The evening world. Newspaper, May 10, 1922, Page 1

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Fee ah ace " To-night’s Weather—CLOUDY. STREET CLOSING | TABLES. LX. No. 92,045—DAILY. Copyrigh' iting "Cee tee “ Circulation Books Open to All.”’ KILLS SELF AND 3 CHILDREN To-morrow's Weather—CLOUDY, L STRE THE Bit EDI ‘aaa WORLD ‘ |“ Circulation Books Open to Al.” | ————S ~ VOL. NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, _MAY 10, Entered as Second-Class Matter Post Office, New York, N. Y. 1922, Dr. L. Pierce Clark’s AFTER BUILDINGS ARE BOMBED AND POLICE SLAIN IN GRIGAGO ——— Every Important Offiical of Building Trades Council in RUSSIANS REVISE Custody of Authorities, Chief of Police Fitzmorris REPLY 10 ALLIES Announces, s Issues Declaration of War AT LAST MOMENT Against ‘““Hoodlums and Ex- Convicts’ Committing Outrages — One Prisoner Identified as Bomber. Tchitcherin Decides to Tone Down Answer After Con- ference With Schanzer. CHICAGO, May 10.—The police to- day. raided the Building Trades Labor Headquarters and arrested three of Chicago's biggest labor leaders—‘'Big ‘Tim’ Murphy, Fred Mader and Cor- nelius Shea—in connection with bomb- ings and shootings which<carly to-day resulted in the death of two policemen and serious injury of a third. Murphy, known as Chicago's ‘‘La- bor Czar,"’ ie out on bail after ‘ving been sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary in connection with the $400,000 Union Station mail robbery Mader ts President of the Building ‘Trades Council, while Shea heads the ‘eamsters’ Union. Among the twenty-three union members and officials arrested during the morning was John Rafferty, also implicated in the mail robbery with GENOA, May 10 (Associated Press); —The Russian reply to the Allied memorandum, which was ready for presentation this forenoon, was not delivered to the Allies, as expected. At the last moment, after a con- versation between Foreign Ministers Tehitcherin of Russia and Schanzer of Italy it was decided the qeply woutd have to undergo some alteration. M. Tchitcherin left Genoa at 2 P.M., returning to Santa Margherita to con- sult other members. of the Russian delegation. It was not expected, therefore, that the reply could be pre- sented until to-morrow. The fact that the delay was due to M. Tchitcherin'’s visit to Signor Schanzer was regarded in some quar- Murphy. : . Charles C, Fitzmorris, Chiet of] ‘rs 88 @ favorable indication. Police, immediately ordered every ie RECA IOs (Of the BORAn (Fes ply, it was learned this afternoon, urges the point that the entrance of foreign capital into Russia depends far more upon Russian guaragtees for the future than upon discussion of claims. The preamble expresses re- policeman on duty and directed that all labor leaders be brought in, “I have ordered detention of every ome who may have any information of the workings of labor attacks," he said, The dead are Terrance Lyons,|&™et that the Allied memorandum thirty, Acting Lieutenant, and Pa-| Paid more attention to contentions about legal questions than to consider- ation of a financial arrangement for rebuilding Russia. The Russians. in their preamble protest against the attempts of some powers to compromise them because they refuse to take responsibilities lightheartedly and without carefully weighing the possibility of their ful- fillment. The reply says that as long as the political and economic quarantine is continued against Russia such states as practice it cannot but encourage military adventurers attributing to themselves the role of gendarmes of European civilization. The reply, says the Central News, requests that Clause VII of the memorandum be refered to an inter- national committee of experté, with Russia represented on it. With re- gard to the war debts, the Allies are asked to state the exact discount that would be made if the debts were acknowledged. On the whole, it is added, the reply was evasive. (Clause VIT in the Allied memo- randum to Russia is the clause relat- ing to the status and disposition of foreign-owned property in Russia na- trolman Thomas Clarke, thirty. The wounded man is Patrolman Albert Moeller. Although the killings and bombings were in different parts of the city, police believe they were directed by a single band, desiring to express re- sentment at enforcement of a decision handed down by K. M, Landis, former