The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1919, Page 3

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" A “a LAUNDRY STRKE -ADSSHRTSHLE, MSO OLLI Restaurants Prepare for Old ‘. Fashioned Table Covering and Paper Napkins. @ began to-day to look as if—ex- cept for what good old Hop Sing and hig cousins can do—there may not be & clean shirt in Manhattan in a day 9F two except those the haberdashers’ are holding at post-war prices. The strike of laundry workers is growing. Some restaurants, anticipating a continuation of the strike, are laying in @ supply of oll cloth tablecovers and paper napkins, should their sup- ply of clean linen run out. Every union man employed in the industry in Manhattan, Brooklyn and the Bronx, Strike Leader Vernon Smith said, will be out by Monday. The number now on strike is 35,000. ‘The call for a general strike, which went out to-day, will ewell that num- ber to at least 55,000. “Today,” Smith said,*‘we have been joined by workers in the coat-and- apron supply trade and every one en- aged on flat work. Yesterday it was 600 drivers of laundry wagons, mem- bers of Teamsters’ Union No. 133, and about 2,500 hands in the wet wash line.” Every union laundry worker in New York City, Smith sald, will assemble At 1:30 o'clock to-morrow afternoon Harlem Casino. Smith, who is president of the joint board represent- ing Local Nos. 97, 205 and 212 of the Laundry Workers’ Union of Greater New York, announced to-day that two of the biggest steam laundries, one in loboken and one in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, had signed up with the union, and their employees had been ordered back to work. ORGANIZE TO TAKE OVER AMERICAN TOBAGCO STOCK Securities Corporation Offers Four Shares for One—George A, j Harder President. | The A. T. Sccuritiés Corporation was organized yesterday at the Guaranty ruct Company's offices by the election * George A. Harder, President of the lon Products Corporation, President; Angier B. Duke, Vice President; Robert aN 5 ph. - h AL \. Norriss, Treasurer. ‘The directors are Messrs. Harder and Duke, G. M. P, Murphy, Harold Stanley, ‘ohn B. Cobb and Thomas Yuille. Mr. | Duke is a nephew of James B. Duke ind Messrs, Murphy and Stanley are Viee Presidents of the Guaranty ‘Trust Company. Mr. Cobb and Mr. Yuille ar ormer Vice Presidents of the American obacco Company. The company has an authorized cap. 41 of 3,000,000 shares of common stock without nominal or pur val share ranks equally with every othe share aa respects dividends, voting ghts and distribution of assets. To rovide a cash balance 1,000 shares of Jae company’s stock have been sub- serlbed for at $100 per share. ‘The directors authorized an offer to exchange their stock for stock of the American Tobacco Company at the rate yt four shares of A. 'T. Securities pi Meatilita ata WILSON IN MAHOMET CLASS. Min 14 Potats, Allah be praised! Mark 8, Roy, who for elght years has been a Presbyterian missionary n Egypt, bas communicated to the Interchurch World Movement in this coty that sident Wilson has been proclaimed a Prophet by the Moham- wnedans in the land of the Sphynx and the flowing Nile. ‘The Moslems, according to Mr. Roy, became enthused over Mr. Wilson's Pourteen Points and made Mr. Wil- son one of themselves, If the report be true th will be the first Prophew the ‘of Mohammed who didn't wear iskors. a Connecticut Financier Dead, ROCKVILLE, Conn,, Oct. 11.