Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
18 . THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 265, 1922, (4 /|Gold Star Mothers Carry DENIES DELAYING 12 NEW SCHOOLS INVESTIGATION OF | WAIT APPROVAL OF LOSES SAVINGS IN WALL STREET: ‘ JIMPS FROM BOAT Brooklyn Man Leaves Letters Calling Himself “Sucker” Before Leap. Search is being made to-day for the body of a man believed to be E. J. Moran, sixty, of No, 274 12th Street, Brooklyn, who committed suicide by leaping from the municipal ferry boat President Roosevelt on the way to Staten Island last night because he had lost the savings of a lifetime fn unlucky {investments in motor stocks In Wall Street. Among a score or more of letters and cards he left on the ferry boat were postcards to newspapers, one of which read: “There iv a suckef born for Wall Street every minute, I was one of them.” There were other cards to newspapers: To the Editor—If you will send a man at noon to-day to Broad and Wall Street he will find the body of a sucker who lost all !n Wall Street.” From these poljco believe he had intended to mail the letters and cards yesterday, and to-day jump from a window at Broad and Wall Streets, but changed his mind and decided on drowning, One letter he left was to District Attorney Jacob H. Banton and read: “Trust you may stop and think a few minutes, Brokers of Wall Street tamnot do business honest and make a living on commission, Wall Street is as crooked as a ram's horn. In- vestigate and you will find this to be true. There are hundreds of suck- ers like myself. It is up to you to remedy conditions in Wall Street."* There also was a letter to Frank American cities to the country, There will be a dinn at which Comte Rigal gue, acting chairman, en te ag to France ENDS AS COUNSEL Four Who Lost Sons in War to Sail With Good Will Delegation. Four gold star mothers will be] Cluy G. Stephens of Nashville, Tenn among the National Good Will dele-| They were clected to the delegation gation of 100 American women which | by their townsfolk, who deemed it fit- | have warranted the Justice in inst!- sails for France to-morrow convey- ing messages of friendship from fifty | ages, The Good Will delegation | 4% delesat 1s under the auspices of the American Committee for Devastated The delegation will arrive here to-day |xineers, lies in the Romagne Ceme- | but merely a warning that if the Jus- and be at the Waldorf-Astoria, tery; Mrs, Abbey's son {ts buried near] tice continued to “willfy public of- M. Jusserand. In the absence of Miss] ens's son was killed on a bombing ex- Anne Morgan, Mrs. Gilbert Monta-| pedition near Amanty and is burled| in spite of the fact that McWhinney Mr While preparations are being made for the funeral of Mrs, Dora Van Buskirk, sixty-two, at the family home, No. 17 Claremont Avenue, Jer- sey City, the nelghbors are rehearsing with emotion her gallant self-sacrifice yesterday afternoon, when sho died, that her ten-year-old granddaughter, Dorothy Harsh, her litte chum since Dorothy's cradle days, might live. Mrs. Van Buskirk and Dorothy and the child's parents, Mr. and Mrs, John Harsh, of the Jersey City ad- dress, were bathing at Bradley Point on Long Island Sound, near New Haven. Dorothy was leading the way aiong a rocky ledge jutting out from the beach and ending in a dangerous “step-off"’ in deep water. Suddenly the girl, with a scream, went under, her hands flapping wildly above her head. ‘fhe gallant old grandmother knew nothing of swimming, but she had been taking care of Dorothy all her life and without a moment's hesitation, she plunged into the water after her. Spluttering and choking and sawing the water with her hands she some- ATTACKS ACGUSER He Says the Justice Should Have Taken Steps to Punish McWhinney for “Threat.” Chairman Edmund RB. Jenks of (he Assembly Committee appointed the instance of Assemblyman Thomas A MeWhf ey of Nassau County to as- certain whether impeachment pro- ceedings should be brought against Supreme Court Justice Selah PF. Strong, sald to-day that the findings of the committee would not be made public until the report was submitted to the Legislature next winter. Th attorneys of both sides have been given to Sept. 20 to file briefs Former State Senator Brackett counsel for gustice Strong, intro- duced no witW¥sses for the defense, saying that the prosecution had made no case, He said that McWhinney’s —SS SS MRS -H.H BIRNEY, =———— Dora Van Buskirk, Si Went After Her Granddaughter in Deep Water. -Two, Unable to Swim, how kept herself above the surface until Dorothy appeared and the child instinctively sought the arms which had been her protection since Infancy, and her own little arms closed tightly about the neck of her darling grandma as they had always when sho wus “afruid.’* John Harsh, Dorothy's father, who had been trailing behind, was by then in the water swimming in frantic haste to the rescue, He received the child from the arms of the drowning grandmother, swam back with her to her mother and then returned for his mother-in-law. But Mrs, Van Buskirk, her feeble strength ex- hausted by her efforts to save the child, had sunk. Harsh dived, but to no avail, The screams of Mrs. Harsh had brought other bathers id their efforts brought to the eurface the body of the gallant old lady half an hour later. A plmotor was brought tnto play but the life spark had been extin- guished, Mrs, Van Buskirk had giv- en her life for her granddaughter's, and Dorothy, now fully recovered, looked on with awe only vaguely able to realize whot had happened. warning to Justice “Strong that lie The gold star mothers are Mra. Pd i Herman H, Birney and Mrs, William | ¥ould “get in a muss” if he cont nued Abbey of Philadelphia, Mrs. Otto] his investigation into the conduct of Brewer of Wichita, Kan., and Mrs.| certain Nassau County Nymphs Must Wear ’em Longer At Great Neck Swimming Trunks Have to Begin at Knees, Is New Edict. Republican bosses was an affront which would ting that these women who gave sons/tuting proceedings for the ur to Franco should bear good will mess-| ment of the Assemblyman. h- ‘The mothers, aside from their duties} Harry C. Perkins of Binghamton, es, look forward to Kkneel-| who acted as counsel for the cominit- ing on the French soil that 1s conse-| tee, argued that the remarks of Mc- crated to their sons, Mra, Birney's| yyy ‘ France. | son, a First Lieutenant in the 6th En. | W!"ney did not const! people of that ute a threat There will not be many bathing beautics down at the old Steamboat Landing bathing beach in Great Neck, L. L, to-day. Most of them will be at home adding all the way from er this evening | Somine Dieu, as also is John Brewer, will represent | son of Mrs. Otto Brewer. Mrs. Steph- ficlals” a legislat would be necessary. @ investigation He added that will preside. ‘near there made the remark and later followed A, Ward in care of the Fire Commis- sioner's office. Mr. Ward told the police Moran was his stepfather, but that he knew nothing-of his financial trouble: There was a letter from EB. H. Whit- Ing & Co. stock brokers, No. 44 Broad Street, asking E. J. Moran, to whom it was addressed, to call at the office in regard to stocka he had purchased. Another was a memoran- dum of purchases—all motor stocks— showing payments on account by Mo- ran of $500, $1,000, $800 and $375. It was impossible to tell from the memoranda how much money he had lost, but there were recorded losses as high aa $700 in one day and tndi- cations that he had started playing the market with a considerable sum. A few men braving the rain at the stern of the men’s cabin were smok- Ing and watching the wake three minutes after the ferry left the Ba tery for Staten Island at 8.25 o'clock when they saw a man on the other side of the deck put one foot on a cleat and dive overboard, They ran to look for him, but he had disap- peared and they rushed through the cabin to the mate, Willlam Kenny, He signalled “man overboard" and Prepared to lower a boat. For fifteen minutes the boat cruised about, but found no trace of the miss- ing passenger, It returned and the President Roosevelt proceeded to St. George with the first “‘sulcide’’ entry on its log. —_——_-—— SUN YAT SEN’S FORCES BEATEN AT TWO POINTS Juror in Trial of at Hom Judge Haskell in the Brooklyn, to-day held: conducted in the Hotel of Mr. and Mrs. Wremor to determine whether c: what they saw even ditions at the time of were the same as on fumigated the rooms last, and who is under Drive on Canton Falla; manslaughter in the ported to Be Heavy, CANTON, July 25 (Associated Press).—Troops of Sun Yat Sen, driv- ing southward through Kwantung Province in an effort to recapture Canton for thetr leader, the deposed President of the Southern Republic, have been defeated in’ a number of skirmishes in the last two days in the vicinity of Shiuchow, about eighty miles north of Canton, according to railway advices. Sun's forces also are reported to haye been defeated near Yungyun, southeast of Shiuchow, in a battle entailing considerable casualties on both side AMERICAN MOVIES | SCORED IN REPORT BY MISSIONARIES visit by the stork to one of the jurors. Samuel D. Kantor minute. Judge Haskell! from the bedside. Stanley fense, made strenuous clude the testimony of Nam Brosnan, attache: with flashiig! t powder, coming up through op side of the radiator the bathroom. ows"? ince ‘cypangont-_ amen nage unaided except Raymond Leary,| drews" Is and what he has done i rie! slieves U = him motionless, rushed from the]twenty-one, No. 578 West 65th YT he has been with the commission, 1 Orient Believes U. S. Men 19-YEAR-OLD GIRL stage screaming that he had been eae patched up eee understand he ts paid a salary of $10,- Are “Barbaric Savages” and Drunkards. PASADENA, July 25. The American motion picture was blamed tor the troubles of American missionaries in the Orient in a report of the Women's Hoard for Foreign Missions, pre- sented here to the MISSING FIV Ethel Holpp Ethel Holpp, ni daughter of Mr. and Holpp, No. 755 annual ses- sions of the Presbyterian Synods ot Arizona and California T nearly five weeks, her to the police there to report declared the natives of Canton, Shanghal, Tokio, Cal- |.) 2 eutta, Bombay and Jerusalem | Philadelphia June 21 concluded that all American men are Mbarbaric | savages’’ who | parently mailed at the Philadelphia near nts House at Mineola, Here is what |[Yearein, Me Now Fore ders hin ane earn 4 living, drink whis- | rajlroad station, announcing his | !MPounded them. The eurs, it ix sald.|, ye got for $15,000: Sf the beat cavalry officers that ever hey like Water carry (wo guns VT daughter's safe arrival. But she;were sold to dealers at about $75 A railroad power house at |.erved In the army, and 4 bowie knife and kiN their never reached the home of relutives. Japiece and resol! for sums runging| Douglaston, Gen, Andrews was in the army thirty stime; thut Mr, Holpp waited dance halt Seca debate girl would reappear § who cigarettes, JV oided to ask police aid. fink Beavily und ‘Holl them- | iucm bas been sent elves for a coin or a smile _— The other piete shown In COSTER MASSACTR, the Orient are of the eternal tri- OVER angle variety, the report contin WEYBURN, Sneak ved, and the 4 ndtioa, hAVo'E : ave Oullette, one of the diMeult t explaining that all th American men und women are [Under Sitting Bul Bot like the characters in the rm OV cas ut the Pictures, < ‘ TESTIFIES FUMES (BELASCO BIRTHDAY Man Expecting Stork of the flashlight powder experiments} Asbury Park. nex, Brooklyn, ie the deaths there might have worked their way into the Jackson apartment from rooms under fumigation below, might testify ax to could not state positively that con- the rooms were fumigated, The trial of Albert J. Bradicich, a] he added, birthdays have a way of|than, in proper terms, to charge the vermin exterminator of Brooklyn who continued before Judge Haskell to- day despite the prospect of an early juror No. 4, explained his tardy ar- rival by saying that he expected to] to his home. =e become a proud father almost a Mr. Belasco on the stage was di-] FREE FOR ALL FIGHT cess, but the prospective father said he could do with telephone bulletin ywier, counsel for the de- Headquarters, as to the experiments tifled he had scen smoke from the powder enter the Jackson apartments, room and around pipes and valves|® leading to the bathtub and closet in General Alarm Sent Out for New York- Palisade West New York, has been missing The girl left to visit. relatives in| Stolen In and about Newark have been Mr. Holpp received a posteard, ap- four inches to, say, 'a foot to the bot- tom of their bathing trunks, Not that the new order, put Into effect yesterday, means that the unan- imously worn one-piece sult is banned in Great Neck, but that simply too much leg above the knee is being shown for the good of the general public, “You see,” one of the caretakers ex- plained, holding a forefinger as near to one of Broadway's bewitching brunettes as he considered proper, “as I understand it, you've got to begin here at the knee and have some- thing on you up to where that there belt of yours Is. You girls have been coming down here in one-piece suits them with theswesolytion calling for the legislative inquiry, he “was not behind the charges.” * The. MeWhinney threat, it has een testified, was made after Justice if he would work for the defeat ‘f a This bill was introduced by former Senator Loring M. Black of Brooklyn va oe =) jt | after the Surrogate and County Judge Fumigator]Plunged From Stage to Pit] otter the ableged es ocuiwel for the During Rehearsal of Brooklyn Transit Company, the latter! tiat didn't even look like they had “Sh i having secured the transfer of the) {iat Clint Oyen OT. fs Shore Leave. Cee eee cout of the Mal-| “That's what riled the authorities. I told ‘em you girls wasn't immodest and that you all just wanted to keep as cool as possible, but they said that I was all wrong. They figured that September Morn had a long shock of hair to help cover her up, but you gals are all bob-halred. So far as your swimming sult was con- cerned, they said, why, they'd just as soon you wouldn't go to the trouble putting It on." The Steamboat Landing beach ts patronized by scores of Great Neck's summer colony of actresses as well as by many young persons whose permanent homes are in Great Neok. Show girls have swarmed into the public bathing park this summer in greater numbers than before, wearing bathing suits ranging in color from purple to orange and green. “WHO'S ANDREWS?” HYLA NASKS DAVY; HERE’S WHO HE IS General, on Transit Board, in Army 80 Years—West Point Graduate. Mayor Hylan last night asked Com- missioner of Accounts Hirshfield to in- vestigate Gen, Lincoln C, Andrews of the Transit Commission, whose report concerning the recent fire in the Lex- ington Avenue subway was made pub- Me yesterday, ‘The Mayor wrote: "I see that @ person called ‘Gen Lincoln C. Andrews, Chief Executive OMicer of the Transit Commission,’ has signed a report on the subway fire which goes to great lengths to apply the whitewash, “IT wish you would make an investi- gation to find out who this “Gen, An- David) Belasco eenending: his|alxty= Bronce Judge Isaac R. Ocland of third birthday In bandages and {/the Brooklyn ‘Transit law forces, is He had forgotten that}counsel for the Nassau County Bar to-day is his birthday, but could not] Assocution, which first drew the forget the bandages and the fall that|Charges against Justice Strong, and nt M. Jackson, | made them necessary, which was re-| Strong inquiry, making frequent sug- yanogen fumes] ceived on Thursday last while re-| gestions to Prosecutor Perkins. hearsing "Shore Leave," which was| Mr. Brackett said that among right- produced last night in Asbury Park |™inded men there can be but one ‘The playwright, who was injured in opinion as to the cause and purpose the Lyceum Theatre, this city, was|0f the McWhinney threat against confined to his bed for several cays|Justice Strong from such a source. in his rooms in the Hotel Marie An-|Continuing, and speaking of Justice tolnette. He said to-day he had been| Strong, he sald too busy to remember about his birth-] “Before he had taken a step in the day until reminded of it, and hesides,| Performance of such duties, other County Court, that witnesses Margaret An though they the experiment the day when sneaking in oUt withoyt letting you| Grand Jury to investigate in orderly know, unless you are looking for| fashion certain matters named, he them. was threatened by one of the parties While the accident, at Mr, Belasco's| Who manifestly feared that any ex- instruction, has been kept secret by| amination would reflect upon himself, the entire cast of “Shore Leave,"|the threat being that if he, Justice the family of| which he was rehearsing at the time] Strong, proceeded further he would of his injury, !t ts learned his con-|involve himself In personal trouble dition became so alarming three phy-|amd an investigation by a legislative sicians were called and he was rushed| committee. on April 25, indictment for second degre, of Sea Gate, ee recting Miss Frances Starr in one of her acenes in the new play when his FOLLOWS WEDDING gfattention was called to a woman agnigaitien friend who had just entered the| Police Called to Quel theatre. The producer leaned over the tween Guests and Intrader footlights to shake hands with her.| Police of the West 47th Street Station The woman slipped and was about to} were called at 6 A. M. to-day to end a fail when Mr. Belasco, in attempting] {ree-for-all fight at No, 846 Eleventh Avenue. There was a wedding there to lift her to her feet, himself slipped at 8 we and crashed into the orchestra pit| (0%, ,TkRt And hostilities were between invited and uninvited guests, below. The chairs had been re-| Who und what started the trouble moved from the pit, and the pro-|the police could not learn, but from all {ducer fell upon iron girders and|accounts there was a spirited perform- stands used for keeping the orchestra] ance while It lasted on the part of men ats in place. with such names as O'Brien, Callahan, He was badly bruised and lacerated| Kelly and O'Flaherty. about the arms and legs, and several] ,After the fray was reluctantly ended members of the company, who saw] Sl! were able to leave tho field of car- 1 offered to efforts to ex- Detective Wil dio Brooklyn Brosnan tes- enings on eac! in the living 000 a year and that what he has or has not done to earn ft will be of great in- terest. “Attend to this at once."* People who read the papers and oc- castonally read books do not require an investigation to find out who An- drews {s. For the bayefit of the Mayor the following information {s furnished Gen. TAncoln C. Andrewa ts a grad- uate of West Point and served ac manding officer in Cuba and the Philip- pines during and after the Spanish- American War and commanded a brig- ade in the 88th Diviston in France dur- ing the World War, In recognition of hie servic the French Government made him an officer of the Legion of Honor After the armistice was algned he was Assistant Provost Marshal of the American Expeditionary He was cavalry instructor for four killed. home. 50 STOLEN AUTOS RAILROAD SOLD SEIZED BY POLICE] TO JUNKMAN FOR 14] Bought by Dealers in New “SONG” OF $18,000 Mrs. Frederick Hii v at 875 and Sold at $100 Upward. Within the last three weeks fifty automobiles allezed to have been He was revived and taken] surgeon and then went home reta were made, No ar- E WEEKS of West neteen-year Avene Traction Property In- volved Was Valued in 1910 at $1,650,000. Michael Schiavone, metal and xold in Newton and other cities in] rubbish dealer of Jersey City, Sussex County, N. J, ‘The State Po-| went to an auction sale yesterday lice have confiscated these cars and} $2 the Nassau County Court futher reported day The next day n the hope the |from $400 upward. The deulers huve but to-day de-|declared they bought them in good ‘A general | faith and sold them in the same way, years, He is a recognized authority on the organization, handling and lead ship of men, and his book, “Manpower, published in March, 1921, 48 a gtundard A substation at Roslyn, Thirty-eight miles of tracks. Three bridges. out. A number of dealers said to-day Bighteen passenger coaches. work. that to show their good faith they Four service coaches. . = INDIAN DEAD] would return to the purchasers what THs property was owned by | DENBY TO RETURN TO wv, 8, 104), they had paid for the vars, The aus] the New York and Nussau Trac- SEPT. 1, July ~Antoine}tomobiles have heen stored in garages | tion Company, which went tnto SAN FRANCISCO, July 25.