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Me, ‘ O'MALLEY QUITS WITNESS STAND IN ROW To-Night's Weather—FAIR AND COOLER. “40 TO DAILY WALL STREET FEATIJRE THIS EpitioN PS {Circulation Books Open to All.” | VOL. LXII. NO. 21,832—DAILY, Copyright, 1921, by The [re Col (The New York W Publishing a). NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1921. To-Morrow's Weather—FAIR. WALL STREET EDITION ULSTER FACTIONS KILL AND BURN; TROOPS ' TO CONTROL BELFAST | MILITARY RULE INBELFAST AFTER 14 ARE KILLED Many Fires Reported to Have Been Set by Rioters in Various Sections of Excited City During the Night. Trish Republican Army Warned! to Be Ready for a Breaking| of the Truce—South Ireland Keeps Its Pledge. Dublin Opinion Is That Dis- orders in Ulster Are Part of Extremists’ Plan to Stop} Concessions, : BHLFAST, Aug. 31 (Associated Press)—The military, it was an- nounced at midday, will assume con- trol of Belfast within an hour, as a| result of representations by the Lord Meyor as to the urgent necessity of affording the citizens protectién in View of the fierce rioting and fight- ing in progress. ' By mid-afternoon, with the fight- still proceeding in@some areas etween the Ulster loyalists and Sinn the total death roll Monday night had reached fourteen. ing Feiners, since Soores have been wounded, but the exact number is not known. Tramears this morning raced through the riot district of North Queen Street and Old Lodge Road, the passengers lying on the floor to escape the bullets of the rioters, but an Engl shman on his honeymoon trip was shot in the abdomen and is in a critical condition, Last seenes night's centred in Royal Avenue, They began with a attack b snipers on Crook Stre determined a party of t. At the end of that thoroughfare crowds had sembled, on which a heavy revolv: fire was opened by a Feiners. A Whi arty of Sinn wild stampede resulted. | of the crowd ran along ard Castle June- me Avenue to tion, the mainder attempted to cs- cape along Donegal Street toward the Cathedral. ‘They had gone only a few yards when two youths with cups pulled down over their faces dashed over Academy Street to the foorpath | and commenced firing, The terpitied | crowd raced back toward Royal Ave- many of its members falling and being trampled upon. Later, operations were opened Stanhope ot, Where Sinn Meine equipped rifles fired into the Lime Street and Old Lodge Road.4 \rmored © sctiwities of the gi y quelled the but at 9 rs temporar smen, 1) M. they were resumed and police einforcements were hurried to the lucality, On aprival of the eurfer hous matters quieted, but throughout the night oceasional saots were heard. During the firing of this morning crowds gathered in Royal Avenue at the corner of York Street and gazed battleground of yesterday, the anniversary of the imposition of ihe curfew was one of the worst days ty's histor: ave ful toward the onditions in our (Continued on Seeond Page.) Classified Advertisers Important! Classified advertising copy for The Sunday World should be tm The World office On or Before Friday Preceding Publication THE WORLD IS REASONABLE BROOKLYN APPELLATE COURT. Opinion Lays Down Detailed| Directions to Guide Municipal Justices. EXPLAINS BASIC POIN’ Income Should Vary With Re- turns in Other Fields, It Is Declared. The Appellate Term of the Brooklyn 10% NET INCOME FROM RENTS RETURN, RULES ‘SAYS SPIRITS SHE CALLED UP DROVE ~—-HIMLTO SALOON Until Then Actor Declares He; Supreme Court, composed of Justices | Kelby, Cropsey and Lazansky, handed | down an opinion to-day containing five rules for the guidance of the Jus- tives of Municipal Courts in determin- ing “reasonable rent “The following is laid down as the sensible way to determine the ques- eer involved," writes the court. . Determine the present fair mar- ket ate of the premises. This may | be done by offering opinion evidence as to both fee and rentul value or by introducing other competent evidence. | “2, Determine the gross rentals de- manded by the landlord. “3. Determine the allowable operat- ing expenses for the past year. These | ordinarily consist of payment for taxes, water rates, insurance, janitor’s