The evening world. Newspaper, May 4, 1921, Page 18

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= ee es oA Sa a SSE DIS LA Ya nosinaaa Ae HYLAN VETOES BILL Mur ray Admits 3 Wives FOR 4 MUNICIPAL GOURT STIS Measure Urged by Lockwood to Relieve Con- gestion of Suits Over Rents Mayor Hylan to-day vetov< legislative bills providing for the a} pointment of three additional Mun ng etpal Court Justices in the Was ton Heights section of Manhattan and one additional Municipal Court Jus tice in Brooklyn. The bills calling for the creation of the new Municipa Court Justiceships were passed by the Legislature at the re the rest of Lockwood Legislative Housing Com- | mittee. As explained when the were introduced, their object relieve cougestion in municipal courts which have been caused by the trial of cases under the new rent laws. measures was to It has been repeatedly pointed out | | by Municipal Court Justices, particu larly those sitting in the Seventh Dis- trict in Manhattan, and in the Fourth in Brooklyn, that rent cases have so seriously clogged calendars that many will not be reached In months. The bill planned to take a part of the seventh district and create the tenth district out of it, and to add fa Justice to the present fourth dis- trict In Brooklyn, State Senator Lockwood appea at a recent public hearing on the. bills | and spoke in favor of them. Although Mayor Hylan has not submitted a memorandum explaining Senator THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1921. He Wed Within 7 Years; Almost Wins New Bride Exi@ IG 4 TSE 8 <i | “MARIE POSENER: MARIE E DOUGHERTY ANITE SOUTHWICK MURRAY (N91) MURRAY (N°2) MURRAY (HOS) | | Photo by Albin. * ;Young Publisher Says Only) pany iP thes name of Ann| Wa ek. One Is Legal Spouse and | Would Keep Her. | ALL EAG' 3R TO BE FREE.| First and Third Wiv | Actresses, Second Was War Worker. An attractive young woman living a month, | ——- | Uff and would be only too willing to lead with her a normal married lite Through her attorney, Maxwell Ru- bin, of No. 182 Nassau Street, No. 3 n March asked for a separation on the ground of cruel and inhuman} treatment In reply, wife was a bills he had nt apartment at No. 740 Tiadison . for which the rental was $300 Murray set forth that his! had and run | pivent. the plain- | He insisted he was in: He said he “deeply lov his opposition to the measures, it is Since Feb. 23, he alle she had ri understood that one reason the |in the West 90's, whose friends are| fused to treat him as her husband, extra expense the additional Justices =| On April 2 lust, the court signed Mad their clerias would entail, expecting an announcement of her| ay rder directing the defendant. to Inasmuch as the bill provides that|engagement to John William Murray,| pay $40 a week alimony. Shortly af-| the law become effective Jan. | next, terward, he left the Chatham Hotel, | the Mayor is opposed to what he| live-wire young publisher and ad~| where he had been living, and started | deems unnecessary additions to the | vertising man, will learn to-day for| for the Coast on a business trip next city budget. Another objection | Murray was found to-day in the is that the ation provides for|the first time that Murray has three! g¢ prancis Hotel, San Francisco, and the erection of a new municipal jus-| wives alread said: " ready : - tices’ court hou: ‘ T admit the three marriages, The ae Murray is nov in Son Francisco, whole thing is an attempt to hold m where he is quote: in patch up. District Attorney Swann is ful CALKED UP HIS ROOM : . Spatches a8 | cquainted with the facts in the mar- \ y[admitting three murmages, but in- HOUT iiss Southwick and. the "THEN TURNED ON GAS| "tins the last one was the only| geparation suit. That marriage was i E legal one of the three, His matri-| the only legal one of the thre || John Hopp Found Dead in Brook- lyn House—Two Dressmakers Also Victims of Gas. {John Hopp, sixty, was found dead ‘from gas early to-day in his furntshed room at No, 139 Lafayette: Avenue, (Brooklyn. He had stuffed paper in the cracks of the door and windows and stuck it over some of the cracks with paste he made from flour and water. No one In the house, where he had been ‘only two weeks, knew anything about him. Miss Adele Crocker and her guest, Miss Helen Boone, dressmakers, were overcome early to-day in their room at No. 202 Decatur Street, Brooklyn, by gas that escaped from a defective heater fn the kitchen. They were treated by fan ambulance surgeon and remained at home. FOR FOREST PRESERVATION. by Gov, Edwards at Request, TRENTON, N. J., May 4.—In accord with the call of President Harding to the Governors of the States to set apart thé week of May 22-28 as Forest Pro- tection Week, Gov. Edwards to-day is- sued a proclamation calling upon the press and the schools to ald in reduc- ing the damage resultant from forest fires, or other destruction of the State's forest resourc The Governor drew attention to the fact that the two million acres of <h State's woodland, about 45 per cent. of the acreage of New Jersey, has a net value of ordy about $2,500,000 yearly for the stumpage, and only about $6,000,000 for the standing timber, while the forests Of the State are capable of producing t least $10,000,000 worth of the wood at the St mports and of advaic- d value af §$200,000,000 NO MORAL LAXITY IN SHORT SKIRTS, SAYS EDUCATOR Italian Exchange Professor Vassar Defends American * Girls, WASHINGTON, May 4—(United Press).—There is nothing wrong with the modern American gir! Such is the conclusion of Dr, Bruno Roselli, first Italian ix change Professor, now teaching at Vassar College, who came to her defense in an address to the first convention of the at American Waldensian Aid Society here to-day. “It isn't fair to compare the American girl of to-day with th: Abigaiis and Patiences in the New England churchyards,” Prof. Roselli said. “They belong to a day that is dead and gone, “The modern girl is just keep- ing pace with civilization. Short skirts and cigarette smoking and the general restlessnes mani- fested in other ways do not con stitute lax morals, ‘Rather, they are the expression of healthful exuberance and the as Jjoy of living. |, ‘can honestly say that I find the young American college gir! @ far more satisfactory product or vice "™ than her Muropean sister. She «has commendable courage of her convictions and is healthful » physically and mentally. Too often the student of Continenta Europe is @ dried up and embit- tered girk” monial began when he was twenty-six, in 1914, Two of his wives | were actresses and (he other al war warker, All seem eager bo! from him, the one to third seems to be the only one he cares ty and ced keep. Murray has made no effort to con-| G. C, Houghton Murray said in the license applica- tion he was born in Chicago, the son of Willlam McKenzie Murray, native of Scotland, and Elizabeth Hickson Murray, native of Ireland. ‘The bride said she Was Marie Yvonne twenty-five years old, of | of England, Both | never married be- Posener, Brooklyn, a native said they were fore, Professionally she is to-day known | as Yvonne Pavis and appears in the Lasky productions at Hollywood, Cal Murray in 1917 sued her for divorce but dropped the case. In 1918 his wife filed a divorce suit in Los An-| geles, accusing him of cruelty ‘The | California courts in 1919 refused to grant a decree. In 1918, Murray gave up his work| as one of the publishers of a string of fashion and movie magazines and) ente the Liberty Loan organiza-| tion, In this capacity, in July, he} met Miss Marie Elizabeth Dougherty, | a worker for the National Security | League, an enthulastic, mild-man- nered and refined young woman.