The evening world. Newspaper, June 20, 1921, Page 3

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S WIL FCT ONPERS FOR HEAD F THE FEDERATION ill Ruin in Spite of $100,000 Fund Talk at the Con- vention To-day. G RAILROAD _ ISSUE. ‘ogramme for Government Control With Democratic Operation to Be Pushed. DENVER, Col, June 20.—John owls, President of the United Mine Yorkers, to-day announced his can- idacy for the Presidency merican Federation Lewis's announcem=nt ortly after reports that mpaign fund was Jeing used to rther his candidacy drought the attention of the convention Lewis said: “I have decided rmit my name to be presented of the Labor was a $100,000 to to fe convention as a canditate for resident of the American Federa- fon of Labor.” He had previously Id his closest backers that he would t announce his candidacy s8 had enough votes pledged to in- mre his clection. | John 8. Leheney of Idaho brought the attention of the convention tie | tharges regarding $100,000 cam- ign fund, and moved that the con: ention appoint a committee to tigate the charges. The convention was unable to con- der his motion, however, because a | evious motion of adjournment, hich had right of in the n’s proceedings. The adjournment adopted, President Samuel Tuled, although there lchorus of “noes sided that immec on Leheney'’s motion. “I am of the opinion that no cor poration can place one dollar among delegates in this convention and in fluence the of the American unle the way had been | motion was Gompers was a who de- m be taken from th ate a in action made | Experts in Flying Who Are to Wed, And Plane for Honeymoon Trip Jot. Lae = y= PLANE ‘Doron = MAN AND ie MOTHERS KILLED BY GUN THAT HER HALTS MILK WAGON AND SAVES LIFE OF IODINE VICTIM Youth Just Out of Hospital Takes Poispn, but “Rookie” Police- Federation of Labor,” Leheney said “I am opposed to Gompers, but this man Foils Suicide. convention cannot rest under such a | f enathteramllutwanen aanbled cloud," “Leheney declared pales A ae The convention adjourned until 2.30 ge eman Jenner, a “rooki the Atlantic Avenue Station, to ind the al P. M,, when there was ¢ tion that the squabble over ery Sixieen-Year-Old Lad Held for Death—He Declares It save a youth's life in front of No. ledged $100,000 campaign fund would 1988 Fulton street, Brooklyn, probably be brought up again Was Accidental. tondad, Andrew Furuseth, head of the In- , aes eae Jenner heard a hottie break on ternational Seamen's Union, present- : ed a resolution which was adopted,| }YWood Weibert, sixteen yoars old,| the pavement and saw a young declaring A. D. Lasker, Chairman of| "il as aeeall ned in court in Griggs-| man stagger to the gutter. He the new Shippiig Board, had come | | nthe eee nats ¢ apd eH smelled iodine, and remembering out for an open shop; that agents Of 1) “ine tragedy occurred Saturday | IS first ald instruction headed off the union would be prevented from|' y ay ss ; Ks, and commending the|2t the family home near Griggstown.| a milk wagon going by. Seizing a Vine, COCKS, (Gnd COmMensinE, |The youth maintains that the affair] pottle he held the youth and seainen for their stand in refusing to] ee eee ats cee ine te ot ey a accept uch persecution.” “The } soins, es “ poured the milk down his throat Shipping Board, while hiding behind a trai fedintele aflar’ Ate anooting By the time an ambulance ar- smoke screen of dale hate, is tor-| wich occurred while John Weibert,| tived from St. Mary's Hospital pedoing the Merchant Marine and sea| fie yoyee futher, w truck farmer, was| te Patient was out of danger power of the United States,” the reso-/in Now Brunswick, young Welbert He refused to his same, jution declared. |was arresteu and locked up in the| Ut,Was recognized by doctors and ‘The convention adopted other reso-|Somerset County Jail ut Somerville,| nurses at the hospital as Daniel futions favoring: Appeal from deci- sions of the Federal civil service of- ficials, and adequate housing laws A resolution advocating equaliza-| tion of rights of white and colored! ‘workers in union membership were| considered, but action was withheld| and the measure sent back to com- imittee. ‘The Irish question probably will be ought out in the convention to-day ‘or to-morrow. The committee in wharge of it was expected to recom- mend that union labor be urged to support the Irish cause. It was re- ported reliably, however, that the clause declaring a boycott on British (goods had been eliminated. DENVER, June 2 (Associated Press).—-The International Association ‘of Machinists has announced its de- termination to have the A. F, of L. convention repudiate the action of the Executive Council in severing rela- tions with the International Federa- kion of Trade Unions. A resolution irecting the council to immediately reaffiliate the federation wth the uropean labor movement has been pubmitted, The request of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way ‘Employees and Railway Shop Labor- ers for reinstatement in the federa- tion, {t was learned, has the full sup- * port of all the railroad organizations. ‘This union, with its membership of nearly two hundred thousand, suspended in 1919 because of a juris- dictional dispute with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, ‘The carpenters’ bas announced its intention, with co-rp. was union N. J., on the charge The boy picked up a single-barrelled shotgun lying in the kitchen and started to leave the house, saying he was going crow hunting, His mother ordered him to put the gun down.| drank the poison, and his mother While he was returning it to the cor-] aid she didn't know. ner, he said, it slipped from his hands, = oe ech AE fell to the floor and was discharged KILLED IN AUTO UPSET. of murdc sh, seventeen, No. 1981 Fulton Brooklyn who was oper- ted on for appendicitis a month ago. He wouldn't tell why he The shot struck Mrs. Weibert in the chest. She died immediately. Weibert, who is the eldest of six]. children, was arrested by George D.| Victim of Accident Said to Have Been Forced Wa Clark J, Stamford, Cotten, county detective Of Road by Bus. re I 30 Belltown ‘onn., was killed yes- lace §. SAVED LIVES BY LEAP. terday when the automobile he was - - driving turned over In a ditch on West- chester Avenue near White Plain: Automobilists Jamp Jast as Train elr Car, f ing him underne: h. fis son, sma who was with him, escaped injury Mr, and Mrs. E. Pilcher of Cald- Richard. Distant: ne Man ee ne well, N. J., motor through East] suffered a badly wrenched shoulder. Orange last night on their way home,|” Dietzman told the White Plains police did not notice that the gates were down| that Charles Wein of No. 30 Townsend at the Harrison Street crossing of the] Street, Port Chester, while trying to D. L. & W. Railroad. The automobjie| pass them with the Port C -Whi was partly under the gate when Mr.| Plains bus he was driving, forced them and Mrs, Pilcher saw the approaching] off the road. Wein teed with train, homicide but released in the custody Both leaped and ped injury, The! of his attorney, pending an inquest set automobile was smashed. for July 1 KIDDIE KLUB MEMBERS TAKE NOTICE!! Beginning Wednesday, July 6th, Sixty motion picture theatres of Greater New York will open their doors free to Kiddie Klub members three days a week. A separate section on the first floor of each theatre will be set aside for the Kiddie Klub Cousins. Members of the Mothers’ Clubs of the city will act as chaperons to the children at these theatres and see to their comfort and ‘well being. Children of eight years or over, who are members of the Kiddie Klub, on presentation of their pin and membership certificate, and a Kiddie Klub Amusement card signed by the parent or guardian per- mitting the child to attend the theatre, will be admitted free, eration of the Building Trades Unions, to fight against the railroad orgapiza- ‘tion reinstatement. The question of putting into effect the federation’s rauroad programme ailing for "Government control with democratic operation” is expected to be one of the major issues. Delegs of the machinists’ union and other railroad organizations declared that Abey are going to demand that the Pxecutive Council take steps immedi- ately toward getting this programme under way Speasage from the stranded ship 1 ‘way In no serious danger as lon; one belweather continued favorable, eee FRENCH STKAMER AGROUND. NORFOLK, Va, June 20.