The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1921, Page 25

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\ A . wn B AUTO BANDITS GET HUGHES FORCED IBORDEMANDS SANE CE “MEMID TO PROVE AY BRN CLOSING "2,9." Badly Wounded. HIS OWN POINT F MANY THEATRES 2 etna assistant superintendent of the Boggs @ Bunt department store, and William , Stagerfleld, another employe, as they Obregon’s ‘Government Ad-|Rorted That Movies Are}iert the store for the bank with the i Y j morning receipts, Neel was wounded mits Constitution Confiscates re to Be at the Hippo- | thy"one or the attacking. force was Foreign Property. rome Next Season. automobile. ‘The automobile was drawn to the vas rumored to-day along Broad-|CUnb in Federal Street. Just as Neel, carrying a satchel said to contain withat labor troubles may clos@/ cash and securities to the amount of gal of New York's big theatres, {All lps "| man sprang from the automobile and That Is Needed Is for St+| daing tne Hippodrome, which hae| opened Aree Neel went down with a preme Court to Make Article [ne nad « closed season during its) Un°t Qiroush his ebdomen. ‘ @ and Not Retroactive, fin years. Once the theatres were | tossing it into the automobile leaped ti hud kept hls engine running, sent the ( strike. Now it is the stage| machine forward at full speed, but By David Lawrence. \ | not before Charles Schultz, a police (Special Correspondent of The Even- who are causing trouble. man in citizen's clothes, who hap- ¥. ing World.) dward P. Gately, President of the — to Ra} aon oe pn el be- 2 4 “ : *|hind a telephone and_ began ASHINGTON, June 10 (Copy-| trical State Employees’ Associa. | {1N0 2 NlGhnOne Mole ee rob. has Ny t taken this week at the meeting | they reached a corner and turning ie resolved itself Into a simple qU6s- | 4,, jxecutive Committee in Den-| rove rapidly up the Allegheny River Mm of time. The United States Gov-|y would not come before the |" ernment confidently expects the Mex- | Mucing Managers’ Association un- ican authortties to cone round to the| Susust. According to Mark Lues- 10C FARE OR ALL IS LOST, IN JERSEY arrested. The others escaped in an THEY HAVE A WAY OUT. $50,000, turned from the doorway, a dl for & time because of the ac-| ito the machine. The driver, who Fight, 1921).—The Mexican situation| 4 sald to-day that whatever ac-| pers answered him shot for shot until Viewpoint expressed in the proposai| % ™4nager of the Hippodrome, the for a new treaty of amity and com-| & hands are now receiving $3.25 a merce. The Mexicans have begun | Prmance. is ‘ ; A arguing, but eventually they must ac-| '°Y Rave asked for $4, according Public Service: Asking Raise, Says cept the proposal made or remain| ‘f". Luescher, but Mr. Dillingham) — It Will Drop $2}000,000 is to stick to the old scale, ‘ se etl peeps haughty ahs Brduslng MANAROR Auace This Year. exican 8; " iuanis hava, TRACTBAMNURA ae hotel con will meet next Tuesday to| TRENTON, N. J. Juno 10.—The know how firm is the attitude of ie aider ways and means to iower|/Public Service Railway Company, retary Giughes, ‘They imagine tt ta| POs of theatre operations. |through its counsel, argued before ih Wobseet 1H Wilh chara Eck be ond.| .° Shuberts declared to-day that the Supreme Court here to-day to leug'Dickering, But Mr. Hughes in-| {| Wowd not turn over any of have the order of the Public Utility sists on one fungespantal Paine {| tt theatres to cinema attractions |Commission refusing to grant the etiap (lat. CaHAA tioned) ayn ‘A {me event of labor trouble. company a 10-cent fare, remanded Gen. Obregon a good deal. ne on after George M. Cohan’s an-jto the Board for reconsideration. fundamental 1 almply that tho aex.| cement that he was to quit the|/The application was for an emer. Jcan Constitution 1s or 1s not confe.| trica!_ business, it became known | gency fare, due to conditions brought catory. Ie SGiden't, "than a treaty | nthe mppodrome management has) about by the war. ‘The Hoatd said tt whould be negdtiatea to sseva tid thght of reopening the big play-|would consider no more war-emer- hde in the fall with moving pic- . gency cases. gee te labasrrror pre in're-/tu, No preparations are belng) Counsel for the company declared Conprivution’ad'wh ts setae all their) mg for the spectacle for next se8-|tnat the company will lose more than \ we semove all doubt | somnd contracts and engagements! 59 999,090 during the present calendar nbout confiscation of foreign property $2,000, ing the p 3 ha} not been renewed, the delay Senlurod that {¢ lawfully acyu.red, ‘hen reco; ‘ year. ‘The lawyers declare va kee gnition/ bef due to labor troubles. The |i, imperative that money should be will not be extended until a Govern-|Hijodrome is usually the first thea- p . ment arises which (es feel capable |trgto open. expended on ne Sommneny s propels of making the desid treaty. He punbagement, Of ottier theattes(Te ee eee naan ment, Mexi the property will become unfit for What Mexico hasjust done in re-|arjfacing demands of increases from| jjcc, phe rates, under the Jaw, must fusing to negotiatca treaty on the|bon stage hands and musicians. be suffictent to induce the investment ground that no pat or international] @ificlals of the Actors’ Equity As-| of capital, The credit of the com- vent! can onflict pany has been destroyed and new Seer jet with thejiocation say all the closing talk 19) Co pitai cannot be obtained for neces- Mexican Consttaion is regarded |jased merely on a natural summer| sitios, The increase, it was argucd, here as absolutdy proving the Am-|}ump. erican contentim, The mere fa: that Mexico say : treaty would be/1 a formal statement to George M. in contradiction sfvertain articles in| ohan’s assertions of yestorda; the Constitution in admission that the Mexicans ontrue the famous|'g that they (the Fidelity League) ‘Article 27 complend of by the United Btates as confimory. Hitherto theMexicans have de-| sgements in the same company with tlimed to admit Atthe Mexican Con- stitution was! drastic as that in| W would not, and could not even it Secretary |b would, bar them from forming actual oper@n but Hughes has tmoouvred the Mext- pans into the sition 6f proving hig| COMtituted by members of the Pro- point. In a itshell, the situatio: has progressea point. bans now ede that their Constitu tion confiscis terpretationt Officials hiare not disturbed over | to step cown. We promise that when the situatlorPhey believe the Mex!- pans will evually see the point and | for them as we are now working for Talk of|the presmt majority.” Interventiomoceeds as usual from} The sta‘ement emphasizes that the those with om the wish is father | Equity inno way "shoved" Mr. Cohan lo the thou; But it can be stated | Out of the profession, that he was positively tlooercive measures of a|20t the ouly independent producer in rive the req'te assurance! military cheter are not even con-| closed shop clause. There is no fight, sidered here an alternative to Mex- | th kan refusal The realernative is refusal to}, f, yunded by 42d Street on the south Neal with tQbregon regime and a/and 63d Street on the north,” declares patient wat for a new Adminis- | Mr. Gillmore, and add: tration, Pdent Wilson waited till| a, q producer on account of Equity. ‘The Mexicans didn't |'There again he is disingenuous. There it mld be possible for|are many ways out for Mr. Cohan if {withhold recognition, ) Huerta got. belleve America Now it apps inevitable that unl The Mexi- foreign property. hey have a Y out, however, ‘They eed not chge thelr Constitution hey can ha their Supreme Court interpret theticle in dispute as not the sdution of the difficulty. tebroactive. ven then the United|they lave become members they can Btates wouldsist on @ treaty so as! qght tle present leaders from the in- to prevent 4 return to earlier in-| side, atd as soon as the msjority is The Equity, through Frank ct{lilmore, Executive Secretury, replied “All we Equity members hve declared war on us and our icy, is that we will not accept en- mmbers of the Fidelity League. But thr own companies, if same are dumg Manager’s Association.” Depite the fact the Fidelity was orgaized to fight the Equity, the statment continues, the Equity stane ready to take in any Midel- ity member. . “Ty can come in at any tims and ye suggest that that would be Once persfiadid to their views we will have that occurs we will work as loyally the couniry affected by the new ment says. and therefore the fight is no: centred upon “Mr. Cohan's view is apparently 9; “He says that he will have to retire would enable the company to pay its operating expenses, taxes and fixed charges. It would expend $1,850,000 for depreciation and get a return of 21-2 per cent. on its capital stock ——_—_—_—>—__—— “BIG TIM’S” FRIEND DYING FROM WOUNDS Lorillard Reynolds Beaten and Shot by Masked Men at Sea Breeze, Fla. DAYTONA, Fa., June 