The evening world. Newspaper, October 22, 1919, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a nn All Tabbed and Described in Evening World’s Exclu- sive Directory. NEW YORKERS IN LIST. All May Now Be Readily Spotted by People Who Believe in Law. Mikko Hyokki of this city is one of the active revolutionary Finns listed in the continued alphabetical list of radicals fyday. Hyokki {s one of the orators who volunteers for I, W. W. gatherings. He made a big hit with his radicalism when he delivered a speech at an I. W. W. picnic at Turner Park, Philadelphia, Aug. 23 lest. A Hanninen of this city is one of the writing staff of the Finns’ I. W. W. organization. He wrote “The Chances of Revolution in America” and it was published by the I. W. W.-Finnish Workers Society outfit. The second instalment of the list follows; ENRICKSON, Gustav, Saulte Ste. Marie, Mich. Secretary Workers Institute Support Society, Col- lector funds relief of Jukka Tolvar, arrested at Timmons, Ont, Canada. jans and Russians must see that he is freed. Comrade Eino Aalto has got one of the contribution lists.” (Sept. 10 last.) At Virginia, Minn., he collected and remitted to Peter Petaja $31.92 for I. W. W. printing fund and sub- sequently for same cause $14.50 and again $61.68. Herlivi, L., Red Lodge, Minn. Mem- ber Revolutionary Dramatic Club. Herlevi, Martha, Red Lodge, Minn. + Dramatic Club. Hietala, Victor, Crosby, Ticket agent for W. W. * Hehnala, Eli, Bessemer, Mich. $54 for benefit of Jukko Toivar. Hilden, L., Detroit, Mich. Revolu- tionary Dramatic Club. Hill, David, Biwable, Minn. for literature. Hill, Edward, Portland, Ore. for literature. Minn. Sent Agent Agent Hill, H., Duluth, Minn. Agent for hiterature. Hill, Hilda, Juanita, Wash. I. W. W. speech there Sept. 16. Hill, Jacob, Beer River, Minn, Agent for literature Hill, John A., Bessemer, . Chair- man Finnish Workers Soc wo Hill, Matti, Ashtabula Harbor, O Representative I. W. W. District Com- mittee for Ohio and Penn Hill, Nestor, Eveleth, Minn, Agent for Mter » and hypnotist for I. W. W. benefit entertainments. Hill, Victor, No. Eveleth, Minn tary, Finnish W I. W. W. ticket Duluth, Minn rom, Gust mittee, Ohio of Recruiting Commi! Henrikson, Gust., $ Mich. Deported from Canada for I. W. W. activity Oct, 211 Heltunen, Red Lodge, Mont. Member voluttonary Dramatic Club, Heltunen, Emil, Payment, Mich. Contributor to LW. W, defense fund. Hirvonen, Nante, Nashwank (7), Agent for literatur: Holkko Conneaut, O. Agent for literature. Holmberg, Alf los Angeles, Cal. 1. W. W. de’ te and organizer, Arrested Oct, 3 last with thirty.four others. Holmberg, M., Los Angeles, Cal. ent for literature. so Ernest, No, 1001 Madison Street, Chi . 1. W. W. agita- and organizer. Detroit, Mich, Secretary Di t Branch, LW. W. Finnish Workers. Local correspon- for Industrialist bs wW., } 2305 Lincoln Avenue, Chicago, Ill, Librarian for organization at Belden®Hall; mem- ber trustees meet fourth Wednesday of month. Honkasalo, V. Corresponding Philadelphia, Pa. creetary Finnish Yage Workers’ Society; meet Sun- gay P.M, at No, 282 West Ninth Street, His address No. South Third Street Hoogen, ‘Hjalmar, ml. Col- gont for literature, he ee 1 Pauk City, Tdaho. lector for I. W. W. Defense Fund. Huhta, Emil, Duluth, Minn, Revo- lutionary actor. Chicago, (Continued on Sixteenth Page.) FITTING Quality, washability, of good underwear are women and children, RED REVOLUTIONISTS TEACH THE LW. W. HERESIES: FROM ATLANTIC 10 PACIFIC THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22 Women Serve LA TOURAINE PASSENGERS LANDED ON U, $, ORDER State Department Rules Passports Valid on Plea of Wife of Cuba’s President. Thirty-five passengers who were de- tained yesterday on the French steam- ship La Touraine because of defects in passports have landed to-day through permission telegraphed by the State Department. Among the passengers were Mrs. Teresa de Tanco, wife of a’ former President of Cuba, and her three daughters, Julle, Marie and Hele Mra, de Tanco, who claims to be a direct descendant of Ponce de Leon, was detained because she had no “Form 228," which, during war time, obliged ellers to give a complete history of their lives and the places they had travelled in the last five years. ra, ‘Tanco aaid that when she sailed ¢rom abroad she was told by American Consulate oMfcers this form was no longer needed. The State De- partment upheld her, and also directed immigration authorities to release other Passengers held for the same reason. Mrs. de Tanco and her daughters have departed for Washington to visit friends, In bis appeal he says: “pfhns, Ital- | | istrations.” (LW. ' PERFECT MUNSING perfect fit—all of the things you expect into every Munsingwear garment. Order your supply now and enjoy winter comfort. A right size for everyone—men, The satisfaction lasts. GRAIG SEES CITY VICTORY IN SUBWAY BOND DECISION ' TOMERINS * ng i fet MPISINS - Comptroller Cites Ruling Giving WeMAN City Power to Authorize Issu- | CAMPAIGN ance of Corporate Stock, ales tok Comptroller Charles L. Craig said| to-day the city had gained “a sweep-| ing and conclusive victory” over the | Citizens’ Union in the opinion handed | down yesterday in the Court of Ap- peals on the refunding of special rev- enue bonds issued to pay for subway construction by issuing in lieu thereof rapid transit corporate stock to meet the moneys required for such pur- poses, Craig said in « written stat men’ “The Court of Appeals held that the city has absolute power to authorize the issuance of corporate stock, provided in the resolution of Feb, 7. 1919,,and to apply the proceeds as pro: | Yided by such resolution. ‘The court | further held that the procedure fol- lowed during the Fusion administri tions in regard to such matters was erroneous and illegal and that the | present Board of Estimate and Ap-| portionment has power to correct th of the Fusion admin- | M\ISS CHARLOTTE: RUDYATED= ON TAR CAMPAIGN COMMU TTE AFT BELIEVES LEAGUE WILL PROTECT THE JEWS Foresees Long Struggle, However, Before It Will Have Necessary Prestige. reply to a request from Louis Friedman of No, 1115 Broadway, for an expression regarding the massacre of Jews “in the nations newly created by the grace of the Peace Treaty," former President Taft has written the following Section Where Blackstone and Blackthorn Were Synony- mous Is Enjoying a Novelty — Political Campaign to} Elect a Woman Is Being Directed, Canvassed and Given Publicity Eniirely by Women, In Down where Battery Dan used to dispense justice for the benefit of the tag by fam New Haven, received to-|old First Ward, where Blackstone and “r have your letter of Oct. 12, Dahare|® Blackthorn Were synonymous, & with you deep indignation at the abuse woman is running for Justice of the Municipal Court. Her name is Bertha Rambaugh, a member of a distin- guished family, a lawyer by profes- sion, a Republican in politics and for several years devoted to the welfare of women, ‘The candidate 1s conducting her campaign from what ‘used to be Spillane's saloon, at the corner of Hudson and Perry Streets, and yes- terday she was hostess to some of her admiring constituency of her own sex. She gave them a talk and poured tea for them over Spillane's bar, Hudson §treet hag been made fa- miliar to the public through the “Hudson Dusters,” west side gang- sters and the terror of decent people in and far beyond the neighborhood, But there wasn’t a duster, save the one which was used on tho bar, at Miss Rambaugh's tea, the first a woman ever served within the four walls of a saloon, The bar was lined with cups and h the Jews have been in Central Europe, and (teh in Roumania, Poland and elsewhere, With the League of Nations, however, and through the provisions made in the ague of Nations for cil bathe canis ancillary treaties going to be improved. But {t will & long, hard struggle to give the Leagee of Nations the prestige that it should have, In order that it m much abused people.” “™*Y Protect these —_ BANKERS TO FIGHT UNREST, Would Educate the People Against Radical Doctrines, ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 22.—An intensive campaign to educate the masses against radical doctrines was advocated by Speakers at the convention of the In- vestment Bankers’ Association of Amer- ica to-day, “The present industrial unrest {s on a world-wide acale because of the quick means of communication,” said Law- renee Chamberlain of New York, Chalr- man of the Education Committee, “and there is no reason why we cannot use these same means of communication to teach the people the virulence of radi- cal doctrines being disseminated." . rs and a teapot san; oily a vs 1 Stranded om Nantucket |**UC° i 5 saucily as Sound. it turned loose its steam, A hand- CHATHAM, Mass., Oct, 22.—The sul- phur-laden steamship Mayport some coffee urn nearby didn’t sing, but was patronized on account of its was stranded on the casterly side of|good looks. There were cakes and shovelful Shoal in Nantucket Sound| crackers and other good things, Be- to-day, having run up on the bars hind the bar were two barten-—no, not bartenders, just tenders — who “washed the dishes” after tea was served, The back bar was decorated during the fog and rain of last night, The Mayport. is a Shipping Board freighter of 1,510 tons, James Anthony Turley and James D. . Murray, also candidates for the Municipal Bench, and F, H. La Guar- dia, who is giving Bob Moran a run tor Aldermanic President, SPILLANE’S OLD BAR SEES SOME NEW FACES AND NEW DRINKS, The hour set for the tea was 3.30 o'clock, the session lasting till 6.30, But the women voters didn't wait for the appointed hour, They broke into the saloon as early as o'clock and @ lot of them brought their babies in arms and sat, as maybe their sons and husbands’ sat in the days gone by, when they served something be- sides tea at Spillane’s bar. “Will you have some tea?” asked the gracious hostess of her early guests. “Oh, not yet is too early. The kiddies on the block and the next block and from several blocks i besieged the front door in massed formation. And do you think those lady politicians aren't campaigners? Mrs. F. H. La Guardia, who is one of -Rembaugh's alert campaign UNION durability and woven or knit lpn CAT AARINE mAISS with pictures of other candidates— | " was the response; “it | f 1919, Tea in Old-Time Saloon To Elect Bertha Rembaugh a Judge in The Old Battery Dan Finn District MRS. CHAS Ey KNOBLAUCH ——Se 177 RENBALOA- CANDIDATE Por TUSTICE oF HE MUNICIPAL court, <— Mrs. Ne hy 2A GUARD), =: - button in h and wears her husband’ | Miller coat, took two packag' La G Jacob Riis, Mrs. F. H. Mrs. Thomas B, Welles of gingersnaps and passed out th door. It looked fér th oment as if h Executive Commit- the door wouldn't be closed behind her. irman “Look what I've ; Mra. Caroline Lexow Bab- houted the aviator Olive Stott |. Miss pretty blond wife, when Mary ©. : at the curb, And when she displayed | fany, Mrs. Mary Fisher Torrance and the gin naps, ginger was infused| Miss Mary It. Tow It's an all- into the kids and they chased the! woman campaign—managed by wom- lady across the street, where she cted hy women, canvassed by laughingly and very slowly doled out) Women and the publicity work done |the dainties, Before they were gone Here by | publicity work | a sample of the political clreular: er get arreste oO women, all the women were inside the saloon and the door safely ed. i le | “That's the latest snap,” laughed A ralioed 46n 1106.008 the fiyer’s wife, referring to the gin- , ger things. | inca ee pe || Don't think for a moment thoso| _,D/d you landlord ever raise your |They’ro working for | with a dangerous fire escape or unsanitary plumbing? Did you ¢ trip on a broken sidewalk and sprain your ankle? Did you ever have trouble in col- | lecting your w or a small bill? SHOULD NOT BE ONE WOMAN JUDGE? There are three vacancies in this district and there will not be an- other election for ten years, (IF ELECTED SHE'LL CUT OUT THE BLACKTHORN. strikers, and they if Battery Dan’ Democratic sembly District, which |got to win, They ha | win the Second, which is 'T district. They know they en fight, but are all in the fight to the finish, |EVERYBODY COURTEOUS TO | WOMAN CANDIDATE. | “The campaign is exciting and in- tensely interesting,” said the candi-| It is explained that in one-third of |date, “I am making a thorough cam-|the cases tried before a Municipal paign and going everywhere and sec-| Judge a woman ts a party, either ing everybody I can in my district, [| Plaintiff! or defendant. If you don't have met with the most courteous|know Bertha Rembaugh, and what treatment from the men, and the wo-| she has been doing for the last 15 men evince the greatest interest in| years as a lawyer and citizen, you the fight, telling me that it’s time |are referred to almost any Judge, set- that the district had a woman Judge.” | Uement worker, woman labor leader, Miss Rembaugh’s Campaign Com-| probation worker, woman doctor or mittee 1s headed by Mrs, Leslie J.| Suffrage worker, Tompkins, who js a Democrat, and| Mis Rembaugh 18 familiar with among the members are Miss Helen| Blackstone, but not with the black- Arthur, Katherine Devereux Blake,| thorn, and the publicity ladies tel) Miss Ethel Stebbins, another Demo-|the world she has knowledge, erat, Mrs. Mary Garrett Hay, Miss|sympathy, training, experience and a Alice Dillingham, Mrs, Alice’ Duer' fine sense of justice, FISH ENJOY DAY OF QUIET AS STRIKERS REST NETS, ane , STRIKE HINTED BY CITY'S 1,500 TECHNICAL WORKERS atisfied With | Salary Allowance in Pending Budget, Enters Protest, which shall be adjus 8 of two from ei with a selecte by com- ployers and en umpire by ¢ ploy four Union ‘Recognized W Grants of $40 Week for Nine-Hour Day, | And now it's the fishermen of the) Union Local, Dk |sea who have been unionized with a| new scale of prices, Nearly 1,000 men who go down to the sea in boats with | New union nets and ollskins yesterday went | gps , on a strike and the finny tribes of the| cal No. 16,388 of the Union of Tech deep sported in their native element and | Meal Men, to which 1,600 engineers, sur- veyors and draughtsmen employed by the five boroughs of Greater New York |belong, at a meeting last night decided to protest against the salaries allowed |technical men in the municipal budget |now under Consideration, and named a hoped ever, But this morning wad news was the portion of the finnians 60 whole- sale handlers of fish in the Fulton Mar- ket, !t was claimed that 31 had a cepted the new scale of Wages and con.|Committee to consider the proposition of ditions under which fishermen will work |% Strike in the event their demands were In the future, ‘Tne demands are that a|%0t granted day's work will comprise nine hours,| The union also yoted to request the m6 A M, to 3 P. M, resignation of Frank X. Sullivan, Public Journeymen, $40 a week Works Com loner of Queens, from the men, 4 Gay | beaker b | position of Legal Counsel to the State J Federation of Labor, ‘They took the po- wort After 3, time and a half, and after 6| sition that as an © of Borough o'clock, double time must’ be paid, as | president Conn might en- well as double time for holi ‘and Bunday work, There shall be no-atrike {Counter @ conflict of interest as the le- hor lockout pending settlement of grigy-| gal adylacr of tho State Federation, that the strike would last for- Wages fo STARVING WOMEN AND CHILDREN FILL ~ MOSCOW STREETS Russian Princess Declares She | Actually Saw Girl Die | of Hunger. PARIS, Oct. 22 (By the Associated Press.)—Pictures of Moscow's hunger are given in the Figaro by a Russian Princess arriving from Russia. “I will not speak of the terrible, re- volting, and odious things that passed in the streets of Moscow,” she said. “But only of the hunger incidents I saw with my own eyes and which were repeated day after day. I met @ woman and child, ragged and thin as skeletons, the child crying con- stantly, with an unchanging expres- sion of terror. The mother said that the child was hungry and asked for a piece of bread, as they had not eaten for twenty-four hours. I opened my purse, but the woman turned away saying, ‘No, not money, but bread.’ “Another time I saw a blond-haired young girl with arms outstretched, , leaning like a living crucifix against ;® wall and murmuring: gi am hungry.’ Next day she died. “I have seen in the middle of a side street a great, yellow, hollow-sided dog, carrying a bone with a little meat attached, while a ten-year-old | boy, a few steps away, with the pal- lor of long misery on his ched the dog as if hypnotized. With neck outstretched, mouth open and fist clenched, he looked at the dog with hate and ferocity. “I have seen children, hardly clothed, hollow-cheeked and with | forms like shadows, on their knees in the street trying to pick from between the paving stones grains of wheat that had fallen from a torn sack, “I have seen before bakeries men, | ‘women and children stretched on the cold stones, awaiting through days and nights their turn to get their | eagre ration of bread and then often falling exhausted and dying at the | doorsteps before they received it.” FARMER GETS $8.1 FORWHEATSOLDAS BREAD FOR 9587 |Senator Capper So Declares in | Plea for Legislation to | Aid Agriculturist. | WASHINGTON, Oct. The farmers’ side of the high cost of liv- ing question was presented to the Senate to-day by Senator Capper, Re- publican, of Kansas, who declared that, while farmers are selling their products at a loss in declining mar- kets, the consumers are paying ris- ing prices, Faulty distribution was blamed largely, “In our efforts to get rid of the high cost of living disease,” said Mr, Capper, “I fear wo are in great dan- wer of dying of the remedy, As a result of Washington's effort to re- lduce high prices by breaking down entirely the cost of food, we have the remarkable spectacle of a rise of 1 per cent. in the cost of living, co- incident with market drops that are putting live stock raisers out of busi- ness and causing serious losses to other producers,” Illustrating the anomalous situa- tion of farmers and consumers, Sen- ator Capper said farmers aro selling their wheat at a loss, adding: “It takes four and a half bushels of wheat to make @ barrel of flour. The wheat raiser gets about $8.37 for the wheat, the miller $12.70, the baker $58.70, and the hotelkeeper here in Washington, ag it is doled out in thin ices, $687." The Government, through the Grain Corporation, Senator Capper said, profited 00,000 at the ex- pense of farmers last year, the far- | mers selling from 20 to 70 cents less than the guaranteed pricer ‘The situation of the livestock far- mer is even more deplorable,” be said “While everything a farmer must buy demands the high dollar, the price of his commodities, the cheap- est in the mar are held down by a foreign embargo and a Government guarante Citing losses sustained by agricul- tural producers, Senator Capper said the recent decline in. livestock prices hag cost producers $80,000,000. Farm wages have doubled, land values have risen enormously, and everything the farmer buys, he suid, has risen from 50 to 300 per cent. “Price making in necemities of life," he said, “should never aguin be left to the gamblers of the Exchange or to corporate monopoly.” Flow Increasing. T. H, Oct, 22 (Associated HILO, Press) by WOMEN COPS MAY SOON BE CHASING THOSE WHO SEEK CASTLES IN AR MRS. ROBERT H. ELDER. Police Reserve Official Sends Out Call for Reserve ,Aviator Recruits. Mrs. Pobert H. Elder announced to-day that the Police Department has sanctioned a plan to train a corps of women aviators to be attached to the Women Police Reserves. Mrs. , Elder is the head of the Women's eserves in Brookly and Queens. According to Mra. Elder, women be- tween eighteen and twenty-five years of age are eligible providing they can pass the physical tests, which call for absolate perfect condition, The Women must furnish their uniforms and other equipment. The fights will be made at Fort Washington, where men flyers will train the women. Mrs, Elder, at her home at Willow and Clark Streets, Brooklyn, said: “It will be a fine outdoor training for women, It will give them nerves of atecl and will also tend to increase the growing spirit of independence of the sex. It will not be dungerous because we will allow no girl to leave the ground who is not fully expert in the art of flying, It will take several months to teach the girls how to Qy, but when they learn they will be, no doubt, us expert as are the women chauffeurs and they handle cars as well as the m GRAND JURY WITHHOLDS REPORT ON INTERBOROUGH Special Investigating Body Ad- journed After Addressing Let- ter to Gov. Smith. ‘The Extraordinary Grand Jury which haa been conaldering the charges made Mayor Hylan of a conspiracy be- tween the management of the Inerbhor- ough Rapid Transit Company and the Interborough Brotherhood to bring about an increased fare through a strike of the employees did not report to Justice Weeks to-day as had been expected It was learned that the Extraordinary Grand Jury adjourned yesterday sub- ject to the call of its foreman, who stated he would issue the call when he had received an answer to a letter which the Jury addressed to Gov. Smith, ‘The letter was delivered at the Hotel Biltmore to William McNamee, the Governor's secretary, after Gov, Smith had departed for Albany. It was understood that the subject matter of the letter was of grave im- portance and that the future actions of the Extraordinary Grand Jury toward the District Attorney would depend upon the reply of the Governor, PRINTERS ON STRIKE GET ULTIMATUM FROM PUBLISHERS |Many Periodicals Ready to Leave New York—“Big 6” 4 to Vote on “Sympathy.” ¢ Here is the present situation t& the strike of the two pressmen’s unions which seceded from tw@lr in- ternational bodies, to find themselves “outlaws,” but succeeded in tying Op. for three weeks the periodicals, trade, papers and job printing plants of the city: Some publishers here are moving* their plants to Chicago and other cities and declare that they are leav- ing New York permanently. Others have passed their contracts over to firms outside the city tempararily, with the hope that the strike will soon come to an end. The publishers have given their ultimatum in regard to thelr former employees. They may come back only as members of the new unions being formed and which are aMliated with the International Pressmen’s Union, ; A committes of foremen of the various preas shops which conferred yesterday with the Labor Committee’ of the Printers’ League is trying to effect @ reconciliation by inducing the strikers to join the new unions. i A referendum vote is being taken’ by Big Six Typographical Union to- day on the subject of the members assessing themselves 10 per cent. of their earnings to support their fellow members in the shops who have taken: “vacations” in sympathy wita tho’ striking seceding pressmen. This proposition has already been turned down at @ general meeting of the union whose members are also employed on the newspapers of New York, The result of the vote will be known to-morrow, and it is generally believed that it will bt the same as that of the general meeting. The employing printers saythat if it is otherwise, new complications will ensue. “Big 6” will then be in @ position of sympathizing with the seceding pressmen and the “vaca- tons” will become a recognized strike, with “Big 6” in the same posi- tion with regard to its international body as Pressmen’s Unions Nos. 23 and 51 are with theirs. John Adams Thayer, secretary of the New York Publishers’ Associa-+ tion, sald this morning that his asso-} clation is working with the Printers’ League and wil stand by them to the end. ‘ ‘The Committee of Foremen Preas-” men said that they had found a stumbling block in getting the strikers to join the new unions tn the disposition of the $100,000 which gtfll remains in the treasury. They want to know what is to become of the money if everybody joins the unions except Bagley and Nolan and the other old union offictals, GIRL MILLINER PICKET ~ -HURLS MISSILE; FINED: After Magistrate Koenig tn Jeffer-” son Market Court to-day had carefuly explained the United States of Amer- lca principle that a man has a right to work wherever he can find employ~ ment, @ delegate from Millin Hatters’ Union, Local No. 43, stepped forward and paid the $5 fine the Magistrate imposed on Kitty Shore. seventeen, @ striking milliner, of Ne 432 Hast 79th Street. ‘ was standing in West 36th Street: near Fifth Avenue, yesterday after- noon,” Edward McNally of No. 3 Weat 34th Street told the Court, “when this oung lady pegged a ble pie Hd dow back of atme, It shattered a windo' 10. “L wanted to scare him,” said shore; “and it was only'& newspaper, m TOUR: most Gave been e f the o ave been 8. oP7. 9 mar mi Iron Age,” commented the POLITICAL. publican this year. a choic office « sort of which Alfred E Exemplar or shall it be Not Even ~The new lava flow from the seven craters of Mauna Loa is in-| creasing in volume and brilliancy, It is moving at the rate of two miles a day and the str is half @ mile TL TOOT TOO POLITICAL, An unusual responsibility falls on the Re- His vote is going to have a voice in deciding Democratic leadership— not of man alone but of principles. The Governor who would not “pay the price” has made The Challenge. the polls with his friends. Democrat or a Republican you also are put to He is coming to Whether you are a What type of man shall we choose for public id political councils? Shall it be the . Smith is the Brilliant Hearst? “Loyal to No One, His Own” ALL MEN KNOW WHERE GOVERNOR ITH STANDS. (Most Men Know Hearst) What of The Challenge? DEMOCRATIC COUNTY COMMITTER 4 a | | |

Other pages from this issue: