The evening world. Newspaper, September 3, 1920, Page 1

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THRILLING To-Night's Weather—FAIR. To Be Sure of Getting The Evening World, Order in Advance from’ Your Newsdealer a A ? ae Copyright, ‘1920, bi (The VOL. LXI. NO, 21,527—DAILY. jew York World). y The Press Pub! = NEW YORK, fudlaslestete SEPTEMBER 3, 1920. WBREAK IN baie, RESCUE OF 34 _INSUNKEN SUBMARINE S-5" Sve PRICE THREE CENTS ~ |REBELS DRILLED BY NORWAY'S PRINCE N GUATEMALA agai Was a Suc DEMOCRATS SURE COXWILL PROVE s, but the Royal Instructor Was Not | Guatemala, arrived to-day on the Unit- HIS FUND UND CHARGES. dint hatte Sensations Now Now Anticipated at} Inquiry, Which Apparently. * Was on Verge of Rizzle. ANGRY. | G. '@. P. CHIEFS’ Displeased at Certain Repub- lican Who “Fed Him” With |, Alleged Information. By David Lawrence, | (Special Correspondent of The Ev: ning Wor! CHICAGO, Sept. 3 (Copyright, 1920) ~-Confidence that Gov. Cox will prove his charge that the Republican Party | was rai | ng a campaign fund of $15,- | 00,000 seems to have developed sud- | denly in the Democratic camp. It {8 No secret that friends of the Demo- eratie nominge have been--waverin 4 but the arrival of Ed Moore, pre-con- vention manager for Gov. Cof\ put| life Into the Democratic case. Mr. Moore came here aching to be called by the committee, which, in-| stead, took a recess until Tuesday, the decision being unanimous, how- | ever, because certaya members had} Labor Day. Un-! engagements over doubtedly he will have anvopportunity | next week. Mr, Moore insists that all State finance directors be sum-| moned tg the witness stand and that] some of them will surely substantiate the Cox charges. Mr. Moorg said he was ready not only to prove that Fred W. Upham, Na- tional ‘Treasurer, had testified mis- takenly with respect to various quotas but that in one case in pare | ucular he was ready to give the name | vf the man who had contributed all | of ‘the Atlanta quota—something Like $25,000. Mr m testified that ised in impression if he can show wheretu the Repud- licans have failed to admit the iy quotas in one or nee will be conveyed to the gives the two cause public that Gov. Cox is right about the other quotas too. It had truly begun to appear as if the bottom bad dropped out of the in- vestigution ‘when Senator Reed with his characteristic vigor brought out ss-examination Hermuas reasurer sof National | Young Men's Republican League, that it had planned to raise $100,000, Chatr- man Kenyon had jist disposed of the s by asking him how much money had been ralsed—about $1,900 and everybody got the impression that it was anyinsignificant orgunization. ‘Tho members of the Republican Na- tional Committee have claimed, more- over, that all these independent or- ganizations were outside of the Re- publican National Campaign Organ}- = = | (Contiued on Eighth Page) Classified Advertisers CLOSING TIME 5.30 P. M. SHARP SATURDAY FOR | when Jed Fruit’ steamer Turrialba on his way to his native country for a brigt vacation, Mr, Gravem said last April Willam was ‘on his trip around the world he happened to.Jand in Guatemala dur- ing @ fevolution againsh the Cabrera regimes, which had ruled the country Prince of Norway | with a’ rod of iron for twenty-two years. The Prince was living in the capital when the ¢ temalan Congress de- clared Cabre! rose against Government. him ard Wesleged the The Prince, a yoldler by | training, accepted service as an offi- cer in the dictator's forces and taught the barefdated soldiers to use machine syns. He drilled them day and night, and under his direction the guns played terrible havoc in battle, The Cabrera forces lost, however, but the Prince experienced no difficulty, due apparently to his rank, Mr. Gravem says G temala is very | prosperous uwfMer the Herrera regime, HIS THRICE WEDDED THRICE PUNISHED? Justice Hints It Is im Suit Against Man Who Believes in Seven- Year Marriages. Justice Guy in the Supreme Court to- day heard an application for $60 a week alimony and $1,00P counsel fees on b alt of jal Mrs. Augusta Pollock pendi of her suit for a separation from tin Pollock, President of a dy finishing corporation, — F Sandter, counsel forM repor to be $20,000 a year. That's !mposstble sel for the husband lock even has beew office.’ aard Pollock, stated then,’ ia the a that he cannot UW than #even years at a thine and any ellent ta. his third wite," "ihtice punta) rondy? untied tice Guy, re decision, 1Sc FOR FINE SUGAR ANNOUNCED TO-D. Federal Refining ‘eonmaay Sets That Price for Granflated, “Less 2 Per Cent.” ug Company to-day uctlon in sugar of king ity prive tor “1G cents a poynd less Brothers did not thelr lst price, : late last night they we nount of fine granulated at 15 2 pound. This is sugar that had beon bought by speculators or others* who have returned It to reflueries to be “sold best price obtainable,” nnoyneed no RATHER AP PRISON THAN WIFE INWANT, | Van Tassel, Escaped Convict, Gives Her $800 Savings and Go Back to Jail. Saying that he would rather give the $800 he had saved to his wife and two children than spend it tn an to TheSUNDAY WORLD’S Classified Advertisements BRANCH OFFICES CLOSE BEFORE 6 O'CLOCK Positively no Classified Advertise ments will be received for The Sunday World after6.30 P. M. Acivertising copy for The worl should be to ‘The W: ON BEFORE. FRIDAY PRECEDING PUBLICATION | | se if Rroued fresh [rb Hew, bew fight extradition from where was arrested gn the informa- |tfon given by a former’ fellow convict ward John Vantassel, who cacaped some Ume ago from Dannemora, to-day | walved extradition and prepared to g back t@New York with John Cuthbert 4 deputy sent after him from Sing Sing Vuntassel wa: toneed tn pur yenrs for for ok for $190 Danner ra ™ wit 4 insane and the country | d her husband's income | CONFESSES DRIVING AUTO IN TRAGEDY NEAR HIPPODROME Zola Goldfarb, U. S. Cavalry- man, Ran Gar Into Crowd, | Injuring Many. ASKED TO OPERATE IT.| Man ~ Declares’ He Believed Owner to Brooklyn. Zola, Goldfars, twenty, a member of the 25th Recruit Company, U. S.| Cavalry, now stationed at Fort Slo-| cum, and who says his parents resite | at No. 69 West 115th Street, con-! fessed to the police early to-day that | he was the man who operated the auto that ran into the crowd in Weet 44th Street, the Hippodrome, yesterday afternoon, killing one man and injuring several others, | Goldfarb, who was arrested at 1.99 | A. M. to-day Pollee Sergt. John J. Martin of the East 51st Street | Station at Fifth Avenue and 53d 8 because he answered the de- near by ect |scription of the missing man, says | he was standiffy in front of the New York Yacht Club, in 44th Street, an auto, when a man came out | near and asked him to drive him to Brook- jiyn tn the Goldfarb says he | thought the man was the owner of car, | the car and consented, When arrested Goldfarb at first | protested his innocence, but confessed jut the station efter he had been questioned about half an hour,- He sald he went home after the accl- | dent, and remained until he went out | } to see a girl in Rast 49th Street, and | | was on his way home when arrested, ae |The army rehing for | the missing man when he was taken, Goldfarb say@ he served on the Rhode Island during the war and made sev- police were \eral trips to. Bue He does not | appear to reallze the seriousness of Y | the offense for which he is held with- out bail for examination Sept. 9, Louls Murphy, twenty-six, a hotel | proprietor in Hagerstown, Md., who | was waiting for the doors of the | atre to 0} ag pinned between | \the wheels car, a two-seated | roadster; and the wall of the Hinpo- drome, Murphy received a compound fracture of skull and two de-p wounds in the abdomen, He died in Bellevue Hospital two hours later, Mrs. Frieda Hartmann, twenty-six, lof No. 7 North 7th Street, Newarx, also was pinned under a wheel, and suffered a possible fracture of the skull and left arm, deep contusions on the left temple and Jacerations of the right hand and arm, She is in| Bellevue Hospital, in @ serious condi- | on. G. O, Lyon, owner of the road- Told Him to Drive {N | plained by the had left the car in front of fhe club while he ute luncheon. When {he emerged, about 130 o'clock, he at w tia auto being driven | away, | ARMY RIFLE TEAM WINS, For First Time Defeat Team From Masnchunetia, | The Unted States Army Infantry | rifle team defeated the Massachusetts iflemen for the first time Nt the twen- ty-seventh annual tournament of the Yew Jersey State Rifle Association at Seu yesterday, winning the Dryden | trophy by nine, pointe The two teams of the Marines took third and fourth places. New Jer \y land New York were elf 1 ntnty | A protest bis t ylotory of the tr m in | tive won by| . tox | ‘ 34 IN SUNKEN SUBMARINE, FACING ALMOST CERTAIN DEATH 42 HOURS, ARE SAVED Men Unable to Escape Be- "NEW TYPE BUOY cause Craft Was Upended, CREDITED WITH Nose on Bottom. . SAVING 34 MEN DEVIC E CALLS 4 Passing Steamer Discovers Plight-Drills Into Hull to Give Men Air. BOSTON, Sept. 3—A message to-day from the steamer Alanthus, whieh took off the crew of the disabled submarine 8-5 off Cape Henlopen, said that the Alanthus, accompanied by five other steam- ers, was preceeding toward the Delaware Capes with the 8-5 in tow, The message received at the naval radio station here “8-5 seoured to Alanthus, fifty feet of stern above water, Pos- sibly slight negative buoyancy. Nose of boat on bottom.. Steam- ers Brazos, Overton, Billingsley, Putnam and William 8, Preston standing by. Towing 8-5 to Del- aware Capes, If Alanthus fails to carry the tow the Brazos Will do the towing PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 8.—Thirty- four men of the United States Navy Submarine 8-6 are on thelr way to Cape May gn the steamship Allanthus, after being rescued from the bottom of the sea forty-five miles south of Cape Henlopen, thirty-five hours Lieut. Com- mander C. M. Cooke and his men in the helpless submarine, up-ended so that her nose was sunk into the bot- tom 168 feet under water, had waited for an almost certain lingering death The torpedo tubes forward, through which rescue from crippled submarines on the bottom is usually . possible, could not be used because of the boat's position, Just what had happened was ex- commanding officer in reless dispatch to the Navy De-| artment after the rescue: | “Partly flooded while making crash dive, Crew and officers saved at inclination of about 60 degree down by bow. Now secured to 3. 8. Alanthus, being towed to Delaware Breakwater. Boat can be salvaged. Crew and officers still aboard Alan- thus." aw NEW YORKERKS IN CREW OF SUNKEN SUBMARINE S.-5 iTON WASHIN( . 3.—The N : Department to-day made its well on the deck when it was| ine tne crew aboard tho | sub. marine 8-5 while she was submerge. known the boat had lost the power tol sey. wry go to the surface, Lieut. Commander Charles M. This device is like the ordinary metal buoy which bobs on the watera wong the channels to New York Bay Cocke jra 7 Cottage Street, Welles- . S. Grisham, 23 Lang- It has a steel frame over t ae teel frame over its top in don Strest, Portamouth, NM: which {s hung m bell and carries an sutomatic acetylene gas flare | Ensign J. H. Langstaff, Oneill, Neb, Attached to the upper structure of| Gunner Robert Holt, 1020 S. New the buoy is & Water tight telephone | Jersey Street, Indeanapolis, Ind. box Pode ony pid hich sounds con Following are the enlisted men: stantly un’ ne box is opened a the instrument lifted, i) Fan daeub Akare. is Warren Cliffe W. Out on the trackless sea, the ben | Va; William John Bender, Weat |ringing irregular strokes ‘over the Falls, Me Yi Fred Bennett, Tunes- waters and the clear yellow light | 8a! Y.; Geo. Withelm* fall oe above them gave the only call for Willtam Street,” Yenkers, help which could get the slight|Grove Bradbury Conklin, 09 chance for life for the imprisoned | Flower Street, Los Angeles, Cal. sailors. They knew tht often they| Clarence Dewey Dye, 2328 Howard had cruised for three and four days | Street, Louisyilie, Ky.; Adam Earl | and more along the coast without | Dooley, 2622 Enyle Avenue, Alameda | seeing a ship within the distance from |Caf.; Perey Fox, Buffalo Cente which & buoy on the surfuce was vin- \Jowa; Stephen Michael Gavin, 1 ible. It was entirely like thelr | Yey! Street, Rochester, N. ¥.; Henry light might be seen and ¢ at the |Clay Hoskins, Broadhead, Ky.; Rus- bell might be heard by a se [poll Hudson, New Point, Va skipper ve the curiosity} Roberto Igdanes, Philippine Isl or the s aiter to cuuse lands; Goorge Michael Ulrich, 419 him to turn ¢ from his course to | Dallas Street, Baltimore, Md.; Anton | find out its cause Joseph Urban, Parksville, Md.: Fred athe ( © Genera! grick William Whitehead, 368 East Ke W. Goethals « Govern- 2gth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Ray- nt-owned line to Hayt! and Pan |mond Jennings Wininger, Luttrell, --=- Tenn: Jom, Stare Youker, 516 Broad: (Coptinued on Thirteenth Page? ‘way, Camden, N. J, public the ay MANY VANS HALTED, DRIVERS DRAGGED —— OFFAND BEATEN) |Pickets Have Clear Field at venth Avenue and’ 58th e Street. STOP HARLEM TRAFFIC, |Building Trades Strike of 75,000 Threatened—10,000 Painters Return. A pickels to-day bailed aii van strike Ue vans they encountered and in several in- thousand moving stances where drivers refused to de- sert, handled them roughly. Seventh Avenue and 68th Street was a storm centre, fifty plokets lining the curb and dragging off four drivers, No police reserves respondea fo fele- phone calls for them. in this sector Charles Hartman of, No, 225 West | 126th Street, van driver, was dragged |from a van with furniture en route |to Rosedale, L. 1 After being pum- melled, Hartman escaped into Cen- }tral Park, Later a driver took away the van, agreed not to deliver tt. In Fifth Avenue at 67th Street mov- ing vans were stopped in the early hours. Two pickets pulled a driver from his seat at Broadway and 66th Street, one of them driving away with | | the van while the other escorted the driver from the vicinity. When they returned ,the | tora, but cided to join the union. Detectives dispersed a crowd of 100 strike pickets who halted all vans passing Broadway and 125th Street and blocked all traffip for twenty min- | utes to-day, [rank Morris, President of the Moving Van Assoctation, sald there were no prospects of the strike ending to-day, At the offices of the Amalgumated Plumbers, Fitters and Helpers, Local | No, 32, It was asserted that failure to settle with the plumbers and elec- trical workers wonld be followed by |a call upon the Building ‘Trades Counell, with 75,000 members, to strike. The United Counctl of Labor neets to-night and action will be tuken by the United Electrical Work- and the International Carpenters’ Union. The local branch of Journeymen Stone Cutters of North America yoted to demand $11 a day, an in- from the Greater New Contractori & Son, new court crease of $2 Yorke Ston Henry Hantein $2,872,000 on the Lmestone, and the cutters want a share of the award, ‘Ten thousand striking painters | went back to work to-duy after em- who bid | pluyers #igned the new scale of $10 | day Instead of $9 union officials | announced, asserting that two-thirds Jot t employers had capitulated | Word was received at strike head- | quarters that 760 painters, decorators | and paperhangers lad walked out in Long Island towns where contractors refused to meet the new wage de- | sone : :|MAIL TRUCK NO NOT SUPREME, ‘s re Teuck to a. No, 230 all truck th Driver Whe W | Hale © Mulberry t col pany No Ic at Watts and Varick |Strects Aus was fined $35 by | Magistrate X. Mancuso in the Traffic Court He was charged | . a (Racing News on Pages 2 and 16) | nyer all ght of way an Post Office, New York, N. ¥ STRIKE VIOLENCE GROWS = AFTERB. R.T. ULTIMATUM; announcing Hartman had | driver's clothing was) he announced he had de- | Association. | house | belong to the association | ~ MANY MEN RETURN 10 MBS | R While the Bolshevik element of attempts Green Car Men Blaze NewTrail For the B. R. T. Strikebreakers Run Past, Terminal and Are “On Way to Burope” When Stopped. Two strikebreakers who knew about as much about Brooklyn and Queens; | as & prohibitionist does of the taste |of whiskey, enjoyed a fine, long ride on a Ridgewood-Richmond Hill trol- ley .car, of which they formed the | erew, according to A field investigator | of the Public Service Commission. Arrived at Jamaica Avenue, Rich- mond Hill, where the car should have | made tho start for the return to Hidgewdod, the motorman jogged right along for « couple of miles to the B. |. ‘TP. terminus sat Canal Street, Ja- |matca. ‘The patrolman guard, who halled from the Bronx, was as igno- }rant of the routes a the car's crew. |The passengers, realizing a joke was on, sat light | But when, instead of starting back from the easterly extremity of the B. R. T, line, the car was steered to the tracks Jeading through Queens Vil- lage to Mineola, the passengers de- serted the ship, That was carrying the joke a bit too far | Meanwhile car starters whose pro- tests had been unheeded by the crew | in its hand picked routing, had noti-| fled.an official and he was pursuing in a taxd, “Hey, you fellows," he shouted when finally he overtook the car, “whe are yo going with this car to Burope? You're clean out of the B, Kt, T. sphere of influence, Take a reef and tack back to your moor- inga."” The crew geography, | ee | EDGEMERE TENT COLONY FIRE SWEPT) ts now studying B. R. T. Fifty tents and two two-story frame cottages were destroyed this after- noon by a fire which swept away two blocks of & tent colony known as Til- on the beach between 52d and Beach Sith Streets, Mrs, Goldie Abrhamis of Forsyth Street, Manhattan, 1) by flames out on a pler bulk- roso Camp, Beach | | juniped Into the water and frac- } tured her right leg, She was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital, The fire started from an overheated gas stove and was fanned by a strong south wind, Firem from Par Rock- away, Arverno and Hammels under fon Chief Lawrence responded. nts and houses were, owned by tirase Realty Company and ere gecnpled The mation, | detectives fought back with Mob of 200 Battles With Police After. Attack on Car and Sabotage Is: eported at Many Points—Over , 400 Surface Cars Run. the B. R. T. strikers continue their at sabotage, riot and violence in answer to the ultimatum of Federal Judge Mayer, although they are not to take official action on the ultimatum till to-night, the service of the company continues to + prove and veterans of the road are flocking back to their jobs at the i.- crease allowed them by the court and their seniority secure, During the evening rush howp twenty lines of surface cars will be operated from Brooklyn Bridge and 183 elevated trains, including 600 cars, The surface lines will include 403 cars, More cars: could be oper- Ateted but the police have pro’ for the humber named and reques! that no more be put on, in order that those in operation may be perfectly safe, Besides this the subway trains run ning from Chambers Street and up- town; with the exception of the Sea Beach line, will also be operated, The service will be largely increased over .that of yesterday afternoon and pas- sengers taken from the Bridge will be landed at thelr oWh stations or at subways which will enable them to reach thelr destinations without trouble, The night schedule has not been de- elded upon but will probably be the same as that of last night. A great number of the cars which have been Operating to-day have no and some have no police guards w! others have but one. At the B, R. T, headquarters le greatest satisfaction was expressed at the resumption of service and the return of the old men, One official sald that the men were coming back in droves, so fast that the company was not prepared to take care of all of them,’ but was making every otros 0 do 80, Loads of rubbish have been dumped" on some of the lines which have not yet resumed service, and an attempt was made to pull down the trolley Mnes on the Third Avenue run, The police stopped this as they did at. tempt to wreck a switch-box im am effort to shut off the “Juice.” A De Kalb—Avenue car was ate tacked as it was returning to the depot after having made one trip, over the tracks. A number of strik~ ers and sympathizers gathered at Sumner and De Kalb Avenue and showered bottles on the open car which was not co\ured with chicken wire, Ps A number of passengers were the car, but none were struck by the. bottles, Detectives O'Neill, Flynt, Wagner and Abt were crossing Sun ner Avenue on thelr way to the Bers gen Street barns, and immodiately made for the crowd of missile hurlers, r ‘The detectives chased the crowd for two blocks and captured Leo Pink, 19, who said that his father was striker and lived at No, 127 D@ Kalb Avenue; and Charles B. Cahae of No, 925 De Kalb Avenue, who said that he was a striking “L" guard, On the way back to the corner of De Kalb Avenue a crowd of between — 200 and $00 strikers and sympathizers rushed the detectives and tried to take their prisoners from them, bi a Bottles were again thrown tective Abt wag Said about ‘he pa nd hand. ; wereral golcnnen tm the | ‘ 3 | er ee = A OS

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