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The Weather Cloudy, with light mow tonight and tomorrow. Hsurly Temperature Record on P»»e Two. DAIU^i ^fflm STAF VWEEN9 BOROUGH PtJBLfC LftRXR? 1 REFERENCE DEPARTMENT TSIOH xi^wSV «. f BJ ^ JP iL 12 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 FIFTY-FIFTH YEAH OFFICt: STAB »OU»Sl. LONG ISLAN0 CITY LONG ISLAND CITY, QUEENS BOROUGH, N. Y., MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 16, 1931. 14 PAGES—2 SECTIONS PRICE THREE CENTS QUEENS GIRL, 15, IS KILLED, ING MAN LOSES LIFE WEEK-END AUTO CRASHES. PRIEST PROTESTS RADICAL' TEACHER IN SCHOOL NO. 80 Marion Fahr Crushed As POCKETBOOK THEFT Car Upsets in North CHARGED BY WOMAN Side Collision. Chauffeur Fatally Injured in Fall From Machine in Smash-Up. TO FLUSHING MAN Two residents of Queens are dead and many are nursing injuries to- day as the result of automobile acci- dents over the week-end. The dead": William Livingstone, thlrty-tbree, 132-24 Maple avenue, Flushing, was arrested last night on a charge of I grand larceny preferred by Mrs. j Marie Jansen, 217-08 Forty-third ave- ] nue, Bayside. According to the police, the theft ' occurred in a store at 208-16 North- l ern boulevard. Mrs. Jansen is said to have laid her pocketbook containing more than the new Maspeth precinct is won- dering today how he will explain to his superiors the sportive mood that led him to stage a one-man variety show in front of the R-K-O Theater at Northern boulevard and Main street, Flushing's busiest traffic cen- ter. Saturday was his day off and he deemed it proper for a celebration at A scathing attack on radicals, I the corner at about 7 o'clock in the with specific reference to a supposed I evening. The public seemed to ap- "radlcal" teacher in P. S. 80. BUss- | predate it. but fellow-patrolmen ville, featured an address by the Rev. ! failed to pall for encores. They gave Sportive Policeman Provides Thrills With One-Man Show for Flushing Throngs. But Fellow-Officers Give Him the 'Hook' Police Sergeant Meville Noble of house that a drunken police sergeant Father Lonergan, in Bliss ville Speech, Proposes Boycott of Glasses. John J. Lonergan, chaplain of Cal- vary Cemetery, yesterday morning. Without mentioning any name, he denounced the supposed radical teacher aj» "an out-and-out agent of the Soviet Union." and proposed a boycott of his classes. The address was delivered before the Holy Name Society of St. Raph- ael's Church. Bllssville, snd the Marion Fahr, lifted, 86-28 139th found under his coat when he was street Richmond Hill. searched. He will be arraigned In $100 on a counter and Livingstone is Bllssville division of the Ancient Or- sald to have picked it up. aer 0 f Hibernians at a communion The police say that the purse was | breakfast In the Central Hotel Greenpoint and Bradley avenues. him the "hook," and now he Is un- der suspension from the department. Sergeant Nohle, who was assigned to the Flushing precinct until a few months ago, waa arrested in the midst of his "act" and taken to the Flushing police station by Captain | their way out of the line and tried to Richard McHale after several per- sons had telephoned to the station | (Continued on Next Page) was interfering with automobile traffic at the intersection. Noble was in uniform. Ha danced on the pavement at Main street and Northern boule- vard, a spot which is about the cen- ter of the community. Hundreds of persons leaving or entering the shops and theaters in the vicinity stopped to watch his antics. Traffic came to a standstill. Ser- geant Xoble. inspired apparently by the intenlness of the audience, pigeon-winged his way to the center of the street, where honking motorists were trying to thread a passage through the throng. H» stopped car after car, announc- ing that he was going to inspect brakes. Occasionally drivers edged 12 NORTH QUEENS GIRLS NOW GONE IN 'EPIDEMIC OF DISAPPEARANCES; 50 HAVE LEFT HOMES SINCE JAN. 1 Oscar Kills, 131-60 Bradford street, Flushing. The injured: George Burnette, twenty-one, 115- U 201st street. St. Albans; cuts of the right hand and right thigh Krnest Welker, twenty-three, 151 Newtown avenue, Brooklyn; frac- ture of the left leg and ankle. Margaret Bavter. thirty-eight, Sec- ond street, near Northern boulevard. Bavside, possible fracture of the Flushing today. CLEARV1EW TRACT BOUGHT BY BERRY AT $940,000 COST Father Loenrgan bitterly con- demned the practice which, he charged, permitted radicals to be- come .teachers in the public schools in which Catholic children are pupils. He urged the Holy Name Society and the Ancient Order of Hibernians to do their utmost to aid In keeping radicalism out of Queens public schools. Would -Sliiui Classes. He then referred specifically to P. 8. 80, declaring that a radical was In Roads Are Jammed With Summer Traffic As Winter's Last Sunday Is Day of Sun, But Zephyrs Develop Teeth After Dark The last Sunday of Winter proved , tic. _A one-way rule was enforced for to be the first Sunday of Summer yesterday—while the sun shone. Throughout the greater part of the day, the sun was brilliant, and the breezes were soft and warm. To- wards midnight, though, some of the "breezes" that blew in from the waterfront areas showed that King Winter, despite his senility, had not traffic on Northern boulevard be- tween Bayatde and Douglaston. There were double lines of cars on Rocky Hill road; there were double lines on the roads leading to Long Beach and Jonea Beach. The roads to the Rockaways were jammed with traffic which barely crawled. Both serious and minor traffic acci- dents reached mid-Summer propor- Three More Are Reported Over Week-End As j **>. Missing. .-,#/•• Two Astoria Chums Vanish —Maspeth Girl Fails , to Eeturn. HOOVER SELECTS NEWSPAPERMAN WASHINGTON, March 16 (U. P.).—Theodore Joslin, Washington correspondent of the Boston Transcript, will be appointed secretary to President Hoover, it was announced at the White House today. JAMES NEILL, ACTOR, DIES HOLLYWOOD, March 16 (U. P.).—James Neill, seventy, one of Hollywood's most widely known character actors, died in his Glendale home last night after a short illness. Neill was on the stage for twenty-eight years prior to entering motion pictures twenty years Twelve North Queens girls are. now missing from their homes in the I "epidemic" of disappearances in thl* borough, the police revealed today. It was learned today that fifty ! girls had vanished in Northern sablna Nevens. thirty-nin^ M A ^ , | the SPrviee of the gchoo) "teaching I ago. He was "the husband of Kdythe~Chapman, 'herself welt known in ^TnMcNMcktr seven, 47-14 Kis^ A p p r o v a l 0 f p ar k Sit« Op^On radicalism daily to our children." fi f ms . H e played the part of the Apostle James in "King of Kings" .Tohn McVlcker, s e v e n . _ # it s a.,. "! protested for his removal but and tha t of Aaron in "The Ten Commandments." instead he WM promoted. Father L/0nt*rEan d©cl H red • The Holy Name Society .an cor- j INCOME TAX DROP EXPECTED move" U radicVs 0n but 0 we can gTTthem I WASHINGTON, March 16 (U. P.).-Secretary of Treasury Mellon empty classrooms." "' expects to get an index of the extent of the business depression and He added that about 25 per cent. \ the probable Government deficit from the income tax collections for boulevard, bruises and cuts of, the head, right leg apd •f/rttfc Albert E. Daly, thirty-five. 30-.W Thirty-fifth street, Astoria, cuts of j the face. Girl Dies in Crash. •Marion Fahr met her death as the ; Regarded Certain as Price is Halved. vi Acquisition of 122 acres of the prop- result of "a collision of two cars at|erty of the clearvlew Golf Club, J of tne children of St. Raphael's par- i the first quarter of this year, the last of which were pouring in today. I!™ „.M„MC vesterdav morning at I Whiteatone, at a cost of S94OJJO0 for j igh aPe pupl is at the school, the oth- , Treasury officials have estimated returns for the first quarter, which 4:30 o clock yesteraay » I park purposes was announced*today erg attended parochial and public mu%t be filed bv midnieht toniirht XT~_.W.„ honiovard and 150th street, h .. r<„.trnii«r R»r«. t „v,„„i. i„ n.JTl^i-. „„A TkL.„n ?!X**J*". ?i e ." BV miunignr. lonigiu, Northern boulevard and 150th Flushing. . She waa riding In the front seat of a car owned by John Krappman of 178-28 120th avenue, St. Albans, which he waa operating south on 150th street when it was struck by by Controller Berry. The option has been closed, the Controller stated, and the project will be submitted to the Board of Estimate with full confidence of its I Patterson, pastor of St, Raphael* approval because the price originally ,.,. ,, _, asked for the same land waa $1,800,- (Continued on Next Page) a car operated west on Northern Uga, v | ^__ boulevard by Louis C. Benjamin of Tne clearvlew Golf Club purchase j .._ ., would run between $525,000,000 and schools in Greenpoint and Thomson j ?3 3 0 ,000,000, or about §100,000,000 less than for the first quarter last Father Lonergan wa* railed upon i vear > when thev totalled $628,000,000. This is despite a general in- In the absence of the Rev. John J.' crease of 1 percent, in the tax rate over last year, when the temporary 1 per cent, reduction voted by Congress was effective. ASTORIAN KILLED | CORONA MAN HELD IN MANHATTAN AS ON CHARGE HIS CAR TRUCK OVERTURNS' HIT POLICEMAN Thomas F. Moroney Hurled Bail for Wallace Odom is Set * I to Death While Driving at $500 Following Flush- Vehicle. Thomas F. Moroney. fifty-one. 28-05 ing Accident. Is the largest that has been made under the recent appropriation of 130,000,000 for park purposes. The purchase price represents 19.75 , per cent, .of $4,800,000 which was Queens' share of the total appropria- tion fund. Meanwhile, agitation for the pur- to the] chaae of jjorth Beach Park in the 305 Sixth avenue, Brooklyn. The collision overturned Krapp- man's car. As It started to overturn, the door beside hiss Fahr opened and she was thrown to the roadway. The car landed on top of her. She waa not removed from tne wreckage until the car had been Ighted again. Removed ng Hospital In an ambulance p,,.^,, % i . Ql0a & Ward continues. -. Harrison, she died at T.w fbe greater part of the Clearvlew tract is occupied by an elght^en-hole j golf course. ' A pier, approximately 860 feet wide, extending 1,000 feet into the bay and said to be valued at $150,000. con tains bathhouses and complete loc equipment. ' There la a clubhouse on the by Dr. o'clock vesterday morning Burnete, who was riding In the rear seat of Krappman's car. w * 8 attended by Dr. Harrison and taken "Detective Anthony Duane of the Flushing precinct q«e»t«oried the operators of both care at t»>e Fltwh- in th# Floa-m* Cam* to deteiwra* whether m «h«rg* of nomicW* should be made fn connection wltn tn* death of the girl. Returning From Beach. Krappman told the police that he and Miss Fahr and a party of friends had been at Long Beach, Saturday night. After taking two Whiteatone girls to their homes, they started for Richmond Hill. „ He said that Benjamin'* car struck the rear end of hi* machine a ter- rific blow, causing It to overturn. Patrolman Alexander Dltter found the brakes on Benjamin's car in good working order. Miss Fahr's Injuries were listed by the police as a posaiblo fracture of the right hip, fracture of left and right rlba and cuts of the back. Misa Fahr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Fahr, was the nleca of Public Administrator Alfred J. Kennedy, of 150-27 Fifteenth drive, Whitestone. Besides her parents, she leaves two brothers, John and William Fahr, twelve and ten year* old, re- spectively. She was a native of Whitestone, and had lived here un- til two years ago, when the, family moved. Tha body was removed from the Flushing to the home of Mr. Ken- nedy whence the funeral will be held at 10:30 tomorrow morning. At St. Luke's Church, a mass of re- quiem will be offered by the Rev. Francla J. Dillon, the rector. Burial will be In the family plot in Mt. Saint Mary Cemetery, Hushing. Oscar Ellis met hie death Satur- day night when he fell from a car in Roslyn after it had been la col- lision with another machine. Ellis, who waa a chauffeur for the Flushing Storage Warehouse Company, leaves a widow. Ora and five children, Anthony, sixteen; Lil- lian, fourteen; Virginia, twelve; Ora, ten, and Loretta, fifteen months, all of Flushing, am Ernest Welker waa driving his motorcycle west on Rodman street about 1,000 feet east of the Flushing Creek, Flushing, early yesterday morning when It waa struck by an automobile being operated on Rod- man street by Fred Wagenstein of 375 Thirty-eighth street, Astoria. Attended by Dr. Harrison of Flushing Hospital, Welker waa re- moved to his heme. Weman Injured, Margaret Bavler suffered her In- juries at 11 o'clock yesterday morn- ing when a car she was driving on Roosevelt avenue, Flushing, collided (Continued on Next Page) PLUMBERS' BALL ATTRACTS 1,500 The North Side waa well repre- sented at tha annual entertainment and dance Saturday atght of Queena- boro Branch, Association of Master Plumbers, in Triangle Ballroom, Richmond Hill. More than 1,500 per- sona attended. S. Bogert Ford, Public Work* Com- missioner Hallaran'* secretary, rep- resented Borough President Harvey. Entertainment waa provided by pro- fessional' talent and George Kohl- meter directed the musical program. Joseph Mittaseb waa chairman of the arrangements committee. Jos- eph Zimmerman la president of the branch. NUNAN HAS BILL TO SHIFT QUEENS BOUNDARY LINE Two Changes Contemplated, One At Inwood, Other Near Woodhaven. INSURANCE SHOWS GAIN FOR 1930 ALBANY, N. Y., March 16 (U. P.).—Despite depressed economic conditions, life insurance figures for 1930, when tabulated, will reveal I street "Haepttal, where he died a an increase, according to the seventy-second State Insurance Depart- short time afterwards, ment report. The report, scheduled to be submitted to the Legislature today, was compiled by George S. Van Schaick, newly appointed superintendent. Increases also will be noted in casualty and surety departments, the rajptfit stated. •yjjt- juitd to, he wwrtb About IS WITNESS FOR AIRPORT OWNERS _____ f Smith, Former Civil Engi- neer, Testifies in Suit Over Cutting 0 ? of Road. Sanitation Commissioner L C. L. Smith, for many years a iclvll en- gineer In Queens, was the principal witness today at the resumption of the damage and injunction suit brought by George Kremer, North Beach* property owner, against the New York Air Terminals, Inc., builders of the Glenn H. Curtiss Air- port, North Beach. . Kremer alleges that cjty property was taken fof» the development of the 'airport and that the value of his holdings had decreased because of the elimination of one section of Old Bowery Bay road. , The auit la being heard by Su- preme Court Justice Macerate in Brooklyn. Commissioner Smith of- fered testimony baaed on survey* he made at North Beach for the New York Air Terminals, Inc. He said that the high wire fence erected on the northerly side of Old Bowery Bay road waa on airport property. ight changes "are eonteaffetatelT in the boundary line* between Queen* attd Nassau Counties and between Queen* and Ktnjr* Counties. _ Ihe former change is proposed be- tween Far Rochaway in Queens and Inwood In Nassau, in order to facil- itate rapid transit development for Far Rockaway, and contemplates a shifting of the boundary 1,500 feet to the east. The proposal has been Indorsed to the Nassau County Board of Su- pervisors by the Inwood Chamber of Commerce. The second proposed a shifting of the line between Queens and Kings from one side to the center of the following streets: Beginning at Atlantic avenue In Woodhaven, south down the center line of Eldert lane to Glenn street: down the center line of Glenn street to. the center line of Drew avenue; down the center line of Drew avenue to the center line of Liberty avenue; down the center line of Liberty ave- nue to the center line of Ruby street. Thence down the center line of Ruby Jtreet to the center line of Du- mont/avenue; down the center line j FORD METAL PLANE BREAKS TWO RECORDS AT JACKSON HEIGHTS ROt.t.KRSKATF.R 1NJI7RKD. Arthur Kearn*, nhM, of 30-41 154th •treat. Flushing, waa rollersksting at Northern boulevard and ltfnd •treet, Flushing. Saturday afternoon when he wa* tripped by sn unidenti- fied Hoy and falling to the sidewalk, a possible fracture of the iw. He wee attended by frin of Flushing Hospital A trl-motored Ford all-metal cabin monoplane took off fifty-one times from Holmes Airport, Jackson Heights, carrying a total of 501 passenger* on pleasure flights over North Queens yesterday, It waa re- ported by officials at the airport. Captain Paul Herman waa the pilot and Arthur Bussy, co-pilot. Many of those who went aloft had never been in an airplane before. Airport official* said that the num- ber of flights and the fetal number of passenger* carried broke two world'* record*—those, for the num- ber of flights made In one day by one airplane and the total average of passengers carried In a single air- plane In one day. Two more trl-rdotored Ford* will be at the airport next Sunday, It waa reported. PARK PLEA INDORSED BY ASTORIA FARMERS The recklessness of automobile driver* and the tack of park and playground space In Astoria were crltlsed by Anthony Ionone at a meting of the Farmer* of Astoria, 23-7* Thirty-second street. Rudolph Masin. president, streesed the need for a comfort station The aocretary, William Seatak. was Instructed to send a letter to the r per authorities askmg attention given several civic needs. The Farmers made plans-for their eighteenth animal dance May 2 In Lido Garden*. Astoria. Milton Sol- omon, chairman, la aMlsted by Job*) Walsh and Richard Specht. VIENNESE GREET CHARLIE CHAPLIN VIENNA, March 16 fU. F.).—Charlie Chaplin arrived here from Berlin at 1:10 p. m. today. A crowd of 200 persons greeted Chaplin at his hotel. yet lost sll his bite. Every gasoline engine which would j tlon.s. run appeared to be running, and vlr- It was a perfect June day. tually all of New York was out on And persons familiar with Queens Queeng since th , n m o{ the year rubber tires. I weather predicted March blistards ^ Wlth the ^ception of the twelve Queen.i roads carried Summer traf- for the first Sunday In June. n(}w bfing B0U? ht, however, all were found by the police or returned to their homes voluntarily. Several girls have disappeared dur- ing th- last few days. Others have j been missing f< r weeks. Detective Charles Oppel of the Missing Persons Bureau assigned to the North Queens district said today that there had been an unusually ; large number of runaway girls In j North Queens. Three more cases were reported to ; the Astoria and Maspeth police over the week-end. Astoria Girls Gone. Two Astoria girls, it was reported, disappeared together They are Gladys Squlers, sixteen, 32-31 Forty-eighth street, and Ingrid Thompson, fifteen, 32-57 Forty-eighth street. The third girl whose absence wa* reported is Nora Woods, fifteen. 55-5* Willow avenue, Maspeth. Gladys Squlers Is declared as five feet three inches.tall. She weighs 115 pounds and hsa blue eyes and blond hair. When »he dissppeared she wore a black coat trimmed with fur, blue hat, black silk dress, flesh-colored stockings snd black shoes. Her chum is described as five feet five Inches tall. She weighs 11* pounds and ha* blue eyes and blond hair. She waa wearing a blue bat, ma- roon coat trimmed with green, tan .ersey blouse, bluajbklrt. fleeh-oefl- itred stocking* snd WpWin shoes. The Maspeth girl is flv» feet five iookea tall, weighs 140 pounds and hss bias eyes and blond hair. She wajs wearing a green cost Wallace Odom, twenty-four, eol- Thirty-seventh street, Astoria, was ored. 33-20 112th street, Corona, was fatally injured yesterday when » . arraigned yesterday in Long Island truck he was operating in Manhut- j City Magistrate's Court, accused of tan overturned, throwing him to the j being the driver of an automobile pavement. | which on Saturday struck and serl- The accident occured In front of j ously injured Motorcycle Patrolman 159 Washington street. The Astorian i Anthony Budney at Murray street suffered a frsctured skull snd other I and Thirty-fifth avenue. Flushing, injuries. Budney, who lives at 23-40 121st He was removed to the Broad street, College Point, was struck as he was riding his police motorcycle. He is In Flushing Hospital with a fracture of the left leg and Injuries j to his left foot, Odom pleaded not guilty yesterday to a charge of simple assault when qulem will be offered in the Church I he was brought to court by Detec- I of the Precinus Blood. | tlve James Kternan of the Flushing j J squad. Magistrate Peter M. Daly ordered Mm held in »6O0 bail for a hearing In Flushing Court on Thurs- day. Mr. Moroney leaves his widow. Mary Ann. The funeral will take place from his home Wednesday. A mass of re Burial In St. John's Cemetery will " Mlrwv I*JU **} AII (lias MI >( Sons. LAWMAKERS TACKLE 'BIG THREE' ALBANY, K. Y., March 16 (U. P.).—Three major issues—pro- hibition, water pow«r and the.proposed New York City investigation —are expected to h« acted upon by the L*)gi*lature this week. In ad- dition, it waa thoughttffel/ Governor Rdfoevelt wottttl TecetVe specific charges of misfeasance against Mayor Walker of New York by civic and church groups who are demanding his official acts he looked into. $- 3 - WENDEL TRADITION PASSES A fortune of more than 1100,000,000 was to be disposed of today, and the stgrn tradition of the Wendel family established a century ago by its fur-trading founder, John Gottlieb Wendel, was broken. Miss Ella V. Von Wendel, the last of the six recluse sisters who lived in the somber, dusty house of mystery at Fifth avenue and Thirty-ninth street, Manhattan, joined the others yesterday in the family vault in Trinity Cemetery. The simple funeral services were attended by nine- teen persons and a dog. The defendant is also charged with H e d Jjj^ tur , \ Uck hat> bU ck JPW^rBgaa amt^ wttb*«t *»vta*; a | ^ " ^ an< , a „, d .j,.,,,. All have been missing since the early part of thi* month, although He admitted he had license, but was BAR CHIEF URGES PASSAGE OF BILLS \*"° - •"""•• a •*»*"-^"-.« FORMO^E JDDGESJBOYS ARRESTED iMfflrMRSttS driver's license. j never obtained I paroled on this charge, which will j th*"w>fiei"w«a w3jr notified o v e r l S also be disposed of on Thursday. | Wft »£-« B £V ^^ ; fi**** Casta*. "Whai do you find •* the cause Early Action Needed To End Piling Up of Cases, Says Bellucci. The need for early passage of bills now in the State Legislature which would create sn additional county judge snd two additional City Court justices In Queens was stressed to- ssing girls? I sii.ed. j "There Is no general cause," he j »sld. "Each girl is a personal prob- I lem." While the search for the twelve j girls continued it was reported today j that Dorothy Sundstrnm. seventeen, 85 Queens boulevard. F.lmhurat, who | had been reported missing, had re- Coal Snatchers Endangered i turaed home. ° A police official who would not per- mit his nsma to be used declared the compulsory attendance at con- tinuation school 1* responsible for some girls running away from their homes. He said that he hss questioned TO SPARE LIVES, SAYS L.I.R.R. MAN By Trains, Magistrate Daly Is Informed. HOOVER PREPARES FOR TRIP WASHINGTON, March 16 (U. P.).—Activity at the White House, ; day by Frank A. Bellucci, president the Navy Department and aboard the reconditioned battleship Arizona ," f th# *•*»• County Bar Associa- was speededSup today to, permit the earliest possible start by President j T Th<< conKMtion In the clt Court ,, ,,,,,,,,, Hoover on his trip to Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands, announced | la g0 g &t that lt ,,, i mpo8 ,ihie for ! the Long Island Railroad slong For- « nd ft K aln a™* h » v * co f mpI ? 1n *. 2 over the week-end. The time of departure may be made known today. !our residents to receive Justice." the', ty-eighth avenue (Sixth street). "' m H *^V t "-hooiT" » tl * naBnce »* The President probably will sail from Norfolk Wednesday or Thursday, * bar head told the Star. "We must Hunters Point, Special Pstrolmsn "" " " ' depending upon how soon accommodations can be made ready. "have two new Justice* immediately if we expect to giv-p litigants the Unemployment ha* affected the , . . . coal then situation" in the yard of m « nv r " n8W ,* v * iH * * nd ££ 2*2 ENTRY INTO WRONG HOUSE FATAL SAN MATEO, Cal., March 16 (U. P.).~Bernard O'Donnell's George C. Miller, a railroad employe, \ Many Flee School. told Magistrate Daly In Long Island | These girls, he asserted, complain prompt action to which they are en-1 City Court. that they do not want to attend I titled. Miller appeared at the arraignment j school any longer, that they want "Queens Is growing rapidly snd ' °f Frank DcPrano. eighteen, 10-17 to work, but part-time attendance the situation is becoming more acute I Forty-seventh avenue. Hunter's in continuation school prevents them of Dumont avenue to the center line ! failure to recognize nis own front door cost mm his lire. He returned , dav oy day. Even if the aid 1*1 Point, whom he said he arrested j from obtaining employment, of Sapphire street; down the center " '~~* '"""' '' '"* *" '"" ' - ' - - - —'• •'- * - •' '--*• '--' *- '-• - . . . _.. ...... line of Sapphire street to the center line of Cozlne avenue; down the center line of Cosine avenue to the center line of Ruby street; down the center line of Ruby street to the center line of Vandalla avenue; and thence down the United State* pier and bulkhead line to Jamaica Bay a* established by the United States Department of War on September 17, 1MB. The change Is provided for In a bill introduced Into the State Senate by Senator Joseph D. Nunan. THREE INJURED IN MOTOR CRASH ON ASTORIA BLVD. Parked Oar Figures in Col- lision in East Elm- hurst Section. home last last night. He entered a door which he thought led to his granted us it will be some time he-l Friday night in the act of stealing "The upshofof the whole thing Is own apartment. Upon reaching the second floor he realized he had I fore the calendar, now more than a bag of coal from one of the train* | that the girl packa a few things, hat made a mistake and was in the wrong house. He turned to hurry back j twenty-two months behind, can be j "n^'^e siding. ^ j a couplej>f dollars^in her purse and downstairs. Half-way down he tripped, fell and broke his neck, dying | brought to date." almost instantly. I • Col . ,t ! t y. Court Jhe situation NEW JOLIET OUTBREAK FEARED JOLIET, III., March 16 (U. P.).—An air of expectancy, laden with Is not so critical, Mr. Bellucci said "But." be added, "this Is due mainly to the hard and conscientious work of Judge Add. He has kept , , , , ,,- I . i the calendar up to date but he is the submerged emotions of fear, anger and rebellion, hung today over j bad , y overworked and should have the state prison where one convict was killed and several wounded i assistance. His health win surely Saturday in a riotous outbreak. The forty-three men who led the riot- break if he is compelled to carry on ing were in solitary confinement. The 1,100 convicts who followed ' at the rate he is now going." their lead and aided in wrecking the mess hall and furniture shops [ were kept in their cells. Six hundred prisoners who did not join the not suffered curtailment of privileges. Charles Schroeder, *l«ty.feur, of 13t-4s Sited street, Laurelton, L. I , suffered •oacuselon of tha bfato hi m fall Three men were Injured la the col- tiaion of two automobiles at Astoria boulevard and Ninety-sixth street, East Elmhurst, Just before • o'clock yesterday morning. One of th* cars waa parked. August Roepcke, forty-eight, MI- SS Grand Central parkway, Jamaica, said to be working on the motor of the parked car, was cut on the scalp. Frank Noonan, thirty-one, S2-53 Twenty-*lxth street, Astoria, report- ed to be the driver of the other car, was cut on th* chin. Martin Kelly, twenty-three. 1248 St. Mark* avenue, Brooklyn, a passenger In th* second car wa* cut on tha scalp. All were attended by Ambulance Surgeon Gllhooley of St. John'* Hos pital. i ri i nm WORKKR INJI Rr.O. While working at 104-at North Railroad avenue, Corona, today, Clarence Barrow, thirty, 5*1 Warren street. Brooklyn, fell and suffered cut* of the scalp, left shoulder and forest m Ambulance Surgeon Tan- ner of Flushing Hospital attended him. FIM l>AMAORH STOKB. lira of unknown origin caused damage eMlmated at several hun- dred dollars yesterday la tha fruit store at 1S$«S9 Neftkera boulevaed, LINGLE MURDER TRIAL ON TODAY CHICAGO, March 16 (U. P.).—The long-awaited trial of Leo V. Brothers on charges of committing Chicago's most sensational crime— the murder of Alfred "Jake" Lingle—was scheduled to open today in Judge Joseph Sabath'a Criminal Court. The thirty-year-old St. Louis man, whom tha Stata charged with killing the Tribune reporter and secretive racketeer for hire, appeared confident as attorneys prepared to spend at least a week in selection of a jury. QUEENS ONLY B0R0 TO SHOW DECREASE IN MOTORCAR DEATHS Death takes a holiday la Queens: With public authorities giving vent to consternation at the record-break- ing motorcar fatalities In th* greater city during the first nine week* of 19.11. Queen* wa* reported today as the only borough to reduce Its motor- car accident deaths below the figure for she same period of 1930. Twenty-four persons have been killed in Queens by motorcars since January 1, 19.11, as compared with twenty-six daring the same period last year. Eighty-three person* have been killed In Manhattan: seventy-four In Brooklyn; twenty-five la the Bronx, and seven in Richmond. Queens fatalities amount to only one-ninth of th* total. Health Commissioner Wynne an- nounced today that, although the general death rate of the greater city ha* been reduced 'S.St per cent. In ten year*, the motorcar death rata ha* more than doubled during the same period. WHiTr.HTrtxr. fTim. BITTRN. Rleanor McKeown, seven, Ur-tfl j man o? the group of five of the Slav South Eleventh avenue, Whiteatone, j tn§» Bank Association of New York, wa* bitten on th* left thigh by a Astoria Health Class, Unlike Famed Horatiat, Abandons Its Bridge Health and late hour* do not mix, *o th* Rlvervlew Heights Health Class, meeting at Eve- ning Recreation Center 1SS, As- toria, voted to abandon Its card game*. The member* found thst they, could not plky bridge st their meeting* and still have time for exercise. tt does not mean, however, that card* have been banned entirely because a card party la planned for the near future. Invitations were extended to all member* to attend the pa jama party to be given by Mrs. Mar- garet Berger at her home, Sit Nineteenth *treet, Astoria, Friday night. x BORO SAVINGS BANKS GAIN 4,217 ACCOUNTS!•«»« FATHER AND SON BANQUETS TONIGHT IN FIVE CHURCHES 600 Flushing Diners to Hear Speakers—Other Groups Follow Suit Soon. Father and son banquets to he held tonight In Ave Flushing churches will be attended by more than 400 men and boy*. Two churches will unit In such a banquet at the Methodist Church In Bsyslde. Brief addresses will be followed by entertainment at esch banquet. The dinner* have been arranged by th* churches In en operation with the boy*' division of the Flushing Branch Y. M. C. A., where Joseph H. Van Scholck Is boys* work secretary. Seventeen churches In North Queen* will hold these father and son banquet* either tonight or in th* near future. The tots) attend- ance will he near 1.600 diners. Th* churches of College Point, White- stone and Little Neck are planning their banquesta later In the season. The Community Church at Doug- laston will bold Ite banquet on March 30. C. M. Chapman Is chairman of th* committee. The group* co-operat- ing are the Church Council, Bible school and Boys' Association. More than 960 father* and son* are to Four other youths, all under stx- | moves off," he »*id. teen, were arrested the same night "She hires a cheap furnished room, by the railroad police In Hunter's | usually under an .assumed name. Point, they are subject to the action ! gets a job and stays sway until she of the Children'* Court. : 1* beyond the school sge. A|l don't "It's not only that these boys get i get this break, however. Job* ar* away with ton* of cosl In a month," hard to g*t and soon th* few dollars Miller told the court, "but It's the are gone and a tired, hungry girl re- danger of their being killed by other turns home. trains operating in the siding. En- ! "Nine times out of ten, however, glneers are unable to see them In the i we locate them before they are away darkness." from hom« more than two weeks. He made the statement In response I How do we do It? Th*f* a police to a question by Magistrate Daly as to the railroad's attitude In connec- tion with the prosecution of the coal larceny cases. The bags of coal ar* valued at seventy-five cents each. DePrano, charged with petty lar- ceny, stated that It wa* his flr*t In secret." Big Mtttfkf View. Mrs. Smith Alford. president of the Big Sisters of Queens, said today that -he know* of two girl* who are missing from home who have not been reported to the police because vaslon of the railroad siding. He their parents wish to avoid publicity. declared he hsd Intended to take the coal home because his family was In need. He was paroled for a hearing Wed- nesday. Queens saving bank* received 4.S17 new account* during February, ac- cording to Ray C. Shepherd, ehslr- of dog owned, according to tha ponce, by Karl Van Pell, 18-31 Cross Island boulevard, Whitaatoa*. Th* child ! 1147, £ I The deposits received during the same month amounted to $4,604,447, waa attended by Dr. Flushing Hospital. bringing tha total due depositor* to ,60»,6tS. The borough, acoerdlag Maaameano of to Mr. Shepherd, baa SB,lit •avlaf* Street Reformed Church of Astoria held Ha banquet on March 5 with sn attendance of 128. St. Jam**' Church of Elmhurst held It* banquet on March 7. ACCUSED OF THEFT OF SUGAR TRUCK Charged with the theft of a wsgon loaded with sugar and coffee at Thir- ty-seventh street and Forty-eighth avenue, Thomson Hill, on August 7, 1930, Orlando Oaeta, twenty-one, 1S7 East 118th street, Manhattan, wa* I »ha wa* *ur* that no story of why Unemployment, in Mrs. Alford'* Judgment, I* a contributing factor to the apparent tendency of Queen* girls to disappear. Mrs. Alford said thst she knows of one girt who lost her Job, but wa* afraid to tell her parent*. For a week, Mrs. Alford said, the girl left tbe House every day at th* usual hour, and returned at the usual hour. At th* tnd of the week, *h* told some story of why she had not been paid. At the end of the next week, she did not come heme at all. becaoM held for th* Orand Jury in $1,500 ball. The larceny charge Is made by Ned Sail, 12*9 East Nineteenth street, Brooklyn, an official of th* Manhat- tan Sugar It Coffee Company o* Thomson Hill. Oaeta was arraigned In Long la- land City Magistrates' Court follow. hi* arrest on a warrant by Detec- tive Joseph Anderson of the Hunter'* Point squad. The defendant I* said to be a former employe of the Thomson Mill firm. Th* stolen supplies were valued In th* complaint at |8M. HISTORY C U B HRARS) RF.PORT*. ON RI W A Lena Laljer, tw*nty-sTX, of SS7 Thirteenth street, College Point, *uf- fered cut* of tha forehead yesterday nMt*iag l« a fall agalaat a window. She was attended by Dr. Oerttee of Fluahhfcg Hoapiftat* The Flushing High School History Club heard repeat* by members on subject* relating to Russia. Vera Evan* spoke on "Russia'* truce With religion." Christine Law- rence gava an outline a** tbe life and work of Trot*ky, and Margaret Robinson followed with a talk on Stalin. Then Mary Ptch. a girt wko has spent several year* In Raaasia, told about Ufa in a Russian vlllaga. Th* officer* of the History Club mm Sally r*routy. inrtteart; Heeea Daly. ^*C0*9^V*MQaffaal%« U l •WtelfcOwjTf secretary. she had not been paid would go un- investigated Mr*. Alford said she wa* certain that abductions have played no part In the recent disappearance*. BARGES ARE MOVED TO RECOVER BODY After six hour* of work, tha Marin* Division of th* Police Depart- ment moved fonr barge* at the foot of Dupnnt afreet, Greenpoint, Sat- urday atght and recovered the body of Join Mahoaey, tfty-tve, af SS Virginia avenue, Jersey City. M*bea*y waa the captain of a eoai * m th* start Rivet snd he fall overboard lata Saturday night. ma body became wedged la th* river a b*rge* and II wa* aom* ttaM •V 0 f f w M B # Re*M»**cl» BOY IXttJRBB IN FA I.' Jerry WflMama, *ix, of 40-18 Par. boulevard, Flashing. ***llfl bruise* of the f«reh*«d I the right hand Saturday wkeM be fell lata an or th* rear of SM Haw* Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: VWEEN9 BOROUGH PtJBLfC DAIU^i STAF ^ JP TSIOH 15/Brooklyn NY... · Smash-Up. TO FLUSHING MAN Two residents of Queens are dead and many are nursing injuries to day as the result of

The Weather

Cloudy, with light m o w tonight and tomorrow.

Hsurly Temperature Record on P»»e Two. DAIU^i ^fflm STAF

VWEEN9 BOROUGH PtJBLfC LftRXR? 1 REFERENCE DEPARTMENT T S I O H x i ^ w S V «. fBJ

^ JP iL

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

FIFTY-FIFTH YEAH OFFICt : STAB » O U » S l . LONG ISLAN0 CITY LONG ISLAND CITY, QUEENS BOROUGH, N. Y., MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 16, 1931. 14 PAGES—2 SECTIONS PRICE THREE CENTS

QUEENS GIRL, 15, IS KILLED, ING MAN LOSES LIFE

WEEK-END AUTO CRASHES.

PRIEST PROTESTS RADICAL' TEACHER

IN SCHOOL NO. 80

Marion Fahr Crushed As POCKETBOOK THEFT Car Upsets in North CHARGED BY WOMAN

Side Collision.

Chauffeur Fatally Injured in Fall From Machine in

Smash-Up.

TO FLUSHING MAN

Two residents of Queens are dead and many are nursing injuries to­day as the result of automobile acci­dents over the week-end.

The dead":

William Livingstone, thlrty-tbree, 132-24 Maple avenue, Flushing, was arrested last night on a charge of

I grand larceny preferred by Mrs. j Marie Jansen, 217-08 Forty-third ave-] nue, Bayside.

According to the police, the theft ' occurred in a store at 208-16 North-l ern boulevard.

Mrs. Jansen is said to have laid her pocketbook containing more than

the new Maspeth precinct is won­dering today how he will explain to his superiors the sportive mood that led him to stage a one-man variety show in front of the R-K-O Theater at Northern boulevard and Main street, Flushing's busiest traffic cen­ter.

Saturday was his day off and he deemed it proper for a celebration at

A scathing attack on radicals, I the corner at about 7 o'clock in the with specific reference to a supposed I evening. The public seemed to ap-"radlcal" teacher in P. S. 80. BUss- | predate it. but fellow-patrolmen ville, featured an address by the Rev. ! failed to pall for encores. They gave

Sportive Policeman Provides Thrills With One-Man Show for Flushing Throngs.

But Fellow-Officers Give Him the 'Hook' Police Sergeant Meville Noble of house that a drunken police sergeant

Father Lonergan, in Bliss ville Speech, Proposes

Boycott of Glasses.

John J. Lonergan, chaplain of Cal­vary Cemetery, yesterday morning.

Without mentioning any name, he denounced the supposed radical teacher aj» "an out-and-out agent of the Soviet Union." and proposed a boycott of his classes.

The address was delivered before the Holy Name Society of St. Raph­ael's Church. Bllssville, snd the

Marion Fahr, l i f t ed , 86-28 139th found under his coat when he was street Richmond Hill. searched. He will be arraigned In

$100 on a counter and Livingstone is Bllssville division of the Ancient Or-sald to have picked it up. a e r 0 f Hibernians at a communion

The police say that the purse was | breakfast In the Central Hotel Greenpoint and Bradley avenues.

him the "hook," and now he Is un­der suspension from the department.

Sergeant Nohle, who was assigned to the Flushing precinct until a few months ago, waa arrested in the midst of his "act" and taken to the Flushing police station by Captain | their way out of the line and tried to Richard McHale after several per­sons had telephoned to the station | (Continued on Next Page)

was interfering with automobile traffic at the intersection. Noble was in uniform.

Ha danced on the pavement at Main street and Northern boule­vard, a spot which is about the cen­ter of the community. Hundreds of persons leaving or entering the shops and theaters in the vicinity stopped to watch his antics.

Traffic came to a standstill. Ser­geant Xoble. inspired apparently by the intenlness of the audience, pigeon-winged his way to the center of the street, where honking motorists were trying to thread a passage through the throng.

H» stopped car after car, announc­ing that he was going to inspect brakes. Occasionally drivers edged

12 NORTH QUEENS GIRLS NOW GONE IN 'EPIDEMIC OF DISAPPEARANCES;

50 HAVE LEFT HOMES SINCE JAN. 1

Oscar Kills, 131-60 Bradford street, Flushing.

The injured: George Burnette, twenty-one, 115-

U 201st street. St. Albans; cuts of the right hand and right thigh

Krnest Welker, twenty-three, 151 Newtown avenue, Brooklyn; frac­ture of the left leg and ankle.

Margaret Bavter. thirty-eight, Sec­ond street, near Northern boulevard. Bavside, possible fracture of the

Flushing today.

CLEARV1EW TRACT BOUGHT BY BERRY

AT $940,000 COST

Father Loenrgan bitterly con­demned the practice which, he charged, permitted radicals to be­come .teachers in the public schools in which Catholic children are pupils.

He urged the Holy Name Society and the Ancient Order of Hibernians to do their utmost to aid In keeping radicalism out of Queens public schools.

Would -Sliiui Classes. He then referred specifically to P.

8. 80, declaring that a radical was In

Roads Are Jammed With Summer Traffic As Winter's Last Sunday Is Day of Sun,

But Zephyrs Develop Teeth After Dark The last Sunday of Winter proved , tic. _A one-way rule was enforced for

to be the first Sunday of Summer yesterday—while the sun shone.

Throughout the greater part of the day, the sun was brilliant, and the breezes were soft and warm. To­wards midnight, though, some of the "breezes" that blew in from the waterfront areas showed that King Winter, despite his senility, had not

traffic on Northern boulevard be­tween Bayatde and Douglaston.

There were double lines of cars on Rocky Hill road; there were double lines on the roads leading to Long Beach and Jonea Beach. The roads to the Rockaways were jammed with traffic which barely crawled.

Both serious and minor traffic acci­dents reached mid-Summer propor-

Three More Are Reported Over Week-End As j **>. Missing. .-,#/••

Two Astoria Chums Vanish —Maspeth Girl Fails ,

to Eeturn.

HOOVER SELECTS NEWSPAPERMAN W A S H I N G T O N , March 16 (U. P.) .—Theodore Joslin, Washington

correspondent of the Boston Transcript, will be appointed secretary to President Hoover, it was announced at the White House today.

JAMES NEILL, ACTOR, DIES HOLLYWOOD, March 16 ( U . P . ) .—James Neill, seventy, one of

Hollywood's most widely known character actors , died in his Glendale home last night after a short illness. Neill was on the s tage for twenty-e ight years prior to entering motion pictures twenty years

Twelve North Queens girls are. now missing from their homes in the

I "epidemic" of disappearances in thl* borough, the police revealed today.

It was learned today that fifty ! girls had vanished in Northern

sablna Nevens. thirty-nin^ M A ^ , | t h e S P r v i e e o f t h e g c h o o ) "teaching I ago. He was "the husband of Kdythe~Chapman, 'herself welt known in ^ T n M c N M c k t r seven, 47-14 Kis^ A p p r o v a l 0 f p a r k S i t « O p ^ O n radicalism daily to our children." fifms. H e played the part of the Apostle James in "King of Kings"

.Tohn McVlcker, s e v e n . _ # i t s a. , . "! protested for his removal but a n d t h a t of Aaron in "The Ten Commandments." instead he WM promoted. Father L/0nt*rEan d©cl H red

• The Holy Name Society .an cor- j I N C O M E T A X D R O P E X P E C T E D move"UradicVs0nbut0we can gTTthem I W A S H I N G T O N , March 16 (U. P . ) . - S e c r e t a r y of Treasury Mellon empty classrooms." "' expects to get an index of the extent of the business depression and

He added that about 25 per cent. \ the probable Government deficit from the income tax collections for

boulevard, bruises and cuts of, the head, right leg apd •f/rttfc

Albert E. Daly, thirty-five. 30-.W Thirty-fifth street, Astoria, cuts of j the face.

Girl Dies in Crash. •Marion Fahr met her death as the ;

Regarded Certain as Price is Halved.

vi Acquisition of 122 acres of the prop-result of "a collision of two cars a t | e r ty of the clearvlew Golf Club, J o f t n e children of St. Raphael's par- i the first quarter of this year, the last of which were pouring in today. I!™ „.M„MC vesterdav morning at I Whiteatone, at a cost of S94OJJO0 for j i g h a P e p u p l i s a t the school, the oth- , Treasury officials have estimated returns for the first quarter, which 4:30 o clock yesteraay » I park purposes was announced*today e r g attended parochial and public mu%t be filed bv midnieht toniirht X T ~ _ . W . „ honiovard and 150th street, h . . r<„.trnii«r R»r«. t„v,„„i. i„ n . J T l ^ i - . „„A T k L . „ n ?!X** J*". ?ie." B V miunignr. lonig iu , Northern boulevard and 150th Flushing. • .

She waa riding In the front seat of a car owned by John Krappman of 178-28 120th avenue, St. • Albans, which he waa operating south on 150th street when it was struck by

by Controller Berry. The option has been closed, the

Controller stated, and the project will be submitted to the Board of Estimate with full confidence of its I Patterson, pastor of St, Raphael* approval because the price originally „

,.,. „ , , _ , asked for the same land waa $1,800,- (Continued on Next Page) a car operated west on Northern Uga, v | ^__ boulevard by Louis C. Benjamin of T n e clearvlew Golf Club purchase j

.._ ., would run between $525,000,000 and schools in Greenpoint and Thomson j ? 3 3 0 , 000 ,000 , or about §100,000,000 less than for the first quarter last

Father Lonergan wa* railed upon i v e a r > w h e n t h e v totalled $628,000,000. This is despite a general in-In the absence of the Rev. John J . ' crease of 1 percent , in the tax rate over last year, when the temporary

1 per cent, reduction voted by Congress w a s effective.

ASTORIAN KILLED | CORONA MAN HELD IN MANHATTAN AS ON CHARGE HIS CAR TRUCK OVERTURNS' HIT POLICEMAN

Thomas F. Moroney Hurled Bail for Wallace Odom is Set * I

to Death While Driving at $500 Following Flush-Vehicle.

