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; ; RN ae me Foti DA tienen he ern ie = oS ed 8 eto ee = 10 PORCH CLIMBERS GET S26 000 GEMS . AS FAMILY DINE Country Home of Goodhue Livingston Robbed—Heir- looms Among Loot. The country home of Goodhue Liv- ingston, architect and member of one of New York's Oldgst families, on Lake Agawam, Southampton, L. I. ‘was invaded by porch climbers while Mr. and Mrs. Livingston were at din- ner with guests Monday night. Jewelry valued at $26,000 was stolen from a bedroom on the second floor. The robbery became known yester- day. During dinner at about 8 o'clock, sounds like footfalls were heard in the bedroom, above the dining room, but no attention was paid, it heing thought servants were moving about. ‘Two hours later the sounds wera again heard. Mrs. Livingston discovered the robbery when about to retire. An open window showed how the jeweis and thieves had left. A few minutes later George Campbell, a gardener, reported that he had seen two men, running from the grounds st 11 o'clock. The Livingston home, one of the show places of Southampton, is of colonial architecture, with great col- umns supporting the sloping roof. It is thought the burglars climbed the columns to the second floor window, jimmied their way in and then leisurely ransacked the room while the Livingstons and their guests dined. 4 In reporting the theft to the a Oe Spee Sa TT eT Southampton police, Mr. Livingston said the stolen jewels were nearly all family heirlooms. The Living- ston’s town house is at No. 38 East 65th Street. It also became known yesterday that the home of Dr. Edward L. Keyes, in Art Village, the western end of Southampton, was entered in the same manner Sunday night and jewels worth $2,000 stolen. THE IDWALISTIC ATTITUDE. (rom the Washington Star). “Are you sure your ideas about poll- ety 1, replied Senator forghum. ‘My part of the proceedings is to tell people that if they will be good they will be happy, and leave the practical details to my campaign managers.” SOLDIER CRUSHED TO DEATH BETWEEN TWO WHIPPET TANKS Sergt. UUAN STAHLSCHMIDT Crowd Who Had Been Watching Parade Wit- nesses Tragedy. Julian Stahischmidt, a Sergeant in the 27th Tank Company, was crushed to death between two army whippet tanks yesterday, just as his unit was about to be disbanded in 924 Street, at the close of the parade, “A crowd of onlookers, attracted by the unusual sight of war tanks along a city street, saw the fatal accident. The tanks had been halted close to- gether and three abreast, when the tank to which Stahischmidt was as- signed lurched forward. The move- ment unbalanced him and he slipped and fell forward, directly in the path 6f the oncoming tank. Just a few feet ahead was another tank, and Stahl- schmidt had no chance to save himself from being crushed between them. Stahischmidt had been a member of the 27th Company three years. He was a bank clerk and lived at No. 138 West 129th Street with his parents. The police are investigating the ac- cident with the co-operation of Major John Mansfield and Capt. Oliver Bell. a. aie ass WIFE OPPOSES EX-GOVERNOR, WACO, Tex., May 31.—Receipt of the application of Mrs. Myriam Ferguson, wife of former Gov. James E. Ferguson, for a place on the Democratic primary ticket as candidate for the United States Senate was announced to-day. Mr. Ferguson also is an announced can- didate for the Senate, but he has not formally applied for a place on the July primary ticket. Black an SHOE Astonishing Women’s ‘SIGNET Educator Shoes for 14th St. at No. 6 East 6th Bt. at 1855 Bway. 4d Bt. at No. 187 West Bend Mail Orders to itd Str Values in Rice & Hutchins Men’s and Fine Shoes at Incomparable Prices SHOE SHOPS d White SALE the Whole Famiif 185th Bt. at No. 112 West 160th St. at 3rd Avenue Brooklyn: 557 Fulton St. - LightensSummer Housework part. Rugs make the house a store. Sold on easy terms. NEW YORK. BROO! hn Any EUREKA dealer or ourselves will free in your own home. Call at your dealer's or write or phone our