The evening world. Newspaper, November 29, 1921, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ARS. RAGIN SHOT MANINSTRUGGLE TO SAVE OWN LIFE ? +? aT aaa ~ Such Is the Contention of Her , Lawyers Who Open Case for the Defense. “Whe defense of Mra, Josephine Ra- gone, on trial for the killing of Frank Jucalano before Judre Crain in the Gourt of General Sessions, was begun t6-day. The usual motions for the Aisimiveal of the case were made, and fenied by the court. Her attorney, Newman Levy, in his opening sald Mrs. Ragone had been forced to kill lifealano In self defense. He stated Niealano endeavored to kill her and in the struggic she obtained the re- volver and he was shot. Don Daquino, of No, 96 Bay 1%th Street; Bensonhurst, swore that on Oot. 18, 1920, the day before the kill- in, he saw Mrs. Ragone and Icun- | lano and heard her say, “Leave me alone; leave me in peace.” The man replied with an oath and told her to shut up. On the morning of the misting he says he saw them again, He had one tand on her coat and was shaking his her face, He anys whe heard “If you don't do what | want, I wil kiN you a sheep.” He says he passed on and later re- turned in time fo hear him say “Do what I want right away.” The killing happened at 105th Street ‘4nd Second Avenue, When near 110th Street he says he heard three or four shots und thought they were the ackfire of an automo! and con- Waned on his way RUSSIANS CONFER WITH BIG POWERS | justice FORD UPHELD Soviet Mission Meets Americans, English, French and Ger- mans in Berlin. BPRLIN, Nov. 29.—A Soviet mis- fering with American, English, French and German diplomats here | regarding international co-operation for the reconstruction of Russia. President of the Aaty of Soviet Foreign Chicherin, “and Prof. chief of ‘the technical Berlin. -The Soviet envoys were sent to sound out the opinion of the major 44 countries of the world on the present of Russia and geek the best f reconciling the Soviets with the rest of the world, it was under mission to ‘The Stinnes plan for reconstructing | Russia is belleved to be tayored. Pissdt dl oBic BRITAIN’S ZIONIST POLICY CRITICISED| Places an Embargo on Jewish Immigration, Dr. Weiz- man Contends, LONDON, Nov. 28. (Jewish Tele- graphic Agency)—Dr, Chaim Wels- mua, President of the World Zionist Organization, declared at a mass Meeting here to-day that the Zionist < attitude toward the British Admin tration in Palestine was becoming ii creasingly negative, becauso of the limited interpretation the latter placed upon the Balfour declaration, and eause of the practical embargo no existing on Jewish immigration to the homeland. ‘ Dr. Weizman declared he was satis- fied that the officials charged with the folfiilment of the provisions in the Palestine mandate, now shared the Zionist view that the present Pales- tine administration should be replaced, Os TAYLOR ELECTED CAPTAIN OF N. Y. U. ELEVEN Balentine Appotntea Manager—18 Men Get Letters, At a meeting of the New York Uni- Yersity football team to-day Buck Taylor waa elected to captain the 1922 team, and Balentine elected manager. Taylor played end on this ®eason's eleven and showed to good advantage in all the games, ‘The Athletic Council also met and gave the followin, ne aeons men their letters: therdon, Berga- Macomber, | “Adele Boufort Giuney, Hobn. Hy ‘Berkwit, Fehres, Horrigan, BES Aduins, Taylor and Rosenberg. pes tte re Hla MILK STRIKERS HALED TO COURT. | Four striking milk wagon drivers ap- peared in the West Side Court on charges of unlawfully withholding route | Books of tho Clover Farms Dairy Com: by which they formerly were em- | ea. The men were John Dever, No. tf Weet, 129th Street, Morris Kaso- RS ROGANE. KA IN TWO DECISIONS Imonsly Re+ Division. Supreme sustained and the Appellate Division of sion 1s understood to have been con. | the Supreme Court, First Department, has been reversed in a decision handed down by the Court of Appeals in the case of the Butterick Publishing Com- ‘The Russian Envoys are Rykow,| ing patterns other than those published Supreme Council | by the plaintiff, ‘The Appellats Division Economie Board, Karachan, Secro-| reversed Justice Ford unanimously and in the State unan- the Appellate ¢ Justice Ford granted tore Grit of mandanua direc court reversed M peremptory, wri 00, to properly audited. in the prone, fey, the d_ not tice Ford ordered the claim paid, |qauntioe fae Division decision decided dmously, fast the ruling, but it infeusly upheld by the jour" ‘of Appeals, i Mother of Three Who Insists She sho ria ies in Self- Defense 1DA AND MILLIE SPINSTER, 52, LEAPS Fast Impact ef Body, 5.16 o'clock this morning by of the one-story store at No. 8th Street, adjoining of No. 820 Lexington Avenue. Di-| roof of the fiv She profeased to be unable to 5¢ cents were found there, years in the boarding house Joseph Quigley. last night, FROM ROOF; WILL DIE. Side Tenants Arouned by ‘Tenants in the five-story tenement house at the northwest corner of Third Avenue and 66th Street were aroused at fotiowed by cries and moans of « woman, <A policeman found on the roof She had jumped or fallen from tie ory building. Feigen took her to Flower Hospital. 2 | Her Injuries probably will prove fatal. popes Craig to pay a claim of 1aaP fe fe Wells & Newton Com- po ny of New Pee tee installing, heat ing and Rede hi Evander Childs Hi The Comptroller "Gotused claim ‘on the ground that it she got to the roof of the tenement. Her coat and her purse containing Miss Trondlo had lved for many Bhe left there, ac- cording to Mrs. Quigley, at § o'clock THE EVENING WORLD, | Je 9.30. @ crash 99 East the ténement, Migs Marie Trondle, fifty-two yeans old, Dr ten how of Mrs, Re. SHOES FOR THE KIDDIES Little shoes which cor- rectly guide growing feet. Presented in many styles following the delightful fancy of I. Miller. For girle of all ages, and for little men up to size two, THE MILLERKINS SHOPS . Filth Avenue ot 46th 81, 15 West 42nd Street BROOKLYN SHOP 498 Fulton Street Corner of Bond ae = P= Fiz is best interpreted by those things which have practical uses. Furniture affords a highly acceptable form of holiday remem- brance—and Flint Quality Furniture as 9 standard of value, provides a ready solu- tion of “what to buy.” Flint ¢ Horner @ im 20-26 west 36" se. “Convenenti~tos: Pith Aveanee™ a 44 = = ———- ae ‘RECORD HIGH TIDE IMPEDES JERSEY inimiijienlen Water Fills Runways to Slins and Washes Over Battery Ferry service between New York and New Jersey was seriously im- peded this morning by the highest tide of which the Dock Department has any record. The water filled the runways to the slips and slopped up over the battery sea wall. y some of the ferry houses were awash, At its height the tide was reported seven feet above mean low water and| He separated me from my girl and 2.76 feet above normal high tide by the markings at Pier A. The cause, according to the Weather Bureau, was due to @ combination of circum- stances. There was a high Northeast wind combined with a slow moving storm.and an increasingly low area of barometric pressure, To this was ad- ded the effect of tne new moon which rose at 647 A. M. Of the ferry services that of the Erle was the most severely effected. Vehicular traffic was abandoned and most of the passengers were forced to take to the tube because of the conditions on the Jersey side. ‘The Lackawanna, which has double deck boats, used the upper runw to load passengers. and West Shore Ferries also reported unfavorable conditions from 7.80 to The Weather Bureau says the ab- normal conditions may continue for two or three days. 29, 1921. killed in a crowd at the corner of Ludiow and Stanton Streets. The police have been unable to find any witnesses of the shooting, although scores saw it, and the murderer es- caped. Fuchs is said by the police to have been a dealek in narcotic drugs. STORMS OFF CAPE COD AND OVER GREAT LAKES TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, “LIED TOMY GIRL AND | KILLED HIM,” SLAYER EXPLAINS aiatpoalpetils Prisoner Blames Dead Mer- chant, Once His Boss, for Breaking Up Romance. FERRY SERVICE Local Disturbance Wit iat Over by . ToMorrow Me: WASHINGTON, Nov. pie eee of great intensity, one south of Cape Cod and the other over Lake Superior, were reported to-day by the Weather Bureau. . ‘ The Cape Cod disturbance ts attended by giles, rain and snow in New Eng- land, the Middie Atlantic States, North Carolina and the Ohio valley. It will be over to-morrow morning. The Lake Superior storm is sweep- ing eastward toward the St. Lawrence and should do little damage in this country, the bureau said. Sea Wall. Willtam Ginsberg, thirty-four, of Lakewood, N. J., was arraigned in Essex Market Police Court to-day charged with homicide and held with- out bail to await the action of the Grand Jury. He shot and killed Sam- uel Lavbin last night in Lubin’s store at No. 146 Forsyth Street. “Yes, I killed him,” said Ginsberg. In New RICCI MADE AN LL. D. ALBANY, Nov. 29.—The University of the State of New York conferred the honorary degree of LL. D. upon Vittorio Roland Ricci, Italian Ambassador to the United States, at the Education Building last night. A feature of the ex- was the presentation of a bust kept me from being married, “I was engaged to Anna Rosenthal who lives at No. 804 South Third | ercises Street, Brooklyn. I used to work for |. te te the State Library ass gift] ACCUS POLITICIAN OF STHA of the ftatian renidents Ibany. A #025 PAID FOR WHISKEY. Rica y cov Gov. ier’ at the Mneoulive Frank Higgins, Democratic captain of Mansion, the Sixteenth Assembly District, wae to-day held in $1,000 bail on a charge pala sek TROLLEY FRANCHISE /gifctit aria chit 1 {Rie WINS IN DES MOINES amination Dec, 13. Marcy I. Minden. a cigar manufacturer, alleges that al $935 for whiskey an ‘ha fled to deliver the goods, Eight-Cent Fare, No Busses, Peo-| ple’s Desire. DES MOINES, Ia., Nov. 29—‘Street ears at any price.” was shown to be tho 2 to 1 sentiment of Des Moines in Mon- day's trolley franchise election. ‘The proposed franchise was approved by @ vote of 16,884 to 8,776. ‘The franchise drawn up by the strect car owners provides for an 8-cent fare and elimination of busses from car line streets. —_——s—— BANDITS HOLD UP BUS; FLEE WITH IT AND $55 ‘William Presby, driver of a jitney bus between Woodcliff and Weehawken, N. J. was held up by two armed and masked men last night at Palisade Avenue and S4th Street, Woodcliff. They took] g about $35 from his cash box and $10 from his pocket and drove off in his Inachine, whic wa later found aban- doned at 20th, Street and Broadway, West New ¥ Presby lives at No, 320 Main Street, Union Hill. Lubin and ho was sore at me, He wrote Hes to the girl and she broke off the engagement. I tried to get him to tell her he had Med about me and he refused. Last night I got a gun and went to his store and shot him.” There were no witnesses to the murder, Lubin’s wife and three chil- dren were in their home upstairs and did not hear the shot. Ginsherg went to the Clinton Street Station and gave himself up. Detectives found Lubin‘s body in the store and notified his wife. At about the time Lubin was shot Charles Fuchs, twenty-seven, of No. 895 East 102d Street,» was shot and « $35 NORMANDIE, BOLIVIA, SILK ys The Pennylvania <>. oQ@e NE Ny The Piano Record is a pecial 475 FUR TRIMMED COATS —LARGE, LUXURIOUS COLLARS OF GENUINE FUR IN GARMENT CO. 307 Fifth ue Near 31st Suroet JUST THE THING FOR THE KIDDIE He Is built solid with stee! (rame ort enforced at base, WA) Worth at bine ae tach tail and 30° tnches ; ond. with a fine Least $65! Cat ot ncaa plas and cat sed up in avy studded ‘aiher collar. Send $5.00. and we will mail you the animal prepaid. Money re funded If not satisfactory. Tip Top Toy Compan: jos, G. Kaempter, Prop 115 East 18th Stree Dept. 2. Now York City SEAL PLUSH, SUEDE VELOUR to all | Stenographers: | and Typists | HE Oliver Typewriter, has changed its key- board and you are cordi- | ally invited to the first | public demonstration of | this NEW COMMERCIAL... KEYBOARD to be held at 310 Broadway ALL THIS WEEK 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Critical Test Attractive souvenirs free O reproduce the music of a piano is one of the severest tasks you can put toa phonograph. The result is usually decidedly tinkly and weak and reminds you of the nursery and the children’s one octave toy piano. That is why we advise you to insist on hearing a piano record, as well as others, before you buy. S ——— ———- ENS Eris the children x healthy and rebar is the ai oth: Good ‘wholesome food is the most important means to this end and yet many ‘THE ee OF QUALITY Onor, We CLEAR AS A BELL hers who plan the °, ‘ing din The Highest Class Talking Machine : pers seem to forget thet . ‘ast—coming as it in the World ‘ r, a welcomes this test because it fully reveals the superior is perhaps the most im- ity of the Sonora, which renders ALL VOCAL AND portant meal of all, INSTRUMENTAL eelections with matchless beauty and faithfulness. Playing ALL MAKES of disc records perfectly without extra attachments, Sonora YN has a magnificent tone which is 80 clear, lovely and @ hurri fried ora expressive that you visualize the artist, who actually oup of coffee. hie a ses seems to be in the room. is frequently Sauee ‘i Meee tases ca under-weight and mal- chouen ty thaed who dacntod the bet, and that for cacsllones ore t im children. ef tone and design, and for important and exclusive features of What then is an ideal construction it is unrivaled, 6 breakfast for a child? A wuperb pasts of upright and Period models Ex, in ‘ion fall iscsi us that a child's breakfast Prices $50 to $1200 Genera te Heensed and operates under BASIC PATENTS of the * phonograph industry SONORA PHONOGRAPH CO., Inc George E. Brightson, President Fifth Avenue at 53rd Street 279 Broadw DEALERS EVERYWHERE should first of all be built around a good full dish of ening Satval ach as (Hornby's Oatm Mary S. Rose in her boo! “Feeding the Family” says: “A werm cooked cores! should always be the staple with fresh, stewed or baked fruit and milk or cocoa to drink, in both the winter and the te iden, ‘ it every cae (ay nies goes peace to all stenographers and typists. ‘ THE OLIVER TYPEWRITER COMPANY New York the childish muscles gain their strength —it is tht H-O that puts the nay glow of health into chubby cheeks and helps to keep it there. Watch the children's breakfasts. Make sure that they get the dai ated the mysterious Feond in very qualiti fie a ae na Way To Serve H-O Top off a dish of H-O with « spoonful of ht red currant, apple, or other jelly which you may have on head, paeetilad tiny Secale Elecite Heating Pax $10.00 te itd Bec 9 bit of color is a te children, giving them ' entirely new interest im their H-O cereal. with our Depart- iedNotitice Gorton helpful ine which we Ftblish from time to time. Send your request to H-O Child Nutrition Depariment 49 The H-O Cereal Co., Inc. eae BUFFALO, N. Y. Bemitectunted tea A mated read Whee Pols” ore it F Brecsee Killlt Quick!) To-Morrow May Be Too Lai See Creoles Ad. on Page

Other pages from this issue: