OCR Text |
Show - t S. , - DEsE ET EvENING NWS, IrOltLIGN , .7, 'NEWS SOCIETY WS. is , ..016MMO, r1:111trA1lY s.vrritiLty SECTION THREE - SALT 19.:11 I I CITY IgAla, , 11TAII ' , Int: I('.1(", DRAMA. AN!) LITER IL RE EIGHT - PAGrt: aN,ImEn i s N rrl . ' . 4 ir a .., 3 ) I ,. , . 0116...war 1 t 1 , 4 ., . ' 1 V... 1 olt L 41 B -- to1110.1.1,a',s .dinsi 1, Inik. Imis than moder av resyloden tmorofrtsti lit; o e L for a year on what it costa to 1 I. :I 4,, ? 11i- - i ,1 01 t t, ' I . - Pi eN H. ; : S1 7 It .. 1 I: Nre '- - .N - a': ,moilimmknmomu- - - '- e. '' emm,,mmkm, - -- - 1.1)1: .1 S IZI f,,I .;fl Titis Is all due to that mysterious thing, For' On Exchange. Today ,in Berlin you can buy for . 1 thousand dollars more housing, food, Pervice, shoo, manufactured goods. motor cars and lothes, .1e7,,s1 J,K;ecitaitiona than you could buy there with twenty the And. with 1r .. theesand dollars before the war, ' , save thousand dollars, you can buy more- of the eonumalities mentioned than you could buy wish thousand dollars in the United States. i thirty ' ' Iflve - ',. '. .,, ,!':.:: Hi. AA1 - ogr Irday-etss- . ode r I ( 1 "I kr, .. i . , 1, itrohlhd , i, ..., ---, 9:1 li s,,,, .7,- - ..."7"7 ''. .., .. di -- - r ,41:7,7- -- ?r:4 slit - - ' ' . ...... . b - s, ,,,1 - fm .77- I Ili . -- !1 e1. AN , YS,4,'1 t' 1, ."'' ' 1' .'1',' ,; - Iii'i ,01 4 1 ,. 0 1. i , :!! , ' ts.-- !'e ,,.7 ''- - C' ; , I - ' , it I1 t irri , , ;4.4 - ,. ...,'' ,. ' . , -- . . .'. ,.,.-- .4:1. ,1'.....--- - ' .: 7,7. 411, 6111 - :4-1-7.--f-la- ... . c'il J! l'111 Y:,N P , leather-boun- d volunk-- gat-edge- tlr,i. o tiths of a 1;trily To cent.; a 1,44egrant Hight r costs a ten pound purcel from Berlin to Copestliagen costs 417 rents; for two-fiftof a cent you tan go by strevt oar from one end of Brr- lin to another; and you can drive in a motor taxi 13 a riround Heflin ut a cost of O cents am tune.In short, Ilsrlin is a paracEse for pautsere, that is.- - for- - foreign- tuiupers- .- For Germans 'priZes are stiff enough. How the foreign pauper livet in relative luxury for u yeer on the price of life on the same scuie for a mere month la the United States may be shown by the following table, Tompiled by an American business Man who hay actually been keeping house for the last three months in ileittn; and who nutd up the table out of care... fu114 kept houSehold hooks- :Yearly (stmt.: narks Dollars steam-heateapart- mem. with two iwrvants; rooms, two bathrooms I rtoo 70.90 Was of cook and parlor maid 1,920 38.40 Got and rlettririty 911 ' 16140 od for 2 ndults. 3 children, 2 servants. ZAPO M. a week 24;,000 .120.00 llothIng for 2 adults and 3 chil- t1 one-fift- h : (non one end of a rent per hs Berlin with the ambition to Ike Iike it millionaire naturally feel little doubt. - Anti in (Art, many food products are scarce; meat and butter are rationed out In- - imignifieant mitintities--- - meat at tb n I y half a pound a week and butter at For natite Germans prices are half an ounce. high; for foreigners they are ridiculously low.. One pound of meat costs I 'natio', 4 cents;. our I cent; one pound. tit bread costa rill pfennig,, 7 m of II butter. cents: eggs, 2 marks pound' each, 1 cents; one pound of best apples, g.50 marks, IsniUeslet Moselle wines, bottle; 21-- ord. 6 POMP A to Rhine winc7i, 20 to IS cents a 20 cents. to IS cents a bottle. relettely fleet lou ran get Lola', ,,! - ) 6. Goetiot, Schiller alr Wine for about St.litt. bought a new thouailiorpoge book of calculatiol table's tor WI! retitc, l'omtaire on a lytter tor jIuin Lrrrin costA f!rth of n Tent; ts letter to anytme else- - rs - 7-7,r v.-7-'''''', 6, 1 ,....'-- ! 1 Tagq-blet- L is r5ecenstsn; rohnuenipougnnde,of9jannlia.r3ksnitiFSkstle6ntcsentigt. fi, i ilipp t ! . - 4.k 1 'II! ", I 1 0, IA , ','!i ip 1.II .1 7. 4 tto .: A) s lb ., -- ilit s 'set- eon .t., - il--- St.' t 1 I, IIP. t; ts da . - .7r.".'4--tir' ,:7... ..4., - ti-I- jf I 1 o .; - ' '' 1 ahht 7- 7se'c'; ) 11 , - I' - -".-- --- ,11' 1 , '417 -.- -- - .. 7., ;;.--) . 4.it - ' ' ., !" The German mark collapse has gone much farthan the most pessimistic German expected. they t you change American dollars into German iViben marks you get about twelve times as many marks yekrS. as yoU did before the war. This eollapen of the When an American travels to Berlin via Co- ' mark exchange is even more striking than the t For his. first penhagen, he gets his first surprise. I eollapse of the Russian ruble, for, whereas Itumia c lass ticket from on the i nkier- - tsor Warnemuende, is bankrupt and you can buy nothing with Russian 70 marks Berlin: which i 6 about 200 rubles, Germany is till solvent and the mark has a which is 1 now to about $110. When he equivalent the Yet down mark further very high buying power. t t ith all his ''reaches Berlin he drives in a taxi I exchange goes. baggage to the Hotel Adion, let us say. a distance 41 In peace time the maik's par value IVLS 23.82 of about 1t2 miles, for 5 marks, which is 10 cents. ',..i comts, U. S. 'currency; which means you could buy Ills room in the howl, Berlin's best, cost3 him 25 unit mark with a little under 21 eents;.in 1917, at the i marks, which is 50 cents; and his supper before iowest quotationeit the year, a mark could be bought going to bed vista hint somewhat over half a dollar. for 13.4t centa. Expert prophets declared that it H ere is his bill: soup, 3.50 marks, 7 cents; pur- ' could not possibly go lower. But in February, 1919,. (ion of roast (one eats gooe eternally in Her- ti mark could be bought for 9.90 cents; in July for lin), 12 marks,goose '24 cents; dessert or cheese, about 5 195 cents; and. on December 4 last, for a fraction 10 cents; half bottle, of wine, Ft marks, 16 ever 2 eente. Roughly, one can reckon a mark es marks, cents. Total, for a good plain meal with wine in of a dollar instead of ti worth a first-clas- s hotel,57 cents. If, gratilied by this This imazing cheapness, he tips the waiter a. whole 5 I i atotrabogyic cireumstaionce,t mfeorri,toh.e IrCo.cr.rntTon who wants marks (10 cents), he is thanked profusely and IIAmerican who wants to buy things in Germany, or secretly despised for- - an ostentatious. ignorant Germany, it works quite the other way. For, lionai re. I ) although the cost of living and prices of all commoBut only millionaires live at the .Adlon. The dities have risen heavily in GCnnalrly- - since the be-- average permanent foreign resident lives in a pentinning of the war, they have not risen anywhere or sion, house, where he spends, for a dav's boarding sear as much as the dollar and other undeprein New board and the price of a hair-cu-t lodging. The cost risen. have Sated units of foreign currency hair-cI in Berlin York. ',costs (Incidentally al living in Germany has trebled since 1914, but, as cents.) an American gets twelve times as many marks for the dollar as in 1914, it follows that the cost of The best pension in the Kurfuerstendamm , what it was fashionable'residential street, in fact a German mu- living in Germany is about what it is in lionairet street, charges 4i) marks a day (about 80 before the war and about Ametica:And there are certain- things,- such As,. cents). For this the guest- - gets a large - steamwhat they cost in- any - - heated room, excellent service and good food,- - in- more apartmenta, which, in Berlin today, cost not much cluding plenty of meat, fish and other things which of What they cost i any cnnnot be got on ration cards. The charge i A con more than first-clas- s, ere American city in Berlin an enormous are sidered . , - -. ,'0'2, 2111. - ' , . .. 