Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SENT TO JAL FOR TRAFFIC VIOLATION — eee e 408 Speeders in 233 Cases Tried in Court — Fines Amount to $2,702. Jail sentences of from three to ten @ays were imposed to-day in the Traffic Court on thirty chauffeurs in @efault of paying their fines. In all, 283 cases were heard. There were 107 speeders as first offenders and some second offender. Magistrates ©obb and Sims presided. The fines jounted to $2,702. Among those who paid fines was Cleveland BH. Dodge, thirty-four, Riv- @rdale Avenue, the Bronx. He was hhaled into court on a summons by Motorcycle Patrolman George F. Batley, who charged that on June 18 | Dodge drove his car in St. Nicholas ‘Avenue between 156th and 158th | Streets at the rate of twenty-six miles ‘am hour. He was fined $ Richard Lazalvo, twenty-four, a chauffeur, No. 5141 Broadway, was a second offender for speeding. He was @iven five days in the City Prison. Daniei McElevery, twenty-six, No. Farrington Street, Flushing, was charged with spoeding at the rate of {wenty.six miles an hour on Riverside Drive between 97th Street and 100th Strects. When arrested by Patrolman James Gunshannon and askeg for his @river's license he said he ‘had left ij at home. He told this to Magis trate Sims to-day. The Automobile Bureau was telephoned and said Mc jlevery had failed to obtair a 1322 iicense. He was fined $25 for speed fmg and given five days in the City Prison for operating an automobile without a license. Town in Terror Of Weird Airman Who Flies Low Woman Rushes Into Stran- ger’s House at Night to Avoid Being Hit. For a long time complaints have been coming in at Police Headquar- ters, North Bergen, N. J., about an @viator who flies his plane through the streets, below the roof levels, and frightens women almost out of their senses. One woman said that the-flyer came down so low one night recently that she was compelled to Fun into a strange man’s house to @vold being struck. Other women said they were afraid to go out o° pights. It was not until to-day that a defin- aviator was brought to book for ying/&bout North Bergen, and he ‘was arraigned before Recorder Niles He is Edward L. Taylor, of No. 8 First Street, Weeluwken. Rosario Nizzo, owner of what is known as the Homestead Ash Lot, a public dump- ing ground in the town, charged that Taylor alighted in the lot last Sun- @ay night. Taylor admitted this, but said It because he had but one alterna- ve, to alight in a rwamp and prob- ably lose his life. He denied he had flown low over the town or down any of the streets and Recorder Niles dis- missed him. Now the town is wait- 4ng to see whether the . low-flyer shows up again. he ee '‘SHOPLIFTERS USE BABY TO HIDE LOOT Couple Confess Concealing Goods Stolen in Store in Long Dress. With her seven-months-old baby in jfher arms, the long dress haying been |fased to hide stolen goods, Mrs. Filo- \amena Pacecca, nineteen, and her hus- band, Cosimo, twenty-seven, pleaded wutlty to-day in the Adams Street ourt, Brooklyn, on a charge of shop- See and were held in $300 bail pach for trial in the Court of Spectal Bessions. Rose Murray, detective of a depart- ment store in Fulton Street, saw the fpouple wandering from counter to wounter yesterday. The father was parrying the baby and every once in ‘while a stop was made and some- ing placed under the long dress of the baby. Miss Murray caused their arrest fWhen the baby's clothing was pearched, it is alleged, fifteen pairs of Bocks, three pairs of silk stockings, @ necktie and a pair of bloomers were found. —__———— BRNEST STOVIL GETS LICENSE TO WED TO-MORROW. Ernest Medley Stovil of No. 62 Riv side Drive, forty years old, an adver- tising man, obtained a license to-day to marry Miss Edith Hays Brierly, twenty- three years ol, of Castor road, Phila- delphia, She is the daughter of Joseph Brlerly, The ceremony will take ¢ to-morrow at St. George's Church, a PRESIDENT HARDIN TARY Is MARRIED, CINCINNATI, ©., June 28,—Miss loranell Mattern, confidential secretary to President Harling, was married here e-day to Norman P. Sheppard, at- te the Insurance Bureau for For- mer wvice Men. Mrs. Sheppard has been dm Mr. Harding’s employ since ait, SECR- Three hundred schoolgirls and two hundred boys visited City Hall Plaza in sightseeing buses to-day and were addressed by Mayor Hylan, The chil- dren are members of the Junior Civic League of the Department of Street Cleaning, headed by Reuben Simon, The girls were from Public School No. 88, Dominick and Clarke Streets, and were in charge of Margaret Ait- ken, Principal, and under the direc- tion of Miss Mary Rowan. The boys were from Public School No. 97, Man- gin Street, near Stanton, and were In charge of Morris L, Cohen. It was explained to the Mayor that all the children are members of a league that not only practises and preaches the gospel of cleanliness on the streets and in the home, but that tho boys and girls are missionaries in the cause of civic advancement. Mayor Hylan left a delegation of Washington officials looking for a new Federal building site long enough to address the children, He thanked them for their aid in keeping the city clean and told them he was always glad to meet them and talk with them. The children waved flags, sang patrjotic songs and gave several class yells. WINS $20,000,000 GAS ROYALTY SUIT Plainfield Man Backed In- ventor of Refining Process. Royalties estimated at 420,000,000 and part control of a gasoline refining process hitherto used exclusively by the Texas Company are Involved in a suit won here yesterday by George T. Rogers, In which he was said to be backed by the Standard Ofl Company. Reciting that in 1907 he had ad- vanced to George A. Adams, an in- ventor, $5,000 to develop the refining process, Mr, Rogers produced a ccn- tract by the terms of which he was to share a 40 per cent. interest in the process. The Texas Company contended it bought the process from Mr. Adams in the belief that it was acquiring full title. In handing down his decision yester- day, Supreme Court Justice McAvoy held that a reasonable inquiry by the company would have disclosed Mr. Rogers's interest in the process. The company was ordered to turn over to Mr. Rogers his share of the approxi- mately $20,000,000 royalties that have accrued since the company bought the patents of the process. Mr. Rogers's share is estimated at $8,000,000. Mr. Rogers, a retired whole: dealer, lives in Plainfield N. J. SUN’S LIEUTENANTS JOIN GEN. CHIUNG Deposed Leader Said to Be Recruiting Army From Among Bandits. AMOY, China, June 28 (Associated Press).—Military leaders of Kwang- si Province, previously adherents of Dr. Sun Yat Sen, have cast their lot with Gen. Chiung Ming, according to advices received here from Canton. Information available here does not clearly reveal the plans of Sun Yat Sen, who apparently still hopes to regain control of Canton and re- establish his power as President of a South China Government. One report says Dr. Sun from his headquarters at Whampoa, near Canton, is trying to recruit a new army among bandits and the remnants of his own and other provincial forces. J. Se EDISON OFFICIAL FREED IN INTOXICATION CHARGE ohn W. Robinson Dentes Allega- tion, but Admits Highbal coal John W. Robinson of No. 19 North Maple Avenue, East Orange, N. J., Hee ry of the Thomas A. Edison Companies, was freed by Recorder Ellis in the Police Court to-day when arraigned on a charge of driving an automobile while intoxicated. Policeman Cohra arrested Robinson on June 13 and testified he noticed the odor of liquor on the prisoner's breath, Dr, R. J. Potter gave similar testi- mony, but would not say to what ex- tent he thought Robinson had been drinking, Robinson emphatically de- nied the charge, admitting, however, that he had a high ball three hours before he was arrested. MOTHER MUST SUE IN ANOTHER STATE FOR SON’S CUSTODY Jersey Divoreee Denied Ap- plication in Home State for Boy. Mrs. Queenie Morley, of No. 29 Argyle Place, Kearny, N. J., d her application for tne cus year-old son, Theodore B,, to-day by Vice Chancellor Foster in Newark. She contended that the courts of Providence, R. I, had awarded her the boy cured a divorce from Morley, of No. 188 Grove Street, Montclair, last year. The husband insisted the child had been awarded to him and the Vice Chancellor told Mra. Morley that proceedings in Rhode nd would be necessary, Mrs. Morley stated that after the divorce proceedings she went to Cali- fornia, leaving the baby with a friend, Morley, she asserted, took the baby and since then she has not been able to regain possession of the boy. Morley presented to the court letters purported to have been written by. Mrs. Morley promising him custody of the child if he did not contest the divorce. CLUB WOMEN HEAR MOVIE ARGUMENTS when she se- Theodore A. Final Action by Convention Is Expected by Motion pictures had the stage at to- day's sessions of the biennial con- vention of the General Federation of Women's Clubs. Representatives of producers, exhibitors and censors spoke and teachers and women club members led discussions. To-night Will H. Hays, President of the Mo- tion Picture Producers and Distrib- uters will talk on “‘Upbuilding the Nation's Life Through Motion Pic- tures.” The speeches have brought to a focus the controversy between ad- vocates and opponents of censorship and between those disagreed upon means of co-operation between the federation and the motion picture industry. Final action by the con- vention is expected to-morrow, CITY DENIED P PERMISSION