| |Murray the next day enlisted in the Marine Corps and two days after meeting her induced Miss Dougherty | to marry him, July 15, in the Hall of | Records. The marriage was per- |formed by the Rey. Dubois H. Loux. | Half an hour iater Private Murray | Jstarted for duty at Paris Island. — | Wife No, 3 has retained counsel to bring annulment proceedings on the | ground that Murray had another wife living. | Last summer Murray was a prom- | nent | figure in a number of week- Jend parties at Seabright, N. J. to some of which society women came. Murray paid ardent suit to a girl liv- ing at the Hotel Buckingham who at- | tended these parties with ner mother, But the romance, which he spurred jon with glowing descriptions of his | “income of $100,000," was suddenty disrupted when the mother learned of his previous romance In the middle o. December last at ja gathering of the Kit Kat Klub in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, he met a girl to whom he had bee! two years previous. This girl on Dec. | 24 became Wife No. 8. blonde. slender, of medium height, blue-eyed, soft en, Her name is Miss |May Southwick, daughter of a 3 introduced She is MORE CLERGY JOIN ceal his amorous exploits, even from sarticular Synod, which includes all hia three wives, it is sald, He la! PMriek in ivchurches in Jeraey City described as a fast worker and proud 11 several in New York and Philadel- of it. He dres: well, ts a lavish dyin, at its annual meeting in the Cen- spender, a “good fellow.” and a SUC- tral Avenue Reformed Church, Jersey cessful man with the ladies, He has city, last night adopte 1 picturesque Ine of conversation. nouncing the coming Dempsey-Carpen- When he began collecting wives he tier battle and calling upon officials to! s a commercial photographer stop it. Perey eaedh . 1914, he engaged| The Jersey City Chamber of Com-| In'a tete-a-tete In a Broadway theatre | merce, througl, Manager Willard Stan- " he ever before had ton, has replied to the Clergymen'a Biest tllae he ks te onimunity Club, which criticised the met. Within an hour they were on 4 .it'and indoraement of it by the Cham- thelr way to Brooklyn, where A8-| hor, Stanton tells the ministers that sistant City Clerk Thomas H. Maher tho class of people who attend the fights fasued a license. The next day they/are not of “bruiser” calibre and the were married in the Little Church] poxholders include some of the b Vt Around the Corner by the Rey, Dr.| men tn the country; that the sport is | Anite | BIG FIGHT PROTEST Jersey Reformed Church Synod Wants State Officials to Pre- vent Ring Battle, | resolutions de- | the finest kind of athletics, and that! Jersey City will Iprofit a million dollars by securing the big bout. pe See Sao German Veteran Wanty to Paint Portrait of Gen, Pershing. | Gustave Klammerich, a Bavarian painter, who by way of self-recommen- dation, said he had become acquainted with the American fighting spirit while serving with a Bavarian cegiment | which fought against the First Division, A, E. F., has offered his services to the Knights of Columbus, who plan to have a portrait of Gen, Pershing painted for presentation to the French Government, {fleers of the organization sald to-day that It hardly rd likely commission would be given to a man, “PALL MALL” of Regal craftsmanship is the stay, between the upper and 61 Nassau St. 175 Broadway (Nr. Cortlandt) T4th St. at rd Ave. | 40 West 34th Se. | 125th St. at 7th Ave. St. Nicholas Ave, at 1819¢ St. 481 Tremont Ave. tor, lil, merchant, Miss Southwick was in the “Three Live Ghosts" com- In genuine Russia Calfakin—patterned in a new panel effect. Tough, flexible sole of walking weight. An unseen detail $750 ‘DO YOU WANT TO BE A KID AGAIN LIVING OVER HAPPY DAYS OF PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA? Jackie Coogan Has Posed for the Pictures of} the Stories That Begin in The Evening | World Monday Next. Do you want to be a kid again? Every man in America t b the stories about P Bad Boy | Fivery boy of to-day has heard hia| about the Peck’e Ba orge W. Peck started writing the) adventures and pranks of his son a} of years ago. They ran| at first, and finally Mr. Peck) to put them in book title “Peck's Bad Boy | way the number form under the and His 1% wuthor OFFICE Here is the volume luced th OF “PEK Milwaukee. have th Gents your if you minds that to move unl Boy” articles are public book ahead, and p The "Bad Boy made world these “Bad given to the | form, why go | e to your ashes, | is not a “myth,” | though there may be some | hes of imagination in the ‘The counterpart of this ated in every city, vil- up | will in strete artic lage a ountry hamlet through- out the land. He is wide awake, full of vinegar and is ready to crawl unde cus or the canvas of @ cir- repeat a hundred verses of the New Testament in Sunday School. He knows where every melon patch in the neighborhood 4s located, and at what hours the dog is chained up. He will tie an oyster can to a dog's tail to give the dog exercise, or will fight at the drop of the hat to protect the smaller boy or a school girl He gets in his work every- where there is a fair prospect of fun, and his heart is easil touched by an appeal in thi right Way, though his coat-tail is oftener touched with a boot than | his heart is by kindness, But he shuffles through life until the time comes for him to make a mark in the world, buckles on the and then he harness and goes to the front, and becomes suc- | cd@sful, and then those who said | he would bring up in State | Prison, remember that he always was a mighty smart lad, and they tire of telling of some of s deviltry when was a boy, | though they thought he was pretty tough at the time. This book is respectfully dedicated to boys, to the men who have been boys themselves, to the girls who like the boys, and to the mothers, bless them, who like both the boys and the respectfully, 30, W. PECK. has just been G Boy to public attention by a film version in which Jackie Coo- Peck’s Bad brought ba gan is starred, So The Evening World belteves every man and every boy and every girl would like to read the story of young “Hennery” Peck’s pranks. The W. B. Conkey Company | of Hammond, Ind, owners with’ George W. Peck of the copyrights | sess | case. I 5 ing “Peck’s Bad Boy and Hi has courteously consented to the republication of some of the stories | and Jackie Coogan has posed for pic-| tures illustrating them | ‘The ive. | The stories will begin in ning World on Monday, May 9, and will continue two weeks. The rst week's stories will be taken from | Veck's Bad Boy and His Pa," and | the second week's from “Peck's Bad | Roy at the Circus," “Peck's Bad Boy With the Cowboys," "Peck's B: Abroad,” and "“Peck’s Bad Boy of d Boy | nan Airship.” The privilege reprint- ne from the latter four books has | |F been granted iby the Stanton & Van t Company, well known Chicago | publishers Don't im Leen CHAUFFEUR GETS | $1,000 FOR “HUNCH” | of 1 | any | Goes Back to Look at “Silver Foil,” | Finds Mrs. Taylor's $35,000 Bracelet. George L. Baker, a chauffeur, ot No. 146 First Avenue, is $1,000 richer to-day because of a “hunch,” and Mrs, Dorothy Cadwell Taylor has recov- ered the $85,000 saphire and diamond bracelet she lost Sunday night while out calling with her fiance, Count Carlo Dentice de Frasso. Baker was hailed by Mrs, Taylor and the Count ai they left the home of Mrs. Herbert Shipman, No. 439 Madison Avenue. He saw some- thing that looked like a piece of ver foil in the gutter in front of the Shipman home, and after leaving Mrs. Taylor at her home, No. 540 Park Avenue, decided to go back and second look. He had no idea that it had been dropped by Mrs. ‘Taylor and had | no reason to suppose it was any-| thing else than silver foil. He da couple of hotels on his way n from 61st Str ’ anybody had got into wouldn't have heeded the “t 4 P| which led him to the lost bracelet ( ee ees s} POLICE BOMBARDED IN RAID.| | Showered With Pots and Pans| |Ey While Searching for Narcotics. | |Fd Fred Washington and his wife, Laura, 3 negroes, of No. 123 Walton Street, | |B Brooklyn, were held’ to-day for: Special | EM Sessions by Bridge Plaza Magistrate Court, Brown in Williams charged with having drugs in their pos- Bail was fixed at $500 in eacn Detectives Edward Yolakoff aud Alfred Cubbidge of the Narcotic Squad raided the house and claim to have found $500 worth of drugs. They told the court that the place was @ rendezvous for addicts where “dope” was sold for a dollar a “sho When they broke in the door, they con tinued, they were met by a fusillade of pets and pans, six negro women tah part in the shower. The Clymer Str reserves had to be called to their aid TV OOOO Se sas TOUR DUBE EORIBUE aloes ‘A right-about-face in the shoe business’ TEAS every one is expecting some shoe concern doing the right-thing about shoe prices. See how Regal Shoes for Spring meet your expectations, You will hardly match such values outside the Regal Shoe Stores. Few concerns approach the Regal command of genuine leather and fine craftsmanship. Still fewer can serve you direct through factory-owned stores — with a range of three prices, $7.50, $8.50 and $9.50. REGAL SHOE COMPANY BOSTON, MASS, REGAL SHOES Regal Shoes for Spring are $7.50, $8.50 and $9.50 NEW YORK STORES inside back- the lining. Broadway at 37th St. Broadway at 50th St. 6th Ave. at 21st St. Broadway at 27th St. 2929 Third Ave. (Nr, 152nd St.) 991 So. Boulevard 466 Fifth Ave. 5422 Fifth Ave. ithush Ave. NEWARK 825 Broad St. BROOKLYN STORES ~ 357 Fulton to take the lead in in the business can 301 Broadway \ 1049 Broad: 1375 Broedw: Nee Gates Ave.) t. JERSEY CITY | 108 Newark Ave. | WD, IP ULTON AND BRIDGE STREETS Greatly Reduced Prices Are the Feature of Our Thursday Sales Remarkable Apparel Values for Women, Misses and Girls Long-Line Tricotine Suits. Considerably Below Former Prices Smart Wraps and Coats Very Greatly Reduced Tailored Tricotine Suit, $29.75 Satin Wrap Reduced | to $19.75. | | | ¥ Yn FORMERLY TO $39.75 FORMERLY TO $45.00 i Women's and Misses’ Suits Pie ape ibe sh) of 75 styled on the newest long, grace- 15 elvet; Bolivia s, the ne full lines, ing all the be: varieties of tan; Navy Tricotine fashion features; finely tailored : Wraps, with sill stitching; also and silk lined. Of an excep- mannish belted Polo Coats. All tional quality Navy Blue very handsomely silk lined... Tricotine. . Silk Frocks of Newest Vogue | (i/tle Ladtes Apparel Advance Summer Models ——SPECIAL VALUE—— Very Specially Priced D Pleated Dress Frocks of of Canton Imported Crepe in Gingham, Two Con- $6.95. trasting Color. 829.75. New frocks that reveal the style changes for the coming season; Canton Crepe, Georgette, Crepe de Chines, and bodice originations in Taffeta; Pleat- ing, Beading and Fringe trim e med. Truly remarkable values at New Gingham Dresses SORE, TIRED FEET Imported Gingham, in red, green, brown, maize and pink ‘checks; White Organdie collar and cuffs, 95 e Girls’ Gingham and Organdie Dresses, 1.95 to 15.75 No puffed-up, burning, tender, aching feet—no corns or callouses. “TH” GLADDENS “Tiz” makes sore, burning, tired feet fairly dance with delight, Away go the aches and pains, the corns, callouses, blisters, bunions and chilblains, “Tiz" draws out the acids and poi sons that puff up your feet. No matter how hard you work, how long you dance, how far you walk, or how long you remain on your feet mo brings restful foot comfort. “T is | magical, grand, wonderful for tired, jaching, swollen, smarting feet. Aht ‘how comfortable, how happy you feel. |Your feet just tingle for joy; shoes hever hurt or seem tight. Get a box of “Tiz” now from any drugwist or department store. End foot torture forever—wear smaller | shoes, p your feet fresh, sweet and happy. Just think! a whole year's foot comfort for a few cents.—Advt, Cuticura Soap —The Safety Razor-— Shaving Soap wticurs Soap shaves withoutmug, Evarywhere zie. —_——= SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WOKK MONDAY MORNING WONDERS, SS eal eR SAE ABE BEART HIS

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