Tombs court today on two charges of larceny.
"Stand up," said the court, and noting everything, blond curls downward, pronounced: "You are a most interesting psychological and sociological study, sir."
Detective De Groat said that the youth worked for a gang as Oliver Twist once did. Despite his youth and apparent innocence, therefore, he was held in $2,500 bail for the Grand Jury.
(3)
Two men knocked on the door of Mrs. Mary Martin's apartment at 210 Easton Place yesterday afternoon and said they had come to fix the gas meter. Mrs. Martin through the keyhole told them to go right away, but they kicked down the door instead and walked in.
The woman got out on the fire escape and yelled for help, while the men put the parlor clock in a bag and rummaged about in search of money.
Policeman Cox answered Mrs. Martin's call for help and ran upstairs. The men heard him coming and scrambled out of a skylight to the roof. Cox followed, but the two had disappeared.
In their flight, however, they spilled a bag of flour over their clothes, and so when Policeman Cox, two hours later, saw two men with their shoulders white with flour, carrying a bag down First Avenue, he arrested them.
Mrs. Martin identified the men as William Kelley and James Hammond, and said they had both lived in the house where her apartment is.
They were locked up on a charge of burglary.
(4)
Mary Hand, 7 years old, who was run down by a mail automobile last night in Third Avenue at Seventy-fourth Street, said she wasn't hurt and asked to go home.