The evening world. Newspaper, April 17, 1922, Page 3

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eS comy ~ RECORD THRONGS |SOME WELL KNOWN PERSONS WHO WERE IN THE EASTER PARADE ON FIFTH N GREATEST OF EASTERPARADE Fashion and Flappers Mingle in Promenades in Many Parts of the City. GUARDS AT CHURCHES. Bright Colors Beneath Bright Skies and Never So Many Flowers. Veteran policemen and others who ought to know said to-day that yes- terday was New York's biggest East- er. It would not be accurate to say “Easter parade’ as there were par- ades in many sections of the city this year, the first Easter since 1919 that it did not rain. Chauncey M. Depew sald there has not been a loviier East- er within his memory. Of course the big show was in Fifth Avenue, and a feature wherever pa- peared the flapper, « ture of vivacity and color, There were parades in Riverside Drive, Park Avenue, upper Broad- way, 125th Street, 181st street, Grand Street and Schiff Parkway, as De- lancey Street is now called, And in Harlem's, Little Africa the Negroes had a parade all their own. sually cast side paraders are re- splendent with diamonds, but few were displ this year, due, it was explained, to holdups, There was a profusion of flowers No one remembers seeing so many flowers before. And the number of ibeit there was a noticeable absence of blond rivate detectives guarded the en- trances to virtually every large church in Manhattan Two thousand were turned away from the 11 o'clock mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral, At St. Thomas's the passing in and out was practically continuous, with large groups sitting contentedly on the steps in the sun. Mrs. Jay Gould, tn @ close-fitting turban and costume of black satin with her daughters Anna and Helen, in quaint ruffled coats and rose trimmed poke bonnets, were among the worshippers here. Also were ex-Senator William A. Clark with Chauncey M. Depew, his wife and son, Mr. and Mrs. William Yahnestock, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam M. Douglas, Miss Ruth V. Twombly and Miss Joan Whitney in an embroidered cape trimmed with black caracul: Mrs. J. P. Morgan, Mr. and Mrs, Irv- ing Brokaw, Miss Barbara Brokaw, Mr. and Mrs, William Goadby Loew, Mrs. William Loew Rice, Mrs. Burke Prince Maximillian Hohenlohe and Miss Virginia De Haven. The Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church displayed a sign: “Church Filled to Capacity,"" and at the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church ushers were obliged to ask that no one else enter. St. Bartholomew's, the altar beutiful with banks of | had people stand- ing in the side aisles at 11 o'clock ser- vice. Mf. and Mrs. William Osgood Field, Mrs. Wilber A. Bloodgood, Miss Rosalie Bloodgood and Miss Josephine Osborn worshipped ther Dlink Alle Same Like Mule Kick Traps Chinese raders ay radiant ci pretty was staggerin, Vith Chop Suey Waiter Charged Serving Detectives With Medicine.” ng Sah of No. 12. Division in a chop suey res- Sixth Avenue, chat tra with 1 © » Levine West ide Court to-day. De Lamordee and Farley said isked for whiskey with thelr ey last night have £ replied Leong Sah. bout Yok Jow “What's Yok dow?" asked Farloy “China medicine," replied — the waiter. ‘Velly good. Custlomer all ay: ‘Kick all same mule!" Iivring on your Yok Jow," said Lamordee. When it came they poured it in a bottle and took it te chem- ist, who, they said, told them it had 48 per cent. alcohol. Leong Sah had forgotten all his English when he reached court. A friend, who is reporter for a Chine: newspaper, interpreted for him to the effect that he misunderstood the de- tectives to say they were sick and gave them a dose out of a bottle of medicine owned by one of the waiters The reporter-interpreter also ex plaincd that Yok Jow, otherwise knewn as rice wine, is imported from Tien-Tsin, and was very popular with the Chinese delegates to the Arms Conference at Washington and their guests, The detectives say the traffic in Yok Jow at 0 a bottle has ser ously affected equilibrium of night life in the Tenderloin and they were ordered to suppress it . Leong Sah was held for sions in $1,000 bail CONVICTS IN 322 JAILS OPPOSE DRY LAW REPEAL ial se WASHINGTON, April 17,—Out of fotal of 154,321 votes cast by in 322 jails, only favored the prohibit nendmeyt 2 Didding, Pre nt of the Prisone Relief So anced to-day The vo he sugge of a Se Aion, ‘HAS KILLED HIMSELF THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1922." AVENUE GNNOR SOT HEE Sas. |FAceo PERSECUTION So Says Sister-inLaw, Who Also Was Ordered From Ireland. Mrs. Michael Connor, sister-in-law of Patrick Connor, former member of the Irish Republican Army, who" is in Reconstruction Hospital, recovering from four bullet wounds inflicted upon him by an as yet unidentifned man at 84th Street and Central Park West, sald to-day that she and Confor’s parents had left Ireland owing to per- secution by the Black and Tans, a former British constabulary in Ire~ land. It had been intimated that Connor, at one time a sergeant in the Repub- lican Army, may have given infortaa- tion to the British authorities while he was a military prisoner of theirs and has been made to pay a price which came near being his life. Am Associated Press despatch from Corls, 7 . : IROINIA where Connor lived, indicated that RS CRIS REE MER : ; Oa een, he may have been regarded as @ Woman Evangelist Says Her Faith iho : > Ba ONS inecisten's rees fortis cant In Prohibition Is Incomplete |WOPK ON 1f 000 ners tone And Doesn't Oppose Cigarettes (OW RENT HOMES have been ordered to leave Ireland af- ter this shooting, which followed a raid on a farmer's house. Several young Irishmen were captured at that time and told by their captors to run for their lives. Then came the volley which killed the four “It Js true that my brother-in-law was a prisoner of the British,’ Mrs. Michael Connor said to-day at her home, No. 483 Columbus Avenue, ‘but as for his having given them any secret information, we know nothing of that. We really know very little of his activities on the other side.’* “Were Connor and his parents com- pelled to leave Ireland?" the reporter usked her, “I don’t know anything about that. He came to this country alone, I came over with his parents and my, baby.” * Estimate for Year Fixes Receipts Near Million, Almost Equal- ling County Expense. Mortgage tax collections in the Bronx Register's Office, for the first qua r of 1922 show a phenomenal increase over any quarter since the members of his family are said to Pastor of English Church, Arriving Here With “Six Messages,’ Admires Flapper STARTSIN SUMMER and Says “Let ’Em Dance.” Here's an evangelist come to town — —— Who will have to be attended to for Other Insurance Companies three reasons: are . . First, her faith in Prohibition as a ae hy ire oe uild Apartments. = establishment of Bronx County. According to Register Polak, fees for the current quarter in this depart- ment show an increase of 500 per cent. over the corresponding period of 1921, when the fees amounted to $38,- 997.30. The amount collected during the first quarter of this year and de- posited with the City Chamberlain, is social panacea is incomplete Second, she has no strong convic- tion against cigarett for women. Third, she admires flappers. She is Miss A. Maude Royden, sis- Before the summer has passed there will be at least 500 low rent " “Were you compelled to leave?"’ ter of Sir Thomas Royden and pastor apartniert buildings under construe- MRS peeihat H AT Bis bd SM Pie es tee we igen account of the of the Guild House Congregatignal tion by insurance companies or by Cees debtedness amounting to $41,531,000. | Lo secution of the Black and Tans. CHiurch in Eccleston Square, London. groups who will obtain their financial] PAE ™ . The receipts of the General Admin-|We have absolutely no knowledge And she arrives on the Celtic ghis : support from these companies, Sam- FOYLETA ~ A F istration Department also show an in- uel Untermyer, chief counsel of the) “ES CAUGHTER & Lockwood Committee, said yesterday. mborning to go to Hot Springs, Ark., and deliver “six messages to the American people’ through the me- dium of tlie Young Women's Christian Association, which is about to hold a gonvention there. There is 1 little catechism that the ship news reporters nowadays put to most visitors from foreign iands, and it starts with Prohibition. This is how Miss Royden stood the test: Q. Now, about Prohibition? A, I am attracted to it as you have it in America. (She had been in America about ten minutes.) But I don’t feel that it would be a good thing for ngland just at present. We are not dy for it, In general, I think it better to get people to be vod volun- why Patrick was shot nor by whom. He alone can clear, up that mystery. He claims he doesn't know who shot him. “Do you think he knows and is afraid to tell. “I do not. ur only, hope is that they don’t bother us. *‘Whom do you mean by ‘they’?” “Anyone. We had enough trouble on the other side.’’ At the hospital to-day it was said that Connor's condition continues to improve. Ever since he was taken there last Friday evening a detectivo has been on duty at his bedside in an effort to obtain some information as to his assailant. One of the bullets went through Connor's jaw and, to crease of 69 per cent. over last year © pre THOMPSON | nd amount to $35,671.60. Papers re- é corded were 7,628, an increase of 66 ee eee tener eurade per cent. Chattel mortgages filed airustiondof law feau apartmentael Atlantic City’s Easter Parade show an increase of 490; there were ar 2 6,698 instruments. isepect there wil ba bo or ae oleae Satisfaction of mortgages recorded, Me oyeEe ates Untaraveriad di ¢Bront t Ski Is L H an indication of the healthy tone of present indications there ought to be or on r By Ong on ose, real estate conditions in Bronx not less than this number, which will A p € stand Petes Teer of 60 per provide new and comfortable accom- cent. ina 4 + modations for 16,000 families, any nie ers In rong Register Polak believes this favor- “All of the buildings will be of able condition in real estate is likely about the same eize, containing thir- a to continue through the years. t¢ he ty-two apartments to the structure. ‘“ * is correct, e fees of is office There will be some variations rom] Names on Knees, Painted White Leather] approximate $1,000,000 for the year, the first unit of fifty for which the ° aa ° A The sum allowed by the Board of Metropolitan Life is now providing, Suit, Vivid Blue Stockings and Live Rab- Estimate for Bronx County for 1922, as there are three different plans in re é including all Bronx County offices, | relieve him of the necessity for verbal ree ee Nee era ge aerate v bits Feature Boardwalk Promenade. National Guard, Supreme Court, |answer, quemtions have been written vice i 8 He be dealt with on a na- “There will be many more of these charitable and miscellaneous costs, |and presented to him. His only re- tional scale apartments constructed in Queens} ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., April 17) white kid and diamond-buckled feet and others in the Bronx. We do not] (Copyright, 1922 ; contemplate construction work in the Came tripping also the girl in the other boroughs just now, (er com- startlingly bright blue crepe knit, with panies than the Metropolitan will}™ore than a dash of red the startlingly bright blue stockings to finance these projects, and I expect] And skirts are still short. If not|match. There were days when a stock- more private groups also to help} short, what would be the use of hay-]ing was on and a blu carry on the good work. stocking stood for the Inst word in “LT believe there will be probably ®\piety. But what is to be sald of the $50,000,000 or $60,000,000 worth of this] Stockings, daringly near the knee?\modern biue stocking with the wear sort of work under way before au-|One's name, mind you, hul not one's fer's name in yellow descending from think that some of the new dances tumn. I think the average rents will | address. the knee? : are repulsive be about $7 and $8 a roo Ithou, A thrill passed visibly through an- 2 z ~ p i ¢ group when in entering a rolling Q. Flappers? A, 1 don't know the tho limit In the law is re 28 Jother group when in en Mapper types personally, but if theo’ MAU DE ROYDEN Walter Stabler, Comptroller for the |numerous as walking canes.¢ There |ehair a mutronly lady revealed her ini descriptions T've read are correct oe fd etropolitan Life Insurance Com-|were even white ones of eponge—]tials done in white on black drop- feel I should like the flapper. y today said that no contracts itd | knicker suits without a vestige of atitoh 1 atockn ; " ; Q. Divorce? A, I'm not absolutely signed for locations for apart-] ory ie Soe eae ake by a wee, the ster inst it—but it ought not tg be so ments, but that he was going to Long {Skirt and very smart on very sma ade was short on skirts and long pes Island City today to look over several | People, If the vogue spreads indis- Jon hose —__--—— kites that the company hus in view[eriminately, however, you cannot re-] And there were rainbow searfs too. FEARS HIS SON and whieh are desirable for the pur] press a shudder as the Imagination} ply the people in bathing failed to is Mags . oth Snes HOBIE leaps toward the coming heated term ° a ——— ne MYSTERIOUS BURGLAR _{1\'" fo casy (o turn a Knicker into 4) AeTRESS HALES ACTOR 7 , AVOIDS MANY TRAPS AT Atlantic City to-day is slowly get-[,. HUSBAND TO COURT New Rochelle Young Man Dis- ; ST. MARK’S NURSES’ HOME | #& Its eves ‘uncrossed, and its fin ve Se . Q. Cigareties, please—for ladies? A, I don't feel very strongly that. Im England we mal cuses for the girls who drink and smoke—beca many of the men they ought to have married are de You don't have the same excu here—to the same degree, Q. How ut modern Oh, let ‘em dance I do was $1,200,049.29, sponse has been a shake of the head, —It was a blue] to proceed bout some ex- Zaster with 4 touch of orange and ing one's name embroidered on one's * knicker suits, they were us appears After Falling Out With Girl gers too, after an Buster parade off Amks &70 ‘Weekly Allmony and 190,000 promenader ‘a parade which @500 ¢ el Fees. All kinds of burgl ms are ir : : ie "J for brillianey of color could teach} ytre, srarriet 1 an actress Julian De Mackiewicz,. drugaist,| Magistrate Brown Believes] use in the six-story nurses’ home 9¢-}ihings to the spectrum, and forlwho lives at No. 2 West 74th living at No. 15 Kcho Avenue, New FA Move Would Aid i Joining St, Mark's Hospital, at audacity of style make Paris 100k UKE} eg.day brought her husband, Reginald Rochelle, has reported to the poll Such a Move Would Aid IN street ana Second Avenue. At night}a rural crossroads. Carrington Short, before Justice Dele ° the disappearance of his soh, Ken- Decreasing Crime. detectives are posted on roofs In the} | The annual event was more than} sii iy sup Court, to answer New life, methe (weNty : fetes nesal usually Knockout from the moment | '*R Eee atb acoecoe. plimony’ Ghd On Friday night the young man . Des voral visits | (he Aree. Mannikin: pul tee on she her sult for accompanied Misa Alice Story of No. Magistrate Brow ting in Coney| A burglar has made peverat vl rdwalk until the very end of the] $500 counsel fees, pp ner sult fo; 2269 Creston Avenue, the Bronx, to| Island Police | day, expr there in the last three weeks, usui4l! | double-wedding rehearsal in late af-|separation, Mr, short also is on the the circus in New York, De Mackie-|the opinion that the main cause of [Sein down the fire-escape Saas ternoon with a!l the participants wad- | stage and is scheduled to oppen In Buf 2 wicz said, and the young woman later }ecrime is the { uiforded toproo!. On his first visit he stole twoling out into the ocean up to $helr| alo to-night with William Faversham it’s S told the older De Mackiewicz that] rowdies and low{ers to congrel $100 Liberty poe, oe aan Mm [neck® ‘The actual Neptunal Nup-lin g new production Pp after they reached her home after the | therefore, to deci tineche and sobre nacils {com Mae tials will take place during the HOt) ae har adda Short charge ° ! circus they had a quarrel. The father | close al! dance ba OHARA aye TaNens a ging | ™on's convention & week henes crue ntme f The nd told the police that he fears the young bs nt 10 DSUEORA WARS “Sai, euah aad Live white rabbits were carried Inf Orel treatment ) damage sult a tea time: man committed suicide, His mother}ay) day Sunday Sines Agi peany ed ra the arms of girls wearing black and ne Mount REAIAAL is dead and there are no , other| theory is that th Se eee white checked suits and distinctly lipaas et th children. f{oafers havo no for meet tha feagon | riday. sudible white and black checked hose.] alienation of her husband's affec ; ? Sn oe with their k gohomeel tre cuyuse ave aa Watched from the middle of the} She men Rarburw Allen hae A . ‘Twelfth po OUTHSE DAYS NEVO? § '| oardwalk, the parade, if you didn’t]in her charges her uctor-hus: r} QUICKLY PUT OUT aS Twelfth | oq him and, he haw eweaped so any oardwalk, the parade, if you aitn't nh HOSPITAL BLAZE] 270) oon eee: tine Now age | aps they think he ts a wonder. Some) Ot eee cari acope which made youl Short dentes his v pailens kirk Avenuc eph Smith, No. 825) of the stuff for which he ha: 1 full Ses fe that hap- | MS anewerlng atlid d avers that —— 2st Street; Josep Benuliss No. SA8 | his life was hardly worth « ng pete eye ae eo he has been in ser fin 11 atralts Pa . : : Thi ot and John Powers, 0, ay a yas very AY A} pit pal be colo! pend of te, o » the ti c Mtior Most of Patients in Sanitarium fb oye Avenue, Brooklyn, all t Rs eae ae at toca t Blithely tripping, for instance, came} of the’ the isin Fi oF ra Didn't Even Know The tween twenty and twenty-four years} protect the institution, the Jndienutenly SEACH HAE OF Cae arenes Delaney: neaerva 6 \ Vir old, were prisoners in court shane WIRE TAREnel Ere ia cP es Bene nial bowers ai —— asa e. with disorderly conduct. They pleaded go d-painted flo ony Firemen worked as quietly ax por-[ guilty to creating a disturbance in the] MERG MAECER, GETS © {Nut really teather, ahe explained, but| DROP MERCHANT MARINE sible this morning in putting out a|Prospect Hotel, a Surf Avenue dance fe) AS}a flexible tmitation a in NAVAL RESERVE PLAN blaze in the boiler room of the Madi ball nd moving pletu shov Po- aie aught out by herae . nee son Sanitarium, No, 41 East 78th{liceman | 2 O'NelK testified eee neve out NOE cont sree Sith -# NTOnOer | penbr a to Cnt Street, Few of the fourteen patients | they ' five out of a mob Of No. 1201 Southern ‘ound skirt out of sultcase covering Provis nin, n knew that there a fire. Jengaged in a for all ¢ t at mid-| Bronx, who was convicted tabecch ey a ud Of 1p ane 1 WASHING Ae who did find it were as- [night the Criminal Branch of Sup we tiny Olle ened [iy rc ecretary 1 I sured that there was no dange “Tam surprised to learn for wire tapping, was ser pelea ys Ronis ainted (rel sya fe ais ‘ I he a « ey on ea A wooden box standing too close to] halss are « Sunda * Brown to-d lice oetineerderita.? LA asa leech - the furnace was ignited and some | city uid t two years in Sing Sing prison Pee ere trina aU i ; other wooden things in the boiler room | been « Pree re Wd oe aL le a anton a poten SBEMAN BROTHERS, Inc., New York caught fre, But Aremroot year i 1 eo ARAN weitbe dkeaiie hee ; ‘ered 1 Proprietors of "White Rose” Coffce dam Was nominal Mos. 1 o y . 6 defendant =x i * Hamilton, the head phoned | troublesome « ‘ t 40° Milned hy aman named ‘1 ‘ ean ‘ ST ae meee real : the alarm, feetuer and pi Weraitio vue work, aa tl mi for ler posed by the y Depar . \ > BY BLACK AND TANS aie ee —s

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