The evening world. Newspaper, October 6, 1922, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1922. EUNICE C, CARROLL BECOMES BRIDE OF ‘ STUART H. JOHNSON CHILD'S MATCHES SERIOUSLY BUR ANOTHER ATPL Father Who Rushes to Her Aid on Fire Escape Also Injured, WH ROME, ~- ROHLAWYER, 6, + SUESFOR NORGE Wife, 33, Asks $10,000 Counsel Fee to Combat Case —No ‘Alimony Sought. John Howard Cromwell, a direct de- @eendant of Oliver Cromwell, is the Blaintift in a divorce suit against Row Barker Cromwell, broux fore Supreme Court Justice Morschau- ser in White Plains, where the de- fendant asked for $10,000 counsel fee. # There are ten charges made by Crom- well, a millionaire attorney and ‘Wealthy Manhattan property holder, who is sixty-eight years old. His wife Is sald to be thirty-three. Mrs. Cromwell makes a general do- try mial. No alimony was asked by Mra. While her mother was in the rear of the apartment and her father was attending his pusheart on the street in front of the house, No. 1962 Second Avenue, Minnie Martin, five years old, was safely parked on the second Noor fire escape in the front: of the building. t today be fire escape another child playing with matches dropped a lighted one and ft landed on the clothes of the little girl, In an instant the light cotton Cromwell, as it was stated hy her frock of the child was ablaze. Her ; counsel, George ‘Taylor tr, Republi ms Caused en persons to , ean, candidate in Westchester County into the house, the father among : for the Supreme Court Keneh, that er the first of them, He reached her ; Husband, since they nated | and drew her in through the window, April, has been paytic her $600 a tearing the clothes from her. month and has agreed to pay her this Vatrolman Crawley, of the Kast monthly sum for life or amtil) she lodth Street Station commandeered a should remarry, Mr. 'Tay the complaint and the ¢ vaguely described. The Cromwelis occupied one of the “most luxurious homes in Larchmont and, it is there claimed thet in the Summer of 1919 and 1920 Mrs, Crom well was indi aid that wey were taxicab and rushed the father and child to Mount Sina, Hospital. There it was found the child was seriously burned about the body. The father was burned about the face and arms. He was attended and went home. The child was kept at the hospital where it ty said she will recover. Ceremony ‘lakes Place at Country Place of the Bride’s Mother, eb. ly 13 e Pullman The marriage of Mrs, Buntee pp a iar Cnet Caceres Slate 18 Carroll to My, Stuart M. Johnson ook [LEAK OF AMMONIA tha nuriber of’ the teen Dlive yesterday afternoon at Plkhurst, CHASES FIFTY IN tice! Morschauser asked M the, house of Mr, and Mrs. i. Mott Pho lawyer replied that thit would] mer Ward, at Locust Valley, Li 1 HASTE TO STREETS have to be obtained in « bill of par- Sods Mrs. Carroll, a daughter of Mrs. Ward by u former marriage, was di- vorced several months ago from Mr. Brandish Johnson Carroll jr. Mr. Carroll has since remarried. Mr, Johnson was graduated from Yale in 1914. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Henry Colt Johnson of this elty. . ticulars, although the plaintiff's law- yer; Hi. D. Holden, assured the court that he haf#*‘the number.”* In the summer of 1921 it ts alleged that Mrs. Cromwell hired a cottage at Asbury Park and there entertained a man named Harry Cohen, Mr. Holden objected to the amount of the counsel fe saying that trips to Canada are necessary.” Trouble in Blackstone Hotel Keeps Residents Busy at Phones. Ammonta fumes released by a leak in the generator of a tank in the base- ment of the Blackstone apartment hotel, No, 50 Hast 58th Street, near asked that it be kept down to $2,000 | money was nothing to the wealth! yfadivon Avenuc, permeated the thir Justice Morschauser sald that the] Cromwell lavished upon Wis awife 10} oo tosien or nt ; ie defendant should be given every] their Larchmont home. Justice Mor-| °° aie ODE EURO SUUSUUIRS AB nie 18 to protect her name. hauser said he would reserve de-| o'clock this morning cision on the motion and would fix the amount himself. A judgment against her would put her away forever," he sald. “She might just as well be out of the world dead. If she's got to go out of the world branded she is lost. ‘The women would turn their faces away from her. Therefore she is entitled to tight to the last. Safety Pin Removed From Stomach of Child by Delicate Operation Wire Loop Manipulated to Close Point and Tiny Pincers Draw It Out, Without Anaesthetic. ATLANTA, Oct. 6 (Copyright).—An operation by which an open safety pin was taken from the stomach of Mac Asbill jr. well known Atlanta attorney *L would rather be tried for homi cide than be tried for affecting the virtue of a woman,"’ the court said “In these kind of cases there should be no limitation for expe: when it comes to the woman.’* Mr. Holden contended that since Mrs; Cromwell left her husband she has received $9,490 from him. It was brought out by Mr, Taylor that that Witty employee: cluding enginee: workers, fled to emarted. ¢ Charles Fursman, valet; employed by Mrs. E. Lee B.. Gardner, living on the eleventh floor, was overcome while making a down trip in the elevator, although he protected his mouth and nose with handkerchivfs, but was re vived when brought to the pavement Andrew Miackwoud, clevator bey, was almost overcome, but revived in the fresh air, Occupants of the apartments, al- though keeping the house telephone busy with inquiries, remained in their rooms unharmed. Eugene Cahill, Chief Engineer, sta- tioned in the boiler room was first to detect the fumes. He immediately turned in a fire alarm and rushed to the street, where he found Policeman Horner of the East dist Street Station The latter called the Rescue Sq which quickly arrived in charge Lieut. Kildride, The teak in the crator wax stopped and clectric fans started. The fumes were soon cleared away. City is a resident in the ——— RAIN ON THE WAY TO BREAK DROUGHT Will Come Within 48 Hours, Says Weather Man. > six months’ son of a was to-day characterized by doctors as one of the most remarkable feats in the history of surgery. By means of a wire loop at the end * of a rod a foot and a half long the point of the pin, which rested just at the entrance to the baby’s stomach, was pushed under the safety catch and then ‘the pin was drawn out without injury to the child, In addition to the wire loop the doctor used a tiny pair of pincers on the end of two long Pieces of wire and lowered down the baby's throat a tiny electric light to enable him to see, ‘The entire operation was performed up a trifle and that the sharp point Was pressing on the flesh A surgical operation felt to be impossible because of the location of the obstacle. Dr, J. H, Buff, a spe- clalist, culled. He studied the X-ray pictures and announced he. was certain he could get the pin He decided against any anaesthetic, as it might prove dangerous, #0 he secured the child to the operating table. Attendants held his hands, Magistrate Moses Rittenbers Blackstone put he was so exhausted with crying] WASHINGTON, Oct. 6.—Relief nithout anaesthetic and lasted about|that he gave very little trouble. Por Oe ocr ca trae fifteen minutes. The child had swal-[ Dy, Buff ted the cord of an elec-|T9m the drought that has bee lowed the pin wile in bed, Hi ro wbout his head, ‘Then with|{ damaging crops all over the country motier, hearing lim scream, notice weht hand he manipulated the {was premised to-day by the Weatht When she went to him that the safety pincers and a wire loop after frst! pureay here pin} txed to hold down the blanket ring the tiny Maht down the | wriere will be raih pretty gene in which he was wrapped was missing At one timeythe instru However, as the baby soon stopped|ments had to be withdrawn, because | lly cast of the Mississipp! within crying, she decided that he was all|the breathing was interfered with. |(o 48 hours,” the official forecaster right. Careful search failing to locate| After several efforts Dr. Buff caught | stated. the missing pin, the doctor was callod| the pin with the pincers, Holding it} The rain would break a dry spell ar a precaution. steady, he manipulated the wire loop|that in some localities has lasted The infant was removed to a local] over the butt of the pin and began to| thirty days. In the West and North sanatorium and an X-ray taken, IL revealed the pin, open, just at the en- trance to. the stomach. Specialists pull on it, ‘This caused it to stip alohg the pin and pushed the point toward the end on which the catch was. ri west, forest fires have resulted Among the crops damaged ure cot ton in the South, tabacco In Pennsyt who were called said there was « pos-| nally the point slipped under the catch | vania and Maryl@&d, apples in the sibility the pin eventually would puss|and then it was a comparatively easy | Middle West, Mississippi Vahey, Ore through the stomach without injury.|task to get the pin out through the} on and Washington and potatoes in Sotne hours later, however, the child] throat developed pain dnd’ cried a lot. An-] *The child quickly recovered from its other picture showed that the pin, in- [experience and seemed as well as eve: stead of working down, had moved ‘to-day PANTOMIME New York — 12 WAITRESSES FLEE WHEN FIRE STARTS Nobody Hurt tn Meyer Brandt's Restaurant Binge. Traffic was impeded the of No. M7 Fulton Street, this mornifg by a fire in rant owned by Me: address, Soon after 11 o'clock a ket tle of grease boiled over and caught fire, destroying the kitchen, making its way to the basement, burning insula tion and causing dense smoke. Joeeph Newman, the head waiter, ran three blocks to turn In the alarm and a dozen waitresses fled to the atreet. Nobody was hurt ‘Trolley cara in Fulton Street were di verted to Livingston Street to make room for the fire apparatus. And traf fic in Flatbush Avenue extension from Fulton Street to the Manhattan Bridge was checked for fifteen minutes. LOOK AT YOUR #5 BILLS, Warning against a new counterfeit $5 note was fssued today by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York Carrying the serial number R2990979B, it ts described ax darker than tho genuine but fairly deceptive.” It in on the Now York Federal Reserve Bank, chec letter “A”, no faco plate number, back plate No, 1554, verles of 1914, signed by A. W. Mellon, Secretary of the ‘Treasury, and Frank White, Treasiucor and bearing the portrait of Lincvlu in vicinity Brooklyn, the restau- er Brandt at that The police say that from an upper|@nswered the question, iW in the basement, in firemen and kitehen six of whom were women, the street. Their eyes all Stephen Graham Sees America An Effeminate, Dry Nation,From Canada Clear.Down to the Canal Keen Observer of Trend of Nations Says U. 8. Will Be -Happy and Prosperous for 500 Years, Cleanser of the World, in Whict. Cigarcttes May Yet Be Forbidden. By Marguerite Moores Marshall. An Imperial America, with her frag fying from Canada to the Canal, A Grinklcas, smokeless America. A country that is the world's cleanser, A nation of feminine men and of more and more “bachelor wives.” A country that wilt climinate tty laboring class through the use of machines, A tand with at least prouperity ahcud of tt— That is how Stephen Graham “America— five hundred years of generat happiness aud Whither Bound?" # a question whieh T put to Mr. Graham for two reasons. In the first place he is the author of that intelligent, exeeedingly up- to-date surope—Whither us answers so many ot of us have been asking about the other side. In the second” place this noted writer and world-tramp ts far better fitted to discuss the America. of the prewnt and the future than are most of our Brit- ish visitors, Instead of shooting, comet-fashion, trom one big city to another by train, Mr. Graham has, literally, taken America at a walk book, whieh und ? the questions the vest He tramped trom New York to Chicago away kin 1918, da 1919 he tramped through the South, following, among other routes, that of Sherman’s March to the Sea. And his latest wan- derings, thorugh the Rocky Moun- tains with Vachel Lindsay, which he has described in his facinating book, ‘‘Tramping With a Poet in STEPHEN GRatand change of government?’ I sug- the Rockies,’ took place only last auates, P 5 year, “T think that your imperial des- Now he ts in New York again tiny fs in conflict with your demo- for a few dnys on his way to the eratic teh said Mr. Graham, Southwest and th: Mexican hor- “T think that the power of plu de id T saw at the Murray Fil tocracy in your government is Hotel, this slight, wiry world- waxing and that of labor ts wan- wanderer with the heayy yellow ing. On the other hand, Americ: mustache and the clear, deepsct, unlike any other country, wan dreaming blue eyes. founded on certain principles of individual liberty, and I believe “Six months ago,’ I said to that they still lie deep in the him, “Fl. G. Wells told me that American heart, Such a man as the future of America lies in two werds—Adventure® or Degenera- tion. By Adventure he meant a world-adventure—helping Furope to escape the ab And IT have William Allon White, for example, xeems to me much more the ty} cal American than Morgan,’* We spoke of Mr, White's superb just finished reading G. 1K. Chus- defense of freedom of speech and terton’s book, “What 1 Saw in thought in the “Letter to un America!’ Mr, Chesterton thinks Anxious Friend,’ published te- that our democracy is destined to cently on the front page of the struggle with our plutocraey, anu our agricuiturists with our indus- trial groups, But what do you think? Krom your viewpoint, whither is America bound?'’ KEimporia Gazette, But then 1 asked Stephen Graham it Amer- fen, despite tty Htée printiptes of individual “liberty, was not now bound in the opposite direction, as instanced by Prohibition. Mr. Graham's vision differs “But America wants Prohibt- from that of cither Wells or Ches- bition,’ insisted. ‘Outside of terotn. New York and Chicago the coun- “T don't think it will matter to try really wants to be dry. I per- America whet happens to Bu- sonally like a glass of wine; on rope, just as Burope has survived the other hand T realize that beer independently of Asin. You are makes for stupidity and whiskey ail too speroux, too happy, tw for boasting, and 1 feel thut be affected by what goes on over America wants to be rid of both, there, You are most sympathetic It seems to me partly a matter of with suffering, of course; particu- larly with the suffering of women and children, Mr. Hoover's work in Russia is a magnificent ex: ple of your helpfulness, But your sympathy is limited to this sufter- ing; you have no sympathy with climate. Whiskey in this air ix too exciting."’ “So you think that America bound desertwards?'' | sighed. “T don't think you'll get away from Prohibition, evon to the ex- tent of light wines and beer," is European politics. Ameriea, the prophesied the observer. ‘‘And [ solvent of nationalities, is impa- think you are on the way to ban- tient with the nationalities of ishing tobacco—in the form of Europe. cigarettes, at any 1 ‘There a seeme to be a tremendously “T believe that America’s face strong sentiment against them, is turned away from the West ond America’s future role, as I see it, turned toward the South. ‘t to will be that of the world's your imperial destiny, whieh you cleanser. But you can bo just as cannot escape, Th a very sort happy drinking ice cream soda as comparatively speaking, the py tings else ican flag will be flying to Ul — Canal. It would be flying over Stifling a low groan, 1 asked Canada, if Canada didn’t happen Stephen Graham whither he to be a part of the British Em- thought the American woman pire. was bound. ‘Away from the “You will have dificultios with home?" 1 hinted. some of the natives,’ admitted He nodded, smiling. ‘There Mr. Graham. ‘Then aditeg, will be more and more girls going whimeleally, "It’s too bad, for the out for jobs, and more and more sake of your imperial ambitions, achelor wives,’ he prophestod; that you have a resident... All that {s, more wives and fewer through the British West Indiv», children. Politically, ems to for example, they talk about Wing me that your women are « George. Because he is a King, gish. They've had the y me he is a figure of romance It's time, and they seem to have di impossible to make a figure of 10+ vided up about the way men do. mance out of a man who is de- They hayen’t the English wom posed from office every four or an's intense interest in politics eight years!" But they do not sem inclined to ‘satiate grow less dominant “Do you think that imperial “American men, 1 think, are America iz bound to have a very feminine. They let their City’s Telephone Investigation Cost Given as $340,000 to Date Muddling in Rapid Transit Affairs Has Absorbed $100,- 000 This Year and $75,000 More Is Wanted. The cost to the city of an investigation of telepbone rates and tele phone matters and accompanying litigation totals $340,000, according to communication from Acting Corporition Counsel George P Nicholson *0 the Board of Aldermen requesting a $170,000 issue of special evenue bond When the Hylan Administration® Oroginally undertook these proceed-[ $95,000 more will be needed this yeu ings, its assumption was, that the]{o pay the bills for the telephone con coat to the city would not be large. | test An issue of 360,000 for expenses in] For expenses in the (ansit matt the telephone investigation wa 4 $100,000 special revenue bond thorized in April, 1921, qnd-an asdi-| wus authorized in January tional appropriation of $10,000 al-|'This fund is exhausted and the tra Jowed in the 1922 budget, Both off tion bills for the bs l these (undp ase exhausted and about will amount fo about $75,000, a SPP GSTS NO ET 4 f HEAD AND TRS LEFT AS WARNINGS, DETECIVES Planted Where They Would ive Deliberate Notice Is AMERICAN WOMAN WHO KEPT 500 GIRLS FROM THE HAREMS ye 1 Hung Clothes On Fire Alarm And It Rung Police Say Johy Swift Madc Clothes Horse of Alarm Box. Thousands of persons were brought out of bed and traf lc at Madison Avenue and 68d Street was tied into & tangled knot shortly after 7 o'clock i " this. morning because, police say, Their Belief. John Swift, No. 59% Ninth Avenue, yrs made a clothes horse out of the ~* While diligently working to estab- lish the identity of the murdered man Whose head was found near Pelham Parkway on Sunday and whose torso was found in Rronx Rotanical Gar. dens yesterday, the detectives on the handle of a new fire alarm box. Swift, foreman of five men engaged in widening sewer pipes in Madison Avenue, hung his coat on the handle when he went to work. A few min- case are not hopeful of success, They utes Inter ho returned to remova a | believe that the friends or relatives of book from a side pocket. He i= be- the uraeres man know who mur- lieved to have unknowingly turned | dere ' him but have not even ven- tured an Identification because they are In fear of the murderers, The head, wrapped in oilcloth and newspapers, was left in a place where the handle. In short time, three engine com- panies, two truck companies, two bat- tallon chiefs and a deputy battalion its discovery was # certainty. The chief, the whole under command of torso was abandoned: in one of the alion Chief Patrick Murry, mady most frequented parts of (he Botan clangorous descent upon ihe corner. ens, a] Me was completely tled up, while | detectives assume that the mur jumberless persons, thelr — sleey | » whoo Ht have disposed. of these evidences of their crime in more inaccessible places, deliberately plant ed them where they would serve as a notice or a warning. Policemen of the Harbor Squad be- wan dredging the Bronx River north and south of the Botanical Gardens to-day in the hope of finding the miss. ing parts of the body. Yenterday's dis rovery of the torso hax not heen of assistance in determining the identity of murdered man Tho reason the discovery of the torso did not aid in solving the mys- tery is that it was wrapped in the sme kind of ollcloth and newspapers as the head, and the head wrappings had not helped any. The police be- lieve the murder was committed In @ tenement or vacant house, The torso was taken to the Fordham Morg There Robert Stetler, the Morgue keeper, found that the torso, cut off close at the lower part of the neck, fitted in size and the shape of the cut- ting the head found in the park by boys on Sunday, broken, looked from windows or hur- rled Nalf-dressed fo the street to me: what was the matter, Finding no fire, Chief Barry In vestigated and found Swift's coat on the alarm handle. } Swift believes a passerby, atoppiny to watch the men at work in. the ‘ sewer, leaned on the box and turned the handle A false than $100. MRS IRA MITCHELL WIDE,.WORLD Nearly 500 Greek girls were saved from being sold as slaves in Stam- boul, due to the intrepid intervention of Mrs. Ira Hitchell, wife of an Amer- ican missionary, backed vigorously by American diplomatic officials anc British rifles, Mrs, Mitchell, who is representing the American Soctety for the Propagation of the Gospel amony the Turks, learned that a throng of these Christian refugees from Smyrna had been gathered in Stamboul under . Turkish “protection. With a representative of the Ame joan High Commissioner she went boldly into Stamboul, marshalled the girls and marched them to the Amer- ican Embassy, her companion inform- ing the Turkish “guardians” that the girls were undér the protection of the American fing. Wed