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i ia i A ies i ~ONBARRACKS KILL} HAVE FIERCE FIGHT} AS BOMB BLASTS THREEIN DUBLIN} WITH SOCIALISTS} HOUSE IN BRONX pie OR ah Machine Guns «and Rifles}Seven Companies Recruited Trained on Troops From in Movement Reported to House Tops. Be Growing Rapidly. | Te sebagai Infernal Machine Explodes, Wrecking First Floor of Tenement. DUBLIN, Nov. 8 (Associated Press).—Attack with machine guns and rifles from nearby housetops was made by Irish Republican forces here against the Wellington Militery Barracks this forenoon. Three Na- tional Army soldiers were killed unc twenty others wounded in the fight- ing, which lasted two hours.” The Casualities suffered by the Republi- cans were not learned. Numerous ambulances flew about district picking up the wounded and taking them to hospitals. At noon the area affected was under @ strong cordon composed of troops from the Portobello barracks. At the time of the attack, which was opened xt 9.30 o'clock, the par- ade ground was filled with troops under drill, The attacking forces, concealed on the rooftops on both tides of the barracks began a heavy fire at that hour to which tho Gar- tison replied vigorously. Troops were rushed up from the Portobello Burracks and these joined .in the fray, drove the attacking parties from thelr positions and pur- sued them in armored cars and lor- ries, a running fight being kept up LONDON, Nov. 8.—The Amster- dam correspondent of the Exchange Telegraph Company says that alarm~- ing news is being received from Ber- lin concerning the rapid growth of Faseisti action in Bavaria. At Munich, the report sald, flerce fighting took place between the Fascisti and So- clalists, and the Socialists got the worst of it. Seven companies of well armed Fascist!, wearing steel helmets and marching to tunes from fifteen bands have departed from Tyrol. Yesterday a meeting of the execu- tives of the Socialist Party decided to recruit detachments the workers under the command of mili- tary officers in order to defend the offices of the Socialist newspaper, Munchener Post, and the headquar- ters of the trade unions, —_ <> or INJURIDS ACCIDENT. Frank Hermann, fifty-one years old. of No, 114 Weat 84th Street, dled at the Knickerbocker Hospital Avenue and Bast 180th Street, three-story 2878 Arthur Avenue, the Bronx. police, the bomb was made of dynn- mite and slugs of tron and steel. from into a panic, Station. Patrolman Florent Haerle of the Arthur Avenue house when DIES IN acto and women, paintings were ripped froin the lulaki, twenty THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1922. Residents in the vicinity of Arthur the Rronx, were driven to the street earty to-day by the explosion of a bomb tn a hallway on the first floor of the tenement house at No. The first floor of the building was wreckod. None of sixty persons living in the house was injured. According to tha The house is situated in the heart of an Itallan section and the detona- tion, which could be heard for blocks, thréw occupants of adjoining houses Quiet was restored by reserves of the Bronx Park Police the Bronx Parg Station had just passed be heard a loud explosion, followed by the crash of glass. In a few minutes the street was filled with excited men breakfast and that this te@ to an al- teroation in which he attempted to cut her throat with a razor, She ran screaming to the street, her husband following, and there Finelll was caught by Patrolman Stein who said he took the razor away from the angry hus- Stein then arrested Finelll. Richardson Street, Brooklyn, was held without bail for the Grand Jury by Magistrate Folwell in Bridge Plana Court, Brooklyn, to-day on a charge of attempted ous assault made by his wife, Fel Mrs. Fine!’ cused her of Jeavii t c } Patetaly ita ts Co's POSBAND CHASES WHEE smoke-filled bullding. As he started toward the stairway he nearly He Becomes Angry When Breakfast In Not Ready fell into the hole, He managed to Louis Finelli, fifty-two, of No. 72 climb to the first floor and from one of the apartments reached the fire- escape, where he lowered a drop Ia4- der to the street and assisted tenants to safety. A few minutes later Mike Ferrari and his brother-in-law, Angelo Cap- petti, both of No. 349 East 180th Street, the Bronx, proprietors of the coffee house, staggered out, dazed but uninjured. Meanwhile someone telephoned +o the Bronx Park Station, and Deputy Inspector William F. Day, Detective Dominick Caso and Sergt. Shields and the resrves went to the scene in auto- mobiles, The Bomb Squad was also notified and burried to the Arthur Avenue house. Deputy Inspector Day ordered the patrolmen to quiet the tenants and escort (hem back to their homes. Investigation by, the police showed that a time bomb made of dynamite had been set off in the hallway. was (fied with tron and Many were dug from the wa ings and flooring. The house cently renovated at considerable cost The interior was remodelled and a stueco front and sides put on the building. The lower floors of the building are used as stores. The upper floors are occupied by six families. Detectives satd that following the opening of the coffec house, two yeoks ago, by Ferrari and Cappett!, the majority of the people in the neighborhood patronized it because of 8 artistic decorations, They sald they were convinced the bomb had been placed in the hallway to wreck the coffee houne. eged her husband ac- g slow in preparing his band. Rich Creamy Milk —All You Want! Plenty for coffee—all you want for cereal, cessert or cooking. All without running up a big milk bill or being in any way extravagant. How?—simply by adopting Van Camp's as your milkman and keeping a supply of Van Camp's Milk in your pantry. it’s the purest, richest, safest milk high-bred herds and model dairies can produce. Supplied you at far less cost than bottled milk. Begin using Van Camp's Milk today. VAN CAMP’S MILK The sim: simplest way to end a corn is ceotan A touch stops the pain instantly. Then , % early to-duy ‘ | for ‘some distance. The residents of | from injuries he recelved ‘when struck | The explosion blew a large hole in ; 6 tablished {807 the corn loosens and comes | a aeiee ae aye i pan Ca by a bat yeh East] the flooring, tore down ceilings and Si out. Made in a colorless while e fighting was in pro, nigi ccording to wre . i i | When the altackers had been driven he number of the car} Wrecked tho stairway leading to the Aittes erie atiseea 3 off the National Army troops began And be one owned by | id floor, It shattered the walls action is the same. 7 | an extensivwsearch of the whole dis- f No. 143 West 63d] of u coffee house, Della Bella Napoli, | trict, idonted oil the peound. floo¥ ou ‘the Pain Stops Instantly . | south of the building. Valuable phan d ie peRlendcnnice § PTOWN serving tray ble tops of tere bro! Shouting bent and twisted, m: cracked and sware and crock ‘Tenth Avenue, ington Avenue, Jast night struck Mrs Lucy Kassan, forty-one years old, of No. 98 Amsterdam Avenue. She re- celved injuries about the head and body vas taken to Harlem Hospital to relinquish the p of th at the ‘congress. Poor health {3 to the tenants hy Virginia cigarettes in the convenient package Piedmont The Virginia Cigarette Qaacett & Myers TOBACCO Co, of the the majority of whom were DOWNTOWN Park Row & Chatham Sq 193 to 205 Park Row “Gverlasting Furniture” u 3rd A i] venue & 12ist Strect Ask. Your Grandfather 2212. to 2224 Third Ave. $200 Worth of Goods for $2.50 a Week - Other Amounts in Proportion, for instance : ann Hof MALT EXTRAC Bi fs T Furnish your home prettily, with attractive, sub- $15 Worth for 25c Weekly stantial goods by this simple arrangement. $50 Worth for 75c Weekly F Thousands of families are adding beauty, comfort, and $100 Worth for $1.50 Weekly happiness to their homes, by the wise use of credit on Cowperthwait & Sons’ liberal terms. Keep your savings for emergencies. Use your “small change” each week or month to pay for the furniture you enjoy. $1,000 Worth for $12.50 Weekly Pay by the month if you wish. No interest added. No extra charges of any kind. 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