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ee n OTHER MEMBER OF CONSOLIDATED EXCHANCE FAS Alexander & Co. Employees Find Doors Locked When They Report for Work. ~ ‘When the employees of the Con- solidated Stock- Exchange firm of Alexander & Co., brokers, with offices sthe eleventh floor of No, 7 Wall » arrived there for work to-da found the doors locked. Up to 11 o'clock no member of the firm had appeared. The eight men and two ‘Women sought information of the ele- vator men. They were told that Assistant Dis- itriet Attorney Schreiber had been in ‘the office, last night and there wea a port he had removed the books and to the District Attorney's An-involuntary petition in bank- was filed at the opening of the United States District Court to-day against the firm and the partners, Paul Alexander and James J. Mor- row jr., individually. The liabilities are placed at $60,000 and the assets at $500. The petition was filed by creditors with assigned claims. Assisstant District Attorney Schne}- ‘ber gald to-day he had not gone him- self to the office of Alexander & Co and none of the papers of the firm ‘had been removed by his order, Mr. Schreiber said that late yester- day afternoon he received a telephone message purporting to come from the bookkeeper of the firm to the effec that the members of the firm had drawn all of its money out of the bank nd had disappeared from the office rly in the afternoon. ‘The supposed ookkeeper added that he made the iscovery that the financial cupboard as bare when he went to the bank eash a check. for to-day's payroll. Employees of the Wall Street Jour- al said to-day that Alexander was lormerly a reporter for that news- r and had made $1,000,000 in a ucky overnight deal at the time an ntimation got loose prematurely in ‘Wall Street that Germany was about ot ask President Wilson to mediate with the Allies. He thus set himself up im the brokerage business. Patan br) Sad weet EGRO MADE FACES AT PRETTY WOMAN Thorley’s Valet Puts Out Tongue and is Arrested. Accused of sticking out his tongue at a white woman, Eugene Nicols. thirty-five, Negro valet to Charles ‘Thortey, Fifth Avenue florist and sportsman, was arrested to-day and brought before Magistrate Levine in Yorkville Court on a charge of dis- orderly conduct. He pleaded not guilty and Gsked for a postponement until next Tuesday. This was granted and bail set at $300. Mrs. Helene M. Peck, extremely retty, private secretary of No, 137| That's how Announcer “A. C. N." Rast Sith’Strect, was the complain-]° WJZ, Newark, presented Miss ant. She charged that ‘the offense |urst and me to the great radio pub- was committed as she was going to|lic last evening, You couldn't see her, MISS MARSHALL FANNIE “Women are not purifying politics because husbands still are breathing on their Famous necks.” Writer ~ Tells “Women do not ‘understand the tariff, but *Evenin g neither do men.” World How Women Are Using the Vote. i) “The great majority of women still count on their fingers.” “Moral for women in politics—Don’t listen to your husband!” By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “We will now introduce a very unique feature to the radio audi- ence. You will now listen to the first person ever interviewed by radio, this person being no other than the famous Fannie Hurst, author of ‘Star Dust,’ ‘Humoresque’ and “The Vertical City,’ who will be inter- viewed by Marquerite Mooers Marshall of the New York Evening World the first time a newspaper interview has been at- tended by the whole country.” ing third birthday as voters. “I think that you and I, Miss Hurst, both believe that Suffrage for women has been worth while lweakfast. radio fans, but she sat ‘about three But why What have women eeerstg erro i é ctually done with the vote, now inches away from me, her comely| actually ELEVEN PLANES IN RACE s , that they have had it for two face vivid against the baby Jamb col- th FROM N. Y. TO MICHIGAN vents lar of her wrap and the smooth, close- ceaidwiiug die tact ras the fitting folds of her black turban, her] meg of America have had the vote big brown eyes sparkling with inter-| for well over a hundred years, est in this newest thing in interviews.| the progress that women 2 ave lea were: trl rhade during the two years th woe will Mitchel Field at a] And as we talked the eyes were bri Have. voted wold iaadione wens Zero Hour" next Tuesday or Wednes-}ly but flerily indignant, the softly A sonably to suppose that at the ny according to weather condition, on}rounded’ chin set determinedly, and m race to Selfridge - Meld, Mount] humor, sometimes tronic, sometimes Clemens, Mich., where the Pulltzer} playful, hovered about the mouth w Make Trip For Puliteer Prine Events. even airplanes of the DeHaviland leave end of 130 years the women will have made as good if not a better yates are centering in the air micet at that place. job than men,” Miss Hur Wield, with You dn't see 7 torted, with just a hint of sh: ou ce this human side of bly on the the interview, but it was there! But you heard—at least, ‘The another following Sun¢ race from Mitchel race back, prob- ¥, will “be ness. “One of the things we used to many of one of the longest races ever flown by : yorld reader: be told,’ 1 recalled, “was that ap many planes tomethers The Evening World readers heard.| be told/’ 1 recalled, “was fn It will be a free for all race, the|For our hearers and for those who} tl Noumal Neitt sooet cou first stop being at Bellefonte, Pa., for roe = olities o j ihose Who teed gas or oll. ‘The second | ere Teading this interview for the frst The radio couldn't catch the atop, for the same purposes, will be at|time, my first question wag framed to] flash of Miss Hurst's fine eves as Cleveland, and th ey and last stop indicate the subject T wanted Miss} she answered: ‘No! Because the at Mount Clemens, The el will’ ‘be e EG care husband is still breathing on the atest of the skill of the pilots as the | Hurst Reece cae iPpeadl rai sate af tie avebagn Waris ote BASS B2 Oh SRS BRD SPE terest In her two short years of wield- pea : 5 WICKERS TAKEN FROM BROKER “Because It is only a month be- ing the vote, she has had neitier ‘Tye Consolidated Stock Exchange has| fore election,” [ began, ‘and be- the time, nor the courage, nor vemoved two of Its tickers from the! cause for the third time millions the knowledge to work out her office of the non-member firm of Frank-| 6¢ women all over the United own political convictions, She does lin J. Hauser & Co., 32 Broadway, W.S.] States will have the chance to not understand one-half of the Slikworth, President of the exchange, ounced to-day. The removal fol.| take part in that election, it must Iiterature given her at the polls wed the refusal of the firm to have its] be interesting to them—and to and to which she attaches ler books and records examined by the ex- thelr men-folk—to see just where name. It is e r to take hus change’s bureau of auditing and ac- American women have got, po- bane word f it, and it does counting, litically, on this, their approach- not reveal the depth of her ignor- —| ance. This is regrettable, but fatal. In a f more years wemen will be reaping the bene- fits of these pioneer years of ex pertence and will be voting .mo courageouslf and intelligently “Have women voters done any thing to further disarmament?" 1 questioned. “Theoretically, women are the pacifists of the world," she re- piled, ‘Ata time like this, how- over, with the gins of war still smoking,” not enough of that moke has cleared away for * women, or men for that matter, to * go far with the subject of dis- armament at present, But that fs a job ahead for the woman voter-—to help make the world ready for disarmament.” Then I turned to the question PANTOMIME of what the womun voter has done for herself, ‘Fave women I inquired, “procured for ther selves absolutely equal trentinent With men under the laws Again Yiere oame Crom Miss Murat an/uncompromial “Mon holds the gov whip hand,” she cont fo now Ils attitude te ing ariny wunen \ % ; j THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FIRST INTERVIEW EVER BROADCAST BY RADIO|SFAPCH Fanny Hurst Tells Women How to Vote; ee ae to Your Husband! ’She Says! ARONA KILLING) ACROSS ATLANTIC HURST amusedly tolerant rather than helpful. There are still certain restrictions on