Thomas F. Moroney. fifty-one. 28-05

ing Accident.

Is the largest that has been made under the recent appropriation of 130,000,000 for park purposes.

The purchase price represents 19.75 , per cent, .of $4,800,000 which was Queens' share of the total appropria­tion fund.

Meanwhile, agitation for the pur-to t h e ] c h a a e o f jjorth Beach Park in the

305 Sixth avenue, Brooklyn. The collision overturned Krapp-

man's car. As It started to overturn, the door beside hiss Fahr opened and she was thrown to the roadway. The car landed on top of her.

She waa not removed from tne wreckage until the car had been Ighted again. Removed

ng Hospital In an ambulance • p , , . ^ , , %i.Ql0a& Ward continues. -. Harrison, she died at T.w fbe greater part of the Clearvlew

tract is occupied by an elght^en-hole j golf course. '

A pier, approximately 860 feet wide, extending 1,000 feet into the bay and said to be valued at $150,000. con tains bathhouses and complete loc equipment. '

There la a clubhouse on the

by Dr. o'clock vesterday morning

Burnete, who was riding In the rear seat of Krappman's car. w * 8

attended by Dr. Harrison and taken "Detective Anthony Duane of the

Flushing precinct q«e»t«oried the operators of both care a t t»>e Fltwh-

in th# F l o a - m * Cam* to dete iwra* whether m «h«rg* of nomicW* should be made fn connection wltn tn* death of the girl.

Returning From Beach. Krappman told the police that he

and Miss Fahr and a party of friends had been at Long Beach, Saturday night. After taking two Whiteatone girls to their homes, they started for Richmond Hill. „

He said that Benjamin'* car struck the rear end of hi* machine a ter­rific blow, causing It to overturn. Patrolman Alexander Dltter found the brakes on Benjamin's car in good working order.

Miss Fahr's Injuries were listed by the police as a posaiblo fracture of the right hip, fracture of left and right rlba and cuts of the back.

Misa Fahr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Fahr, was the nleca of Public Administrator Alfred J. Kennedy, of 150-27 Fifteenth drive, Whitestone.

Besides her parents, she leaves two brothers, John and William Fahr, twelve and ten year* old, re­spectively. She was a native of Whitestone, and had lived here un­til two years ago, when the, family moved.

Tha body was removed from the Flushing to the home of Mr. Ken­nedy whence the funeral will be held at 10:30 tomorrow morning. At St. Luke's Church, a mass of re­quiem will be offered by the Rev. Francla J. Dillon, the rector. Burial will be In the family plot in Mt. Saint Mary Cemetery, H u s h i n g .

Oscar Ellis met hie death Satur­day night when he fell from a car in Roslyn after it had been la col­lision with another machine.

Ellis, who waa a chauffeur for the Flushing Storage Warehouse Company, leaves a widow. Ora and five children, Anthony, s ixteen; Lil­lian, fourteen; Virginia, twelve; Ora, ten, and Loretta, fifteen months, all of Flushing, am

Ernest Welker waa driving his motorcycle west on Rodman street about 1,000 feet east of the Flushing Creek, Flushing, early yesterday morning when It waa struck by an automobile being operated on Rod­man street by Fred Wagenstein of 375 Thirty-eighth street, Astoria.

Attended by Dr. Harrison of Flushing Hospital, Welker waa re­moved to his heme.

Weman Injured, Margaret Bavler suffered her In­

juries at 11 o'clock yesterday morn­ing when a car she was driving on Roosevelt avenue, Flushing, collided

(Continued on Next Page)

PLUMBERS' BALL ATTRACTS 1,500

The North Side waa well repre­sented at tha annual entertainment and dance Saturday atght of Queena-boro Branch, Association of Master Plumbers, in Triangle Ballroom, Richmond Hill. More than 1,500 per­sona attended.

S. Bogert Ford, Public Work* Com­missioner Hallaran'* secretary, rep­resented Borough President Harvey. Entertainment waa provided by pro­fessional' talent and George Kohl-meter directed the musical program.

Joseph Mittaseb waa chairman of the arrangements committee. Jos­eph Zimmerman la president of the branch.

NUNAN HAS BILL TO SHIFT QUEENS

BOUNDARY LINE Two Changes Contemplated,

One At Inwood, Other Near Woodhaven.

INSURANCE SHOWS GAIN FOR 1930 A L B A N Y , N. Y., March 16 ( U . P . ) .—Despi te depressed economic

conditions, l i fe insurance figures for 1930, when tabulated, will reveal I street "Haepttal, where he died a an increase, according to the seventy-second State Insurance Depart- short time afterwards, ment report. The report, scheduled to be submitted to the Legislature today, was compiled by George S. Van Schaick, newly appointed superintendent. Increases also will be noted in casualty and surety departments, the rajptfit stated.

•yjjt- juitd to, he wwrtb About

IS WITNESS FOR AIRPORT OWNERS

_____ f

Smith, Former Civil Engi­neer, Testifies in Suit Over

Cutting 0 ? of Road.

Sanitation Commissioner L C. L. Smith, for many years a iclvll en­gineer In Queens, was the principal witness today at the resumption of the damage and injunction suit brought by George Kremer, North Beach* property owner, against the New York Air Terminals, Inc., builders of the Glenn H. Curtiss Air­port, North Beach. .

Kremer alleges that cjty property was taken fof» the development of the 'airport and that the value of his holdings had decreased because of the elimination of one section of Old Bowery Bay road. , The auit la being heard by Su­

preme Court Justice Macerate in Brooklyn. Commissioner Smith of­fered testimony baaed on survey* he made at North Beach for the New York Air Terminals, Inc.

He said that the high wire fence erected on the northerly side of Old Bowery Bay road waa on airport property.

ight changes "are eonteaffetatelT in the boundary line* between Queen* attd Nassau Counties and between Queen* and Ktnjr* Counties. _ I h e former change is proposed be­tween Far Rochaway in Queens and Inwood In Nassau, in order to facil­itate rapid transit development for Far Rockaway, and contemplates a shifting of the boundary 1,500 feet to the east.

The proposal has been Indorsed to the Nassau County Board of Su­pervisors by the Inwood Chamber of Commerce.

The second proposed a shifting of the line between Queens and Kings from one side to the center of the following streets:

Beginning at Atlantic avenue In Woodhaven, south down the center line of Eldert lane to Glenn street: down the center line of Glenn street to. the center line of Drew avenue; down the center line of Drew avenue to the center line of Liberty avenue; down the center line of Liberty ave­nue to the center line of Ruby street.

Thence down the center line of Ruby Jtreet to the center line of Du-mont/avenue; down the center line j

FORD METAL PLANE BREAKS TWO RECORDS AT JACKSON HEIGHTS

ROt.t.KRSKATF.R 1NJI7RKD. Arthur Kearn*, nhM, of 30-41 154th

•treat. Flushing, waa rollersksting at Northern boulevard and ltfnd •treet, Flushing. Saturday afternoon when he wa* tripped by s n unidenti­fied Hoy and falling to the sidewalk,

a possible fracture of the iw. He wee attended by frin of Flushing Hospital

A trl-motored Ford all-metal cabin monoplane took off fifty-one times from Holmes Airport, J a c k s o n Heights, carrying a total of 501 passenger* on pleasure flights over North Queens yesterday, It waa re­ported by officials at the airport.

Captain Paul Herman waa the pilot and Arthur Bussy, co-pilot.

Many of those who went aloft had never been in an airplane before.

Airport official* said that the num­ber of flights and the fetal number of passenger* carried broke two world'* record*—those, for the num­ber of flights made In one day by one airplane and the total average of passengers carried In a single air­plane In one day.

Two more trl-rdotored Ford* will be at the airport next Sunday, It waa reported.

PARK PLEA INDORSED BY ASTORIA FARMERS The recklessness of automobile

driver* and the tack of park and playground space In Astoria were crltlsed by Anthony Ionone at a meting of the Farmer* of Astoria, 23-7* Thirty-second street.

Rudolph Masin. president, streesed the need for a comfort station

The aocretary, William Seatak. was Instructed to send a letter to the

rper authorities askmg attention given several civic needs.

The Farmers made plans-for their eighteenth animal dance May 2 In Lido Garden*. Astoria. Milton Sol­omon, chairman, la aMlsted by Job*) Walsh and Richard Specht.

V I E N N E S E GREET CHARLIE CHAPLIN V I E N N A , March 16 fU. F.) .—Charlie Chaplin arrived here from

Berlin at 1:10 p. m. today. A crowd of 200 persons greeted Chaplin at his hotel .

yet lost sll his bite. Every gasoline engine which would j tlon.s.

run appeared to be running, and vlr- It was a perfect June day. tually all of New York was out on And persons familiar with Queens Q u e e n g s i n c e t h , n m o { t h e y e a r rubber tires. I weather predicted March blistards ^ W l t h t h e ^cept ion of the twelve

Queen.i roads carried Summer traf- for the first Sunday In June. n ( } w bfing B 0 U ? ht , however, all were found by the police or returned to their homes voluntarily.

Several girls have disappeared dur­ing th- last few days. Others have

j been missing f< r weeks. Detective Charles Oppel of the

Missing Persons Bureau assigned to the North Queens district said today that there had been an unusually

; large number of runaway girls In j North Queens.

Three more cases were reported to ; the Astoria and Maspeth police over

the week-end. Astoria Girls Gone.

Two Astoria girls, it was reported, disappeared together

They are Gladys Squlers, sixteen, 32-31 Forty-eighth street, and Ingrid Thompson, fifteen, 32-57 Forty-eighth street.

The third girl whose absence wa* reported is Nora Woods, fifteen. 55-5* Willow avenue, Maspeth.

Gladys Squlers Is declared as five feet three inches.tall . She weighs 115 pounds and hsa blue eyes and blond hair.

When »he dissppeared she wore a black coat trimmed with fur, blue hat, black silk dress, flesh-colored stockings snd black shoes.

Her chum is described as five feet five Inches tall. She weighs 11* pounds and ha* blue eyes and blond hair.

She waa wearing a blue bat, ma­roon coat trimmed with green, tan .ersey blouse, bluajbklrt. fleeh-oefl-itred stocking* snd WpWin shoes.

The Maspeth girl is flv» feet five iookea tall, weighs 140 pounds and hss bias eyes and blond hair.

She wajs wearing a green cost

Wallace Odom, twenty-four, eol-Thirty-seventh street, Astoria, was ored. 33-20 112th street, Corona, was fatally injured yesterday when » . arraigned yesterday in Long Island truck he was operating in Manhut- j City Magistrate's Court, accused of tan overturned, throwing him to the j being the driver of an automobile pavement. | which on Saturday struck and serl-

The accident occured In front of j ously injured Motorcycle Patrolman 159 Washington street. The Astorian i Anthony Budney at Murray street suffered a frsctured skull snd other I and Thirty-fifth avenue. Flushing, injuries. Budney, who lives at 23-40 121st

He was removed to the Broad street, College Point, was struck as he was riding his police motorcycle. He is In Flushing Hospital with a fracture of the left leg and Injuries j to his left foot,

Odom pleaded not guilty yesterday to a charge of simple assault when

qulem will be offered in the Church I he was brought to court by Detec- I of the Precinus Blood. | tlve James Kternan of the Flushing j J

squad. Magistrate Peter M. Daly ordered Mm held in »6O0 bail for a hearing In Flushing Court on Thurs­day.

Mr. Moroney leaves his widow. Mary Ann.

The funeral will take place from his home Wednesday. A mass of re

Burial In St. John's Cemetery will " Mlrwv I*JU **} AII ( l i a s MI >( Sons.

LAWMAKERS TACKLE 'BIG THREE' A L B A N Y , K. Y., March 16 (U. P . ) .—Three major issues—pro­

hibition, water pow«r and the.proposed N e w York City investigation —are expected to h « acted upon by the L*)gi*lature this week. In ad­dition, it waa t h o u g h t t f f e l / Governor Rdfoevelt wottttl TecetVe specific charges of misfeasance against Mayor Walker of New York by civic and church groups who are demanding his official acts he looked into.

$-3 - W E N D E L TRADITION PASSES A fortune of more than 1100,000,000 w a s to be disposed of today,

and the stgrn tradition of the Wendel family established a century ago by its fur-trading founder, John Gottlieb Wendel , was broken. Miss Ella V. Von Wendel, the last of the six recluse sisters who lived in the somber, dusty house of mystery at F i f th avenue and Thirty-ninth street, Manhattan, joined the others yesterday in the family vault in Trinity Cemetery. The simple funeral services were attended by nine­teen persons and a dog.

The defendant is also charged with H e d J j j ^ t u r , \ U c k h a t > b U c k JPW^rBgaa amt^ wttb*«t *»vta*; a | ^ " ^ a n < , a „ , d . j , . , , , .

All have been missing since the early part of thi* month, although

He admitted he had license, but was BAR CHIEF URGES

PASSAGE OF BILLS \*"° - •"""••a • * » * " - ^ " - . « FORMO^E JDDGESJBOYS ARRESTED i M f f l r M R S t t S

driver's license. j never obtained I paroled on this charge, which will j th*"w>fiei"w«a w3jr notified o v e r l S

also be disposed of on Thursday. | Wft»£-«B£V ^ ^ ; f i * * * * Casta*.

"Whai do you find •* the cause

Early Action Needed To End Piling Up of Cases, Says

Bellucci.

The need for early passage of bills now in the State Legislature which would create sn additional county judge snd two additional City Court justices In Queens was stressed to­

ssing girls? I si i .ed. j "There Is no general cause," he j »sld. "Each girl is a personal prob-I lem."

While the search for the twelve j girls continued it was reported today j that Dorothy Sundstrnm. seventeen,

85 Queens boulevard. F.lmhurat, who | had been reported missing, had re-

Coal Snatchers Endangered i turaed home. ° A police official who would not per­

mit his nsma to be used declared the compulsory attendance at con­tinuation school 1* responsible for some girls running away from their homes.

He said that he hss questioned

TO SPARE LIVES, SAYS L.I.R.R. MAN

By Trains, Magistrate Daly Is Informed. HOOVER PREPARES FOR TRIP

W A S H I N G T O N , March 16 (U. P . ) .—Act iv i ty at the White House, ; day by Frank A. Bellucci, president the N a v y Department and aboard the reconditioned battleship Arizona ," f t h # * • * » • County Bar Associa-was speededSup today to, permit the earliest possible start by President j T T h < < c o n K M t i o n I n t h e c l t C o u r t , , , , , , , , , , , Hoover on his trip to Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands, announced | l a g 0 g„&t t h a t l t ,,, i m p o 8 , i h i e for ! the Long Island Railroad slong For- « n d ftKaln a™* h » v * c o

fm p I ? 1 n * . 2

over the week-end. The t ime of departure may be made known today. !our residents to receive Justice." the', ty-eighth avenue (Sixth street). " ' mH *^V t ™ "-hooiT" » t l * n a B n c e »*

The President probably will sail from Norfolk Wednesday or Thursday, * bar head told the Star. "We must Hunters Point, Special Pstrolmsn "" " " ' depending upon how soon accommodations can be made ready. "have two new Justice* immediately

if we expect to giv-p litigants the

Unemployment ha* affected the , . . . coal then situation" in the yard of m « n v r " n 8 W , * v * i H * * n d £ £ 2 * 2

ENTRY INTO WRONG HOUSE FATAL S A N MATEO, Cal., March 16 ( U . P . ) . ~ B e r n a r d O'Donnell's

George C. Miller, a railroad employe, \ Many Flee School. told Magistrate Daly In Long Island | These girls, he asserted, complain

prompt action to which they are en-1 City Court. that they do not want to attend I titled. Miller appeared at the arraignment j school any longer, that they want

"Queens Is growing rapidly snd ' °f Frank DcPrano. eighteen, 10-17 to work, but part-time attendance the situation is becoming more acute I Forty-seventh avenue. Hunter's in continuation school prevents them

of Dumont avenue to the center line ! failure to recognize nis own front door cost m m his lire. He returned , d a v o y day. Even if the aid 1*1 Point, whom he said he arrested j from obtaining employment, of Sapphire street; down the center " '~~* '"""' '' '"* *" ' " " ' - ' - - - —'• •'- * - •' '--*• '--' *- '-• - . . . _.. . . . . . . line of Sapphire street to the center line of Cozlne avenue; down the center line of Cosine avenue to the center line of Ruby street; down the center line of Ruby street to the center line of Vandalla avenue; and thence down the United State* pier and bulkhead line to Jamaica Bay a* established by the United States Department of War on September 17, 1MB.

The change Is provided for In a bill introduced Into the State Senate by Senator Joseph D. Nunan.

THREE INJURED IN MOTOR CRASH ON ASTORIA BLVD.

Parked Oar Figures in Col­lision in East Elm-

hurst Section.

home las t last n ight . He entered a door which he thought led to his granted us it will be some time he-l Friday night in the act of stealing "The upshofof the whole thing Is own apartment. Upon reaching the second floor he realized he had I fore the calendar, now more than a bag of coal from one of the train* | that the girl packa a few things, hat made a mistake and was in the wrong house. He turned to hurry back j twenty-two months behind, can be j "n^'^e siding. ^ j a couplej>f dollars^in her purse and downstairs. Hal f -way down he tripped, fel l and broke his neck, dying | brought to date." almost instantly. I • C o l . , t ! t y. Court Jhe situation

NEW JOLIET OUTBREAK FEARED JOLIET, III., March 16 (U . P.) .—An air of expectancy, laden with

Is not so critical, Mr. Bellucci said "But." be added, "this Is due

mainly to the hard and conscientious work of Judge Add. He has kept

, , , , ,,- I . i the calendar up to date but he is the submerged emot ions of fear, anger and rebellion, hung today over j b a d , y overworked and should have the s ta te prison where one convict was killed and several wounded i assistance. His health win surely Saturday in a riotous outbreak. The forty-three men who led the riot- break if he is compelled to carry on ing were in sol i tary confinement. The 1,100 convicts who followed ' at the rate he is now going." their lead and aided in wrecking the m e s s hall and furniture shops [ were kept in their cells . Six hundred prisoners who did not join the n o t suffered curtailment of privileges.

Charles Schroeder, *l«ty.feur, of 13t-4s Sited street, Laurelton, L. I , suffered •oacuselon of tha bfato hi m f a l l

Three men were Injured la the col-tiaion of two automobiles at Astoria boulevard and Ninety-sixth street, East Elmhurst, Just before • o'clock yesterday morning. One of th* cars waa parked.

