The evening world. Newspaper, November 7, 1921, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1921. ~ WOMEN CRUSHED (German Immigrants Who Arrived “IN JAM OF COURTS. On wid Hansa, the Old Flier Deutschland OVER RENT CASES Crowd of 3,000 Storms One Buildiaz—Attendants Scale Fence to Get in. MANY TRIALS PUT OFF Brooklyn Judges Working Early and Late in Effort to Clear Up Calendar. Litigants and pi spective jurors in Iandlord-tenant ca swaymed to-day Into 1 Brookiyn sever Municipa Courts where jury tr 3 had been ar- The Hansa o he thomba ranged. Asa result the courts we American line, watelr wi open only with t ance of tie Deutschland ne holder police. Reserves v called from tite the trafigatiantic speed record, Clymer Street Station tu restore order {$s tled up at the foot of W at the Third District Municipal Court, 45th Siveet after her first in Lee Avenue, near Clymer Street,! &%¢ as an emigrant ship. where 3,000 persons hod gathered fo brought over thirty-one passengers and 787 in the steer- age, as happy and sturdy a lot of children among them as have come to port for a long tite. CURRAN, IN FINAL the opening of court Thi endar 10 ve were 1,000 cases on the cal Dunne ived early difficulty, who came a little Justices Do: to presid and got into Court wit nd were but the attendants jater, found such a jam about the doors that they could not wedge thetr way in vent through the Ciymer lice tation nm and through rea rd and over a ] fence to get into court. Inside there was scarcely breathing ' 6 } space. One man who had his hat on srotested to the tendants, who or cered to take off, he couldn't raise his hand ty 1 t be- : caure of ihe crus Lists Promises Mayor Failed Justices Doughty and Dunne de . cided to cail tie first 200 cases and to Carry Out—Both Ts put the rest over until later in. the at} “hat, Hatinwas Be HAR CURA WS GG Sides Claim Victory. GERMAN IMMIGRENTS ARRIVE. FOTOGRAM side and on the court steps read the a a ist of those called, informing the Major Henry H. Curran delivered to get a real test in the 9th Assembly home. In the work of sep- the final speech of his campaign at District to-morrow, according to the op- the 200 an their witne: s pone f Edwarl R. Rayh Thess A ak ner SSS moon to-day at a luncheon of the Ponents o Bye ote reer tes Wome Mere uhucked Gown andl ¥ “ Pn of the vere out all over the district making a aL yout K de a ‘oung Republican Club at No. 849 jouse to house canvass and have planned estion on the calendar, it. Broadway. He quoted an editorial /_ dozen meetings to-day, when most of , could not be avoided. The from the New York Globe of Nov. 7, | ‘#2 campalgners are resting up for to- have asked for relief, accord- 4, thevday atten NOV. © morrow's contest vurt attendants, but have not + the day after’ the election Of Rayner was one of two Manhattan eceived it . Mayor Hyla The editorial, which | Republicans who voted for the Miller | sot) Gates Avenue Court, 320 lant~ was headed “Wil We Get These | Rapid Transit bill and the Governor's lord and tenant cases were on ths op , f Guenlie Wheneae ison c Things i read: A bill abolishing the direct primar; . Glove went on the bench. Extra polls: Wu louas taxes ber lower? oth or ane ners wae retuned 8 ion were 2. Will the cost of living be re- nation, but yher, despite many pro- —e to ke commun - duced? tests, was put up for re-election and . 7 “a Tuatice immedi 4. Will our children be better edu- %!#° approved by the Citizens’ Union| Any Found Guilty Befor2 ate ned 400 cases until Dec. % coreg and better provided with Which in nearly every other case maila| — ~ ay a - the next trial week, and an: , 8 f provided with the vote on the traction bill a test of Judge Talley Will Get nounced that he yuld try fifteea schools? a candidate's fitness. ‘¢ * canes a diy in onder to eare for the “4, Will our streets be cleaner?" Rayher not only stood for all of MIL Heavy Penalties. Fe GSausth DiNGice: Lf Will there be less crime and dis- lcr's programme, but he has shown no ——- In Howard Avenue and Madison § r, less flagrant vice? signs of “repentance,” and Is one of Judge Alfred J. Talley in charging 1 cases faced Justice O, 6, Will our death rate be cut down, three city candidates wpo refused to brook, Of these 200 were adjourned our food kept cleaner, our living con- ®nsWer the questionnaire of the League two Grand Jries for the November until Dee. nd the nder will gy of Women Voters. So the women and term of the Court of General Sessions ons more sanitary? he tried this erbrook the Progressives of the west side are announcing Yhat he would plan to sit Will the helpless sick and poor, working as hard ag the Democrats to to-day surprised the jurors and his carly and late tn order to dispose ofthe inmates of prisons and insane getrat him. They declare that in the |Pearers by confining his remarks to L/S asylums be better cared for? Will gth District, rather than In the city at|the subject of election frauds, Hi more widows and orphans be main- jarge, the real “referendum” on home|advised the jurors that when they Her Shoe Used tained at public charge? rule and Miller policies ts betng held. | convene on Thursday to take wp their —— VERY LITTLE BETTING; ODDS REMAIN SAME Will fire destruction be sened, insurance rates lowered “9 Will Death Avenue be abol- ished, and noise and defacement from Riverside Drive, without cost to the routine duties the election will bi been held. Four years ago, said. sixty men were sent to prison for fraudulently counting or miscounting the ballots cast In the Mayoralty he To Bank $5,000; Didn’t Know It leo- | gid city?” b0 Held by One Firm to Lay Cobbler Finds Ik. Te Brent tn Seteren on Hylan at @ to 1. tion and last year, in thia county, the Cobbler dds her reathless y item Major Curran went Y int eco ‘or cel i inds I, Then Breaih F fie) Reports from Wall Street broker | Manner in’ which the count for cer Woman Claims It as H hrough these promises of Mayor axe: holses which: are hand) 1 tain offices was made was 4 scandal F “lain oe Q Hylan and showed that not one of tee ™ ee ae ing elec: snd disarac Husband's Roll them was carried out. In conclusion | {OT Petting to-day state that the | nits year" said the court, “if the son olan’ heal odds remain unchanged. Curran sup- sve RE GRUae eu n elderly woman described as be- | 7° SAT necessity arises and rust it will not, Ree mon % porters, it was claimed, are asking ng Polish, left a pair of shoes to be RE aes nOURD faith in the intellt- | saay of 7 to 1. A bet of $3,500 to $500 1 direct that you put aside all other epaired with Frank Sidelli, cobbler ‘ ge oF ine voters of this city tO was reported by Darnell & Co. This, business and, with all possible dis- it No. 1098 Avenue C, Bayonne, N. J. peek no man can attempt to’ house also reports that It has $100,000 Patch, pass upon any charges made to-day ss em hen and get away with‘. to lay on Hylan at 6 to of violation of the Blection Law, The Sidelli foimd vad in one of Ante An a earst ave through to-| al) betting commissioners agree court will aid you In every manner the shoes. He toss relessly in- Borer: The government of Naw that lay, money has Bese bet on the | possible if you find indictments will to a pile of litter and went on abo ‘01 ity going to be restored to | resu oO! o-morrow's election than 6 é 1 e defendants so n ir-suid went 0 Bee oubliet jon any in their experience. prefer the trial of the defendants s ‘is work, <A little later he came} Th F A Wager Of $5,000, even money, that that speedy justice may be meted out) across the wad again, opened it and) TH anasars of Major Curran's |Hylan would be ‘elected by, 190,000 was to any man or set of men who dures any bay campaign foun u a placed to-day wi ‘red Schum, betting! is found it comprised fifty $100 bills, | C@mpais solid substantiation | oonmissioner of Brooklyn. A few dave attempt to trifle with the votes of for their expectation that the bulk |ago an even money bet was made thal of the votes of the women will be|Hylan would win by 165,000. cast on the coalition side in the en- BLY DID NOT VOTE put the Polish | ‘husiagm and fervor of a great mase Ho shouted and his wife and children came running in, They called the police. A search was made, American citizens."" Judge Talley called attention to ad- by the Board of vertisements Elec tions rks, canvassers and ‘or poil cl About it until just now, after T told|@fd the election officials and clerks tremendously important d duty « nlm had sent the shoes to be re-| Will be getting ready to open the| Mt Bly's opponent in to-morvow's | cry recording the will of t taired. "We will use the bank from | Polling places when it breaks up. —_ [election Mr. John C. Fallon has been | ay expressed by their votes, how on |” Final estimates of the result of the | telling the voters that Mr. Bly voted, Judge Talley condemned po election pug tbe rival eampelgn man- | for the State Enforcement Bill and | ent method of counting the vote agers sticking to the figures they)... 7 ite pantit advocated a system by which the ba SODA POP BARRAGE _duotea ‘at the opening of the cam-|## 'snored the proof tb the contrary eee should be sealed and taken paign. Secretary of State John J, | furnished by the following letter from | Election Night, under police guard, t FOILS HOLD-UP MEN Lyons stit insists that Curran will W. K. Mansfield, record clerk of the|q central place-an armory for ‘in = = {have a majority of 160,000 and John | Assembly |stance, where the ballots would b Delaney, tho Hylan commander in y dear Mr. Bly: I find that you | countea the next day by a corps of c 5 ith Bottles | chief, predicts a Hylan majority of Are recorded in the negative on the | civit service employees aided by Collector Opens Fire: With b ttle | 360,000, a ial i passage of Assembly bills Nos. 961, | fhe eactlition OE nodern acc sat aney Against Pisotls in Store Predictions of victory were made | ii176 and 1205, the so-called Mullan-| ‘The remarks of | Judge Talley Saar 6 to-day both by United States Sena mi seers ce 1 C 1 wide-spread commont among and Save $630, tor William M. Calder, in charge of _W._K. MANSFIELD. politicians who estimated them to 1K ‘lied “it. won't go|the Republican campaign in Brook = lireet criticism of Tammany Hal qhamuel Kurty, yelled "t won't £0 {Vn and John H, Mecooey, the Dem- THIEVES BLOW SAFE wich canon’ him sake eee oft! pened fire 1 soda POP ooratic leader. the strong s f publ pinion hottles against a battery of two re-| The total registration in Brooklyn AND GET $1,000 CASH |), °""')" Dubltcen organtention olvers when hold-up men attempted |is 450,638, of which 292,380 are men whier failed to endorse him ‘alpen Nim Ana ay iGr ey Terr : y and 158,308 women. Une Clothes They Found in Pinc SHABURITRONG Teal RAlAthcLe yer store at No. 58 Harrison Strect a enAchines (ra. to he. eed) An for Padding Explostye 3 West 112th Street, ang Char Helle N. Jy to enh ‘ Rrooklyn. At the Board of Elections ne | Robinson of No, 470 West 144th Stre elleville, N. J, to-day os | cy 1 Burglars entered the office of the : ‘One of the men sent a bullet ;9mMfices in Brooklyn 2,000 poll clorks were designated foremen o through Kurz’s left wrist and another , S°7® sworn in to-day to assist tho: tomobile v station of 8 He) Grand Juries. eaaaed bis hip. but they failed to get |aiready appointed Gassaway, No. 106 West 63d Str ——— either the $30 which Mrs. Terreri had ant is last night, collected all the overalls High Army Officers Retorn, just handed Kurtz or the $600 which REFERENDUM IN 9TH and other clothing they could find in| Major Gen Charles Bailey, Command <urtz had in his pocket and which ‘ i y SY a Carpe Area: Bri Ore es oa We the peconh Hella! ON MILLER POLICIES the locker room and in the closet usea | °" Of the Third Compe Areas The hold men left after a strug- — Dy the office manager, C. N, Bollings, | James Kerr Ene AG) uta gle, disappearing a car which @ Rayber, Who for Miller and his Secre 'y, Miss L. A. Hart | st ff, ene « whore Donaldson ‘ ae Mra man had driven up to the door! yyaive pute, Again Candidate 284, weed it for padding explosives poem mnaking a tour of Hngland, Franc of the store. ‘ hae with which they blew the safe to} jnq"peigium and also vislted the troops Kurtz was collecting for his father, | for Assembly. pieces on the Rhine arrived home to-day on vt the firm of Jacob Kurz & Son, ; They took all the cash, amounting | the Finland. They were present at the Viiciesaie grocers, No. 209 Bruce| ‘The “short memory” of New York, on to about $1,000, but left behind several | burial of the unknown American soldier vtveet, Newark, | which politictans have always relied, is packages of checks and securities, in France, . in 5 ; 4 meeting of women addressed by the FOR STATE DRY BILL woman was not found until, » full naiaste tor Mayor and. aie. caso. other election officials because of in- hour later, she came running In| ctates on the ticket at Cooper Union| Asgemblymgn Submits Proof to/ability to obtain responsible persons breathlessly and crying for her money, | last night, It was one of the beét| petnie Mopenéwt'a Pee ieh GEAvOrgInANe GRADRBIN TOE THB When Sidelli told her he had found| meetings of the campaign eNO RUeR ERY e ueres: saa a ; ret snc il ui Hrenn'| f : Mayor Hylan will stretch his cam-| The newspapers in March, 1921, | Tesular political organizations, krom the $5,000 and sa it for her she paign right up to the ultimate limit ‘ 5 5 . - of /this it would appear, he said, that the DE IaCTA ain e qeneet ‘ named Assemblyman James FP Bly of praised him for being honest and gave| He will address meetings to-night | ; lees ; ‘ ba sled fiterally to him @ $10 bill on Washington Heights, in the Bronx | ‘he 11th Assembly Dietrict, Brooklyn. |city has been compelled lithra “My man is always afraid of bur-| 8d in Brooklyn, ‘The Brooklyn meet- |S having voted for the M g0 out into the highways | glare” sho said. “He packed his| {9 at Somers Hall, No. 126 Rockaway Gage or State Prohibition bill to pick up in any manner it can per- Mines in my shoe and [didn't know | Avenue, le rcheduled for midnigi was an error sons who are charged by law with the UNTERMYERFINDS HYLAN LONG BLIND ToC. FARE FIGHT Minute Intervention in Chicago's Appeal Held Up As Evidence. M or Hylan's announcement that | rporation Chansel O'firien went to | Washington last n | i to try to pre-| ent before the United States Supreme Court to-day an argument in behalf of | the City of New York in the matter of | No appeal by the city of Chicago yeainst # stroot railway fare imerensy ordered py the Minois Public Unitities Commission, fucnished Samuel Unte yer with material thing ar- ent of the Mayor and his ac at the Young Republican Chily luncheon this afternoon. Mr Untermyer said “In his forma! statement Mayor Hylan furnishes against himself the most amazing and conclusive proof of the charges that have been made against him of the utter incompetency tnd gross neglect of his administra- tion in dealing with the traction ques- it is the strongest confirmation to be had of everything that has been said in favor of taking the defence of the 5-cent fare ont of his hands. “It appears that the Public Uttity Commission of Illinois increased fares from 6 cents to 10 cents; that the city of Chicago assailed the constitution- ality of that law; that it has been heid constitutional by the state courts and that an appeal has long been pending in the United States Supreme by the city of Chicago, which is to be argued to-day “The Mnyor says the legal questions raised in that ¢ re similar to those appertaining our city. He then ells us in the most unconscious and unconcerned manner, as, though jad made a great discovery, instead of which he is convicting himself, that the lawyers for the traction companies in this city have known all about the appeal and have subg mitted a brief to the Supreme Court, his Corporation Counsel did not hear about the case until yesterday. “If the Supreme Court once de- cides those questions against the City | of Chicago, us the State Courts of Illinois have already done, it will be a binding preeadent upon the City of New York when it attempts to con- test the constitutionality of the pres- | ent transit commission plan, if what the Mayor tells us about the simi- | ity of the two cases is true, which Court to he whilst for the sake of the city I hope tt ts not “These triefs have doubtless been | on file in Washington for weeks. Yet all this time the city has slept in blixsful ignorance of what has been going on, Now it awakens when It is too late to do anything beyond ask- | the grace of the court to file a brief | which the court may or may not per- | mit if the cases are to be argued this morning “Must we endure that sort of rep- resentation for ever? Is It any won- | jer that nothing has been done to stop the cancellation of the free transfers? “The announcement made by the Mayor which was ignorantly intended jto be a tribute to his own watchful- | nessa is about the most iliuminating | vidence one could want of the hope- | less inefficiency of his administra- tion and fully explains the sad pass | to which we have come in this transit | situation, MELLON-MORGAN. PLOT IS CHARGED | | | Sen. Watson Assails Secretary of Treasury and Urges Debt Ultimatum to Britain. Asserting that of the |Treasury Mellon in the Cabinet the great international bank- x interests of the country. Senator Watson, Democrat, Georgia, charged that the Treasury Secretary wanted to have full contro! of the fundjng of foreign debt “and thus put the |bonds in the hands of J, P. Morgan & Co.” | Now balling a spade a pade. Rete United | money Secretary represented he added ) statements that the collect the) a Senator ring States could not the Georg the United States could tel Britain unless she paid Ambassador would be ve home and the United States | ull its Ambassador he sa ould sh shame | said Great the debt ned would re area quired world,” ne be re of the Se 343,000 JOBLESS IN CITY. More Than 13 Per Cent, ef Work- ers Idle, Says Committee, New York City’s Jobless are estimated o number 349,000, or 13.5 per cent. of 2,531,747 persons engaged in gainful occupations, according to the 1920 cen- sua, Says a report of the New York City Committee on Unemployment Statistics, made public yesterday. | The largest percentage of unemploy- ment exists in the “transportation” |kroup, which comprises employees of | railroads, city transit lines, steamship und telephone and telegraph compantes. The mittee estimates that 63,000 of such employees are out of work. In r general groups the percentage of mployment + turing and mec clerical and trade, 9; domestic and per sonal service, 9; professional service, 16; puble service, 1 mgs Horne mt e report says ullding: are exceptiondily’ busy. f Fingerprints of Da Vinci Figure In $500,000 Suit Over Painting ‘This “Portrait of La Belle Fervoniere,” clalmed to be the work of Leonardo da Vinci, is the subject’ of a $500,000 sult filed against Sir Joseph Duveen, London and New York art dealer, by Mme. Andree Hahn, wife of an American army Captain, It is charged Sir Joseph declared the picture was not a genuine Da Vinci, Mme. Hahn's attor- ney declares he will prove by fingerprints made on the picture by the artist that the work is genuine. BLOW-UP ON LAUNCH; MAN JUMPS IN WATER FINDS HUSBAND KILLED BY EIGHT-STORY PLUNGE e500 NGENS STOLEN FROM SAFE IN WOMAN'S HOME Welfare Worker's Apartment Mysteriously Robbed, Thieves Overlook Part of Jewelry | | NO FINGERPRINTS LEF?. Detectives at a Loss to Under stand How Burglars Opened Door of Safe. Detectives concealed until to-day & report of the mysterious theft a |week ugo of mone than $25,000 worth 4 of jewelry from Miss Marie Forrest j of No. 540 Manhattan Avenue, a child | welfare worker, form of Detroit 2 Miss Forrest. went to dinner witht : friends Sunday a week ago, and when she returned home placed some of thy 5 jewelry she had worn in the wall safe 4 in her dining room. She took from {t about $8,000 worth of jewelry to wear next day and hid It In a case In her boudotr, | When she went to the safe Monday night the door fell off in‘her hands |All the jewelry was gone, but valu- able papers were intact, The other Jewelry in her room was unmolested. Detectives could not find how the | safe had been opened, but !t appeared to have been the work of experts. No fingerprints were found. The mi: ing jewelry, ten pleces, all presented to Miss Forrest several years ago, in- cluded a dinmond lavalifere valued at $7,500, a string of pearls valued at 60, a platinum bar pin, $5,000; a three-stone diamond-sapphire ring, $2,500; a solitaire diamond rinj $2,250; a flexible platinum and dla- mond bracelet, $2,500, and four pinkie ‘d $3,500. . Forrest has made many ac- quaintances in her welfare work, 5 “Shipper” Burned About the Face Wife Discovers Body of Clerk some of whom she knows little about, y and Body. of Work and Worried. She has been making the rounds of John Johnson, thirty-five, No. 142) Raymond Griffin, thirty years old, who|Pawnshops with detectives in search, Lake Avenue, Mariner's Harbor, Staten | lived with his wife, Viola, and their two-|of the jewels, all of which, she says, Island, narrowly escaped death this year-old son on the eighth floor of the/are so marked identification will be morning. A 30-foot launch which ‘ic apartment house at No, 123 Waverley | easy, even though the stones are re- Was operating in Staten Island sound . way Instantly killed this morning | moved from the settings. cuugat fire from an explosion of its | by failing. ‘om the bath room window | = , engine and forced him, after he was| to the court eS | e ences” Wite is ld the police he burned about the face and arma, to ait Wie told the police he wot up| ced for Family's Sake. jump into the water: and swim to the}a whi She fell asleep and wakened| Hyman Popinsky was sentenced to shore at Port Richmond to save hin-| and. not weelng him looked oul the | serve from six months to three years | 2 \“UHmn, who aerved In the navy during |in the penitentiary by Judge ‘Talley tn Johnson waa on his way to Bayonns| ing the war, was a clerk out of ork the Court of General Sessions t jay for to ferry fifteen men who are employed | and h ud worried greatly. The police say ng. atolen foods nape op at 1 Whe launal it would have been impossible for hi wciford Stree! wife, ‘ on Staten Island. The launch was do-|{h Nave fallen by aceldent, as the wine | escaped with & suspended sentence bes stroyed. dow sill Is five feet above the floor. cause she had seven children, The Store will be CLOSED ALL DAY TO-MORROW o jiciti Ty + 9, ry ” Improve the occasion by visiting “America’s Making Exposition, at the 7ist Regiment Armory | MADISON AVENUE-FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street | Beginning on Wed in of fine quality; in plain colors and 5, 12 and 15 feet 4 For Chenille Carpe ing of such excell te tS securing rare value nesday the Rug Department, on the Fifth Floor 5,000 Square Yards of Scotch Chenille Carpeting will be offered at $9.00 per square yard ° (War Revenue tax additional) an unusual opportunity for in widths of ence, this price _

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