The evening world. Newspaper, April 22, 1922, Page 5

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ere * - ~ Poy ‘ APPEAL GRANTED TO ANARCHISTS Certificates of Reasonable Doubt and Bonds Will Give Them Brief Rele Judge Cardozo of the Court of Ap- peals to-day in chambers, ordered the release on bail on certificates of reasonable doubt of Isaac Ferguson, Charles B. Rothenburg and Benjamin R. Gitlow, who were convicted of criminal aharchy in connection with the publication of a manifesto in “The Revolutionary Ag Bail for Fer- guson and Rotherburg was fixed at $5,000 and for Gitlow at $7,500. Action on a motion for a certificate of reasonable doubt in favor of James Larkin, also convicted of criminal an- archy, was deferred until next Satur- day upon request of John Caldwell Myer, Assistant District Attorney. Bail bonds weer furnished in the cases of Ferguson, Rothenburg and Gitlow. These will be take nto Sing Sing Prison with orders for the re- lease of the men. Upon their release they will be rearrested upon other in- dictments, charging criminal anarchy, and will be taken to the Tombs. ptosis ieee ACCUSED BY WOMAN, ALREADY HAS 2 WIVES Wife No. 1 Doesn't Want Him, but : No. 2 Pleads Love. FENEXTDOOR OPOLICE STATION LOOTED BY THUS _ Office of Apollo Hat Company on Clinton Street Entered By Burglars. GET CASH AND BONDS. Thieves Scale Wall in Plain View of Precinct House Windows. CHICAGO, April 22.—Threat of another railway strike was indicated here last night when the Railway Employees’ Department of the Amer- jean Federation of Labor (shop crafts employees) voted at its biennial con- vention to send out strike ballots to its 600,000 members. The question involved is the farming out of repair work by the railroads. B. M. Jewell, President of the Rall- way Employees’ Department, said: If there is a atrike, and I feel sure our men will vote solidly for it, it will be in protest of the action of rall- ways in ignoring decisions of the United States Railroad Labor Board.” Benjamin Zuckman always believed that the company of Which he fs President, the Apollo Hat Frame Company, would be perfectly secure from robbery, no matter how bold thuss.might become, because the con- cern is 2d next door to the Clin- ton Street Police Station, at Nos, 126 and 128 Clinton Street. [t is not only ® precinct station, but also is de- tective hcadquarters for the district. Brt -*-5 Mr. Zuckman c;- -* the place at 7.30 o'clock this morning and went to his office on the second floor, he found that his faith had been dis- tressingly misplaced. His safe was an utter wreck, the door had been swrenched off and the strong box loot~ _@d of $350 in cash and a number of Valuable bonds. ~ With all possible speed, Mr. Zuck- _midn hurried into the station house mext door. And according to what he told reporterselater, ‘the detective wot right out of his bed and came in and looked over my place and told everyone not to touch anything as they were going to take photographs of the finger prints the thieves had left behind.” He added that his only consolation was that the week's pay- ‘roll, amounting to $2,000, was not in the safe. It had not been drawn from the bank, so that much of the firm's money was safe. ‘The burglars entered the premises by scaling a rear fence which was in plain sight of any one at the upper windows of the police station. They got over by means of a ladder they took from a building in Broome Street in which painters were at work. Once fm the rear yard, it was easy for them to mount the fire escape and force a second-story window. After that there was only the safe to locate and open. It was accomplished by what is known “as the “‘can-opening"’ process, the door of the steel box being pried off. The tools the burglars used, long, heavy crowbars among them, were carried down to the yard after the Job and left there with the ladder. ‘The building in which the robbery Mre. May Morton Styles, twenty-five, No. 438 West 63d Street, married to Charles BE. Styles, twenty-seven, and the mother of a boy none years old, and Ida Anderson Styles, twenty-one, . 403 Onderdonk Avenue, Bronx, mar- ried to the same Styres, and mother of a boy two years old, met in the office of Assistant District Attorney Hastings to-day. Styles is a prisoner in Bellevue. He was arrested on the charge of a young woman who velleved he should marry her. Mrs. Styles No. 2 pleaded ‘for his release and said she loved him. “Well you can have him," said Mrs. Styles No. 1. “I dont’ love him and don't want him. He deserted me and my boy six years ago."’ Styles is in- dicted for bigamy ana will be arraigned Monday. ————<»—_____ ACCUSED AS THIEF, SHE CLAIMS OLD FAMILY Mra, Randolph Fitshogh, Again in Court, Pleads Not Guilty. Mrs. Randolph Fitzhugh, who lives on West Washington Square and claims to be-a member of an old Virginia family related to the Lees, pleaded not gullty to-day before Judge Rosalsky in General Sessions to an indictment charging that on March 31, in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, she tried to steal from Miss Fannie Grey, No. 853 Seventh Avenue, @ purse containing $60 and some Jewels. Her attorney told District Attorney Banton that he would ask for a com- mission to examine into her sanity. She has been errested a number of times on similar charges, but never convicted, the charges usually having been withdrawn. “HONEST ROBBER” FREED BY JURY IN CALIFORNIA Hungry, Held Up Shop, Got Job, Pald Back 6, Surrendered. SAN FRANCISCO, April 22.—John M Gilroy was released to-day as an “hon- est robber. Gilroy told the jury he had been out of work, his wife ill and his children hungry. He needed $6, so he took his revolver and held up the soft drink es- TACOMA, Wash., April 22.—Bat- tling for his life fifty feet beneath the surface of Puget Sound, Walter Mc- Cray, a diver, known tn marine circles from Alaska to California, came out victorious here yesterday over a giant devil fish. ‘ The monster wound its tentacles so tightly about McCray that the diver was unable to reach the knife he carries for protection. When one ten- tacle threatened to cut off the air sup- ply McCray, through the submarine telephone, called for a short steel wrecking bar, With this weapon he was able to pierce the body of the devil fish and at last, with man and monster still struggling desperately Pay for DETROIT, April 22.—Howard B. Lee, alleged to be a, golf maniac in his wife's sult for divorce, sald: “I wanted to make enough money to support my rich wife on my own income. That's the reason 1 got into financial difficulties.” Mr. Helen Joy Lee “He married me fc my money.” tablishment of William Moorman, tak- She reiterated her statement that occurred was once Apollo Hall and forjing the $6 in the till. He found work N - 1 1s: tr st more than half a century it has been|next day and out of his first pay he} be was @ golf maniac and spent mos} an east side landmark. It was a cen-| reimbursed Moorman the $6 and surren-]of bis time on the principal links of “the of social doings in that part of the} ‘ered (0 the police the country, He was’ three times ‘The Jury tek a standing vote of Ae- | city, countless weddings, balls and] ita ‘ baying taken champion { other entertainments Michigan’s amateu —_s —=+: Golf Maniac a Champion at Home, Lost $4,000 Games Here, Says Wife Complaints cision ts expected next month after Board. of the 600,000 Railroad Shopmen to Vote On Calling Strike on All Lines In Dispute Over New Plan of Work Fatming Out of Repair Work Held to° Be Violation of Rulings of the U. S. Wage Labor railway) em- ployees in connection with the farm- ing out system are now pending be- fore the Railroad Labor Board, de- the conclusion of the present wage hearings, ‘There are now several thousand men on strike on the Western Mary- land Railroad against the farming out of maintenance of way work. Mr, Jewell declared that the pre- cise wording of the strike ballots ls The question, yet té be det he said, is simple—whether to strike The ballots prob- ably will be sent out within a short time and the result should be known or not to strike. ermined, within six days, Mr. Jewell added. —$—__—_— Diver Battles With a Big Devil Fish In Puget Sound 50 Ft. Below Surface Unable to Reach Knife, Telephones for Steel Bar and Disables Monster. McCray was drawn to the surface by his assistant and other men called to help. While Ric’ hard Burnett, a dock watchman, stood by with drawn pls- , because the tols, unable to shoot, diver and devil fish pletely tangled, othe what weapons there and finally the devil fl hold and disappeared. water, were so com- ish rel beneath ‘s attacked with were at hand ed its the The devil fish was one of the larg- est ever seen in the ‘sand was the first, MeCray said, ever at- tucked him McCray, who suffered chiefly from exhaustion, was prepared to resume diving to-day Defeats. Rich Mrs. Howard B. Lee Declares in Suit That Husband Used Her Money to “He played golf in New York," she said, “for $4,000 a game—my money, it lost those ga he ws troit ve since found o Ames, uit. He always I suppose, though s considered a champion tn De- She said that for three years after their marriage she loaned him money because he told her business wa He was so busy playing golf he has not three childre weeks ago. Mr Sundays 91 even seen n, Who was born a says his gol 1921 at family, and at church n one o f mania ome Ww bad. le said, £ the few did not keep him from spending all but four 9 th his Dlace there. eS “HE NEEDED MONEY, /ISsHIS EXCUSE FOR ' -TAXICAB HOLD-UP “Bank Clerk Captured, Two “Pals” Escape After Chase in Bronx. MORE COAL EXPORTED DESPITE STRIKE THREAT Both Bitaminous and Anthracite Shipments Abroad Increane, WASHINGTON, April 22. — Despite the anticipated miners’ strike which might have caused the holding of coai in the United States, coal exports dur- ing March increased as compared with February, according to reports issue to-day ‘py the Commerce Department Bituminous exports aggregated 1,187, LOCAL. Brooklyn income tx receipts thi, year total $846,379, as against $2,300,000 in 1921, The Military and Naval Officers of the World War hold th second annual dinner to-night at the Plaza, When three young men whom he{!00 tons compared with 813,000 in F ‘The American Merchant Marine Li i 7 ruary. Anthracite exports totalled brary Association has supplied 150 had driven from 47th Street and|qqq tons, compared with 000 the} American ships with libraries, prcsawey to 197th Btreat and: Valens |tmentt: Refine. British Ambassador Geddes and Presi- . ; ¥ fae ee Shauncey M, Depew were the morning pointed revolvers at him and MOSEL FROM WAIL: bl jet re % ordered him to throw up ls hands,| Richardson M_ Peterson, of No, 27 A celebration of the Irish rising of 1916 will be held at the Lexington The- atre to-morrow night. “Jacob Levinson of No, 485 East 178th Street, fhe Bronx, shouted “Police! Howard Avenue, ‘Tompkinsville, 8. 1 a letter. carrier employed at the St George Station, was veld in $1,900 bail] Pred Spencer, manager of the Mirror whereupon one of the three stunned| yy United States Commissioner pten-| Candy Store, No. 1 West 34th Street, him by a blow with the butt of w re-|nessy in Brooklyn to-lay for exainina- | was fined $5 for wnclean soda taps : sii heen | ion on a charge of takire eight let Employees of the Board of Education volver. His cry, however, had heen} oi) oe ue mail and extracting a dollar] will ive a minstrel show at Palm ( heard by Patrolman John Butler, woof?" Of Me mall ay I pate Pere ne found she-siire6 2788 ARUN ae = ‘The Bronx Kegular Republican Club _agver the chauffeur and going through | way, wait, OF ART CRITIC FIELD] has boi 4 y vullding at his pockets after puliing a ring from his finger. When the patrolman ap- , beaved the three ran. The patrolinan _faught one and Detectives Nylan. .Corso, Bonnio and Mancani, who * Peppened along®a a new department automonile, jumped out and chased The will of Hamilton Easter Field Street art crille of (he Brooklyn No. 784 The he Goshen Point, | home for sick ch Mrs. 1. R. Stettinius will open her house, No. 102 k Avenue, this afternoon f versury sale on Hoffman estate, s remodelled as a dagle, leaver his entire collection avd virtually all of his estate except his personal Jewelry to Robert Laurent, © lifelong frie with whom he lived at No. 106 Cotumb Heights, Brookiyn. will was fle ithe-other two across lots to 199th Jin Brooklyn to-day. ‘The persons! prop: | And dlanoe by St 1h her's Guild of Btveet and Decatur Avenue, firing}erty is valued at 100.000 and the) rea | St y's Free Hospita | about seven shots after them. Tae ‘ ‘A. Downer was elected Presi- property at upward of $10,000, Alliance Fran- dent last night of tw 1 powerer, eceeded In mak- pass see, ger ers ate caise du New York ing thelr escape, Courts Building to obviate an abuse, ipa : vebae ihattan chapter of Delta {Phe prisdoer, who was charged} iion for a long time has furnished Sratie hold lke anil eprite ith highway robbery, described mmM- | certain detectives and patrolmen with at the Commodore last evening weit as Ned Stone, t of No. 238 West i20th Street, a former bumk oh He (old the police he had been out of work since Jan, 1, he said, and -ngeded money. » He sald he and hia friends decided an excuse for holidays and deprived the city of their services when they should have been on the streets Commissioner Enright agreed to re- store the rule after a conference to- of pont k Ave: in Calvary Miss Atlee Lee M Mra, James FP. Bac Vavis Schreiber of No nue will pried to- Chureh in Summit. lay with District Attorney Banton,| ppe funeral of Arthur FP. Rice, promt- to stick some one up, and each P19 Two described the existing conditions} nent coal man for ny years, W cured a pevolver, They met ''8i}in no uncertain terms. dled in tos Angles, will gmehh at 50th Strset and Broadway Distr.ct Attorney Banton inforimed} Wednesdry at 1 1’ M. at the Campbell Fund after walking down ro 47th tts et'Commissioner Enright that it has| Funeral shureh. Phat dol. vinscn ond ted im tolpeen a pratcice by many detectives} Capt. J. ©, Sanders of Mire Patrol drive up to the Bronx, After thelang patrolmen, called as witnesses in| No. 3 will be presented with a diamond thee atin t ror the taxicay Lev-| various purts of the criminal courts, | badge in token of his (wentyotive yours given to him at jt 30th service at a dinner to be the Patrol fire hous™ No 2409V Street, this evening ‘inson turned to receive his fare And |to disappear for e day, when ad- instead found himself facing three} jgurnments were taken in the cases In yevolvers. which they’ were Interested, later re- . Gluseppl Accaro, twe address Ww Saheb bby porting to thetr stations that they had! known, who wes Working With & Kang ENRIGHT ADOPTS been “detained In court.’ Of longehoremen tnlouding the ston No. th how hateh to nd was killed All policemen will be required to re- "2 RULE cort to the Lieutenant ,immediniely » their arrival in the Crimina ey) » Fs fj call Boose Building, informing him 4 “case they have been called + ship Lake Far River, to-day teh bottom of the bali ANOTH rror, met ffm» atoner When an adjournmen , 5 & pallies yond at tiken. (he Aswistiunt District Ation r mee, Ae iets. ibs n chase will the Liewer Vile ee MNRLONE TH AL thes Giet. ao polleeman Neced A stun al pews wit ty 9 FEN bis Heutenant im the 6) pon ' be World News in Brief lows will be celebrated in Queens | meetin, in Odd Fellows Hall, Whi stone, lo-morrew evening DOMESTIC. Pilot C. Shiller, employed by company — operat “commercial lanes between Key West ffnd Nass Islands, wa mobbed und = v beaten on his arrival ot Na Tuesday, In the belief that he was Probibition officer, Improve nt of th St Lawrence River should be undertaken by priy The first published wi Prof of t Moscow nach: to form United, State fons in Ri A Enrique OF} Henry Hy capital rather eraity of Clilen un i be com daniel L fi neric Commise: n mixed ¢ » for mot uséla, laya Her pointed Columbian Minister t ton, with his wife and two daughters, on the stear left Panama for New York ——» INOTYPER FOUND DHAD mphreys, than under Go from New York in 1890, Harold Adams, charged v theft of $26,000 from thé Toston Electric ninating — Conip: which he was employed for years as an asalstant cashier, bi fexsed that the money was lost’ ir Island gambling houses, diction pte sukenbs told t rin four an Oyler FOREIGN. Charles Recht, attorney In the States for the Soviet Governine He has been auth ri foner of ompantes fon pictur mpany drilling for oil 11 of Vera Cruz, In Mexico, ¢ Wruck depth of 1,185 feet, it is’ reported bis Typographical 1 ed on The Wo nt, We Siaaolu, ut control, according to a Chicago state ment of Hugh L. Cooper, a New Yo engineer, who has made a study of ti project Col, Paul Bernard Malone hus nominated lo be Brigadter-General the Regulir Army. He was o to the Military Academy at We Washin THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 22, HOMES FOR 150,000! New Yor IN NEW FLATS 10 COST $120,000,000 RES tel Bronx Rushes to Leadership, Queens Second, Manhattan in Fourth Place. Fints for 150,000 persons are under stlon in the Metropolitan dis- cost of $120,000,000. Commissioner reported plans filed in his department for 885 new structures since the first of the year 21,000 families, 000 rooms and the cost constr triet at ‘Tenement Frank Mann to how contain over is estimated at $84,000,000. Practically all of these houses are under construction, of the projects recorded and started since the tax exemption period began a year ago are coming into the de- partment’s jurisdiction during the cur- ‘The total of these, accord- ing to statistics of. Chief Inspector W. A. Robertson of the Tenement House is close to 1,300 build~ ings, with apartments for over 28,000 families, or 140,000 persons, suburban districts outside the city, embracing Westchester, Nassau, Suf- folk and the Jersey commuting zone, 00 apartments are under way, raising the total new housing capacity in such structures to 30,000 families, 000 persons, rent year, Commission, fully or RUSH OF 'FLAT BUILDERS PUTS BRONX IN LEAD, Hat builders did not take the van of the constructional movement until the the end of the original period for starting tax-exempt That the Bronx into leadership with a sud- denness which From. fourth place, north side building final rush projects. market. far above Manhattan, in the Bronx since the first for total estimated building: of the year outlays a Queens comes second’ with $45,750,000. Brooklyn stands 000. Manhattan is forced into fourth place with $42,360,000. The matter pushed the shown by ment records of fint builders had = recorded to contain 9,6 April 10, houses with 3 ments Brooklyn for apartments $19,703,500 ‘The movement of ‘Queens into sec: building campaign immense output of small private dwellings, hey flat build- ers having filed plans for only 177 new houses with 2,088 apartments and 7,758 rooms to hreénew flat houses have ond place was due to an Richmone been pre and 655 rooms to cost $845,000. SURPLUS OF HOMES AND FREE RENT AGAIN SOON. of statistics flat buildings has returned to a volume slightly above war, the city was quite seriously over- 80 much so that free A study landlords the p 1 1,795 new 1911, with current tion of pri normal. from all would be lords again rent to get ng rentals | ut the ding, }drop of si ers have another ig tax-exempt contracts eck, as Company, district Among 9,141,000. MADE To my Prohibition in More Successful Than It By Roger Batchelder. Several visitors from Norway have|all they want, recently spoken of/the failure of Pro-|'@¥, however, reply that the rich get hibition in that country and Hans Bull, director of one of the largest) see, you in this country are not mak- whale-oil concerns in the world, now]ing a greater success than we are, at the Pennsylvania, from Bergen, /and there gre many elements in the tells of conditions and proposed legis- | Norwegian "situation which should be lation which should be of interest to]of interest to the United States.” the United States. ee “After more than seven years of it any Intelligent person will pronounce ohibition in Nerway a failure,” he asserted, , measure, but for the past two years| Tschirky, Maitre d’hotel of the Wal- beer and wines of less than 12 per| rf, is the forty-ninth of a series of cent. alcoholic content have been al-| favorite recipes, tcritten especially for “During the war beer was abol- | Dey or Two" by New York's famous ished, not because of any possible | C“linaryy experts. bad influences on the community, but to conserve the supply of its neces- sary ingredients, At present the situ- js exactly like that of New York—any, one with the price gets what he wants. the South to the boundary there is a coast line almost as long as the distance between New] pour into dish containing one- York and Norway. Though the Gov- ernment has spent several million Kronen for additional revenue officers y have been unable to prevent smuggling. sorts of alcoholic beverages are con- stantly brought In and customs offi- cers are frequently wounded in fights] The ‘New Yorker For a Day or with smugglers, “Norway is now trying to pass alday is Dr. I’. P. Pyles, who is at the Jaw which will restore liquors of high| Pennaylvania. Hia home town, Rio alcoholic content, but under such alde Janciro, is over 6,000 mites from high tax that the price would be al-* Broadway. “JERSEY JUSTICE” ENDS CRIME WAVE AMONG STUDENTS In preparing its embryo attorneys for the rigors of practical pleading, coun- selling, strivin, ing cases, the Brooklyn Law School of St. Lawrence Unt cial fie) eet ture quasi-legal department that hie geste fade, juries, plaintiffs, | Brooklyn Lodge of Elks locked horns defendants, district attorneys, witnesses | in the Elks’ Club, No. 150 South Ox- and all t : eS taries and functionaries—all members of | f°" Street, Brooklyn, on Thursday the senior class, ‘The judges hold permanent In addition, most startled the following Queens, volume jumped the skyscraping with $44,300, flut builders into leadership ories to the fact” take turns at being} ted shoulder, according to a com- prisone! Judge Henry W. Humble, ordinarily | to-day. tice and 8 fines, and corrects the ambitious future lawyers in their attempts to emulate M thelr more successful brethren already| Sree. John ¥, Lantry, an insurance in the profession. U. OF ROCHESTER ALUMNI apartments, rooms, at a cost of $33,- 498,000, while Manhattan plans for 74 houses with 8,417 apart. nd 14,854 rooms at § houses with try down with a blow to the jaw and —— + HOLDS ANNUAL DINNER that he dislocated his right shoulder! Pan-American Conference Told — — in falling. : Peanaan i neeeees « bs oe #15") Attorney Abrhham Kesselman, ap-| “Human Progress Is Not | University of Rochester Alumni Asso-| journment and Colgan was parolled clation of New York City held its an-] until May 2, dinner last night at the Alpha] cuss the affair, Delta Phi Club, sident; John H. President; Carl Park Penny, Se and Harry C, Michaer, Treasurer, University, announced that assets of rs : the University had increased from $2-] Youngster Who Came Into World 000,000 in 1920 to over $19,000,000 in 1922, due to gifts in the past year of John Rockefeller and George Eastman of $10,000,000 for a new medical school and the $5,000,000 of Mr. Bastman for the Eastman School of Music 16 SENTENCED IN DAY; 42 MORE PLEAD GUILTY Glass, No. 64 Second Avenue, is get- built with flats rent of one commen pre means of securing tenants. threatening serious consequences and tice, new flat houseswith 20, ments formed the yearly output. 1918, it had been 28,038 ay soman ment Charging Hold-Up of Sa Sixteen prison sentences were tmposed | tha: yesterday in the Courts of Sessions and the Criminal Bbanches of | live. the Superior Court. Morty-two pleaded uilty to variou Erimea of violence Bronx. He weights « bit more than one Patrolman David P. O'Neill of the | pound twelve ounces and Is bnly 18% 104th Street Station, who was} inches long. arrested on a charge of holding up a bartender in a saloon at No, 774 Tolrd oe Avenue on March 1 and taking 926 from | #ald to-day Clint ahe had bein awaken apartments 931 new houses apartments; in 1910, WIS a This volun 08 new houses ate dwellings was comy tively small ments now about equal to curr output of private mained normal, and vent gouging united to stimulate ate dwelling construc. times greater From this viewpoint, reports metropolitan district tend to Indicate that the com- pletion of projects under tore building—in the cash drawer, Jud Rosalsky iictment eharging robbery In the firat|declared that this was only another nt demands if the was in uniform at the time of the 4l- | vitality. The food the baby receives is leged robbery, « volume of pri tion three or four WHALEN CONSIDERS BIDS = FOR 3 NEW FERRY BOATS| FOUND UNCONSCIOUS parts Extimaten Heceived, Both of Bankers’ Association here to-day. | ‘Them Higher Than Expected, a, Two Pogi- “We are indeed around the curve , ver A. Whalen, Commissioner of ele: of depr@ssion and are moving stead- ® Plant and Structure Phy obably would decide Monday (ubnay: ‘On Whether he would accept wf ne Policeman Cornelius Foley to with so many bids forthe building of the two or} 46 wo bids were oper tply now that home bulld~ | corporation was $1,101,900 for two bonts id $1,639,900. for three. Thal of the} running and said they is shown Ly had estimated the two boats should cost} tried to strike ¢ metropolitan | $950,000 and the thre There 00, with 288 residential at #16, 85 new operations announced but not put for $37,000,000, were “DRY? OFFENDER TAKES PAU-] East 78th Street and James Judge, Peter Waydetch, Brooklyn, form saloon, Nia aeeitht ie tags. than $20. He was} complextoned, and wore a gray suit fined $500 by Federal Judge Garvin after ~ — he had pleaded guilty ‘o a charge of] WANTS SEPARATION violating the Prohibition Law unable to pay and spent thirty da 24 residential at nts Ul of sev state of William Ht Young Avenue, paper and disposing about $6,000, vith Surrogate ¢ White Plains de: B. Bake very and what Written on note Slater to-day at Commissioner Rasquin Wite of “wi * Claims invasion - —_— ; Maken 875,000 @ Year, — FUNERAL OF JOHN W. FOX ‘Asa Reon dan? edgavetion’ track! Oecad ARGH HE HAD PISTOL LY AUPO, The funeral of John W. Fox. veteran Brooklyn newspaper ma y at the Roman Catholle Church off “Wi Glyn, reg of Tete nr i the Lady of Mercy, in Schernerhorn| lightweight crown fin the ay in Harlem Court, "1 The requiern moss was cele-| Bronx Supreme ( by hie Detective Dougherty of the he Rey. Joseph O'Brien, and| wife, Paulyne Tob Street Station with viokal newapapermen were present. A In @ motion to be made ¢ jonday. | of the Sullivan Law. While cruising in ~ legation from the Brool rent on the 1 1922, FACES INDICTMENT 35 Complaints Made That Sec tional Houses Have Not Been Delivered. District Attorney Glennon of the Bronx announced to-dey he would present evidence next Tuesday té“the Grand Jury and ask for an indictment of the Sunshine Homes and Conerete Company, a Bridgeport, Conn, firm, which, he charges, have defaulted in their contracts to deliver sectional houses after receiving from $1,600 to $6,000 in payment of them. Thirty- five complaints have been received against the company, be said. The Sunshine Company, which has a New York office at No. 25 West 434 Street, has been given two op- portunities to show good faith, but the istrict Attorney alleges it has failed. Complaints are largely firemen, policemen, letter carriers and teach- ers, The officers of the company, it is stated, are Robert C. Lafferty, Robert M. Keys and Simon Lake, who i the inventor of the process by which the sections are built. ‘The 4 latter has stated, according te Mr. Glennon, that the company has two plants and can deliver if given time to become properly organized. POLICE TO MOVE FROM CLUB ON DRIVE New Quarters Provided for Them ‘ in Old New York Athletic Club. The Police Club, at No. 141 River~ side Drive, will move about the middie of next month to the sixth and sev- enth floors of the old New York Ath- letic Club, at 55th Street and Sixth Avenue, where the members of the department will still have for their host Speelal Deputy Police Commis- sioner John A. Harriss. It was the Special Deputy who° ; pluced at the disposal of the depart- ment, from patrolman to Police Com- mission, the fine house on the Drive without rent, and supplied chefs and attendants, where meals could be se- cured at reasonable prices and where other entertainment was provided. But the cops, eager at first for the new club, gradually fell off in attend- ance and Deputy Harriss learned that the objection was that it wasn't cen- tral enough for the convenience of all. So atya meeting early this fmonth it was decided to abandon the Dfive : house and the Special Deputy turned | over the new clubhouse to them, ‘There are 785 members of the club. as WOMEN DISCUSS j WOMEN’S FREEDOM patna he JQ, Most prohibitive, It is propored that Norway No this tax be $2 or $3 a quart, and many like myself think that this will produce something more like real Prohibition. “Some immediately objected to this on the ground that it is a penalty for the poor, while the rich can get We who favor the Is Here. Navvor might yway, and the Government well benefit. So far as I can THE VISITING HOUSEWIFE’S COOK BOOK. STEWED OYSTERS—By Oscar “It wae passed as a war the scrap books of “New Yorkers For BSD aed! Sh sel Take one quart oysters. Put into saucepan with one pint water, salt and pepper, and a tablespoon of rolled cracker orumbs. Let it come to a boll, and pour in the oysters. Allow the oysters to boll thirty seconds, not an instant more. Remove from fire and From Christiania Northern half pint of milk and serve, Never allow the oysters to cook in the milk. (Another excellent recipe in this col- Brandy and all other|mn Monday.) , Sena: FARTHEST FROM HOME, Two"’ who ta farthest from home to- ELKS LOCK HORNS; LAND IN COURT Past Exalted Rulers of Brooklyn Lodge Engaged in Fight. Complaint Reveals. Two Past Exalted Rulers of the conniving and just try- remaining necessary digni- night, with the result that one of ure Of} them suffered a sore jaw and a dislo- ec while the remaining landlord, tenant, or mere apec-| Plaint which reached Magistrate Short in Flatbush Court, Brooklyn, ontracta, fe presiding jus- ains, overrules, sentences, George A. Colgan, fifty-two, of No. 324 Jay Street, appeared to answer to a charge of assault in the third de- broker, was listed as complaining wit- ness, The complaint charged that Thursday night Colgan knocked Lan- pearing for Colgan, obtained an ad- Confined to One Nation BALTIMORE, April 22,.—Freedom | for women was the keynote as dele- | gates to the Pan-American Womén's } Convention gathered at a Round- ‘Table conference to-day, The women } of all the Americas must be emanei- pated, civilly and politically, speakers declared. Leaders at to-day's session were Mrs. Mebel Walker Willebrandt, As- sitsant Attorney General; | Judge Catherine Waugh MeCulloch of Chi- cago and Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt,) Honorary President of the National League of Women Voters and Preési- dent of the International Suffrage Alliance, ‘ The women who have come to the conference as representatives from 22 countries are certain, Mrs. Catt said, to go home with the message that “human progress is not confined to one nation, but that it is inclusive of all the movement for common good.’* eee fee BUSINESS OUTLOOK BEST INTWO YEARS | Country Moving on Road to Pros- } perous Conditions, Says Comp- | troller Cressinger. i GAINESVILLE, Fla., April 24,.— The business outlook for the entire Nation is now brighter and moreen- | couraging than at any time during the last two years, Comptroller of the Currency Crissing#r tol? the Florida Colgan refused to dis- Lantry lives at No, 890 Third Street, Brooklyn, —_—_—_— FIVE MONTHS’ BABY YELLS LUSTILY ‘The following officers Dr, John B. Hamilton elected: Rush Rhees, President of the Ahead of Time Getting Along » Finely. The little Grushka boy baby, born four months before he was expected, in the private hospital of Dr. Jacob ting on so well"that Dr. Glass announ- Indict-|ced this afternoon he had increased the little fellow's food allowance and there was every indication he ‘established himself’ and would Arraigned General | had The baby is the son of Mrs, Louise offenses, most of them | Grushka of No. 1451 Wilkins Avenue, One of the patients in the hospital t night by the ing of .the arraigned before | ed las Yinorning on an in-| diminutive newcomer and Dr. Glass He pleaded not guilty, O'Nelll token of the youngster's remarkable wate rand sugar of milk fed by means of an eye dropper. oe aie ae AFTER STREET FIGHT to-day said that Grvsainx land lly, strongly, surely and straightly forward on the road to more pros- ) perous conditions,” he said. | “We are weel rid of business and | industrial froth, Business, industry, } agriculture and commerce need oaly | } | shouts early to-day Street, near Eighth Avenue, where ropored turbe-electric ferry boats] ye found an unconscious man. Several Staten Island service: persons told the policeman they had d yesterday. The} seen three men In a struggle, then one the Staten Island Shipbuilding | drop, Foley had stopped two « the awakening of American pluck, couraze and initiative to insure the re-estublishment of prosperi » who were were having Company Wat], race home.” Later they said the un- h for] identified man had walked along beside ‘d he} them\ a short distance and suddenly em, but slipped and $1,330,000. fell, They described themselves as Gerald Cronin, twenty-four, of No, 408 pei Bgakelre N MONGOLS PROCLAIM INDEPENDENCE OF CHINA ht and Basi for two and $1 Commissioner W) ———__<—_— Report Also Tells of Compact With Soviet to Ald Revolt, COPENHAGEN, April 22 (Associated Press).—A Helsingfors despatch stat that the North Mongolion Government in Urxa, at the instigation of the Mos- cow Government, has proclaimed Mgn- golla’s Independence of China. The Urga Government, says the mes~ sage, also has concluded a treaty with the Russian Soviet Government, under which the latter pledges active support to Mongolia in the event of a Chinese PERS OAT twenty-four, of No. 312 West 49th >. 93 Third Ave- | Street. proprietor of # At Flower Hospital it was found the Dtained hie uberty, to-day by} Unconscious man had a fractured akull bi ae pet ch declares | H@ tm @bout thirty-five years old, dark- He was in He was freed by United States FROM PUGILIST fe Jackno Vraak 10 twenty-seven, saloon~ 115th Street, was known in the pri ie Jackson," ring as was held to-| Tobln keeper, No. 434 a contender for the yn Citizen,} Mrs, Tobin will ask for + week] one of the new oplice automobiles early Andrew McLenn, editor, und]allmony and 5,000 consel fees pending] this morning, Doughorty halted @ gan epresentativee {vom every de-| trial of the action, alleging (hat since | containing four men, searched the party ve pres 0.7, When they were married, Tobin's} and says he found a loade* gun @m int hen & 7 r Vueei '

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