—The Wrench Steamer Nord African is| ground at Cape Lookout and a wrecking tug has been sent to her piatance from this port. A wire These cards may be obtained at the theatres any time aiter Monday, June 27th, A list of the theatres which offer you their hospitality will appear in The Evening World from time to time. Watch for this list and select the one nearest your home, Parents or guardians are welcome to accompany their children. Adults accompanying children are requested to pay the regular admission, HOW TO GET A NEW PIN. In order to get a new Kiddie Klub pin you must save up three coupons, numbered in ro- tation, and send them to Cousin Eleanor, The Evening World's HOW TO JOIN THE, KLUB, CUT OUT THIS COUPON then Evening Kiddie Klub, No, 63 Park Row, Jou muss give your NRC New York City, together with aii ek » AGB AND ADDRESS, a letter giving your name, ad- become embers, ‘Back menver Lend dress, age and certificate num- ber. | | | | | by la | Court | jury in a divorce act |force, to {two to fly THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1921. ™ tere HONEYMOON IN AIR ISPLANNEDBY THIS GOUPLEOF FLYERS Marry To-Night and Then Hike by Sky on Plane Named for Bride. Up in the clouds is the proverbial place for bride and om, and to make it practical as well, Mr. and Mrs, Russell F. Holderman (who will not share t at name until & o'clock to-night) going to start off on their honeymoon to-morrow in fast-flying aeroplane, Both brid und groom are, by the way, expert aviators, ‘ The Je-to-be is Miss Dorothy | Currier Harris of No Brooklyn Avenue, Brooklyn, who has to her credit many flights from Hazelhurst Field, L. 1 in fact, she has flown countless times in the very machine whieh |s to be her “Honeymoon Ex press" and which Mr. Holderman has appropriately named “Dorothy Mr. Holderman, who lives at No. 679 st 179th Steeet, the Bronx, used to be a Sergeant int ying Corps o the army and was for two years in structor at Hazelhurst Field. Later he n ed the United States Aero Mail Service and now he's flying in his own behalt It was in 1917, during a visit to cehie D. Smith, who is to be best m at Jamaica, L. L, that Holder- man met Miss Harris, and it wasn't | long before they became interested in ach other and finally engaged. When angements were made for their wedding the Rev. Belvin W. Maynard, the Flying Parson,” was to haye per- formed the ceremony, but he is at present in| North Carolina, so the service will be read to-night by the Rev, Thomas Wi ns, pastor of the Pilgrims’ Congregational Chureh 0! Richmond Hill, The wedding will be at Rusurban Inn, No. 1630 Fulton Stree Brooklyn, and to-morrow morning the newlyweds will fly to At- antic Asbury Park and points South, hen they return they with ake up their home temporarily with the Rev. Mr, Maynard at Queens, L. L ~~ TWO YEARS IN CELL FOR EX-POLICEMAN Justice Dike Hopes Simonetti’s Ex- ample Will Stop Perjury in Divorce Cases. Paul Simonetti, for fourteen a member of the New Yor detective ntenced to from Sing Sing Prison in Brooklyn Supreme his plea ¢ day was s years in Justice Dik after guilty to per- on. Simonetti was for four years head | Wife and Baby of Carpentier Posed at Their Home in France MME CARPENTER AND ©OxAvDEL AND VERBERT JACQUELINE nis if One of the latest photographs of heavyweight challenger. She is } vaiting the news from th grea Mme. Carpentier, wife re seen with baby Jucque- t encounter N EW YORK WOMEN MOTHER IDENTIFIES RENOT DODGERS GIRL FOUND DEAD WOMAN MISSES - SG,TTSIN SUBWAY: THREE MEN HELD > Victim Said to Be Manufactur-| | er's Wife—Police Round | | Up Tube “‘Jostlers.” | | A lot of alleged pickpockets were In| | the Police Headquarters’ line-up this | morning, three of them charged by | Detectives Stanley and Drum with having stolen from a Mrs, Blum, wife of a manufacturer, whose address |s withheld by t handbag | ontaining $6,115 in cash and jewelry Mrs, Blum rode from 96th Street | to 16th Street in the subway on the | night of May 14, When she got in at |néth Street, she had the bag and | when she got out it was gone he men were arrested jast night at Sec- ond Avenue and 10th Street on the di scription Mrs, Blum gave of three men | she said jostled her in the subway | ‘The suspects are James Rocks, thirty, of No, 300 Second Avenue, | who, according to the police records, arrested twenty-four times wd has served long and short terms in Sing Sing, Elmira and tho work- house; Henry Allen, thirty-seven, of | | No. 208 Bast 1th Street, arrested | thirty times and been in Sing Sing, Dannemora and on the Island; Mor- ris Wiseman, thirty, of No. South Third Street, Brooklyn, sald to have been | been once on the b A. | Detective Henry Musge of the Pickpocket Squad is looking for a | pene who lost $32 at Canal Street and Broadway yesterday afternoon, |The detective says Sam Schwar thirty-four, of No, 116 Suffolk Street, and Harry Raum, forty-eight, of No. 142 Rivington Street, were on a sub- Way train, and he saw Baum take | some money from the pocket of an | unknown and step from the train to the platform, Mugye says he grabbed the pickpocket, who dropped the According to the detective, the money | was picked up by a bystander, man alleged roll five me that money!” cried the detective. | What money?" inquired the by- stander Mugge made a reach for him, at] which the money was forthcoming, jand the bystander disappe | | Mugge dragged Baum to the pratforin | ps and arrested Schwartz arry Cohn, twenty . of Street; Morris Goldp@x, No, 495 Kast I7Ist William Joyce, twenty- 131 were ar Detectives Stanley hird Ave | 1 | Ildridge | twenty-four, and No by Broadw: and | | rested Harding on a southbound nue car lust night, charged with push. | Leonard, | 118th John 35 Bast and jostling. of No. ing twenty-nine, Street was arrested by Detective Kil- his resignation from the police, | ); y y 2 the Hert bee pay Qs aan n the action for divorce of Jos ilar charge, and on the same charge in Shevaction, tor diver Fas : —_ | os John Demexgia, twenty, No. 15 Mon- e Martini against his wife, Nora, eeeeree te roc Street, and” Rosaro” Seibetth | Simonetti testified to having found, 150,328 Pay $4,500,000, and, She ine ha]]_ | twenty-two, No: 0 Prospect | the defendant in a compromising t . ie aan Ih aie W nS \deline Mars! all Stree t, Brooklyn, were picked up at! mm eee eth ies Eeteager ent ca Form One-Fifth of the Who Had Left Her Home on {Sut Ferry co-respondent, He ified he did Number Reporting 90th Street Yesterds | | iS Be esterday, . not know Russ it developed sala Gay | WIDOW WINS $30,000 | Russo had been in Simonetti's em-| ALBANY, June 20.—Records’of 180} rng body of a young woman |Moxtand Killed im Scaffold Fatt) ploy for a montis, New York State Income Tax ture aad an iat at doth Street and Tth Avenue, | Justice Dike r referring to only in underwear, found in a hall , 5 concerning tax et 8 ec 0 || Mrs, Millis Metzroth, wh band, Simonetti’s good police record, said: |“ OR Ter uEne Cle t0r 1919) pay at Ny Street, into which|Charlos Py a telephone tneman, was| “You were ready to furnish per-/ SOW that 150,828 women, one-ftth Of| se ssa heen earvien ame , ; a year ago when a scaffold fell| jured testimony to those Who desired | the total reporting, filed State incon | : : Re Rn ater 49th t and Seventh Avenue, to- | it, Something must be done to stop| midnight, was iwentified this afte : 80 | crjury in these divorce cases,” |tax returns in 1919, contributing very : Dtifled this after-| jay recelved a verdict of $20,000 against | Pp these olvonge ‘ {noon as that of Miss Adeline Marshall] th 2 enth Avenue Corporation, | materially to the cost of St Gov-}of No. 120-122 West 90th Street the Greenwich Assoctat Inc, and WOMAN KILLED AS ernment Mrs. Ann Marshall, mother of the| rank Melton, from a Jury before Jus- That energetic y York smen | OUnE woman, identifled her t | tle Mitehell Several others were AUTO HITS TRUCK! ui w York wonen sh DBHRNKA ads buried with Metaroth, ‘The city was a SSeS 1 their sisters in other States as : PROERTR: ENS Jofendant, but was cleared Five Others Hurt in Elizabeth, N,|'9¢eme %* hayers is Indicated by tho) «1t ja my daughter,’ sald Mrs.| J., Accident—Both Drivers Are latest Federal figures, which show | Mars) "She loft home yesterday | beea arrested on a charge of forging A that in 1918 a te 3,854 women | afternoon to go to meet her brother, | Her, mother’s name on a check. he Held by Police. Wied lneaine ac cet bees boasts 0 to meet her brother, | way released by a Magistrate. ‘The ae ied inc 4x returns in ed) Marvin, whe run seeing bus| fingerprints aided in her identification Bessie Condon, twe States and “ \t » Coney and. “Her arrest was rible istake ally Injured and five residents of New York State. When did not come home at {#id her mother, police should were slightly hurt in an automo’ | a eve ave take r repr lision Oa hateae Avenue, oat Rec Le how that over $4,500,000 |10 o'clock and he had not seen her Nile they Bid hay shoul nat Hed J., shortly before midnight Iaat night 1919 tax regate came from|We started to look for he We | stroyed them, because she was a good Miss Condon, who was employed as _|8!98l€ and married women who filed | Searched everywhere and were still was no reason for her governess by Francis Henderson, nt-| individual returns. Returns also dis- rching when news of the finding of the stockings of the clair, died to-day Miss Condon wa ubeth Hi William Fisher, 9 Badger Ave nue, Newark. Fisher's car crashed into the rear end offa truck driven by Joseph Walsh, No, 102 Orar ewark, Both drivers were held by the police, Fisher asserted there wa no rear light on the truck he other passengers in the touring ar, “all of whom were bruised, we Mr. and Mrs, Henry Pri No. 154 nn Street, Brooklyn, and M 1 Mrs. ©. A. Moeglin, No, 443. Lincoln Avenue, Brookly sl A HARVEY ON TRIAL IN AUTO SCANDAL Queens Ex-Sheriff Is Accused of Bribery and Conspiracy With NasSau County Men. Herbert y mer Sherif of Queens ¢ ndietinent 0: harges of ¢ nd bribe wo put on trial in th ne Court at Mineola to-day fore J « It expected pr i county detec Aubre Ve for- mer Superintendent County Build ings; Matthew J. O'Neil and William Hoffinan, O'Neil erving 4 Keven year term at Sing Sing for receiving stolun property, Plant and Pettit pleads ed guilty to the anid Hoffman is under indictunent on charge. u.| closed that taxes paid by w thi | !Sations trom New York to Buffel and of nen ran| the dead woman was received.” ear driven by | from a penny to many thousands of wore when she jeft home a} dollars, with members of the feminine | platinum wrist wateh and a gold recelving handsome salaries not|/chain. She had between $15 and $16 from the motion picture and|in a pocketbook | theatrical professions but also from] When the body was found there financial and business enterprises |was neither jewelry nor money. Her While the Income Tax Law pro-| pocketbook with her clothes was in a vides that husbands and wives may |neat bundle by her side. There was file separate returns, the joint returns | not) but a mirror and a powder | were the more numerous, Husbands | puff in the pocketbook | d wives filed 464 joint returns| ‘The bedy was found this morning | fer 1919, and signatures attached to y Mrs, Jacob Witkin, who has a store returns tell the st of hj voted jon the ground floor of phe tenement husbands were assigned the priv Mrs, Dora Richman, wife lives on the lie spending sleeple nighta | floor abe the st jorted to | &: with income tax figures © that n er midnight tw t bundle or aj) person from a house diagonally a cs on men and wonten|the street, When they came to her ried females who filed | side of the street she L aight at rns, some with depend-| them without. Thi class in-| ” n he Morgue large number of weal wi on that A in before aA ht 1 wn 1 The} Miss Ma were at xvce ted | P Headquarters, because she ha lope from delinquents only an instgnifiennt A ve mount