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RALAEAISHERE [CROWD EESMAN er, amy iV GETS MONEY 'etMPESRPR CMBERIN HAS Plowe” er, ATER NOTED” DONT WANTULS. 1 SLASHATTHROAT | ts 2im Over, PADI MARKETS | Le CHANCE TOREMAN | #erews in Fine) IT DUCHTERI -MEDDLEINSTRNE} OFGRLINSTRET tt) RUSTON NQURE “WNULS. SENATE," — POSTAL SHINO of $55. oliceman August Grom of the Bed- Pleading poverty and then display- Want Time to Experiment]Refusal to Marry Him the|rora avenue Station, Brooklyn, had a|That Is Answer to Mayor's Albert A, Miller Charged With. ing a roll of bills caused an increase of 600 per cent. in the fine of Samuel Klan’s Candidate in Lead by ri) « Inian? ; $82 rough and tumble fight this morning} (Chg “pj iti in 1 y. Neff |Gotaman, a butcher, No. 666 Ralpt i i With “Company Union”— Cause of Assault—Her peer eiat at Roebling and Grand harge of Discrediting 33,000 in Texas—Gov Neff /fotmany s tutcher, No. 666 Raion} Using Mails to Defraud \ Fight to Finish Indicated. Injuries Slight. Streets, Brooklyn. His Administration.” vpét,, Renominated. fy | Gutes Avenue court. Companies. —& nh wen venniaind Gale -whae he = Goldman pleaded guilty to having an unclean shop. He looked at Mag- istrate Jacob Ellperin and sald: The Federal Grand Jury to-day, “Judge, Iam a poor man. I havo| returned an indictment charging Al- little money. “How much have you got?" asked the Magistrate, “Only $5," the butcher replied. “I'll fine you $3,"" the Magistrate sald, Goldman walked to the desk of Chict Clerk William J. Power and took a{ With using the mails to defraud, roll of bills from his pocket. The M According to the indictment, the ee saw this and called Goldman | Millers used the mails in connection “Count your money,’’ commanded the Magistrate. Goldman found he had $55 Hundreds of girls and men on their} the gout appeared at his side. Grom] District Attorney Ruston of Kings way to work to-day saw a disappointed | pave the animal a poke with his litle] County took official notice to-day of suitor draw a razor and slash the|*nilly’’ Tl backed a few steps and|#n open letter written by Mayor throat of the girl who had rejected} then crashed into Grom's legs, Again | Hylan te Commissioner of Public him, It was the startled cries of the] und again it butted the officer. Finally | Markets O'Malley, 1n which the crowd that drew the attention of Po.|the animal rolled Grom into the] Mayor charged that the Investigation liceman John euLnt into alle) reetarr Tiernan of the Mercer}, «nouts and laughter of a crowd | |” an te i eu lad aE Street Station and resulted in the ar-Jyyic) gathered attracted Policemen | Public markets in Brooklyn has been rest of the alleged assailant, Cosimo} Schneider and Metreau, who managed | !nspired by food profiteers and politi executives of railroads in the East 1n| Toricelli, thirty-one, Np. 661 Metro.|to get a rope about the animal's head | clans who are seeking to discredit and New York to-day it is plain that they | politan Avenue, Brooklyn. and tle it to a pole, Then ita feet] embarrass the Clty Administration. tkve no enthusi for President 4 were tied and the three policemen car- ‘ : usiasm for President} Concetta Cornaccio, elghteen, of the goat to the station. ‘There it| The District Attorney said he is a Harding's new plans to end the strike] No, 229 Elizabeth Street, left her|was claimed by Philip Willstein, No. | believer in end supporter of the mu- of the shopmen whatever these plans| home for work about 7.30 this morn- {536 Metropolitan Avenue, who said the | nicipal markets. He also believes, he fay be. They say they have not been animal had escaped from a stall. that they should be controlled consulted, that they are breaking the by the Department of Markets, su- — strike, that they want time to expert- pervised by inspectors in the employ of the department and that the push- cart peddlers should pay a feo for doing business in the public streets. “The thing that concerns me,” said Mr. Ruston, “Ils that the officials of the Department of Markets, in open violation of written law, have been diverting into other channels large sums of money which should have ny gone into the sinking fund. I am in- vestigating this violation of the law. Counsel for Managers Says] My investigation thus far has dis- ’ . closed a number of expense accounts Actors’ Salaries and the Sea- | vainanty padded as to be nts son Must Be Reduced. “The only politicians I have run across so far are three or four who ‘There will be no joy in the Yiddish|are very high In the councils of the sections of this city in the fall unless | Mayor and upon whose recommenda- the Hebrew Actors’ Union and the|tion supervisors were appointed managers and owners of Hebrew] These supervisors should have been inted only upon the recommenda- theatres get together quickly and] ®PPo! th the Civil Service Commis- prevent the threatened lockout. Bey OL THe pb y ice = Comite DALLAS, July 24.—Interest In the outcome of the first Democraite pri- mary election, held last Saturday, nar- rowed down to-day to the question of an opponent for Representative ‘Thomas L. Blanton of Abilene in the second “run off primary Aug. 26. Representative Blanton, seeking re- election, had ‘a five-to-three lead and ’ was assured a place on the run-off nike 3 EAVIORY: . ticket, but his opponents were Byouped closely, with former Repre- Widowed Daughter of} sentative Oscar Calloway of Fort Burke:Roche Married at Worth holding a slight advantage over y ‘W. J. Cunningham of Abilene and J. Newport. B, Dibrell of Coleman NEWPORT, R. I, July, 24.—Mrs.| United States Senator Charles A. Cynthia Burden, widow of Arthur | Culberson still had a chance of re- Scott Burden of New York was mar-] taining his seat, although 33,000 votes a tock Gis ts \ was mar-| sehind Earle B. Mayfield. James E. ned to-day to Guy Fairfax Cary, also) ferguson or. Culberson will run of New York. The ceremony was] against Mayfield in the August elec- performed at Elm Court, the home of | tion. the bride's mother. ae erelack foray ODED be counties in the State, twenty Mrs. Burden, one of the social! complete, gave Mayfield 100,785; Fe leaders of Newport, had a quiet] guson, 68,947; wedding, only about fifty of their] Ousley, 36,681; Henry, 4. closest friends attending. Mrs. Bur-|. Gov. Pat M. Neff, with a 82,000 en's mother and her elt lead, ds assured renomination without and her elder brother.) going into the second primary. Maurice Burke-Roche, who re-|/ Mrs. Edith Wilmans of Dallas may cently inherited the title of Baron| be the first woman to sit in the Texas Fermoy of Ireland, are at present in| Legislature. She won the Democratic Burope. nomination from John E. Davis, Mrs. Burden was born in England| newspaper man. thirty-eight” years ago, the daughter} Mayfield is indorsed by the Ku of the late James Boothby Burke- | Klux Klan. Roche. On June 11, 1906, she was| Billie Mayfield jr, @ newspaper married to Arthur Scott Burden, whg died in June of last year from an ine jury suffered seven years before while man, indorsed by the Klan, ts far ahead in the race for Lieutenant Gov- riding to hounds. Their daughter, Eileen, is now nine. ernor. He and T, W. Davidson, anti- Klan candidate, will probably be in the run-off, Mr. Cary, who is four years older than Mrs. Burden, was graduated from Harvard in 1902 and from the Harvard Law School in 1904. He is 4a member of the law firm of Shear- man & Stevling in New York, and is a director of the National City Bank, the Southern Railroad and several uther corporations. pale COOLER WEATHER TO BRING RELIEF It Isn’t Hot Now, Take It From Weather Man. STATEMENT BY STRIKERS Expect Drastic Action From the Government To-Day or To-Morrow. bert A. Milter Company, which for @ years has operated investment broker age officies in the Singer Building. Albert A, Miller, head of the concern, and his daughter Josephine M. Miller, From opinions gathered from the with a scheme by which it was repre- sented that the corporation had weal- thy clients always ready to loan 4 and back old or new enter- I'm going to increase your fine be- cause you attempted to deceive the court,"’ the Magistrate sald. ‘Fifteen dollars or five days.'' lo IRISH NATIONALS TAKE BALLYHAUNIS Their Capture of Limerick Is Followed by Other Successes. DUBLIN, July 24 (Associated Press),—National Army troops have gained a fresh victory in West Ire- land by capturing Ballyhaunis, County Mayo, from the Republican irregulars, {t was announced to-day, The Free State triumph in the cap- ture of Limerick was swiftly fol- lowed by successes in the surround- ing district. A number of minor positions in this area have been add- ed to the list of Free State victories, according to to-day's official bulletin. The total number of casualties in the Limerick fighting has not been accurately estimuted, although it is known that at least fifteen of the Na- tional Troops were killed and eighty- seven wounded. It is generally be- lieved that at least thirty of the 1: regulars lost their lives. The total number of casualties suffered by Free State forces during the capture of Water?ord was nine Killed and nine- teen wound SS TO CROSS ATLANTIC IN DAY BY PLANE England Building Largest Aircraft to Annihilate ing. While she was walking on Bleecker Street, near Crosby, with her lunch under her arm, Toricelli, ment with the “company union" plan | who had apparently appointed himself <they do not like the coupling of the}as her sweetheart, advanced and Word “union” with the idea, and that] asked if she would marry him. She the majority of the large E: declared her father would not permit tiers are in a “fight to a fin it, and Toricelli, it is sald, drew the The following statement was made] razor, by L. F. Loree, President of the Dela- ware & Hudson Railroad: alm lacked strength and only a slight -"“The morning papers quote Gov.|wound was inflicted. The girl did Ben Hooper (Chairman of the Labor}not scream, but the crowd did. Board), as saying: ‘As might be] Miss Cornacclo, who {ts sald to be supposed, the President seeks to know | unusually attractive, came from Na- this situation from every angle, from] ples three years ago, Toritelli de- the viewpoint of the carriers, the em-| clared he was only twenty-four and eet ee aoe aoa and dit [asked her to marry him. She wrote neither the President nor Gov. Hooper |t® her father, still in Naples, and his has ever made any effort whatever to] reply, ingthe negative, was received ascertain the viewpoint of the em-| only recently. ployees. The strikers’ point of view a oo Init no effort hus heen mate to develop [40,000 WORKERS QUIT IN GARMENT SHOPS the employees'’s point of view.’ Referring to the published appeal (i _ sion.”” Temporary Shutdown to According to Charles W. Groll, Ex: Force Union Conditions of Daniel Willard, President of the ecutive Secretary and counsel for the iy M theatre managers, wages must be cut Watch and h on Small Manufacturers. Ci ain Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, to the from 10 to 80 per cent, and the theat- ° ary What has been described as “the }iica1 season shortened to thirty-four Stick to Louis 8 prises, The indictment says that through the operation of the scheme a number of persons were duped. They include. F. W. Giberson, President of Will- jams & Williams, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa.; T. A, Goldner, Secretary of the Quaker Ice Cream Company, Phila- delphia; O. A. Bofer, President of the Nojag Flexible Wheel Company, Chester, Pa,; T. P. Burdett, Secre tary of the Tennet Products Com- pany, Freehold, . and the Steel- master Hotel Apartments Company, ttsburgh, Va Miller, who was arrested at the ins stance of the Postal authorities some- time ago, is out on bail. He will be notified to appear with his daughte: for pleading MRS. OBENCHAIN’S SECOND TRIAL OPENS © Murder Defendant Confi-+y dent of Acquittal—Plans Return to Ex-Husband. LOS ANGELES, July 24.—Argu- ment was berun here to-day tn the second trial of Mrs, Madalynne Oben- chain for the murder of her sweet- heart, J. Belton Kennedy, a young @ broker Mrs. Obenchain has expressed her- self as confident of acquittal—so con~ fident, she declared, that she already had begun packing her possessions in preparation for leaving the county jail, where she has been a prisoner nearly a year. Then, she sald, she was going back to her former hus- band, Ralph Obenchain, in Evanston, ie He was so excited that his arm and Ku Kine Sheriff BEAUMONT, Tex., July 24.—Sheriff T. H. Garner of Jefferson County was renominated over two opponents in Saturday's primary. His race attracted wide attention because of an ouster suit filed against him here because of his admitted membership in the Ku Klux Klan, SHOTS FLY AT CAR IN 5TH AVE. CRASH Policeman on Running Board Pursues—Woman Badly Hurt. striking employees of that system to agree to a conference looking to a settlement without reference to other roads, Mr. Loree expressed the opinion that Mr. Willard was alone among the Eastern exocutives in de-| "7%" Stock taking of tho cloak and} woexs, The union, Reuben Guskin, ° siring to settle with the strikers. sult trade” in New York City heging |husiness mannger, sald, refuses to ac- Hands on Train “Mr. Willard,” Mr. Loree contin-| to-day, when the International} @épt the cut in wages, but is willing ued, “was a member of the Brother-| Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union has|to recede from its demands for a Es hood of Locomotive Engineers. He tslordered its 40,000 members in the|{hitty-elght-week season to a thirty-} All Gummed Up From a man of profound sympathies. No [ii aust; t - six-week year. . 5 doubt he has been moved by the ter-|!B4ustry to cease work pending a] ‘The Yiddish season is over and the Drinks, He Couldn’t Make roriam to which some strikers have|!sting of all manufacturers, sub-| nine major theatres in this city are Th ‘Behav vesorted in going to homes and threat-| manufacturers and contractors, their | dark. | Rehearsals mee Best meee) em ehave. ening wives and families of men who] places however, are to in. next month. se —cenaea have stayed at work. He has that| vjoe Ay ee and those with) nut the managers mainiain they willl youis Levy, thirty-eight, No. 190 background, and {s entitled to exper\- vO WUBI ORR: not open their houses in September 7 Sev 1 th rO, \. mést in his own method for reliet.| The stoppage represents an effort| unless the union gives in. eee Avenue, Brownsville, was} r¢'3 delightful weather we're hav-| geyeral shots were fired by a patrol Distance. Wits culty ce Hee atone; cram ‘L§e bituation is certainly big enough|to stamp out the so-called “soclal}] Mr. Saag Rae ee AR arraigned to-day in the Coney Island] ing, with a fine breeze out of the Jer-| man standing on the running board of] LONDON, July 24.—The world's] icense here to re-marry her, bu: taj let every one try something elso| shop,” a recrudescence of the old time | "80 had & bad seagon Mkt year | | Police Court charged with being | sey meadows curling the waters of the| a commandecred texicab In a chase|largest seaplane, designed to Cross the|the authorities refused to permit « once. The strikers’ committee issued the following statement to-day at the Hotel Continental: “The Government now admits that] sanitary conditions exist and union the railroad strike is a grave public} rules as to pay and hours apply. issue. The public knew it two weeks ago. Tt ia only the die-hard group of| BY the orders, 2,800 factories and Eastern executives who still deny it.| 88ops, employing some 40,000 work- Atlantic in one day, is being con-| wedding. structed at Southampton by tho Air — Ministry, it uunced to-day. ib wae annotate s INDICTMENTS DISMISSED JAND SENATE CANDIDATE, IN THEATRE DISASTER] potltical, inter. has some trom the Woodrow Wilson house of seclusion © Held in| here. The exPresident has written a. letter to Mrs. Robert R. Henderson of sweatshop in which clothing !s manu-|nogs** he added. ‘They have had|® pickpocket. Detectives Herman factured at much lower costs than is|good seasons too, and they did not|Schlesser and Michael Abt grabbed possible in the larger factories where |give us extra money. Now they want] Louis, they say, as he was removing us to work cheap just because they]a gold watch and chain and $8 from had one bad season." Mr. Groll, on the other hand, de- ¢ clares that ‘‘excessive demands" of the articles disappeared in a West the union, which is affiliated with the] End train before they could stop him. after an automobile that had collided wit) another car at Bi{th Avenue and th Street early to-day. According to the police, Morris Feld- man, nineteen, an actor, No. 27 