The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1922, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a | i 1 { WANUCCARVES “ROSS ON BREAST ~~ BMASSIS SAD Cathedral Congregation Hor- rified as Man Brandishing Knife Rushes to Altar. Efforts are being made to-day te Yearn something of Gabriel! Joannics the religious ated mass in fanatic who ¢ freat excitement at 10 0° St. Patrick's Cathedral rday by cutting a deep cross into his bared chest and attempting to offer himself asa “human sa fw at the moment the Rev. 1 « Daly Was uttering the words of consecra tion The priests at St believe he in the months ha. the writer sts human bor Patrick's several sending letters that in The tet to any particular At the ad rved s the madman gave Street, little could be learned o that he said ho worked at various things, incl him except ing making su at instruments and cleaning windows. He ty-one and when asked at Bellevue Hospital, where ho will remain under observation for ten days, his next of kin, he replied: ‘None but God." Panic wag prevented by Mather Daly's cool 1,500 worshi as when some of the =, many of them from out of town, bs frightened at the man’s actions months about known for nsept pew erving the mass sounded the altar bell announcing the approacti~wf the co: Joannies arose in his se off a heavy sheepskin coat he wore even on the hottest days. In shirt sleoves he quiatly and reverently walked to the altar railing and placed his coat upon it Joannics, mumbling an unintelli- gible jumble of foreign words, raised an opened penknife he held in his right hand, and with two powerful strokes marked upon his chest a cross. Father Daly continued with the mass, not even glancing toward the man or paying the least attention to the muniac’s mumbled words, Joannies wus quickly surrounded and overpowered. The knife was knocked from his hand und it fell at Father Daly's feet, where it remained until the end ot mass eee RUSSIA FORBIDS ALL MIGRATION TO SIBERIA No More Free Land and No Assisi- Jaly 81.—Emigration of European Russian peasants to Siberia and other less thickly populated sec- tions of the country has been forbidden. For nearly century the Government encouraged it, Now the Commissars announce there {s no more free land in Siberia and hae a tremendous difculty, in supplying farm machinery and food to tide settlers over to first harvests. ‘Tho Immediate return of peasants to the famine districts evacuated last autumn is also decreed. $235 Reduced from $325 « Beautifully grained wood. Pret Summer “Oldest Furniture 3d Avenue & Uzst St. 2212 to 2224 Third Awe. Alas, Rutherford Spooners! Bandstand Vanishes, and Now There’s No Place for Cooing ny Some One Complained, and A Dead of Night, the Deed Was Done, but None Takes Credit fer It. ch {there not one Church, —W alnut 4-Piece Suite A substantial suite made along the severe lines of Colonial furniture. ty Dresser, ample Chifforobe, full Vanity with six drawers and three mirrors, full-size Bed. “Reputation Behind the Goods—Long Service Ahead of Them.” Unusually good furniture has been and always will be sold at Cowper- thwait & Sons’, with the additional advantage of liberal credit, unknown in 1807, when our business was started, Prices Are Down on Our Large Selection of Wicker, Porch and All Sorts of Our Usual Liberal Credit on All Purchases Summer Closing Hours: Both Stores will close at 1 o'clock on Saturdays. For the convenience of our customers The Harlem Store Will Be Open Monday Evenings Until 10 o’Clock ‘The office and all departments running es usual. COWPERTHWAIT & SONS Established 1807. Twe Stores The Spooners’ Paradise of Rutherfore Paradise of timber and t to begin with, wh! to raze when the purita who sought the shade of Lincoln Park f evening found not a trace of the bandsta trysting place. There was no one in all Rutherford | vanis yesterday who would assume re sponsibility for the destruction of the |r 1 element decided it ha ins were buried, Some of the neleh and, although indignation was|hors vowed they POPE PRAISES U.S. IN LONG AUDIENCE fter Council Meeting, in Ponti? Regrets That He Will Never Be Able to Visit This Country. i, N or their us nd that for y ROME, July 81 (Assoclated Press) Pope Pius yesterday received {1 widience James M. Cox, former ( f Ohio and Democratic ca for Vres i] in the hed as if by magic. Not a stick left No one knew where its re n- vard a hammering, pitch. If it had to be torn ging and rumbling cart in the was of suc on down thi as no summer for such hours of the mornin, o| Vatican officials called ft “a private act, it was argued, with rain no eye Witnesses of Interview.) Mr. Cox was accoms occurrence and no shelter in town A great gloom las IHL Ue IU OOo einee Oe A except the movies where lovers could |ford in the morning—the gloom of out-|Timethy Ansberry of Wash comfortably hold hands and whispor|raged feelings. The townsfolk felt[#d Ernest Rice of Dayton sweet nothings. they had been cheated out of their The Americans were recely It never would have come down at| bandstand for nothing ai) {f complaints had not been made} “Tt can’t imagine who took it down to Edmund Tate, a borough council- | remarked Mr. Edwards sorrowful man, that it was detrimental to the|he surveyed the spot. “And I don't morals of the people, Waa|tenow w was done in the dead of asion when a youth | nig! ad smashed electric light) bulv| opir oon the She and Palatine ko that darkn might brood over the | mis © Boroug’ ance Mgr Spooners’ Paradise? War it not set-]did not refuse to take the stand away, | PoMe’s chamberta : ting a bad examplo to the children of | but we asked for more definite reasons|PAty into the Payal “xeeret ante the town that their flapper sisters and | why it should come down, he letter |ehamber.” flipper brothers should get out for the} went to the council and was read last | 7 nitift,: dressed ip) white d with the avowed intention | night at the ing of the ng? of the wh the purit d their say d. They ap President of Shade Tree Commission In the dead of night after the next mecting| sho of the Borough Council the bandstand | mor them int Vins expressed ple uid S connected With the tone of [receiving the party and reg ality of our young folk 1 een umable to sa cherished desire to visit: the United DANIEL J. EARLY DIES on FROM APPENDICITIS er thie certninly would gens to Aimer lis election te puyehicul research, died here tn * he must 1 finer of Lnte Jodge hidying that ‘noble, mbher of Tammany. at a distance. Daniel J. Warly, at one time a luw Pius expr profound in partner of the late Judge McAdam, 2 tereat in the welfare and progress of died last Saturday in the [’renct ganist of ct ) uns nten ao Ree taconint caak ‘ i constituted suc ort acto pital following am operation f ~] at Windsor, by order of Queen Victor 1 t of the world. The pendicitis. He was a graduate of st in the development of the we n Francis Xavier College, the In psychical research he had worked |interview ended by the Pope impart Law School and a member of ‘Tam- many Hull. His wife, one son and | {i two daughters survive him Puneral d services will be held in St. Michael's | * West 34th M. to-morrow, FRANK 5. COWGILL. CHICAGO, July 3l.—Prank 8. Cow- gill, President of the Burtlett-Frazier Grain Company, dropped dead of heart disease Saturday night at the Skokie Country Club Street, at 10 A JOAN FARRELL. John Farrell. “Pop” to his muny {riends, an ever eourteous employee of Perry's drug store in the Pulltzer Build- ing from the day it was opened In 1890 until five years ago, died yesterday ut the home of a married daughter, No, 185 Rogers Avenue, Brooklyn, from ail- ments incidental to age and injurles when hit by an automobile in Park Row which compelled him to give up work, He knew he was ninety-three and was probably older. He had only a hazy recollection of coming from Ire- land in boyhood. r thirty years, beginning when Perry's was in the old Sun Building in Park Row. “Pop” Farrell was in con- tact with the thousands of regular night customers of the drug store at the briage entrance, among whom he had hundreds of friends, His wife died four years ago. ie DR. JOHN H. GOWER DEAD; WAS FAMOUS ORGANIST Descendant of Sir W jer Seort at 11 Organist to neen, DENVER, July 31.—Dr. John H. Gower, sixty-seven, —_ {internationally famous organist, composer and expert Payable $3 Weekly Furniture House in America” Park Stow at Chatham Sq. Row. with Sir Oliver Loud German nationals with allied cit For ‘The Tired. Man Of Business| _ Willan ¢ apostolic benedi presented Mr. ¢ ng the {y survived by his widow, a daughter’ a son, whieh is 4 me ARM Tomato [atsup Your Guests at Luncheon or Dinner know the delicious flavor of Pride of the Farm Tomato Catsup. They will feel perfectly at home when they see the familiar bottle on the table. It’s wise to have an- other bottle or two in reserve. It Is Great Millions of Bottles Sold Annually in Grocery and Delicatessen Stores BORDENS FarmProducts Co,Inc 123 the other a shepherd. THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 31, 1922, was inclosed in a red morocco case | exving the Papal arms. Mr 8100,000 F GRAND JU town forty lowe was $100,000, aid he hat Ween greatly ned by the extraordinary mod-| Russian os nd simplicity of the Pontiff, his devotion to his office and his keen interest in American affairs. WITH EX-GOV. COR) —_ BY CIGARETTE, five mites enst of here, The ‘the medal LENIN YET AT HELM IN CONVALESCENCE Premier in Touch With Affairs, Declares Trotzky. Moscow, July 81 Press).—Premier Lenin is keeping CTION, Col., July 81.—Jin close touch with affairs of state originating from a claarette stubland doing royed an entire block to-day in the | convaleseonco, business district of Grand Valley, an off | Trotrky. “T Just saw Lenin and we had about active according to an hour's con Mintoter, as being on leave of absence and In a state of convalescence, as a matter of tact he takes a most active part in the work, follows everything and|4zoqay read with considerable relish, is completely in touch with every important question."* (Assoclated work during his Leon teem with wit and humor, ation,” said the War eth BODDY ENJOYS TWAIN BOOK. Luther Boddy, slayer of two Manhat- tan police detectives, who for a long timo was sullen in hts cell in Sing Sing death house, is now in a facetious mood and has turned to reading etories that Sing Sing attendants, who announced ” 4] & week ago that Boddy is doing a lot of Although he ts on record | A Taing, aisclosed yosterddy, aah iee May ading Mark Twain's works, jcut Yankee at King Am ie Court” Is one of Twain's books urned to tonne of Aug. 28. Buy Dr. Cur 1 WOOD ARCHSUPPORT SADDLE seg ''Y Arch Support patented for ite before buying will con- vince you of fmmedia Relievew tired foe ve. near lith St., N. 150 6th Lord & Taylor FIFTH AVENUE August Sale of BLANKETS and COMFORTABLES EXCEPTIONAL values. ‘You'll seldom find anything to equal them. A glance at the prices is sufficient proof. All-Wool Plaid Blankets, $6.95 Pair BY. far the. best values we have seen in several years! Actually very close to present cost price. can’t afford to overlook this. Rose, blue, pink, lavender or tan. You surely White Wool Blankets, $13.50 and $14.95 Pair VERY fine quality with rose, blue or yellow borders and 4 inch satin binding. Sheets and Pillow Cases In our cAugust Bedding Sale - Sheets 63 x 99, $1.40 81 x 99, $1.65 go x go, $1.75 Cases 45 x 36, 32¢ Single bed size, $13.50. 50 x 36, 35¢ Double bed size, $14.95. Values in Comfortables $6.95 — Plain Sateen covers these wool-filled comfortables of good weight and excellent quality. $14.95 —Pure Jap silk wool-filled comfortables, rose, blue, lavender, gold, beautifully stitched. SECOND FLOOR Swinging Couch Hammocks, $17.50 | ‘| THE summer is still young enough for you to en- joy the comforts of one of these attractive hammocks which have been reduced to $17.50. Sturdy and dependable, they have tufted, all cotton filled mattress, rolled edge, upholstered back and tustproof spring. The covering is painted, heavy duck in sttipes. Hammock Stands, of rigid metal, $4.50 each. Shadewell Awning, easily adjustable, in striped effects, $4.50 each. FIFTH PLOOR Special! Japanese Nightgowns, $6.95 and Pajarnas, $8.75 SPECIAL prices have been marked on all of these nightgowns and pa- jamas — made of Jap silk, flesh color or white, the nightgowns with elaborate enibroidery and scalloped edge. All most unusual values. Imported Japanese Silk Kimonos $6.95 — Brocaded Japanese silk crepe with white silk border. $9.75 — Flowered crepe silk, lined throughout. Crepe de Chine Negligees, $8.75 — A delightful style for summer wear. Trimmed with ruching and tieing loosely in the back. Costume Slips — With hip-deep shadowproof hem and simple tailored top. Tub silk, $2.75. Radium, $5.50. Philippine Nightgowns, $1.95 — Hand-made of lovely soft. materials, and beautifully’ hand-embroidered. SECOND FLOOR Other cAugust SALES Mid-Summer Furniture Sale Oriental Rug Sale Fur Sale Special Purchase ! Junior Floor Lamp, $29.75 THIS most attractive floor lamp is marked at an attractively low price. The illustration will giveyou some- idea of its grace and charm. Tt has a black en- ameled shaft with gold and colored bands and a silk shade of plaited silk in an assort- ment of colors. Edged with triple dachingend tinge. Cords and tassels to match. Two Other Specials Bridge Lamp, black enameled with 14-inch silk shade to match, $27.50 A Wrought-Iron Bridge Lamp, complete with decorated parch- ment shade $6.50 FIFTH FLOOR hel mn ent i ma Tigh Special Purchase of “Duplex” Fireless Cookers $20 A MOST fortunate special pur- chase is the explanation of the remarkably low price of-this well known Fireless Cooker. Its time and trouble saving qualities are known to all, and this price pre- sents such a real opportunity that you should not let it pass. Cooking capacity 14 quarts. Ir has two compartments lined with aluminum, The equipment consists of one 8.quart pot, 3 two- quart triangle. pots, three large baking and roasting disks, disk lifter, folding baking tack and two aluminum mats. SEVENTH FLOOR Cool, Charming Porch Frocks $5.95 YOU can buy two or three frocks most inexpensively — and you probably need them by shis'time. They are tissue ginghams in sey- eral becoming styles and novelty figured materials. $6.95—White self striped voile, a straight line model trim. med with Val. lace. Also a frock of uncrushable linen in charming summer colors, cut in a plain tailored style, And two pli in datted batiste, dark colors appro: priate for street wear. SECOND FLOOR Boddy has just one more month te live. He ‘# to be put to death the week fect model. A. trial te rvllet from callous or ny other foot trouble,

Other pages from this issue: