The evening world. Newspaper, August 8, 1922, Page 1

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)

- - : OE ERLE TER SEVEN SHOT IN RIOT ON EAST SIDE To-Night's Weather-—F AIR} COOLER. WALL STREET ear EDITION Copyright Publishing Company, Che [Circulation Books Open to. p All.” (New York World) by Press inae. NE w YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, « Cire ulation Books Open to All,” | Entered as Post Ue Gord. Offlee, To- Morrow’ 's Weather—FAIR. n to All,’’ Second-Clasy Matter New York, N.Y, HARDING CALLS ON LEADERS OF HOUSE 10 BE PREPARED TO ENACT NEW STRIKE LAWS ———— ye Industrial Situation Now So Serious That President Wants Full Attendance Ready in Case He Is Forced to Ask Legislation Stone Calls Rail Unions to Conference. VASHINGTON, Aus. 8 (Associated Press).—Faced with probable re jection f his latest sil strike settlement proposal by the striking railway shopmen and with a reply from the executives as yet uncertain, President Ilurding let it be known to-day that he is desirous of having the House reconvene next Tuesday prepared to enact any legislation which might b« dcemed advisable in connection with the industrial situation, esident, it was said at the Waite House, has informed the House 11 he is opposed Lo any programme of three-day recesses such Pen contemy ed. He has suggested to the leaders, it was further hat instead of marking time with a handful of members present ter the House recor so that Coner out t enes next Tuesday a full membership be on hand uny legislation is needed to carry vith respect to the coaband railroad mi funetion in case Administration programm: lw given tot meywell, American, Still in ie aalitoadie anes \ir, Expected to Prove sae Ue Winner. F — al GENEVA, STONE SUMMONS er UNION CHIEFS TO noon of distances covered by the con textants the RAIL CONFERENCE]... ;., Aug. 8 (Associated Latest calculations this after international James Gi balloon the n Bennett STE Cup indicated that Oscar Westover, Press).— Warren piloting an American Army. balloon. of Brot was leading over Maurice Bienaime, Boginen: felog French contestant morning asking them te Word was received that Westover frence in Washington next had landed on the right bank of the co the Tailroad situation | Danube, about thirty miles southwest ah hout the country and “avert the | or pudapest. Consequently, it was dinpending calamity of a collapse in trav timated, he appears to have tray “TP called th hood chiefs to- | elled the gretest distance of those gether as requested am thus far reported, “but I do not know j v7 he Swiss balloon Zurich, piloted @hil ba taien by W. Muller, landed in a violent President Stonc is taken{ storm near Salzburg, Austria, said a following receipt. of im this | Messawe received this afternoon Micmniie fron. Bort el, head] Thunderstorms and snow squalls of the shop crafts unions; William H,| nearly spoiled the — international Johnston, President of the Inter-| balloon race for the James Gor national Association vf Machinists,Jdon Bennett Cup, and joo and J. 1. Noon President of the} descended upon the enthusiasts here Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, pwhen the news was received of sev- il early landings on a asking him to call such a meeting. [er ‘ount of bad > — Weather, some inside Switzerland and RAIL BOARD READY _ jt!" only small distances over the FOR AN IMMEDIATE | vic American pilots remained the after Walter SENIORITY RULING] (evertes, oven Reed had reported landing near penlieim, Germany outdistanced by Pap- He probably was Capt Armbruster, Swiss, who reported from Kirschiag ustria, but later Major Oscar the American, was heard 1 in Hungary e race now seems to le between Aug. 8 (Associated Press).—Acting upon President Har- ding's new suggestion for ending the rail strike, the United States Rail- road Labor Board stood ready to-day | ‘"y promptly and readily to consider and|, E, Honeywell, the American, who = is’ stil unheard from; Major West- (Continued on Second Page.) over, and the Italian’ pilot, Gughel- — ietti, who was the latest to report, STRIKERS REJECT \iiaving landed at Salorn, in Czecho > Slovakia. The general opinion in RAILROADS’ OFFER] neronautic circles here is th pt Honeywell probably will win WASHINGTON, Aug. 8 (Associated] ‘There remained to be heard from Press).—The Shop Crafts Committee| this morning, bestdes Capt. Honey- ie well, two of the Belgian entries, Bel set outhern alli tem And) cu and City of Brussels, ono French, the Mobile & Ohio Railroad, meeting! Anjou; one Italian, ‘Triomphale VI., with t! oMcials here to-day, {and one Swiss, Zurich uv Mors that they w voie, French entry, Janded at not make any adjuetment of the luch, in Northwestern Czceh arth j Southorn or the| slovakia, near the German border, in- Mobile & ( Irike is national] stead of in Bavaria, as previously 1e- and must be cl nationally, ported, GIRL IN RUM PLO TO BARE STRANGE LIFE AT HER TRIAL Hirsh Will in Yacht Booze. Tell of Seized for Mrs. Vrip © FATHER KNO\WN Was With Alleged Bootle; Ch... Police Seek She Says. WELI The strange life of Mrs, Budith Stevens Hirsh, on trial in the Brool lyn Federal Court on charges of tak- ing part in an spir few det international bootleg ey, will be bared ia all takes only testi ging ¢ but a Is when she the witness stand to give the mony that wil be offered for the de- fense. The announcement was made to-day 1, Wallace BE. J by her couns Collins who said that the only facts to be withheld would be the identity of the parents 6f the who is only nine- teen rs old Stortes of yachting cruise d the Picking up of mysterious cargos mysterious to the girl—will be part of her testimony, Mr. Collins said, And the full narrative of her adventyres with Anthony Cassese, alleged boot legger leader, who is missing, will be give “For the protection of her father who is well known in New York,"! Mr Collins said. “my client will suppre: his name and the name of her eased grandtath but the rest Will tell “She will tell of her early life with her parents, of her travels with them rope, of the luxury to which sh became aceustomed in clilldh Then she will tell of her mother divoree and how she herself east her Jot with her mothe earned what peverty is when er married is Snydor and his hem nb lyn “My chet will tell how, for the first time in her life, it Ve nec essary to work for her own living as an operator of an adding machine for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Com pany, At the age of seventeen, In rant of poverty, she married Mil ) Hirsh, April 18, 1920. But this did not turn out well, Her husband failed to find work and Mrs. Hirsh again qwas forced to earn her own living “She will tell how she first met Case It was near Calvary Ceme tery, Brooklyn, whe lad gone to visit the grave of he ndfather She was struck by Cusse ate mobile, t hrown to the 4 stunned “He picked her up her te her home in Manhattun, where he afterward visited her. He todl her he was a wealthy t 0 merchant, owner of two yachts, and he proposed that she accompany him on a yacht ing trip. She was in a ndent mood, ready Imost F tion, and 1 ‘On the ' (which wa fterward s¢ Viesaing) she recompanied Case Hahama to Bermuda, to N will tell turn trip a ‘ usioned left Cassese came and pleaded with he ying he would need her testimony the boot legging case uguinst him u id her she would he wanted to testify about the men he negotiate! with in the Ba hamas Again consented to » with him to the Bahamas, The ‘ testify, Cassese hyred 1 and he and she went off boarded the ebt R ho wa being loader, She u tt at th cargo wax cocoanut She will tell of t ‘ Ripple att « is Brooklyn, afte ‘ i 1 and move r We 67th St 1, Mar n, whe they lived until thre t week befure hor arrest tell on busine Wher NEON tony days she received “mn (Continued on Second Mase) WILL TELL STORY OF STRANGE LIFE IN RUM PLOT TRIAL SEVEN CHILDREN a Beaten by BOY STEALS HIS PISTOL. Another Policeman Attempts morning. NAMED FOR STATES] teen beaten by a