Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
EEE ST 25 88 SU IRE MOEN BUS ROLLS DOWN FOUR-FOOT BANK, TARE INJURED Every Passenger Hurt When Rockaway Point Motor Ve- hicle Overturns on Road. RAIN CAUSES ACCIDENT. Wheel. Sinks Into Mud and Sends Car and Occupants Down Declivity. Every one of the 15 passengers was ‘\ hurt early to-day when a motor bus that runs between Rockaway Point and the Long Island Railroad term- imal at Rockaway Park, five miles away, turned over and rolled down a four-foot embankment. No one was killed, but four were so badly injured they were taken to the hospital. ‘The bus is owned by William Bren- i ner of Rockaway Point, and was driven by Edward McLoughlin, of No 10 Eckford Street, Brooklyn, who escaped injury by jumping. Those in the Rockaway Beach Hospital are: HARRAR, MARY, 30, No. 44 Cornelia Street, Brooklyn, internal injuries, abrasions hip. PEG, KATE, 19, No. nue, Ozone Park, knee, shock. HANHAASER, BARBARA, 52, No. 234 East 33d Strect, Manhattan, frac- tured right rib, EDMUNDS, RBGINALD, 35. No. 2345 Broadway, Manhattan, dislocated shoulder. Those treated for minor injuries and sent home were: Mrs. Louise McQuaid, sixty, and her daughters, Agnes, thirty-five, and Helen, twen- ty-five, 454 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn; Nellie Cummings, twenty, 2404 Jerome Ave- contusions right No, 740 Bast 182d Street, Bronx; Joseph Sneider, twenty-six, No. 272 Manhattan Avenue, Manhattan; Nellie Nestuva, twenty-nine, No. 317 Mast 65th Street, Manhattan; Kate Hunt, twenty-five, No. 381 Bleecker Street, Manhattan; Catherine Mur- phy, twenty, No. 47 Perry Street, Manhattan; Sergt. John Hayes, twenty-four, Fort Tilden; John Rice, | twenty-six, No. 84 Bedford Street, Manhattan, and Nellie Collins, twen- ty-six, No. 993 Park Avenue, Brooklyn, Most of the passengers had been spending the week-end at their bungalows at Rockaway Point, and were on their way to trains back to the city. The bus was going along Centre Street, Rockaway Point, in a heavy tain. The roadway is of dirt, accord- ing to the police, and there is a four- ‘foot declivity on each side. One of the rear wheels sank into the road, | which had bocome mud from the rain, | slipped down the bill and the bus ¢urned over. Policeman Arthur Nash and several | citizens helped extricate the passen- | gers from the bus. All had been hurled about violently and cut by broken glass. oe ec . “MAKE ME LOOK THIN.” Princess Ludovic Pignatelli Ar- rives on Savoie. Princess Ludovic Pignatelli, daughter | of G, Jason Waters of the Hotel Am- | vassador, was among the passengers | arriving on to-day on th French Line steamship La Savoie. Her husband met | her at the pier, as did a party of pho- ographers. All she asked of the latter was: “Please make me look thin! A dollar (American) for a highball in Piis was too much for Dr. Samuel Storn, of No. 41 West Bist Street, an- r of the passengers, and this and other hig hprices in the French capital Trae Tre Three-Minute Hut Weather Interview Wn ann Test Is Passed With Flying Colors By Prot. Binder of N. Y, University SHOULD U'S:MAKE A SEPARATE PEACE WITH GERMANY ? ARE COLLEGE GIRLS ACQUIRING THE CIGARETTE HABIT? VIS IT POSSIBLE FOR NAULTY TOFLY OVER THE POLE? WHY DO UNDERGRADUATES OBJECT T0CO-EDUCATION ? WHAT 15 THE BEST THINGAMANCAN TAKE. AWAY FROM COLLEGE ? WHAT MUST AMERICA DO TO REMEDY BIG PERCENTAGE OF ILLITERACY ? Ts, AT 15 THE REASON FOR THE Busi~ Wess MAN'S PREOVUCICE AGAINST, HIRING THE COLLEGE MAN P ARE THE NATIONS READY to / AGREE ON DISARMAMENTS WHAT'S THE CHIEF DEFECTIN IN NEW YORKS PUBLIC SCH" 5} Head of Sociology Depart- ment Refutes Charge ‘Col- lege Professors Are Slow- pokes—He Gives Views on Topics of Especial Interest Mental Alertness and Agility of] WHY ARE Cee ESN, KED BY SHOT Bras P MUST WE _ FIGHT JAPAN?, DRINKING INCREASED AMONG YOUNGER GENERATION SINCE ROMIBI TION? the records to| prove it. Q. No, 8—Are the leading nations of the world ready to agree on a policy of disarmament? : Dr. Binder—Yes, [ think they are Q. No, 9—What is the chief defect in New York's public school system? here in my desk SHINING SILVER FOR LUS K IS NOW A RADIANT FACT Talk About Public Interest in the Gift, Look at the Con- By MargueriteMooersMarshall Who 6ays professors are slow- Ihave just seen q professor pass with flying colors The Evening World’ test for mental alertness and agilit M. Binder, Ph.D., who is in charge of Q. No. 12 Necessary Average. ing Interest: ral function nent)—/ quired the answering with visible amuse was his plaint to the Ship News re- porters, Hehlomysheff Linden, a director of the Russian Volunteer Meet, engaged | in passenger and treight service be- en Russia aud this country, came here trom Paris to see if he could no find 4 way to prevent the Soviet Gov- erement from taking possession of the | feet's vessels which are lying idle in this port. ee BEAT HIS STEP-CHILDREN: GETS 30 DAYS IN JAIL. Denoances “Bratality” oxing Sentence, Magi ste in ° Im “You wre one of the most brutal per- 1 have ever known in twenty-eight | in the law,’ suid Magistrate nin the Washington Heighte -day in sen| forty, of No. 2 years 3 Bighth A thirty days in the Workhou yor beating her stepehildren, Georg i John, nine y old The wom: 8 charged with by stick. | Ten: d by the boy fourt!! wile. with & moj nt were a s Wulf = Mrs. Annie} “Vd have Because they fear the intelligence of! the young ladies, as it is manifested | in competitive examinations } ow he Pa Reld on Theft Charge. ‘Although his employers allege he s Ave Kuntz, twenty seven, No. 530 Fourth Avenuc, Brook iyn, When arraigned to-day w+ 2 $5,900 bail for examination 5 on the specitle « of misas ating $1,000. Kuntz gave chimeel! up last Friday after he ad returned tvom Caneda, where he after he is al Ieged to have misappropriated y belonging to his employers, the Cohn Furniture Company, Sixth Avenue and th Street. It is alleged he spent the moncy in ‘going the pace.” j i | chuckle)—They’re they're tickled! at the érpiration of the sccond minute. THIRD MINUTE. | Dr. Binder (hesitating and lookine Q. No. 1—Siould the United States | She has drifted away from her natu- you,” | answer reach fever heat not shocked— rier and shinier. Contributors make them s! are N, Must we fight Japan? u wie to-day ed")—Ah, that is because do you She has turned against will fete FREE, BUT N been compelled to expose i. “But you didn't.” OTT requested A a 4S) : + eas Dr. Binder (tis keen blue eyes nar- tributions. irr Educational and Political aha teat Baling rowing shrewdly)—Politics. Politics The Evening World's Fund for World, Including Progress on Ce ean you call ert ee the Purpose of Keeping Senator id a = le oO. hy are many college 5 2 5 Made by the College Girl. ; : Lusk’s Silverware Shining now i di Mee ’ boys so shocked by the dr and be- amounts to .30% cents, Interest DeViot ede ule magagi mid is spreading and bids fair to Dr. Binder (with a perceptible One contributor scnt in a silver . dime. This is too much. The pores! Because of the time taken on Q. Nv.| ¢und should be made up of small At any rate, I shall never say so for] 7, 1¢ had lost the one-question Iead.| contributions. The inore the mer but we were even with the schedule to paper ¢ the three-minute, hot-weather, right-| Prof. Binder Finishes Just Within mi ae he D8: o the nt ARG iributions to-day t curren off-the-griddie interview ©” fifteen ean BAA eal ‘ rates of exchange the mark 1s 2 suniaieab and . No. 11—Are colleges honey-| worth about .01% cents, different topics of public interest and) | a with radicalism and Social-| Already Acknowledged .... 12/2 importance. ism, as Vice President Coolidge re-j A’Mgld Rosenthal ne As the academic representative in| cently suggested? BEE. (One Mark tl our fast growing group of fast think-! Dr. Binder (with quiet contempt)—! G. V..4J. ". and Ch. R.. 05 ers and talkers, { chose Prof, Rudolph No. they are not ae) ; ; To the Talltor of The Evening World the DepaeDant of Boclolony at NEW a, is He ware trying’ to plerse the Wicloesd youll. fina u Wrkel we York University. I found him at DIS syture)—Not yet. In fact—oh, | would ected to swell ihe funds for desk in the university’s Washington answer that question, ‘no!’ we hove the ARS Ue Square Employment and Service BU- Q. No, 13—Ifas not drinking in-| good as some Prohibitionist nose reau. | creased among the members of the G. V., M., C jo T have no chance to prepare f0F|vounger generation. sinco Prohibi- | ay ine stor of ToC EOS the questions?” he asked, laughinsly. tions gg ae Tiaras Sian Not a chance,” said 1, “but they’re Dr. Binder (somewhat to the sur- silver should he kept hly pol- not taken from college examination ai9. 6 ig questioner)—I don't De Henle pole. papers. Now, if you're ready"—the inins go, ara ieeen, professor and 1 both pulled ont our“ Q* ye, 44 Why is the modern mi Inelosinis here: watches—"It's one-trenty, IME!" | woman so restless? are looking for a motto, FIRST MINUTE. | Dr. Binder (sitting up straizhter Nhy not take this one: “Aye, r i Sarno a - he rub" Professor Gains a Question on the 2nd, as the photographers say, “look- NOLD W. ROSENTHAL. To the Tditor of The brening World find a small make a separate peace with Ger- contribution (one mark) toward rane family tife; she is groping around fpr “the Sterliny, Sonnter aaeneae Dr. Binder (somewhat aardonically) | Something else, some suostitute; silver polishing tund. 4. i. I etneinattonnrit self anew. Sh - —We'll have to! laity; tosorlantsharele ans aNG ssa vatar on taateins ed @. No. 2--Are college girls acquir-| Will never get over her restlessness WAGs tohesd ante ee Ing the cigarette habit? |untilsxhe finds again her true func-! est the “Silver Polish Mund" ne, ‘Dr. Binder (with a broad, remin-| tion and fulfilment—the family. tablished in behalf of the now jacent grin)-Some of them, I think—| @ No, 15—Do colleges make snobs? {MOUS | Senator Task of the s sd t if ers and the “empty” bilifelid iy ee SORA Dr. Binder (permitting the precious May T nat contnnnie nate @. No. $—Is it ecientificaliy possi- |Seconds to tick away as he consid- nts to help keep that silver in ble for the New Yorker. Naulty, to/ered, but finally answering with com- pasta ondition? One never , . h Pole? mendable honesty at the fifty-eighth 7 90: BD when th fly over the North Pole? EE OA Gh nce ie ntlom, the dewers and th Dr. Binder ‘pursing a retiective d ‘ad mini » te emp Wfold will need ca mouth)—-Probabiy—but, 1 should say, | #ome extent and if he is enabled to peep. the rm The sirtieth second! silverware in first ci condition not yet , ah he will always be able to put @. No. 4—Why do many maje un-| Tim same in pawn, derzraduates object to co-education? What would you have done to me | Yours, for charity Dr. Binder (removing his pipe, and| if I hud taken longer?" jokingly in- | BC. O DRINK, AS YET HE’S WRINGING WET. is. dows i Q. No. 5—What is best thing INJURED SAVING GIRL. Sidewalk Monologaist taken to la young man can take away from) oo Hevae in Serious Condition. college? Pellcoman Brasher fer Aside, bat) 4 man, who said he was Jou Dr. Binder—Hadits of industrious- F nder Wagon. lapeeenieatae ce eee mRCEL t hans Patrolman Abraham Nelson of the| ered a crowd of about 500 persone on Q. No. 6—What must America do| Bergen Street Station, Rrooklyn, was hh Avenue between 28th and 29th to remedy her big percentage of il-/on the driver's seat of a patrol wagon St Fets to-day, He regaled them witn literaey, to which Gen, Pershing; with Arthur De Nyse, chaufieur of on Snot uppOsed inconsi y recently called attention? , the Poy Street Station tod mu a wh ne Dr. Binder (succinctiy)—Compul-| when nineteen-sear-o'd Lena W ) | sory education. Jinan at Myrtle Avenue near Br Let The jist minule was post, aud te) street stepped in front of the vehici:. 1 professor had gained one question on) De Nyse blew the horn but a pass- herweiid ae | the mean average of five per minute. ng “L" train drowned his a bi 2 which is necessary to sinish withir| Nelson immediately sprang to the} ian Heme the the allotted time. \ step, brushed the woman out of the! | k my SECOND MINUTE, car's path and fell, the rear wheel of rattle ' Loses One-Question Lead. but Keeps ‘0 ait! Wagon. whieh was to the sta i With Schedule. \s rowded Ay th prisoners on the way Heyue Hoe iy business man's prejudice against was found Nelson hag an incomplete , CORPORATION TAX AND hiring a college trained man? Nelson ix thirty-three sears old and| TRANSFER BUREAUS UNITE, Or, Binder (azuin removing his |jives with his wife and two children ipe and letting the second-hand/at No. 444 15th Street, rook!yn. | Part of Gov, 5 7 pe over three or four tiny divisions | Miss Weldman Itves at 1525 Charlotte Hats MUMie's Re ABOME Pro- \of time white he framed his earnest |Street: Brooklyn PE i Sieg ENE had and emphatic answer)—The business! Retired Clty Employe 0 ATE SthaT @kanig (ea heran cr wan is recovering from that preju-| Josep Sweene: of No. 28 1 nounced to la It is less operative every year. Street dropped dead to-diy It was originally due to his hin office é as | at college men Jacked practicati ws at No.1 Mill but now the business man is hiving and e | the college man for every branch of Pp. papiznen ts work, even the administrative. This| 1919. H lose onine 3 00,0 fe being done by the most powerful [Ana 8 son. Tasmas, empoved | pr STL amine ae Ot hy and hurd-headed employers, 4 have’ Licciricity, survive bing EARLY TRIA BOTH KOENIG AND "MURPHY PLAYING AWAITING GAME lwo County Leaders Want to See Other's Complete Slate First. Charles F, Murphy and Samuel M. ‘Koenig are engaged in a preliminary [combat in politica! finesse. Each is waiting for the other to announce the [personnel of the New York ticket, but neither appears to be in a great hurry to make the announce- ment, Murphy conferred with many lead- ers Saturday and yesterday, and it is said that the slate, to be headed by or Hylan and Comptroller Craig, is almost completely made up, but is subject to amendments if the Repub- lican ticket shouid seem to call for them. Tha Bronx is insistent on naming the candidate for President of the Board of Aldermen, but the men from that borough are not in agreement as to the candidate, The only candidates agreed upon by the Republicans on the county | ticket are Morris Koenig, brother of. the Chairman, for Judge of the Court of General Sessions, and Helen Var- ick Boswell for Register. Tammany | has decided that County Clerk Will- |iam F, Schneider has served long enough in his present office and the | nomination will probably go to some west side leader. Bue Schneider ob- j jects to being “buried” and is mak- ling a lot of noise around Tammany County Hall. | Neither Tammany nor the Re- publican organization is expected to jannaunce the ticket, although ‘Tam- many may put some feelers follow- ing a meeting of the Executive Com- Imittee to-night. It appeared to-day that Joab B, Banton, who has been jrunning the District Attorney's office jas chief assistant for some time past, | will be nominated tor County Prose- cutor, Henry H. Curran, the regular Fusion nominee, starts in to-night on an active campaign which will take him into every corner of the five boroughs before the date of the primary’ Although he has the organization support, he is guing to appeal in per- son to enrolled Kepublican voters, mindful of what happened to ‘John Purroy Mitchel, who made no cam- paign in 1917 because he thought the | Republican organization was strong jenough to put over his nomination in primaries, Curran opens to-night the Tenth Assembly District Le- Jican Club, No. 8 West 28th Street } County Judge Reuben L, Haskell of the | Brooklyn, Aldermanic President I. H. | La Guardia and William M. Bennett, ‘\ho have announced their intention o enter the publican primary from Richmond indicate n President, Calvin D. Va Will be renominated and tha Matthew J. Cahill or Alderman J. O'Rourke will be nominated or Sheriff. They will have a figh: Jin the primaries. Former Borough | President George Cromwell will get | Republican nomination to run ke: nst Van Name and Joseph B. Name, eith Joan nominee for Sheriff. SS ‘POLICE ESCORT AT FUNERAL OF RABBI ABRAHAM BLUM. Service for Chaplain of Depart- ment te Be To-Morrow, ‘The Police Department will take 4 conspicuous part to-morrow in the funeral services for the late Rabbi \braham Blum, a chaplain of the de- partment, who died Saturday, At 10 Vclock to-morrow morning the body wil taken from Campbell's undertakin, boms, 67th Street and Broadway to tac femple Emanu El, 43d Street and INfth Avenue, where the funeral services will | be held: In the police escort will be two cap- | uns, four lieutenants, eight sergeants nd eighty patrolmen, in addition to the Police Department Band and six en members of the Glee Club, all der direction of Inapector lenera! ) to che wple y 8th St and b eet Avenue oe L FOR FIVE ACCUSED OF SLAYING BOY. Varotia Wi portant, Says Jndge. Wudg> Alfred Talley to-da tin yin the Tombs ind eppe Varotta for Aug. 16. Tie 0, was kidnapped from his home, No. 34 H Ith Street, and his body found n the Hudson River after Ima father had refused to give a ransom of $5,000. va-dudge Leonard J. Snitkin opposed the application of Acting District At jtorney Banton for the early date of the jtrial, but the judge refused further delay In this case id Judge Ta a quickly. It is 4 r Mt case for the people of " fits of kid fe \t carted out and. murder | done eens i jw. ow Dies After ae Wits widow mn H Oren tt Wire Island ‘pwyiyee oi, ' napping Case Most Im-, MSS WALTON | DANGIG PARTHER INGELLALL NT Her Protests Fail to Save Him From Jersey Reckless Driving Rules, Leon Leitrim of No, 19 West 69th Street, New York, dancing partner of Florence Walton, spent last night in N. J jail bail, and was to remain there until 4 o'clock this afternoon, when de was | to have a court hearing. Leitrim, who with Migs Walton and others was returning from Greenwood Like late last night in a motor car, was locked up on a charge of reckless driving and intaxication, The police station, where the party repaired after their arrest, was the scene of voluble explanations, plead- ings and protests from Miss Walton when Capt. Frank Kirk amnounced Leitrim would have to spend the night in jail. ‘This was after a physician had found Leitrim intoxicated. Miss Walton protested strongly that Leitrim was not intoxicated, al- | though she admitted he might hav< taken a glass of wine | Capt. Kirk was extremely but rules were rules, he explained, and if the doctor said the man driv- ing 4 car was intoxicated the rule was to lock that man up and keep him in a cell until he was perfectly sober in order that he might not en- danger the lives of others on the highways, See ee HIRSHFIELD BACK FROM UP-STATE TRIP the Hackensack, without sorry, | Has Been Investigating Conditions in Home Regions of Meyers’ Investigators. Commissioner of Accounts Hirsticld returned to New York to-day from a tour of up-State counties, including those of the western tier, which began last Friday. He spent an hour in the City Hall conferring with Mayor Hylan. Mr. Hirshfield said he had been making up-State investigations of legislation affecting this city intro- duced in the last session of the Legis- | lature by Senate and Assembly mem- bers of the Meyer committee. ‘The Commissioner of Accounts said he will hold no examinations on days when the Meyer cominittee is in s« sion in public hearings. But he will }ummon witnesses, including, pos= jsiis, some members of the Meyer | committee, on off days. | Mayor Hylan is priming himeelf to take the witness stand at the first public hearing of the Meyer commit- tee in the Aldermanic Chamber in the City Hall at 10,30 o'clock to-morrow. |} Announcement was made at | Meyer comnuttee headquarters t that Winthrop D. Lane, the Socialist, | will be continued on the pay roll of | | the committee investigator until his work is finished, despite protests | of various posts of the American | Legion. pe FINE AND DAY SENTENCE FOR TAKING BANK FUNDS. Conrt Considers Salaries of and Woman in impor } Mrs. Judity B. Demming, assistant} cashier, and H. B, Rundall, cashier, of | the Finst National Bank of Amenia, N. Y., she under indictment for ab: stracting $600 of the bank's Ginds, and he for misayyropriating $8,000 of them, Man | Penalty.) to-day pleaded guilty before Judy Shepard in the Federal Court They were sentenced to a day each! jin the custody of United States Marsna MeCarthy, with an additional penalty ot 30 for the woman™and $500 for | Kkundall, Assistant Uuited States At torney Mattuck said that the officials ot bank had kept the abstraction and muisappropmation secret for t yea and that be wished there were Jsome way in which. these officials in! be reached by the w. In imposing 90 light sentences Jud. Sheppam said that he took: into. « iderution that the woman wry Wie | aly $29 a month and the Shan tnnualiy and. that hone oft hey tad abstracted trom the t ren spent save