TO INSPECT GAS PLANT Corporation Appeal B Application of th through Assistant Corporation C Joseph P, Morrisey, to inspect wand make a survey of the plant of the New York and Richmond Gas Company was dented to-day bys B. Meredith Langstoff, special examiner of the Public Servic Commission, before whom the gas com- pplication for an in- took exception to the and declared he uld appeal to th 8 for redress, explained that if the y's representatives would peruse the records and reports of the gas comp: on file with the Public Service Commis sion all the information desired could by obtained. w Mr, Langstaff MRS. FORAKER SUES HER FORMER FIANCE DEMANDING $25,000 Late Senator's Daughter-in- Law Charges “Cave Man” Tactics Were Used. CHICAGO, June 28.—-Alleged "* isan tactic: of Herbert L, Myers, wealthy Chicag dealer, led to the filing of a $: 000 damage suit by Mrs. Kathryn Foraker, daughter-in law. of the late Senator from Ohio. The petition alleges that Myer dur ug a quarrel last February, picked her up and‘huried her against a news- etand. Mrs. Foraker declares she sus tained injuries which have kept her confined to bed since. was engi to marry Mr. myers ai the time,’ Foraker When her en en ker, died he left her $250,000, —_—. REAR ADMIRAL KLINE DIES AT HIS HOME rved for Thirty-six Years When He Retired Because of Hl Health. Read Admiral George W. Kline, N., retired, died at his home in Bound Brook, N, J., this morning in his fifty- ninth year. He had served in the navy for thirty-six years, being retired about a year ago because of ill health. He was under treatment at the Naval Hos pital in Washington until about two months ago, when he was brought to his home here, He leaves his wife, who was with him ade for « mil Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Burial will be at Readington, N. J —_—_——_ DYNAMITE BLAST KILLS 9, IN- JURES 10. KNOXVILLE, Tenn., June 28,—Nine dead and ten injured was the toll of a dynamite explosion that wrecked the Holston Quarry Company's quarries at Strawberry Plains, 16 miles from here. late yesterday. HOLIDAY From Pennsylvania Station and Hudson Terminal. ‘astern Standard Time, Saturday, July 1 Pennsylvania Sta PM. Hudson Terininai, ¥.00"a, ‘3 12.10' (Atlantic City Limited)’ and 0 P Sunday, duly 2-—Pennvylvania, Bt tion, "7.18 and 0.05 A. M.. Hudson Terminal, 7.12 and 9.00 A, M. [F In addition to direct through ‘trainn convent t traina connectit A. Me, 400"end'8.00 P.M HA ca {aU z UA 4ith of July SERVICE ATLANTIC CITY THROUGH EXPRESS TRAINS THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE. 28, 1922, Humorist Statue [DRY LAW OFFENDER ; Hear grees Talk on Cleanliness pp cas Gallery Plaster Cast of “Mayor of Montmartre” Grins at Venus de Milo. PARIS, June 28 (Associated Press). —For the first time since the Louvre Palace was converted into an art gal- lery a living artist has succeeded tn getting one of his works into its col- lection, the first condition of entry to which Is that the artist be dead. For five long days a plaster statue of M. Dupaoult, the so-called Mayor of the “free commune of Mont- mattre,"" made for the Humorists’ Salon, has stood on a pedestal in one of the main galleries, looking with a malicious smile at the Venus de Milo. Although the statue has apparently escaped the sharp eyes of the guar- dians or else satisfied their artistic conceptions of what should belong in the Louvre, it has mystified many American tourists who have been un- able to identify it in their catalogues. That it belongs among the statues of antiquity is indicated by the Latin inscription on its base, though it wears a battered stovepipe hat and a frock coat of Twentleth Century cut. The practical jokers who smuggled the statue into the Louvre expect to gain as much fame as the man who, in 1911, made away with Leonardo da Vinci's “Mona Lisa," and are sald to be planning to emulate his exploit by smuggling out their statue. TAKE GIRL ABROAD TO END ROMANCE Miss Vera Stock’s Parents Object to Her College Engagement. (Special to The Evening World.) CHICAGO, June ‘Will Rhenish castles and Viennese orchestras make Miss Vera Stock forget her American fiarice? This was the question that friends of the daughter of Frederick A. Stock, conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, were asking to- day when they learned that Miss Stock had been suddenly whisked away to Europe by her parents. The reason for the parental action is understood to be Ralph L. Hoy, a young lumberman of Brainardsville, N. Y. Mr. Hoy was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1921. At that time Miss Stock was a fresh- man. That was the start of the ro- mance that culminated in the an- nouncement of their engagement by Miss Stock recently. Then objections to Mr. Hoy on the part of the