Four Weeks She Was Ordered To Support Family, Bride Claims Married Man Two Days After Meeting Him Because Home Had Been Broken Up, but Love Soon Filed. When Betty Duttman, was married to Herman Cohen, twenty-two, of No, 732 Hinsdale Avenue, Brooklyn, four. weeks ago, he didn't hayo enough money to buy @ wedding ring, so she supplied the $11.50 needed to pay for it, Two days later sho told Magistrate Goorge H. Folwell, between sobs, in the New Jersey Avenue Police Court to-day, he ordered hwr to get out and earn thelr living on Broadw Mrs. Cohért ‘was before the Magis- trate to prosecute a disorderly charg against Cohen. ‘The Court told her Alarm costs the city more Recipe of a celebrated « chef - Italy originated that splendid dish—spa- ghetti A celebrated Italian chef furnished the recipe for Heinz seventeen, broken up, she accepted Cohen after a ‘wo-days' courtship. the husband could not be tried on T can never live with him that charge, dismissed the case and (al Dats ped metals Spaghetti, cooked with nent the youthful wife to the Family 4 chur Hehaiterhal Avenue, Brook PARSON GOT BOTTLE | Tomato Sauce and an —"| MIXED WITH BIBLES| cheese, All’ but theres: 4 She announced her intention, how wo nig z is Hei . i aver, of seeking an annulment of her] CREENVILLH: 8. ©. Oct, ¢—At-| DG 18 Fieing, Heinz f lage He husband 1 er preaching a power! sermon on . Re 1 marriage, He: husband. 16 onl line eve of whiavey, the. ev. w. ./ OEY Spaghetti, Heing fa- | get married. he gave his age as| Ste?» & Baptist minister, while on] mous Tomato Sauce, his way home from church was de- tained by county officers, who found on him a quart jar of moonshine whiskey and two Bibles. Police who reported the case to-~ day termed it “a mixing of the word of God and the spirit of the devil.” Tt happened in the mountains that skirt the upper edge of the county in a region known the “Dark Cor- ner,” «@ prolific field for “moonshine hooch.” twenty-two. Death of her mother two years ago and injuries which her father, Louis Duttman, No. 718 Hinsdale Avenue, received in an automobile accident, sending him to the hospital for a long period, were responsible for her mar- Her hot a cheese especially se- lected by Heinz—Heinz skill in cooking ard sea- soning —Heinz quality and goodness through and through. Delicious! omen order them around as no Crea nae atuicticiam ot the | State Constable J. Hi. Toward ana A ey colleges they ane giving up the other oMicer were hunting a still] Delizioso! , natural outdoor sport ich on ven they saw the preacher walking | alinte: “Wie eaet | walking. [#long. They turned aside long enough (her prefer to ride in their care, [te investigate the puper haudtug the clergyman carried, In one of the Bibles there was found a circular sent by a committee of the State organization of the Anti- Saloon League at Columbia to min- Even cowboys would rather vide in Fords. And though your chil dren are finer phys 1 specimens in appearance than English chil- HEINZ, © Spaghetti , are ter seem superior in fre tteg that don't show. At [lstera urging thelr efforts and tnfu- : ac the death [ence toward Prohibition enforcement, er op uate pala dieaba ts Mr, Step is pastor of the Pleasant Ready cooked, ready to serve ‘ove Baptist Church County. tfully high.’ in Greenville Then Stephen Graham made | ——_ another interesting prophecy. He says that in the fulure our labor ing classes will be climinated. Not 1 by fire id sword. Not by the tri- umph of Mr, Chesterton's agricul turists—"nobody but Chesterton,”* observed Mr. Graham, dryly, “would call the man who can travel all over America in a Ford @ child of the eoil, The United States has no agricultur ists, strictly speaking; no peasant cluss “But the laboring cla n opinion, will be eliminated b: spread of machine From Ceylon’s Machine will do the work of your labor he dec! Mrhey will Join your great, pros sunny fields comes perous, contented middle class . pars, contents: vem, | theworld'shest tea, Uetshe eceasa will be bascenad ery. “America in now the great machine-using nation For five hyndred yvare, at least concluded Stephen Gra ut nee AL The Imperil the dextiny n te all-Ceylon Whereupon our g frien Tea Mr. Graham, summed one wo t our uf Main St Ucl-calelacuca, he said,

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