for thelr liv penses ——— ABE ATTELL HELD FOR SALE OF TICKET TO BALL GAME. Denied Admis-| The man Polo ehang a To-« val game and gave eph Weller, thirty-tw No. 162 Hast 4th Street in the Washington Hemhis Court | morning on a charge of of years old was arraigne un specuintins [ile admitted to Aassimant District \ torney Saylor that he is Abe A ‘ex-prise fighter. He was teld in. $v oil fi pecial Sessions. | Tue detendant explained that he] ought a ticket to the Polo dis | nd d iulmission boc ot argument whic eh the ounds about 4 year ago he uid not use the ticket he to Detective gs of the Fifth In spection District, the detective charges _ Women Fund Seekers’ Cases Pont- pomed, At the request of Assistant District | Attorney O'Shaushnessy, the cases of | ssell, March Paillips and MF harged with solic 1 Timed Nassae Street Yorky1 These om Oth. Richard WORKING GIRLS OBJECT TO HAVING AGES PUBLISHED Say Proposed Rule in Boston Will Play Hob With Mat- timonial Chances. | ROSTON, Aug. & | craphers, tele~ } B phone operitors, waitresses | and other working girls are up in arms over the proposed plan of the city authorities to publish their ages in the annual Police voting list, They say it may be ail right for the society set, but to the girls who have to earn their own way in the world DOUBLE SHOOTING NOTH STREET STL MYSTERY Mrs. Kruer Will Live, While Her Assailant May Die With His Secret. Thomas I°, MoCarthy, who is all |bound for her summer home at Deal| Beach, The Lounger quickiy hove to and Headed for the drifting seaplane, transferred to the Lounger, which | |speeded with them to Highland, where | |they were attended and given dry| clothing and shelter | thing happened and the plane went into the water with a splash that tore the wings from the pontoon and left tat the mercy of the waves, Mrs. Inglis M. Ippercu saw the ac- cident from her motor launch Lounger If, She is the wife of the President of the Aeromarine Company and was which had been helpless and in dan- wer of being battered to bits for fit- teen minutes, A rope was thrown to the six on the wreck, the seaplane was drawn in and after great dif- ticulty the six drenched figures were | Caperken and his mechanic would | not desert the wreck until it was ready to sink. hey saved most of it. The owners of the Ambassador were Jay O'Brien, Jacob J. Bield and John Grossberg, New York brokers, Mr. O’Brien is hustand of Irene Fen- } wick, the Several weeks «go | the Ambassador to be brought | down near Spring Lake while the three owners and Miss I’enwick were passengers > -— SAYS MAN WHO TOOK HER SWIMMING STOLE $3,440. acti ess Gave Him Money Bing for Safe-| keeping, She Telly Cour i Mexander Bukantik of No, 133 Leon- and Street, Broo! as held in $10. 000 bail for a hearing to-morrow w arraigned in the Fkutbush Court to-day it means financial suicide in that t? have shot and wounded Mrs. Rer- Vg it Would cost more than one of nard Kruer near the doorway of her | them their jobs if t a home in the Hendrik Hudson Aparte { ages w known, and might ments, No. 611 ¢ . i wreck their matrimonial chances aba ig teclisbeilat tr lrtss $4 They frankly declare that the S*sterday morning, is still uncon- t ysdia Aniigsee Aa OA scious in the Knickerbocker Hosp!- ; age man contemplating matri. | ta! a8 the result, according to the mony has his eye out for a |POlice, of his attempt at suicide. He } “chicken” rather than a woman |™4¥ die aoe: RINE: | Mrs. Kruer, who waa shot through iene SSS: the shoulder and the right cheek and who will be scarred for life, is in St. RESCUE (fF SIX Luke's Hospital. It is said she will be out in a few days, : | Unless MeCarthy lives and talks, the mystery surrounding his attempt j to kill Mrs, Kruer probably will ree main unexplained. Mrs. Kruer, who ) is thirty-nine years old, was visiting Miss Ada Casswell at No. 540 West 112th Street, She left there at 1.40 } o'clock Sunday morning. A few min- utes later she was shot in front of ee aan her home. She admitted knowing |McCarthly slightly for about three Mr. and Mrs, E. M. Fuller years and said she had reprimanded . |bim for speaking to her on the street | Among Passengers Saved jand told him if he did it again she | From Battered Ambassador. | Would call the police. | | She said as she reached her home | a man stepped out of a shade Pilot Arthur Caperken of the sea-| when sh Oe him viatihe Wits jplane Ambassador, his mechanic and! he shot her. She staggered into the four passengers returned to. thelr|cntrance of the Hendrik Hudson and | homes to-day from Highland, N. J.{#/most fell into the arms of the doors none the worse ‘or their experience ikecartiy wie’ Wat cca . a toreman in late yesterday when the storm drove! th, nepartment of Public Works afid down the plane inside Sandy Hook} jives at No. 238 West 127th Street Bay ‘in a furnished room, was found Two of the passengers were E toross the street with a bullet wound Falier, President of the broker: in his head and a revolver a few firm of E. M. Fuller of the Stock Ex-| feet (rom him, He is forty-five years change, and Mrs. Muller, The me-|old and is said w be separated trom chanie is James Nygard | his wife. The Ambassador was a privately! Mise Caswell told the police she owned seaplane used by a group of| never had heard of McCarthy. Bons’ prominent New York men to com-| nard Kruer, husband of the injured mute between this city and At tic] woman, also says he never heard of City It left in perfect weather) MoCarthy, Kruer, it is said, erly it 5 P.M. yesterday, What hap-| kept a liquor store at Columbus Ave-“ pened off the Hook was seen through| nue and 110th Street. With his their glasses by marine observers for! brother-in-law and his daughter, a» the telegraph companies. young woman, he visited bis wife ia The seaplane arrived just as the| the hospital to-day. clouds and wind let go. The bay was 's rough and dangerous. Caperken ap-| HENRY MILLER HAS f peared to be fighting to force the H plane through the squall. ‘Then some- | SOLD HIS THEATRE. ] Actor, Like George M. Cohan, Re- tires From the Managerial Field. Henry Miller announces that he hae arranged to sell the Henry Miller Thea - tre in West 43d Street and that pape for the deal will be signed to-day in Atlantic City. He would not name the purcharer or the amount. ! It is his intention to withdraw from the managerial field, and it is under stood hia retirement is due to causes similar to thowe that led George M. Cohan to stop his enterprises. “All T want is to follow my profession undisturbedly,” sald Mr. Miller. “I have no comment to make on the present situation, I am simply selling my thea- tre and will no longer manaze it,” Among the stars who have appeared at H this theatre are Mr. Miller himself, Mrs. Fiske, Ruth Chatterton, Bittle Burke and Patricia Collinge, 50 good cigarettes an on a change of grand larceny ‘The complainant is Mary Luk the money was missing | > | * Man Stops Attack on Dry Awent ostrong & When revenue agents nm wo a rest Archie Had etor of fotel at Merrick edie, on © of violut hibition taw 1 customer in the 4 wit ut Samuel J. Caliah 5 The age ns sd sent of them xt arm’ men of them prevented. the customer fron attacking the officer. Hadden was neld in $1,000 bail to-day. Robert Enbrock proprietor of a road house at Rockaway Road and the turnpike, Jamaicr also held in $1,000 bua! sts Months River Pirate. ms bela w the tr workt te Marsa in vrisania Court, on @ disorderly con duct charge GENUINE “BULL” DURHAM TOBACCO Morneee. MeO Notice to Advertisers Dispiay advertising type copy and relrage ords fer either the week day blorning World or 1 World, Ue received after +P. ML the day ng publiration, can be inserted ooly as may permit apd in order of recelpt at The rid office. Cipy containing engravings to he made by The World must be received by 1 P. st Display advertising, type, cory for the Suprise ment Seething of Sunday World must he Freeived thy 1PM: Thursday preceding, publica fon and release must be ol by 2 Friday. Copy containing engravings to be made ‘The World must be received by Thursday noom, Ma type copy which lat eveived Mo" Priday,” and ene 1 been received in the ee A Retaay “aad post tre srltra nok, sacsived by RR. a " omied ‘as eondiioas require, righty ie rder of lated receipt and positive release oF orders released later than as when omitted will not serve ia ot "auy character, comtract or othe THE WORLD iis