services, necessary legal expenses made by the landlord incidental to maintaining his right to possession and necessary expenses annually paid out force ing rents; also payments for necessary supplies incident to the use of the premises, such as coal, gas and electricity; also necessary -ur- rent repairs for the year. Allowance hould be also made for loss of rents by reason of neies or tenants failing to pay. Allowance for annual depreciation, if established by the proof, should be made upon the fair market value of the buildings. “4, Deduet from the gross rentals the operating expenses, and this will give the net rental, REASONABLE RENT WOULD VARY WITH MONEY MARKET. “5, If this net rental does not ex- ceed 10 per cent. of the present value of the property, then the rent demand- | ed js not unreasonable, The reason- ss of a rent charge may vary under chan ng financial nditions, Upon the proof in this record (the eat bar), showing the return up- on other well recognized and general- ly accepted forms of investment we sblene lthink that 10 per cent a net re- turn te an owner of real property is ot unveasonable, but such a per- centage might be excessive if the evi- on Second Page.) —>—— COHAN WANTS TO BUY CINCINNATI] BALL CLUB. (Continued G. M. C Hot Herrmann, Present Owner, Wetnnen to Se CINCINNATL Aug August Herr- mann, President of the Cincinnati Na- tional League ball club, d that “The Cincinnati Reds are not for sale to orge Cohan or any one else," whe he received a telegram to-day from t theagrical manager and xctor asking Horrmann te prt a price on the con trolling interest of the club Putting in a bid for the Cincinnati Cohan's second attempt to short Jas being wil team is Mr break Into organized baseball, A w time ago he report ne to pureb the Boston American Laugue nine but the deal fell through, Sebi 49 POUNDS OF FLOWERS FROM ONE GIANT PLANT. len Fite et High and Also rts Bean Vines, ning World.) Aug, 31.—Charles B we writer, Justice agent, has added 5 year Russia nt y of Peace and pension to hia kitchen garden t riant sunflowera, Onc one-half feet high, sunflowers, total wetght 49 1- The largest was eighteen inches across and weighed when cut 101-4 pounds, On another plant, fourteen feet’ high, fifteen and ven he picked three bushels of green pole | beans fron) vines that left their poles | jand reached out to the sunflowers for | support, Had Done All Wife’s Housework. Eugene Lowe, an actor, said he did |not object to washing dishes, making | spiritualism and preferred to be di- “guides,” “Red Feather” he did temper and sought the solace of the | rected by her | |and “Little Flower, lost his corner saloon, The wraiths, he charged, in his en- rer to his wife's allegations that he threatened to kill her, were responsible for his occasionally losing his temper. Justice Wasservogel to-day allowed |M Lowe $35 a week alimony and ing on suit. | Mrs, Lowe alleges her husband left ‘her in May, 1917, and contributed $35 a week for the support of herself and seventeen- year-old son, Eugene Knight Lowe, until May Lowe say the first six their married life, which March 1902, were happy be he did all the household work. As a result of his wife's having nothing to occupy her time, be last. years of says, she took up spiritualism, Lowe says he did not object to this in itself, but he did protest because when economic or domestic d | sions arose she insisted un taking the advice of her “guides.” In the winter Lawe was not bothered | inuch the “guide but in sum- | mer when the theatri business was | dull, he had to remain home, and listen to the he says, srish of a baby “guides” HOT WAVE TO LAST FOR SEVERAL DAYS Weather Man Says There Is Hope of Showers—84 Degrees at 1 P. temperature is higu While |the | wil be the and Weather Man's best bet is that s hot to-day and to-morrow as it was yesterday, there is hoy showers which will bring some The to relief mercu registered 84 degrees Jay at 1 o'clock. late mercury hov- for several at midnight intense after ather of three no serious Yesterday's maximum in the afternoon, The ered this fi | hours was 91 around and was at 83 While suffering was the almost perfect w