girl's mother and father appeared. Now they have taken her on an extended sojourn to Germany and Austria in the hope that she will forget her romance. Slee a MME. TARASOVA SUES MANAGER FOR $5,176 Charges Hurok Falled to Fill Concert Dates Mme. Nina Tarasova, grand opera and concert singer, filed a suit in preme Court to-day against her mar: ager, Solomon Hurok, for $5,176, which she alleges ts due her on a contract for 1 serles of twenty concerts for which she was to receive $650 each. The singer says her manager fallod » fulfll eight of the concert dates ed for in the contract. Two of Mmo. Tarasova'’s concerts were at Town Hall and Carnegie Music Hall, Singer Teeth Without Plates I Save Decayed Teeth, Tighten Teeth, Treat Diseased Gums, Badly Decayed Teeth and Roots Care fully iraniea, all Theranen Caan Geia snd Pere ier ge Made at Reasonable Prices. BROKEN PLATES REPAIRED WHILE YOU WAIT Li gt Ph Oon, 163 B 125th St., cor. Parke Ay. (Over Loft's Gandy store.) ™# Las ton Av., cor. 58th St. (Over Liggett's brug Store.) 169 E. 34th St., cor. 3d Av. A Ma ve Atlantic City for Pennsylvania ation and Hudson Terminal day, July 2—8.15 A. M., 3.13 B.D Mantle Clty ‘Limited, sho coaches, extra fare jtrain), 419 and 7.00 July 38.15 A. M. ‘ana 1.30 . July 4—K.1S A. M., 1.30, 3.10, ity Limited, no coaches, train), 4.15 and 7.00 may. (Atiantl extra tare M to direct through w York, trains | making conven North “Philadelphia a} and Pennay! 8.00 (will 9.00 A.M we 50, 8.00 nA. and 890 P Parlor Cars on all Express Trains. PENNSYLVANIA SYSTEM — The Route of the Hroadway Limited. asin srsrem] JAILED BY MISTAKE SET FREE BY JUDGE scnaneaipeitin “First Violators” Rush to Plead Guilty and Be Fined in Jersey. Charles Pintal, a bartender, of No. 75 West Street, was released from Es- sex County, N. J., Jail to-day after serving three days of a three months’ sentence for selling liquor. United States District Judge Ervin ordered him set free on the motion of As- sistant United States Attorney J. M. Cashin, who said the charge against Pintal had inadvertently been entered as a second offense and. the defendant had pleaded guilty thinking he was charged with a first offense.’ A fine of $25 was also assessed against Pintal. Judge Ervin hus departed from the custom of other Federal judges here of sending all Volstead law first of- fenders to jail for 14 days and has fined first offenders from $60 to $100, second offenders being sent to jail for three months. This fact soon became known and the calendar of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of such cases now pending is being lightened through pleas of guilty being taken by defendants. Those charged with being first of- fenders would not plead guilty before, with certain jail sentences staring them in the face, and the cases ac- cumulated much faster than the courts could try them, the result being the clogging of the court ma- chinery. “More have pleaded guilty during the past two days,"’ sald Mr. Cashin, “than pleaded since January 1. We hope to clear many more from the calendar during the week."* Mr. Cashin, who comes from King- ston, N. Y., succeeded Palmer Can- ficld in charge of the Federal District Attorney's Prohibition enforcement staff. “W ear-Ever” IN CANNING fruits or in making preserves, jams or jellies, the “*Wear-Ever” Aluminum Breeerviog Kettle provides three distinct advantages for the house! results ea it SAVES the Wer Ever The heat-conductin, aluminum used in * over a hot stove and ’ utensils are used. The ‘‘Wear-Ever” trade-mark on the ANTEE that the utensil ie made of the hard, THER, theet “Wear-Ever” insures yeare and years of service in ighning the There ave thousends of “Ween we Soya ing such service for 20 years nearest stock now. Go to burden of kitchen work. Kettles in use t “Wear-Ever" stores bottom of eluminum ware is e GUAR. x that have been ve these kettles dealer's and get one TODAY, THE ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSIL COMPANY NEW KENSINGTON, PA. His Ask Your Dealer About The New' “Wear-Ever” Prices Thousands of women like Lifgbuoy for the soft, pleas- ant, after-feeling it leaves. You can almost feel Life- buoy’s pure, soothing, palm and cocoanut oils pour over the skin. Women who use Lifebuoy never have “dry hands,” It keeps the hands soft and beautiful. HEALTH SOAP General Cooking Beret andy whee warvkes paring pot roast of constant stirring. rties of the hard, dense, THICK, ”” utensils are such that heat AWAY from i bottom and distribute it EVENLY throug! the utensil. This prevents the heat from collecting at the bottom of the utensil, Hence, with “‘Wear-Ever” utensils it is not necessary to stand ir continually as is the case when thin aluminum fuel, it insures better sheet they carry the : & and Preserving Kettle