nearest The Grand Prize UREKA VACUUM CLEANER No need taking up your rugs to save summer sweepi Th i ; c ping. ne EUREKA will clean them quickly without any effort on your home. Keep them down. ladly let you try the EUREKA EUREKA VACUUM CLEANER COMPANY 3d ory fi ROOKLYN, 346 Livingston iSerest; Sterling 46sec Street, Market 9418 a ma = = a - as we en enarenenee ete i & EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1922, JEALOUS OF SON'S LOVE FOR MOTHER FATHER KILLS BOTH asteaiigieidcss Murders Boy in Sleep After Attacking Wife, Then Slashes Own Throat. Relatives told the police to-day they believed one of the frequent qui 8 George Krumpet had with his wife Mary, over their children by former marriages, caused the man to become suddenly insane last night and mur- der his wife and their seven-year-old son, William. He almost severed | their heads with a pocket knife in their apartment on the top floor of No. 368 Rast 45th Street, and then slashed his own throat William had frequently shown greater love for his mother, who was forty-five, than for his father, who is forty-eight and employed in a slaughter house. For this preference the quarrel is believed to have cen- tered on the boy. William was sleeping at 11 o'clock when Krumpet began a bitter quarrel with his wife. His words became #0 threatening that Charles Reicher and his Krumpet's stepdaughter, fled. Suddenly Krumpet ran to the kitchen and returned with a long- bladpd pocket knife. . He ran toward the bed where Will- jam lay asleep. Mrs. Krumpet threw herself on the boy to shield him, Krumpet lunged at her and wife, PECIAL Harvey Assailed as “Traitor” And “Traducer Former War Chaplain in Memorial At the Morristown, N, J., Memortal esterday, the Rey, Charies rland, General Seoretary of the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, attacked Unite:t “tates Ambassador Harvey's recent slur on American idealism. Dr, Mac exercises Mac Varland was a Chaplain with the rank of Major during the war, “We must breathe no spirit of malice or revenge," he said, “but we it to our soldiers and to their fallen comrades and we owe it to our- selves to speak the truth. We owe ic to our national self-respect. “Only a little while ago a man who aisrepresents so wretchedly this nation at one of the great capitals of a sister nation released his ready but misguided tongue and undertook to nterpret our nation to the world and to speak even for those who had gone forth and offered up their lives. “He exploited his haggard humor nd let loose his playful sarcasm at ur idealism. With hilarious imper- of Soldier Dead” Bitterly Attacks Envoy Day Speech. inence he announced to that nation jand to the world that America, and hose who went forth to represent lAmerica upon the fields of France, were animated by little or nothing except the grossest of self-interest. “This man has more than once put us to shame—trampled our flag and trailed it in the dust—and I want to take this occasion to lay naked his atrocious lies. “As @ shameful flaunter of his shameless self,’’ continued Dr. Mac- Farland, “as a degrading influence not only in our body politic but in the world of nations, as a traitor to our nation, as a reckless traducer of every known and unknown father, brother, husband, son, who lies beneath the green sod in the flelds of France, as one who has stamped upon every grave with as rude a heel as any Teuton warrior, as the ruthless invader of the sanctity of 75,000 mothers’ hearts, George Harvey ought long ago to have found his place be- fore the bar of our public opinion and then have been deported to obscurity.” ee drew the knife across her throat, Then he hurled himself on William and almost severed the boy's head. Mrs. Krumpet’s dying screams aroused other tenants. Some fied to the street, screaming for the police, A touring car with Detectives Andrews, Culhane and Clark, on night patrol, was just rounding the corner from First Ave- nue. They raced up the flights of stairs) to. the fifth floor, arriving as Krum- pet, his throat slashed, staggered out into the dimly lighted hallway. He fell at their feet. He was taken to Bellevue Hospital in a dying condi- tion. Two other children, Ella, fourteen, and George, twenty-one, were visiting friends. ee FIRE SWEEPS PORT OF NAPLES. NAPLBS, May 31.—Fire swept the general warehouses of the port of Naples last night. Huge stores of pe- troleum, coffee and timber were de- stroyed. Soldiers and sailors fought the fire and succeeded in fsolating a magazine, the explosion of which would have threatened a conflagration. Dam- age of more than 10,000,000 lire was caused. two-piece golf suits in rugged mixtures. Three-button jacket with spacious bellows pockets, half belt, inverted side plaits, with easy-swing shoulders., Tailored and modeled with flawless precision. at $35 to $65. Linen knickers in natural and white, $8.50 to $11. Par value Everything in golf apparel and acces- sories, at low prices for high quality. BROKAW BROTHERS RTY-SECOND STREET WEST 42d ST. of the same Stern Brothers (Between Fifth and Sixth Avenues) Men's Suits—Special! $35 Smart KIRSCHBAUM business suits in worsteds, cheviots, pencil stripes and cassimeres; young men’s models in suitable novelty weaves. All made to the very highest quality standard—and priced considerably less than the average for clothes | character. (Sight Charge for Alterations.) | Kirschbaum Tuxedo or Full Dress Coat and Trousers—Special at $45 All models—all sizes. WEST 43d ST. 6,000,000 CHINESE STARVING IN HUNAN New Famine Sweeps Land —Cannipalism Is Re- ported. SHANGHAI, April 30 (Correspond- ence of Associated Press),—Six mil- lion people out of a population of twenty-seven million in the Province of Hunan are starving and hundreds of thousands are certain to «‘le before midsummer, according to estimates of mission workers there, Literally thousands have fallen, never to rise, in the flelds and by the roadsides. Bodies of dead are stripped by the emaciated survivors and the pitiful rags that clothed corpses sold for the few brass coins they may bring, with which to buy a handful of rice. In one part of the famine belt can- nibalism is being practised, according J White Flannel Trousers $7.00 up 279 Broadway, near Chambers to Ma Ling YI, former Minister of Education at Peking, Gilr children fre being given away on the mere promise that they wil be fed, and fromy twenty to PEASANTS RULE NOW IN BULGARIA American Legation Under Guard Because of Threats to Minister Wilson. SOFIA, Bulgaria, May 31 (Asso ciated Press).—A warning to the Bul garian bourgeoisie that rule by the peasantry Js now an actuality was given yesterday by the peasant Pre mier, Stamboulisky, in an address be fore the Peasants’ Congress “We are now able to do what we he said ja is another Sodom and Gomort inhabited by speculators and unproducer The bourgeois party tried to get the King 9n its side, but the ig must remember that it is the people who Kuppenheimer GOOD CLOTHES bavestment in Good ’ Chppearance a Men’s and Young Men’s ° Suits *35 PAY THIS LOW PRICE AND GET GREATER VALUE Kuppenheimer Clothes Regularly Priced At This Figure Assure Dependable Quality, Right Style And Fit, Long Wear. But This Special Selling At $35 Eclipses Our Former Record For Extra Value At This Moderate Price. Light Patterns, Pencil Stripes And Blues Ready To Wear In All Sizes To Fit The Short, Stout Or Regular Sized Man. OTHER KUPPENHEIMER GOOD CLOTHES $50 540 $45 Our 34th Year in Business Broadway, at 49th Street Downtown Stores work, and that if we can ‘make him Prenident of the Republic of Bulgaria, the od Bulgaria will be fintshed,’* bourgeoisie, fearing a peasant dic« tatorship, are attempting to export their valuables, and many pave been caught and jailed. The American Legation is under a heavy guard of police and soldiers, owing to the num- erous threats received by, Minister Wilson 47 Cortlandt Strect Linen Knickers $4.75 REAL ESTATE ADS. FOR : The Sunday World Real Estate Section MUST BE IN THE WORLD OFFICE BEFORE FRIDAY, CIRCULATION OVER 600,000 @