10,—Tho death of Lorillard Reynolds, for more than 30 years an Intimate associate of "Big Tim" Sullivan, the New York politi- cian, was momentarily expected to-day as the result of wounds recelved when ‘a mob of masked men severely beat and shot him last night at Sea Breeze, a fashionable beach resort on the su- burbs of this city. Reynolds received bullet in the left breast which missed is heart by less than an inch. No mo- tive is known for the attack, A few days ago Reynolds's theatre at Sea Breeze was burned. When the theatre was burned, along with several residences, {t was rumored that he was responsible, and feeling against him had been hig!. He was overpowered last night while stand- ing near the ruins of the theatre, and during the struggle waa beaten about the head and shot. The injured man was placed in an automobile and driven to Ormond, five miles away, where he was released. yes ieee APPEAL ALTMAN AWARD. Eecutorn Oppose $1,000 Claim of Ex-Employee Under Will. Cadwalader Wickersham and Taft, counsel for Col. Michael Friedsam and other executors of the estate of Ben- he chooses to use them. It is open to him to engage all Equity companies or all Fidelity companies, or he can lhe Obregoiministration makes a|join the Producing Managers’ Assoc- treaty therill be another period be watchfuliting. Of courehe danger of dissolu- fon inside rico is always present | ™™ when an urmgnized regime tries to Rnance its@r consolidate its do- mestic eletts, And in such a| tress, period of ton untoward acts are| near Goshen in 1845, jation. In the latter case he would have the whole profession to plok from.” oo ——— ELIZA B, MASTERS DIES, Miss Eliza B, Masters, founder of the Masters School for Girls in Dobbs Ferry and for forty-four years its Head Mis- died yesterday. Bhe was born In 1915 Miss Mas- likely to oc which may force the | fa Sfranged to give the school to the American ernment’s hand In| carried on that sense interventionists may be pleased athe turn which things have takeng it looks as if the pegotiation be prolonged. ‘The uncer factor Is Gen, Obre- mn, If heoves as stubborn us Parranga, tlituation may be re- parded as onat will lead to even- jual frietion! grave trouble, If he PN as flexible as his friends claiw is, there will be a polation prad from the Mexican pnd which make Article 27 for- bver inopera so far as lands held prior to 19ire concerned. Wien nce that acle is overcome, the making of treaty would become p routine affind recognition would be automath i ee Gets Bis Hard Degree After 45 Years. BOSTON, > 10.—A degree for a foures compl forty-five years ago wae ewardoverctt E, Hapgood py’ he Massachts Institute of Teen- nology to-da‘iapgood completed his course with ‘class of 1876 with the wired thesis, lack of lumni Association to insure ita bein: after her death. Il be held in th to-morro’ services wil 4 P.M. HE necessity and boys. Dependable quality, precise models, patterns ma growing popularity of week-end trips intensifies the for quick action in supplying demands for the niceties of dress —from head to foot—for men Ready and fit— Every article of apparel for Summer wear. nd sizes and all at payable prices. BROKAW BROTHERS 1457-1463 BROADWAY AT FORTY-SECOND STREET Jamin Altman, to-day filed notice that | the: would appeal from Surrogate |oley's. recent decision directing that John R, White be regarded as a lega- ‘tee under the will of | Mr. Altman, which provided for employee White claimed $1,000. In his etition ‘he stated that while he left the Alt- man concern, he returned before the \Geath» of Mr. Altman. White con- tended the will did not stipulate con- tinuous service. —_—_—»—_—_—_ SEHLF-CONSCIOUSNESS. (Prom the Washington Star.) ‘rwhat in your idea of a true states- ! ?* asked ibe. my oung man ‘Tejoined, Senator Sor “| gm willing to give you an in- , but I haven't tine for a full of our being ready tailoring, broad choice of SHEETS ARE USED IN PLAGE OF WAL BY FLAT DWELLERS Some Families’ Homes posed to Neighborhood by Reconstruction Work. Mrs. Mary Mandalay cooked dinner for five behind the friendly shelter of six sewn-together sheets—the ones she made on Decoration day, not thinking she'd ever necd them = for such use. She told to-day about how hard It is for folks to live decently when the whole rear wall of their tenement house has been torn down, Mrs. Mandalay lives on the second floor of a five-story brick tenement at No. 352 West 39th Street and is one of two tenants who have remained thero while Luigi De Maio, owner of the house, proceeded with reconstruc tion of the premises under an alleged Building Dpartment permit. The house adjoining, No. 354, a twin structure, is also affected by the ‘unusual situation. From the front, the two houses look like almost any other two of the five-story brick type in similar sec- tions of the east or west side—ex- cept that the bricks appear under in- gpection to be breaking away from alignment and sagging toward the centre, From the rear the view Is totally unlike anything else probably in Man- hattan to-day. Ten flats exposed to view, the tenants of some of them shielded from the eyes of curious neighbors by sheets or old canvas tacked up after the fashion of Mrs. Mandaly’s, others carrying on their cooking and washing and eating right under the unofficial inspection of the entire neighborhood. JOBLESS LEADER TO GET A PLACE ‘Lindsay for Tenement Deputy Commissioner Suits Boss Mc- Cooey, So All’s Welt. George H. Lindsay, Democratic leader of the 13th Assembly District in Brooklyn, will be appointed Deputy Commissioner of the Tenement House Commission for Brooklyn, it became known this afternoon. Commissioner Frank Mann, a close friend of Mayor Hylan, objected to Lindsay, on the ground that he wanted a lawyer In- stead, Boss McCooey insisted that as Lindsay was the only leader in Brook- lyn without a place he should get one, “I have nothing to do with the ap- pointment of a deputy to Tenement} House Commissioner Mann," said Mayor Hylan, “The appointive power rests with the Commissioner. Who- ever he appoifits will be satisfactory to me.” ——$—<——— CHARLOT IN PORT, HER DECKS AWASH Steamer Which Hit Iceberg Barely Kept Afloat Until She Reached St. John’s. \ ST. JOH N. FP, June 10.—The| American freight steamer Charlot, still staggering from the effects of a col- lision with an iceberg yesterday, reached thia port to-day. Capt. Albert Ricca and his crew had made a hard fight through the night to stay afloat, When the crippled ship slipped through the Narrows her decks were awas and her| boats swung outward, ready for jaunch- ing in the event of the foundering that appeared imminent. The Charlot, bound from Philadelphia for London and Hamburg, was 200 miles from this port when she encountered the {co yesterday, She had loft here several days ago after effecting engine | repair: Capt. a reported that the steamer's bow was stove in by the blow. BOY OF 15 KILLS. SCHOOLMATE, 10, IN FIST FIGHT — Weeps and Begs “Enemy” to Speak After Blow Given for Calling Names. Salv Guard, motherless fifteen-year-old boy, whose home {s with his father and sister at No, 414 East 98th Street, is locked up In the Fast 87th Street Station charged with killing his echoolmate, Samuel Lich- terman, ten, of No, 492 East 78th Street, in a fisticuff scuffle to-day at tore De Public School No. 158, 77th Street and Avenue A The boys have had a half-earnest ud for years, Sammy tormented Salvatore by calling him names and running away to escapo chastisement until one day last year when Salva- tore caught and trounced him thor- oughly. In the last few months Samucl, who was shooting up like a woed and was almost as big as Sal- vatore, had begun calling him names again. After the noon recess to-day Sal- yatore cornered Samuel as the pupils were gathering to return to their deska and slapped his face, saying, “Now I've got you." Instead of running away Samuel squared off and they exchanged blows, while a hundred or more others formed a circle and shouted in joy over the prospect of a real fight, Salvatore’s third or fourth blow caught Samuel on the chin and knocked him backward so that his head struck the sidewalk, He did not move after he fell, Salvatore leaned over and lifted him, shaking him and crying: something, Sammy, «1 didn't mean to hit you so hard, 1) didn’t mean to hurt you. Can't you} tell me you know I didn’t mean it." The other boys, frightened, pulled at Salvatore and advised bim to “beat it before the cop comes.” “_ will not," answered Salvatore, stoutty. He laid Sammy on the sidewalk and ran across the street to a coal and ice cellar and came back with the mer- | chant and a pall filled with chunks of ice, which he put at Samuel's head. Policeman Kiernan came on them working on the boy. He called Am- bulance Surgeon, Spaulding from Flower Hospital, who said Samuel was dead. He could not tell whether death’ had been caused by the blow on the chin, the impact with the slde- walk Sr heart disease. paths CUT VERDICT FOR BABY. { 820,000 Damages for Loan of Eye) Reduced to 12,000. ‘The Appellate Division. of the Su- preme Court to-day directed a verdict for $20,000 damages in favor of Henry Yoost jr, and against the Third Avenue Railway Company, be reduced to $12,000, | with $150 allowance for costs, If the, plaintiff accepts this reduction judg. | nt for the smaller amount will be ntered in his favor; otherwise the yer- dict will be set aside, | Henry Yoost jr on April 14, 1917, was! rried in the arms of his mother | ird AY , between 104th and {05th Streets, When a steel aplinter from ‘driil acroks the street entered his eft eye, depriving hhm of ite uae for life, AS Henry was then a baby, his Jrather was appointed his guardian ad! litem, and tirough him this sult was brought \ —_—s—_—— | | OFFERED COP $50 AN HOUR, Men in Front of Factory Were! Pinched by Him Instead, | Eleven men out of a crowd of 300 at tho cout factory, No. 1604 Chestnut Street, Brooklyn, to-day were arrested by Patrolman Sanders of the Parkvilie Station on charges of disorderly con- duct. The plant, conducted by Domin- ick ‘one, aploys about forty non- Union workers, The crowd which gathere according the policeman, consisted of unioy garment workers.’ They were standing in groups as if prepared to make an The water reached the fire room last night, and he found It necessary to send out a call for help. (Trade Mark Reg.U.S, Pat.Off. and Foreign Countries) This Is The B. V. D. Label T is Red Woven and is sewed on every “B.V.D." Undergarment. It guaran- tees to you proper fit, long wear and full value made possible by “B.V. D.” experience and equipment in making underwear from material woven from selected cotton in our own milla, agsiult on the butiding, but when they y him, several of them started (o Keo up a, oollection Dif ho He waa offered wild go Away for an hour.” Quality Ever Maintained “BV. D." Sleeveless Close 4 ” OwchUnonsao/PaUsay THE BV. D, COMPANY ey Pe Sey 28 Mean ae et NEW YORK Length Drawer 0? the garmens 1387 Broadway, Bet. 37th and 38th Sts. 1514 Third Ave., Near 85th St. 2331 Eighth Ave., 1 door above 125th St. NEW YORK—BROOKLYN—NEWARK—BRONX ITCHIE: CORNELL Sale at 138 West 23St.and at All Our Other Stores ““ccow"" A Frank Statement to the Men of New York:— Notwithstanding the fact that we are doing a tremendous volume of clothing business, we feel we are entitled to considerably more because of the remarkable money-saving opportunities we offer. As manufacturing retailers makin our own clothes in our own Daylight Tailoring Shops and selling them direct to the public at a small margin of profit above the actual manufacturing costs we eliminate all middlemen’s profits—you owe it to yourself to see the clothes we offer before concludi g a purchase anywhere else. We do not want you to judge these clothes by the prices, because in each instance we save you the jobber’s and retailer's profits, and the values of the suits range from $10 to $15 more than our sale prices, and in trousers we offer you a saving anywhere from $3 to $5. De Luxe Custom-Tailored Ready-to-Wear SUITS ing clothes, our price is 15 NEW YORK CITY. STORES: 251 Eighth Ave., Near 23d St. 691 Eighth Ave., Bet. 43d and 44th Sts. 138 West 23d St., Bet. 6th and 7th Aves. 2000 — SMART SUITS for Men and Young Men in a wonderful variety of single and double breasted models in a great selection of new woolens at the remarkable price of yeu will be pleased to know we are making a specialty of our well-known suits in sizes to fit men known in the trade as ‘‘stubs.”” ture a great variety at made of the finest woolens; sold in the so-called exclu- sive shops up to $60.00; at FLANNEL TROUSERS of superior qual- ity flannel —not serge. Values to tailored in a splendid man- in a splendid variety of new ner of superior quality fab- rics; and, due to our ‘ maker- to-wearer” system of sell- materials. own shops. Evenings Til 9 P.M. Saturdays Till 10 P. M. RITCHIE & CORNELL for Stout Men and Short Men We fea- Trousers Tailored in our Values up to $10.00, at *4 BROOKLYN: 104 Flatbush Ave, °° Rom trom sate, 6. BRONX: 408 East 149th St., Near 3d Ave. NEWARK: 196 Market St., Nr. Broad St. Ory. IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED A WORLD “WANT” AD. WILL GO AND FIND IT ty

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