The evening world. Newspaper, August 19, 1922, Page 2

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rps ae SF ESA a reer Hn EEN A PR I RT ECR SCT er on West 434 Street and with Bert M. Jewell, President or Railway Employees’ Depart- ment of the American Federation of Labor and national leader of the shopmen's strike. Chiefs of the rious shop crafts unions and the sta- Uonary firemen and oilers, who also are on strike, were with Mr, Jewell at the Woodstock. It was shortly after the return of the mediator$ to the offices of the Ex- ecutives’ Association that the big con- ference adjourned. A few minutes later Robert 8. Binkerd, assistant to Chairman Cuyler, issued a formal typewritten statement which rea: “The conferences between the lead- ers of the five train service organiza- tions, acting as mediators, and a committee of railway executives have been adjourned until some day next week not yet designated. Prior to further conferences the committeo of railway executives will consider fur ther the suggestions made and con- sult their associates. The discussions which have taken place have been marked by commendable public spirit and frankness on both sides, and this recess is taken without any diminu- tion of this attitude. ee FOR SHOOTING MAN NEGATIVE VOTE ON DEAD ATHERHOME TAREE LATE TODAY Radio Operator Killed by]Warns Senate He Will Op- Landlady in Dispute At- | pose Grant of Revision tending His Moving. Power to President. FIVE BULLETS* HIT HIM. WASHINGTON, Aug 19.—Attack- ing the provisions of the tariff bill Proposing browd authority for the President to increase or decrease duties, Senator Borah, (Rep., Idaho) declared to-day in thé Senate that he could not give his support to the ve, tiem ae 5 . measure on the final vote late to-day Mrs. Agnes Pintco of No. 2614 Voor-| tntoxy, thee provisions were. elim: hees Avenue, Sheepshead Bay, was] nited. He said he could not arrive to-day held without bail on the charge] at the conclusion that they were con of having shot to death Louts Antey, | *titutional CHILD OF 6 WEEKS PRE-BIRTH HURTS during an argument over rent tn her| dential powers conatituted one of the home last night. ie Wife Witnesses Slaying of Husband as Assailant’s Chil- dren Stand Near. ee ving features."" He sald there if; . Mrs. Pinico, the mother of five}Were many “excessive” rates in the Log ote a. children, claims Aniey attacked her|!ill but that he would vote Yor i in Seeks to Recover From voll the hope that reductions would be with a revolver and was shot twice! mia in the conference comedies Taxicab Compay. during the scuffle. ‘The Pinieo chil- A six-weeks-old child, through her]dren witnessed the: killing of Ante: father, to-day brought suit in the]4and it was their screams that brought Hudson County Court, Jersey City, | the police. against a taxicab company for in-] Mrs. Pinteo and her husband, An-|6, and Reecd of Missouri opposed juries alleged to have been received] S10, a tailor, took the two-story|the Presidential grant; declaring it Maile! tee was bors. frame building in Voorhees Avenue Was too great & power to place in Through her father, Samuel Gar-| last May and soon afterward Anley TRapINe. ASTOR to atacks on Gargiulo, No. 167 Clendenny Avenue, | and his wife rented three rooms on the} ing Hii], Chairman MeCumber of the the infant, Anna, alleges that as a]second floor, Things mittee declared the font Ge an encanta | Pecan smoothly for a while, but Anley, while her mother was riding in 41 after ascertaining what other rents taxicab of the Hudson “axicab Com. |e ee ae nt een, retumea 2 |lican Tariff Bill ever passed. pany, No. 227 Hudson Street Jersey lelghborhood, refused to} wwe noed no excuse for t City, she was black and blue from|Pay the price Mrs. Pinico demanded. |he thundered, pounding his desk. bruises at the time of her birth, and| The Issue went to the Twelfth Munic- “As it will go to conference to-day had a paralyzed right arm. She} jpal Court and the radio operator was|!t has been cut almost in two as com- seeks $25,000 damages from the taxi- | upneia pared with the House bill and is con- cab. company. ss siderably lower than Her father asks $16,000 damages] €cording to the police, this brought | measure.” for future Joss of the child's services| about bitter feeling on the part of ee and for eal expenses incurred. | Mrs, Pinico, and yerterda; nin ri raters zn ie arp was only! Aniey Batts = a peng ue AS SCHOONER Bours slightly injured when the taxicab in . which «he was ‘riding collided with| “m7 that bis ship was sailing ¢o-day pattestelsbaak bt Teuihen car. and he and his wife would return in the afternoon and remove thelr be- IRISH REBELS SLAY longings. When Anley appeared there TWO RED CROSS MEN was no one at the house. He went away angry, but returned Dublin, Aug. 19 (Associated Press).—| !8t night at about 8 o'clock and be-| iayed ner arrival here early this week, Two Red Cross workers attached to the| 68” to pack up. His wife was helping | ine Adriatic of the White Star Line National Army, have been killed in the) him when Mrs. Pinico éntered the] aie for Liverpool and Queenstown Killarney district, according to a report | room. ja ichedite time tous: from ‘Tralee, They were viewing the] ‘You should have been out of here} fay tist, is picturesque scenery from a small boat] long agc "’ she js alleged to have sald, The Homeric of the same line, on Lough Leane and were fired on a®}and when this led to an exchange of|bound for Southampton, was not #0 they were disembarking on Innisfatlen| words over her absence in the after-| fortunate. Due to set out on an ebb- Island. ep Ree she ran to her|!ne tide at 11 o'clock, she unexpect- A motor car eccupted by four Nation-| own’ room. Aniey went. downstairs | caly found her path obstructed by a a! Army officers was fired on in Aungler/ and to a shack back of the house to] four-masted Nova Scotia Street, in this city, lust night, and later} get some radio equipment stored] SChooner, whose economical captain, | m subjected to a bomb attack. The officers| there. doing without the services of a tug, | Cit were not injured, but one pedestrian] While he was packing this up in the babes making port at the rate of tw was killed and three were wounded. back yard, Mrs, Pinico, as the detec- | knots an hour, elce heavy firing all tast| US told it, appeared. The argument} Although he had all sail on, with the night throughout the city of Dublin} whipped her hand from the apron that] half an hour to make way for the between National Army forces and] had concealed it and fired five times] Homeric. While execrations from offi- Republican Irregulars. Free State} ®t Anley. All the shots took effect,|cers and crew of the palatial iner troops on patrol duty were fired at| Coney Island Hospital arrived Anley the rail, smoking a shelibark pipe. by snipers and machine gunners, who] was dead. From the rear porch Mrs.| phe Homeric carried 225 first cabin attacked various National Army] Anley witnessed the shooting of her! passengers, 100 second and 500 thin. posts, The Irregulars were frustrated Lalo ores Lion Rabarradbalas ia by the vigilance of the National flashes of the pistol, troops, it was stated to-day. Petesiery Rael yi pelea oe the The National forces are advancing | Sites in tront of the Finles, home on the irregulars from both north and} when Mrs, Pinico darted out. After a south in County Cork, chase of a block Wallet caught her. BELFAST, Aug. 19.—The irregu-] She was taken:to the station house “If they are pot cut,” he added, “then I shall exercise the berty and Prerogative of voting against the bill finally Senators Underwood, minority lead- e “lower than in any Repub- inj of Nova Scotian Lumber Ship Gets in Her Way. Despite the explosion in No. 3 hold, for a new Flo Ziegfeld show. Practi- cally all the members of the “Follies were at the pler ot bid her goodby, Jars last night blew u e of the} and charged with murde: . prevue. thing t! made her want to spend the most important bridges in West ne. pala Nakbie TESS RD PTR rest of her life anywhere except right land, spanning the River Shannon, in Brooklyn. near Corrick-on-Shannon, KILLED BY TRUCK vateagse “cht ea Run in sii 8 ae While SOUTHPORT, N. C., Aug. 19.—On}| Five-year-old Robert account of unfavorable weather con- ditions the seaplane Sampalo Correia, Mother o: to Do. ‘Mrs. Cecilia Cohen, forty, wife of a Singleton, home at No. %45 East Twenty-|moved to this city, was sentenced to- the auspices of The New York World, |{"om behind a westbound automobile}for shoplifting by Justices Healy, arrived here yesterday from Manteo, | directly in front of ar eastbound auto | Edwards and O'Keefe in Special Ses- was unable to continue the fight|‘*uck driven by W. H. Dingley of jstons, southward this morning. No. 261 West 14th Street. The boy]three small children, ked down, 7 4 3 A Piewh, “sind phos obihal alate. ae knocked own, run over and in-} Detectives of the Stores Mutual said he would leave just as soon as Dingley was held blameless by wit- weather conditions cleared, but on ac- | nesses and was not arrested, count of storms along the coast early ¥ 1 to-day it was doubtful if the ship} COURT REMITS FINE would be able to get away before this ON CHARLES MURPHY afternoon. RIO JANEIRO, Aug. 19 (Associated | Co @ Resalt of the Lock=}anancially. ne-—-He In Broke. Press).—Tremendous interest has been Supreme Court Justice O'Malley to- aroused here by the attempted fight flight }4@y rendered a decision remitting the|some prices, he said, $25 blouse from a Broadway depart- ment store on April 19, arrested her, several stores in Scranton, recently sold out at hand- from New York of the seaplane Sam- is drawing great headli $5,000 fine Imposed on Charles Murphy, [stopping at No. 176 Madison Street. papers, while crowds pence Dilt Es Editorial writers are treating the spec-] W@4 sentenced to ninety days tn jail and tacular attempt as an impromptu num-|the fine after being convicted of viotat- IN NEW SPEED RECOKD palo Correla, The progress of U 1 bulletin boards awaiting the latest word, | "ead of Wells & Newton Co., Inc., who] BENCH ARMY FLYERS Wer of the Brazilian centennial cele-ling the Donnelly Anti-Trust Act. The bration, conviction was an outcome of the Lock- Wiravel im Military Formation From > wood Committee's investigation into Paris to Mayence, “ICEMAN” IN MINEOLA the building trades, ‘ In his affidavits, Murphy was able to} PARIS, Aug. 19. DOES AN “IZZY” STUNT |econvince the court that he was without | formation, @ French air squadron has ib omenenbates funds and had a wife and children de- ed of }Pending upon him. His ninety-day sen- n minutes from Paris to May- tence in jatl will be completed on pie "a day and Justice O'Malley felt that the | Machines. man had been sufficiently punished, ‘The distance flown was 550 kilometres Bee (342 miles), this means that ail six al NEW YORK WOMAN HURT] | planes made an averige speed of n IN TROLLEY CAR CRASH 240 kilometres (150 mil ‘The flight was mad mn Occurs Middletown, OWN, N.Y. 8 Marla 8, Robinson of No, 204]/4RREST ELEVEN Fon t 83d Street, New York, was a BASEBALL, verely injured near here when two tro DODGEVILLE, Wis, Aug. 19.—Five ley cara on the tine of the Wallkill} players and six officers of the Dodge- ‘Transit Company met head on iu @ ra~ | ville Baseball Club ure under arrest “Here's how,” suid the ice man. Set-| vine. Several others were slightly hurt. | here charged with conspiring to violate ling down the glass, he added, casually,| It is charged that the accident was}the Sunday “Hive” law hy. playing ‘take this summons.” The ice man| due to the failure of one car to await | paseball last Sunday. The warrante was a Federal Prohibition agent in dis-| the coming of the other at a siding. | were sworn to by members of gules. Frank Krug, owner of the hotel,| Miss Robinson had been receiving | Dodgeville Law and Order League. has been summoned to answer @ charge} treatment at @ sanitariun here before | Conviction may result in a $10 fin of violating the Volstead Act. + [the accident. The law was enacted in 1849, Owner of Krug’s ¥ Dry Law Vi MINEOLA, L. L, Aug. 19.—A few days ago a new ice man appeared at the old barroom of Krug’s hotel, at Krug’ corner, Mineola, famous during the days of tne Vanderbilt cup races, and swing ing bis tongs curelessly inquired: “How much ice?’ “Who are you?’ tender. “Your ice man,"’ was the reply, ular man is off to-day. “Come on in and have a drink," the bartender is alleged to have said. Near Paris to Mayence to Par! inquired the bar- Aug. 19.— SUNDAY MAYOR MEGAPHONES GRANDCHILD HAS COT TWO.SOUNT 'EMTEET wet it right? the Mayor, carrying ©} shouted abruptly. you've got on your head Mr, Sinnott hastily doffed a Picca- dilly top hat and put it behind his never let “Where's your) singh glass und your stick? Son-in-Law Sinnott had no words of Was resumed and suddenly the woman|exception of hin jigger, it took him|Teply. . u When the Port Physieian had made his inspection of the Paris the Mayor headed the boarding party and tho aid Whee aa AinbUlAnSe Gareecn thoes greeting became more intimate. But it be Med the alr he leaned gently against} vasn't tive minutes before those with. in twenty feet heard the Mayor ask if they had heard what he yel Among those on board was Fannie] (ne cutter about also saw the! irice, who will spend seven weeks in| inter Parix and London collecting costumes | mney did, While the liner was going up the river Mrs. Hylan sald she had been intérested by many including Sally, the chimpanzee which | beautiful things abroad and by Euro- recently arrived to take part In the|pean life but that she hadn't seen a tremendously decidedly. The squadron consisted of six] right now in preparation | porters. for the coming attempt of the military | stand on that, squadrons to do 4 nor stop flight front] been taking her orders for thirty-two THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 NEW MAUVE AUTO’ FOR POPE PIUS Vatican Precedent Smashed; First Use Religious. ROME, Aug. 19 (Associated Press).—Pope Pius has an auto- mobile, The people of Milan, where the Pontiff was Arghbishep before his election, have presented him with a machine of the latest Italian model. It is mauve colored and bears on the doors the Papal coat of arms surmounted by the triple crown and the Pontifical keys. The Pontiff, it is sald, will use the car within the Vatican gar- dens, which he now circles twice daily in his promenades, a dis tance of three and a quarter miles, When the car was brought into the Vatican grounds Pope Pius went out to see it. “We will use {t first to transport the statue of Madonna of Loretto," the Pontiff said, meaning that the ear would be utilized Sept. 6 to carry the copy of the famous statue, which he ts to bless that day, from the Vatican to Loretto. The statue is a small, black image of the Vir- gin and Child, carved from Leb- anon cedar. This {8 the first time a Pope ever has owned an automobile (Continued from First Page.) you get my wireless about it yes- terday?"’ The three heads over the rail bobbed the original| their heads violently. "Two," said the Mayor. Not one. Two." The heads bobbed again. “Couldn't bring him out here,"' waid “He's at the dock wait- He can say halt Calls me ie for you. Hey! ‘grandfather’, now. ‘Grand. "" The rest of the passengers of the which killed six of her crew and de-|jiner began to get initerested as they lenrned who the eager flushed gentle- an on the cutter was, “Say, John Sinnott?"’ ity Hall, Baby John's “They wear some wonderful dresses over there and they have some beau- titul women, . n Te]] [best looking woman I've seen since Three and Well} ie tere was that lady over theres" and she waved her hand to the Statue of Liberty. ‘The most important thing that hap- playing in the street in front of his]Scranton business man who recently pened in Europe during the trip, one gathered, was the receipt of Grandpa bound from New York to Brazil under}#eventh Street this afternoon, ran|day to thirty days in the workhouse fda Bd cable message about Down at the foot of the gungplank with the Hylan party was Baby John Mrs, Cohen is the mother of} himself, held in the arms of the Mayor’ O'Hara, Protective Association told the court] Mayar’s | they had observed Mrs, Cohen take a}irving O'Hara. The Sinnotts and Mrs, Hylan were ‘On April 26]in for we oer al shock, all unsus: in saw her take a blouse and | pecting it. they agal ‘As they rushed on Baby John to Probation Officer John T, Smith}hug him and kiss him, he took one said Mrs. Cohen is comfortably fixed }!ook at their faces and father's top Her husband, who had|hat and wrinkled up his face and Philadelphia and}opened his mouth and bawled. He twisted around in his mother’ and they werefand reached out his arms grandfather and kicked and struggled. Before the party could go to their baggage to await customs inspection, the Mayor had to take his grandson to his shoulder and assure him it was really all righ Somebody asked Mrs, Hylan what she thought of the Hearst plan to ying in military} nominate her husband for Governor. “I think he has got enough to do established a record of two hours aug} to stay right where he Is," she said ‘The work he is doing is more important than being Governor. she si sister-in-law, Mrs. “Did you he “Well, she is the bogs, That settles it. years and she's always right, WOMAN TREATED FOR IODINE POISON A woman describing herself as Mra, Righ, thirty-five years old of No. 82 Laurel Mills Boulevard, Elmhurat, L. 1. e| Was treated for jodine poisoning at the Grand Central Terminal to-day at noon. She was later taken to Bellevue Hos- pital. “Did you the. Mayor “What is that ck, “If I'd thought you'd come back lumber] with a British tile like that I'd have uu leave your deak at the the Mayor said fiercely. barrelled eye. d from new Without a trace of diminished wt they demanded to hear more. “But the George wife of a brother of the bodyguard, Detective Sergt. arms to his that?" Mr, Hylan (still patting the quieted Baby John gently on the back) called to the re- I've 1922 RAILROAD BRIDGES;) RELIEF FROM HEAT) LIKELY 10 BE LEFT|OF COP INJURED IN SHOOT UP SHOPS} AS CITY SWELTERS; 10 GOMMISSIONSTOLEN AUTO CHASES os ¥ ‘ Operators and Miners Ad- journ Until Monday Without Agreeing. Troops Sent to Shops at}Fair and Cooler Weather Pre- Spencer, N. C. to Pre- dicted for To-Morrow — vent Trouble. One Prostration To-Day. CHARLOTTE, N. C,, Bight Flushing Policeman Leaf From: Faxi to Car and Twists Steering Wheel. ‘Patfolman Henry Roelich of th Flushing Precinct probably saved t Under a cloudy sky which seemed to lend confirmation to the Wegther PHILADELPHIA, Joint conference Aug. 19.—Thr of anthracite coal Aug. 19.— companies of North Carolina National Guard began enitraining to-| Bureau's prediction of cooling rain, | operators and union officials adjourned | life of Patrolman Edward Cook of th day for Spencer, where serious out-|New York was still suffering this} about 11.30 o'clock until Monday] same precinct, whom he had relieves breaks are reported at shops of the| Morning from high temperature and/afternoon without having reached an|of post early to-day, when he pre Southern Rallway. humidity. But 1 1s promised that the | agreement. A brief statement was| vented the driver in a stolen touri: Companies from Durham, Winston] Tain will surely come before night,| issued by James A. Gorman, Secre- | car trom running over Cook, prostrat and Concord also are under ordera] With fresh west to northwest winds, | tary of the conference, that the terms /in the road with a broken les, the evening and all of to-]of a possible contract had been dis- cussed, but containing no information as to what progress toward a settle ment of the strike in the hard coal fields had been made, and that morrow will be fair and cooler, Following is a table of temperatures t oreport at Spencer at once, accord- ing to information obtained from local officials of the Southern Rall- way here. ‘ CHICAGO, Aug. 19 (Associated Roelich and Cook had been pu suing two alleged stolén cars in ommandeered taxicab. When t taxicab caught up with the slowe of the automobiles Reelich jumpe and humidity - ‘Temperature Humidity 8 A. M. 8 5 wilt ive ‘on. | tom the taxicab to the automobil Press). — Outbursts occurred in the] 9 AM... 85 oan ea will reconvene Mon- | while both were going thirty-five mil rail strike at seattered points from] 10 A. M. ... eee a an hour. Cook stayed in the taxies the Atlantic to the Pacific. Niombs} 11 A. M. 69 The bone of contention, it was} until he saw there was not possibility ware throws IM Ue AK 12 Noor ‘ learned, concerned the methods offof overtaking the faster of the t ere thrown into A he Atchison, To-] 1 49 p. M 76 arbitration, The miners were said to] @utomobiles, which was far ahead peka and Santa Fe yards at Albu-| 900 7. M. ......80 67 when he jumped off the taxicab as t be loath to accept the terms of the operators, while the operators were equally as emphatic that some tri- bunal be established to adjudge the main issuek of thé dispute. One of the proposals, which it was unofficially reported, the operators were to submit to union officials, was to refer the wage controversy to the Anthracite Conciliation Commission, which, for twenty years has settled minor disputes in the hard coal regions. The commission, whose member- ship comprises the three district Presidents of the anthracite fields, three operators and an umpire, has never passed on wage questions. The operators’ proposal, it was stated, would provide for three umpires in- stead of one, the other two to be ap- pointed by the Presiding Judge of the United States Circuit Court. atontpecbes INDIANA OPERATORS querque, N. M., and a heavy blast rocked th trestle of a Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad bridge near Huntington, W. Va., early to-day. Early reports say neither caused much damage. Dynamite tore up the track ef the Tilinols Central at Paducah, Ky., just ahead of a coal train. Two passen- ger trains and a freight had passed a short time before and the explosion burst behind a bridge crew. The coal train was flagged. United States Deputy, Marshals tn the district were rushed to Shawnee, Okla, early to-day, and at the stops of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pa- cific a strong guard was placed after thirty shots had been fired. Ninety per cent, of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks on the Missouri Pa- cific employed on the road voted in latter was slowing down, At the md ment he was about to jump the taxi ab struck a bump in the road an the patrolman was thrown, breakin his leg. As Cook Aay Where he had fale the second alleged stolen car, wi Roelich on the running board, sp straight toward him, Cook said’ la he never felt so near death as when saw the car with the alleged bandit the wheel, racing toward him, Whi the car was almost on the inju policeman, Roelich seized the whe and gave it a ‘desperate wrencl swinging the car far enough off course to avold hitting the prostraf policeman. Two automobiles were stolen ea to-day Flushing, one form garage € YHeman W. Weincke, at ' Avenue, and one from #ity home of Nicholas Gilroy vitt Avenue, the pol cke heard his car y the driveway, he One jprostration has been reported to-day, that of Willam Gleason, forty-two years old, No. 229 East 47th Street. He was overcome at 117th Street and Park Avenue and taken to Harlem Hospital. By order of Mayor Hylan park lawns have been thrown open to the public day and night and an extra force of policemen was on duty at each park last night to protect the sleepe It was estimated that at least 6,000 slept last night In Centril Park, the largest crowd on the dawns bordering the east drive near 86th Street. Hundreds of babies slept In their carriages, near which parents lay on newspapers. Similar conditions were observed in other purks, particularly those on the east side. The beaches, guarded by an unusually large number of police- men, were spottéd everywhere with favor of a strike. It was said that no|sleepers and piers, fire-escapes and} SIGN COAL PEACE TERMS he petice, walkout was contemplated at present, | 'oofs all over the city had their usual st ag Patrolman Poelich was just reli Removal of armed guards employod | Hot Weather quotas. Producers of 3,000,000 Tons Annu-| ing Patrolman Cook at the Flush! by the Great Northern Railway at| ‘The grass of Riverside Park and ly Woreatall Conference, Bridge booth, and both patrol: Havre, Mont., was demanded by lo-]Drive was filled at midnight with] opp @HAUTE. Ina +o .| Jumped into the taxicab and purs: cal officials of the “Big Four’ train} S!epers, but around 2 A. M. a cool! realy tatriet wo. 11,) Re alleged stolen cars, The ct service brotherhoods, The demands |breeze came down the Hudson and'Wresident Hessler of District No. 11,] were turning into Lawrence St followed the killing of a Great North-| "ve most of them indoors. The ten{ United Mine Workers, to-day an-| from Broadway, and the police pV ern brakeman by a guard Thursday |e purks in the Wronx also were} nounced that Indiana operators, repre-|8¥td for two miles, tu the No night, filled with sleepers. senting 8,000,000 tons of coal produc. | Hempstead Turnpike. When ‘At Pratt, Kan., a warrant was is-| Hundreds of automobiles were lined Lined) taxicab came abreast of the slo sued for Thomas P. Hylan, General|¥P all of last night along the bigh-|tion annually, have signed the Cleve-|car Roelich made hia @ariig 1 Chairman of the Rock Ialand carmen, |Ways facing the ocean, where their|!and agreement, in advance of the} from the taxicab to tho automo 7 j] occupants tried to find relief from|meecting between scale committees of | After twisting the steering w alleging’ flolations of the Industrial Court Act. Hylan %n a#peech was quoted as referring to the court as a Joke. stuffy homes. In the congested sec-|the operators and miners here Mon- tions, doorsteps and fire escapes were | day packed with people who could not tnd room in the small parks, Thousands followed the street cleaners as they flushed the streets in an effort to get cooled off. ROCKEFELLER HOME SCENE OF CAR CRASH in time to ve Cook, Roelich rested the driver of the car, who his name as Juliug Gall, eighteen Kingston, N, Y., formely of Cog He was arrested in Corona last the police said, on a charge ‘of in gautomobdile tires, and put on’ bation in the Court of Special sions after his mother had mad plea for him. Ae, FATHER AND SON DIE [eos Se ILLINOIS CONFERENCE SPLIT ON ARBITRATION Sub-Committee, However, Will Seek Solution Over Sunday, CHICAGO, Aug. 19 (Associated Press). —IIlinois operators and miners held a Joint session to-day in first acutl efforts since the ees “SHUFFLIN’ PH,” DRUNK, KIDNAPPED = to negotiate a wage scale BY COPS HE SAYS Men Pinioned Under Auto| strike last Aprit 1, and although two IN AIRPLANE CRA 5 an Hour. diametrically opposed positions on the] pramrLEBORO, Vt. Aug. 1 i : pject of arbitratlh vere developed, i oH Mad? ah —— As 0 result of an automobile wreck |e) coponatn or both, el pyc] Two persons were “burned to de: proposals of both sides were sub- mitted to a sub-committee of six mem- bers. ‘The sub-committee in an effort to find means of compbsing the arbitration obstacle will hold sessions this after- noon and again on Sunday. ee NORMAL COAL OUPUT and Migs Evelyn Harris was mor burned te yesterday when an plane crashed at the dedication new flying fleld here. In its des the plane touched high-tenslon and caught fire. The three were passengers in aj chine piloted by B. Hughes of eola, L. I., who escaped with injuries. The dead are James early to-day on the wet pavement in front of the late Wm, Rockefeller's estate in North Broadway, Tarrytown, | Otto Olsen, a chauffeur at the Sleepy Hollow Country Club, lay writhing in agony for an hour under the big auto- mobile with his leg broken, and suf. Yering from internal injuries. With another chauffeur, Jack Clark, IN OHIO BY MONDAY he went for u ride. Clarke says the} han of this city and his tive-ye: glare of headlights from a passing car} Will Ship 5,000 Carlonds a Day)... Norman. blinded him, the car skidded off the Omelat Reno: — road, hit a wail, and turned oyver.| WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.—Coal pro- It was twenty minutes later that they | duction In Ohio js expected to be normal were found by a despat¢h rider from] by Monday, the Central Fuel Distribu- the American Auto Association. He] tion Committee was advised to-day by could not help the men and Tushed| George T. Poor, Chairman of the Ohio to! Police, Headquarters, State Fuel Commission. The police were unable to lift the} ‘The Ohio Commissioner declared that heavy car, but finally a big truck|py the beginning of the week Ohio came along and with its Jacks the car| would be producing about 5,000 carloads was raised and the men were rushed | of coul a day. to the Tarrytown Hospital, Olsen is (Continued from First Page.) ten deal, I had to make my living some way, 80 I wrote the letter. “Mann crossed me by not tearing up the letter after he had promised to do so, but I have nothing against him. It was my fault. I didn't real- ize what I was doing. I realize that this {s no excuse, but just wait until the public gets my side of the case. “As I said before, Mann crossed me but God knows I never threw a bal! game in my life. I haven't always kept in the best of condition, but I've always done my best. The letter put nie in an awful fix and makes every- thing look bad for me, but I'm not concealing anything. I'll prove my imnocence in the end. I want the pub- Ne to know that I am not guilty of DIED. KIEFF.—PIGNOL = HE FUNERAL CHURCH, B'way, at 60q Sunday, at 2 P. M WEISS.—PAUL CAMPHELL F AL CHURCH, B'way, at 66th st., 5 at il A.M. LYONS—MARGA RET, nee Dalton, 71 st., Brooklyn, died yesterday. Survil husband, Jeremiah J., aad five cl VIRGINIA any crooked baseball.’* in a serious condition. wesTr CONFERENCE Beals Sear eaets Briveaters: savvy. Judge Landis, in Chicago last night, came: 4 SHORT LIVED: Funeral Monday morning at the A gave out Douglas's offer to the ‘‘un- MORATORIUM LOST CHARLESTON, W. Va., Aug. 19—] 465 Church. High ma 10 och known" player, It reads as follows: ‘I want to leavo here. I don't want to see this guy win the pennant. You know I can pitch and I am afraid If 1 stay I will win the pennant for him, “Talk this over with the boys and if it is all right send the goods to my house at night and [ will go to a fish- ing camp. Let me know [ff you all will want to do this and I will go home on the next train. PHIL DOUGLAS. POLICE DENY DOUGLAS WAS DRAGGED TO STATION.” Capt. Patrick Gargan, in command of the West 135th Street Police Sta- tion, to-day denied that Phil Douglas had ever been dragged to the station, or that he had ever been arrested. “There is no record of Douglas ever having been brought to the tion house as he claims,’’ said Capt, Gar- gan. “I know nothing of any such incident and his name does not appear on any record. The story is an un- truth." se re ea JEREMIAH J. CASEY DEAD, FORMER HARVARD COACH 1] BOSTON, Aug. 19.—Jeremiah J. Casey, fumous veteran oarsman, who coached the Harvard crews In ‘84, ‘Si ‘The wage scale conference of the com- mittees representing the Kanawha coal operators association and district No. 17, United Mine Workers, broke up to- day after a short meeting, because of inability to agree in regard to “check oft” the “open shop’ and provisions for the men now at work. Official Voting Coi._on. ‘ This Coupon Entities the Holder te Cast One as jn Fett ene Vote tor, the Most Besutitad BY BELGIUM’S VOTE Reparation Commission Will Give Respite on Aug. 15 Payment. BRUSSELS, Aug. 19 (Associated Press).—The Belgiar delegate on the Reparation Commis‘ion, in agree- ment with the Belglan Government, will vote against granting a mora- torjlum to Germany, which, accord- ingly, will be refused by the com- mission. The commission then will give Germany some days of respite for the payment of the 60,000,000 gold marks Which was due Aug, 16 on debts of ‘Allied nationals. During this time the commission will discuss the fa cilities tor payment that are to be accorded Germany. $$$ LOST, FOUND AND REWA LOST—Gold-mounted diamond and bar pir, Thursday night, New Ami Theatre, or between 4st st., entrand Sth av.” Finder will be rewarded up turn of pin te R. Echavarrin & Broad at. oY Woman, Who, on Sept, 11, 1022, at ) MARDI GRAS FESTIVAL AT CONEY ISLAND Will Be Crowned KING AND QUEEN 1922 Coney Island Mardi Gras Revae Week of Sept. 11. N Vacation have Th World follow you. Maile very day to your summe ddress. wie R WORLD SUMMER RAT! » for Kir (or Queen Contest Closes 12 Noon, Sat., Sept. 2, 1922, UE I vote for.. and ‘86, died here last night, following Week Month , 3 un Votes to EVENING WORLD MARDI GRAS nears sits, Ha ee Mattosiise 7*8r* 1 Moxning @ Panay: an 9, MuDITOR, P.O. BOX 247, CITY ]IALL STATION, Casey defeated the best oarsmen in Evening World.... .2 8S NEW YORK, NEW YORK. the country thirty years ago. He was the conqueror of Danbury of Boston, the elder Ten Byck, and the great Joyce of Springfield. Sunday World 10c. per Sunday length of * panded in at The Worlds vartons branches: Bronx, dae When rit ave. Uptewn, 2Ads prays 4 Broad 7 . "800: a ve BEAT YESH whey gorner Sth st.t Merce ge cbs Washingteneth nad Tultees: Decide : @ Casey won further liurels as a mem- newodealer will arrange tos, ut beth King and Quoen on this ballet, Voto for © ey ber of the notes! four-oarod New finatand eter "you. or remit direct to Tf you uve Unllot tor Ring ond Queen Jk will ‘ crew that kept a clean slate for thre te destroyed i sr ie Alga estabiished s scvensyear| || Cashier, New York World, consecutive record for winning the City of Boston championship in the Fourth of July races, Fark Row, New York City. |] S.@SOGSOOIOOLS OLS OW TOGLOSIO OGIOOS (For Story See Page Five.)

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