weeks, there trations, Low were pros- humidity prevented fort an unusual amount of | Among those who complain are men who had discarded their straw, hats for fall headgear. | ‘The weather man does not expect relief in the immediate future and thinks the heat wave may continue for sev Jays. | A man giving the name of Jake Ricks, forty-two, No, 24 West 49th reet, Was overcome by the heat at |49th Street and Tenth Avenue to- a THE WORLD TRAY 1. BUREAU, Kor ¥, City Teknan 4 Chek Peon ba. 4 hatceis open, ay and night, orders and wavellers’ checks for |beds, sweeping floors and mending when his wife thought such duties beneath her, but when “she took up) 9 counsel fee, pending her separa- | tarted | ause | girl Litle lowe hed Feather,” an Indian chief, whe picture adorned the wall Whenever he monstrated with his wife for her apathy toward house- hold duties Lowe alleges she replied that id ther” did not deem them nece Lowe ave p has tried to bee reconciled to his wife, as he loves her, but she refuse uuying her| BOY WHO KILED CHILD BY AUTO THANKS RIS JUDGE ———— |Carl Henderson’ Worked on Jersey Roads as Penalty for Homicide. HAS SERVED S ‘CE, Realizes Autoists Are Not Kings of the Road and Is Grateful for Punishment. was to-day Reformatory at had ‘his school vacation in that institu- | tion, Bahway, N. J, The boy been sentenced to spend 23, 1920, on a charRe of manslaughter. A jury before Judge Fred Stickel returned that verdict after it had been shown Henderson had run over and killed nine-year-old Moas of 32 College Place, Newark. Curl stood Stickel dressed in a ne wsuit and had in his leockets $17, the proceeds of his Charles before Judge abor at 60 cents a day for working on State |roads with model prisoners. He ap- \peared fifteen pounds heavier than | when he was senten ed, His cheeks had a healthy, ruddy tan. Five days after he aad received a | unusual sentence Judge Stickel hi requested the reformatory officials }to place him with the mode! prisoners jat Budd's Lake who were construct- lin section ate road. “whatever lesson you hould ave learned under the “1 did a lot of worrying over your IT wanted to be fair to you, law with the ind to society. I do not re- gret having sent you to the reforma- Jtory, You did not suffer by this sentence, 1 had to send you some- Where because of the verdict and t | demand of the Young Judge had "Ca now re community Henderson thanked — th nd Said he was sorry that bh of the been 1 1 & reformed boy,” he sai ze, a8 Your Honor has said s not king of the that pe h have to that an auto driver oad. luhts and that scoot out of the un very th atory of me fitted in many 1 realize jestrian they do not way of machines. 1 nkful and to the officials for th you treat- | ment I believe 1 have bene- for | suffered no ips and had pleasant ways, und clean " —_ 200 GALLONS OF WINE, HOME MADE, ESCAPE TAX. ’ the Lamit. a made heads of famille in private lay by 1 states tn the wine Is begun, Collector B sa announcement is in rdw regulations received from Washington. | > | Bitten by Shark, | do by Sea | plan | MANILA, PL, A Marcellus T. Abernathy, ath ¢ |Artillery, was so severely bitten by ja shark n Manila Bay |tha d. Abernathy was caplane and taken 1 ‘ jor Hospital where an or on n med without success, Carl Henderson, eighteen-year-old | [student in Central High School and jthe son of wealthy ents, living Jat No. 93 Bleecker Stregt, Newark,| reieased from the State} following his conviction on Oct.| guidance of the institution you probably have} learned now. You must lize by) this time that an auiolat’s rights are | not supreme over those of peres-| trains a the court death of | Magistrate F. X. MeQuade in West Side Police Court Thomas Dono- an- nounced to-day that if Capt West 47th Street Station, now acting as Inspector in charge of the hue of the Third District, does not remove a the 794 Ce uniformed of Michael P- lumbus Avenue by ing he will issue Captain's « | pression, policeman from cafe t No. Browne, to-morrow morn- a warrant for the charge of op- that if Po Head- quarters orders Donohue to keep the |policeman on guard a warrant will be issued for the arrest of Police Commissioner