- liane who served {and also at the Netcong camp a th (he hands of u receiver some time | penby, Secretary of the Navy, w the time of the) Hate Rullce S sud that a Net-] ago and was valued in 1919 at Prive in San Francisco on S fitty ya uuo. cong dealer has made 4 yiarter of af $1,650,000 ~The power house | sqantla on the navy transport Honder. ee of over lug} imiion dollars tn selling used cars in] cost $325,000 alone ‘The sale was |son. He expecta to spend a week on the last year. ordered ty satisfy creditors, itis Pacific Coast. 4 Woman Leads In Rescue of Cat From Under Pier Workmen Free Imprisoned * Animal That Once Sur- vived Starvation. Dusty Rhodes licked his paws con- tentedly on Pier 21, Duane Street and North River, to-day, and showed no signs of his latest escape from losing one of his nine lives. He was rescued late last night from under the plank- ing of the pier, where, apparently, he had been inprisoned for five days. Mrs. E. I. Zelsloft of No. 325 West 42d Street likes cats. Somebody who fad heard Dusty's walls told her about it, and how no one was making any effort to rescue the animal. She tried to get help from the Marine Di- vision of the police and the S. P. C. A., but was told the cat would have to walt until morning, She then went to the pier and en- listed the aid of several Erie work- men, who got pickaxes, crowbars and searchlights, A large crowd gath- ered while for two hours twenty men Broped about until they saw the cat's eyes. When they pried up the heavy planks a wet, feeble cat tottered out, Charlie Whalen, timekeeper at the Pier, then identified the cat as his, Dusty Rhodes, missing five days, Three months ago Dusty Rhodes was found in a refrigerating car of apples that had been locked for six- teen days, and as he doesn't eat ap- ples, he was almost starved, pe CAMP SETTLES SUIT WITH MRS. THORNE Widow of Montgomery Ward Official to Pay $140,- 000, Is Rumor. CHICAGO, July 25.—The Thorne. Camp case involving a $350,000 trust fund and some lively scandal was an. nounced settled to-day before Master in Chancery Edwin A. Munger, Although the precise terms of set- tlement were not made public, it is generally rumored that Mrs. Kather- ine C. Thorne, widow of a former of- cial of Montgomery Ward & Co., has agreed to give her former husband, William C. (Billy) Camp, $140,000 to surrender his privileges on 8,480 shares of Montgomery Ward & Co. stock, — WOMAN BORN SLAVE PASSES 118TH BIRTHDAY Outlived All Her Children of Sey- eral Marriages. LOS ANGELES, July 26.—Anna Mel- vina Prater, born a slave tn South Carolina, has just passed what Is said be her 118th birthday anniversary at the Los Angeles County Farm. She attributes her long Ife to hard work and plain food, and still sews. She outlived all her children from several marriages. U.S. PUTS CHECK» ON DRIVERS WHO SPEED WITH MAIL Speedometers for Trucks So Chauffeurs Can Tell How They’re Going. WASHINGTON, July 25. Mail truck chauffeurs will be able to keep within the speed law and dlso prevent disputes with policemen when wrongfully charged with speeding, through the proposed equipment of all Post Office trucks with speed- ometers of the most modern type The Post Office Department has called for bids fur searly three thousand of these sper checks. Much complaint has been made {n Washington as well as in other elties that drivers of mail trucks violate speed laws, ’ category 1 and {f the berry Str THEATRE DISASTER} EDUCATION BOARD Brookly:. District Attorney Retorts to Charge Made by Hirshfield. District Attorney Ruston of Brook- lyn waxed sarcastic to-day in com- menting on a charge made by Com- missioner of Accounts David Hirsh- field that his investigation of tho collapse of the American Theatre in Bedford Avenuo last winter, which was fatal to several workmen, is being held up by the Kings County District Attorney's office Said Mr. Ruston: “If ‘Kalsomine Dave,’ ‘Foxy Grand- pa's’ whitewash man, wants to in- vestigato the Brooklyn Building De- partment let him go to it, Nobody is stopping him. But it he grants immunity to any persons in- volved in the collapse of the Amerl- can Theatre he will get himself into trouble in Kings County. I was ready to try the persons under tn- dictment In May, but was held up then and have been held up ever since by motions by the defendants’ attorneys for permission to inspect the minutes of the Grand Jury, “Foxy Grandpa," In Mr. Ruston's *Mayor Hylan. Among ndictment of negligence those under in the matter of the collapse of the American Theatre is a Building De- partment Inspector named Finley Commissioner of Markets O'Malley was seen to enter and leave Mr. Rus- ton's office late yesterday afternoon. The District Attorney sald ho ts con- tinuing his investigation of alleged graft by public market supervisors investigation discloses criminal acts he will submit the mat- ter to the Grand Jury ae ESS 10 YEARS SENTENCES FOR PICKPOCKETS Brooklyn Judge Administers 5 to 10 Years for Shoot- ing “Rookie.” Ten years at Sing Sing with the last five years suspended on condi- tion that they stay out of New York State was the sentence given two Pickpockets by County Judge Mc- Laug'\lin in Brooklyn to-day. They are Samuel Harris of No. 616 East 137th Street, Manhattan, and John J. Williams of No 98 Dean Street, Brooklyn. The men, who police say are old offenders, stole $80 from the pocket of Edward Drake while the latter was asleep on a bench in the Pacific Street station of the Fourth Avenue subway In Brooklyn on May 6. They were convicted of grand larceny in the first degree as second offende! John Kaluzzi of No. 246 Eldridge Street, Manhattan, was sent to Sing Sing for from five to ten years by Judge McLaughlin on the charge of assault in the first degree. He fired two shots at Patrolman Stenz!, a rookie" policeman, attached to the Parkville Precinct, on April 11, when Stenzi caught him and another man on the premises at No. 4521 13th Avenue, Brooklyn, The other man escaped, Kaluzzi is an alien, who has been arrested several times on burglary charged and convicted once of posses- sing narcotics. SCORES JOIN CHAS OF THIEF SUSPECT Man Surprised by Woman {s Caught After Leap From Window. Pursued by a mob yelling “Thibt!” while others blew police whistles, Jo- seph Cucco, twenty-four, of No. 66 Mul- dashed several blocks in the Bronx iast night before he was cap- tured by Policeman John Wood and locked up on a charge of burglary. Fulton Avenue in the vicinity of Third Avenue, the Bronx, was filled with men, women and children when Mrs, Rose Abramowitz, accompanted by her two small children, arrived at her apart ment on tho third floor of No. 1545 Ful- ton Avent Entering her bedroom, the woman surprised a man and grappled with him, The burglar fled to the fire es- cape as Mrs. Abramowitz fell, uncon sclous from fright. He entered the apartment of Solomon Winer on the second floor. Winer fought with him, but he got away and pursued the man unt!! Patrolman Wood selzed him. In his pockets wer a weteh, ring and a pair of cuff links whioh Mrs. Abramowitz identified as SAYS HE SHARPENED KNIFE TO KILL HER Mrs. Bertha Maudey Denies Ifusband’s Char, Misconduct in Suit. Mrs. Bertha Maudey applied to Jus- Cropsey in the Supreme Court Brooklyn, to-day for temporary all mony and counsel fees, pending tris! of the suit for divorce brought 2 her by Arthur S. Maudev, N Carlton Avenue She Ne counter suit for scp allext cruelty. Justice Crops sof erved de- cision. Maudey alleges his wife was sullty of misconduct with Francis O. V landt denying the charges, » Maudey in her avit says “Om Jan, 1, . the plainuft vent down to t Y¥ and sharpened a carving knife, stating to the defen that |. was going to kill her, but w restrained tn so doing by cher friends." Special Meeting To-Morrow Will Consider Plans for Additional Buildings. Recommendations for twelve new school buildings or additions will b e presented to the Board of Educatios at a special meeting to-morrow after- noon to consider bullding matters, The semi-annual report of C B. J. Snyder, Superintendent of School Buildings, also will be submitted. The recommendations of the Board of Superintendents for new buildings fel- low: ® A new bullding of sixteen clams- rooms he erected on the site of P. 8. No 86, Queens, Everett Street and Westchester Avenue, St. Albans, for boys and girls from kindergarten to 8B. An improvement tn placing the boilerroom below ground to give ad- ditional play space. A science room and gymnasium are provided, A new thirty-six-classroom build- ing. to be known as P, 8. No. 197, Queens, at 46th Avenue, between 167th and 168th Street, for boys and girls, Kindergarten to 8B. Library, un~ graded classroom and auditorium seat- ing are planned. This school will relieve P, S. No. 22, Sanford Avenue and Murray Street, Flushing. A new sixty-nine-classroom build< ing, to be known as P. 8. No. 16, the Bronx, on East 161st Street, near Courtlandt Avenue. This ts the larg~ est school building so far asked for, although ® seventy-two classroom school ts projected. New P. & Na 76 will have special and regular"tlass rooms for boys and girls from kinder- garten to 8B. A new thirty-six-classroom bulld- ing, to be known as P. 8. No. 109, Queens, near 98d Avenue and Callis- ter Place, Bellaire, Will accommodate boys and girls from kindergartes to 8B A new sixteen-classroom building, to be known as P. S. No, 71, Bronx, at Roberts and Hobart Avenues, for hoys and girls from kindergarten to 8B. A sctence room, general medical clinic and gymnasium are provided and the plans are drawn so an addi- tion can be built later. A new sixteen-classroom building, to be known as P S. No. 40, Rich- mond, on Lafayette Avenue, New Brighton. This will be for boys and girls from 6A to §B and will contain special features to be decided upon later, A new fifty-nine-classroom bulld- ing, to be known as P. S. No. 208, Brooklyn, at Montauk Avenue and Hegeman Street, for boys and girls from kindergarten to £3. A new forty-eight-classroom bullde ing to be known as P. No. 43, Queens, at Amstel Boulevard and Beach 65th Street, Arverne, for boya and girls from kindergarten to 8B. Present P. S, No. 42 ts an annex te P. S. No. 44, Rockaway Beach. A new forty-elght-classreom bulld- ing to be known as P. 8. No. 177, Brooklyn, at Avenue P an’ Dahill Road, for boys and girls from kinder« garten to 8B. Present P, 8S. No. 17% {s a temporary school at Avenue P. and West Avenue, A new 48-classroom building, to be known as P. S, No 200, Brooklyn, at 60th Street and Ninth Avenue, for boys and girls from kindergarten te 8-B. A new building for the Girls’ Coma mercial High, Brooklyn, and an ad~ dition to P, S, No. 120, Manhattan, Broome, Suffolk and Clinton Streets, U, S. MUST SHOW HOW GLASS WAS CONTROLLED Defendants in Trost Law Violation Indictments Win Plea. Judge Hand of the Federal District Court, In memorandums filed to-day i+ rected Nathan Probst jr. special Gov- ernment Attorney, to answer some of the particulars asked for by Joseph H, ehan, indicted as President of the tional Window Glass Workers Asso- tion; Willam A. Landorfer and James T. Zellers, indicted as Presidente of the Window Glass Cutters and Flat- ners Association; Willlam L. Munroe, indicted as President of the American Window Glass Co.; and John W. Davis, as counsel for all the other corporations snd individuals charged with violating the Sherman Anti-Trust law, As a result of Judge Hand's rultny the Government will in the particulars js required to state, "the inanner, means and methods by which and in what respect, it iy claimed, that the ly of window glass within ¢ rn district of New York, was con- trotied, Umited, reduced and curtailed by the defendants.” BIG PICKEREL YANKS PASTOR OUT OF BOAT Preacher Gets Ducking When Fish Runs Away With Bait. STROUDSBURG, Pa., July The Rey. W. Hl. Westwood, pas- tor of the birst Methodist Church here, w = jerked from a beat into the deep water of Mink's Pond, where he was fishing, to-day, when @ ble pickerel struck’? unexpectedly and ran away with the bait With the aid of his gompanion, Ss PD. Manuel, a Philadelphia anufacturer, the Rey, Mr. Who is a good swim- mbled back into the