1 l t ''.."''' readmits& ligerfluli Nageinteethede 17 die Catthed by tiot rileter rartisseript Inman 1 et Wong...sena Nay Live to late Weirpella 1.1bo As Ides 7,.-'-- di! ii 1 ,- 4 :"1 1 - OP rp-- "-- -- 11' 14111111easireo - 7 1:1:t 11F, r' I,:, '-'-' , ' 's - with high exchanges, especially from Scanilinavis, Denmark am! Switzerland. people al7c flKling to Bezlin.- Russians, also. flock- - there: mostly men who have est aped Soviet Russia arth the equiva- lent of, say, $5,000. (In this they could live toler- ably in Stockholm or Copenhagen for a year; a fter that they would starve. Hy coming to cheap Her- lin, they ree themselves secured against starvation, and guaranteeft high comfort for at least five milera,-4!-pa.te- : :.;-- I i ! .14;t1' , '',11.,...tA t i t -- I ttty i 11 4 ...... V Vt ',:t ,l la eighteenmo SWOTS Street. Wer rdr-- h parimheata toe 1.48111Itill Of 11170 a lose Iloatteiseea e f 1 l'...,.....4 lezi , tl 1 kt ---- , I - flamer, We, Nest rik-4.- ,,,,:".- - ,... . - : , t, s -'-'17- - i a Jr-- :..... e, l st 1..4.Q... J. ler 4...4 - , 11 141 , It! Ill J 0 1 - 4 Typo -0.- - o -- - .. Ili I fr''.1 o.,,,,,,. . ;,7,7r1 - li:l gold. .'-i' vey..eff' 1 I 0 ,,,r, -- ti.,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,., f- , ' . '; ()REIGN In It4.1114 the fort.rn n the littultcr ran ro tley ziJ jiisy out rnuth itut than it ainrie Ikirutre iftit molt hint in Sew York. l'In.b.rt. mat, in the Ixelt theatrts wit fnam 2t IA) ernill. A but for tit e per wmg et.,t4 11.70. he beet in the hest around 6 teats; picture iihows in intetior ',hums they cost J rent . sometimes low. The tnorning and evening editions of the Fliq t, !to,r Vonlookehe 7Altung and other Itertin liv,kaibtstito ale delirryti et your house for 9 crots month; and the colored COMIC papers like 1.us!tire itieuer mod Jugend rust 1 rents a copywhich - 4 i i ' 14 . . I ' P trire-r:--.1.-e tC ' I - j - I7J:,' 11' - 'became -- - ' ' , 11:.j., ,11.,,:, , . . - ----- , . ... Berlin Just now is the foreign pauper's paradlse: :' la 'a dream come true of thousands of men with : whose high ambition it is to do ..troy fixed incomes, p it it the fabled land of Coekayne; the les work; , ,., . . Wirt li N ep a b Las of Din.. of the Pennon fable 'here, ,., when Jilver shekels were dropped into water, they - ' t ,.:191., - ' LIT all'Ilf,1.,,.1 - WO ffe,,t t i 11 ' A., .44. ecui, 110.11! .. 1 : - , '', I a i -- 71- )o )1 spend a gay week at Atlantic of hard-uRusaians, Swedes, Thouaands City.. Dal flea. Dutchnuin. Norwegians, Ponuguest and are florking into mirsculonsly cheap Berlin. - Turks the eit Loin that the Wohnung-Amt,- " overcrowd 7,liss,y , ' autorratie "Dwellings Bureau," cannot find Mail- 61 i ' tations for the native Prussian. ie., -- - - in,tt.isloeuve' yet not spend more millionaire, i i e- il ellIi 'r aradise 0 For Fine Apartment. PO a Year, $1.12 For Whole Week's Food, $8 For Good Suit of Clothes, All Owing to Abnormal Depreciation of German Mark in Worlds ExchangeFor $1,5)0 a Year, Foreign Resident There Can Live Like Rich ManThough Cost of Living Ilas Trebled Since 1914 It Ilas Not Risen Anywhere Near in Proportion to Depreciation Of German CurrencyNat- . ivesa Pay More For Everything Than Before, But Thousands of Foreigners, Especially Russians and Scandinavians, Flocking to Berlin to Take Advantage of Extraordinary Situation. " t t. 99 - - - , The total outlay on foist of a foreigner ho contented himself u ith the eierman official ratiolui Id l yould be about citi marks a week, or.Mtt.--- tItrthlit '1 Ilri! any healthy adult could keep alive and in good ' t ' ; !!!!,,....- ....til , . .' and, in fact, trie great mass of the (or:condition; '. ; , 1 rot 1 ci$rn i paupers do not spend much more than a dollar 'te , . .. i! ll week on food. And live fairly well. dren. a ,11 ...' 1 42,1)00 1,, ,' ' , ,t I 1 Bu t all who can afford it buy much more than Amusements' 3.00 70,(WI IJ the rations; they buy things which are not ra ., I ,:t ,.1' ,...,-- ... ,. Newspapers, books, etc. .. .. ' ,. ., .. it 1,000 , 20.00 ;II .,., ' tioned or such as peultry, game and Local traveling on streetcars and. 38!!!, A 'AlortgOKINs. 'NY. - Marttniadt 1? fish; or they buy from the illicit trader, the ' I .100 10.00 401sfrstost-hs44 .4- nausflotolatitlattiie br "Schleichhandler.who selis meat, butter and other (...;te8hdueic:mlaYsi.sexosPe'l:nasen. i'li 1,10000u 8604 :LAi:(141"11eirolkir ringlint Ogle : . .280;0000 foods in .excess of the lawful nation. But even- food . ri'il . li bought at the exaggerated prices of the "Schleich. ..........- .--' ' I;1 ..I', ;,, ,., '. ...41 ,.....: , , Total ..'.. ,', handler," who has to make his profit and covor $1;613.20 , 80060, his ribk of being had or sent to jail, is far lk , ,Aecording to present german standards, such 1. Tiptoe' Itivortioesavato Ia toretta Nearpoper 7 cheaper than in other European. countries. Eggs expenditures meab high living: for, p. Ottertat Itrgaina to Lodleoi'Jterketo. Prtren 1 arc just half the price of ems in Copenhagen. Den., though the, poorest extraordinarily n. American who settles in Bet-maiLitea la Markel) Look Formidable., bat t ' 11,t is the isorld's great butter country, but but- - lin nowadays is certain to have knot inh sliest to and etsatti' Pt $1613.30 a year, the ter Ger- costs there 71 cents a pound; butter bought at of S0,660 marks of which this is the Depreciation 11122.3;:kmosors:tecottI -equivalent iA with-froIt I the Berlin "Schleichhandler" costs 21 marks, 03 reach , It ot only really wealthy Germans. A Prus- witich is 1i1 cents a pound. lie charges for good 'ban cabinet minister receives tne, only 20,000 biarks. 0;,;i beef 15 marks, or 30 cents, a pound. saltrry; which is WO a year; If a foreigner wanted a. is ifr Yve in the not only hunkry, but Tens Germany class st.reet can be rented for $70 year. ror ti.li greatest German luxury, by spending , e 7 $5,000 a year, or.250,000 Germln et six l arge rooms, two servants' rooms, tw., of thousands of Germans have worn no undereloth. you marks at the' ing for years. Yet to thepoorest visitor who cornes bathrooms, a large balcony, possibly a roofg-,riiotpresent exchange, he could rent tfic higge.stpalsCi in to Berlin armed with foreign 'currency, clothes are Lolin. keep a p and perhaps an ice chest. , servants, and a dozen au, 7.,-. eheap. They are cheap even when made wholly 1,,ollobilos. . serva:nis..es. ' Next you start to acquire domestic o No itondtr that 70,000 raw materials as cotton. Though Russians, '7,000 Scone', ' fore the war they eost about 40 marks, s,:inont1), . ft.1. foreign t rman to has had enormous Burns importer pay 2,000 liollanders, 3nd numerous other ti,vilns, which was. equivalent to $.10;.now.t1. ; e!;sif.1,1 ritirks; , for.. 4 ks 4or this raw cotton, his manufacturing ex- - eigners flocked during 1919 to , which is 41.50. Taken 14- ,r.:-... &Alin. .4fuel,: and wages are ridiculously Low lope' the pi esent situation will last no - tit! ad Ti''Ar.;',,- in.ia bhv.-- ' Berlin, first-claMeal suits- - at .700-- ,-- knowie.n!Sonte experts' shopireell ... A:YEAR IS. A., Font fir c.oking will be,at most room,. enough marks, or $14; passable suits cost la-- A really good Piously; some get say that the evchingeof the dollar - .. riectrie ligbc, 1.44. . 1 I made to order by fairly good food, and comforts su' ch 'as. bath, ebe- costs $30. mews st,,r tailor, currencies Berlin is the city where the American aril Will 0 cOst the and wintsz $ marks, I nr2tros n..a.lc .wiil summer, - - - - chop, E team-befor 15 marks. or 30 cent.' I.,: .4,g, - --and- Oat . shoes of the best quality cost $3.50. )3c. 1500.a year, or any other foreigner with the tile light and Ni;Zt on All be sesde th:s or a about $7 ., year. : up's' A . . Women's are still shea per . Silk day'. nottlin But a garments his with live these can big . family can equivalent, Which in America only relativeli wealthy people changes . . only take place slower, i , . Houses cost from 60 cents to $2 apiece. Foreign ind in the tnantime Berlin is for foreigners , Y I:Ai-t- . Input in a good street, .keep two or three seants,. FOR ;.74A - live;and the .wholething will so far this . .. business men . I . sat as as it is possible to eat in Germany, clothe psstered by --nie'.r.cpor-- s 'in the worldniroblitly tlitrdieap--'------ -more than WO a year. back to their wives German clothing. Three , ett ,n Itho histoly of the bring Keening house in Berlin today costs 111 e:t,h01, 'Imsclf tolerably, amuse himself violently, 'and, in woll,k. house in Having heard of the appalling food 'conditions. - dollars is considered an enormous pace- eta ' a EDWARD L. BYRNE. , ;eneral, live in what - Europe usually calls an "upper a tenth, or a twelfth of thCpriee of keeping .. .. , good-size- d over Germany, the foreigner without wealth who woman'ti baL New York.7:-That. is why, from countries apartment in-- 3,..gocei---Thamiddle 'class" .way. - (Cf,pyright,itt20, Marshall) - , ,- . , - II !, i I' i t , I .. , ,, , IA! s , , 1; twat 43 I 1Ps. ::,-- , - , ' , '" ili -- ' - .,- 1. price-controlle- d. t 11 one-fourt- one-fiftie- th d.9 00 OS bo , useos,etc;-xp:nses..- - :It ---. 1 11 - . rk 1 11 m ut 11, , -- one-four- th . one-eigh- th .. - ste..m-heittin- hit en - - - one-fiftie- th - V-- -- war-ruin- um-:-th- ch ,.i ss ir lit5,-Thi- 40,Marice,-(i'lmontLwri:- . yr h - - --.-. . - ' I-- . A . a-e- ll . , ., - . , , , . ll - - -- ,, . given and assidtance.secured ' - ,dma - siGUn iman clerk. - b4 a ,.-- wou :;l .. . s without a permit- -. Per-- , buy mita are not needed now and -- there are many thousands.of and soldiers who own revolvers. and Des want to sell them. The path is thus made easy ferssetiatlititla in violence. Xhat is one explanation of the- prement recitterence of revolver "hold-bpii.- ? but it' tines not carry us far. because, before the war. the pro- fessional thief. or burglar rarely tised ' , hi's' and for st.,long lime .spent Juties, Ine-arm- dodging nighte 1 dmiginary-abell- s. I , tn lite- - beedisloUrties,casa the Aug,. -- Rhocres-Scholár Cun Totine More - 4 a , victim of pected man was also 3i s has also been The use of ' , ', nerves. 0 more frequent since the war in "un'Shell-shoc- k leaves a man seeming- , .written' law'', cases. It has figured. returns again.i cured ly r riots at too, in a, nwrrberrv1-7-racebrain-stor. ,.t hat the While rages Liverpool. Cardiff, Newport and in man does not know what be is doing., the LastEnd of London. These riots, Is it ,surprising that. at times,. Eng-- I motor car and arrived at the bank have been more common since the war:, . XFORD. Feb. 1The first is startled by some tnusual deed land (Special Correspondence.) is effil;idilY-.on clósing time, He ,managed and the introduction of: revolvers s. Neurasthenia halt left! of violence? 28.There is a just ever ONDON: baby born to an Arneri-1 the war. :Married men were. factor. a new and most unwelcome to get into the manager's private-. The The defense in' a Clibitk. of simple, men weak-wille- d can ithodes scholar "in res1-- 1 ebarred fron t rthode s ao ;holarships. a revolver... crime wave in Ilngland.-- 'IGUn leveled and The' the-wa- r.from of e. the Robberies Clu to of freight chestiness packages heard life e gives but robbery when recently tho war alarm In Oxford-----ricebecomias full got the aside' are knocked weapon cases" manager dence", at London and provincial warehouses war exPeriencec have- upset his with violence :..ttnd death. looked &Ft if it would go on f or- came into the world. To cele' Attel and Just as a shot was fired and the man! and shops, and of automobiles as well, mental balance, leaving him irrespon- - millarity , must also be held partly to .soctitint a number or students who had ever, )nglY common. -'clerks. The was by overpowered rn4n, ,have given the English itithoritieS', sible.l' said the lawyer.- defending the for this post-wI won problem of gun this historic erebt. the litt;s gkl. Ilitod fs acholarships, despairing The papers teem with ' reports of accused of the crime declared in court; and! of late. toll I or ever DAVIES. trouble of a CROSSLEY en This great...deal .officerierimes."-prisoner. a .t. to being able take IP their such cases. The other 'day, ,close that he shot on the floor to frighten London merchants have found insur- bed hatt .shell-shoe- k Ali the baby is, had h7' healtill peal ' and tither in-- ltroovriebt 14441 t ' at Oxford and desiring to , drunk out of mighty "scOces". tbittl; studlea clid tt In upon the heels of other outrages, the manager and did not intend tot ance rates rising against them. so. Them the war- ended marry'. , "s kill. I the newspapers- reported the , dute baelt to I tie titel;seet Charles I.! while yet,: there was aniple time for t there was the story ofIln arnred man e And now she has In-iman arrested-i- n the Leeds easel theft of nearly 10,000 yards of Va oingtient s to complete their e cho!. who'ralded a post office. Only a few 1; Tbe ' 7,r..7,1 de lenciennes lace,. of furs wbrth nearly an officer who won the About 20 tbe ancient et;upel if St.' Joh ry s days ago a bank manager was murand was recommended for. the112.600 'and of $1.500 worth of calico 0 1 ntarried. and : like fOrtieth:ng half , thsit dered at Leeds and an es..officer, Is Military Cross. He was Wounded In !from three different wrehouses. The legethe first c 14 of ,an American lout-oedesired to go to Oxford. a f,qlalL gray ear., student eVer t he : 'under arrest,' Charged witit the be christened Ito an! The IThodes, trustees came to the ' I., , ... The same day masked men, armeal Itrar17""e-Irr-r' e t' ape,. otirro In this' case a man drovi up in a mo- - 1"15In 13f memory. g thrtstarecent ,rObry at New- with revolvers, gagged and How What?!. an another Hot that. long stuff to i (Special rorrespondenee. exception I, rule. so y-- t Th05, I tie Mis s. 'tor - car to the bank,- a' branch office !castle. a man In khaki; with the t haVe Sottbeen demobilized ?'' ,serretary of- a Wept End restaurant' hey ocontinued the scholarsh . toe to Dimbat- Faucelt. whose father Is thi,- 'those-whToBritons. Londoners bad Just before closing per part of his face blackened and the and made off with some donned ina quietsuburb. khaki , and VP. Faett. wren 1. !Modes loan-led- . ' who- sarv'ed in the war. 'no phase o! Rev. about to lower concealed by a handkerchief,' the safe. A nionth or Ito later an And thus-i- t time. As an 'official-wa- s' there datlY as sedately as if theinev., tit woe more p front t hniversity of the are , to day, eight m arriedthatRhodes the armed thief raided a bank in the a at when a office Into rushed campaign post shot the door, pie yobber., holdrng 4 uth. Sewanee. Tennesse e. an d w- bos, iseho;ars at Oxford:were county of Kent. near Londowand whinl er, in their lives. had done lturesque than the presence of , revolver. rushed in and shouted postrnitsti.f- an4her assistant . are over familiar buses from home.. nioat of 'mother was itdariel Barr, younge: I When these finish their studiei anti---74,4 'nitride 11.'pl" t The manager started balancing the accounts for the dav.i pursued, by the police, turned and anything more excittng, es n still announcing. Olt their stillea(' 'daughter-of-Jait. is, .uniikely that ever tZ,, forward. Presumably fa tackle the bri-- .- Leveling a revolver at them he de- fired at them, On that same day, 200 motorbuses ' that ,oiaw ger- them London'., dietricts through wkiih 17rYorneeasrtly distinguished young womai-lagaiwill thore- to any other mar. it- the money, and decamped two burglars, surprised .by the polire vice on the battlefields of France Ithe gand, and was promptly sit& dearLitmanded car atilt In life. ran. and ing t tied tier formerly ircholor 'prbud grand'. Rhodes took refuge in the lava- - with 35 (about 817I.) Other cases-, In .London, resisted and one fired in at and Flanders, and Many other more ' their advertisements of enmplodya father. 31MR:it Barr. Is the young0 'oxford. .Por this reason residence at an officer, 'Alias 'WM- tory And the robber locked the door of Wsimilar character, have been re- point-blan- k brother of the late Rotool 'Darr, and ..beth," one of ton- distant theatrés of wor. What thril- whisky or sormqiody else& P ioo .Dickerspon, 'Martel since, Dinon'them and fired again. The bulleCcosded with alarming frequency Elizabeth i wrote "In the T111111 1:111e1.1.t is already A$ a permanent memc a) of the like. the...latter, who else was:the armistice. don's magistrates, in trying a case at ling'sarns they must pin to each igdged in the will and no one . ,'...: uses-ithe Of . Midst and other Alarms" famous Of work performed bythe . automobile theft, ob other as, . I Of the same tYpe but distinct in hit.heotns uniqUely distinguished; she ;to' 42, kale dean workt..he rot his earls JournallYrr, is ore of four ballies their.long day's work over, war zone. one of them some of its leattiree . was a recent rob-- ,' served that there r as not a motor en A re:tyt daye 'at ter the Leedi crime born, to Rhodes battle-ac- e In iting tof side side. in these stand they Statee. theig,gar; by Alio training did not London row rrpP.tUanL, hall, in residebee. she Is the know hen ginrel'In s.mitar titurtlge Was committed in Pery at Guy's hoorotal,r-Lonclonthough; seholars L' ' ' ati4 "Ole ft ,"!recentY &Canadian by- - birth. , Wood Green, a itotniern suburb, of armed and masked men attacked the there were 'hundredsof these caSee. ages at night. , : only ono born 1..1 a schclar ao'ho 'Wail 0 w - , braglo : plate, IthOdes bean marked it; resio Married e.holtirs am On. a in to revolver It metal res;clemok were him I witli I 7 get easy today of it oxford rt. tbe thy. It is easy enough te itnagine They hit Loudon; The methods used donee at Oxford are IP11. Until 'sortie , tot.t an exact-cooof the Leeds crime. bar. burtthough they got away. they iii Fngland as it wss bard during the them honing anutber with: "Hello! crd exist.' ago; 'iCootinuod no they an three one Awe) ued war could on ,not trstilitie4, , the .,, 11 Saw last Tear, alarm 'Pouring Page you Somme, didn,'t ((onti Page ,two) ,an ..!Vi cose,co..1.pg tubber .used.,a,Went.empthhandtd.si ',. , England- - - - fire-arm- Much. Increased By. War, - ' i m fire-arm- L of-fl- - Bab oml "In Residence" At- Oxfor( 1 - ' - - is a , . . I ti, . I ar - t one--da- Veteran s I - . - - -- Londoner - - . ,...N ! ,- - -- ar. Bus - ' r - ezar - 1 1 f; ...........--,.- . - . - 1 m :- - - ' ' - . - ,. ,,, ea-littl- e - Bow-Stre- et , -, ; 71 . '''' - - - :' . , . . , , , ...( . - , " . ' .. -- . ; ! , - . - , . . , . - " , , ---- ' r , 15J ' ' d. PI . . 1 - .1 ; |