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"THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1922. = aa a AUTHORTIESPUAN |i se se ana CARRY AWAY SAFE TO REHEARSE THE | MHS Onton “ek inan Cuts FROM CFE POLICE JOHNSON SHOOTING BOOTH 20 FEET OFF prscre Muriel Vanderbilt Pitches Society IPN SUF Girls to’ ety Over Newport Men NOVEL THAT TELLS ABOUT HER WOMEN Leaves Actor-Husband Re- pentant in Hospital. ee = ‘4 ¢ nip op indian. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 6.—Mra <, " § > “Kimono” Confiscated by Will Try to Verify Story Of] iscatrice stone Mack, wife of Willard Crooks Tote Heavy Vault Government That Buys All Injured Husband of Mack, actor, playwright and producer Two Blocks and Escape Copies in Country. is in Los Angeles, while her husband is In the Leland Stanford University Hospital 111 and penitent. With $10,000. Peggy Marsh. EXPOSES GEISHA EVIL. nN PLATTSRURG, N. Y., Sept. 6.- Undisturbed by the sight of a polices cussion among members of the for- eign colony here has been aroused by the constant recurrence of the reports tained by Thomas Ridgeway, Miss Vanderbilt pitched her team to vic- slone. Miss Adele Reynal carried off her share of the honors by the man- ner in which she played the sunfield. men batted left handed and agreed to throw underhanded, but the girls de- clared they did this voluntarily. If not, me sent to Bellevue, be- aw, all will be well and good. then have CAN’T TELL WHY HE WAS OUT WITH BOY . Revelry at a hotel while she was Rehearsal of the scene in which Albert | sway in given by Mra. Mack an the booth less than twenty feet away, i. (Buddy) J ' band of : " } Published ‘Uhder Nom de Pixey stucsn aE Wa hea: ne reason for taking her two children by burglars early to-day entered Arnold Plume, Author Is Known was shot was planned by authoritios| . fOymer maar ee ag ee hal ame lat tae ¢ South. The act in which She and her and the Boulevard, Arve to Be British Diplomat. to-day. fcitiand uve Gach aBGaIRG BAG an ulevard, Arverne, removed a ol Investigators are to be despatched} oN! O ee on a heavy safe, which held $5,000 im shed, #0 @ 1s concerned. Its i Copyright, 1089 (New York Rvening World), to the scene, forty miles from here, | 1°" We ie : ae i eigen cash, $5,000 in gems and valuable pa- by’ Press Publishing Company miss where Johnson, n of a wealthy ag Rick Ea: OR dips, pers, and escaped 1e store faces*the LONDON, Sept. 6.—Both diplo- EL zABerTH New Seek tamiy, wah, Sn the At the hospital Mack is candid in matic and literary circles here are| Quer? b = AY) Se eet "| voicing his regrets, He sald his wife Dolice booth nie r 3 ; y miss presence of his wife, on whom the} duparted several days ago to get her Wetzler closed the shop shortly, greatly interested in reports that the S SanBvEro estate of the late Henry Field made] oijidren in 1 cages ie cae novel “Kimono” by John Paris has AA PR EB IIs A large settlement when she alleged) them ts San Franciaen, After hee ven a 7 ae fa Hie ere ] been suppressed in Japan. Field was the father of her child. | turn sti protested he had been “play placed the three days’ holiday re- ithe book, published under &paens Authorities will attempt to recon-| {jc in ler almence, according ty ti ceipts in his sufe together with all bis mes . Pe struct the story told by Johnson, who] (18 : > : Insurance and other valuable docu- donym, is generally attributed to Mr. 1s in the Champlain Hospital seriously | ""¥. a ; F. Ashton Gwatkin, at present an wounded, and hia wife. Both stated Bill," he quotes her be saying, ‘'T ments, carefully locked the front attache of the Foreign Office, who that the wound was inflicted acct tS tenchnnane Ebereli aren andes door and went home. spent six years in Japan and asous dentally as Johnson was cleaning his| °°...) 08"" replied ye can't star Some time later burglars entered. revolver. bys Nh , “yo step i , mulated much knowledge of condt- out of your act ike this whenever hy They rolled the safe from its regular tions there, but Mr. Gwatkin refuses Charlen E. Rayne stepfather of Al-] You feel like it. RETURNS FROM HOLIDAY | position near the front window to the to die-uss the matter. bert Johnson, and Miss Helen L, John. I'm not only going to step out of TRIP TO KILL HIMSELF | rear. Then they hoisted it through Messrs, Collins, publishers of “K1- son, sister of the Injured man, were] my part in the play, but out of the mono," confirm the statement that found at thir home, No. 981 Madison] other as well, You'ye been making «| si 5 Geoanalyt Teor wiuchidiagonally faces the PENS CARURE esertel Aisa aes Avenue, to-day. Both expressed com-| foot ot me here at ur notel whey bal E. New, Cotton Goo police booth. The robbers left no ae ally supy plete conviction that the «hooting was| |” i AU t so enerr Hak meen) BEeeclee: clue. in Japan. eir statement is that accidental and said they hoped there| W48 "Way and T won't stand for it.] Returning Inst night from a holiday” “pwe dlocks from Wetzler's their Japanese agent recently advised would be no further official inautry. I'm going to leave, trip to Cedarhurst, ta tf, Silva New: ltaurant at eeu sl tee eee them that! the Japanese Government 2 piesa And according to Mack she left. ye[{T® te © ya th a aurant at 69th Street is a similar had confiscaed or bought up all FIND BODY OF AGRD MAN IN| hopes she will return and thinks she] ‘MY ® cotton goods dealer o establishment conducted by Harry cop) of that novel that reached BAST RIVER: may, because "it. is. the way of|!74 Went 79th Street, shot himself in] Westrich. Westrich told the police Jap Police of the Marine Division tast | Women,’ the right temple at § o'clock thia morn-|to-day that five men entered his 7 -¢ dented that the author had night recovered the body of a untdon-| The actor-dramatist has been mar- [ing ee CC tuaday eae) hove le‘ 9-8 diplomatic post in Tokio ar 3 ver| Tied four times, His first wife was] His aunt, Miss ta th wh a ee ones le fol- a ‘ult of the publication of his} |MS> o pele ne eee tigad man about aixty {n the Bast BPE | Maude Leoke) Hin exootd Waa) Mats |e Aveda ite Sit eh A teune tha | towed them, he said, and they told i r et. “reimono,* olnting out that) | Utoemenucr, oUS® sult and outing shirt. He was 5 fest|Jorie Rambeau and the third wife was} youy, partially clad, stretched on the} piey prore lookin ge a towel 2 boo not issued until some 8 Inches tall and weighed 150 pounds,| Pauline Frederick. The present wite “ . ; rich added that he paid no " ame after his return to London and Mins Reynal caught several files with-|paid and had a stubby gray mustache: [is known among her treme ar Bene {°%: She called Dr. Theodore Sanders r attention to the five men. his assignment to the Foreign Office —_— s cewris | out an error. Other members of the ot No. 425 Went End Avenue, his best] Later in the evening he noticed that When the Japanese Crown Prince was . Veaneur. |team were Mrs. Herbert C. Pell be- fiend) Who hea: (eateachim ail the screening: 6Ver one of the: win in London ho was assigned to his Thomas Ridgeway’s Team Berepacase [Ue wat, Mise Anite Stew rides Far From Home Clad 0 . montha for melancholia, Dr. Sanders|dows was torn, Westrich gave the personal staff and jhter he accom- Fie oe Fas way on first, Mrs. Lewis G. Morris n y in 0g pronounced him dend c enry | police descriptions of the five men panied the British delegation to the! Loses 9—3 in Enthusiastic second, Miss .Consnelo Vanderbilt 9 area cche ata etd Witec @ ut aireani| Te @ bellonsd they ape the) sale sf 4 i tory and won handily. at al cs EI Weisenbach, No. 219 Weat Sist Street, J re Washington Conference as one of th S Sais 'y an y. at short, Miss Blizabeth Sands on a who entered Wetsler's Reataurant Far Eastern experts Game Before Fashionable} A large gallery saw the girls van-| third, and Mrs, W. Frazer and Miss 0es ost | ance in Broadwa sald New returned from Cedarhurst ap-| chortly after noon the safe was The publishers were not aware of ~, : ate Paaah |auish the men’s team at Balley’s| Martin Wickes in the fleld. ntly in good spirits, although hel round in a email alley off Gant any attempt to suppresathe book in Gallery at Bailey’s Beach.| teach, Interest was keen and parti-| cy ptain Ridgew had Dorland es Sena a been depressed for a tong period. | Avenue near the Gaston Garage. Thia England and said it had had excellent _ sanship was by no means drawn by|poyie and Sidney Smith jr. as his He said his nephew had no money js leas than two blocks fr ; , 4 y y on a Ww eo. 74 « ks from the scene press notices and a considerate sale] Newport. sept. §—Th masculine or feminine lines, The} battery. Mr. Ridgeway played first.! Doesn’t Know Where His Clothes Are or How He Got} worse of the robbery Mr. Gwatkin is now working on} NE » Sept ose men | crowd was with the best team and the}and the remaining members of his acl bees . J @ second novel dealing with the life] Were shown something here yester-| score, 9 to 8, doesn’t begin to tell the} team were Samuel FE. Pisa, Donald There But Otherwise Seems All Right. of the Christian missionary in Japun.|day, and as a result Mies Muriel | Story. As far as the pitcher was]McRae, Sumner Gerard, Bugene 8. rere ey ne i oo. Wanderbilt and her allcgisis® to concerned, members of the opposing|Reynal, Williams Post and Charles] °° ‘zen went up to Policeman Edward McManus of the West °77th Former Residents in Tokio Unable RET girls’ team of | team were emphatic in their defense] Dunlap, while Burke-Roche, Charles| Street station in Broadway near 215th Street at 4.30 A. M. to-day and s4id to Procure Coptes of Book Ther ball-tossers are receiving congratula- | 1 Miss Vanderbilt had a hop on her] M. Bull and Gustav J. 8. White were] apologetically: (Spectal Correspondence of ‘The venivé] tlons to-day on their overwhelming | fast one UULY men ig in pamsing that the} “EXCUSe me, officer, but please ® TOKIO, Aug. 12.—-Considerable dis-| Victory over. the all-men team cap-| And the pitcher was by no means| It might be sald in passing that the] oo. with me. “It you eee what I that the Japanese Government has gone into the book censorship busi- ness, and that “Kimono,” an interna- tional novel of the marriage of an English nobleman and a Japanese heiress whose wealth comes from dubious sources, has been suppressed. While these reports have never been dignified either by acknowledg- ment or denial on the part of official- dom, great difficulty has been en- countered in getting hold of a copy of the book, and rable re course has been ma hannels which are exempt fro} scrutiny of customs officials, in effort to obtain the book from abroad, either in America or England. If it be true that Government has actually importation of **Kimono, the Japanese blocked the ¢: use for this latest example of cx veiled In- presents, ste nsorship can be found in the thinly dictment, which the novel of the Yoshiwara, which con simply of a Government-licen quarter in Tokio and other Japat cities where the vice traffic flow ishes, The annual parades of women in the Yoshiwara, while not being on the itinerary of the regular t agencics, is a feature of Japanese cit life not unknowe to the majority of foreigners who visit Japan Quite apart from Government con siderations of policy with respect to revelations of Japanese institutions, much speculation has been made with regard to the question of the author of "Kimono," whose anonymity has been concealed behind the pen name, “John Paris." The authorship has heen variously attributed to a vu Ver of diplomutic and consular official in the British staffs in Japan. It i known that the author is not at pr ent in the country, and is, presi ably, in England, ‘The person me prominently mentioned as being ine author of the novel is a person who wus one of the Secretaries of the Brit: ish legation at the Washington Peave Conference. In the mean time, copies of novel already in Apan ar passed around among friends, and have, he 4 stock-in-trade among and literary smug the U. S. DETAINS GIRL AS DAD: PACES PIER English Girt, Born in South Afvica, May Be Deported—Quota Filled. Because she was born tn South Africa and the Immigrant quota of that coun- try 1s Alled, Phyllis Hosking, eigt of Falmouth, England, may be deported from the United States. Detained by ation officials following her ar- rival on the Royat Mail Steam Packet een, immig ner Orblta, Miss Hosking yesterday was not permitted to speak to her father, James H. Hosking, who stood a few hundred feet away on the Chris- pler. He had come to meet his daughter after a separation of three years. Miss Hosking sald she had been a nurse in Engiand, where she has lived with her mother and two sisters for the past ten years. Her case will be heard at Ellis Island to-day, pher Street Honest Lifesaver In Gems but Not $500 Reward He Turned Precious Bag Lost by Autoists Over to Po- lice, Who Got Reward From Delighted Owners. The loss of a satchel containing jewelry, cash and fine wearing apparel, valued at upward of $25,000, by Mrs. ¢ ingston Manor, while motoring last Wednesday cause it'll be that I'm seeing things.” McManus went with through the fog. In a few minutes, dancing merrily in Bro appeared a man clothed only He skipped leaped, and him Finds $25,000 the middie of dway, in f pirovetted and and all the as a phantom McManus He § to continue time was as quiet went and stopped wanted over im: med dazed but 7. B. Ward, a wealthy resident of Liv- his dance. He was led near Orchard Beach, and| through the enveloping fog to a taxt :te recovery through the honesty of a lifeguard of the resort, became known|a few blocks away and taken to the to-day, A reward of $500 was pald by Mrs. ® Ward when she received the property, it {s declared, but Arthur Gonne, cap- ain of the lifeguard battalion at Orch- ard Beach, who found the satchel and turned it over to police, says he did not receive it Gonne told of picking up the pre- 57 Beauties at Atlantic City Compete for “Miss America” Hudson Maxim to Choose Successor to Miss Gorman, but Forbids Perfume and Flower It rained beautiful girls upon Atlantic City to-da and by air, an amazing galaxy of young women descended upon tie scen pageant, where “ of her own home town, ball dress and stage attire, against those from every of America’s fall beauty ach girl, “Queen” ing costume, of the United § es, By sea, by land Miss America” will be will mateh her charms, chosen, in bath- corner Hudson Maxtin, the Inventor, who will be “King” of the carnival and] caret Gorman of ‘Washington, who who will rise from the sea with his] was crowned “Miss Amorica’ in 1921, court to start proceedings on Wednes-}| The inventor has made but one rule day, will select a successor to Mar-| for the contest—tair participants may not use perfume nor wear flowers: Miss Gorman will defend her title against fifty-six others, who have been selected at held at beaches throughont the niry this summer. Each girl is known the name of the city she esonts:e for instance, “Miss New York’’ or “Miss Seattle. Dorothy Hughes “Miss New York,"' and her escort, beauties from neighboring beaches, were to fly from Manhattan this afternoon, lund in the sea off the boardwalk and swim ashore. oe LINEMAN HURLED FROM ROOF OF CAR While Frederick the New ¥ New Hayer ad, was at wor lineman of und Hartford top of a car ork orning in the Onk Point Yard treet, repulring « feed wire, the sa flash at and he wa Jung from the car. His fa s badly bur 1, temporarily linded, he was taker Lincoln He ital. He will be all right in a day or wo, it was sald The flames and explosion caused t ates Ave- Iph Beanhagen of No, 182 ¢ Brooklyn, whe 9 fall against wing station, His clothing was not found A doctor from Columbus Hospital cious parcel on the shore road west|!ook@ him over, but couldn't solve of the City Island Bridge, while on| the mystery. his way from the beach. Patrolman! He said he George, Beary, Walter Gerstenbach, on duty at Pel-{twenty-seven, No. 889 Bas m Parkway, took charge of the | Street, and declared he didn't know atchel, according to Gonne, and 1| Where his clothes were or low he ot the presence of another witness|from his home to 215th Street und opened the bag. The sight that me Broadway, His family wa notified the eyes of the three men guve theni|to come for him and bring clothes a shock. The police believe he was able to The bag contained an assortment of] make the long trip without clothes women’s evening clothes of high aujai-| because of the fos jty and a case containing many picces| _ of jewelry set with a yarlety of the js ” arest gems, and in addition $1,500 LIFE INSTITUTE Gerstenbach got in touch with th |H}BAD TO BE INDICTED property clerk of the Police Depart ment and made arrangements to turn] . ; 77 the find over to him. lee. Cream Man's Wife a The following day, as soon as word | + Disciple” [lusband Dies. ef her loss had been communicated t pol Mrs. Ward was notifled that | CHICAGO, Sept After delving satchel with contents similar to those |for more than a week into the seers described by her had been found. = ores “hife Institut Wards immediately went to the of DIRETY ey ahi ‘ ' of the property clerk and t{dentifled | for healimg sad hearts and unk the valuables. homes. Assistant State At At the Ward place at Livingston | yetaughlin announced to-day that he Manor {t was said that Mr SaAanoum nee to warrant ti evi | | and Mrs | \¢ vy} Ward were “out of town." It wa! dictment of Moore for swindling. |t learned, however, that the jewelry | 4 r¢3 east and other effects had a value of at | Uselples, who — inchudes i least $25,000 wealthy soctety women Mrs. James H. Cartwright, wife of —_ | longshoreman, forty-one, 103 De whose hort WITH ABANDONMENT 1 Patled to was at No whose hody was found early to d w Stree Justice Cartwright ef the Illi 1 SLAIN MAN FOUND J vem On Cus amone ABOES WRAPPED IN QUILT stoore's cut. : |W. W. Talcott, ter eream manufac Victim Dropped in Street, RELL ae ee ee Murderers Leave No Clue. | wire's interest in the cult, committed Detectives of Brooklyn Police Hea |; UBL SNES See DY SRE ni quarters are trying to icincnverlie ee ee the assailant of Concetto Mellitte A 19, CHARGED Lett Bi by at Nursery a Harrison Avenue and Hicks $ | Return, Police Say wrapped up in hed comfo: ‘| Mre, Kose Fulton tee N 81 Patrolman Edward Conn of thelpuimetto Street, Brookly waived ex Butler Street Station made the lt cation mend GWA tld tb covery, and upon unwrapping the bo: i , observed blood stains which later |o[fot the metlon of the tian’ diy whet to the location of a bullet wound NUN atse cA VRnue aomiut to A the man's back, Alfred Russo, with|'} vege of abandoning her } Whom Mellitte boarded at the Degras| ‘The woman. left. th ant at the Street address, was questioned | wood = Day 327 could throw no light on the mys' |Knickerbocker Avenue na "Whe police are satisfied the crime wo WAS Koll tO OW lleet committe elsewhere and the bo return for bat ¥ allowod, conveyed to the street corner Jand detect arch of.the dead man's elothin failed to reveal any money A lette FREE written in Italian Is now bel The Pare natal iW translated and may furnish a-cluc |{lOelUe free monuigneAd. Like The body was taken to the stat Park, by | ! house, where the Medical Examiner jsoint dark Will perform an autopsy by the Polic Man and Child Unable to Say Where They Live. A well-dressed light-haired way and 12 day of why he hour, Street There but he could not recall where he lived or explain why he was leading the child through the streets. He said the boy's name was Philip. The boy said the man was his father, but could not tell where they lved or why they were out at that hour. The taken to Bellevue fo observation and the boy was turned over to the Unable Police the boy had they took bo Station Children's of five curiosity of tax! chauffeurs at Broad- th Street at to get the man sald he Italian leading aroused an ehild out at tety —_— WEDS 21 COUPLES IN 40 MINUTES Deputy City Clerk [las An- other Busy Day. ‘This promises to be another record breaking day at in the urday brok issued and marris half day Between % AL M nd 12 M., 140 licenses wore issued, and be tween 10 A. M. and LT M. Deputy City Clerk Jam J. MeCormick mur ried eighty-five cou and sent away ut least thirty-five ples who re mained unmarried at the closing hour It was supposed that many of these he ed ones would come back to-day but at noon none wt appeared Dre sumably they had been married else where At noon to-day more than 100 1 censes had been und Deputy McCormick had mar forty of the couples. In the first forty minutes of his day Mr. Met urried twen ty-one couples To-day's applic: cense and marriage Inelude number of Greeks, brides’ wl Municipal 1 © all marriage chapel Iding. Last Sat tds of livense Vriday the holi — BROTHERS HURT ALIKE AS BOOM FALL of « Hight Arn Hoth Dislocated le Snaps. sea M t Mer ad y br atone. the 4A. M. to explanation that to the West 123d was Frank Moresco and that the boy was his son rformed ina pieture 8 Island and S ON THEM Mrs. Past Thirty — Many women think their skin beauty nat- urally begins to fade at forty. How ridiculous and untrue! Thousands of women who are grandmothers have learned to keep their skin still smooth and fresh and firm. You can surely do the same. The secret is, “Wake up your skin.” Lifebuoy does it. No other soap does. Try Lifebuoy. Feel how gently, delightfully, won- derfully, it cleans both the surface of the skin and the pores, wakes up the cells, induces a natural, health- giving circulation, Then watch your skin improve day by day —year after year, It is your own fault if your skin beauty is beginning to fade, Wake up your skin! LIFEBUOY HEALTH SOAP Kipling Blasts America As Soulless After War “America has got the gold of the world, but WE our souls!) Do you think that any of us who have war—who have lost children in the uld chang of them, for all their happiness and prosperity! So d Rudyard Kipling in a talk with C1 sherida al European staff correspondent of THE WORLD, who doing a brilliant series on the humanities of Europe in war's aftermath, ‘The Kipling interview will appear on Sunday, Sept. 16, in the first article of Mrs, Sheridan's forthcoming series. The other siriking s will printed daily thereatter, have saved fought the with one war—w , spec he