women's prop- erty rights that hark back to the dark ages, The State Department of America still refuses a woman a passport to go abroad under any other than her husband’s name. Many women for business and professional reasons desire to retain thelr maiden names, “At the coming” Congressional election,’ I pointed out, “the really big issue is the tariff. Do you think that women voters understand the new tariff and its probable effects, so that they can vote intelligently to uphold the men who made It—or to defeat them?"" Another ringing ‘No! from the Hurst side of the interview. “But neither does the average man, for that matter,” she blandly went on, “except as it may apply to his particular product or products. The great Inajority of women still count on their fingers. At this stage in her political! development the average woman will not vote in- telligently on the tariff—which is not for a moment saying that if she listens to her husband, her vote will invariably be an intelli- gent one,” she wickedly finished the paragraph ‘ “Women have joined in large numbers the existing political parties. They have a National Woman's Party. By which of these moves have they iplished more ?"" So I put to Miss Hurst the most debated question of the hour among feminists, 1e answered: Iso. foi “It seems to me & grave mistuke for women to Segregate themselves politically by forming a National Woman's Party. Universal suffrage means equal rights for men and women, Why keep up sex consciou by forming separate parties? us function in the government of this country as Americans—not as American men and women,."* "Since Suffrage women have held political offices I queried. “Becguse both men and wemen jave inhibited it suid Miss Hurst, with outthrust chin,“ W. because they have not sufticient self-confidence, For instanc T know women who hrve no faith was granted, few important Why is this defiantly men, in women doctora will not patronize them, I also know women who will not v 2 for a woman to hold a portant oifice—as yet “It is perhaps jubt as well. As time goes on and eal experience grov more apt to do credit te public office when ultimately she 15 ready, for the mantle to folk upon her.” “Should more women :un for {t was the turn of trony on Miss Hurst's expressive coun- tenance, I hope some of you cuught It In her voice, as she an- swered: ‘Yes, Runnf{ng limbers up the muscles and makes suver the ultimate goal, So does also running!” T asked her what sort of women would be most valuable in the conduct ef public affairs “The type of woman thot America so successfully turn It.) phe anmwered, earnestly he wotian whe won't admit that (he businessgof being aw and mother places her on the sidelines of Ife. ‘The alert, edu cated mnatron, The young bu hess and professions) — wonumn Whese contacts with 4 uw with 1 t "Abd lat at, thie OCTOBER 7, 1922, OF 21 —e Man Whose Diary Named] Success of Twenty- Pwo Women Is Found Strangled. PHOENIX,. Oct. 7 Sheriff E. M. Bell is in Los Angeles on the trail of a Phoenix business man wanted jn connection with the murder of Guy N. Dernier, the story of which is replete with amazing de- velopments, Dernier, strangled to death, was found In an Irrigation ditch Sept. 12. In a pocket was a diary involving twenty-two Phoenix and Los Angeles women, all married but one, and many of them prominent and wealthy. Ariz., The diary tells intimate and ro- mantic incidents, In several {n- stances it even mentions money these women gave Dernier, One paid him $600. Phoenix authorities b the twenty-one hus Dernier, Two of the twenty-two women are residents of Los Angeles, who were visiting Phoenix, Seven others are residents of Phoenix, who have gone to Los Angeles to cscape the talk and the suspigion, Deputy Sheriff J. B, Fox of Los Angeles and Deputy Sieriff Bell questioned these nine women, fox says they admitted having been intl- mates of the dead man. Some gave him money. “We asked why they had done what y did,” Fox asserted. “None of them could say exactly. ‘I guess we just fell for him,’ one of them put it. ‘There wasn't anything especially attractive about him, but he had a way about him.’ ' Dernier, formerly manager of a mail order company in Chicaga, was sent by doctor's to Arizona for his health about five years ago. Apparently he recovered. He was sccretary of a country club in Phoen{x. Six divoree cases in which he was named are pending, the actions having been started before the murder. Shhh testes MILLER IS GUEST OF G. O. P. WOMEN Governor’and Other Can- didates Entertained at Luncheon. ‘The Women's Division of the publican County Committee gave a luncheon to-day at the Hotel Astor to Gov. Miller and the other candidates on the State ticket, Miss Helen Varick Boswell, Chairman of the Women's Division, was in charge of the affair, with the following associate district leaders as assistants Miss Anna 8. Maisel, Mrs. Mildred Rich, Miss Angela Cagnolati, Miss Alice Ratkowsky, Mrs. Kathryn Mac- Neil, Mrs. Agnes Scheiffele, Mrs. Anna C. Reed, Miss Tessie Cutler, Mrs. William Wilson, Mrs. Mary Grout, Mrs, Samuel 8. Koenig, Mrs. Niles R Becker. . Mrs. Frederick L. Katherine Hammer, Mrs. Char- lotte Farrar, Mrs. Mollie Wilkinson Mrs, Lillian Michel, Mrs. Elizabeth J. Cudmore, Miss Matilde Schaefer, Miss Sarah But Miss Ida Malee, Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Mrs. John H. Iselin, Mrs. Helen B. Rothweiler, Mrs. Fiizabeth Kogel, Mrs. Edith Schach- ter, Miss Anna Liebowitz, Miss Bertha Hechinger, M Slizabeth Peirce, lieve one of bands killed Marshall, Mrs, Mrs. Mary Cotter, Mrs. Gertrude M. Taffee, Miss Harriet E. Porritt, Mrs. M. L. Ogan and Mrs. Myrta M. Han- ford It Was Maw’s Punishment ter’s Togs seen in a prize ring. the moment of the interruption, for the boy in pants had a bloody nose woman whose family has grown up and left the nest of ihe home and whose active brain will not permit her to settle down in the homes of her childron. Ties women, thot nds of them tin what men would call the prime of thelr own lives, sworm this country at home and abroad— restless—unhappy, and with a potential power that ts enormous. Here is a job at home for the middle-aged woman with the ripe wisdom of years upon her. ‘In short, here 1s a Job for all women—not the holding of public office, but an awakening of po- litieal se!f-con ezs, Women are the hoiMecleaners of the world, They have only fust ar- rived upon the sceno with their buckets and pails and mops, Yes ~-there’s considerable hourect ing to be done!” our fifteen minutes programme was neat! fa the 1, that is, for women moral of (hia story-—the nor tle: He teeth showed in a frank sm think the a dt nie Hur pulitios ts -dur uty you dusbaud —peputy |By Capt. Robert Scofield Wood. z tha Boy in Girl’s Dress Could Fight As Bloody Nose and Bad Eye Told The peppiest scrap that Homestead, N, J., has seen in months was interrupted by the police this morning in a vacant lot on HiIl Street. of the fighters wore short pants and a torn shirt. skirt, dainty slippers, a lacy waist and some other garments not usually The skirt looked like the best bet at#—————___ FORONE [LIPTON TRIES AGAIN] Their Old Ford Junk Now, HUSBANDS | TO TALK BY RADIO |Wins Zvenino World Car Mrs. kKreitzler, Winner, for Her “What Did You See” Human Interest Story ’Can Continue Taking..Whole Family Out Riding. > Attempt From Jersey to London Not Yet Determined. Mrs. atharine W 1081 Unton Avenue. Kreltzler of Now the Bronx, came to her front door smiling, this morn- when an World reporter ang the bell Mes. Sir Thomas Lipton, the world’s most famous yachtsman, made his second at- Kreltale sald the young tempt to be the first man to talk by “a man, after he liad introduced himself, radio from America to England tast " ‘i you've won’a Ford car for your con- night from the powerful vroadcaating dl a tribution on the ‘What Did You See station of L. Bamberger & Co,, W O R. During the space of three minutes he talked over a distance of & using the land To-day" World.” Mrs page of The Evening 100 miles, Newark to Kreitzler's eyes opened wide. lines from San Francisco in a conversation with Mercy!" she exclaimed. “That—~ H. Gordon Selfridge Jr., for whom Sir that's WON-derful! ‘Thomas acted as the llaison in trans- She pauscd, seemingly to get her mitting a message to H. Gordon Self. breath. ridge sr., the merchant prince of Lon “Oh, I've been made a happy don, who was listening in on a radio receiver in London, England Sir Thomas, is as enthusiastic about radio as ahy man who has a con- suming passion for woman this morning!” she continued. “I've just taken my daughter, Catha- rine—she's six—to school and her teacher told me she was the smartest girl In the class! I was thinking of who yachting could be. delivered (he following short message by radio tetebhony MRS. CATHERINE W. KREITZLER| that when 1 opened the door, and “Lam very happy (o have (his oppor now--now—why—t can hardly talk! tunity Jo address the radio audience tor DRIVER FINED, DIES | Wait « minute, piease:” the second time, It was a source of She ran to the telephone, gave a ALL WITHIN HOUR War Hero After Speedin Trial Sends Auto Into Telegraph Pole. HAMMONTON, N Oct. 7 Charles Wayne Walton, twenty keen regret to me when I found that my frst address, last Sunday morning, was not hear@ across the atianflc by my friends who, I understand, are listening this evening, but I was pleased to know that some part of the musical pro- gramme was received in England.” am keenly interested in this at tempt on the part of the folk at home lo try and intercept this message over] ¢D, War hero and former Prohibition 3,000 miles away. It Is a commendable | Commissioner enterprise on the part of Baimberger'’s to endeavor to find out if the browd At- lnntic proves no barrier to the power of their station. [ look forwant to th day when science will have so far ad- vanced that tee people of Great Britain may sit down their hou as you do here in Am ica, and listen to your World's Series gaine reports with th same ease and certainty, 1 am eve downtown number, got a Mr, Rudolph Kreitzler on the wire and imparted the good news to him. What he said made her even happier, and she came back radiant. “My husband's just said he would teach me to drive it,” she announced, happy aa a child, “You have no idea,” she went on, “what good luck this is for us, We've had a small car, which is now prac- tically junk, We have been planning to sell it for whatever we could get for it, and we couldn't afford another. 1 was hating to wee the thing go, be- cause it has given us the only chance we've had to get outdoors, Now ev- for Gloucester County, N. J., was instantly killed yesterday when le drove his car into a tele- graph pole on the White Horse Pike, near Devonshire, N. J., one had been fined $10 reckless driving hour after he and warned for With Walton were four women and thinking how nice it would be if the] two men, ‘Three were seriously In-|®!0Ds comes The Evening World and people in England could follow with just GIV us another! juved. They were Miss Grace Mittil No. 130 Susquehanna Avenue, Phil Mrs. Ray Flannery, Chi cago, and Miss May Newton of Port Richmond, N. Y, Lloyd Pearson and James Miller of Woodbury, N. J., also were injured. The injured are in Egg Harbor. According to authorities who ex- amined the debris of the automobile, the speedometer showed fifty-five miles an hour. Walton was the son of Freeholder Charles Walton of Woodbury. In the war he won the Croix de Guerre and the Distinguished Service Medal. their radio seta-the course of the next yacht ep as it is broadcasted fro) America. Let us hope that science will] deiphia; have made these strides oice ¢ jes across the Atlan- d by the folk at home [ desire to extend the best of greetings to my old friend, Mr. Selfridge. 1 also wish to convey a message from your son in San Fraifcisco, to whom I was speaking by telephone a few moments ago. He sends his sincere love and best greeting to you and to the folk at the store, |, Sir Thomas arrived at the broadcast- Ing station shortly before 9 o'clock and indulged his good natured Irish humor in a half hour of chafing the ladies and explaining that he was determined to continue his radio efforts until he was heard in London. He also announce that the results of the next yacht race in which he is interested in America would be broadcast from WO R Altogether he spent the better part of an hour in the broadcasting studio Ustening to a programme of special numbers which had veen arranged in his honor Although the night was very poor from a standpoint of radiobility, the station wes reported as being heard in California. Whether or not favor able conditions existed on the Atlantic Is problematical. Th Aquitant which is somewhere tn mid-Atlantt heard the message and other numbers of the programme, with which the parsengers were entertained, It will not be known until some time late this afternoon whether or not the message was received in London. Ww not, to put {t in the words of the ve erable amateur sportaman: “Try, try again until we succeed." This last statement is the keynote to his charac ter, which has made him Internationally famous. “The piece I sent in was the first I'd, written, too! And I was hoping I'd win a Forg with it Mrs. Kreitzi@? then sat back and mused about her good luck. Besides her husband, herself and their daugh ter, Catharine, there is also a three- year-old daughter named Ruth, Then too there is Mrs, Kreitzler's mother, and— “We can all go driving, with me at the wheel!” exclaimed the lucky winne: Here is the story which won the Ford for her: THE RAGMAN. While watching at my front window on Union Avenue for my little girl to come home from school | saw that a funeral was in progress in the next block. There was a hearse there and several carriages, and it seemed as if the body about to be brought out. While | watched « ragman drove along, who wanted to go through that block. As he approached, his bells jingled, calling the attention to house- wives to his presenee. He the funeral arrangements just ahead, and coming to @ stop in front of my house got down and stuffed every bell with bits of rag. Then he drove along past the house of death. Auto Deiven by a Minister K St ford City Employ STAMFORD, Conn,, Oct. 7,—An auto driven by the Rev. H. R. Rose of No 839 Greene Street, New Haven, pastor of the Methodist Church in Clinton, Conn., ran down and killed William Sheldon, a city employee, here. With Mr, Rose were hia wife, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Ray and Ivan Rossitér, all of New Haven. Ray, Ronsite and Rose are students of Yale Divinity Schoo! The party was on the way to the Polo Grounds, Sheldon attempted to cross the street in front of the car. He was carrying a section of pipe on his shoulder. id Mr. Rose was released on his own recognizance. THE WORLD? Harlem Offics Now Located at 2092 7th Ave, | Near 125th St. | @OTEL THERESA —>--- FREE ACTRESS OF MURDER, PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 7.—Mrs, Clara Woodward, a former burlesque actress, was acquitted to-day of the charge of having murdered John Peppern New York travelling salesman, apartment tn this clty last March defensg adimftted the shootin) pleaded self-defense. That He Should Wear Sis- for a Day. | “Americans? Fought for gold!” One The other a bright red | “German-Ameticans the worst of all Americans!” and a bad eye. So the cop grabbe! he skirt, hauled It out of the battle, ind discovered that its also a boy, Charles Har 341 Hill Street. He was taken home to mother and she explained Yesterday wearer w | “Jews the cause of all the trouble!” seven, | “Tell the Americans that if you | like!” she » “Charlte was caught trying on his sister's clothes and posing before a mirror To punish him I told him he would have to go out on the street to-day in girl's clothes." Then Charles took up the narrative | Ludendorff, in a bitter, scorching in- | mem awent ite i ant mnowed | terview with Ferdinand Tuohy, PUCCINERTANTRR IRR An On denounces the United States, | IN CONVENT. . . (gROME, Oct t-—angelion Puch, ae revealing a remarkable attitude Gee Rea tate ee at ara ee of mind of Germany’s greatest Mother “ Supertor th convent at Li mm, noar Pisa. he composer was strategist. To-morrow in the | Editorial Section of - | at hin alster’s deathbed “Lost and Found" a Word or reported Bureau.” Koon De Hated sean bo ¢ The World's Offi Lost and Found” advertineme enn be left at any of The Wor Advertising Agencies, or ean b | telephoned directly to ‘The World. Cal! 4000 Faokman, New York, oF Brockiyn Office, 4100 Mein. 103, World Bu: intrty day or