be traveler has no ur gent reason for going abroad his ap plication is rejected on the spot. Ill health is not considered a good rea son. It must be urgent business. Furthermore, after he ultimately has obtained his German passport he must proceed to the legation of the country he intends to visit and ap ply for permission to enter, an under taking that requires additional exam inations, telegraphing and other in conveniences. Some German newspapers have late ly protested against the passport ob stacles thrown into the path of Ger man business men by their own gov ernment, but all appeals have been in vain. URGE CENSUS OF WOMEN WORKERS Housewives of the United States could pay off. the war. debt in two years with their earnings, according to figures presentedto Secretary Red field by Mrs. Raymond Robins, presi dent of the National Women's Ira Jo Union League, in a letter requesting that both wage-earning and house keeping women-, tie", included In' the next canape. , " 4j V- Mrs. Robins states that "current estimates put the number of women doing their own housework at 19. 000,000, and the value of their out put, computed at the rate of $45 a month, would reach an aggregate yearly Income of $10,000,000,000. She declares that many wage earning women support dependents. ST. LOUIS. NEGROES PLAN OWN DEPARTMENT STORE ST. LOUIS, Sept 11 A co-operative department store organized, managed. and for negroes was being planned here today. A meeting Is expected to provide funds for the enterprise. Stock amounting to $25,000 has been sub scribed, and the balance of $100,000 Is expected to be raised tomorrow. Dr. B. G. Shaw, pastor of the Metro politan A. M. E. Zlon .Church and pres ident of the Co-operative Association of Liberty, is founder of the idea, "We are going to separate ourselves," he said today. "I think it is well for vs, to. build up a whole section com mercially and otherwise." UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT If yon want good dentistry, come io us. .satisfaction or bo pay. f Largest and best, equipped of. nccs aouui oi actv zoric ' HO PAIN NEW TORJC, Sept 11. "Walk up fifty-eight flights? Not me, honey! Shoe leather and silk stockings are too costly. Think of the-- wear and tear on knees that means. Why, you'd have to bend them a million times to .get up that high. Besides the supply of chewing gum and nice novels, with handsome he roes and heroines, was large. And so some thousands of little stenographers employed up in the flf-ly-elght-story Mertopolitan Life Building rested comfortably on the stairs in the lower lobby, reading of the good old days of love and ro mance, after telephoning friend boss that the elevators .-weren't running this morning. It was all because the coal heavers way down in the third or fourth subbasement refused . to work when they were refused an increase of $5 a week. They were being paid $4 a day. Some there were who walked up, but they were mostly the male popu lation of the building. And some of the girls thought more of work than of romance and chew ing gum and giggled their way up. But most of those were from the floors that seem to be the basement when compared to the top of the building. Vitality and enthusiasm carried some as high as the tenth floor or so, but ambition waned as the height progressed. And so the great lobby of the building appeared as a mass ive reading room, where the girls reveled in the tales of lavender and old lace. "Bill" Sewall, formerly guide to Col. Theodore Roosevelt, undaunted by the wilds of many trails in the Maine woods, looked somewhat aghast at this array when he entered the lobby on his way to a meeting of the RooBevelt Memorial Association on Ihe twenty-ninth floor. But "Bill" he's seventy-four years old regained composure and announced his inten tion of climbing up those many flights. "I've often walked over forty miles a day in the Maine woods, and this Porcelain and Gold Inlays a Specialty. Call for Jfrn r.Tamtniitlnn lUonrat 8s30 A. 31. y 8 P. M. Son- any, iv a. m. to 1 I'. M. Columbia Dentists 403 9thSt N. W. Over Strand Theater. HOUSEWIVES msist on ycror grocer giving you the best, when ordering Nut Butter. TROCO is a wonderful food. product. It is the TME SyCCESSOR TO BUTTER and costs so much less that its use will help you to economize. TROCO is handled by the best grocers in Washington. POTOMAC BUTTER CO. 910 C Street N. W. Phone BIAIV 203 Sole Distributor HARVEY'S V Famous Restaurant t . ..... ' Originator of Steamed Oysters-arid aFoddf; A. i The Opening of ''.-.. ... . . - . Suppea: Dansante ; Monda$eptember 15th ,..,.. . . . . ... And -'Continuing Every Evening (Except Sundays) -- ' From, 10:30 P. M. to 1 A. M. . . r a 'npH5 third floor during these Ijoufs. will be given - over to. dancing. - The.f inesL JazzCGrchestra. in Washington has been engaged tofurriish the music. J Those who danced to the music furnished by this Orchestra last winter know what wemean when we say it is the finest dance music fn Washing ton. Service. a la-Qarte. , V From 6 P. M. to 8P.M. - , " " On the Third door, ; Table-de-Hote X.-f ft'. Dinner ' " ': - - . v 'B .1 "v'V:' $1.25 ;-:A' t V$p& JErom-22 smKmiz -?c3n --"!. NbomdoZP.M. ." m.- inessMdn's Lunch : i- . .,- ALWAYS DINE AT HARVEY'S, "YTS ECONOMICAL . i Mr j7 $ R Kb w HotjWeathe skin-troubles Rcand Ointment usually relieves sunburn, heat ntsh. chafing and summer -" instantly. Aided by Resinot Soap, k takes out smarting ani itching and sewn restores lb -skintohealth and comfort. kcttoU Soap keeps com ptejdons dear m spite of Kimoier sun. wind and heat. Jferian. ku teen pracri esmo I & . .s 'i. Mr. J. Fischer, 3224 Eleventh Street, clearly the reason for the reputation of Corby Mothers Bread. I have been selling 0orbyfs Ifothers Bread long enough, to know that it enjoys its wonderful reputation solely on its merits. Stay after day it-is al ways the same delioious quality. I never hear a compliant about 06rbys " ebthers Brea s ' t j SiJioerely 3ur g, -r' t, n -w We don't leave any room for complaint in Corby's Mothers Bread. It is scientifically made bread in which is developed 22 per cent more of the tissue-building gluten than's to be found in any other bread. Eat Corby's Moth ers Bread pure as Mother made it. 100 PURE Delivered hot to your grocer three times a day. b sp