The evening world. Newspaper, August 11, 1922, Page 4

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t i | _— MANY NOTIBLES IND BIEST HAL © ON MMURETANA Otto Kahn, British Ambas- sador and Boy Scout Chiei Among Passengers. ‘The biggest mail ever brought from Burope arrived here to-day on the Cunard liner Mauretania, which also earried 1,452 passengers, including 396 first class. The record mail, larger even than any Christmas consignment, was due to the cancelliny; of the Olympic's voyage because of a stern post fracture, giving the Mauretania &@ double burden. It included 7,843 bags of mail and 965 parcel post pack- ages. Capt. Arthur H. Rostron received a wireless from the Adriatic the White Star line at 8.85 o'clock this Morning, reporting the explosion in her hold. From her report on her po- aition, Capt. Rostron believed she was then 1,000 miles from New York, due outh of Cape Brace on the Newfound. land Banks, and about 335 miles from Cape Race. ‘Two representatives of foreign coun- tries in the United States were aboard the Mauretania. Sir Auckland Geddes, British Am- Dassador, was on his way to Wash- ington with Lady Geddes and their gon, Ross, after a five weeks’ stay in Beotlan and London. Sao-ke Alfred Sze, Chinese Minister, Feturned from England, bringing three of his children, two boys, Szeming, fourteen, and Dedie, ten, and a girl, Maimai, twelve. He plans to go to Washington and then to Wood's Hole, Mass., where his wife, with a younger child, now is staying. Otto Kahn, the banker, returning from a six weeks’ European trip, re- ported meeting Lloyd George. Passengers said Mr. Kahn told them that many leaders in France now favor moderation in dealing with Germany. Kitty Doner, a young Winter Gar- den actress, who has been in London three weeks, played a joke on cu: toms officials. When asked what she was bring back she said, ‘A little Black and Whit “Let's see it," she was told. Th she dug from a basket a black York- shire terrier pup and a white Irish Wire haired terrier. \ " Mrs, Walter Wanger, known on the stage as Justine Johnstone, arrived from London fora three weeks’ visit. Geza Kede, managing editor of a Hungarian newspaper here, on his way home from Budapest brought an invitation from the Hungarian Premier, Count Bethlen, to 1,000 American citizens to visit Hungary and look over its financial possibili- ties. James E. West, head of the Boy Scouts of America, who attended the International Boy Scout Conference in Paris, which had been called, he said, ‘the Junior League of Nations," declared American Boy Scouts lead the world. There are 550,- 000 of them, he said, far more than any other country can boast. : -_———— MARC M’DERMOTT FREE P IN ALIMONY ACTION e Hee steamship of Actor and Former Movie ‘ leased on Bond. Mare MacDermott, ohee one of the bereen’s most popular stars and lately ® vaudeville actor, was freed to-day from Ludlow Street Jail in $5,000 bail. MacDermott was locked up late yester- day on complaint of his wife, Mra, Miriam Nesbitt MacDermott, who is suing him for separation and who claims he was about to leave for Bos- ton. She is asking $10,000 yearly ali- mony and $5,000 counsel fees and the action comes up to-day in Westchester County. Mrs. MacDermott was also once a famous leading woman and claims that her husband suddenly cut off the $100 @ week pin-money he allowed her and that she is now in need of funds and her advanced years makes it impossible for her to secure « theatrical engage- ment, ie, SVS EDITOR WHITE. AS DRY QUITS WET WEEKLY Whe Judge es Beer and Wine. EMPORIA, Kan., Aug. 11.—Light wines and beer caused Judge, the hu- mo.ouw wetkiy, 8) sn» Its editor, Will- fam Allen White. nen the magazine opened & campaign to restore the bev- erages, White resigned his job, Mr. White's last copy as editor of Judge was written early in July and was printed this week. “I'm afraid I'm getting old and cranky,” Mr. White said to-day. “I don't seem to be able to get along with the folks. I quit as editor of Judge be- cause the owners of the paper desired to start a campaign for light wines and beer, I am a convinced and confirmed Prohibitionist.’* CAMP GRANT BURNING; FEAR INCENDIARISM ., Aug. U.—Barracks Just east of the camp gaardhouse and ‘across the road from the hospital area ts on fire and is burning rapidly. Camp authorities suspect incendiarism, Soon after inidnight the Rockford City fire department announced that the fire, having jumped a bundred-yard gap to Kishwaukee Street, was apparently bo- yond all control and would sweep the entire north section of the area, Capt. Kirby Greene, camp exchange , discovered a fire in a barracks out of line with flying embers. He has- tened to the building, but before he oul Feach it the fire had spread so ‘capidly that he could notyenter. ‘ 1,060,858 U. S. KIDS IN GAINFUL WORK Out of Every 1,000 Boys « 10 to 15 Years 113 Are Employed. WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 More than a million American children between ten and fifteen years of age are engaged tn gain- ful occupation, 1,060,868 being the exact figure, according to a Cen- sus Bureau report to-day. Out of every thousand boys between those ages 113 were recorded as employed either on their own ac- count or for wages, while 5.6 per cent. of the girls were so em. ployed, The report showed a decrease since 1910 of 64.8 per cent. from the number of children employed in agriculture, 60.2 per cent. in mining aad 29 per cent. in manu- facturing and mechanical indus- tries. Those engaged in other occupations increased in the same decade by 12.9 per cent. The bureau explained that the decided decreases in certain voca- tion’ were partially explained by the change tn the census date to from April, 1920, 1910, January, 18 MAN-KILLING DOGS PAY DEATH PENALTY Arrest of Mitre) SACRAMENTO, Aug. s have paid the death penalty f Killing A, Bise, a rancher, home at Antelope, near here. * Mrs, Louis Belardi, ow! d and instructed to call the in from the fields, She they were to h in “T would give my life for my dogs, she said. ‘I would kill the person thi my dogs. They tha and or brother After Mra, Balardi had been taken the County Jai! Humane Officer H. Wintons shot the eighteen dogs. beet MISS BROWN COMING EAST FOR TOURNEY | | LOS ANGELES, Cal., Aug. 11.—T Miss Mary K. Browne, of Los Angeles, woman tennis cham- former national pion, contemplates entering business day. Miss Browne, now at Del Mont Cal., plans to leave for the east whe she will represent the west Ii nual east versus west woman be held in September. She won the national title in 1912 an 1918. Last year Miss Browne went in| the final round of the woman's nation: championship, only to lose to Mrs, Mol! play Bjurstedt Mallory, the champion, after She won the doubles plonship, however, with Mrs. Dud. ley and also the national mixed doubles three hard sets. cS with William M. Johnston. ee HOSPITAL BI PAID, SIGNED “THANK YOU." WORCESTER, Mass, Aug. been wiped from the books at City Ho: pital by the receipt of $15 in bills, con- letter addressed and signed tained in a “to. th Superintendent,” You.” 11.—Kighteen who was found chewed to death by dogs at his er of the dogs, did not know New York City, became known here to- the an- ‘4 25 YEARS OLD, 11.—A hospital bill twenty-five years old has “Thank at their cost of re-manufacture! Arar ENEEEEEerener — . THE EVENING WORLD, F HAROLD M'CORMICK WEDS GANNA WALSKA IN PARS CITY HALL (Continued from First Page.) PHONE AND AUTO HOME WRECKERS Vice Head Tells of Harm From These Inven- tions, has sounded knell of the American home of eneration ago, according to Join 8, Sumner, Secretary of the Soctety for the Suppres- sion of Vice, ‘Two of causes of its disintegration, in his opinion, are the telephone and the automobile. The automobile, Mr. Sumner claims, Is an economical means of Progress the divorce in Paris from Alexander Smith Cochran, who before his marriage was known as New York's most eligible the bachelor Dudley Field Malone, who was Mc Cormick's best mun, obtained the di- ce for Mme. Walska voi McCormick was married the day 6 ee ee after he put his youngest daughter, Centive for families to leave Mathilde, seventeen, on a train for] their homes, ‘The telephone, Switzerland where, it 1s reported, she} he says, is a means of carry. is soon to become the bride of Max] ing on secret conversations and Oser, former keeper of a livery stable in Zurich It was Ganna Walska who aided the girl in picking out her clothes for the trip to Switzerland, making !lielt engagements. do not fight to suppress * he sald, “but to sup- press those things which are incentives to persons to cause them to use these Inventions for immoral purposes.’