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| . “My husband and 1 were standing re ANOTHER WOWAN APPEARS AGAST CLUBBER THE ts. Catherine Gaiety Swears He Used Vile Language and Flourished a Blackjack. AD HER BABY IN ARMS. wuspended Detective Sergeant, Who Ran Amuck, Held in Bail on 4 More Charges. Charles Tighe, former detective ser- Beant, under suspension since the @tubbing rampage if which he is ac- of assaulting men, women and Hdren last Thursday, faced four re of his accusers in the West Side art to-day. In three cases he was 1d in $1,000 bail each for the Grand ury after waiving examination, In he fourth he was held in $500 bail for itvial in the Court of Special Sessions. ‘The ‘first case called was that of Mrs. Emma Lennon, No. 561 West 60th Street, whd says Tighe struck her with a blackjack. The second ‘was that of Charles B., Greene, a one-legged bootblack, No, 219 East 73d Street, who says Tighe struck him in the back and threw his crutches beyond his reach when he Temonstrated with Tighe for striking seven-year-old Helen Coen. The third case was that of Mrs, Ella Fitzgerald, No, 329 West 43d Street, who eaid Tighe struck her with his hand. In this case he was held on a charge of simple assault to be tried in the Court of Special Sessions, The only case in which testimony was taken to-day was that of Mrs, Catherine Gaiety, No. W. 434 Street. This was her story: 345 | | across the street from the place where| Tighe was taking his prisoner. Tighe ran over und grabbed my husband, calling him a vile name. I followed | and Tighe chased me a Then he! eame and grabbed me, saying, ‘I can use you, too, you — __ I had my baby in my arms. He put “us in the back room of the saloon and Kept us there nearly an hour. Then} he came to me and told me to get! out,’ only his language was worse than that. I followed the patrol wagon to the West 47th Street Station | and Tighe arrested me again, out! made no charge against me and ‘n an| hour I was told by some other police- man to go home.” In answer to questions by Magis- trate Simpson she said Tighe looked | “wild” and had an alcoholic breath. The court denied a motion to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the woman had not been injured and that crime had been committed. he court made this statemeut from the bench: "The evidence satis- fies me that the complainant for no on whatever was pushed into the ba room of a saloon; that this de- fendant raised his hand with a blavk- jack in it; that 1 complainant dodged what she yperly thought Was to be a blow. There was no ex- cuse or justification for the arrest | and sault of this complainant, g that the cit! zens of New York have a full right to} expect it is safety on the streeta of New York, as weil as in their homes. And especially from sworn officers of the peace. ‘The foul language and ac- tions of this defendant toward this) compidinant were unjustifiable. 1 shall hold him in $1,000 bail for trial.” ed “HELLO JUDGE,” GREETING | OF THREE-YEAR-OLD BOY “Jimmy Brown" Didn't Tell Any-| thing About Hix Foster Parents. “Hello Judge, how are yo salutation of “Jimmy Brown," a three- ar-old, to Magistrate Ryttenberg as was placed before his honor on a table. Jimmy had been found in the home of Clarence Brown and his wile in the basement of No. 2 W 2th Street and William Kelleher, an of the Children’s Society, had was the urent urrested, the colored couple on a charge of .in- pairing the health of a minor. Jimm the son of a white woman named and Mrs. had Miller, said to be an addi ye in the rubl Magistrate's desk the Magistra and it Was impossible to rom him with regard to ny the Browns. Hirshfield to Ask Indictment Be Dinminned, David Hirshfield, Commissioner of ecounts, i by the Almirall nd Jury, Nov, 24 last, for libel in that he had given to reporters i m concerning charges agains, As- sistant District y James 1 Smith, will ap morrow before dustice Burr by and ask that the indictment. be dismissed,“ Hirsh- ficld’s application says the Extraor- ainary d Jury suppresses . i Slight Fire in Freight ator don the floor! of the freight elevator of the tei story loft building, No, 627 Broadway, caught fire to-day shortly before noc The operator, Louis Gertridt, ran it to th bottom floor and extinguished the bi: ‘cently resigned from the staff of the There was no damage, but the smok in the elevator shaft caused a slight panic ‘among employees on the upper floors, THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3 1931 Three-Minute Hot Weather Interview . With Sophie Kerr, Novelist, on 15 Topics | Reveals Another Thinker and Talker, CRAIG CAN SETTL ter Takes Time on Difficult Questions, but Doesn’t Re- sort to Monosyllable Tricks to Prove She Is as Spry ot Tongue as She Is Active of Brain. Sole Arbiter, He Says, in 000,000 for “War Work analytical, logical, constructive mind, his statesmanship. Clayton R. Lusk, Republican teadep - The first minute was just up, with| of the State Senate, gives Comptrol- Marguerite Mooers Marshall.|‘\2" fseaied Pee eee ee lor Craig sole right to settle ap- ately 30,000,000 rorth f When a-pretty young woman euc-|snishing the interoiew on time. ,We|Proximately | § ee ceeds in being simultaneously a bril-|beyun on the second heat. ‘war claims” filed against the City Nant novelist, a popular writer of SECOND MINUTE. of New York by subway contrac- SUBWAY CLAIMS UNDER LUSK BILL Ad-| justing Demands of $30,- ” The contractors’ bill sponsored by | short stories and the managing editor | Takes Time on Difficult Queri tors. The Comptroller read the bill of a nationally circulated woman's but Keeps Ahead of Schedule. loraey and announced that if the ‘ @. No. How can women most|™easure is valld, he, as the chief magazine, one is justified in con- financial officer of the ‘city now quickly become a power in politics? Sophie Kerr (incisively)—By joining the political purties, by working hard, by being willing to learn, by not kid- ding themsel along in the belief that they know it all and have & monopoly on all the political virtue Q. No. 10—is there any way to beat the high cost of living? Sophie Kerr (between a smile and a sigh)—1 haven't found any. Q, No. 11—Whiy do lusbands leave home? Sophie Kerr (shaking her head and emiling)—1 don't know. Q. No. 12—What is the chief defect in our educational system? Sophie Kerr (becoming very serious and taking at least ten seconds to frame her answ Phat is a question cluding that as a speeder she has little to learn. Because Sophie Kerr held for sev- eral years these three roles--she re- would have the right to deal the subway contractors. field disco’ given Mr. measure. He was examining Ps MoGovern, a subway contractor, terday, when he came Woman's Home Companion, in order to devote even more time to her own writing—I knew that she would pass easily the test for mental alertne and agility involved in answering fif- teen questions In a three-minute in- terview for The Evening World. So, with my little list, I called on the author of “Painted Meadows" and wphe Seesaw,” at her charming apart- ment overlooking the Hudson, No. 316 ‘West 79th Strect. She was as interested as urbiter to d with the contra fivid’s interpretation, conside other member of the Board of mate or other city authority the Comptroller. F: islation every one - in ‘The Evening World’s on which I have very strong convie- _ The clause depriving ‘he Board of else Bag Bee nee ver ierviews. tions. [should say that the greatest Estimate of the right to deal with New den Cet eee earked candidly, defect isin nut teaching young peopie the contractors follows: “Any coun-| “But T hope, ate ive upward glance to think (inough, mut teaching them 'Y. Municipality re potitical subdi- with an appre? “that the ques: thoroug not cultivating good sion is author zed through such off- ————— ot ber ie ne ae related to those mental hubits, For, after all, your cer or officers as are hereby given ions are nds ! his tests. inental habits are the most important Power to settle just claims to vested with the right to compromise on claims against the municipality, with Commissioner of Accounts Hirsh- ered the sweeping powers Craig by Senator Lusk's atrick yes- across the clause making the Comptroller the ctors, This clause, according to Mr. Hirsh- n Esti- than 3 r that reason it) is regarded 4s a radical piece of ter shich adison asks in com: Se peny kept within the thing you get out of any education, — promise, settle, adjust and agree upon uns ainute Himit?” | @. No. 13—Ought we to forgive the With the contractors and three-m! Allies their debts? vided.” so tne. I assured her. | claims as berein p Sophie Kerr—Because of his broad,|und “time will prove it” . site {| ’ bay any | play in the Davis Cup matches. SKILLED, HURT, | WHEN SILK PLANT. NACHE BURST Disruption of Basket Making 7,000 Revolutions a Minute | Seatters Death. 3 UNASCERTAINED. Manager of Paterson Factory Says Drying Device Was Inspected Recently. CAUS Three men were killed and three this morning when a centrifagul moisture or “whize machine,” in the plant of the Standard Sitk Dyeing Company in Paterson, N. J.. flew to pieces while making 7,000 and sprayed nearby workmen with hundreds of ecraps of bronze and iron. ‘Two of the dead were so mangled injured early extractor, revolutions a minute as to make recognition difficult, and the management of the plant would | not assume final responsibility for naming them pending a check-over of employees on the night shift. They believed the dead to be: August Vrommelt, Clinton Street; Machias | Heisle, Maple Street, both killed In- stantly; Michael Gauden, No. 81-2 Lane Street, died at St. Joseph's Hospital. The injured are: Conrad Dox, twenty-nine, No. 250 North Fourth Street, fractured skull and possible internal injuries, St. Joseph's Hos- pital, may die; Harry Bos, thirty-six] No. 14 Sheri Avenue, compound | fractores of both legs and right fore. farm, Barnert Hospital, may die; Frank Poznieski, thirty-eight, West) | Paterson, lacerations, General Hos- | pital, condition not serious. Frommelt and Heisler were operat: | ing the big drying machine and stand- ing beside it. Gauden had just en- tered the room when the explosion took place. The cause of the acci- }dent has not been determined and) | probably never will be, according to experts, Something caused the big steel and bronze basket, in which was 125 pounds of wet organdie, to fly from its axis agains’ the cast- iron outer casing and shatter itself and the casing into small pieces. Last Post Card Sent by Caruso From Italy to New York Friend The last mail received in this country from Caruso, with the ex- ception of a letter now in the box of Viviani, the singer, at the Metro- politan Opera House, is a post card to Frank Garlichs, Treasurer of the Metropolitan Opera Company. Friday. hoped to be “over the top soon.” sacred possession. until to-morrow t» open his letter, Mr. Garlichs recelved the card on On it Caruso wrote the most optimistic message, saying he Mr. Garlichs says he values the card for a thousand times its weight in gold and already guards it as a Mr. Viviani is out of the city and will not be back Lengthy Skirts, Covered Necks, New Paris Style Former Must Be No More Than | Six Inches From Ground— Sombre Colors in Vogue. PARIS, Aug. 3 (United Press).— Paris to-day closed the period of revelation in feminine apparel and introduced the cra of concealment, Parisian stytes provide that: Skirts shall be no more than six inches from the ground. Collars shall be high Arms shall be covered. A bas le decollette, The lines shall be long, straight. These commandments, handed down by almost unanimous decision of France's celebrated modistes, were exemplified at the annual fall open- ing of exclusive establishments. ‘There was one exception to general rule, That was a gow! loose and the wi lors @ tight corsage and panter skirt, i- | tended to be constructed in light col- whole effect to be one of the youth and innocence. Otherwise the shows indicated @ complete reyersal of former times. leven pretty colors were s trons and hopeful men Black, gray, tan. khakt were the prevailing colors A few boisterous styles boasted of fur trimmings. pressed mannequins iminced demureiy across the stages before admiring ma- and Here is what the models showed: Black e@treet gowns of soft Velvet was the favorite. garments were adorned with simple white, gray or gold trimmings. ancy belts with chased metal clasps were terials, shown, The gowns were largely one-piece ‘There were some models with panelled and some with cascade skirts, but the geo- garments with plain skirts. eral style was sombre. For ¢ conservative square cut neck front. Evening wear, however, made for the lack of color in other gowns. Emerald green and rose crepe de cine and velvet were favorites in that Some satin skirts, In many were adorned with a drapery display. colors, of lace of the samo color. ening Wear the extreme decollette was dismissed for the more These were cul lower in the back than the all shades of brown, with only an occa- sional flash of color at collar or belt, ma- ‘The aaa FIRST. Y. BONUSES WILL BE PAID AT SCHUYLER MANSION ‘Trustees of Historic Home Will Adopt Suggestion of | Adjutant General WSpecial to The Rrextng Werte.) ALBANY, Aug. 0.—Following the suggestion of Adjt. Gea, Kinanid, Chairman of the Soldier Borns Cem- inteston, trustees of the Schuyler Mansion, the Ancestral Heme ef Gua. Phillip Schuyler, have dectéet Camt at their next regular mesting te per- mit the ceremonies attendeast wpa grounds under their hesteaggeevon Oe It is the feeling among of the board that ne evemt of interest from the stan@poimt arousing the petriottain of @e young aod inwpiring a love of the Mente our eatly republic can It is the intention that hand out the honor chee! shadow of the self same parches an which sauntored Washington, Hamf- ton and the captive Engit#® General Burgoyne. It ts thought fitting that the Bohpy- ler Manton, richer perhaps in Bie torica} interest than any dwelling tn America, should round out its gtorieus career by throwing ita glamour over the ceremonies planned by the State of New York to honer ite ex-serviec men. Legactes eltt Em pleyees. Seventy emplayves of Einstein-Weltf Company, mavefecturers of hentrker- chiefs, will reveloe by the wil of Emil Wolff, hb of the com: Who died June 1819, of $600 to legadios of to the weighed 395 pounds atrict low middling. the sale will go to charit; bale waa auctioned off on change for 68 cents a Franklin Sittott s Co, The machine stands about five fect in height. It was carefully inspected recently, according to W. 8. Colez, manager of the plant. The accident may have,been caused by an over- heated bearing, or by the improper loading of the silk in the basket, throwing the basket out of true and causing it to trike the side of the outer casing. So great was the force of the crash that pieces of steel were flung through the roof 100 feet from the machine. SHANN GIVES LAW TOMAGISTRATES ON Writes to Mr McAdoo Asking That Persons “Frisked” Be Instructed to Make Charges. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets ToMoRROW THE Last OpporTuNity To Buy Women’s and Misses’ _- WHITE SILK SPORTS SKIRTS PLEATED OR STRAIGHTLINE MODELS For Golfing, Tennis, Motoring or Walking 7.50 Former Prices *16.75 to $22,°° Also a few models in pastel or sports colorings. WASHABLE COTTON SKIRTS Former Price “Everybody : tral - - sana there's no connection with the | Sophie Kermit dont ii ae eee cnenal Contentene Ani s © It's mow tia. |hope we don't, Thad the Tausk | General contractors’! Overwhelied by protests trom elti- Rdison questionnaire. iP as called to his es ‘oc by my watch, Are you Owing to the time for consideration special attention this morning. zens who have heen illegally sear hed Mor y of the question on education, the sev- | “If the act is valid the Comptrolier|and oppressed by policemen engaged ready? G INUTE ond minute hud now passed. ‘Third ene owen comin Onin enforcing the Mullan-G - FIRST my on *. attoted | Mout questions to got j give exact fi forcement Law, according to Three More Than t ah | THIRD MINUTE. that the old claims filed by the con-| ideas of enforcement, District A tor Are Ansiwered. | tractors approximate $30,000,000. Nears : ntified alloelty: x Question Are . % i ry A ney Swann to-day notified all city ms he best way to|She Completes Her Job, With 25) Other estimates plac te total Of) trates to instruct persons thus? Ginette Seconda tu Spare. $00,000 ters Clalma nearer $60) Oiy searched or oppressed to mnae spend a vate a proad smiley—| @ No. 14—Should wen iy to censor The claim against the city of} ena sainst the officer guilty of Sophie Kerr Paid re women’s clothes? Contractor Patrick MeGovern, exam-| oi, violation of the law. ‘The notaflea Doing nothing, T enol’ | hi : a _lined by Commissioner Hirshtieia, | Reon Oe Nea # atiflica “ghonld President Harding | Sophie Kerr (spiritedly, with an-| iro ints to $700,000 Mr. McGovern, | tion Was issued through the follow ng | Q. No. 2—Shon +, | other naughty twinkie)—They should pe FOverDy | appoint a woman among America’s) e ‘ ‘who lives at No. 50 East 92d Street,| communication to Chief Magistra: appol be t the disarmament | not. F onally, Lam in favor men|had the contract for section No. 9) yeadoo representatives a i wearing blinders, rather than of) of the Lexington Avenue subway. iver ea mapa RGA aioe conference? hehe ts an/women lengthening thelr skirts, if]. The contractors’ bill fathered by! ests have’ been made to the Sophie Kerr (although she Os ig) | what the men see has such un awful | seen tle aaninae the elirclama| District Attorney that individual ardent Republican worker iB ition) effect on them. extra costs of work brought about| Members of the police force in the trict and keenly Interested In politics @. No. 15—Are men sillier than|by increases in materials and labor] Course of their sffors to lvate No, I don't think #9. uitton’ ever hel een onuse verses Spring the war. — Taw have trespassed upon the | Q, No. $—-Will Prohibition e} Karrctonieticies tne Gist s rights of innocent citizens by for- enforced in New Zork? a Sait | proposition is true, some ova the} MRS. M. MALLORY, | city opening’ t brats bes Sophie Kerr (cheerily)—I hope nok) second; on the whole, I should say it TENNIS STAR, HOME) oe tan their owners and in J ‘ : ‘ . F somo (ns ing the @. No. 4—Should women wear stock=| i apout fifty-Afty, » HO E| Rutan bon et obtain | ings at the bathing beaches? Answering time, two minutes and : P | sdmission without a arch war- Sophie Kerr (emphatically) —They | prenty-five scconds—thirty-fve sec-| NOt Discouraged by Defeat in rant. A ieca Na reU te Ree Rca get theleucet drown | 1808 19 90008 France, She Will Defend acenre thm cue oviuenee heron. | Q. No. 5—Who ze ost fro Next? Soi ertt mis ' c agistrate it would advances “\hite-those who are charming or those | eee American Title This Month. eR ar tustion if wit city | ood ? o sted a agistrate would order that wo are good ivelpy—omoe (PLANT AND PETTIT BEGIN | Mrs. Solis wjursiodt aatiory the) BFS tlh nd here | Sophie Kerr (decisively)—wnose | American tennis star who lost in| ACES Senin haa who are charming. ‘ SING SING SENTENCES, Jrrance to tile, Suzanne Lenglen, UL NA rea pig ES Q. No. 6—What will happen next Mm | Py ched home to-day accompanied | s in the enforcement of a Ireland? jTe Serve Terme for Hecetview |... ner husband on the United States | 2 not fustiied and shonld be Sophie Kerr (with lifted eyebrows) - of the Scandinavian-American Line.| “couraged, aun th Ns ‘and a twinkle under them)—Well, if) Carman Plant, former Nassau County | sie frankly admitted being outplayed District Attorney I knew, 1 think [ could make Brat oo nt NESE aie Pestheo by the French champion, but said| complaints to the | a span erinte tof Buildings in Nassan ’ i deal of money selling iny knowledge | Qo, were tuken from the County | 3@ felt sure she should sanguer) 6f f to the papers }Jail at Minealo by automobile to-day | Me. Lenglen at their next meeting, | a pay Q. No. 7—Who is the greatest living | fo) sing sing Prison, where t wilt] She will defend her American title| yi nset cu American? begin terms of two to fiv at Forest Hills this month displace laws framed | uso ‘The mobile brows in the clear oval| Plant and Pettit we ntenced During the voyage Mrs, Mallory| guard the rights of citizens, no e of her face puckered over this ques- | Thursday by Justice Cropsey kent In training and one estabe | M an wrote to Police Comm. tion, and she musingly repeated it to| lid pleaded guilty of er iminalls lished a new record skip-| > Sen sR ae | herself. Then she lifted her defiant | '"& stolen goods, | ping, perfurming this exercise 2,642 Put a * Oe i ronsecutive mee—and incidentally ' Kerr (iike a good litle f Jatt» int, ' pounds a weurh ” blican)—Hliln Root eotured. 4 ree Bale they Henrich ey Niche aclaied, : n ten vampions, we 1 ula Q. No, &—Why icked at porury: a Jaleo on the vessel. ‘chey have come| heavy coniplaints to the Tse! triot Attormey in the last tive days | 3.° $6.75 1 812,75 A limited number of desirable models in \ COrron TRICOTINE Covron GABARDINE NO CREDITS li EN white cotton fabrics or colored linens. Corton VENETIAN NO EXCHANGES FEMININE SKIRT SHOP—Fourth Floor shaestnapae | | |