The evening world. Newspaper, June 12, 1920, Page 3

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MEN FAR QUTSHONE IN SPEECH MAKING BY FEMALE RIVALS Mrs. Douglas Robinson and} Alexandra Carlisle Outclass Other Convention Talkers, BOTH W “Too, Make High Marks in Naming Candidates, CHICAGO, June 12.—The old-time | politician who prophesied that no} woman could ever succeed in politics | “has another think coming.” The two best speeches made in the} Republican Convention were made by | women, Not only were they the best | in substance, matter and taste, as| adapted to their purpose, but they! ‘ot over better,” .feached more | people, and reached them more clear- ly than did the arguments of Gov.’ Allen or Goy. Willis of Ohio, the king | of all the bull-throated clan that has been rattling the rafters and agitat- ing the banners since Tuesday. Mrs, Douglas Robinson, Theodore Roosevelt's ', who seconded tie Wood nomination, and Miss Alexan- @ra Carlisle of Boston, who performed | the same function for Gov. Coolidge. | were'the two women who upset tic | tradition of the ditficulty of making | 4n impression on convention deie- gates without The exact # ings as ve lowing their heads off atus of political meet- has not been standardized as yet, 20 there was a difference in the cha ter of the costumes. Mrs. Robinson seomed to regard the oc of w semi-formal charac write and she hazarded the opinion that it had been made in Paris, pos- sibly by Paquin, which is reason enough for the absence of a technical description here. Miss Carlisle, on the other hand, ap- parently took the view that a Na- tional Convention was rather a sport- ing event, or, at least, one appertain- jug to outdoor recreation, She wore'a Nght thin costume~a shirt-waist suit 1 um told jt had a patent leather belt, but anyway was a sublimated shirt-waist suit, and had about It an | air of distinction as definite as Miss | °"" Carl 's voice, which rolled out with liquid Arness. Her manner of saying what she did deserves special mention nere, be- cause it ) Mrs. Robinson's de tles the question of active ticipation of women in the mechanics of politics as well as in the voting, whi , perhaps, more important than who happe other time. It was good politics to have Mrs. Robinson se d's nomination, is still the big- and het appear be question of the Roosevelt political Leritage, though she was careful to make it known that it was not be- cause Gen, Wood was her brother's friend or because her brother was Gen, Wood's friend that she asked the delegates to bame him for the Presidency turally it did no harm hav friendship of the chief ambitious, nd the chief departed, emphasized canonized by his party more and} more. From this it is apparent that | the ‘female the species is more deadly than the male in politics as well as elsewhere. There was a curious familiarity |! about Mrs. Robinson's mannerisms and her enunciation, Feminized and graceful, they still had the Roosevelt touch, She did not show her tecth,|¢ put she smiled and narrowed her eyes as she made her points—for example, work which chines instead of a smere cannon fod- der.” Her gestures were easy, gloved and effective. She leaned forw er’s table, just as Th used to do fet face to face with his hearers, and | over the speak- she had a little slap at Wilson’ and | the Democratic statement that he | had to wait for the psychological | moment to bring the country Into the | saying that she preferred the who makes the psychological | s we ma 1 moment to the ane who waits for it Mrs, Francis Fletcher Dobyns was t effectively costumed speak- onded Lowden's nomina- tion and did it well, but not so well the im. er, She s¢ rs did for their principals. hind Mr: Dob h fodtivencss came mnigee 4 lady with whom ( as nally stopped the demonstration, which refused to be stayed by any of the men who seconded the Illinois nomination. This is disputed by some of the new yoters, who say that the New York delegate, Miss Boswell, in white satin and lace, with ostrich plumes in her hat, who soconded the homination of Prof. Butler, really dressed the part as it should be dressed cas Bk My, League Plank, “Cowan INDIANAPOLIS, June 12.