mob and had his SEVEN ATTACKED POLICE FEAR TONG BY POLICEMAN IN | WARIS ON AS HEAD RIOT ON EAST SIDE} OF HIP SING IS SHOT > White Woman With Ko Low Woynded in the Foot the Same Time. Crowd When He Runs Amuck and Hurls Bricks, SOCIETIES ALL FRIENDLY So Says One Inquirer Who | Not So Sure That Ten Years’ Peace Is Off. to Spirit Hin Away, Witness Declares. & A policeman in plain elethey, two] Ko Low, known also as Gow Jatt and 4 half hours after he had com-| How, national President of the pow pleted a tour of patrol duty, played/erful Hip Sing Tong, is dead in beled sh, scl the star part in a small riot in Riv-] Beokmun Street Hospital, shot down ms ee ington Street between Suffolk and]in Pell Street last night 4 oman ee EDITH STEVENS HIRSH, | Norfolk Streets for a ten-minute pe-]who evidently lay in walt tor him E = riod beginning at o'clock this} with an automatic pistol adroitly con After he had assaulted half men and one woman, had ed beneath a Malsbenden, handkerchief. one of the with him at the time, May young women is in the same dozen SEVEN PERSONS ARE si FROM AUTO THAT LEADS WILD CHASE UP THIRD AVE. Six Men and a Girl the Victims —Three Men in the Machine Arrested--Chase Began at ifth Street and § Second Avenue. Vollowing a disturbance at Second Avenue and Fourth Street at 2 o'clock this afternoon which one report to the police stated was a hold-up and another a fight between striking garment workers and strikebreakers a patrol wagon Jond of policemen chased an automobile containing three armed men for a mile through the streets of the lower East Side. In Fifth Street hetween Second Avenue and the Bowery the fleeing nen in the automobile opened fir on pople on the sidewalk and in the street who tried (o stop the car, SIX ten and a@ litle girl were shot in front of Bethoven Hall, One of the shots struck anu filled a pony ate tached to an ice cream cart * wounded were as “ollows Sie (ioldstein, ) oso Bock Street, “Bronx, shot under the heart and taken to B Hospital in a ritieal conu'tion ~ Max ( feld, forty-three years old, ee 0 Jennings Street, t Bronx, shot in the ¢ in Dan Hartman, fifty years nl 708 Belmont Avenue, the Bron: Tsicl Zashkow, twenty-nine invion. ‘Avenue, the a Bronx, shot anctieht tex ' Witterman tive years - i Street, shot in right les “Greatest Prosperity Era Be-|| Philp (Strum, thistysseven’ years be old, 7 Hester & et t under hea gins in Three Months,” He Hyman Youngberg, twenty-seven : sold, of 1967 F Avenue, the Fells Merchants, nx, xhot in tert hand x Street and Second Avenue itinued. That the railroad and coal strikes | Eimer aml Second Avene continues would be settled within a week, to be} najicemen at intervals through Fleth followed in. three months by the|Street to the Nowery, up the Bowery reatest era of prosperity in. the fand Avene, ie) (oulteant® “ eet, W Vourth Avenue and history of the country,'* were the eet eee eee eee te predictions of A Wnt Seoretary of |mobile wa ruled Labor 8. J, Henning, speaking to-day] The t handoned their car but e the midsummer convention of ekly caught, The third, » National Retail Dry Goods Asso . man ran ral blocks ciation at Grand Central Palace, |yeun om Madison Avenue trom 28d which, in conjunction with the Na treet wa tional Garment Retailers Association’ viet near any exhibition at the Tist Regiment Ay | trembled a batt ties mory, constitute the National Mer a bend j idewa ' crowd Mr Henning attack child tat nd spoke on immigration, naturaliz shes tion and citizenship. Other speakers en , were Prof. M Copeland, Dirretor 1 all the of the Harvard Graduate School of Hoshdrcsbrhntancaant Business Administration, and Lew mbuolances arrived and hurried Han, Managing Director of the tau iF LE eae Jesse Isidor Strau President of the " ° — ussoctation, presided oT million men on “Industry FAST NEW YORK TRAIN DERAILED IN GEORGIA there are more than on Mr been trike, Hennin id has paraly On HECOUNL Of AW mistake ant Mmisun- lve. Canws n Wreek Sen- Jorstandings. T predict the lime wil hcana Sivek ome when all strike will be avoided rn 9 ‘ The rail trike means loss of not AVANNAIL, Gat A vids 000,000 a day to the] Alt Line fast train running fin t i fr t a a tox thas castle r ry no ensualtien the rer 1 have every contitence that tel Many Places Where ed thin T prediet th WD . i te ein ner the write | The Week End May etiiod we will the greatost ¢ " Be Enjoyably Spent BROOKLYN CARS CHANGE ROUTES AT 8 TO-NIGHT revolver stolen by a small boy, an-|hospital with @ bullet wound in. her Royster, Perc, Had Pen-] other poticeman, in uniform, tried to] f Kitty Ravenette, the other chant for Queer Cog- anit him a away, but a Sergeant, an-|20UNS Woman accompanying him, Who escaped the four flying -bullets, nome ering a telephone complaint, arrived |toid the police to-day a story of the RALEIGH, N. (., Aug. & and took him to the Clinton Street}shooting which leads to the belief a rderontiycrenyay Me takes Station, that a Tong war may have been di Vermont Connecticut’ Revetery 1" there ho was identified as Patrol-|clared In Chinatown . who is dead here, President of | man George R. Taylor of that pre There were two so-called American- the Arkansas Delaware Royster cinct, who had gone off duty and left]Clinamen in the little party which & Brothers Candy Manufacturing | the, station house, ostensibly for home, dined at the “Chinese Delmonico's’” tn at 8 o'clock. ‘aylor looked as though|Fcll Street last night, and Kitt Company, and one of seven chil he had been in a collision with a mo-|Ravenette said that just atore) the dren whose names were Virvinia | tor truck. He was covered with blood t Its table one of the Ameri Carolina, Indiana Georgia, Iowa | from a deep gash over his right can-Chinamen went out on the = Michigan, Arkansas Delaware |jtis collar and necktie were mi cory of the restaurant and moppeil Wiscousin Ulinais, and Oregon | hig shirt was torn, his clothing v his face with « handkerehief. If this Minn Royster hreds and most of the buttons were] Was a signal the police intend to make Dr. Wisconsin Minois Roy missin as much use of it as possible in trac of Raleigh and Oregon Minn u Dr. Dillon, a police surgeon, ex-[ing the man who killed Ko Royster of Nashville, Tenn., are Jamined Taylor more than an how The Tongs have been at peace for still livin: Mr. ter w i ifter he was taken to the station{abuut ten years, but the police recog on of James Daniel Royster and [house and pronounced him intoxi-|mize that if gamblin mong the 4 grandson of David Royster, on cated. Taylor was suspende the|Chinamen has started wgain, a Tong of the first settlers of Raleigh intexieation char No op | War is not so wide of the m That peared to make any other charge|i# What has started practically all of GIRL TAKES POISON | s#sinst him tate this. atternoon decay ascent is one ove iaisanean : Workmen are engaged in muhing| years ago, of the little seventeen-year IN MIDST OF CROWD Jeepairs on the building at No, 10] old slave girl, Bow Kum AT OAK ST. MARKET| fivington Steet. Sand and » Yee Hing, local head of tho Hip : a piled on the outer ‘ » questioned at length about the _ idewalk. Four labore killing, was asked whether he thot Is Saved by Policeman From] gased in shitting this maté 11 10.30] a Tong War had been started. With a o'clock when a man two] usual suceinctness he repli “Can't Suicide. pindineewhich cdlsappe the|tell yet. Not> till we tind who shot Staggering into Oak Street, mto the] subsequent melee—stag, md] ike Low All the societies are midst of the noonday market crowd, | said friendly.** Anna Bolasky, a fifteen-year-old girl.| “What in hell do you mean by] ‘The story that twenty-two year ‘meee Seige 3 ocuine’ the vaidawalKe' old Kitty Ravenette told th of No, 159 Pennsylvania) Ayenu Phe workmen sald their boss had a] Was Interrupted from tine te time t Brooklyn, collap: on the paving inf permit. In that neighborl long draughts upon the enarette sh front of No to-day, suffering from] gathers in a flash, There soon was a[smoked, Of herself she said little iodine taken with suicidal intent,| {rons #round the arguing men ssking that no more questions be put nis, THE elneaR eked tipi brlvk| to hot bitishe was wilikecenough 40 Prompt action® by Patrolman August] sig jeaved it aimlessly. It struck aftell what she knew of the shooting Vedersin probably saved her life 1 do 1 on the head, cutting the and the matters which immediatet She told police that this mornin kin he victim ran aw The | preceded it her stepfather reprimanded her be ger, with another brick tu "TA MAN NAMED SMITH FROM cause she was idle, She came to Man.| Lally CRATBES into the Crowd, ati "FRISCO hattan in eareh of a job, She se ee eee ee aie eee form ann nt dav GRaliweniGncace ii aen amon ind when she couldn't find one : KGhKARPALGA! KIA GLEE IL ote! To omet a man named W to a drug store and bought the iodiny ‘gt team behind and dntew him. (SHutti! she apis ‘clandn who tn Pedersin turned the corner into Oak} faing, the stranger's head struck |!toduced us said he came from San Street at the exact moment t : “and ‘DIGBA alhedined® tr , |] Meancisco. 1 ran *aeross hin ter fell face downward on the sidew ‘ Conehene He rushed to her side, lifted her, saw] yy, vot up, reaching fort (Continued on Sixth 1 ) dark stains around her mouth and] ,, foun WIG 1 saa sent a rush call to the Beekman] ., ene RECON P Street Hospital, Dr, Blutstem ro- [UN 0" nd oa revere | A wm |W. U. CABLES SEIZED sponded, and, after giving first aid.| qi, \e he was strug to hin feot BY IRISH REBELS sent her to Bellevue Hospital, where], appavently about twelve “a it Was suid he would recover Ae awed Gi EBHINAlditos ; ; pane itl at first refused 10 f HOG, OP EAUERAL EL, jOlfice Tere Reports Five of dersin her name and a ‘ ne NISC Relea ‘dene tell-why she had taken the iodine Hagel at Moder Bel ail maven Lines Working At Bellevue a card was found in h vthe ground floor of the ‘build LONDON, Aug. 8 (A nate pocketbook bearing the name of Ania No. 140, telephoned to the Clin. | P!e8s).—-OF the thirteen tables of the Belasky, 459 Vennsylvania Ave-], { Station that @ policeman in merelal Cable Company 1 nue Brooklyn. She admitted i wit jain clothes was trying to kill eve Western Union Company, wh han he in sight and Sergt. Pater «the bulk of the transatlantic service 2 et Je BUEN from Great Britain, only 1} When Fater reached the scene c to-duy—thowa of the W 946,139 HEBREWS 1 that m uniformed cop had|tnion trom ite Matton ae IN NEW YORK CITY Taylor and taken him inte} gneiand 4 nin tice With t Cust 1 i Jue to th 1 ! WASHI ON, Aug Hl man Owens, who ran amuck ulur fore the ¢ C There are 916,189 Tet ; Stvovt Sunday wigut pun tation at New York City, compared d the unitormed pat ithwweatern Trelar 1 897 British and Celtic 1 1 to get Taylor out of t Union statio at Census Mureau announced te rhe but Ore | I tin th 1 Other nationalities are sted ed that he be taken to the station Italian 803,048; German 690 At the off € Polish 161,21 vt er the riot nobody] Western Unt ith h and Celtic, includ ty except. M of thele : Irish, Beotch, Welsh at m ving scen it « ew Manx, decreased nearly 5 Or the witn: Valentin n ot ince 2910, whil ntiu te eto o v of ad but. per cent \ 1 I offive rey mother tonssur r evolver, loaded, wa and | tay in iilesion di cent, of the enti t moon in an east side publich byminess caused by the t i (he metropolis, hool playsround. Commercial Company's ¢ ' PI Te-Morrew Wit Hun on Other Streets 1 truction of fect of track itating rerouting of it 1 Hrvoklyn between § tost 1 to-mor r ring on bultor t betwoor . pees Hioreum Place and) Elutbush Avent . by the Brooklyn City Rallroad, it wa World “Summer Resort" nnounced t 1 744) Advts. Last Week twee POM. and & A. M i . > More ‘Than Any Other ue ite ea I; 188 New york Newspaper TViausart eed Letartele Hivamten ie For The Best Place Where wisalb Avenue line will be onorat To Enjoy a Vacation, Read and Willoughby Street, The World’s*Summer Resorts ee ee ee mr mmr =

Other pages from this issue: