The evening world. Newspaper, November 23, 1922, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MINE FIRE DEATH LIST NOW 84:1 ~ To-Night’s Weather—FAIR. ‘Pen EDITION VOL. LXIII. NO. 22,213—DAILY. Cire: Copyright (New York Werld) by Frese Poblishing Company, 1928. nlation Books Open to All.’’ NEW YORK, PROSEE —>—° New Evidence Shows Smoul- dering ‘itterness Swayed Home of Rector. WIFE WAS ‘SUSPICIOUS.’ Minister Hastened to Mrs. Mills When He Found She Had Learned Something. (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., 23.—A state of smouldering anger s Suspicion in the second week of Sep- tember in the home of the Rev. Ed- ward Wheeler Hall revealed by witnesses whose confidence has been gained the rking ‘ander che direction of Special Deputy is by investigators wi Attorney General Molt and James Mason, his chief detective, in the Ball-Mills murder cave. It ts to be “presented to the Grand Jury when it Widowhood or Diverce. Mrs. Mills are believed to have been the title of Vaince of widowlonl or divor The Princess’ farewell wa: by Spectal Dey Mott as merely eral prevalenc ty Attorney General onfirming the of night disorders in returns to its study of the murder Monday The testimony of Mrs. Emma Voor- hees, seventy years old, of which| Drops Title of Royalty, to much has been mace, is regarded by Resumed Only in Event of only In the event celebrated Gunmen Get $5,000 in Restauran MIRS. HALL IN ANGRY MOOD foBBERS waexx SPEECHES OF TIGER HERE TWO DAYS BEFORE MURDER. UTOR NOW LEARNS PRINCESS DAGMAR WEDS LIEUT. CASTENSKJOLD, WHO IS A COMMONER BANK, SHOOTING MAYOR, MARSHAL Six Escape With $4,000 After Fighting Gun Battle With Citizens. FAIL TO FIND $30,000. Heavy Expiosion Wakes Whole Town and Stuns Robbers Themselves. GALLATIN, Mo., Noy. 23.—The Mayor, the Town Marshal and a hotel keeper were wounded and the First Nationa! Bank badly damaged when robbers raided Gallatin early to-day. They escaped with $4,000 after cut- ting lines of communication. Six robbers, believed to be of the Kansas City underworld, perpetrated the sensational raid. They were dis- covered at work on the vault of the bank At 4 o'clock this morning by Marshal John Chamberlain. A brief tussle ensued in which Chamberlain was captured. The raiders proceeded with their work. Explosives set before the vault caused two tremendous shocks that wakened the entire town. Clouds of smoke rolled from the bank as furni- ture and fixtures were hurled in all directions, partitions reduced to kin- dling and windows blown out, The the Prosecutor's office cs only of| | Widerwhoed or Diverse. || 11 sate parted like a cardboard Bpeerene smbortance clated Press)—The marriage of Prin- } box Life on Faston Road, on the out-| cess Dagmar, youngest sister of King] Stunned by the unexpectedly heavy rts of New Brunswick, was hectic| Ciristlan, to Lieut. Joergen Castensk-| blasts, the robbers forgot Chamber- he R 1 's celebrated to-day. ‘The cere- , who opened fire, After an ex om tho night the Rev. Mr. Hall and] hold, wai lek d to-da The cere-] lain, w ‘ : mony was performed in the church|change of shots, Chamberlain fell f ai the Castle Fredensborg, one of the . , killed. This has been sufficiently ¢8-| summer residences of the Danish (Continued on Second Page.) tablished by cloud of witnesses| Kings, by the Very Rey, Dr. Fenger, —_ brought to Nght in the murder in-] the Royal Confessionaiist yestigation, although their stories] The bride was given away by the may or may not have had any bearing | Dowager Queen Loui n conform om the murder ca ance with the wishes of the Queen The testimony of Mrs, Voorhees,| the marriage was strictly private. who lived sbout two milos from the] The co will spend their honey- Phillips farm, was that she saw an| moon travelling in Denmark and will angry quarrel between two omo-|eventtully settle on Lieut, Castensk bile parties, heard twc ts fired and| jold’s modest Jutland estate, at saw both automobiles go at a furious! Kongstediund speed back toward New Brunswick] At her own request, the bride will and the Phillips farm, This is taken | be styled Mrs. Castenskjold, retaining GHANGERY COURT that neighborhood at the Fredensborg Castle last eve-}| ondon Wenies He Already “phe Italians are at it ning with the so-called “Pjoltera- ie Kitty Fraley called to her mothe deng” a son ival, in which Kings] 1s Deported, but Declines thelr home across De Russey Lane] Haakon and Crown Pr Olav of Me iee lynne from the Phillips farm when she who. were among. the royal to Give Whereabouts. heard the ts that undoubte participated ai ended the lives of the minister and his — DUBLIN, UNEV on) UAsioeiatad OE ‘Mott YOUNG WIFE KILLED Press).—A writ of habeas corpus was r. Mott does not want the Grand ‘ess ).— r a a Jurors to feel that anything is being WHEN SHE REFUSES TO refused Erskine Childers, Lieutenant held back from them. He does notl ELOPE WITH ANOTHER| or amon De Valera, by the Master want it said that the Grand Jurors a ecehaeeuia (arden did not have full facilities for pass-| Love-Crazed Man Escapes Crowd bs . application iby Patrich ing judgment on the persistent story caving it With Pistol, ro an appli : f that Mr. Hall and Mrs, Mills we When Mra. Elsie Sparace, twenty-| Lynch, Childers’ counsel, for a stay killed elsewhere and taken to theligo No, git East 164th Street, the] of execution the Judge replied that knoll under the crabapple tree Bronx, spurned the love of another] j¢ could not give i, as he had no But it has already been established] ee oP sed to-day, for the id that a purty of Negro bighwaymen} twentieth time, to leave her husband | 7? a , + didarer robbed ui automobile party on and elope with him, she was shot] In refusing the writ, the } aay! Road that night; that o highly dead in the hallway of No. 112 East| declared he must take judicial no spectable’’ church member wis On @) roth strect, by the loye-crazed man, {the fact that southern Treland titious jaunt with the daugt tice of thi surreptitious ja with the daugh-] wig escaped after threatening a crowd ‘ . t ter of a fellow church member in the] Wt © 5 iS Acrowd] 1.24 jcon enduring 4 etate of war (or sume vicinity—and it ts tromgely Police have sent out a generaj| months. and t slainly it was the stil night in Central New Jersey! atarm for Janes Corbett, thirty-two, | duty of the vernment, whether when the cr ling of the small arms No. 408 East 128d Street, who, they sional) or flue constituted, to of high-jacking bootleggers is not 3 ¥ | provisional oh aid: the preserve and save the country from (ot ed on Second Page.) Be Women at the place} orn ist be met t Senn lipued 60 bs where her mother Anna Brau- | d2structior Be —<— — — = r , | mann, employed. Her mother] force A VALUABLE Jreara « man's ae Chiiders had entered the Civil Court “For the last time, will you marry tecti hile Jaiming alin % y K . for protection, while proclai ig ain GUIDE FOR Oe rcwequlan't merry ven AES self a soldier of the Irish ,SopnDp mT wouldn't marry you you were HOMESEE KE RSline tast man on earth,” answerea| The answer must be that tbe court's oo] the young woman jurisdiction was ousted by the stale nen you will never be any good pee ders self ba The popularity of The Sunday t> anyone: clea!" shouted ee pe re Dekel hilders himself bad World Real Kstate Section seems |-tie mother dashed to the de helped to produce. ‘a > inoreaso with cach succond: [p50 lor qn time to prevent: the ee | ee ee neld that Bie ruling alte ing issue. Homescekers and fo- | A 4ar a tulle into hor dameherns | epplie? to the elght other prisoners, *yestors find it contains all the [yoo | wughter's| whose names have not been an- real estate information worth A erawal tried’ Io lcloas | nounced while. Read the interesting hous- eee ee the ee ie eae DON, Nov. 23. (Associated ing announcements next Sunday, |™An Waving th ie ‘ol he escaped The Colonial Office has World “Real Estate” and) "°f"® Police arrival, t Erskine Childers had 28,64 “To Let” ads. last month| PACKERS’ MERGER TO GO BF. by the Provisional Lrish more than corresponding r HARDING, Free State Government to Ascension 4 82 month last year, ASHINGTON, Nov, 23.—Legai as-| (sland, although the officials declined ? pects of the proposed merger of the| to state where he is being held. “As Ae a oe hcking interests! cension Island” a believed here to he > are \ ly by the artment 0 THE SUNDAY WORLD — | icc", "was teurnet’toreay. arth “| merely & slang name for one of the Tl view of laying a comprehensive formal | !s!ands of SERB CORSE WHICH 18 REAL ESTATE SE ON report before the Cabinet at an early| being used by the Free Staters cs « IN OVER 600,000 HOMES | meeting detention camp. , STIR OFFICIAL WASHINGTON: OVATION ON WAY 10 BOSTON ea Re White House Fears Country | Jubilant May Be Influenced by Say ‘ What He Says. om Over Criticism, That’s What | Came For.” SAID.} WORKS ON N EW SPL NOTHING NEW CH But Old Arguments Are|Travelling in State to Hub, Made Effective—Harding | He Hopes to “Wake Them Change of View Forecast. Up,” as in New York. By David Lawrence. ON BOARD CLEMENCEAU'S PRI- (Special Correspondent of The Eve-| VATE CAR. ROUTE TO BOS- ning World.) TON, (Associated Press).— WASHINGTON, Nov (Copy- | Jubilant that at last set right). —The Clemenceau visit to] America talking about Vrance and America ts beginning to take on a] French relations, Georges Clemenceau much more serious aspect than the] Worked to-day on a new appeal and a new broadside of friendly criticism to be launched in his Boston. speech. mere lecture trip of « distinguished statesman. Unofficial, informal, absolutely dis-| The aged ex-Premter of France was connected from the Government keenly interested in news of how his France and “without a mission’ in the | "emarks were being received, es- formal sense, nevertheless the con in oMfcial Washington. He feoubal effort or Tile foriner Hrentier of Nol Col. Stephen Bonsal,” his" eur conductor, that some of the comment indicated that France to influent opinion has drawn fire American public from those in the need for informa- tion in some quarters was “even the United States Senate who fear! greater than he had realized.’ America may he influenced by what] put all the discussion was more M. Clemenceau writes or say than welcome, he declared. “That's The United States Government,| what E came for.” he s: “1 don't meaning President Harding S%-lthink for a moment that 1 am the retary Hughes, who are charged With | cole repository of truth, though I the responsibility of foreign poliey.{know TL have a great dea faces an awkward ani delicate situa The Tiger rode in millionaire style tion, To reply to M. Clemencaulin Charles M. Schwab's private car, means taking official nizance of |r), ifetiem.) AIG RI Was amnutly what he says and reviving « contro-| consisting of himself, Col. Bonsal, his versy which the Administration here | scoretary, stenographer and valet, and is particularly anxious to avoir, est erat Sarviés mat cially since the press of dome ween snatches, of we ' questions is making antagonisms 94] posed to gaze out the c ndow factions enough 1 admire t scenery. FE pelared aut M. Clemenceau’s utterances an salt ie aeeal LOVIN, Wd Wala HE. writings will not go unanswered. He}... ready to give his Hoston auditor has his defenders as ¥ as oppo much of his " as he | nents in this country, and whatever | ive those in New York, which, he may be the final judgment of the] jaded, was ‘all of it American people as to the cone Clemenceau had laid down for a questions raised by the former], ab atten 16H th a Premier, he has already accomplished | oy giept until the train. pulled into one object—ho has stirred up foreign |... dtaven. He was sleeping soundly Questions unew and focused "Then he passed through Stamford, the on them, in which he met Mary Plummer, There: hye ‘been signs th the girl whom he made his first wife pean matters would be nen’ Chana eanturwuage., wa front anyhow by that group All AMER EHS LIMOL Ode Ini waln ternational co-operationists in the K of seeing him. He was routed publican and Democratle Part ) taka Rath bir ehleatidente. at believe the plight of Europe ts SW. Hawes arably interwoven in the “prosperity |)" vs disclosed to-day that yeate of America and the future of ou ; Souatproanincin New Ye port trade particularly agricult the eighty-or products: | Two ph an Hints have been comir | aiandons his £2 White House that the ea | Van ta EGON ne (Continued on Second Pag Hay nuked eres MISHAPS ON SUBWAY t ae ri AND ELEVATED LINES vi © dan Med | DELAY THOUSANDS | '""" : Aides ‘Vraion Break Down at ¥ Nowe)" Sette ak—Uptown and Brooklyo rhe t mort Travellers Are Late r tne po : Severs! thousand person 1 appron At layed in getting to thelr wo! hattan this morning when me hued on ‘twen ' ) trouble developed on a on the Culver line of DEMOCRAT APPOINTED elena lel Hal ld TO U. S. SUPREME COURT Bt HAS: Dielane ‘anc xmeahasis Pierce Butler of St. Paul Che paired the diMoulty at %. 0 ~ Wiesed Bay ‘The delay took plac \SHINGTON of the rush hour, but the crew f Pa 1 well handled by police and 5 Presid \ on (he elevated were given t . Tats to continue on their way to 7 aboard surface cars. Many ¢ ation of As } walked across the brid mu 4 stallec train had been repaired acticin: y tinued to Manhattan and resumed 358 and hi A leak in the oir brake , H , Kingsbridge-Jerowie Avenue | ‘ i x southbound, at 8.20 o'clac ' 1 ing caused a tie-up of fifteen mi ae : in the Lexington Avenue subwa MAS; FRUTON ACCEPTS OFFIC the 86th Street express statio WITH WAMANIS PARTS affected all succeeding trains on FABHINGTON, “Noy. 2 ae as the Jerome Avenue and the West a Womans cone sas Farms branches. Trains ‘pile | (rat woman Henator, had ath as far north as 149th Street on 'h*) pox: of honorary chalrm * pa West Farms branch and 161st 5 nl council, formed pe with the on the Jerome Avenue branch, T ot of bringing about partict ands of persons were late in ation hY women and men in «!! politiea! ing for work a# « result of the THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1922, Circulation Books Open to All.” } Fatered Post { Hold-up; One Office, New York, NJURED To: Morrow's Weather—-FAIR. EDITION as Second-Clayvs Matter GUNMEN HOLD UP TVINRESTAURANT, ONE SHO BY cP Four Robbers Line Up Wo- men and Men—Get $5,000 Gems and Cash. START OFF IN TAXI. !Policeman’s Fire Brings One Down After Chase—Thugs Quickly Rounded Up. hour young robbers, armed but un- held up the proprietor, a and nine patrons in Samuel Seamon's delicatessen and restaurant, No. 194 Manhattan Avenue, corner of 108th Street, at 1 A. M. to-day, eetting betwetn $3,000 afd $5,000 in sh amd jewelry Six shots were fired at the taxteab which they escaped by William est of No. 44 West 106th Street, @ former policeman, who was eating im the place, and one of the robbers was wounded The taxicab was found two hours later at First Avenue and 79th Street There was a bullet bola in the Lack and in the door, the floor was covered with blood, and the-card of one of the men robbed was found on a seat Scattered about was $7, masked, clerk te Two men in the taxicab were de- tained and while the police were searching for the robber gang the wounded one appeared at St. Vincent's Hospital four and within another hour a of the band were under arrest. Seasnon lives at No, 142 Vermilyea Avenue, Washington Heights. He and his clerk, Morris Schaeffer of No. 66 West 107th Street, were behind the counter up in women, when a yellow taxical drew front of the place. Three including former Policeman West's wife, and six men, were eut- ing at the tables in the back of the place, a full view of which can be had from the street. HOLD UP VICTIMS AT PISTOL POINT. The four men lMned up in front of the counter, two with revolvers point- at Seamon and bis clerk, and the others with their right hands over what appeared to be weapons in their overcoat pockets. They ardered che two men to put up their hands, and two ran behind the counter, backed mon and Schaeffer up against the and took $100 from the cash reg- ister They then went throug pockets and got $100 more the clerk, $65, Meanwhile th two went back into the dining room “We just Jost a couple of ‘grand (41,000),"" one said to the nine dine “and we need some jack. Sit stil! and on't move."” They Wned them all up against th 1 West and bis wife had been at a option and were in evening clothes Twenty feet away In West's overcoat pocket was his revolver, He fe 1 was attached to the West 123 tation vetired 0} und was (Continued on Second Page) ee 15 FIREMEN NEAR DEA‘H IN $100,000 JERSEY FIRE Shout Warne Men of Danger From Falling Wa ELIZABETH, N. J.. Nov. 22.—Fif death b in nen escaped caved wall which while they n destroyed tne Sout of the Heidritter inte night. A ga fire w 1 Company out from a Deput Chief wart men in time Tha blaze was of unknown origin fH B. Wolff, secret of the co placed lows at $100,000, a wh ts fully covered by Insuranc oo OLD NATIONAL LEAGUE UMPIRE PASSES AWAY MANSFIELD, © Nnv 3 Charles ('Sandy’') MoDermot'. fo mer Nations agus haseba m pire, died here to-day after an i of several months, He wan ut sixty yours old, Tin umpired in the National L during 1886 to 1888 64 DEATHS, 60 INJURED IN OFFICIAL REPORT OF COAL MINE EXPLOSION Thirty-Eight Whites Killed, Twenty Injured— Sixty Rescued From Pocket in Which They Had Barricaded Themselves — Runaway Tram Caused Fire-—-Doctor Rescues Many. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Nov. 23.