The evening world. Newspaper, December 8, 1922, Page 1

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Px To-Night'’s Weather—RAIN THE AND WARMER. ety ELI TION Conyrigis VOL. LXIII. NO. 22,295—DAILY. RORY O'CONNOR EXECUTED WITH LIAM MELLOWES AND TWO OTHER REPUBLICANS ee . Taken Before Firing Squad in Mountjoy Prison Early to-Day in Reprisal for Assassination of Daii Member Yesterday—Free Staters Fix Responsibility for Death of Collins. DUBLIN, Dec. 8 (Associated Pr lowes, and two other Irish rebels, wi morning it was officially anuounced. The two others executed, it was later announced, were Joseph McKel- vey and Iichard Barrett, both prominent Republic Ab official army report states that the four me reprisal for the assass‘nation of S 8).—Rory O'Connor and Liam Mel- re executed in Mountjoy Prison this ns were executed as a an Hales, the Deputy shot yesterday and as a solemn warning to thos ted with them “in the conspiracy of assassination against the representatives of the Irish people.” The prisoners were tried by court é ON BRIE CHARGES bindfoided, were msi ch - Place of execulioh. O'Connor had to! Order Recites Isaacs’s Claim He Retired Before Fil- be assisted to the scaffold. ing of Complaint. 5 with which the Free State Government acted fonsequence of the Deputy Hales, ca tion among Dublinites, are to sensational happenings Three of the four mc irregulars have now paidsthe price their war the t Erskine Childers, Rory O'Conni ¢ in assassination of a great used us they t noted against rree The startling swiftne Liam Mellowes. Eamonn De Valera 1 When Fire Lieut. Moses Isaacs wa still at large. irraigned betere Deputy Fire Com Mellowes was Secretary to the vld| missioner ‘I Gusinaioneislend Military Executive, while O'Conuorloiy 4 Cae eee was the head of that body and wos ‘i generally credited with the le. p,| Predudlelat to good) order and \@iact- of the armed movement again 12] Pline of the urtment,”” a Supreme treaty. Court order of pr erved Richard Mulcahy, the Minister of | hefore the it recited Defense, on behalf of the Army Coun-|4)0 4 etl, issued a proclamation to-day ths wasted ed he had retired which read: from the mirtiment before cha “A conspiracy exists to assassinate] Were brought against him and was the members of the nation’s Parlia-|out of the reach of departm disci ment, und has already claimed pline victims. To safeguard the life » far as could be learned to-day Ration itself the sternest meastires|no one in the department or the City aro necessar¢."’ Administration has made any effort to Rory O'Connor was an engine call the att f-the District At the service of the Dublin Corpoition}torney to the nature of th charges and received halt pay duri 18 80-Jagainst Isaac ba Journ in jail. Land mines were il) A’ roport pirewan fn his cell when the outbreak ove Michael J Pee yalts im Mountjoy Jail recently, Mol Buri Gtitted tor Vacances was au member of the last Dail! y; Hanst Sees ia Plreann Aventie, wa for the charge: McKelvey was a Belfast man from | ‘he sutstance of this report Ieuan tho Falls District. When the split ; ae Oe tho army occurred he s the! om duty-tor nit an , executive forces, M i WUsunist, Yorane cron eae hy ed Belfast regarded him us a stormy Cap: SOHERL Geetne tee eos petrel. Bar was 4 quartermaster’) ssie an (he Lieutenant. at ween rein weak Ci Company No, 121 at Rockaway Bench, LONDON, Dec. 8 (Associated) ny Caine to Manhatten a Press).—The Dublin correspondent of Satha fanriy sle a4 c the Evening Standard reports that a 1th isaaticrs ‘it aC Ae, party of men to-day entered the Mer Lite an vegan making an ex Gers Hospital and shot a Free State | APN on of the premi @oldier lying in one of the | An employee of Cohen Brothers, oc reprisal for the executions of Rory a a O'Connor and Liam Mellowes, (Continued St cond Page.) Roderick (Rory) O'Connor ana |PROF, TIERNAN HERE “General” ‘iam Mellowes were ers of the band of Irish tins GOES INTO SECLUSION; FRIENDS WILL AID HIM (Continued on ) 2s sce a | Has Brother 4 poration Coun. nels Oftte atives WHIT Seek Pur Him on Feet Aga Rivest in OD nan, formerly ime University, who recently ‘4 a ed that another was the fath ‘Business Opportunities’|"' ee eae Mt his wife's youngest child, sued the —— man, div and married BOC No other newspaper anywhere nd tit have the divorcee approaches the number and Jdectared rived In this city variet of “Business Oppor- yesterday id to be in seetu tunity” ads. published in The sion here. Prof. ‘Tiernan's brotha, World. Veter ix connected with the Corpora Mumber “Business Opportunities” | {!0 Counsel's office in Manhattan and November, 1922: MNo, 112 Boyd Street - THE WORLD 10,854 ud Sinten:-talg The Times + 3,063 ads | ! Sel ; The American 1,278 ads fo Dis t The Herald 519 dw vimed The Tribune 54 Joffurt would be mad WORLD over all combined 5,940 ads | ih t ran t wet RM on 4 feet again The 1-| Gf, oalithe “Business Opportunitios” |tivos or Tiernan here tt te enc, wii | 7 OJ, ave wcioted in The World as n the effort to ald him ¢ (New York World) ‘ublishing Company, 1922. |“ Circulation Books Open to All.” | ‘NEW YORK, F RIDAY, DEC EMBER OFFERED $20,000, POLICE SAY, TO KILL WEALTHY HUSBAND Sought Gunman to Do the Act and Ran Into Detective’s Net. Gov. Miller Is Picked by Harding For U. S. Supreme Court Bench, It Is Reported in Washington Vacancy Caused by Retirement of Justice Pitney Opens Way for Republican Member. (Special Dispatch From a Staff Correspo! WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—Gov. jent of The Evening World.) Nathan L. Miller of New York will be named to the vacancy on the United States Supreme Court bench, caused by the retirement of Justice Pitney of New Jerse: here. » it is learned vnofiiclally “PRAMEUP,” SAYS WIFE. nn ® The friends of other aspirants have Had Sued for Divorce and $26,000 Damages for Alleged Assault. DETROIT, May Blenn Fi Mich., Dec 1 solicited the 8.—Mrs. services of @ gunman to kill her wealthy hus- band, Ney J. Ford, offered the gun- an $20,000 for the ‘job’ and gave him a photograph of her husband to © sure the right man was sliin according to the sworn statements of four detectives, resulted In Mrs. whose ton Ford's day on a charge of attempting to commit murder. Investig Aetentiun to- Denying the charge, Mrs. Ford de- clared she was the victim of a ‘trame-tpt” that out d. her do- mestic difficulties, These diMculties filed last ‘ges crueity, Insclude a sult for divorce, August, in which she cl and a suit asking $2 her estranged husb 000 damages of d for alleged a sault Mrs. Ford was arrested last night when, it Is alleged, she was about t meet Edward Kunath, a detective lieutenant, for a second confe her reported plans for the slaying of lier husband, Kunath, it was sald posed as “a Kansas City gunman" Wednesday night, when the alleged plot was first revealed by Mrs. Ford The first meeting, according to the detectives, took place in an apart- ment, especially rented for that pur- pose. Three overheard the s claim to have rsation in which the woman ts said to have gone over the details with Kunath Several plans for the killing presented by Mrs. Ford, the officers declared. One, they sald, was that he be shot in his farm home Detroit and t were that be shot or slug while work about the barns, th to be bu were west of he ne ned od in a hay stack, Before destruction of the Lody, Ford's gold teeth were to be removed, to forestall identifiea- tion should the plot 1 rry, it was said Maps of Wayne County and sketches of the Ford farm also were presented to the nan, it was alleged, to guide in reaching the Ford some and In making his escape, ‘The $20,000 was to be paid, the de- tectives ml, a on as: Mrs. Ford 1 come into poss rion of her husband’s estate, The conference with the detectives was ar- angeds pol uid, after they heard Mrs. Word “was looking for a gun- man." The officers added that Ford had been warned several days ago Against continued residence at bis farm Before her marriage to Ford a year ago, Mrs, Ford was a nurse, employe {n Toledo, She has two children by a former marriage PRESIDENTS MESSAGE TO BE SENT OUT BY RADIO WASHINGTON, Dee. 8.—For the first time in history, the words of the 2resi dent as he appears before Congre with his ial message will be heard in distant pa the country. President Harding, when he appears before Congr to-day. will speak di reetly Into ' transmitter, His a will be t ed thre tt 1 alr expected that tne the b Real Estate Advertisements for The day World | Must Be in The World Office To-Day Before 6 P, M, To insure proper classification | Sun Zoro, GOV. NATHAN L. MILLER. © by unoaewooo y— Uncen soo. been Informed, it was learned on re- tc that the appointment been practically foreclosed in favor of the New York Lxccutlye whose term expires soon, has Justice Pitney, In whose behalf a Special bill has j been passed by Cong providing for his retire- ment in fixed by advance of the ago Mmit law, will be the second Jus- tlee of the Supreme Court to retire within a few weeks, Justice Day hav- ing resigned to become umplre uf the man-American Claims Commis- sion, The nomination of Pierce Butler of Minnesota, a Demoerat, to the place formerly held by* Justice Day leaves way open for a Republican to be appointed to the other vacancy. mand a market ninety days. The coal is divided into b48 ear of sinall sizes of anthracite and 3, cars of bituminous, a total of approxi mately 331,000 tons, Railr U officha report that the coal on their hand there cause dealers will not o und the dealer who have alr uken po: n of coal, but hay moved it to New Yor suy they can not sell it to consumer Mr Ma . v 1,897 cars arrived and ha not been unlon he Fuel Admin istration. nquir 1 vT Li World d vs nothing of t immen am coal righ the de Atl iS on Raritan F no le than twelve different coal Day Figures in the office ¢ are in the Port of New Y IMMENSE SUPPLY OF COAL INN. Y. CITY GOES BEGGING a Evening World Finds 3,548 Cars of Small An- thracite, 3,069 Bituminou —1,897 Ca £8. 3 of the Interstate Commerce Commission, york available for use, 6,617 Here 60 to 90 Arrived Yesterday. Mayhood, head of the Bureau of Service 30 V Street, show there ars of coal, In the hands of coal companies or coal dealers which, apparently, does not com. Much of this coal has been in the port from sixty to panies operating in New York have gregate of seventy-seven — bar loaded with coal lying alongside th docks which have been there weeks, ‘Lhe firm: { the an they have stored are as follow Patterson & He 18 barge Hartwell & bar ‘thorne, N bur Weston-Di Siler Coal Steamship Meeker & Ci bat We Co. 4 barges; Nadiora, Hill & ( Cullen Fuel Company and lyre t Company, 1 barge « There ure 400 carloads of coal at Port Reading niniad in the the Reading ond which th pany has b to sell ul small antht steam 5 Ws can be utilized a ! anthracite At Perth Amt N. J terminal of the gh V I road, the following uve 1 ,Continued , - Winter Overcoats & Suits, 81 Un clay Btre tin eCLotiur Ady t MOST ABSENT MINDED MAN.--LEFT HOME WITHOUT HIS PANTS » Rain and Chill Fatled to Warn i bot an Db Patrolman Goodyear last night glanced into the doorway of No. 1987 and saw a mun tn the was fully dressed except for one necessary article of attire—hin trousers Goodyear gave the man his raincoat and took him to the West 128d Street Station House, charg ing him with vagraney. There he ssid he was James Allen, sixty five, of No. 268 West 117th Street His daughter, Mrs. Mary Mc- Guire, later told the police ler father Js very absent minded and strayed out without know ° wus only partly clad MAYOR OFF FOR CHICAGO WITH WHALEN AGAIN al Spenker at Real Estate Board Han Mayor Hylan left for > this j afternoon at 2.45 o'clock on Twen- jtleth Century Limited. He is accom “| panted by Grover A. Whalen, foner of Plant and Structures, a king the Journey in reaponse |tnvitation from the Cook Coun state Board to unquet. to-morrow ai. The Mayor is to be the principal veakor. He will return Monday or Nestlay, This Is the second t Chicago for Mayor and ¢ saloner Whalen ing the I w 1 being und he w a and viait He _— THE WOKLD TKAVEA HL KEAE R fs Guna “Circulation Books Open to All. 8,°1922. WORST TRANSIT TIE-UP IN MONTHS GAUSED BY STORM Women Faint and Many Bowled Over in Wild Crush on Subways. cece ie AFIRE IN CAR BRONX. ssengers Scream, but Blaze in Insulation Is Quickly Extinguished. he worst traffic tle-up New York hax known in months was caused this morning by sloet freezing on the rails of elevated and surface Ines in all parts of the greater city and on the exposed parts of subw So was the cong lines that managed to operate that many passengers were trampled, bowled over and in some cases injured No serious injuries, ever, have been reported. At least two wom are known to have fainted in subw y Mne tion on the how trains where they were packed so closely th wd hardly Among those reported injur Alfred Cole, thirer-two, West 140th Street, who fall and cul . subway train Lexington Ave his hand in getting of 86th at and nu Steeet n, twenty-seven, No 1895 Classon Avenue, contusions of ght leg ly Rothbaum, twenty-two, 1804 Belmont Avenue, contusions of leg. She fainted from the pain, A girl not fdentified fainted west side subway train betw and from the Streets and was extric crowd with dificulty Julius Stitzer, thirty-five, No. 658 Jefferson Mlace, fell from the plat form while waitir 1 New Yor Central train at 168th Street and Var! Avenue He suffe 1 contusions severe that he was taken to Lincoln Hospital Margaret Conway, ty-nix 9 old, of No. 1964 Honeywell Ave was treated by an ambulance at the 96th 1 Br tlon of the sub platform, receiving contusions of ti body and a spr of the left kne and right shin Robert ‘The: ». 106 hth Aven. uncen scious from cold thi morning at No. Street He was taken to yspital and revived. Ho sali lie a long shoreman Two men and a woman ly injured by broke i "0 ing in Brooklyn when a Putnam nue suri Fulton slippery rails s Avenue car on ‘ not heavy enough to neh dun age, but it broke some wi Th injured, who refused mouti tion, were: Jolin J Hearia, No, 250 Macbonongh and Tage Pergusor 1 Avenue Albert Zalensh ty-f Fillmore Place, F tyr ppert the ley doorstep morning, fractured s« es and suffered internal I sat the G : Abraham Mostotf, t urret ng on af 263 Bist Street, fr ing when he suffered tie taken home A Sixth Avenue nto West F iptown left the slip the sidewalk, and (Continued _ BIKE SCORE, 111TH HOUR, Goullet- Belloni Brocco-Coburn Egg- Eaton Granda-McoNamara Madden- Kaiser Horan-Fitzsimmons Grimm-Gastman MoBeath-Rutt Taylor-Lands Kopsky-Azzini Speissens-Eykman Hill-Verraes Bello- Gaffney Gremo-Gay senses 1923 Leader, Goullet Entered as Second-Chn: Post Office, New York, ROP LABOR BOARD, MERGE RAILROADS % To-Morrow’s Weather—CLEARING AND COLDER. PRICE THREE HARDING ASKS 10 PROHIBIT LEGISLATION ALL STRIKES IN MESSAGE 10 CONGRESS + Proposes Better System of Farm Credits and Marketing, Pooiin Anti-Child Labor Dry Law Enforced g of Freight Cars and Amendments—Wants WASHIN iTON, Dec, 8.—In a m essage that covered the entire scop of domestic and foreign problems confronting the Nation, President Hard ing to-day laid before Congress the m lined by any President in many yea ‘ost extensive legislative program out rs. At the same time, Mr. Harding reaffirmed and defended before the world the American foreign policy as developed by his Administration. Among his chief recommendations are: 1 Abolition of the Railroad Labor Board and substitution ef a labor division of the Interstate Commerce ils decisions against both the carriers and employees. Commission with power to enforce { If that pro- posal 1a not approved, the Board should be reorganized by removing |, = all but the public representatives moved to Washington. Steps must be taken ty prevent strikes that threaten the public welfare, Announcement here to discuss Prohibition enfo and the headquarters of the.tribuual that a conference of Governors would be called | ment, ‘The President emphatically declared for a strict enforcement of the Prohibition Law, Greater credit facilities for agriculture and live stock Pooling of freight cars under a ‘The merger of railroad lines into systems for the purp omy and interchange of equipmen' Adoption of a constitutional am aterests. a central agency. of ec on y nendment to abolish child labor Adoption of a constitutional amendment to restrict the issuance of tax exempt securities by States and the Federal Government. Registration of immigrant al boards abroad to bar undesirables, Hxtension of reclamation and { Conservation of forests, Attention to the wide difference the Creation of a central agency t ens and establishment of imrifgration rrigation work between the cost of production und price pald by the ultimate consumer, o ald railroad financing. Approval of a proposal for the survey of a plan te draft all re- sou of the country, human a Attention of the super-power Text of WASHINGTON, Dec. in his message President to Congress id in part: “Members of ‘ many problems Congress re calling for olution that a recital 1 of them n the face of tho known Imitations of a short session of Congress, would em to lack sincerity of purpose. It « four years since the World War but the inevitable readjust ment of the social and economic ord is not more than barely begun. ‘The » weceptunce of pre-war condi- tions anywhere in the world, In a general way humanity sharbors ndividual wishes to go on with war time compensation for production with pre-war requirements in ex penditure In short, every one, speaking broadly, craves readjus! ment for everybody except himself, while there can be no just and per manent readjustment except when ali participate. “The civilization which me ts strength of genius and th fence and the resources of ind #, In addition to testing the limit f man power and the endurance nd material, for national defense survey of the Eastern industrial region looking to untfication of steam, water and electric powers. Message ilization. The world has been pass- ing—is to-day passing—through a great crisis. ‘The conduct of war {t self is not more dif_icult than the sohition of the problems which nec essarily low. Lam at this momont of the not speaking problem in tts wider aspect of world rehabilitation or ternational relationst ‘The reference iy to our own social, finan clal and economic problems at home These things are not to be considere solely as problems apart from all in ternational relationship, but every na tion must be able to carry on for it self, else it ernational relations? will have scant Importance. * * © “Had we escaped the coal and ra way strikes, which had no excuse for their beginning and less justification for their delayed settlement, w should have done infinite But labor was insistent o: helghts, and heed ction sought the pre-w levels, and both were wrong. * © * rhe railway strike accentuated ‘ the ¢ ulty of the American farm The first distress of readjustmen came to the farmer, and it will not be a readjustment fit to abide until he ser ee ed eS ee Mo itafis relieved, The distress brought to est test In restoring a tranquil) the farmer does not affect him alone und committing humanity to] Agricultural ill fortune is a national table ways of peace ll fortune. That one-fourth of ou tik eaten Aaliterate population which produces the food t f pre-war civilization mak ft the Rep nd adds so largel, a worthwhile Inheritan to our export commerce must partic with patience and good courage It will] pate in t good fortunes of the na preserved. There never again will n, ¢ ther none worth re precisely the old order; indeed, | ining now of no one who thinks it to be} ‘Agriculture fs a vital activity desirable, For out of t 1 order! fe. In It we had on It is no figure of speech to say} ‘The Farm Loan Bureau, whieh ab we have come to the test of our civ-Jready has proven tts usefulness

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