Enright. ’ | Immediately after this announce- |ment Magistrate McQuade ordered | the arrest of Detective Harry Hepner jof the West 68th Street Station on a charge of oppression preferred by, \Harry Sartoris of the Pasadena Hotel, No. 10 West 61st Street A complaint against Sartoris for pos- NEW U.S. RAIDERS | | ; MEL DRY CITY” “Pt Stay Till nl the Town is Thoroughly Dried,” Says Chief Yellowly. The “Flying Squadron” of special ists on Prohibition enforeement under command of E. C. Yellowly, sent here from Washington with orders to dry work told reporters his pu | poxe is to make New York “a model eit in the mat of aleohol, It was evident that Yellowly not less hopeful than other up the went to nd Yellowly town, to-day, was hope ful of sucer the procession of enfoveement xperts who have tackled New York n times-gone by “My agents are out now sizing the situation,” he said. "We ar: ng after all the violators of the big ones and Little ones alike” | During his stay in New York—and ‘jhe says his programme is to stay un til the city is dry—he will be tech nically ranked as assisuunt to Harold I. Hart, b Director of Prohibi tion for New York State But Yel lowly will really be conducting an in dependent campaign, it said, con leentrating on the five boroughs, using |his own methods and his own agents | Hart told reporters he believed the | situation was improving and said he | was ad of the help that Yellowly twill bring him. Ernest S. Lan chief of the fleld division of for the State, who has 150 men also said he thought the | him, better, He of the tion was getting men he o {still lacks s to have The Grand Jury Kiyn yeste y dismissed 44 0 f 78 cases and made it clear that Indictments would not be returne mn evider 4 vtained by anal “ ade without warrant only fourteen wes pend the Brooklyn jury now 1 nw ses are pending in Manhattan Corporatir « O'Brien nt a third warr 1 ( sioner Enright on the sub. Hegal arches and seizure nelud jing witil this paras That there may be ander standing, 1 bes ty a i neither [, nor Jepar h Iam the chief executive, pre- gent, defend or protect any pe of ficial or officer in any act eveding Lor erit . sin stituted f th ane t Fs n to obey che law 8 ed by me in the aforesaid opinion.” M QUADE THREATENS ARREST OF ENRIGHT; HAS DETECTIVE TAKEN IN CUSTODY IN eee Magistrate ‘Gives Aotog Inspector Dono Twenty-four Hours in Which to feneae Policeman From Browne's Cafe. HERE TO MAKE N.Y. o sessing liquor made by Just been dismissed when brought out on the stand detective, without a warrant, forced his way into the rooms of the defendant. A for Hepner’ arrest. was drawn Magistra McQuade signed it detective Hepner haa! it was that the warrant up, and the a, made under © direction when he was Captain of th West 100th Street Station, the polie arrested Browne and seized a quan- tity of beer. The beer proved to be Tegal in that it contained than half of one per cent. of alcohol, and Browne brought civil suit against Donobue for $25,000 damages for arrest. In July less one detectives raided the’ place (Continued on Second Page.) ROCKAWAY HANGAR AND BLIMPS BURN; Report That Gasoline Explo- sion Caused Fire Is Denied | at Station. Within a set for the few hours of the tim Nicht of a blimp from the val Air station at Rockaway Point and the abandonment of that station, | with the transfer of its equipment to Lakehurst, No J the which Werogmi tire, has not been Blimp 1B A-TY the hangar, ‘The origin of ae stroyei H- b refused to loss, but it $100,000. smaller Kite too und the Nay in estimate of the from $50 officers of the will ange n0 to Hel is the smal’! blimp that re rently broke away frou md the station made oa trip up. the funded in We suntry where it iehster | Rep jes that n preceded by a jenied at the the explosion fie had were tation, but at the offices in Man that a Naval Communi hattan it wLOnS. was said LOSS $356,000 had! was taken into custody in the court-! room, greatly to his astonishment. | Browne's place has been raided three times since April, In the first pt. Donohue's | tank aboard Blimp B-6 had exploded causing the tire j The big aa 2 feet long | 8) t high. In} le trip to Lakelmrs nflated. She wa feet in diameter ant iss without girders consisted of Lieut incon 1, Liew a Gs Ti, (Carpenter WAM. They sought safety ir 1th h ime from ster n his apt ua t ‘ f. The ott | T 4 » n fey sald ram 10 ee 1 1 the Navy Det ungar for dirigibles: w «© property scheduled for sule to murrow at auction, O'MALLEY HALTS TESTIMONY INROW AT GRAFT INQUIRY; “CHIREES ERAME-UP BY MILL ey ee Commissioner Quits Stand on Law- yer’s Orders After Hot Wrangle With Wallstein—Denies Graft and Assails Governor and Food Trust. Edward O™Mattey, Commissioner of Public Markets, withdrew from the witness stand before the Meyer committee to<lay by advice ot his lawyer, Halpin, shouted trom the midst of the crowd of spece tators which tilled the AKermanie Chamber. A yelling exchange of personali Mr. Leonard B. Wallstein, examining counsel for the committee, who manded “proper behavior” Mr. Wallstein had appealed to the Chairman to make the Commissioner behave or retire from the stand. Mr. O'Malley had accepted the invitation of the committee to make a statement and submit to questioning under a waiver of immunity ‘re. garding the charges made against himse!f and his office by witnesses in He had entered a general denial of the so-calleu minor charges involving the nayment of vribes and the demand for bribes by subordinates for market permits. He had quoted James Sinnott, secretary and son-in-law to Mayor Hylan; Commissioner of Plant and Svructures Grover Whalen and Ld Luther, an Albany newspaper correspondent, as his authorities for a-claim that Gov. Miller had offered to smother the Meyer committee in exchange for O'Malley’s vote in the State Council of Market Com- missioners for George L. Hogue for State Commissioner. Mr. Wallstein launched into the subject of the charge of yesterday John B. Hibbard, a real estate agent, that he had paid Mr. O'Malley and de- of the witness, had reached the point where s between the last week. made by JQ'Malley three $500 bills as a commission on a real estate deal of the New York Telephone Company which had been consummated after Mr. O'Malley had summoned H. Michel, the owner of the property, a market stand holder, to the Department of Markets office and ques- tioned his right to a market stand which the Michel firm had held sixty- five years. O'Malley Denies ‘etting $1,500 From Hibbard. Mr O'Malley acknowledged he {new John B. Hibbard and William McHars Ry Mr. Wallstein— Did you get $1,500 from him? A. No. No, SIR. Q. Did Mr. Metlarg ask you to assist the telephone company in getting property at No. 108 Vesey Street? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you send to Mr, Michel and advise him to sell the property? A. 1 told him of the Q. Did you get from Michel a written offer to sell rm] $45,000? ALT and called up MeHatg and he came to my office and proposition ot it trom Hibbard got it RAILROAD WORKERS VOTING FOR STRIKE ~ Clerks eported Strongly in entre 2a Did Mr Hibbard tell you what commission he was going to get? A. sir; never mentioned a commis- jon in any manner, shape or for Have you ever ben in the real wd | Q Shop, & Trainmen, Workers Favor of Walk-Out CHICAGO, Aug. 3L—-Members of | & DP! organizations of / he wanted you to talk to Mr \. Me Ss as a business? A, a business. doMr. MoHarg tel you why hels? nd said: large union MeHary ilrowd workers are voting over Ss try whelmingly in favor of a strike The company quire Be or than accepting a cut In wages, (piece of property, and sis man that or it. Mr. Allen with him, or to complete lephone + man had Now, ephone , © would i ut $5,000, So iseless to talk to we him from bim ught would 1s told dant in the aim. know the would know market. to do?” He rom him just The last time and told him re, he sas, 1 safe figure, Jay at large railroad centres, eon nd t hep workers, being taken thes a Hines far Cae tiiread organiaations oF naybe knew Cannon Denies rd Ble: fo) COMME fd 1 1 positive fixed price 1 w ply you knew Ce Well,” 1 said mit an in 1 don't kn us I saw him in the y Recovered will take ulked to him ne detinite 1 said, “L wilh find out from him it Hed dinastyyphe st week, Was re covered fron} ihe wreckage Unis morning. t i