n collected from wom. 1 tion di- /en who neglected wilfully or through mn, are tax | ignorance of the law to make 1920 re- lise April 15, whicn was|turns, The have willingly shared tha ust day for filing State income | tax burden and shown themselves to x returns investigators have) be honest citizens.” nducted over 10,000 individual inves neome subject to tax in New York State in 1919 was $3,290,- pd 000,000, the $50,000 or more collec’ young woman there was found a mull vial containing a white powder |which the police thought might have been a drug: “If there was anything of that kind in my 4d possession it w placed th s killed her, said (Mrs. “She did not use drugs.” The All-Ceylon Tea | Hsp ee tea flavor from sunny |that they do not need any organ Krening World, Preceding pace tay perm NAVY MAY CHECK DEMONSTRATION ON ARRIVAL OF SINS Impression Grows That the Admiral May Be Taken Off Olympic Down the Bay. In the absence of definite informa- tion as to whether Rear Admiral Sims will be transferred from the Olympic to a naval tug or cutter at Quarantine next Wednesday or will remat d the liner and debark at the piers," the projectors of} ™ demonstration to honor him and ofm™ rival demonstration to subject him "to ridicule are marking (ime. The jm- pression ix growing that. the Navy Department, in order to avoid any chance of riot ween the rival te mmittees at the pier will order the Admiral to leave the Olyme pic down the and proceed tong naval landing place "i Caspar Whitney, the mos: actiye of th of Admiral Sima, spent the day trying to find out what the Navy Department is going tow ception bay admirers f anything, In the event that Ad- miral Sims is transferred from typ Olympic down the bay a re my committee will probably meet him on board the liner and formally wee come him hom Directors of the American Assog\a- tion for the Recognition of the Inu Republic divided over the plug ‘y give the Admiral a mock reat tlon and present him with a young jackass as a mark of appreciation of are rterization of the Irsh th ica as “jackasses.” Major Mix A. Kelly, who fought w.ta the Goth in Prance, is strong for -ga tock reception idea, but there ‘s en. siderable strength to the oppost th elso, Whether the mock reception is eifielal or not th is no doubt tha: there will be a large gathering ¥ idica) Trish at the pier on tne if= vival of the Olympe. Rocent wie rivals of persons favored by or dnt tasteful to the radicals have shu tion to direct where. the ton of their feelings, If the Irish agitators contempt staging thelr. mock reception dowe ie bay it will be necessary for thom to charter a boat. ‘The White Stave Line will take all precautions agaltoyt ony of the mock reception comm! tee getting wboard the liner eitnor at Quarantine or at the pier. a THE CULMINATION. An amateur cook, being asked how she knew when the coffee was done, replied: them to a given porn can make a demonsten+ “I know that it is done when it boils over and puts out the gas.” As a matter of fact, the mak- ing of coffee is a very exacts ing art“ An art that reaches its cul- mination in the delightfully mellow coffee served at CHILDS. Its appetizing aroma and de licious fla make C! coffee A fa beverage. So happy shavers use ~+ Notice to Advertisers y advertising typo copy and release ordeme er the we y or The if M. the day inserted only ae pubileation ‘end in or recelpt. at W ee containing ecparevings | to Bade by The World must bo recelved by 2 P. 1 s type copy for the Supplies a ‘ve Sunday World must Mo 'Paurday preceding -publte Inst. be revetved by taining ensravings to bo. imm bo Fecelved by ‘Thursday ooa, Sunday Main Sheet copy, type copy which has not been revelved by 41M. Friday, and Om Etaring copy which bas not been tecelved in the mabtication office by ‘M. Friday, and post Irarstion Feevived by. 8B. Mh, Conditions requtre, rig receipt and positive bs Copy 6 World mus Will be omltted the order of i ore Display cony or orders released Inter ham vided above, when omitted Will, Bot 46 ee

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