* As late as the first week in June there were denials of anything like an engagement between Harold F, McCormick and Mme. Ganna Walska, but these had been preceded by as many rumors of the Impending mar- riage of the two, Sourcely a day « ; went by that the engagement was| Mr. McCormick's wife was the only not reiterated and as promptly dis,| dushter John D. Rockefeller sr credited either by Mr, MeCormick or married in November Thacopera: MBE 805, and in the divorce action Mrs McCormick testified to Poland. June. ‘They were divorced last When Mr, McCormick arrived in i ifled he had deserte | Paris on July he told the Asso-|her in May, 1918, in Switzerland ciated Press he They were divorced last December. was in Europe for °F business and a rest and that he had|, Mme. Walska was not the only one no intention of seeing Mme. Walska,|t? Whom Mr. McCormick was r« He added he had received no news of pborted to be engaged. Last December her, though there were published re-{it was said he would make sury ports that the two were to meet in| Garden, manager of the Chicago m| Carlsbad in August. Opera Company, his wife. Another multaneously with the foregoing} report had it that he would in a year marry a woman in Chicago so- y who had recently obtained a dispatch came one which stated that McCormick and Mme. Gannaj¢i “t) Walska had gone motoring that day| divorce. in the Bois de Boulogne, that ber] Mr. MeCormick underwent in Jy automobile had drawn up before her| @ operation about which there wae home in th much secrecy. It was done in a hos- to Rue Lubeck and that he J.Jand the singer had entered it and] pital in Chicago where a wing was n away, all smiles, before re-} Walled off with guards and nurses to porters could get to them. ac rd him every prt y. May Mr. McCormick gave to| It was reported the time that he Walska the fine Paris resi-| had offered Dr. Victor Lesp'nasse, that her husband, Alexander| Who performed the operation, $50,000 Smith Cochran, bought from the late] !f no one save the necessary we Gordon Bennett. tants was made aware of the At that time . McCormick was quoted as saying| tion. When he learned that the news he and the singer were not engaged, | had been published it was said to have in] adding: enraged him. “Lf am not in the least concerned| He dec 1 he intended to sue for e.| whether Ganna Walske and Mr,|Ubel every newspaper which had said re he had purchased a human gland to be grafted into his own bod. — Perfect Shoulders aos Arms Nothing equals the beautiful, soit, pearly white appearanceGonraud’s Sreatal, Cream ren- ders to the shoulders and arms. Covers skin blemishes, Will not rnb off. Far su- ricr to powders. | htte-Flesb-Rachel. ws, 10¢ for Trial Size 5 BY. 7. ROPRINS SON New York Cochran are divorced or not, This is the only statement IT can make on the subject, and it is the truth.”’ a ertheless, it was learned even to] then from a source close to Mr. Mc- aijCormick that he hoped to make the ta | Singer his bride as soon as she should be divorced, and that the reason an | engagement was not announced was that she was not then free. | Mme, Walska’s first husband was Cupt, Archadje d'Hingorn, a Russian Army officer, to whom she was mar- ried in Poland when she was seven- teen years old. She separated from him and, took a second husband, Dr. Joseph Fraenkel of New York, who died in 1920. In that same year she ne {became the wife of Mr. Cochran, but in April, 1921, they separated, he go-| ing to live in England and she going to Gouraud's Oriental Cream White Slippers embracing twenty-five I. Miller styles are included in this Semi-Annual Sale Th w h —allowing but a few days in 498 Fulton Street, Brooklyn e Sale closes on August 19th ich to obtain variety of choice. IeMILLER 15 West 42nd Street an scamee |SLAIN MAN’S BODY 1928, RADIO ANTENNAE PUT INTO DISCARD Loops, Outside, Inside or Underground, the Thing Now. WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—Experl- ments have convinced Post Office ex- perts that the day of aerial antennae for wireless receiving has passed. Ac- cording to Supt C, Edgerton of the RIDAY, AUGUST 11, INJURED IN FALL FROW ATEEDTTS, James Manton, No, 439 20th Street, Brooklyn, was working on a new bulld- Ing at Linwood Street and Hegeman Avenue, Brooklyn, this morning when a plank on Which he was about twenty feet above the ji slipped. Manton fell and fractured two ribs, He was taken to the Kings County Hospital. FOUND ON ROAD Bullet in Meart—Believed to Be W. C. Allen of ‘Trenton. / fRENTON, Aug. 11.