The evening world. Newspaper, November 9, 1922, Page 3

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GREEK PRINCE STARTS + ONEILMUSLS ~GHECK BOOKS TD | - 7) RAGE BUS PROFITS Bronx *Under Sheriff Gol One-Third « Pro: for Whalen “Influence.” «FORMERLY DENIED | it Bus Driver Testifies $150 i) Was Paid for Transfer to Better Route. . Under Sheriff § ef the Bronx, reci hivd of the net profits of the West Farms Bus Corporation recompense through a ‘‘gentiemen’s agreement, tor seeing Commissioner Grover Whalen about a permit for tho cor- poration, was directed jp deliver his Old check books to-day to Clarence Sei Princess ANASTASIA Moxband of or Mra, Leeds, Here ta Decembely BRINDISHI, Italy, Nov. 9 (Asi Preéa).—Prince Christopher of Greece, brother of former King Conetantine, ha: arrtved here to-day on his way for his first visit to the United States. He will be Joined in Paris by his wife, Prin- ad J. Shearn, ‘special counsel to the} cess Anastasia, formerly Mrs. W - ped vine vos. | 6. Leeds. ¢ransit Commission, which is fnves-} © ey expect to arrive In New York in “tigating the bus business in this city. pecember. O'Neil will probably be a witness at this afternoon's session of thg com- mission. # When O'Neil was asked yestoniry vafternoon for lis check bvoks, produced one for the current mont), wut this was not what Mr. Shearn wanted. Tho Under Sheriff said ho was not sure he, liad kept any pre vious books but thought perhaps thers was cnt office. He said he didn't see An old check book was anyway. Mir. Shearn replicd that such bot JEALOUS HUSBAND -SHOOTS BOARDER, WIFE, KILLS SELF Entire Family Spend Night of vs about ts what were ‘“‘ofton valuable in proving aA pe ‘ things.” | Terror Locked in In an interview in ‘the Evening Rooms. ‘World on Nov. 1, O'Neil saidethat ‘lye ’ eri attempt of Mr. Shearn to link his ‘name with the receipt of part of the proceeds of the bus line was rigicu- (Special to The Evening World.) SOUTH NORWALK, Conn., Nov, 9. —After a night of terror, in which or ba mexe! ana] ‘2? entire, family locked thefnselves ‘cai Boece Naat ela he in their rooms, William Eckert, a hearn knows that as wel! as [ do,’ he said to an Evening World re porter. On the-stand yesterday after noon O'Neil admitted receiving one- third of the profits, but declared h> yemembered 20 such interview with The Evening World representativ = Jack Nachman, a former bus driver, itestified his partner paid $105 to a member of “Hig Tom’ Foley's club in the ist District, 10 be transferred retired gardener, sixty years old, shot wife and a boarder, perhaps tally, attempted to shoot a daughter 1 then shot himself in the forefiead, ving Instantly Lickert was waiting at the foot of the hall st when William Bodge, the boarder, enty-five years old, cnme down. ¥ t drew a new re- his 10 a good line and that, after the pay-| Volver and shot Bodge in the neck. ment, le heard he had been recom-| Mrs Eckert ran down after the shot mended to the bus off by Peter}and Eckert shot ber in the right Hamill, a member ¢ Fotey Ast ave in the Norwalk club. fospita The representative of the Ist Miss ‘Theima Eckert, twenty-two sembly District, over which Ie rs old, followed her mother down holds sway, is Assemblyman Pet the stair he ner attempted Hamill and is widely known in Tam-| shoot her, but ini He then §! vaany circles: He | at No. $85} himself in the head ard was dead Broome Street, and hos been an Ns-] when the doctors arrived j mblyman seven years machinist with a wife } Richard Murphy, brother-inlaw of in Bridgeport. His wife \ e late Arthur H. Murphy, Tammany {jas had him arreseted several times letder of the Bronx and executor of} for non-support. He has been a | the Murphy estate. testined that onc- | boarder the Eckert home for sev \@ third of the profits of the Franken- |], hs and frequent! t . berg line, umounting to more th ut in bis automobile. $8,000 In five months, has been mud] 41 {s believed Eckert thought Bodge to the Murphy estate by Ferdinand tention to his wife. He W. Frankenbers, esident of t iely Jealous and last night gorporation wan so violent that all the members He could not explain why the Rorcthelr-stvee Murphy estate si en Mr. Murphy ney or done any get this mo Ad not put ap any for the 0 PLAY HERE, work \ ‘yhe Manhattan Chess Club has made «company. be O'Neill" only ox arr ment ron exhibition of sinul- . planation of the payment wus that ; peak j ; ous chess play to be given by Jose y \P{o'Neill was very friendly with Mr. i rT ite eRe Bc t Murphy and went to hin and sue- | ‘ sae oes a gested he join in the profits of the] © ining here trom 2 company, and Mrankenberg agrecd anc, whéte recently he won first a Frankenbergs is facings prosecution] prize in the international tournament of = e of pert y ing tritish Chess Vederation in. Lon- on a charge of perjury for tevtifying Brith 4g | he did nq know two-thinis of the{ Won. Ou Thursday evening. Nov. 16, of the line tor whic he champion will meet all comers up Mpa sne money ans did: all hs where the club has its headquarters, went to Murphy und O'Neill awore they went to Christian - Bros- chart, deputy sheriff ef Bronx, and Leuls Karsch of Mount Vernon Karach has testificd he acted as a dummy” for Mr. Murphy. Bros- chaz yesterday took the stand and testified he acted as a ‘dummy" for Mr. O'Neill. Broschart, as Karsch did, testified he had never received any of the profits, had never visited] vation” linc In Flushing to the the office of the bus company nor.at- am” line on Madison Street in tended any meetings of the stockhold- this o ers, although his name appeared as an owner of one-third of the stock, The Nachman testimony day followed the previous in the testimony ef an affidavit by him that he had pald 8160 to Moe Rappaport, a member of ‘Tom Foley's club, to®be transferred from a “star- ves: inclusion re ON His mince staRrs, | Margot Asquith and Chesterton eee. | Give Americans Opportunity. to ted | I THE EVENING WORLD, T “See Oursel’s as Ithers See Us The Two Noted English Writers Are the-Ones Who Did the “Seeing” and Records bf Their Observa- tions Are Shown in Parallel Columns. ~ . ‘By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. On, wad rome power the gifts To see oursel's as ithers seo us gie ue MERICANS, at least, need not echo this familiar plea of Robert A Burns's—not’ so long as noted English men and women ‘ome ovet to visit us, and return home to write @pout us, Thanks to them and thetr publishers, we have frequent opportunities to see our- selves as others see us-—even if the visions of our visitors sometimes make us feel that they are in need of a good pair of American spectacles! There is truth, however, as well as humor and godd feeling In the coniments of two of our most recent guosts from overseas—Margot Azauith, wife of the gieat Liberal statesman, H. H. Asquith, whose “Impressiuns of America’ have just been published by George H, Doran; and G.-K. Chesterton, dramatist, essayist, poet and humorist, whose Jast brilliant book, “What I Saw in Ameri€a,” has been brought out by Deddy Mead & Ce The Evening World prints below some of the most incisive and amusing comments of Britain's wittiest woman and Britain's. wit \man on such topics of current Interest as Amerigfin Prohibition, New York, American men and women, and American “freedom.” MARGOT ASQUITH. ||| G. K. CHESTERTON” ON PROHIIBTION. ON PROHIBITION. “For the Information of any one “{ went to Aimerica with some who may thinkf as I did, that notion of not discussing Pro- diving Has Goeteaded*tand that in hibition. Bbt I soon found that : ri well-to-do Americans were only oi 4 bi ex! aver too delighted to here js wie, so- | ‘iscuss it over the nuts and ber and happy, wine, They were T can only say even willing, :f the ‘reverse Is ie Reccamaly, iv the truth, I can- pense viet not write of the poorer classes, he first on whom, in thing to be said any case, the about it is that law js hard, but it does not exist, It is to some ex- tent enforced among the rich I do not suppose there was ever , Y among the poor; at any rate, it 0 much alcohol vts intended to be enforced concealed and enjoyed as at the among the poor. It 1s Inly present moment in Young men and maidens, who be- fore this exaggerated interference would have been content with the Ightest of wines, think it nerica, not enforced among the rich; and 1 doubt whether it was intended tobe. * * © ‘The real power behind Prohibition is simply the plutocratic power of the pushing smart to break the low every day employers who wish to get the and night of their ves. last inch of work out of their “A very short visit over here workmen, has convinged me that Pro- “It has long been recognized hibition, as at present adminis- that America was an asylum. It tered, is both ‘Indicrous and is only since Prohibition t it cruel.” has looked a little like a linat asylum . ON NEW YORK. c va e “With the except Tay On NEW YORK. ; ; cehsratiaers New York is an jsiand, and T have never seen a modern town has all the intensive romance « comparabie w York. ‘The an island, It is at of al color of the and lightness ' infinite height vane nite scaulas nut ARATE nite foundatio tts t 1 lofty nase a a ce CT ¢ an Amertean Ewe ah NS i Soo yank t a amous ¢ yin the air, and a general Tha mosphere icty and mo aa si ment which I find Infinitely Beets a lan i el stimulating in New Yor! the confusion of tong stimulating he phone in York WOrks miracles all d But ON AMERICAN MEN. thee “the ‘postal : ork does not w Het (the American man) “is feuue ri aes seldom fashionable and never working.’ e dy Ne ‘ on for ng ali that t 's tov» ON AMERICAN MEN. and holds vigorous views “One of the first impressions of must thing If a little Arai 8 that of a sort of mob aa of business men opie n narrative never “ é but an absolut # about in groups, In article; spontaneous, an gravity. ag . héspitable and keen, Hi Pipe of peace: though, appears to treat women folk most of ilem are smokin With the patience and indulgence and some of them are you ext to spoilt children, cigars, - t to dixcuss mat- “The noe See nplltieet: the th with them, and is agreeably sur maya r prised (€ you show any interest In Iu bustling Wall Street White House"? American business ian ts alwa lata, © © © The American Is too busy to have business habits.” ON AMERICAN WOMEN. BAY a Auta HADI erie most noticeable tins {ON AMERICAN WOMEN, nbout American nis: thete “Americans all dress well: one freedom from ni anil. No might almost say that American Wank cheque could be more women all look well; but they do adequately filled tn, and T never no’ ed with Buropean cease wondering what can the look very different, T think (ce seeret: . suclal tend too much to this cult of mechanism wl to Took at impersonal pecsonality, © © «© and elegantly dress with an The old women can be more beau open mind whatever tople tiful than the young." is discus laptable, available, ea, eae od-humored, the “ ” nich ral eoud-bunored. 06 ON AMERICAN “FREEDOM. the last word in Idliness and “tt seems to mo a very reat fastion.* problem * * © why, whe there is no genuine a sense of " “FREEDOM. uman dignity, there should tr ON AMERICAN “FREED uch of an impossible pett " ask us to mode! ourselves or at in {HPBtates which pun the sin ee jee : . drink forget that there are State , . which punish the equajiy shame chubs, Bis ur Jeg sin of smokin igaret in forbid wr the open a Amer ‘ean: Uk \ ° ean atmosphert Nis es oe Hibition permits be . Punished for ot e Un | In other wo! re ure Sta fveb country 4 er “The ingrained tdea that {tue ne cause there i no } nd | front door, ov e that cespise Uitles, the Ar Ww a anybody eho. There @ people:is ja si an American atmosphere {n wre ee Bary tee | Bhlch people may some day 1 with persone ; shot for shaking hends, or hange that would bs for. writin Ponta: AB? Ingland for a vers to Whieh 1 ~ IAMOND an Newsy TEAR $1,000 DIA! © full of it and there fa no nam FROM WOMAN’S FINGER] fr it but more madness | | Ing a physictan ' Kose] 1 ' GT ieeign: chittae desk ctat home at} you fulh Na. 100 Gesend jlemer sal i 1 ronsacked Uti ' t bell of ber aparlment, strest 93 7 *In we the zines, It skull. pines. ting b got so to lov “By tiful me heir that) the operation, matter. KNIFE MAY CURE: HM, SAYS PRISONER IN UNUSUAL PLEA -~<>-—— College Man on Island Asks Permission to Undergo an Operation. hope that surgical operation, - Mr. Ruston and Dr. Ernest M. Vaughan of Brooklyn, who has recommended are considering the is believed Mr. Ruston WHI arrange for Lester's transfer to a hospltal so the operation may be performed. Lester, who has refused to give his real name and address, said he came of & prominent Virginia family, was a college graduate with a degree and a writer of short stories for maga- He was sent to the Island last With hooked over the brass rail Mr, Rouse exemplified the Coue doctrine by get- ter and better In every until he decided tqexnose OYPoole for he sake of thé moral lesson taught by 1 anc at hin namo of Pitti, which ma tion a bit complex. hario, ience, 4 month of “Then 1 They else al i said the Island of e's happy 4 ing a worthless check on a Brooklyn tailor. He ed more than four years in for similar offenses. is believed that a fall from a horse ten ye severe blow upon the head may ac- count for Vaughan said that in all probability Lester is suffering from a fractured ago which caused a Lester's criminality, Dr; Three Dusky Brides Bring Awful Vengeance on Cook pened to Terrence Lothario O’Toole. The harrowing tale of the vengeance taken by three dusky pipplns, Sitti, Litti and Pitti, against one Terrence Lothario O’Togle, an unscrupu- lous sea cook, was brought home today by Henry Rouse, chfef engineer of the steamship Manlius, which came into Port Newark from the) Philip: the heel of his left shoe way vole, if Uve got the name Mr, Rouse, “landed on Samar last summer and wildeved by looking at beau- Ss and stars and eyes and forgot to go back to his aw it sailins aw 1 settled down to liv two later he married a ne of Sitti and loved that he thought wo or three more he'd like Uke her, is contrary to law and morality y and morality didn't: mean as errence, nd he sn 1 married a away flapper by name of Litti. is time he had acquired tie so he went recklessiy forth another wife, a queen te th however, being a managed fairly we! keeping the thr and affectionate somebody told Litt; some- told Sittt; and Pittl just had her suspicions, And ys were over, r to the Judge man 1 for of 0, ned him ov it will cure his criminal tendencies, George V. Lester, @ Blackwolls Island prisooner, bas ap- pealed to District Attorney Ruston, of Brooktyh, to permit him to undergo a dangerous 1 HURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, @%o. ELEANOR G. MITCHELL IS NOW ‘THE BRIDE OF ator |PROSPERITY HERE, > | BI BUSINESS MEN CONFIDENTLY SAY Ten Lines of Industry They Report Increases in Trade. “ ive In (Copyright, 1928, by Cn Prosperity and winter are coming on hand in hand, according to a aym- Porsium of the Nation's great indus tries. od Pron.) ne Increased employment, vouched’ fort by the gr mitting 6 purchasing publie, per. busin ore with lower Driew, and a genertt settling down to bormaley ere given as some of the reasons for thé unanimous, optimisite utlook toward the coming winter and apring. Among the industries cans vassed werg; Packing, textiles; hotets, movies, elthing, shoos, automobttds, furniture and the American Warm Bureau. Exelusive statements trom heads of these industries follow PACKING “The meat-packing business is Ina better condition than it has been for several years,'! de- clared Charles KE. Herrick, President of the Instinite of American Meat Packers. "Meat values are more stable now, and the export somewhat larger than during pre-war ras: ” TEKTILES—The outlook in the cotton and wool industries ia very encouraging, according te Alston H. javside, head of the Industrial De~ partment of the Merchant Nafienal Bank of 1 Mills have in- A oper & paint x » now runging.on an average 90 per cent, of normal,” Garside ays. “For the present the mills a recolving a large volume of orders. HOTELS — “hiverything Indicates prosperity,” says B. N. Statler, head ofthe Statler Hotele System, ‘We have ni @ decided increase ta burt Ceremony Was. in. Central Baptist Church Yester- . day Afternoon The marriage of Miss anor Grant Mitchell and Arthur C.) Back- ingham took place at 3 P. M. yester- day afternoon in the vestry room of the Central Baptist Chaireli, 92d Street and Amsterdam Avenue. Dr. Frank M, Goodchild officiated. Mra. Charles Heritage and Mra. Ralph [snyder were the tide (Px ness {fim the last sixty to ine! a eet Q ; (} days throughout the cities in which hip’s Engineer Shudders Relating Tale of What Hap-| «ov te. Thin ew prosper CLOTHING—-Samuel Weill, Pr dent of the Stein-Bloch Company. wholesule clothiers, anys: » Our tr shows marked Improvement, and the sprit ules are increasing substan- tially.’ SHOES “Business to-day is much better than it was a year ao,"" ray i 1. Holmes Dalton, an official of the at Oras, which is the port of Mamar.| Brockton Shoe Contpany, ‘Manufac- There was a trial that listed nearly] turers bell hard Umes“are behind half an hour, ence cringing be-{ Md sound prosperity ahead, Not 1] boon times, but frood conditions with i a or er de shoes. that kind of an officerin that kind] 4 demand for higher grade of a court—keeping out of range off AUTOM O BIL B8 —\'Bunintan his wives. He forward] # Volding up well ddring the, rate with some satisfaction term in} Part nd proapects for 19 bright.” said HM hind the bailiff, or whateyer they was lo@king to Jail, where the women could not get{# . at him. Jowett, President of the Paige Com- But that's where he mixeed hie] pany, In Detroit, ‘The Dort Motor ‘onenany of FIL ch. and Dodge gitess. Samar justice is different, As f Flint, Mich. and Dodice noon an Terrance wax foudd eullte the others, agree that 1923 will be a ord year Judge scratched ‘his head and frowned ay "4 r trying to Invent something: hémibia,| FYRNITURE—There Is no Justiti He ‘euccoeded lon for a material increase in fur- ; niture prices, says Willlam B, W. Young man," he said, or words ford, secretary of the Retail Furni- te AMHAE (esfogh) eSOUr jecnence, itil Ae tion of America, peng ogee $n #: locked perience seems to rence smiled t the support of amuse nembering that in the ments follows rather than precedes be more likely to be thre general prosperity,” declared Wil Be the Judge was not thro Hays, High Commissioner of the “You will be lock hel Movies. ‘fn almost every locality t cont 1, ‘and your thr will[atterdance at motion picture theatres be locked in with you—and may Con-1 {4 now increasing,” he said, Cecil B fucis or somebody rey on} DeMilly, producer and director, de pur soul.’ clared prosperity 18 he Vell, they say Terrence fainted] CROPS.—This has been a yeur but I don't know, All T de know ts] good production of grain and other that when he got out he was a sight.| crops, but, according to the American He woultn't talk much about it be-] arn Bure be farmer wil ho yond sayings that Pitt the most pitiloss of the tot."* Mr. Rouse paused, sighed, unhooked hfs heel, and added: “They don't go in for bigamy niu in Sa Flags Train, Saves Hundreds ; And His Reward Totals $21.27 dup [press Speeding Toward Broken Rail in Jer: Heroic Brakeman Warned. RICHLAND, N. J, Nov. 9 ~How into? ybalahy of the stion or ohe very simila Is being muiled today Morattl Tich! whkwalker, who gam terday morning to nsylvania express nd, # led with of between 1 Camden and won, Mo: much Monized by the of the train, one of whom hut around in erder to vartioular gratitude. As ¢ i Moratt! completed the ting up the nickels, dime: that went into the hat he If richer by $21.2 trackwalker nar n bringing the tr od fonr-square tn the track in,a fog franti = his urms, and kept his itil he nad to | into # 1 being hurled $y racing motive engi saw inn ind brought his tral ing that he had st Joc ‘ered land A express | He wh ui knew t express, which us A as far us We ao due ip (wo minutes und the | siation a minut , much fs It worth In money of passengers on a luxurious twelve-car rallroad express train| speeding at sixty-five miles an hour, to be saved from a broken rall and| nsequent disaster, particularly when the rescuer displays all sorts of} sorolem and faces death in order to warn the engineer of the danger be |s| CIGA ey When to hun now —— ran in the direction of the oncom Py bh ‘ OER ‘ 8 COL. HARVEY IN HIS “SOUL” TALK, SAYS oe MRS. MARCELLUS THOMPSON Mrs, Thompsons, Sal to Visit ayendor, Think He Spoke in Jent. “Lethe people knew dad as 1 40, they would not have taken his remark that women have no souls, too seri- ousty,"" suid Mrs, Marcellus HH. Thompson, daughter of Col. George Harvey, American Ambassador to Great Britain, as she sailed yesterday with her daughter Porethy, ex ths United States Lines steamship Presi- dent Van Buren, to spend the holidays with ler father In London. “Father has a great sense of humer ard ! heve no doubt the expression wid made in @ spirit of Tevity.* <i ptm CAUGHT BETWEEN TWO TROLLEY CARS, COLLAR- a BONE IS BROKEN Michaet cling, Elgxhteen, Too Brondly Botit to 8 Between Opi ¢-Going “Hobble-Skirts.” Miehael Tusseltino, dghteen, No. 185 Adarhs Street, Brooklyn, was painfully injured this morning “chen he was caught between two Broadway aurfacs curs as le tried to cross the street in front of the Woolworth Building. ‘Tua- lino Is ® heavy man, too broadly butlt for the narrow space between the “hobble-akirt’’ cars passing on the nortn and douthbound tracks, He was pressed so tightly that his collarbone was en and It is feared that there may have been other Internal injuries. He was taken tothe Trond Street Hospital, TraMe was held up for several min- utes while ‘Traffic Policeman William ‘Troeller and another policeman got Tus: sellino out, CONVIOTE WURGLAR GE 2 YEARS, Lewis Wiley, twenty-six, No, | 619 West 15th Street, an ex-convict, was sentenced to Sing Sing for fifteen years to life by Judge Talley in the Court of General Sessions to-day: He had been convicted of burglary as a second of- idence was that he en- of William Collins, No. st 136th Street, last June, stole containing $2 cents and struck with a sash weight to etop his outery. Wiley was examined as to his sanity and pronounced sane. = a because of the lack of sufficient to move grain, high rates of ration, and because the farm- ey cannot get large enough loans, RATIMA RETTES / for TWENTY ing ¢ 9 as fast as his ou hav he would experienee ened There is no other ee jou! in altruetin 1 | . > & tien of the engine On and vn "Iwar i] bs} mbt nd the clanging ot th a at such a price. hied, and he ¥ ; | shen the giant love ' | f the ha | When Moratti's stor point’ he indicated, and un] f ta ily eon as, a new rail was Inid. ih at sengera heard the atery and ftlocke around the hero, patilag him 4 back and otherwise volcing train continued on its way - LEVIRED MERCHANT Dits an COART HEADRT, rte ; | ima smakers laternment, 1

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