Federal Judge, acting as arbiter in a long drawn out dispute between mem- bers of the Building Trades Council and contractors. The buildings bombed were the garage of Tyler & Hirpach and the Henneberry printing plant. Patrglman Clarke, who was guard- ing a building previously bombed and under police protection, was notified of the garage bombing and a few minutes later a taxi driver notified police that three men were fighting with: Clarke. Officers found him ly wounded, He had been shot through the head and died on the way to the hospital. Police believe Clarke was killed by men who Monday night showered, the building with bricks and escaped in an automobile, Later, Lieut. Lyons, seeing a car speeding past a traffic signal, com- manded it to halt. The occupants ‘answered with a volley of shots which and wounded killed Lieut, “Lyons Patrolman Moelle ~The World’s Automobile Exchange Ads, Sell 14 Cars GARLAND AUTOMOBILE COMPANY 1888 Broadway, at 63d St, Frances Vanore is a flapper at Jast e NEW YORK, May 3, 1922, Betis Mo New York World, _ ah cabeh tate Let it be told in the wonds of Sergt. New York Clty Cuny ‘of the North Bergen, N. J. ae 7 a police. ‘ be any, May 7 “Twas the middie of yesterday af- ‘enclo: oe yeaults from our advertiatng ot ‘ape Bid and gon w ory. Fourteen ci ternoon,"’ says he, ‘when a wild fe- male voice came over the station wire suyin’ there was terrible things goin’ } on at No. 912 Courtland Avenue, Pe og ais dallaae where Frances lives with her parents RLAND AUTOMOBILE ANY, i _G. W._ Garland jr dant. 4 bar staterm, ~The Sunday World _ “I grabs @ couple of patrolman and takes it on high, but all ts Automobile Exchange Ads. ot quiet and, peaceful and subdued when | we Read in 600,000 Homies. “w. reader tie voone. Wothin’ Ye do we all ARREST 23 LABOR LEADERS. [SWEEPING OENAL tionallzed by the Soviet Government.) ‘Can’t Bob Hair,’ Said Ma and Pa, But Frances Did and Police Arrive Paternal Palm Descends on Miss Who Insisted on Flapping With Flappers. Dies Under Gecaian ENTERED ON STAND BY MIRS. STILLMAN Accused Wife Remains Calm Under Questioning Regard- ing Fred Beauvais. BRANDS CHARGES FALSE. Testifies She Was Sent North Husband for’ Chil- dren’s Heath, (Special from Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) POUGHKEEPSIE, May 10.—Mrs Anne Urquhart Stillman took the witness stand to-day for the first time in the trial of the divorce suit insti- tuted by James A. Stillman. She made emphatic denial of misconduct of any kind with Fred Beauvais, the Indian guide named by Mr. Stillman as the father of Baby Guy Stillman, Mrs. Stillman was calm and self-pos; sessed throughout her examination by Jolm B. Mack, guardian of the baby. “When did you first meet Beau- vais?” she was asked. “In 1916 when I went to the St. Maurice Fish and Game Club, on Lake Dawson} in Canada. I was sent there with the children by my husband, who was afraid to risk them to exposure to infantile paralysis infection, this disease having appeared in New York. “We had to have a gulde and I heard that Beauvais was a. good one, #0 I engaged him. Since that time he has been, off and on, in Mr. Stillman’s employ."* When she was asked about a visit to Little Lake Wyagamac, in Canada, in December, 1916, @ witness having testified that she and Beauvais spent the night there, Mrs. Stillman denied this charge. “T went there with Beauvais because I was looking over certain properties with a view to purchase, but we did not spend the night there. We went to Big Lake Wyagamac and I spent the’ night at a fish and game club.” Mrs. Stillman then testified to a visit of Beauvais's father and mother to her and Mr. Stillman at Lake Dawson in 1917. She said that Still- (Continued on Second Page.) FRANK AUSTIN ROY ENDS LIFE BY PISTOL Shoots Himself in Temple at No. 52 West Thirty- third Street. The police of the West 30th Street station report that Frank Austin Roy. fifty.five, of No. 52 West 33d Street, committed suicide at his residence to- day by shooting himself in the temple but get the facts an’ go back to the station, “Frances ig seventeen and a blonde, and she insisted on being a flapper. She said she was goin’ to have her golden hair bobbed, Her mother said she should not bob her golden hair. Her father said she should not bob her golden hair. So she bobbed her golden hair and came smilin’ into the presence of her doting parents. “Mother fainted, Father took Frances across his knee, Frances hollered. Her sisters rushed out and told the neighbors, One of the neigh- bore phoned us. We came. Bat what in blaves have ve got to do with quch matters? “No urrens,* ' \ Father of Countess Lichy Approves b If the Eloping. Girl aly a Child, He Says WIFEOFJUSTIGE ERRATIC MOTHER KILLS SELF PES LEED AND 3 DAUGHTERS WITH GAS: eS LEFTNOTEFROM RUBANAT oe NEGRO BURGLAR CLIMBS LIKE A FLY {0 SECURE BOOTY PICKS UP COP IN CHASE Enters Home of Frederick Brown and Robs His Wife of $3,000 Ring. Mrs.. Buzby, Wife of Vice President of Lubricating Company, Made Elaborate Arrangements for Tragedy. Enjoys Thrills After She’s Con- vinced One Who Begged Aid Wasn’t Robber. Children in’ Her Bed—Hus- band Prostrated, Says She Had Been Acting Queerly for More Than a Year. When Nicholas Sanzo, No. 841 Thin! Avenue, Brooklyn, ran out and climbed upon the running board of, the Cadillac car driven by Mrs. Sharles H. Kelby, wife of Justice Kel- by of the Appellate Division of the Su- preme Court, last night, at 30th Street and Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn, Mrs. Kelby feared for an instant that he was @ gunman, Sanzo had run beside the car and held up his hand, Mrs. Kelby stopped and he begged her to follow a car ahead of her which he pointed out and said had, been stolen from him. Mrs. Kelby questioned Sanzo and, convinced he was not fleeing from a Policeman, took’ him inaide, Justice Kelby was on the rear seat. As they drove, keeping the ‘other car in sight, Sanzo, who is a contrac. tor of No. 841 Third Avenue, ex- plained that a week ago he had left his car before a Coney Island restau- rant and came out to,find it gone. Last night, watching cars’ as they passed, he saw it. After a ride of a half dozen blocks Mrs, Kelby and Sanzo picked up Pa- trolman Robert Boole of the Iifth Street Station, The man in the car ahead had increased his lead, but kp- parently was unaware that he was being followed. With the policeman on the running board, Mrs, Kelby stepped on the gas and came abreast of the car ahead. Then she passed tt, forced it into the curb and made the driver stop at Tenth Street, Boole placed the man under arrest. After the arrest Justice Kelby asked if there was any further need for himself or his car, and was ta- / ATLANTIC CITY, May 10,—Mya. Edith Miller Busby, wife of William %. Busby, Vice President of the Key- stone Lubricating Company, of Phila- « delphia, and her three daug! were found dead in Mrs. pia home at Ventnor, near here this morning from illuminating gas. Notes found in the house indicated at Mrs. Byzby had deliberately planned her death and that of her three daughters. ‘The three daughters, all found with their mother in her bed, were Con- stance, aged eleven; Edwinnia, nine, and Mary, six, A postscript to a note left for her husband ended with the following quo- tation from the Rubalyat: , “What if the soul could cast the earth aside, And naked on the air of heaven ride; Were't not a shame, were't hot a shame indeed, ; In this clay carcass longer to abide?’ The bodies were discovered shortly after 6.30 o'clock this morning ‘by Charlotte Bennett, a maid who has been in the employ of the Buzby family for several years. Mrs, Busby was lying across the foot of the. bed, almost completely covering the body of the youngest child, Mary, and in such @ position as if in prayer or'to smother the little girl if the gas tidd not been effective. The body of Hd- winnia was lying in the bed with he to the head of the bed, while that'6f Constance, the oldest of the three A Negro, who scales the front of buittings in real “human-fly” fashion, just walked right through the fourth floor window of Frederick Sign? apartment, No, 285 pti) ‘West, helped Senaett tarta yy ed, andfhen walked si § wins dow and down the front of the bitild ing. ‘A halt hour before, it is‘charged, he, did the same trick tn entering the apartment of Seymour Feist, No. 808 ‘West End Avenue, and leaving via the window with $75 taken from His vie- tim’s wallet, Mr. Brown, who t# a real estate operator at No. 566 Fifth Avenue, his wife, Rose, and a maid were asleep at 4 o'clock this morning when Mrs. Brown was awakened by a flashing light. She aroused her husband, who Said to a Negro walking through the bedroom: ‘Go on, take anything you want, but don’t hurt any of us."’ “All right, keep quiet and nothing’ll happen to you," he replied. The Ne- gro took $60 from Mr, Brown's wallet, and a gold pen. He then approached the bed, but Mrs. Brown anticipated him_and took a ring valued at $3,000 from her finger and handed it to the intruder, With a final warning to be quiet he stepped out of the window into the darkness and escaped, al- though Mr. Brown immediately ran "COUNTESS ZICHY. DOCTOR'S WIFE DIES FROM COCAINE IN OPERATING CHAIR Husband Aiding Surgeon in Removal of Tonsils When She Suddenly Collapses. Miss Charlotte Demarest Ran Away With Count Same Day She Was to Wed Cocaine, administered as a local an- Another, sthetic, killed Mrs. L. Plerce Clark, | ormed there was not, but was told] down the stairs, giving the alarm, : : i — while her husband, a physician of No.| he might be ncedod as a witness, and} An hour later Detectives Davis and baa eee pias o eye if 7 5 ® East 6th Street, was alding the op-| the policeman would like his name.|ponnelly of the West 100th Street|‘VOUs ® made ‘tempt Warren G. Demarest, ‘whoso daugh- Justice Kelby then gave his name t crawl trom the bed. erating surgeon prior to removing her Station halted a Negro at 91st Street ter Charlo} Pr sterda 1 said he could be narlotte was married, yesterday] "oe and adenoids. and address and sac (S7ad PE ans Central Fark Welt, two: blocks All windows were closed and the to Count Edward George Zichy a few found in his chambers to-day cocks were turned on full from tHe hi before she have t , | Dr. and Mrs. Clark went to the of- | wanted. away, because he was carrying a a ours before she was to have become! | — Oo) py drampton P. Howell, in the| When the policeman and Sanao} bundle, ‘The prisoner guve his name|handeller and from @ gas heater. |) the bride of George Burton, son of tlic Medical Chambers, No. 114 Bust 4th found they had been chasing thelas orge W. Naudain, twenty-four,| The maid said that she reached the late Max Bernheimer, millionaire | eet at noon. ae ; siher bi "A lang [2tolen car in the automobile of a] No, 100 West 86th Street. The bundle house last night about 11 o'clock and Str 0 0 other physic brewer, said to-day that he wished he by phy Justice of the Appellate Division,| proved to be a chicken, found Mra, Busby still up: aoe ivtaer Tehere the! WoUus Soaple. Had and a nurse were present when Dr.] with his wife us the chauffeur, they Naudain'’s fingerprints revealed M Busby did pay SONINE, ple had) towell, who was to perform the op-| were a surprised pair that he had been out of the peniten- |tvened. Mre. Busby not spenk "ve not an-idea where they are,’ |«tlow—a minor one—administered the} Im the Coney Island Court to-day} tiary only two months after serving |! fher-a5 ehe epravel, “not <oie aaa i WBSE y F the prisoner said he was Frederick]a ,sentence for burglary at 121st}was not unusual,” the maid sald. /A he said his office, No. 665 Pifth aine while she was in the chair “, Avenue, “and I will be much in Kellys twenty-reven, No: West} street and Manhattan Avenue and|ittie jater she heard Mrs. Busby Ganon as s " as in is vee Suddenly Mrs. Clark became rigid] 15th Street, Manhattan, The police] pefore that served six months in the Fa igh tia to vets She their whe ne ta, This at re affair {ad the physicians became alarmed] Said there were six previous coavic-} workhouse for petty larceny. making preparations ire air whereabouts, This whole air) at to revive her, Po-| tons against him. He was held in| Mrs. Brown®at Police Headquarters, |did not know when the children cagie baie —_ ie etna A ileaen " ecg miei. wint 000 bail for examination Friday.| positively identified the prisoner as}into thelr mother’s room, where jt © no obje at all to my|liceman Lyman, of the st 51s » was at 36th Stree ‘a be: - . . : daughter's marriage with Count} fea : iy said he was at 46th Street aad) the man who had bent over her bed to} was most unusual for them to gleép os i rag H ‘I Street station, ‘was notified and he rth Avenue when a man gave him| take her ring only a few hours be ead neonate “RST aichy, provided she is happy. Wat] woned Dr. Paul of lower Hos-|the car, saying “Here's a car, If youl fore, Later, when Naudain was ar- Dr. Lewis q , county phy- I most regret is the publicity that come of it It is ” to 2 jan, declared e had pital, who sald Mra Clark had died off WAne tt raigned in the West Side Court on an an, declared that the gas been 8 very hard upon he minded to be #You are too simple affidavit charging burglary, he was as|turned on shortly after midnight, ap- Ghe te nothine cue wena” heart failure dye to shock as a re allowed at large" Was tho retort off Couitively identified by Mr. Feist. ‘The oh i Before his marriage, Count Zichy | of the cocaine. : Magistrate Kilperin ne place for} police will have othor victims of simi- | >reon was known to have lived at the Hotel] Medical Examiner Norris viewed] you ta jail before soine one makes you] far robberies in the past two weeks| The ote for her husband was ad- Warrington, No. 161 Madison Avenuc.|the body and said death wax accl-]@ present of the First National Bank] attempt to Identify the prisoner to, |dreased to “Mr. W. Buzby,” and was Though the hotel management to-day | dental, or the Brooklyn Bridge day. Naudain held without bai! | without other salutation. It read: denied that he was still there, it was| The'police are not investigating, a8] Mra: Kelby, at her home in Prest-| gor examination Frida learned that none of his baggage had] there was no evidence, they said, of]dent Street, to-day said Ed cic Please do not let people, look been removed from the place and]any suspicious circumstances “Really there is nothing to it, except at me and please put me away in ee cer ree ree ee Pe siy| Dee Gite ekangrated Dre Howelllray tase Aree of the intentions of che | eee ee WL TRA We sack T'bavi oni carhin i Gene translatable smile on the tace of one|completely. Everything was normal,|man who stopped our car. But his AFTER SENATE FIGHT “EB “Alwas the same. f the employees when a reporter suk 0} P) $ Pi Regret that my iast gested that the Count and his bride ne sald, apd the result was an unfor- tunate accident that could not have cerity soon convinced me. However, did get a chance for once to driv: op os might be in the establishment. een forseen. rapidly as I wished, When the police-|_ WASHINGTON, May 10.—Nat Gold-1 to ene did have to be a material At the Hotel Ambassador it was| Dr. Howell was visibly affected by| man got on the running board he told] "#1" whose recent eee eh one, for I'm not realfy a material Said that Mr. Burton was no longer|thhe accidental death. A few me to drive fast and I did. I felt rpternal Revenue Collector at St. Louis am I? We will be beta stopping there, though he had had an| ments after injecting the cocaine, he} was all tight legally in doing #0, Tf tne] has been the occasion of much Senate] Persons » apartment up to a short time ago said, Mrs. Clark compla about alman was-a thief, I am glad [ was] criticiam, has asked that his nomina-} ter off, and T can only sagt — When Count Zichy and Miss De-|peculiar, paralyzing feeling. Ten] able to overhaul | Liesune amend (ieee Here the followed the quotation marest went yesterday to the Mar-|minutes later she was de Medical —~ Goldstein wrote (o President Harding | trom the Rubalyat, riage License Bureau to be married,|Examiner Norris told him, he said,| BABE RUTH LEAVES HOSPITAL.) ang his letter was read by Spencer. It] A note was found addressed to the they were accompanied by Philip|that death was due to static lymphat Babe Ruth left St. Vincent's Hospital) said that on account of the many un-|maid, It read: Ellot, who was a witness for them.| cur.” ‘This is the presence in the} shortly after noon to-day. He had] pleasant things said in the Senate com- “Charlotte: Please mail. and T. C. Waterman remembered thet|pack of the neck of a gland which| been there for the past few daya fol-| mittee regarding Go please return my books to the when Mr. Ellot was married ther jshould disappear at maturity. Not for removal of his 100 to be a Lowden delegate at the} tinrary, You may hi my mam. three or four months ago, Count Zichy leven an X-ray reveals its presence Mra. Ruth, his] Republican, come tierthdraw so se tof bership, You have been better to was his witness. When he eecalled|)), Norris said still @ at the hospital felt he must withdraw so as to] oN te “any person, o@ earth. ut by May 20. fine as he iadt the She expects to be You whi be happy, I am sure. 2 Kou kajow 1 am not afraid, dom's A L lark is one of leading eperiatiets in this country ep Democra’ RContinued on Second Page. ol ompital of the nomaauen, Ls . ace me ee ‘ 4

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