--Kighty-four lives were lost and sixty persons were injured, as a result of an accident and explosion yesterday in Dolomite No, 3 coal mine of the Woodward Iron Company, according to a statement issued at noon to-day by Frank H. Crockard. ARE INDICTED BY USTED RUM JURY fication that hour had not been completed but it was belleved that there thirty-eight white dead Aided in Fraudulent With- drawal of 4,900 Cases of Whiskey, Is Charge. at were and twenty white injured, Company offi¢ials announced that all bodies had been removed from the pit, in which 473 men were trapped by fire late yos- terday Frantically battling against after- damp for three and one-half hours, Miners, pocketed in the forty second west entry of the ming, were rescued after they had beep given up for fo: Th sixty sixty men. working. in. the “be Prohibition Scandal Grand Jury enrty leading directly from the d, empanelicd last September and dis-] were completely shut off from escape missed with a rebuke by District] rojowing the blast. Fearing to, ente: Judge Foster handed up as the result] 4), shaft, all of the intprisoned men of nearly three months of investist-| waited patiently foridevelopmenta: tion six blanket indictments against] Ay minutes ran into hours, the 29 indivduals and three corporations} srerdamp began to effect the trapped to-day. The chief indie nt charges : men, A brattice, or protecting wall 21 individuals and two corporations} of coal dust was then. piled. up. to with conspiring among themselves] shut off the bud air, ‘The insidious and with others unknown to tle] as > penetrated the temporary Gtand Jury ‘to defraud the United] bulkhe ud and another was — con- tructod States of customs duties and internal] Wey’ members of the rescue team revenue tuxes on 4,900 cases Of arrived with oxygen helmets and whiskey and 295 cases of champagne. | other safety equipment, however, they The other indictments charge vie- | found all the men stil conscious, ant lation of the National Prohibition Act | t4® Group was ;conveyed to the eure face in a state of nervous exhaustion and involve some of those named In} Hespite the fact he was feeling ef- the big indictment. Six of those in-|fects of the dread blackdamp, Dr, Kd dicted are tormer Prohibition agents. | Wright, a member of the first volun- Those named in the n indictmen* | teer rescue crew to enter Shaft No, 8, charging conspi y to defraud the} battled desperately throughout the Government are Tours of the night and did not cease Emanuel —H. » Kessle ministering to the dying until he hin known as “Mannie” Kessl self hud fallen unconscious by thelr Sweetwood, also known as ide Wood" and "Morris Selzholz"; Joseph ortly after the first reseue teams Fos, also known as “Joe, the Book", orgugized last night, the physi- Morria M. Beeher, \ BE. Bim Join offered his servic Entering baum ge J, Shey sl8o know’AT the mine without a n mask as "Frank 3 “0 th members of the A. 1. ret a uso known as “J ten Wright did not leave Ha 1 passageways until he Aron riedberg , arr tretcher Gotiried: & Spohn At least fifty were elther killed or ba Hf oe ane njured, when a train of trip cars ; a ae rrertite ca running wild from the tipple crashed y be nto the mine yard in the main en (Continued on Second Page) try betes More than $00 workers uninjured by the accident and blast that followed JUDGE HUMPHREYS were trapped for several hours. Most STRICKEN AT HOME] of the injured men huddied them! selves in groups in various places of au turd ed to Cancel Min] safety | Work The n were among the first to reach the outside with actual news of z st hia | the terrible scenes Inside the mime Q TT They told of passing over bodies tn . Tit] the main entry and of seeing other et) miners injured and moaning for help 1 ujor as the fatal afterdamp snuffed out 0 their live Fe ! ding to coaunpany offctals, the ook ' oD curred simultaneously ° of three “skip cars which ren “wild down the slope to HARDING SENDS “WAGS” | mine “yards,” soprontpataly ; 1.100 feet from the entrance, These OF LADDIE BOY'S TAIL ava, breaking cable, while they were TO BOYS’ CLUB MASCOT J being sauled up the siope to the en: trance, crashed downward, severing Lads Not Natoral Withont Lovve eflan elec circuit, ‘This caused a Faithful Dog, He Writes spark and as the cars crashed toto “Live Wires t ards’ in the interior of the SWICK, Mase nine explosion occurred. $0 Slapding, inn (hie eat was the Dlast that the flames good wishes for the alae elched upward all the way to * Live Wires Club," an orga nine entrance, approximate: fr hoya here, | ae t eet, and then continued on friendly tailwose further to the mine tipple, setting MMe niniale, 9 this afire that holda the ow Fire, which followed exploston me ert Iindered the work of rescue and was y a believed to have been responsible for quite natural if many lives & faithful dos A. DB. Jones, a miner who wag ~

Other pages from this issue: