The evening world. Newspaper, September 11, 1922, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBE of the President and Mrs, Harding Visited the White House during the @ay. “The President personally met With most of them and was reported to be bearing up well under the Strain. Mr. Harding spent “a fairly rest- ful night,” but there was no marked ehange in her condition Wallace was informed when he called Secretary at the White House shortly rs o'clock. Secretary of War Weeks, one of 1'¢ earliest callers, said Mes, Harding had “the best night since her iliness be eame critical.” Senators Hale (Maine) and Cum mins (Towa) and Representative Mad den, Chairman of the House Appro Priations Committee, also called. Tl two Senators remained at the White House some time William C. Redfield of New Yor Becretary of Commerce in the Ca of President Wilson, called at White House to express his hopes for the recovery of the patient and to ex tend his sympathy to the Presider Word was received tn Washingte rom that a call had been sent out SCATHING ATTACK ON cereal piace Daugherty, Who Is Also Assailed. ATLANTIC CITY, Sept, 11.— uel Gompers, Pr an Federation, ack on Attorney made a scathing at- General Daugherty, Judge James H, 1Wl- kerson of the Federal Court, Chicago, ind deseribed Boston by the United Soctety of Chir tian Endeavor on behalf of its alumni department urging that prayers be of- fered throughout the nation to mor- row noon for the recovery of Mrs Harding. The President is a meinber of the alumni department of the soci- ety, representatives of which here es- timated the call would be obeyed by nearly 20,000,000 Americans. Com missioners of the District of Columbia also issued ai pr fon calling upon the people of Washington to join in prayer. Prayer for the speedy recovery of Mrs, Harding was offered in the House to-day by the Rev, J, Shera Montgomery, the Chaplain, who asked Divine blessing and strength for the President in his hour of anxiety. “Press not the cup of death to their lips,” the Chaplain prayed. BLINDED, DES: AFTER DRINKING HOMEMADE HOOD Raiders Find Still in River- head, L. I1—Grand Jury Gets Poison Rum Cases. Jacob Lippman of Riverhead, L. 1., @ied on the way to the Southampton Hospital yesterday afternoon after, it was alleged, he had drunk home dis- tilled whiskey. He was blinded by the liquor before starting for the hos- pital, On @ search warrant which Su- Preme Court Justice Strong signed at 2 o'clock this morning at his home in Setauket, the home of Bruno Stephanowitz was raided and Steph- anowitz locked up in the County Jail at Riverhead, charged with possess- ing and manufacturing whiskey il- legally. The raiders found a still in the house and a barrel of mash in a shed back of the house. Mike Smith, who lived with LApp- man said in an affidavit that he pur- chased whiskey from Stephanowitz. Smith in his affidavit said he had not given Lippman any of the whos- key he had purchased from Stephan- owitz but he believed Lippman him- self had bought, whiskey there. A chemical analysis of the contents of Lippman's stomach will be made in New York. Marshail Snyder, Assistant District Attorney of Kings County, to-day went before the Grand uJry to pre- sent evidence in eight cases of alleged Mullan-Gage violations arising from twelve wood alcoho! deaths in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn, It is ex- pected that thirteen in@etments will be returned, To-morrow presentation will be made to the Grand Jury of homicide cases which have developed from the same investigation, There have been ne deaths trom wood alcohol trace- able to the Red Hook section since Saturday, when John Streubal, the twelfth victim, died in Wyckoff Heights Hospital. The Manhattan police are invest!- gating the death of Raymond Kirk- patrick of Cleveland, O., an ex-sol- dier, who died yesterday in Bellevue from what appeared to be wood alco- hol poisoning. Kirkpatrick, thirty- five, was found semi-conscious last Friday in East 18th Street. He told the police he had been drinking “‘ap- plejack.' They say they have learned that it was made from wood alcohol and cider, eraaes TURKS ATTACKING FOREIGN QUARTER IN CONSTANTINOPLE (Continued from First Page,) Press).—Strong forces Nationalist infantry + of Turkish y were hold- ing ull strategic joints In the city. The troops are under strict orders against indulgence in excesses, the fozvign representatives and military headquarters have been informed by the Kemalist Commander, Gen. Selah Eddin Bey. Selah Eddin complained that the Greeks had committed wholesale dev- astation without military reasons and said his men were showing that they could make war fp a civilized manner. The entry of the Turks was orderly, and the Chief of the Allied Nava) De- fachment was promised that there ‘would be no violence and that looters would be shot. Mursel Pasha in- formed the Allied representatives that the city would be patrolled when moiu arrived, is “Daugherty’s pet,’’ at the open- of the sixty-seventh convention of the International Typographical Union here to-day He deciared that ‘despite the in- junetion for which Daugherty and his ‘pet,’ sible, Judge Wilkerson are respon- effective now than augurated several Three since it was in- months ago,"* are attending there were the and thousand visitors in the convention hall, The mention convention, several of the name of Attorney General Daugherty brought out prolonged hissing, “L refer to Judge Wilkerson as Daugherty's ‘pet,’ said Mr. Gomp- ers, “hecause he was appointed only several weeks ago through the ad- vocacy and friendship of Daugherty. “In my judgment the industrial tide has turned. Men and women of toil will cling to our trade unions and federations,’ he continued. The men who are non-union will join our ranks ns their only protection. In the world, of struggle we must stand against the atrocious conduct of our Govern- ment officials toward the rational and constructive movement of organ- ized labor to raine the working peo- ple, It must not be stated that the spirit of 1776 ts dead in 1922." “When did slave drivers spend thelr energies to liberate their slaves? When did multi-millionaires give of their means to help the worker? What legislation did they buy in the Nation, In our States, and municip- alities? I use the word ‘buy’ for big business, because they pay for the legislation wanted, I hold that the trade movement of America has been a greater contributory force than that of any other group for the high ideals and patriotism for the Nation's workers. “We have life, we have such lib- erties as are doled out to us and we are still in hot pursuit, trying to catch up with happiness." JERSEY FEDERATION OPENS ITS CONVENTION Four Handred Delegates Meet at sbury Park, ASBURY PARK, Sept. 11.—The New Jersey Department of the Amer- fean Federation of Labor began annual session to-day, convening for three days at the Casino. About 400 delegates were in attendance. A telegram was sent to the United Mine Workers of America congratu- lating them on their ‘fight for col- lective bargaining."* It was expected that Samuel Gom- pers, President of the American Fed- eration of Labor, will speak to- morrow, its ey ROBS CIGAR STORE CASH BOX OF $500 Clerk Reports Armed Man Held Him Up. Just as Matthew Deutach, twenty- three, clerk in the United Cigar Store at South Fourth und Havemeyer Streets, Brooklyn, was about to close the store last midnight a man entered with drawn revolver and ordered him to hand over the contents of the cash drawer, umount- ing to more than $500. Deutsch handed over the money and then telephoned his ehlef, Joseph M, Wallenstein, No, 460 Halsey Street, wno told him to tell the police, Deutsch described his assailant as about 5 feet 9 inches in helght, slim, cloun shaven, wearing a blue suit, « cup and a tan shirt, and about twenty-six years old SCHOOL DISMISSED BY BOY, 6—ALMOST New Pupil Sounds Gong and Gets a Spanking. A six-year-old boy taken by his mother to P. S. 94, 68th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, came near guining the everlasting friendship of his fellow pupils, but Instead got a spanking from his mother, While in the office of the Prin- cipal the boy sourded the dismis sal gong. It was only 11.30 and teachers and pupils were puzzled, but not suspecting the author of the signal the classes were given MADE BY GOMPERS RAIL INJUNCTION Calls Issuing Judge ‘Pet’ of m- dent of the Amert- the shopmen's strike is more hundred and fifty delegates “Are We Glad to Go Back to School ?’’ Faces of No. 2’s Pupils Give Answer a STREETS: was said to-day that she calmly told him Husband Her Fad, Home Her Job, Mrs. Harding Has Won for Hersel! Unique Place in the White House None More Intensely Interested in er Recovery Than Devoted Attendants, Who Recall Many Characteristic Incidents, WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 (Copyright).—No one is more intensely inter- ested in the developments in Mrs, Harding's illness, and no one more hope- ful that eventually she will recover completely, than the rank and file of the White House personnel. She is very popular with every one > o, Warren Harding, you will not quit; at least, until after the Chicago Convention."" That was her position the entire campaign. It is recalled that she was a great success as circulation manager of the Marion Star in the old days before either she or her husband had any thought of Washington. One of her former route boys, Major Bollinger, now is detailed to the White House as an aide to the President. Another, Jimmie Woods, who was a guest of the Hardings a short time ago, related with glee how Mrs, Harding once turned him over her knee and spanked him for some prank as a newsboy. throughout lays are mifutely ordered and she has kept rigidly to her schedules, visiting there, From the moment she en-| Harding was one of the official family] With those who personally calle’, "> } ine al ue nlly | ses her and seeing that everything tered the historic structure on the] who often could be seen in and about was attenced to to the last detail. the ground. Many residents of Wal lawalla, of Painted Post, or of the larger cities have found to their surprise, following a very pleas: chat with a prepossessing woman who displayed great charm of manner, that it was the “First Lady of the Land" who had unobtrusively walked up to them as they were inspectir the White House or the grounds and had responded pleasingly to their queries about the spots of interest. It has been the delight of both the President and Mrs. Harding to stroll about the south grounds of the White afternoon of March 4, 1921, she as- sumed absolute charge of all the de- tails of management, Her order was charucteristic, Because of the war, and afterward as a result of the illness of President Wilson, the grounds about the building and the White House itself had been barred to the public, Policemen were on guard in and about the place and only persons who could show they were there on business were allowed ———___— DAVY SHUNS JAIL; WON'T SAY WHAT HE THINKS OF CROPSEY Would Be “Expressing Con- tempt” if Ife Talked of Market Injunction. When Commissioner of Accounts David Hirshfield was asked to-day if initial to enter. House, the only part, by the way,|he had anything to say concerning : a b to her| Which ta at any time denied to vi8-| 5 otice Cropsey’ if = Before she had been shown to her} 1iN0D owt ee ng accompanied by {Uustice Cropsey's injunction against own apartments, Mrs. Harding turned to Chief Usher Hoover and said: “Please tell the policemen that the grounds are to be open to everybody. | House sheep . ret " Incidentally, Ral public is to be free to come and Arak wite'of's P: the open-air city markets, he said: “Injunctions have become a fad with certain reactionary Judges, At- torney Generals and corporation rep- resentatives, In fact, Laddle Boy. This is the section util- jzed during the war as the pasture grounds for the famous flock of White Mrs. Harding ts the dent to have an op we are in the go." erative of the Secret Service detailed | midst of an era of injunctions, and That rule has been in force until | especially for her own protection, The ernment of, by and for the people last Saturday, when her own serlous |law makes the Treasury Secret Ser “| \as (temporarily, let us hope) been illness compelled the authorities to ey babies Fe amAnaers Ooter supplanted by government of Judges clone the gates temporarily, Incidental-| 1 onthe of, the Wilson Administration [by injunction. ly, because of her desire to see that] to inctude the w of the President “Also, in the olden days, Judges the public was given an opportunity to} Hut Mrs. Wilson very seldom left the | ypmitted to criticism, just us other KO as it pleased about the White House | \Y Bena i eho Whe NO RESAOL Tin sate. “(Nowasiayn, an in the case of the President's wife encountered 1 if se of the veieraus of the servico|Comptrotier Cratg, it is contempt of piece of Congressional patronage which |. aetatied to Mrs. Harding shortly [court to criticise a Judge. Were I to for a brief period threatened to prove after the election of 1920 and since} state my opinion of Judge Cropsey's ombarrassing, then he has accompanied hor every aiecat ‘Admiasion to the White House, out-|whero ahe haa travelled, On her trip, | wunction decision, I would be surely side of its public halls, 1s by card: ]ig New York and other places, when|¢XPressing contempt, and Iam not These cards ure issued by the Whiteline President was unable to accom-|ready to go to jail for expressing my House office force on application from} pany her becative of pressure of offt-| opinion Senators and Representatives. Last} oint business, the Secret Service guard] saytp i. summer Mrs. Harding decided’ this Mr, Justice Cropsey has time and hae found her most considerate of his comfort and convenlen He was too much of u bother, so she sent again criticised Hylan Adminis- wo: to Secretary Christian that} io 4) tration, but in every instance fyor . abescie er illness has emphasized that ube ; vom Hera ae Ee oenn cards ¥ and}has had no small part in her hus-|the bench, while wrapped in his ju- Hy ubolished. . Her position was, first, |" 24" hoes A companion once} dicial robe, If Judge Cropsey would that after all the people owned the|®#ked her what was her particular! oniy for once come off the bench and White Hous® and should be able to , 1” ghe| Say #ome of the things as plain James see it whenever they desired, and, AMADEO BOO ecicepasysGrileh lié) Bava’ an Sua secondly, thut while it was ull right ays as Jue to have Congressmen issue requests] Her indomitable co uiways has| Cropsey and give us an even chance for curds there were many people who] been a Kreat factor life, and to} the public woult learn our opinion visited Washington who did not know|!t 1s due her present wonderful fight| of Mr, Justi: nscy and of his any one at the Capitol. for recovery. Several tinea in the | injunction,’ ‘As soon as her wishes had been|last twelve years she has been seri- - > complicd with, the row began, Certain] ously ill, but at no time was she ever "7 a cOlarale ut the Capltol kicked, and{deapondent or downcast, she has in-] 1WO HIT BY TAXI TAKEN Kicked strenuously. They insisted the| sisted she intended to recover and her TO HOSPITAL BY DRIVER lasuance of reqtiests was one way offattitude has been of the greatest as showing the “folks back home’? they [sistance te her attendants, That to-| put Chauffour Doesn't Keep Prom. were looking out for thelr interests, |day remains her attitude. When the ine to Report to Police, And, jnasmuch as they were packed Ne ing alte ans were most} Leo Mager of No. 696 Howard Aye- up by the officials responsible for]#larmed Saturday afternoon she] ..6 yrooklya, and James No the safety of the building and its|smiled up at one of them and said: | "U% Brookly James Novak of No, 1691 St. John's Place, Brooklyn, Rit, 1922," SHORT GUT FOUND, GIVES HOPE FOR ENTOMBED MINERS oo Old Stope in Adjoining Mine Promises Rescue Several Days Sooner. JACKSON, Cal., Sept. 11 (Assocl- ated Press).—Discovery last night of 600 foot level of the Kennedy Mine may bring rescue the final barrier cut down by a 120-foot stope above tt workers directly to days the tim required to batter thrpugh to the Argonaut Mine, where forty-seven men have been entombed by fire since two weeks ago last midnight, it we announced to-day by Superintendent several Carbarini He is exploring the stope and said he would be abie to determine to-day if the stope was open or whether it was safe for rescue work. He ¢x- pressed the opinion, however, that it not only was open but useable Clarence FH. Jarvis of the State Board of Control has arrived here as Goy. Stephens's representative to In the White House at all times her|* conduct an investigation of the dis- aster, WOODIN NAMES SIX LOCAL FUEL AIDS ew York City District Men Not Listed. State Fuel Administrator William H. Woodin announced to-day the names of District Fuel Administrators of the excepting those who will later be appointed for the First |apd Second Judicial Districts, which comprise New York, the Bronx Kings, Queens, Richmond, Nassau and Suffolk Counties, and the Fifth Disarict, with headquarters at Syra- cune. The appointees named thus far are: District No, Albert E, Cluett of Troy; No. 4, Clarence B. Kilmer of Saratoga; No. 6, Samuel J. Koerbel of Binghamton; No. 7, George D. B. Bonbright of Rochester, and No. 9, Arthur W. Lawrence, Bronxville, The District Fuel Administrators will meet with Goy. Miller, Mr. Woodin and Col. William J. Donovan, counsel to the Administrator, at Albany to-morrow afternoon, to be n in. All the District Fuel Ad- ministrators have had vious ex- perience in public service. Most of thetn were identified with the fuel administration during the war, or with some other form of war time ion Woodin sald that the first and districts would be subdivided with the volume of 5 Mr. second in accordance work to be done in the several com- munities included in the area. It 1s expected that Administrators for the First and Second District will be an- nounced after the conference with the Governor to-morrow. FRENCH TO JOIN BRITISH STAND Allies Likely to Oppose Turk Move on Bosporus. PARIS, Sept, 11-—France has def- nitely decided to stand firmly with Great Lritain for the freedom of the raits of the Durdanelles and for some form of international control of Constantinople, it was declared in of- ficial circles here to-day. In just what way France will sup- port England in maintaining the free dom of the Straits is not revealed, but competent observers suy uny military urks toward the occu action by the of’rock on this level and may [| Dardanelles will result naval action by the pation of the in military and Allies. ‘All the Allied powers, ft is thought here, will be in accord in limiting the ‘Turkish ambitions to Asia Minor, with a nominal foothuld in Europe, The all-Ceylon Tea the order to march out, Many of |occupants—although, of course, for a] "Don't worry, doctor. I am going adhe . the pupils were already in the | very different reason—the order was|to get well.” were taken’ to St. ‘Vincent's Hospital hall and on their way to the | withdrawn within a few hours, Then she serenely turned on her|at 9 o'clock to-day suffering from cuts stairs when an assistant of the Mrs. cir Ma raonally bad bees 8 dp ans sioeed her eyes. nd bruises by the driver of a black Principal stopped them. responsible for many iniprovements he incident ted the fact that § The pupils who had hopes of Jabout the ground, designed to mod-|it was her decision on several ocea- and yellow taxicab, who said he had an early getaway on the very |ernize them, She has been in almost} sions that kept Harding in the|run into them at Bleecker and Lafay first day of school marched grimly | constant touch with the chief preconvention f nomina- | ctte Strects back to their seats. ener and his assistants and under her] tion. With the t ie Harding| The driver told the hospital clerks a firection location of flower is have} she was visiting Harry New thas he would Lives A repat of the n changed and the flovering| when the retur cpived shows [Reree Sk the Mercer ‘ 1 J on Swift & Compar . : ‘ eived sh Station. He had not app 1 ther Mente sold | poraible, artistically, out of the lun ht for the Ind ation. Thebning World went to press, The num. cente yer | CAPE: Senator from Ohio suggested it might| ber of his license Was not taken at the Visitors early discovered that Mrs, be well for him to withdraw, but it Phospital, 305-POUND CONVICT WINS FOOT RACE Captures Fat Men’s Event at Sing Sing. OSSINING, Sept. 11. — John Cancarato, weighing 305 ponnds, won the fat men's race at Sing Sing Prison’s annual field day games inside the walls yesterday. All the inmate Warden Lewis E. Lawes and several attendants attended the prisoners’ athletic meet RAIL UNION BENS ITS FIGHT TO QUASH RAL INUNCTON (Continued from First age.) cisions except by publie opinion, he sald. He quoted Congressman Esch, one of the authors of the act, as saying in Congress that “there tf nothing of an anti-strike nature” in the law aud also read simi r statements by Sen4- tor Cummins, whose name the law also bears, From the mess of President Harding to Cong on the present rail strike, the attorney re sections in which the President brought out the same absence of mandatory provisions for the en- forcement of the Board's orders The Attorney General has no right, Mr, Richberg declared, to ase the power of the Government to prevent lawor from doing any lawful thing t fight the n shop’ movement Whether the pen shop or the closed shop is to prevail is entirely outside the province of the Attorney Generla, and is a question only the legislat branch of the Government can on if it comes und roment jur- isdiction, at all, he said The defense Attorney cited the de- n of the Circuit Court of Appeals in the drastic provisions of the in- junction issued by Federal Judge An- derson at Indianapolis a few months ago against coal miners om the Appellate Court's decision he read that either employers or union may have pass men free access and appeal to unemployed workers to win employees on the one hand, or union adherents on the other, and that employers have the right to appeal to union men to become non-union while union mem- bers may urge unorganized workers to switch to their side He defended the right of the work- ers to interfere peacefully with inter- state commerce. To get around the provisions of the Clayton Act, he said, the Government's bill seeks to maintain that the purposes of the alleged conspiracy to interfere with traffic are illegitimate and unlawful, but this, he maintained, {s not true, The bill, he claimed, invokes juris- diction which has been denied :*ed- eral courts. The Clayton Act cannot apply to one set of cases and not to another, Mr. Richberg said, unless the At- torney General is going to stand up in court and claim that an act of Con- gress, which he is sworn to defend, 1s unconstitutional The Government comgs into court as an employer within the meaning of e Clayton Act, he argued, because e Government, through the courts, is operating railroads under Federal receivership proceedings, and ja em- ploying large numbers of railroad men None of the principals in the Gov- ernment’s case were in court when Judge Wilkerson ascended the bench. The court room was crowded and dozens were standing. Department of Justice agents were amnog the first arrivals and were scattered through- out the roomfl Outside others unob- sirusively patrolled the halls, while six floors below a pair of experts from the radical squad scrutinized every one entering at each of the four main doors. In connection with these charges Government men mentioned twenty- five murders, the tampering with 60,- 000 railroad cars, the burning of four- teen bridges and the damaging of y locomotives. Two carloads of evidence—tools of lestruction, thousands of telegrams, letters, photographs, blue — prints, books and transcripts of statements of some 17,000 individunls—were closely guarded by Federal agents Secret S operatives also pro- tected Mr, Daugherty and Judge Wil- kerson Whitt Picked and packed within the shadow of the temples TREATY FOR IRISH MUST BE REVISED SAYS DE VALERA aaa In Interview Insists Ulster Question Must Be Settled by Erin Alone. MANCHESTER, England, Sept. 11. (Associated I ‘The Manchester to-day publishes am interview by ita Dublin correspondent with Eamon De Valera, the Irish Republican leader, peared to the interviewer to be in good health and discussed the military and political situation in Ires ess). ivening News exclusive who ap- who land freely The Mr. De Valera as saying he was still opposed {o the treaty with Great Britain in its present form, but suggested that some could be obtained it tnen of good will would set themselves to the task Without clared, violent poll- tical agitation and turmoll in one form or another in Ireland for many years, while for England it, would mean @ the impossible rela- resulted in the war correspondent quotes revision such a, revision, there would be he de- continuance of had of the last few ye Mr. Do insisted Ulster question was an question and settled In Ir tions which Valera that the Irish domes- | that it must be he represent: tives of the peoples concerned. The treaty meant the coercion of the South and the coercion of a large part of the North of Ireland, he insisted. . “No one has gained by the war and © [+ all have by it," was the Repub- lican leader's summing up of the whole position in Ireland tie land {t's toasted. This one extra process quality that can , not be duplicated The Inimitable Loft Quality We say inimitable, because we do not know of another Cand; manufacturer who sateguavae and res the quality of in- gredients through the agency of a modern chemical laboratory. Advt. on Page 11 THE WORLD'S | Harlem Office Now Located at 2092 7th Ave. Near 125th St. ‘HOTEL THERESA BUILDING DIED. DUDLEY D, CAMPBELL FU- COMPTON. NERAL 4 M HO} RALPH T, CHURCH, Bway, O6th,, Tue CAMPBELL FUNEe KAL CHURCH, B'way, 66th, Notice later, WILKINSON.—CHARLOTTE A, CAMP» HELL FUNERAL CHURCH, B'way, 6th, Monday, § P.M. WITTKO, PRANK CHURCH, B'way, Guth — FUNERAL DIRECTORS. THE HOME FUNERAL Conducted inexpensively Call Columbus 8200 When Death Occurs JL, FUNERAL later. CAMPBE Notli = FRANK E.CAMPBELL, “Phe Funeral Chu rch ne 6 roadwa: aera SULGRIM BROS quire in the bright stock girl,

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