August Roepcke, forty-eight, MI­SS Grand Central parkway, Jamaica, said to be working on the motor of the parked car, was cut on the scalp.

Frank Noonan, thirty-one, S2-53 Twenty-*lxth street, Astoria, report­ed to be the driver of the other car, was cut on th* chin.

Martin Kelly, twenty-three. 1248 St. Mark* avenue, Brooklyn, a passenger In th* second car wa* cut on tha scalp.

All were attended by Ambulance Surgeon Gllhooley of St. John'* Hos pital.

i r i i nm

WORKKR INJI Rr.O. While working at 104-at North

Railroad avenue, Corona, today, Clarence Barrow, thirty, 5*1 Warren street. Brooklyn, fell and suffered cut* of the scalp, left shoulder and forest m Ambulance Surgeon Tan­ner of Flushing Hospital attended him.

F I M l>AMAORH STOKB. l i r a of unknown origin caused

damage eMlmated at several hun­dred dollars yesterday la tha fruit store at 1S$«S9 Neftkera boulevaed,

LINGLE MURDER TRIAL ON TODAY CHICAGO, March 16 (U . P.) .—The long-awaited trial of Leo V.

Brothers on charges of committ ing Chicago's most sensational crime— the murder of Alfred "Jake" Lingle—was scheduled to open today in Judge Joseph Sabath'a Criminal Court. The thirty-year-old St. Louis man, whom tha Stata charged with kil l ing the Tribune reporter and secretive racketeer for hire, appeared confident as attorneys prepared to spend at least a week in selection of a jury.

QUEENS ONLY B0R0 TO SHOW DECREASE

IN MOTORCAR DEATHS Death takes a holiday la Queens: With public authorities giving vent

to consternation at the record-break­ing motorcar fatalities In th* greater city during the first nine week* of 19.11. Queen* wa* reported today as the only borough to reduce Its motor­car accident deaths below the figure for she same period of 1930.

Twenty-four persons have been killed in Queens by motorcars since January 1, 19.11, as compared with twenty-six daring the same period last year.

Eighty-three person* have been killed In Manhattan: seventy-four In Brooklyn; twenty-five la the Bronx, and seven in Richmond.

Queens fatalities amount to only one-ninth of th* total.

Health Commissioner Wynne an­nounced today that, although the general death rate of the greater city ha* been reduced 'S.St per cent. In ten year*, the motorcar death rata ha* more than doubled during the same period.

WHiTr.HTrtxr. fTim. B I T T R N . Rleanor McKeown, seven, Ur-tfl j man o? the group of five of the Slav

South Eleventh avenue, Whiteatone, j tn§» Bank Association of New York, wa* bitten on th* left thigh by a

Astoria Health Class, Unlike Famed Horatiat,

Abandons Its Bridge Health and late hour* do not

mix, *o th* Rlvervlew Heights Health Class, meeting at Eve­ning Recreation Center 1SS, As­toria, voted to abandon Its card game*.

The member* found thst they, could not plky bridge s t their meeting* and still have time for exercise.

t t does not mean, however, that card* have been banned entirely because a card party la planned for the near future.

Invitations were extended to all member* to attend the pa jama party to be given by Mrs. Mar­garet Berger at her home, Sit Nineteenth *treet, Astoria, Friday night. x

BORO SAVINGS BANKS GAIN 4,217 ACCOUNTS!•«»«

FATHER AND SON BANQUETS TONIGHT

IN FIVE CHURCHES 600 Flushing Diners to Hear

Speakers—Other Groups Follow Suit Soon.

Father and son banquets to he held t o n i g h t In Ave Flushing churches will be attended by more than 400 men and boy*. Two churches will unit In such a banquet at the Methodist Church In Bsyslde.

Brief addresses will be followed by entertainment at esch banquet. The dinner* have been arranged by th* churches In en operation with the boy*' division of the Flushing Branch Y. M. C. A., where Joseph H. Van Scholck Is boys* work secretary.

Seventeen churches In N o r t h Queen* will hold these father and son banquet* either tonight or in th* near future. The tots) attend­ance will he near 1.600 diners. Th* churches of College Point, White­stone and Little Neck are planning their banquesta later In the season.

The Community Church at Doug­laston will bold Ite banquet on March 30. C. M. Chapman Is chairman of th* committee. The group* co-operat­ing are the Church Council, Bible school and Boys' Association. More than 960 father* and son* are to

Four other youths, all under stx- | moves off," he »*id. teen, were arrested the same night "She hires a cheap furnished room, by the railroad police In Hunter's | usually under an .assumed name. Point, they are subject to the action ! gets a job and stays s w a y until she of the Children'* Court. : 1* beyond the school sge. A|l don't

"It's not only that these boys get i get this break, however. Job* ar* away with ton* of cosl In a month," hard to g*t and soon th* few dollars Miller told the court, "but It's the are gone and a tired, hungry girl re-danger of their being killed by other turns home. trains operating in the siding. En- ! "Nine times out of ten, however, glneers are unable to see them In the i we locate them before they are away darkness." „ from hom« more than two weeks.

He made the statement In response I How do we do It? Th*f* a police to a question by Magistrate Daly as to the railroad's attitude In connec­tion with the prosecution of the coal larceny cases. The bags of coal ar* valued at seventy-five cents each.

DePrano, charged with petty lar­ceny, stated that It wa* his flr*t In

secret." Big Mtttfkf View.

Mrs. Smith Alford. president of the Big Sisters of Queens, said today that -he know* of two girl* who are missing from home who have not been reported to the police because

vaslon of the railroad siding. He their parents wish to avoid publicity. declared he hsd Intended to take the coal home because his family was In need.

He was paroled for a hearing Wed­nesday.

Queens saving bank* received 4.S17 new account* during February, ac­cording to Ray C. Shepherd, ehslr-

of

dog owned, according to tha ponce, by Karl Van Pell, 18-31 Cross Island boulevard, Whitaatoa*. Th* child ! 1147,

£ I The deposits received during the

same month amounted to $4,604,447,

waa attended by Dr. Flushing Hospital.

bringing tha total due depositor* to ,60»,6tS. The borough, acoerdlag

Maaameano of to Mr. Shepherd, baa SB, l i t •avlaf*

Street Reformed Church of Astoria held Ha banquet on March 5 with sn attendance of 128. St. Jam**' Church of Elmhurst held It* banquet on March 7.

ACCUSED OF THEFT OF SUGAR TRUCK

Charged with the theft of a wsgon loaded with sugar and coffee at Thir­ty-seventh street and Forty-eighth avenue, Thomson Hill, on August 7, 1930, Orlando Oaeta, twenty-one, 1S7 East 118th street, Manhattan, wa* I »ha wa* *ur* that no story of why

Unemployment, in Mrs. Alford'* Judgment, I* a contributing factor to the apparent tendency of Queen* girls to disappear.

Mrs. Alford said thst she knows of one girt who lost her Job, but wa* afraid to tell her parent*.

For a week, Mrs. Alford said, the girl left tbe House every day at th* usual hour, and returned at the usual hour.

At th* tnd of the week, *h* told some story of why she had not been paid.

At the end of the next week, she did not come heme at all. becaoM

held for th* Orand Jury in $1,500 ball.

The larceny charge Is made by Ned Sail, 12*9 East Nineteenth street, Brooklyn, an official of th* Manhat­tan Sugar It Coffee Company o* Thomson Hill.

Oaeta was arraigned In Long la-land City Magistrates' Court follow. hi* arrest on a warrant by Detec­tive Joseph Anderson of the Hunter'* Point squad.

The defendant I* said to be a former employe of the Thomson Mill firm. Th* stolen supplies were valued In th* complaint at |8M.

HISTORY C U B HRARS) RF.PORT*. ON RI W A

Lena Laljer, tw*nty-sTX, of SS7 Thirteenth street, College Point, *uf-fered cut* of tha forehead yesterday nMt*iag l« a fall agalaat a window. She was attended by Dr. Oerttee of Fluahhfcg Hoapiftat*

The Flushing High School History Club heard repeat* by members on subject* relating to Russia.

Vera Evan* spoke on "Russia'* truce With religion." Christine Law­rence gava an outline a** tbe life and work of Trot*ky, and Margaret Robinson followed with a talk on Stalin. Then Mary Ptch. a girt wko has spent several year* In Raaasia, told about Ufa in a Russian vlllaga.

Th* officer* of the History Club mm Sally r*routy. inrtteart; Heeea Daly. ^*C0*9^V*MQaffaal%« U l •WtelfcOwjTf

secretary.

she had not been paid would go un­investigated

Mr*. Alford said she wa* certain that abductions have played no part In the recent disappearance*.

BARGES ARE MOVED TO RECOVER BODY

After six hour* of work, tha Marin* Division of th* Police Depart­ment moved fonr barge* at the foot of Dupnnt afreet, Greenpoint, Sat­urday atght and recovered the body of J o i n Mahoaey, t f t y - t v e , af SS Virginia avenue, Jersey City.

M*bea*y waa the captain of a eoai * m th* start Rivet snd

he fall overboard lata Saturday night. m a body became wedged la th* river

a b*rge* and II wa* aom* ttaM •V 0ffwM B# Re*M»**cl»

BOY IXttJRBB IN FA I.' Jerry WflMama, *ix, of 40-18 Par.

boulevard, Flashing. * * * l l f l bruise* of the f«reh*«d I the right hand Saturday wkeM be fell lata an o r th* rear of SM Haw*

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