—Col, rank J. Regan, President of the J. J. Hegan Manufacturing Company here, ind Quartermaster General on the staff f Gov. Holcomb, died yesterday, aged fifty-eight. He jong had been ive In ‘omnecticut business life as a manufa u and banker in civic under- iakings. He was a dologate to the publican National Conv: nat Chi- Rago which renominated — President Taft. He is survived by a widow, two brothers and a 4: es | Ship Repatr Yards’ Strike Over. | ‘Announcement was made to-day by Hunter, counsel for the em- Hovers, of the ond of the strike of workmen in the ship repair yards in the port of New York. Then men re- {urn to work under the wage cond which prevailed when the 1 a Artha tai PUBLTY NEN HAVE A LOSE.UP FEASTNO FADEOUT “Ad” Writers for Celluloid Drama Throw Themselves on the “Silver Sheet.” If a whole lot of advertising and publicity men are absent from their desks in the celluloid world this morning, the bosses can blame it to the blowout last night of the Asso- clated Motion Pictures Advertisers, Inc. The boys had a get-together feast at the Cafe Boulevard, where they got better acquainted and got pointers from one another, and they had for their guests a lot of talent from the trade papers, which is idle | Just now on account of the pressmen s strike. ‘The occasion—which was punctu- ated by a lot of flashbacks, fadeouts and closeups—all technical stuff of the silver sheet (screen), was the in- stallation of the newly elected offi- cers @ the association: President, | Paul Gulick of the Universal, who is & past master at publicity and a present master of his lodge of Mason: Vico President, Paul N. rus of the United Artists’ Cotporation (Big Four), who sees that Mary Pickford loses none of her curls in the still pictures, that Doug Fair- banks {s always smiling, that none of Charlie Chaplin's feet are cut off and that the proper measure of dig- nity is accorded to Mr. Griffiths. Paul has his troubles. Julian M. Solomon jr. of the Fa- mous Players-Lasky Corporation is the Secretary, but Treasurer C, L. Yearsly saw to it that Solomon, in his wisdom, collected all the dues. After everybody was seated and eyes were sparkling at the 2.75 beakers, Presi- dent Gulick passed the buck to Harry |Relchenbank, who for the sake of harmony he called master of cere- monies, . Marry is an Admiral—that 1s, he thinks he is. When he was over in Paris the Prime Minister of the Jugo- Slavs made him a present of the Austrian Navy. But the Peace Con- ference convinced him that there had been a mistake and took the navy away from him and gave him the Swiss Navy. *harles C. Pettijohn of the Moving Picture World objected to the pres- ence of Ben Feinman because he was fo longer an advertising man, hav- ing joined the ranks of producer. NOT THE REAL THING IN FADE- OUTS. Seated around the festive boara were discovered a lot of newspaper men, “fadeouts" from Park Row. They bad mysteriously disappeared long before the thirst of July and ere they were among the millionaire 5 One of the finds was Arthur Leslie who was about the first of thy gulld to do pufflicity—that’s Waiter Tull’s invention—in the celluloid sphere, Charles E. Hastings is another hon- est-to-goodness knight of the qfii Now he's the editor of the Exhibit view, but when the silver zzied his divine afflatus r to Whiladelphia as a press agent, He suggested that there was a big thing in screening “Puddin’ lead Wilson." “Well, T'll tell you," said the new boss, “I ain't the same politics as Wilson, but I don’t think the public would stand for calling the sident of the United States a puddin’ head.” And Charley came right back to New York. Capt. James M. Loughborough, an- other bona-fide _bohem—newspaper man, now doing advertising and other hair-raising stunts for the F in the absence of Arthur J there in all the majesty of tall s and broad smile, “Randy” Lewis, with his whiskers still in a fine condition of pre tion, Was the patriarch of the and had a lot of young Pathes pa- tronizing the various plates, ‘There was Joe Reddy, who used to be a mo- tion picture editor and roast the si lent shows; Vic Shapiro, just. back from the army; Harry Lewis, no re lation to Randy they both claimed, and last but not least, Edgar O'Brooks, who used to be a great English dramatic producer of wild melodramas, and now salesman. for the “shivering” serials, FINE AS AN ALLITERATEUR, BUT FALLS DOWN AS A POET. Paul 8. tuous Vain Nis latest cre Paradise,” n, composer of “A Vir- nd other things, sang ion, “The Press Agent's Want to hear some of it? Let's go: “iret we Kaw a comic, rotten as could ‘Then we saw a pcen ‘Then I"saw old Ton L,Y we Jaw Real Estate OWN YOUR HOME and be landlord, Basler persons | realize, A Wonderful Asscrtment | of opportunities to either buy — | the land upon which to build a home or buy one already | built ts offered readers of | Yo-Morrow's Sunday World, | 1,000 Separate Real Estate Offers | your own than most jeaver bad blondes ‘on th And I mw "you Mr, Galick in’ corner shooting cra = HE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1919 a ‘Men of Genius Who Provide Thrills | About Thrillers of Celluloid Drama TAXES UP 60 POINTS IF $30,000,000 BUDGE S PASSED .Increase of |tions, the city may have ‘all the tentative rate would go up about or fram $23.20 on $1,000 valuation to somewhere Inserted tentatively in is the full ai partment of | most double year, jon Finance and Budget c jot ling the budget for next jthe Board of egme before the publi foP such criticism as may them in the public heari it would allow $1,000,000 maica Bay project, to be ble ceedin at Bergen Beach had been disposed of, ‘The tentative budge would further contain tion of $1,100,000 for the Public Library, about than requested, so th in the salaries’ of Ii could be met, This in crease of 20 per cent. f ting $1,200 a year or less; for those getting betwe $1,900, and 10 per cent ting from $1,900 to The statement “The committ fo 100, ided $50,000,000 Run City in 1920 Shown in It Tentative Figures, Unless there are some big reduc- | imate, which has been prepar- ducation In its statement the committee said s soon as the injunction pro- sought by property owners ry employe to a $300,000,000 | tax budget for 1920, an increase of |} about $50,000,000 over this year, Assuming that the budget cartios | increases, the tax sixty points, | of assessed | near $30, | the budgot | jount asked by the Do- jucation, $87,051,061, al- the appropriation fi Comptroller’ Craig hag little |! |hope it will be largely reduced. It is the purpose of the Committee |; want of the Board | year, to let estimates ‘untouched, be made of ings. for the Ja- made avail- it was said, 1 appropria- ‘ow York 0,000 more the inerease’ s plves an in- r those get- 15 per cent. ; n $1,200 and | or those get- | 80 Included $300,- | ‘: AGED MILLIONAIRE STILL TRYING HARD TO DISCARD HIS BRIDE MRS. KATE HART. i Her Request For More Counsel Fee formation that he would not be dis- Reveals Appeal From Dis- [COSTA RIGANS STRIKE WHEN PRICE OF DRINKS BOOSTED Money Values Fluctuate, and Long- shoremen Refuse to Unload Ship at Port Limon. strike Costa | fever has reached Port! Rica, according to the officers of the steamship Zacapa, which arrived here sterday. It started r the price of a drink. coln there, the colon, was at about in American money. imately twenty-three cents ‘This was approx- two-thirds of the price of a drink of the native beverage, When the Zacapa arri there the long- had discovered that their |drink had advanced of sixty-five cents United States money jand they refused to unload the ship ‘or good American pay to the equivalent 8 were sent for cargo and placed Wh men wi figure out the money rit was th of tl ser on th t As the liner was coming up Ambrose a)| Channel, John Harte, a waiter, who Bi | had been confined in a’eabin on account f his nervous condition, climbed out of * porthole und sealed the side of the He ron to the bridge and nk Davis. bdued and when the shi ) was sent to Ellis Istana gor jon, Harte was docked he | rva ("PLENTY OF ROPE” TANGLES. _ UP WESTCHESTER GAMBLERS. “Kid" Beebe Confesses He Was Told He Could Safely Run a Poolroom, (Soccial to The Kvening World.) WHITH PLAINS, N. Y., Oct. 11.-- When Isidor Bieber, known as “Kid Heebe to the gambling fraternity at the tracks, was arraigned be- forg County Judge Young here toda ‘ged with gambling, he made the statement that he had received in- turbed if he ran a poolroom, He d guilty and was fined $250, > for the support of the Metro. ; Sr Museum of Art, on the sai missal of Suit. Before he ead ave he sald he for the Public Library. This| yam = . -geven and) tad received information from his t | James Hervey Hart, eighty-seven an is the {ull amount requested ‘by the | weaithy, has mot yet done trying to| friend, nik Hoceo, that he would trustees. - cs Untie the knot which binds him to his| net be bothered if he ran a xambling HE LEFT FINGER PRNTS, | Binctecn-vear-old wile, Kate, formerly | "yy strict Attorney Davis told the 7 ]@ manicure, When Mra, He Va Mtr court that his offce and the Sherif, Cs ney, Edmund L, Mooney, applied ye#=|in order to bring about wholesale ar- Castor Hein en He Robbed | terday to Supreme Court Justice Bene- | i" order Ra Minte: MEA Gboldad ee alive mner , sick jn Brooklyn for additional counsel ihe gamblers “plenty of rope,” and 1 1 a court decision made last spring | that was why the information was WHIT 1u— pissing his suit for annulment on! passed to Bee Raymond Hill, finger print expert for| the eround Of old aye.) | gy pal csiodcha j Sharie ; : gg ee ut, the ies Chariea ter, in exame 8 dower rights, estimated at $100.-} JEWELS IN ABADONED AUTO. |ining the fing ints of James which she would in case of ‘a it ‘Odell, who is locked up in the White prea} on appeal, are involved, TOloener Loot Found im Car After Cole Plains jail, charged with robbing the ee re He sine 8 on Pen Sie | i inna | | home of Edward A. Kimball at Pel-| the door to unfounded actions to escape | Helen en it ATO RS, ham Manor, several days ago, de-|‘he marital obligation.” Samuel! Lawson of No, 101 Jackson! tected 4 peculiarity in one of the] Mrs. Hurt was granted a separation] ay, Long Island City, reported te | lingers of the prisoner that tallied |after” her ands ulment tarle pallea aie! stare deat | with the finger prints he made at| failed, $175 « month al Astoria police shortly b on Jet two Tarrytown home the use of his house at No, 837 night touring car going at |-"An inspection showed that the fin- | Street, Brooklyn, speed and without lights rammed ker prints n furniture in Deelsion was reser \ on Astoria Avenue, near Ehret Homes of | Charles Vanderbilt 4 pa 12 : Pee em cae Wallace Odell. at ‘Tarr hy ta ; 5 > . with those of Odell The prisoner JOHN A, MITCHELL’S ESTATE, Was taken before Sheriff Nossitte h h 4, wan tossed te the name’ was Castor Heln and that h Hon, , bruised but 4 jously hurt, had robbed several houses in Tarry- @ Million - » ave five men leap from the town and Pelham Manor. An appratsal , ; ar and - > A. Mitch found tn the | ho dicc o Pennsylvania, | SPARGO AND BOLSHEVISM, | whe. «ea And that’s what T call a Prem Agents’ Paradise Rice and Ryan, artists, “"mussed up some clean white paper, kts of Mary azimova, H. Paul ¢ Ye roft, k manage of the Exhibitors’ Herald of Chica Jim Beecroft was once a r r He worked on th “8 when Owen Kildare was writing his wonderful storieS of the east side, Owen was a pal of “Chuck” Conners, He 1 med and married a school teache taught him to read and write, orge Blaisdell, editor of the Mov. Picture World, wanted it known he had got hls paper out, not- the pressmen's Strik He produced ten pages of mim graphed copy and everybody said it was great stuff, and right there it was determined to give a silver cup to the trade paper getting out the beat looking paper for the year, tho presentation to be made by Santa laus in the merry yuletide, that withstanding Gocialint at a pile Why He's Again ‘erum t1t. win John Spargo, one of H claliat leaders to break a m the radical wing of the party, will spenk to-morrow night at 4 public forum in Publ ¢ Schoo No. 101 ton Avenue and Mth Stivet et will bi Why LAm 1 to Hoisheviam.” After “his 1 he will answer questions from #8 will be one of the serie arranged by the Lecture Bureau of the Department of Education. Nearly th rty | free lectures on vital problems will. be given during the week | ~~ v ble Library ed, | AMSTERDAM, N, Y., Oct, 11,—-Osea- wana, the suinmer home of Arthur A Chalmers of this elty, was burned yes terday, due to defective « fight wiring, The loss, including a rare library and many antiques, te estimated |eart side business organizat at $135,000. \ erday 4 the ‘Depu rH that of wh went ‘ed memb« da Wat ed of enst rday Ind ndidate for let db Alderi already been indorsed b, ‘\o the Socialist candidate, (ner, formerly a deputy x & quantit Wrist Watch 1 Various ‘ing lin alneoat, Dd n women's es from an rugs PLAN MEMORIAL DINNER, Rocky Mountata Clob WII Honor Hoonevelt irthday. Inv ns to ® memorial dinner on t the anniversary of Theodore Ne toosevelt's birth, have been Insued to ne ) admirers of th ex: President ; b of New given at the my Pie onk which Col. Farin | cosevelt the was horift, haa | the Bocky Hoover Fund number of |for whe H igi rbert s opposed | Hoover ts coming from California tor th, occasion. A GOVERNOR ADVISES PORTER BE OUSTED FROM FOOD OFFICE Report of George Gordon Battle Charges Inefficient Administration. ALBANY, Oct. 11.—The removal of Dr. Eugene H. Porter as State Com- missioner of Foods and Markets is recommended in a letter to the Coun- cll of Farms and Markets to-day by Gov. Smith. He made public a pre- liminary report of George Gordon Battle, who is investigating the coun. cil and who suggested Dr. Porter's removal. Mr. Battle sald that tho testimony taken before him had es- tablished the fact “that Commissioner Porter is incompetent to hold the po- sition and that the administration of his duties has been inefficient.” Mr. Battle's report declares that Dr. Porter hnd done nothing to aid the| consumer, and has not allowed his position to interfere with his activi- ties in behalf of the Dairymen's League. Mr. Battle says that Dr. Porter openly worked to promote a scheme of the league to purchase all the milk gathering stations of the large dis- NEW JERSEY TOWN BOARD OFFERS REWARD OF $1,400 FON EN AY HELD WITHOUT BAIL Hammonton — Residents HAMMONTON, GEORGE M. DANSEY... Searching and Praying for Thirty- Months-Old Child. N. Jy Oct, I1.— tributers of milk, which would give This place 1s so wrought up over the itm practical monopoly on the ship- disappearance last Wednesday morn- ment of all milk into New York City, He said that tho league could then charge any price {t desired and that Dr. Porter had or even $25, ing of George M. Dansey, months old, that the Town Councll stified that 2 cents, &t @ special meeting last night voted for a bottle of milk might | to raise from $100 to $1,000 the reward thirty be a conceivable price under such ® offered for the child's return. Resl- plan, | CITY FACES SHORTAGE =| OF 200 ON POLIGE FORCE Only 850: Applications In- stead of Thousands. In |dents offer an additional $400, ennouncing the increased offer the Council made the condition that the boy must be returned alive. Special prayers for the child will be j offered in all ba 4 = P my oy Scouts and men and wome Civil Service Commission Has!qay examined again the woods | #wamps near here in a vain effort to | find Billy, as the son of Hercules Dan- jscy is affectionately known Hammonton churches to- and to the {community ‘The searchers discovered footprints the Civil Service Commission, said of the moccasins worn by Billy, show- Charles L, Stengel, Secretary of to-day that the Police Department will be about 200 men short when the time for applications ends, Oct. 24. Abdut 600 vacancies exist, and | only 850 men have applied. | From this number, Mr, Stengel said not more than 300 could be expected to pass the physical and mental tests, leaving a shortage of 200 patrolmen. “Never before has there been such a dearth of applicants for the patrol- men's test," said Secretary Stengel. ‘But you can't wonder at it. The Police Department of New York has higher physical tests than either the army or navy. At a time when long shoremen can make from $50 to $75 @ week, you cannot expect to find men failing over themselves to be- come patrolmen at about $35 a week.” The shortage of men will be used ¢ ing that he entered @ strip of wpods. aicllienbiaaaapes “THREE BOAST OF STEALING 500 AUTOS, POLICE SAY Are Held in Newark After Revolver Shots Halt One—Tried to Steal Airplane Too, Is Charge. Three men who, the police say, ad- |mittea having stolen 500 automobiles in the United States within the last four | years jare under arrest In Newar! are Edward Maher of No. 870 Bast 164th | Street, Peter Walter of No, 211 West '109th Street and Bernard Monek: 1137 Elizabeth Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J, Maher, the Newark pol {that he was intry for and tried to stea airplan N. J. They of No. say, bragged y city In the by leaders of the campaign to in- |, The three were captured by Detec- crease putrolmen's pay to $1,600, Ht? represented hininelf uae propneg: $1,800 and $2,000 for the three grades. di Ahad ele GOV. SMITH REPLIES TO C.F. U, COMPLAINT Tells Why He Put Labor Federation Officials on State Indus trial Commission, At the meeting of the Central Fed- tr read replying to the objections of that body in regard to the men re- cently appoined to represent labor on, the State Commission that will at-| tempt to adjust industrigl disputes. | Mr. Smith said he knew of no bet- | ter way to represent labor in this State than by appointing the Presi- | Gent of the State Federation of Labor, a Vice President and the General Or- ganizer of the A. F. of L. The ob- | jection had been made that none of | the central bodies of this city was r nted. | A resolution was adopted thanking Kaubbi Stephen 8, Wise for the de- fense of the stoel strikers in his sor- mon last Sunday and labor men were advised to hear nim to-morrow in Carnegie Hall when, it was said, he would reply to criticisms of his stand William Kohn, Chairman of the American Labor Party, announced that an effort was being made to bring Wilham Z. Foster, leader of the steel strike, to this city for an ad- dress, — $10,000,000 BOWMAN HOTEL. s Corporation Will Erect It tm Detrolt—1,000 Rooms, Returning yesterday from Detroit, John McE. Bowman announced that the corporation he heads 1# to con- struct In that city the Detroit Bilt- more Hotel at @ cost of $10,000,000, to open Christmas Day, 1920. ‘The new hotel, which will have 1,000. rooms, will’ be constructed. by the George A. Fuller Company, War- ren & Woetmore are the architects, The building will have three base- ment floors, ground floor, mezzanine, ballroom and. servants’ floors below nineteen floors occupied by guests’ rooms. To Advance Discount Rate of Brit- h Treasory Bt gan & Co, announced yea- next week the discount basis for the weekly offering of Brit- J.P. Mc terday that vol 0 chase the other di lo. taken to the for freedom, tive fi er and brought Walter to a atop. The men hours after they were whi m nade a pi |biles, the Newark police deel I gave the poll jeald they at Th them, #0 ish sury ninety-day bills by the! bankers will be advanced % of 1 per! to 6 per cent a long time it has been the custom of the | ra each Ww It ertain amounts of thes teh ‘Treasury billy, the rate being fixed each week by the firm, ‘This Is pant that hag been announced 6 ——— Dinner by Sphinx Clab and Add. by Colby, Colby, member of the hipping Board and of the | alnbridge Paris, will be day night at a din the Sphinx Club at the Waldorf. ‘Tho club 1s composed of ad- publishers field. Interaltied C & spe Astor vertising experts and leadi Inthe newspaper and woond-hand auto. otlating the pur- ives arrested the » prisoners were being police station Walter broke Haller in pursuit. ‘The de= a few shots from his re- nv mr While t denied gullt until a few in. the station, all three admitted that they had rofession of sten a long list of risoners said that several months y em rides in i vet # airplane, accord. | erated Union last night in the Labor five oem a, Rynirpiand. Aponte. Temple a ‘etter from Gov. Smith was we te w the machine was operated, | ntion of stealing it, but the foiled poltee, became susbicioun 4 the confession to t and Despatch ON Washington Day by Day, by oneof the best known and most widely read writers in Brilliant Comm Affairs. Non-partisan presentation every day of the happenings in the National Capital. ’ “One of the most intelligent of American correspondents. York Sun (Rep.) “One of the Washington corres ed Lowisville Courier-Journal (Dem.). “Well-deserved repute for truth- | coi tellin, ‘Portland Oregonian (Rep.) utomo- | ‘aged a New York aviator to| DAVID LAWRENCE Formerly Correspondent New York Evening Post Begins His Daily Washington — New| ford Courant (Rep.): ESCAPES LYNCHING, Prisoner Accused of Beating Woman Who May Have Fractured Skull, Solomon Domowitz, No. 1574 Lex« ington Avenue, was arraigned tn the Harlem Court to-day and held with- out bail on a charge of assaulting Mrs. Pauline Hinerfield, owner of a candy store at No. 1572 Lexington Avenue, in a rent quarrel that devel- oped into a rot. The short affidavit on which Damowitz was held charges felonious assault. At the request of put over to next Tuesday to await the outcome of the womans injuries. It is said her skul may prove ot be frac- tured, Two thousand men and women, be~ Neving that Domowitz had killed the woman, hurled stones and sticks, and demanding that the prisoner be lynched, fought three detectives and Bast 140th Street Station, ‘The tenants of the two buildings, except Mrs. Esther Domowitz, mother of the prisoner, and a few others, wont on @ strike against rent increases Uct. ih Mrs, Domowitz has since been ostracized. and twenty-@ix years old, ning found his mother’ hysterical after © quarrel with Mrs, Minerfield, in which fists were used, be went to the candy store and erated the owner. A crowd saw Domovits punch Mrs, Hinerfield, She fell ua- conscious, Domowita fled to his apartment on the second floor of the adjoining building, barricading aim- self against the mob at his heels, Detectives Joseph Ryan, Thomas Bachuda and Thomas Enright ar- rested him, but finally had to call for the reserves. “Murderer!” was yelled by frantic women at Domow: while men in the mob hooted the patrolmen and detectives. The patrolmen flourished revolvers, with no quieting effect. ‘Time and again the mob almost sue- ceeded in wresting away the painter, The short trip to the station house, four blocks, took half an hour, Theis) coats were torn and thetr faces showed the marks of attacks when the policemen stumbled up the steps and inside with the painter. Mrs. Hinerfleld, who, was revived by a physician from Harlem Hos- pital, insisted the painter struck her head with a blunt instrument. Ip was abrased. + $5,794,743 FOR HARVARD, #150,000 Gift To-Day By York Ahead of Bost | James Byrne, who to-day donated | $150,000 to the Harvard Endowment Fund, kept New York City in the lead | with $2,278,000, Boston is placed sec- ond with donation reaching $2,236,683, These figures, coupled with $1,286,066 from the rest of the country amount, at noon to-di ———— Coney Sale N: 00,000, The furnishings of Hende; Music Hall and taurant, one of the best-known places at Coney Isl- and, which closed its doors perma- nantly « . 1, Were sold at public auction yesterday, ‘The Bale brought cloxe to $100,000 MONDAY in America. ent on Current “Remarkably frank.” — Hart g and thy hly non- partisan —Adanta Journal (Dem). 4 n-minded."— Telegram (Dem.). Detective Joseph Ryan the case was «| several policemen all the way to the * 5

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