—Mystery sur- ounds the finding of the body of an unidentified man th enn Valley Road, just across the from here. ‘There was a bullet wound through the heart. The morning on the Delaware Coming! boly was picked up by a passing| Radio Section, the department has motorist near the Wheat Sheaf Roud-|peen using “large vertical outside house, raided recently by the Pennsyl-|jnultiple-turn loops," ‘underground Th A t S J f ’ apecteone horizontal loops’? and ‘underground e ug us ale 0 the body was removed to the]antennae’’ and climinating much morgue in Bristol, Pa., the police] static interference. notified authorities of Kastera Penn-| ‘The horizontal buried loop has been AY sylvania and New Jersey to be on the] very successful,’ Supt. Edgerton an- a els an om orta es lookout for an auto from which they} nounced, ‘when well insulated and be.leve the body was dropped. From cards found in the man's clothing he ts be.ieved to be W. C. Allen of buried in water or very damp earth,"” —— FINDS BREAK IN RAILS, Bringing unusual opportunities Trenton Police say they believe he was murdered, brought in an auto- FLAGS L. I. TRAIN A d nobile to the bridge and t z D) J = obile to the brldge.and ehrowe out nat wee(i tO pUrchase high grade bed cov still had his fob upon which was in- scribed the name W. C. Allen on one and on the other “presented by ‘Trent Social Club.” The name . C, Allen was tattooed on his arm, RETIRES AFTER XTY YEARS SERVICE, WASHINGTON, Aug. _11.—Edward erings at exceptionally low prices. ISLIP, L. 1., A few minutes after the Amagansett flyer had passed the Islip station on the Long Island railroad here this morning a section foreman discovered a break in the east bound rafls about 300 feet west of the station, He immediately obtained a red side the See Sunday Papers for Details Dunn, who began In the War Depart-|fiag and flagged local train No. 66, j ment sixty years ago as personal mes-| which came along in a few minutes. senger for retary Stanton, was} Passengers on the local train were ired to-day ng with hits 8 gold | datnyed about twenty minutes white,the | ShcA lre ‘ | filled purse presente: by Secret: rail was being repaired. A section gang ne |Weeks and donated by the War was put to wotk immediately and after HERALD SSUARE Fro. NEW YORK ff. He has been the per-|the rail was repaired the train” pro- onal messenger of every Secretary of] ceeded. It was believed that the flyer, First using a saddle horse] passing at high speed, had broken a ed to a carriage, an auto. but never|rail frog and that this Neive\ivexivavtverivavtievi caused the rail | ee Leads All New York Newspapers in Advertising Gains for the Month (hs World, Morning and Sunday, stood first among the fourteen morning and evening newspapers of New York City in its adver- tising gains for the months of June and July with a lead of 57% over its nearest competitor. The figures for the morning field, compiled by The Evening Post, are as follows: —— Columns ———— July 947 Gain June The World 798 Gain The Times 545 « 566 % The News (Tabloid) 229 « 246 « The American 104 « 2826 The Commercial 140 Loss 61 Los The Tribune 233 « 99 « The Herald 337 27 Certain aspects of The @orld’s gains during this seven months’ period have been the subject of wide- spread comment among the principal advertising journals. ‘‘The gains made in national advertising in the morning field,” says Newspaperdm, discussing the first six months of 1922, ‘by the three papers of largest percentage of gain were: World 31%, Times 28%, Ame. ican 26%. These are remarkable gain percentages Secale! the Luge volume of national business carried by each morning newspaper in the first six months of last year.” The CAorld Gravure gained 154% during the month of July, the largest increase in its history and nearly four times the percentage of gain of its nearest competitor. “ “ | Member of | Netronel } Newy is Tacorperas Morning 352,852 Sunday 609,290 Evening 300,740

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