—Thomas Taggart, Democratic Senatorial nomi. nee, to-day declared that, the Repub: lican Convention's Lensue of Nations plank was the “most cowardly, eva sive and unprincip get of respectable ir put over on the public, ‘that instead cf thing th hoomerang to Republican hopes, Notable Women Who Take Leading Parts | In Work of the Chicago Convention GOWNED. | Mrs. Dobyns and Miss Boswell, | les for feminine activity | Miss E, ESLICK Suffrage Leader, Crease), Tenne CNet ACAR'S: ion as 0-6) r ara had} on what a distinguished woman | described as a calling gown,| , SLEUTH BEAT HIM, CHAUFFEUR SAYS Asserts Death Threats Followed De- mands for Arrest—Magistrate Summons Detective. As the result of a story told to Magis- byiae nomen We TOGETSUGAR, | GOVERNMENT SAYS (hearing the announcement, nodded his | GEN. WASHINGTON SHARES HIS HORSE WITH WAYFARER Distribution nners to Be Under Control ying Squadron, Special Assistant to a of the} that 34,- | avail-| His wife, to whom he has been and| married six years, spent’ the night in-| until the time of the verdict being 80/ driven about in an automobile by wives also will be| ¢riends, She was reported to be al- and eeping Companion Found Clasp- ing George’s Waist Fifteen Feet Above Williamsburg Bridge Plaza. ce George Washing- ton has been on his horse on the Attorney ¢ 000,000 pounds of sugar will be for the commercial Plaza he's had ¢ soon as the'traffic of the One man must have said the sugar wil be delegated to Riley gs him ever since ed againgt the offi Z 4 similar case, make his de ra year and Tr tomers to disobey can th Street restaurant a assaulted him. 3 to be chosen to run | for the Presidency this time, or any} him into a do |NAVY BOAT TURNS itn falacly’ wworn to a ata TURTLE; 7 MISSING Simniti or Henry’ ngs ied.” "'*S General's horse star I have been threatened with death If nove the base of the couldn't figure horseman got Torches Used to Burn Out Bottom | of Boat to Rescue Impris- ISAAC ANDERSON DEAD. Retired Bank the man and ation the erst- WILAUNGTON, Del., 3 vein Boat Manhattan, only home he had, » United States Navy and four seam ny ol was struck b; near|appeal parade of the Salvation Army, y the sister of the man’ who is being o and was the son of in $500 bail “Anderson, one time warden of Black- | Navy officials men will not} Tt will have unique features, all known until late oceurred during a heavy FIVE SALOONS RAIDED. n Bank and the Old lectrical storm. tra Drink, | seve of | Thomas Cly« to tho| others wer | Whiskey Sold at 50 Ce: dQ with Henry Morg' Key the © ivil War, hipyard | Re’d Bt when she described Wood's Plattsburg Avenue. A benefit performance will some of “America’s young mtn abroad as fighting ma- urvived by his widow one brother and three grandchild _— MRS. COX HELD FOR CRASH. | """ dore Roosevelt | ) an apparent effort to members eved to have reenwich Hosptta ' CITY BUS LINES , IN BROOKLYN STOP |!ite2" found the caretaker. engaged | in an attempt to make the stove draw. | an automobile | dent to-day in which his truck we rhed by collision with a ea His Second Bri {Thin City. Wife in Di Hanna Marsone Cropsey I 165 Broadway Jenks well asked for Y unanimous vote the class of |} from they 1920, Connecticut College | 4 this month a Taggart Says of Two Miles of Trolley Seized. Sheriff Hewitt has elzed two mile leet trotley road t any ever tried to He predicted |) ping & vote-getter the “evasive plank” would serve as a the Government commandeersd the r ere who | unless the Government » is operated by the Public mi alleged | Dykman aid} contempt of cour, | HENRY CONVICTION TO BRING SERIES OF NEW INQUIRIES \Prosecutor Emphasizes Charges | | Againt Smith Were Kept Secret Two Years. The conviction of, Inspector Domi- | nick Henry for perjury against As-! | Sistant District Attorney James E | Smith, by @ jury in the Criminal Part | of the Supreme Court a little after | | midnight last night, Is believed to be | | the beginning of a series of Grand G. O. P. Platform Reads Just Like One of Charlie | ten: Jury investigations. Henry spent the night in a cell on the second tier of, the Tombs. He} | refused to make any statement except | to thank Warden Hanley for promis- ing to try to get him into a more, comfortable cell before the day was, Jover. Sentence is to be passed on} | Henry next Tuesday. | Special Attorney General William | | Rand jr. put especial emphasis in | | his examination of Police Commis- | | sioner Richard E. Baright on the fact that the charges against Smith, made | | by Henry, were communicated to | | Enright by Henry and by Enright to | Hylan and then kept secret for two | years, though they involved an accu- sation of crime against a public of- ficial Henry's conviction came at the mo- } | ment when he asked Justice Weeks | | to let him explain tothe jury that he| | never meant to make any, acusation | ag: Smith except that Smith was | making raids in Henry's inspection | | district with a “man of bad char. | meaning Fred Whitin, secre- a mmittee of Fourteen. The jury, coming in with the verdict | of conviction, met the Manuel 4 with Henry's summons Just after the verdict Howard 8. | Beidleman, Juror No, 7, told Justice Weeks he had just learned of the death of his mother, Mrs, 8. Beidle- | | man, in Washington, N. J. Henry, sympathy to one of the men who had just convicted him. Mr, Beidleman, the room ahead of the others, In giving his pedigree Henry said he is fifty-two, a Roman Catholic, born in Ireland, temperate, and now living at No. 325 Central Park West. most in a state of collapse, under] in his charge to the Jury Justice rable him | W ‘since only a grave one for the defendant, icenses of those who disobey or |DUt for the people of New York and eks declared the issue was not the State's judictal institutions, “It tends,” he said, “to sap the \ ery 10 do business | vitals of our organized existence, and peony (ineked | if perjury was committed as charged in this ‘case it should severely punished. Tho whole question re- solves itself into this: One uf two officials hus falsely sworn to a state~ |PARADE TO AID FUND APPEAL. | Salvation Army to Include U Features in ‘mont. Soldiers and sailors, floats and trucks, @ tank, ah armored motor car and 400 policemen who served with the Ame: can Army in France will start from Washington Square at 4.20 o'clock this afternoon and parade up Fifth Avenue to i#th Street in the Home Service Fund The procession will be led by # military band from Governor's Island. ym~ bolical of the work of the ‘Salvation Army, “Jeff Davis, king of the hobovs, and hls hobo monkey, Mike, will lead a large delegation in the “Down but Never of | Out” section Beveral districts did not roport yos- r steamer] terday, and there was no announcement up 46 and four|of subscription totals, Independ- A Home Service rummage will be held to-day or Monday at No. 389 Fifth held to-morrow night at the Casino The- » side | atre. fe EE ROCKEFELLER FIRE SCARE. »|\Smoky Stove Started by’ Woman Draws Firemen, Clouds of smoke from a@ atove tn the kitchen of W. G, Rockefeller's house, No, 292 Madison Avenue, last who turned in an alarm. She told the police that she had lighted a wood fire in the stove to cogk her and ‘supper. The smoke attracted a large crowd, The Rockefeller family ix out of the city. GIRL GRADUATES OFFER SILVER GIFT TO TEMPT STORK First Boy Baby to Get Spoon or in Cup, First Girl a College Tuition. Corporation NEW LONDON, Conn., June 12. for women, at a banquet held in the Mohican Hotel last night, decided to present the first with Justice Weeks's permission, left | if it works Thomas Edison must have written it, NEWS OF HER DEATH | "°7 Scouts’ Fana 970,000; Jona 0, Woman Drops ‘Dead ‘When Told | terday total contributiona of $70,000. tar No, 832 Dawson Street, the Bronx | Subscription of $5,000 was made by John carly tis morning heard moans coming | contributions were Henry 1. Doherty trom the bed of his wife, Tessie, to whom ho was married thirteen months ago. He summoned a doctor, but the bride died of heart failure just before his arrival, eld leaving @ ten weeks' old baby, Ruth. | the Defendam Association, 224 Reale Mra, Ethel Rosenblatt, of No. 413/bera who have died during the p Boulevard Avenue, Rockaway, L. I. by| Ghure Pau) Wert Waalineten telephone, saying her daughter was tll ‘Bireet. When the mother arrived at the Fein- stein home later this morning and was told her daughter had died she screamed and fell to the floor. The bridegroom before his arrival the mother too had | died, Heart trouble was the cause | Th Ci K; De ° Mother and daughter will be buried to- | e Cows are Anee ep in morrow in Mount Hebron Cemetery, ° ° Staten Island, The mother leaves « hus- Grass—Milk is Cheapest bund, three daughters and two sons. | night attracted the attention of | Sister Charges Another Document | is Plains of a will disposing of a) $2,000,000 estate left by her sister, | Frances L. Bemis, widow of William) 4 boy baby the stork brings to a anember of the class with a silver poon or oup and (he first baby girl will receive four years of a college tuition, which will be pald for by the claas of 1920, i = te dupes et Ssh ace ae Cen siete em peemnmenne: Company and Fredtrick Db, ye lin’s Best Pie-Throwing Scenarios. oy Ris R, “Hara. ‘New York Brening World.) CHICAGO, June 12. HE G, 0, P. platform is on all news stands, It was written by the guy that writes Charlie Chaplin's scenarios, in which the hero throws pies at Charlie. The hero in this one throws mud at Woody. Othefwise tt ts just the same as passed by’ the National Committee on Resolutions. The Republican platform ts offered for the candidates to run on and the voters to sit on, It guarantees all the benefits provided by the Con- stitution, including the Eighteenth Amendment, and it guarantees life and liberty, but not Liberty bonds, (Copyright, 1920, by the There is no plank favoring the landlords. The platform goes to the bottom of all our evils and eight newspaper columns, Well informed politicians say its effect will be tremendous, empecially on the white paper shortage. The G. ©. P. platform makers have done their work well, The G, 0. will now get ready for the The platform tells what the party will stand for in the next four years and what it has stood for in the last four years. Some folks claim the Republicans have handled Wilson without gloves, and some claim they handled him with six-ounce glovés, Anyway, Wilson \s blamed for everything except winning the war, The G, O. P. claims (he war was won by Pershing and Hoover, both of ‘em Republican onndidates, The guys that framed the platform certainty said it with flowers. Tiere are plenty of bouquets for the G. 0, P. The platform blames the Democrats for making the dollar worth fifty conte, Only a new administration can stop the Democrats from makihy it look like thirty cents. It claims Wilson's reign made the dollar shrink. The Republican Party now promises to make a dollar worth & dollar if it takés two dollars to do it. The platform reduces inflation with hot air. We will now pass on to tho next problem. The platform sidesteps Prohibition completely, It doesn't even mention a recipe for harmless home brew. The platform to like the 1920 patent medicines, It guarantees to cure all our Ills, but there's no trace of booze on the label. It only asks you' give it a first year's trial. Yea, bo. ‘ f — ° The Republicans are certainly flopping to Wm. J. Bryan. Bryan wants a dry nominee, and it look’s like he'll get his wish. The delegates will milk him dry. The Bigneuces are liberal to all other nations, expecially with talk, They favor will tag days for the starving Armenians, with no mention of thirsting Americans. No mention is made of Fiyme, and they don't even favor giving Blarney to the Irish, The @. O. P's turn down a postseason series for the League of Nations. Ban Johnson's league lost out in Chicago last season, and it looks like Wilson's league gets the same dose this year, The only foreign policy for G, O, P.’s favor is the open door for Wilson—Going out, ‘The Democrats are blamed for the failure of the wheat crop in the Middle West and the melon n.CFOp on Wall Street.» >| so blamed for the failure of Hughes's crop of whiskers four years ago. Agriculture is the backbone of the Nation, and the Democrats have sat on the backbone—it’s @ crime, The only thing the present Administration has given the farmers is rain. The G, 0, P. will give ‘em wind. The Democrats are The platform also favors Republican ballots for the women and homes forthe homeless, If you can build houses out of words, the G, O, P. supplies the material, The platform also provides castles in the air, with a four year lease, for all fastidious voters. The Republicans will leave no stone unturned in order to help the people, and that in- cludes the Hlarney stone. The author of the platform isn't given, but If McAdoo runs his campaign like he ran the railroads, it looks like another Republican year. KILLS ~ MOTHER At the Bontrar py ee New York Boy Scouts of America Central Committee at the Lawyers’ Club yes- Daughter's Illness Proved the extension of the movement were satel announced. The largest contribution Fatal. was $10,000 from the Laura Spelman Ralph Feinstein, a curb broker, of | Rockefeller Foundation, and a personal D. Rockefeller jr. Among the other Geranes » $00; Todd Shipping Corpo. 40; Union News Company, —— Memorial services Feinstein called his wife's mother,! ment Veterans, for the thirteen met to-morrow at = |7.YEAR-OLD BOY INSURED ON Yih Namesake of Paul. Jones Ti as Elk Goes on 1,950-Mile PORTSMOUTH, N. Hy —John Paul Jones, seven-; son of Charles A. Jones of O., who travelled 1,960 miles fi his home to this city to visit uncle, Thomas C. Lackey, has rived home agnin in safety. Young Jones was insured durt the round trip for $25,000 ag: accident and was tagged with am Elks card, The journey and <a historical associations here ; connection with his namesake, ome “founder of the American Ney; made a deep impression on boy. His mother has written brother here of the the safe turn of her son. ‘POKER WIDOW’ WILL TELL OF BIG GAMES Revelations Promised When Mrs Gleason, Accused of Theft, Goes” L T. Piatto, Not 261° Broadway, counsel for Mrs, Eva Gleason, Who held for grand larceny in thé West Side Court last Thursday, @e- would tell the entire story of . Doker parties of the fashionable set mentioned in the case when she goes before the Grand Jury, in about: two Mr, Flatto denied statements Mra. Gleason, while the wife of Will~ jam Sheer, had lost a large sum of money at a poker game: He also de~ nied the claim of Shalleck Gowns, Ine, @, dressmaking concern, that Gleason owed them $15,000, said she had never purchased from them goods valued at more — $160, and had paid for these. Flatto declined to tate the wi its of Mrs, Gleason, who was re- leased on 9600 bail, ‘ HELD AFTER VAN Fire Causes Loss of $4,500 to. Deutsch Brothers, Where There re establishment. WARNING ON FROGS ISSUED. Law Making Jane Closed Season to Conservation Commissioner George D. Pratt has issued a warning to al) frog © hunters and othei the change in the lat it seasion of the Legisiature by whieh the close season for bu'l frogs, green froga and spring frogs was extended to_include June, Shipmen qihich. have rt aieriete, indicate a ithe sean in, the law la ‘not fully re Formerly frome. were ‘protected ont during April and Ma ton to the 0 use of troy A man real estate operator, forty-seven years old, of No, 155 Lefferts Avenue, Island City, was fined $10 tn the 4 Court by Ma giarats Edgar V, FOR MERE $25 Journey, Before Grand Jury. to-day that Mra, G ‘xd BURNS IN STREET. arr Has Been a Strike, ¥ Fred Ernat, thirty years old, of No 721 De Kalb Avenue, Brookjyn, war held in $1, ball to-day “Mh” Gites Avenue Court by Magistrate Dale on co charge of cotta fire to-an ai moving van. A short affidavit, made out on complaint of Peter Sherman. of No. 151 West 195th Street, Manhattan, — said the man got out of an automobile 518 Willoughby Avenue, where the van stood, set fire to it and then rode away in the automobile, ce and the k of furniture in It, * to Deutsch “Bross 1288 rd A eeiey rey") a {ota loss, estimat wore-@ a been h strike. at DAM aforced. calling attention to” made during the of Miest ane frome ina cs whe one tion to whic! any t time of ihe yeu ~ oe ae ‘ an. 10 sald he was Floyd Lord, # of disorderly cor a and 4th Breet annoyed her ed in following her, sain called a doctor, but| WILLCONTEST OVER | “(HE fields are green with fresh and succulent grasses. The cows are literally in clover. The flow is greater and prices are lowest. $2,000,000 ESTATE Made by Standard Oil Man's | Shertletd A dollar invested in milk will buy more Widow Is Withheld. | Bioree ore vitality and sound tissue than it cous DH Mrs, Kittle F. Hunting of Rye Neck | owned and in any other way. contesting the probdte in White| operated You can have a quart bottle of Sheffield E, Bemis, former Standard Oll oftt- | Store in your own container for 10 cents. celal, of Orienta Point, Mamaroneck. | set Stuntinge through her attorney, And remember that Sheffiald milk comee Harold Lippincott, alleges that ‘an: | fo you fresh every day, [t comes when other will 1s being withheld by those at its best, It comes just as a rested in the estate,” and that by nae cow made it—plus the sums of money were willed | safety of perfect pasteurization. to my daughter, Mildted F. Hunting.” | Her action is opposed by Martin Carey, [Xofoee Hah’ ot Sheffield Farms Co., Inc. Surrogate Geo! Stanck of ing St d Oil! Milk brought to your door for 15 cents, You can get the same milk at a Sheffield A. Slater has ape | s temporary administrators | New York Milk is at its best,

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