West Eighth Street, was driving home in his automobile from Pocono, Pa., with sey- eral friends. As he crossed Fifth Ave- Hudson and fanning the face of! Father Knickerbocker, At 11 o'clock the temperature was 75 and the hu- midity Had shrunk from 72 per cent at 8 o'clock to 64. Mr. Weather Man says that we'll have Ro more hot weather during the day and that we needa't use the fire WILSON a man’s vest pocket. The owner of Supreme Court Frees Pheatric yu “rt w ao a scapes or parks for dormitories to- Knickerbocker Collapse. ‘They deny it because they want the| ers which last year did a business of {Theatrical Trades’ Union, can no} “It was this way,’ sald Louis, who ]®scnes OF hit des a ecding nortt Cumberland praising David J. Lewis, strike to go on. They are using this| s675,990,000, are affected tonger be met and certain changes In| iia Cant, MeCloskey of the Coney | NISHt: and that we may need a blan-| ue a touring car. speeding orth) WasinGTON, July 24—Indictments] prmocratlc. candidate. for Senator” tn crisis in a vain attempt to install the|° qn’ this ways It i ected! working agreements are demanded ket—not more than one at that. smashed into tho lighter car, throwing} |g.) aan ne ewentianl aii ‘land, It 4s so laudatory that it is Reovip ag n this way, it in expected that the}|npe managers would cut wages as| I!and pollen he was a clothing oper-| Notwithstanding the coolness of the| out its occupants and smashing a wheel, | AEN UT NS A Ua or] taken as a complete Indersement of union will be able to compel the smaller shops to live up to union conditions and prevent the larger manufacturers and jobber: _ getting work done cheaper than those who comply with union conditions and maintain modern plants. a OXLEY IN THE ®OMBS IN DEFAULT OF BAIL $100 a week and less, 10 per|ator. “I went down to Coney to-day $100-$200 a week, 20 per cent., | to enjoy the sea and I got a lot of over $200 a week, 30 per cent. The}lemon and orange drinks and my Hebrew Actors’ Union was formed| hands got all sticky. I was making twenty-five years ago and {s still 100|for the train and in the crowd my per cent. organized. sticky hands went against a man’s vest and the watch and chain and $8 BEACH SPITE FENCE stuck to them. I was just going to hold the watch and chain and the IS RAISED AGAIN | three berries up in the train and ask who owned them when the cops air, Vincent Kaprotos, seventy, of No. 238 High Street, Brooklyn, was overcome by heat to-day at No. 27 Bleecker Street. He was attended and sent home. Tessie Marano, thirty-two, Monroe Strect, Hoboken, N. J. was overcome at No. 409 Lafayette Street. She also was treated and sent home, Cool weather is promised for to- morrow. ‘The touring car immediately speeded east in 27th Street. Patrolman Selig of Hast 22d § Station leaped to the running board of a passing taxicab and ordered the driver to pursue, With Selig @ring his revolver, the speeding automobile turned north in-Second Ave~ nue, then toward Lexington Avenue and was lost sight of. Struck by an automobile while cross- ing Hudson and Perry Streets with friends last night, Mary Tracchia, thir- *We expect drastic action from the Government to-day or to-morrow. We expect priority orders first and then a pooling of rolling stoc:: to relieve the acute car shortage that has al- ready developed. * “But priority orders and pooling do not produce good order cars, Only a strike settlement and ¢ led mechan- ies will do that. If the Government ‘Wants to relieve the transportation ninety-seyen pissed to-day by Justice Siddons of the District of Columbia Supreme Court, who sus- tained demurrers. The court held the Indictments de- fective and insufficient in that the material and essential facts forming the basis of the alleged offense wert not set out with reasonable certainty 7 = ” rank Schindler, thirty, of No. 408 verry Street, Was taken|and the indictme .t therefore eo Finis it will settle the strike. The ee South Beach Bungaleers| ™epeamen sis we piousea to hear| West, 80th Streot, waa. overcome at Hee league indetinite cana uncertain: way to settle the strike is to persuade Thirty C lai s With pa udge DS DIGBeeK Slst Street and Sixth Avenue. He wag ie peli aaa aaa Gen. Atterbury and his hard-bollea] +/UTty Comp: ainants ith Had Torn It Down that story,"“ssuid Capt. McCloskey as] gitended and went home. onyeOrs tat terhe. Renoue Wall Street clique to cease holding up] $36,000 Involyed—Bond Saturday. they led Lows away ernie, Pallinders, thirty ot Noi the The driver. ‘was, George Newanter, No.| MAN BROUGHT ASHORE the Nationa Vusiness by thelk phe Ayia ae , y. nen Vest H0th Street, was overcome at Bist] ot vanderbilt Avenue, Brooklyn, Hanae oe ee ey eet guts} Of $25,000 Set by Court. | phe rence at the foot of Ocean Ave-| LOOKS FOR SEAT, FINDS |Sstreet_and Sixt Avenue. After belie] °!) AFTER SINKING TWICE attended he went home. FIND MAN GUILTY OF ANNOYING KIDS to strikers. It is inconcetvable that half a dozen men can long impose their selfish will upon the welfare of Alfred G. Oxley, president of the} nue, South Beach, 8. 1, which indig- Sterling System Homes, Inc., No. 1]pant bungalow dwellers tore down on a hundved ‘attilion:? West Bath Street, who was indicted| Saturday, Is up again, The bunga- Total demoralization of through|!ast Friday on complaint of people }jeers call it a spite fence and some passenger train service on the New| who entrusted money to him on his{of them have threatened to remove it York, New Haven and Hartford be-| promise to build houses on their tote lence more. ween Boston and New York, asa re-/and have not rect he houses nor ? Be eee eka Saeed fs Lenn re ae ene ese THe. peliaee ARF | phe Cones was puliup bythe Glen- afternoon by David Williams, spokes-|cered himerif to-day. He was accom. |" Bathing Pavilion Company not man for the committee of strikers.| panied by John T. Dooling, former |8o much to keep the bungalow people Two trains were eight hours late, one| sssistant District Attorney, who has|off tho beach as to compel them to five hours late and others an hour oF /heen retined as his counsel. pay a dime each for bathing there more late, Mr. Williams said. The] Oxiey was arraigned before Judge] The new fence has an opening in It, erage timo between Boston and} aancuso in the Court of General] guarded by a private policeman, who New York for passenger trains other| Sessions. Assistant District Attorney|is told to let anybody in street a THREE MEN ARE INJURED IN CLASH WITH TROOPS rds at Buffalo Accused Assault After Row. BUFFALO, July 24,—Threo men were injured, one probably fatally, in a clash with members of the State Constabulary at Main and North Streets early to-day. ‘According to the injured men they were in @ soft drink place on the corner when a@ State tro~per became in an argument with a ONE BEHIND THE BARS Actor Who Was Tired Called Bur- glar by Police. Tearing « board loose from others that were put up to guard the broken window of a Jeweller's shop at No, 177 Sixth Avenue in order, he told the police, “to get something for a seat,” resulted in the arrest last night of @ man who said he was Centennial Cor- less Cunningham, forty-five, of “Bry- ant and other city park: He added that he was formerly an actor and “had done a song act in vaudeville with Fannie Davenport.”* Cunningham was taken to the West 47th Btreet Police Station charged with Twe Go to Rescue of Swimmer Made Helpless by Cramps, Seized with a cramp when about one hundred yards off shore, John Ford of Eart Orange, N. J., who has a summer home at Manasquan, sank two times before he was rescued yesterday by H. C. Ogden of Elizabeth and Donald] _ Ross of Brooklyn, who heard his crivs. |for elther 1 Ford started out alone when he Was | Drening Wor! caught in a swift curent. As hie See ety erat ‘and fm order of receipt at The strength gave out, he erled for help.| Word vlfice, Cony containing engravings to La) and Ogden and Ross reached his side| msde by The World must bo recelved by 1B My he was sinking for the last |. Display advertining tspe cory for the Suppley 4 ee : Bir carne Wal a sd re oe by a ureday ing pl as Sion and ed by a Ps ha Schardel Pummeled — by Women Before Arrest and Berated by the Magistrate. John Schardel of No. 87 Clay Street, Brooklyn, was arraigifed before Mag- istrate Folwell in the Bridge Plaza Court, Brooklyn, to-day on a charge of disorderly conduct. He had been arrested by Patrolman Herzhouser of Strike G ‘ot ———_7.—_——_ lease must De than the limited flyers ‘s between six Wilso that there ore hea x ees ie Station, whe Mion "and release, mi Meee han the limited flyers is between six} James Wilson stated that there are|ciothes go through but to make the| Sttempted. burglars, "He admitted” be ee Aree row ant] the Greenpoint Avenu IRARA QUIGGS DIES FROM Or=RA- AT GA MS furnished the following table, copied, | Osi Le SDN cop te Ladies bathing people go around to Me ten-| was broke and jobless, but denied in-| stranger from the place and then threw| charged that the man had created) qoy FOR SKULL FRACTUR hearts Fp gente i . | Oxtey, and that the claims aggregate |cent gate tending to enter tho Jewelry shop. John A. Dourls and Willlam Wick, two] , bli t] ATLANTIC CITY, N. —.| nok been aeorived by AP A and he said, from the official bulletin} s3¢,009. He suggested that ball be] Hoth sides have threatened to ap- 2 of the Injured men, after him, Uther|®, “isturbance in ont aiteeta PE ee ee Ne Se Tule BAe lite cory ee : board at the Grand Central Station | tixeq at 000 and over Mr, Dool-}peat to the courts, but neither has troopers in front of the saloon are al-| Provost and Dupont: Bitecll, trie Irara Quisgs, alx y are a 958 of Mr. |Fuhiicavion itico ty dF, At. riaes, and as corroborating his statements: ing's objections the court nominated | done so as yet ENGLAND'S BIRTHS | teees to attacked the men. Wick|!¥n. Where he gave F be eee day at the Atlantic | ti be, omitted ax conditions require, sisldy dren, Schardel was found guilty and was sent to the Raymond Street Jail for sentence on Thursday. Patrolman Herzhouser arrived too late to save Schardel from a pummel- ling at the hands of @ group of women who kieked and bit him repeatedly. ord ecalpt and. pusitive. releas City Hospital following an operation | Sry.,c%* Of ise# receipe and F for a fracture of the skull. On Thu Display copy or orders releared later than he day, July 6 the little boy fell from | provided above, when omitted will not serve tp a ladder and did not tell his parents. | cro Cisgunts of any characicr, con ract oF OIBEDe The following Saturday he was selzei|/ 4% © cr with convulsions, and at the kospital | .THE WORLD was discovered that he had fractuccd Train No, 1, Boston Express, due 4.55 A. M., arrived 12.55 P. M.; train No, 3, Boston Express, due 5.30 A M., arrived 10.80 A. M.; train No. 91, Bar Harbor Express, due 9.05 A. M., arrived 10.06; train No. 81, Boston Express, due 4.43 A. M., arrived 12.49 has a broken arm and Douris ts be- leved be suffering from a fractured kul a result, Qhief of Police Burflend to-day an- nounced that patrolmen had been in- structed to arrest any State constable making unwarranted attacks upon citi He declared that the troopers that amount as the bond. Oxley went to the Tombs. = GOV. ALLEN AND WHITE eS a TRIES TO SAVE GIRL, KEPT APART BY RAIN WOMAN, 62, DROWNED Executive Postpones Trip to Em- porta Until To-Morrow, AND MARRIAGES SET NEW RECORD Death Rate Decreases, P, M.; train No. 67, White M@ntain| . . . MPORIA, K July at—aev.| But Divorces Are Nearly tuinst the wishes of Mayor] Magistrate Folwell — reprimanded }his skull. Express, due 6.86 A. M., arrivéd 7.311Cannot Be Revived When hs Hi. Hah, July St-—Gev: : A ? Minself #¥or) cchardel for his actions ‘before’ he SS A. M., and the Seashore Express, duc ‘roucht to Shore by pes Pe ee bee mute Three-Fold. - tear service on all Internation | found him builty DIED 10.30 A. M., arrived 11.30 A. M. ru ore 's roads from coming to Emporia to speak rig sumed to-day, LONDON, July ta "Governo BE a eo ernone Oe The year 1920 furnished GUIDERA.—On Sunday, July 23, 1922, Ste+ ter MARY DOLORINE ELIZA Ore — . AMERICAN BANKERS cars into ¢ vivice on the bringing at 127, eration Fail In reply to the strikers’ charge tht Her Son-in-Law. NN Vacation ha the train service between Boston unit . = . _- Kansas State Normal School this morn- — = y d New York has bean demoralized: ty HAVEN, Conn., July 24.—[ing. ‘The programme arranged for to- several aecorey in vital Bares line Will be resumed TeRMBEEO Ns, MEET WITH CANADIANS World follow you. Maile erat AG, seoinh Brackinn lee 5 bee the strike, the New York, New|Mrs. Dora Van Buskirk, aged sixty- [day will be held to-morrow tics, according tu the an ‘A west side car was rocked by an x- —— aught r. and Mrs. Joho report of the Registrar General of England and Wales. Births totalled 957,782, a new high Guidera, 88 dlat st., Corona, L. Notice of funeral later, Boston papers please copy. plosion early this afternoon. The poiice reported that a small plece of dynanut had been pluced on the rails. No on erest in the Governor's trip to Em- poria centered on the possibility of a meeting between the Executive and Wil- Huven and Hartford Railroad publi ity department issued the following two, of 17 Clermont Avenue, Jersey City, was drowned at Bradley's Point, Together” 1 July %4,—An Interna- bulletin: jiam Allen White, Emporia editor, who serie was injured MONTRE = o I en sho! . . cord. Death ered 466,- a Wi TES]|| | waccarp.—vircinta oo. caMPsEn “About 10.00 P.M, July 28 an un- 00 the West Haven shore this after- Gyan arrested Inte Saturday for piacing| go oy uae 1,000 ee thonal “Get-Together"” Conference be- ORLD SUMMER RAT! FUNERAL CHURCH, Mondays 3 Peat. 7 noon, when she went to the rescue of f& placard in the window of the Em- e DER NOAO OF ARS DEN Fe 1s — HOT AT THE CIty Wann, r. Trecedented rainstorm in the vicinity ot Providence caused one or two washouts, leading in severa) instances to heavy accumulation of sand and tween American end Canadian bankers began to-day with the arrival of hree representatives of Ameri- jal inatitutions. Week Month Morning & Sunday. .35 $1.00 Morning World. 5 Eveni ‘orld, of po,ulation, the lowest was 1862, When the population was only half that of 1920, Infant mortality was the lowest re- \ FUNERAL DIR poria centred on the poxsibility of @ porla Gusette Building expressing sympathy for the striking railroad shop- men. Mayor John ¥, Hylan to-day message of welcome by radio to Rich- ard E, Enright, Police Comniasioner, who is on bourd the steamship Masostic her nine-year-old granddaughter, who had gone beyond her depth while in bathing. yravel washed on the tracks, this] Mrs. Van Buskirk’s daughter, Mrs. a corded, the sate being 80 per due to arrive to-morrow. The messaga| The Americans went golfing at the Sunday World 10c. per Sunday reaching at one point a depth of | John H. Hart, also in swimming, went] COLUMBUS CLUB NOT FOR SALE. 1,000 births. reads: Mount ‘Bruno course and will be the pega even feet. This resulted in badly |to the assistance of her mother, whol CHICAGO, July 24.—George Burns Srerripae: tobaiio’d ATRA “Weleome home. The ganiblers and| guents of Sir Frederic Willlams-Taylo Rageerioe nena dE ca" erteat ae sesitee: delaying our night service, on ac- | Was sinking ,and her daught Mr. | President of the Columbus Club of the also a record. The natural in- thelr newspaper friends have bee at the Mount Royal Club to-nigh| hd Tour sewedealer will arrange Hart, who was on short, dashed in| Amertean Association, to-day quiet since you left on your party representg all the large American count of the necessity of detouring dented ree] Craabé in population was 492 Pelee ae cei party renreseng “oe the United states remit direct to it for you. F club as to old ol 1 suppose & ae . Maw san are beng recruited Aaily, jand paved his wite and’ taughter and eelaheer tke praetor for ity OM OF] G68, the largest ever recorded. teenduty thes will Tesurrect the erine| this side of the Rocky Mountains, some ||| Cashier, New York World, imereasing the forces, which ara |got his mother-in-law ashore, but the [Sat deal mee bending fo ere Divorces were neucly three ¢ and other propaganda jn thelr at: [of the vieltars coming from Chicago, ‘| ls were strengthen the team, which {fe down in the pennant race, gradually reaching the total re 7 intter could not be resuscitated, The} pending to Hart family comes from Jersey City. Milwaukee, Richmond, Galveston, But- falo, Boston, Detroit and New York, ‘ pt to rive some one out of office times the ber of any year wr Dinner es SEY JOHN F. HYLAN, Mayor.” prior to 1919, Park Row, New York