{ title: 'The evening world. (New York, N.Y.) 1887-1931, September 29, 1922, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-09-29/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-09-29/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-09-29/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-09-29/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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S i LANDLORD TO JAIL FOR 30 DAYS; F IS Hi S250 .Launcelot Berkely Shown to Have Neglected a Tene- ment House. PLASTER HAD FALLEN. Glass in Windows Broken-Score- d by Special Sessions. Launcelot M. Berkley, n middle kged man, formerly an attorney, at No. 36 West 91st Street was sent to the workhouse for thirty days and fined $250 In the Court of Special Session to-da- y for failure to placo a iten family tenement at No. 131 West SOOth Street In a condition to comply with tho requirements of tho Tene- ment House Department Ho 1b the Agent of the property which belongs ito Ills mother-I- the house in question It Is said Ihere are rooms without sufficient Ventilation and the plaster has fallen down and tho whole placo la In a state of disrepair despite the pro- tests of the tenants who havo been forced to do without window glass nnd suffer worso Inconveniences Told that hi. must repair tho placo or cease renting It as a habitation for human beings Berkley is said ito have told the Tenement House De partment, \ho would bo damned If lie would repair It and thry could In wliern thev wanted to about It.\ In his defense In court Berk ley said the property was owned by liia mother and was operated at a loss. He declared last year tho loss was $56C and tho place could not be hoM and she was willing to give It to.anybod who wanted it. Probation officers reported that he was the agent of other property in Kew York and Hronx County In a Jiko condition. In one house, in the jfionx It was testified the Red Cross look a band and forced him to make i because in a room where on service man, who had been gassed, v.w forced to sleep the rain came II ough tic roof and foil upon his lied 11 was testified ho had been fined ' upon two occasions last June to.\ tonus Health Department orders regardlm' property managed or owned 1. bun l.utt July he was. lined $500 lor coni' mi't of court by Surrogate iviialan .md sent to taidlow Street Jail n later paid the fine. lustlccs Murphy. Kernochan and Mnardi- - beard the case. Replying to th 'defense et up bc'ftcrkley, Juutlce Mlirphy said- Wn are not concerned with our Jo ses- upon this property. You are required to keep this house in a con- dition fit for habitation of human be. Jugs You apparently are a man of (.education and should know better than a do as you have done.\ No immediate notice of appeal from Till1 ficll\ 111 O tH in.iwv auu v.i' lc i uitlilii n f.-- linllt-- Berkel will be taken to the workhouse to nerve out his sentence. Jn case Is not paid that will carry an additional Uilrty day.- - CRUSHED ARM HELD FAST. BRAVE MAN DIRECTS RESCUERS Factory Employee Suggests Amputation to Surgeon as Means of Freedom. Joseph Karolnlk, forty-eigh- t, of No. fti' 'i Prospect' Avenue, the Bronx, a was designated the bravest man iliey ever saw by police of the 177th ilreot Station, tireincn of Hook and L.aUder Company No. 13 and memhers of the staff of Columbus Hospital in \W&yt- - l3d Street. I,arolnlk In emplojcd at the Rest Hi' Bedding Compani, No. 150(5 St. In'iolas Avenue. Tin- - morning Mis i r a MRS LAURA Mrs. I .aura Gilder Simony Won Her First Literary Trophy When 13. No one answered tho doorbell when an Evening World reporter pushed the button at No. '117 15th Street. Brooklyn, so he went next door and mado inquiries. \I think you'll find lier at. her mother's at No. ten Tenth Street,\ said the obliging neighbor. Consequently tho reporter rang tho bell at tho home of Mrs. Laura Gilder at that address and uskal for Mrs. Laura Glider Simon. \I am from Tho Evening World,-- ' announced tho reporter in a manner right arm became entangled in the drum of a cotton separator and was mangled up to the elbow. Un- able to withdraw it. Karolnik not only walled patiently while an electrician, .i mechanician arid finally a crew of t'remon walked to release him, bu' actually directed their efforts. AT ono tlnio he suggested to Dr. Tiritllo of Columbus Hospital, who sponded to an anibulanco call, that he free, nun by amputating the arm. The physician advised him to watt. The operation wan performed on the spot Immediately uftcr the arm was- loosened. Again Knrolnicl; often d advirr and ..uggrallon. Between I'm'M In- - ixpict-so- wolici-twd- i' foi In.-- , wife apd children. \Tho shock will Inn I them 'mbK\ In- - told Ui. Tlnillo. Vtttr the utnputatmn lie was re- moved to Columbus Hospital, where Ins condition was leported good \due to his remarkable fortitude,\ said the bouse physicians. Prompt action by his employer, .Schienerman of No. 144 Forsyth Street, who Is ul.so his ton-ln-la- and Louis Isaacs, a fellow employee, prob. ably taved Karolnik'b life. On' his ilrst scream of pain they shut off the machinery. They summoned an ulcian. then a machinist, and finally Policeman Heineren of the 177th Street Station. The electrician f.trugsled in vain to loosen tht. keparatcr. Th) machinist lulled, too. Then Relngcn called tho ambulance and the firemen. After a hard struggle they chopped away the apparatus under Karolnlk'n direction. THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER '29, 1922. \Ford Day \Prize Winner, Woman, No Writing Novice PANTOMIME 'VI 3. SIMON. that might imply anything. \I'd llko to see Mrs. Simon.\ \I'm Mrs. Simon,\ said tho lady, smiling. \Won't you como In?\ Tlio reporter entered and was Intro duced to Mrs. Glider, Mrs. Simon's mother. They waited expectantly for the reporter to state his business. \Mrs. Simon,\ began tho reporter in a portrntious manner ho lias' ac- quired lately, \you havo won a Ford car.\ Mrs. Simon shrieked. She really did. \Calm yourself, Laura,\ cautioned her mother. Well, lt-t- Mm. Simon several moments to do so, but when Anally she had accomplished that she did not havo to ask how she won the Ford or why. She knew she'd won it for the day's best contribution from Evening World readers to tho \What Did You See page. \And I'd given up hope of seeing it in pi Int.\ she f.aid after she bad followed her mother's advlco ami calmed herself. \In tact, I Just mailed a letter this morning with an- other contribution and said to tho edi- tor that I'd keep on writing and writ- ing until 1 won a Ford \ \It was my tiist contribution, too,\ she continued. \I'vo always wanted lo write for newspapers ar.d this me enough to keep on try- ing. Once, whin I was, thirteen yrarj old a IBM\ punted a lairy story I U near: wo own a 1 ord!\ Then sti- pimped up as if reminded of eoinethtuv \Amy!\ :li'- called. \Amy!\ A child toddled In from the ne.t room. \Your mother has won a Ford car from Tho Evening World!\ exclaimed Mrs. Simon, catching up Amy In her arms. INow your aauuy can lauo us driving! Lot's go tell him aboutIt.\ And theicwith Mrs. Simon and Amy ran to the telephone and when tho reporter left the house lie heard her saying: \Oh! Sam And here is Mrs. Simon's story which won for her a Ford: INVITED GUESTS. I was about to enter an ice crea,m shop in Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn, when I noticed the boy ' and girl who had their faces pressed against the window look- ing at the cakes and candies plied high on the other side of the glati. J entered the store, but when I was seated and con- sidering my order I found I could not forget those two wistful faces. Barely tasting the ice oream soda, I told the clerk I would be back directly and, step- ping into the street, saw that my two friends were two doors away. \Little boy! little girl!\ I oalled, \don't you want a soda?\ and to my astonishment thsy ran as if frightened. Well, my conscience is clear, I thought, and I returned to my soda. I scarcely had tasted It when In walked that boy and that girl at the head of a prooesslon of about a dozsn children. \Now we'll have a oda, lady,\ the boy said. I was never so embarrassed In my life, for my purse contained only a half dollar and a dims. The clerk looked from mo to the gang and baok again. Hastily and con- fusedly I explained the Invitation and my plight end promptly ha ordered tht mob to depart. They wera a disgusted and Indignant lot, and when the' last of them had passed out tho Captain turned and flrtd a parting shot t mo. \WhajA ask us In fer If ya didn't mean It?\ he demanded. I remained In thnt store no longer than wa absolutely ntooasarXi Hugh Walpole, Novelist and Noted Optimist, Believes in the Every-Ba- y Man and Woman Brilliant Scion of Noted Family, Happy in Thought Things Are Coming Out Right, Smiles: and I'm come and By Marguerite Marshall. optimist may bo defined as n wio bollovea after AN Couo \Day day, In every way, tlio la better and better.\ Many of us to that club 1914. Not so many stayed In It since 1918. A optimist y Is almost aB as Now1 York Yet ono such cheerful and baa to town In tho person of Hugh Walpole, dls novelist, descendant of Horace Walpole, the wit, ana sir Robert Walpole, tho Prime Minister. Because I knew that tho author of \Tho Young Enchanted,\ \Tho Dark Forest,\ \The Duchess of Wroxo\ and a dozen other brilliantly written tales, 13 thoroughly competent to do ao, I asked him to put tho case for optimism In tho world \What can bo said for It?\ I aaked tho big, bluc-cye- broad-shoulder- young Kngllshman when I met him at the Wuldorf. \Why aro you an optimist? How can anybody be an optimist? In tho midst of our wars, hatreds, unrest, pain, stupidity, what Idea is enough to htand up agulnst the pessimistic conviction which H. Q. Wells voiced for so many of us when ho said that civilisation la on a sinking ship?\ And here, In a sentence, Is Hugh Walpole'a creed of opti- mism: \1 am an optimist becauso I be- lieve in the everyday man und woman, In their tlnenesa, the greatness of their heartn, their pluck, their It Is not that I do not ceo their faults, biit I believe that when you balance them up most men and most women will be found on the side of tho angels.\ Mr. Walpolo didn't recite that little creed offhand. He is amus- ingly apologetic about bio optim- ism. \I've been tagged about It so much,\ ho confessed, embar- rassed cyca on tho-- carpet. \And it is dlfllcult to express without seeming sentimental, without sounding like\ (here ho men- tioned tho namo of tho trading member of tho Pollyanna profession in Now York. \But I do want to say, first of all, that I am sincere in my op- timism.\ he continued. \I try to be quirk to detect tho nhamH and affectations In myself, and that Isn't one of them. Of courso, l think It'a largely mutter of tem- perament.. Also, I think that In my case it is helped by two IhingH the fact that 1 hao excellent health, and that, after a rath\r wretched and miserable child- hood, llfo hae gone well with nie since about my twentieth ycai \It Isn't that I don't see tho suffering und blunders and wrongs In the or that I deliberately shut my eyes to them. But when I read in tho pupora how tin- na- tions are tearing at each other's throats, or when I am biought In contact with tho mistakes \of the politicians, I can't help reducing Instinctively every problem to the terms of tho Individual. And I 'n the Individual. I believe in him because,\ Mr. Walpole added simply, \It seems to me that most of the men and women I know are' finer In- dividuals than they were ten years ago.\ And then he made the confes- sion of an optimist's faith I have quoted above. \Won't you tell me of some of these ipeople who have kept your faith In human nature at tho boiling point?\ I suggested. \I could tell you of hundreds,\ he replied. \But well, there was a man In college with me, a g chap, who haj always had a splendid time and who had, apparently, tho happiest future opening before him. Ho was married Just weeki heforo war broke out. He went directly to France, and he wne in the flint or the gaa attaoka. He wan very badly gaiiurd and lnjure.1 in other wnya. He ruin \Ul or the war with romumpllni' ithnul a penny to MiMname, with no Job In light. Now tin In !.eplni a petrol rhop on dim of tlm roadi to the country fiom lin. tin,' rtn has two oullJrnn, til\ health lei ironn for llfo and yet h Is twice the man hf wai when I kntrw him ten ywarn uno- \1 know a woman, wlfn of r.ne of Hmalanrt' Iwst known men. l'or elghl\ti yeais fhe 'fit if ou BUUtuth 1'afctj \I can sec their faults, but when 'you balance them up most men and women will be found on the side of the angels.\ \Not all the women I know quite have to use\ their New Freedom.\ \There is a feeling (on the question of divorce) that marriage must be a union of two who love are happy together; that St is immoral to live with a person you no longer love.\ \Wo arc all glad the saloon is gone, and sure America will to legitimize light wines beer. Let the people drink a little so they won't want to drink too much.\ \We are on a ship. I believe tho ship will reach port. Ships generally do.\ Mooers person limllo that by world growing belonged before havo thinking rare a Prohibitionist. Intelligent Individual just como tinguished English strong cheerfulness. malo n world, Incalculably two Uttlfl DRIVER OF RED CAR SEIZED IN DEATH OF STATEN ISLAND BOY Arrested at Ferry House After Police and Citizens Spend Night in Search. Determined lo end reckless driving which has caused the death of four persons and thp unions Injury of twenty-tw- o olhcra on Statcn Island Hlnco last Saturday, Deputy Chief In spector Domlnlck Henry of Head- quarters ordered all tho men on post on tho Island, and all tho rrsmcu to start a houoe-to-hou:-- e seaich foi the guilty perton, when Word reaohcil Headquarters that a man driving n red Stutz car la:it night had run down und kjlled Angclo Mhino, 6evrii-yrur- - old schoolboy, of No. Unrger Ave nue, Dongan Hills. Seventy-fiv- e men yprrit tho night trailing the red car. Uvtry owner of a gara.ge ivas ucutiuued, hundred were awakened from Hit ir sleep. Tliih morning, at the Slntcn Ialand Munlu ipal Ferry lloute, Ht. fitorgc, S. I Patrolman Daniel Qulnlan took Inlo custody Joirph Do Marro of No. ,\Gi; firoomo Street, Michael Pallldlo of No 238 Mott Street, and Michael Vento of No. 43 Mulberry Street, all of Man hattan, and Frank Previa of No 5509 First Ptrret, Brooklyn. Do Marco, owner and driver of ri icd Stutz car, wan held In Che Went New rtrlghton Station, charged wllli running down a person with intenl lo kill, to await hearing before Mngln (rule William Croak In the sVeond iilstnet I'ouit. Oilier than denying that he was responslblo for the Mlatio boy'a death, he refused lo talk. The accident occurred at lu o'clo last night. Angelo was returning from u grocery, his arms filled l l packages, when, at tho Junction of youth Field Houlevard and llergi-- Avenue, the icil car 5truck him. i'hi inachino neer paused, but rontlnur'! down the boulevard ut high .1 Tito boy died almost instantly ol .i fractured hkull. One other pcr.wit was killed Mei day, and four Injured, In uutomobil\ accidents. Frances Dl Ouldl. tlur- - ii en, of No. 2111 Knst Sixth Street, died from a fractured skull after heme struck by Jacob Sehwimmor, of No 104 Marion Street. In Brooklyn a collision brought se rious but not fatal Injuries to Kthel Converse, forty-fiv- of No. 1421 Ht. Marks Avenue; Ethel Silverman, fifty, of No. D51 Miller Avenue, nnd Anna Kirchke, fifty, of No. 112 Uelmoiil Avenue, in the llronx, Police I.iem John F. Brocken, fifty-six- , of No. 20m; Marion Avenue, suffered a dislocated left knee and abrasions of the left leg wnen josepn eaniu oi ino. ai icim 133d Street ran into him. JERSEY CITY GIRL HELD FOR D.EATH OF HER BABY Pollre tn In vrMluntp Chilli PniiiDl Drill, Mlna Robin Hayne. twenty. three, of No, IJ Ornnrt Rtri\t ,)ery City, whji .trrrld y rlmmM with IihvImk cmind thn dcutli of her new-hor- n Imby. Th c hllit bnrn ll HiunlHy, mi,) hth found y d-- .ludicn O'Drlannll held MIdk Hnynri. without hull for n Work to innlt pollen luvmtliiMhm of th ihllrt'n Uonlh. Tlio tfrhnlcHl uhniKi flrnt muil.i nH'iliml her wan Unit of vlnlullnu the IikhIIIi law, MtltJVI' Vi:iMtV H MlMl 14 I I.I. Ill) AT MMA, I'elm' tns of Mount Vmiimi, N, V liimnbnr of Him nixiv of Mm llHKinrn i.ladn, wliieli nrrfHc1 hci- - i,, ,, Milllh Vfrlriui ... I II'. .1 in M i.ill fiom tin rifcrhiK on N i ..Mi. . i , aid. lie at buiUU l ulu A ' ' - - - '. ' '''S walpoue . OOU.W CO. SCREEN KIDNAPPED BABY IN EFFORT 10 FIND WHER Ei UT Young Father and Mother Plead in Basement 1 lumc tor Their Child In their search for llttl\ Mlldied Voth, the baby kid- napped Wednesday nltoiuoon In West 125tli Slicet. detectives and ratiol-liie- n of 'tlio Wetit 123d Sticot btatlon y began a house to liouru hunt In tho ncighboihooil of loath Strecl and Mudlson Avenue. Pictures ami drtieill'Honn of the inib&lng child uio to be i.hown on tho ercen of motion plcturo bouseij ihroiighoiit tha city y In another ilfoit to tlnd her. No trace of the baliy has been loutid, but its can-lug- was dlKcovorcd In front of a store .it No. 1635 Mudl-ro- n Avenue, above 109th Street, by Mrs. Mary Newmark of No. 27 East lOUth Street. She took It homo and placed It In an areaway, expecting tho owner to make Inquiry, and a boy huggestcd It might be the one In which tho Voth Imby disappeared. Slio called a policeman nnd Hip Voths idulltllieil H Tin blanket and . loliii.-- a wero mill in tho ctirlagc, but nciv illMnrrangeil as if tlio baby had been huriieillv leniovcd. Firmer prints will he. sought on tlio carriage. \If sin- - is only brought back to mc 1 will not think of having any oiin punished,\ said the mother. Mrs. Julius Voth, ,U her home, No ;i07 Wcbt 113th Sticot. l.lttlo Mildred as carried uway in her carriage whilo hor mothei waa In a West U'5th Street storo Wedorsdiy alter-noo- n. .The police, havo round no one who saw tho Mdiiunplng. Tlio f.'tet tliul the chil.l wan' si 111 hi'lllg riuif-'-- l by mother wuk i uitgf. lor tr.ir y 'J. it ho kid- -' ti ippihii muy und in i i.i ilv . sol-- l ii chatmo of tha diet m In,- m Mirh ,i small J might pro.': si , ions, ,1 a j said. \Why should they take my baby?\ Mix. Voth, breaking ono long tileiiee. \She wus only three mouths old, still nursing. We havo no money. We havo no Why did they dke her?\ And sho bowed her head hupi'lvhhl), hor cyca staring wldo, but dry. \My four children wouldn't eat any supir,\ added Mrs. John y, her sister-in-la- \They cried hII night, so they couldn't go to hleep.\ Sho nodded and tho whole ic.iip followed suit, solemnly, hope-I- ' Bly \Yes. they couldn't go to sleop,\ Mis Voth continued. \They loved ni baby Everybody loved my baby. And It was my only one. Tho first, i r.ov. dld when ho was only eight months \Id. Pneumonia, the doctoi aid That wns two years ogo. Ar. 1 then mv husband he's an electrician nnd mnlicB good tnonoy when he's worldng -- ho got sick last January. Pnriiinonln. Ho can't work. Ha's gov io i\it. or it will como back and might Kill li'm. And now this.\ \We mini I offer n leward, but It vumWn'l it. i iiny good V could gei tin, i,n in I'lntrhow,\ broko in the sh'li hiiHim 'id. Ami once mom the Kioup ii\'M 'I UopelfHuly and In lint noil, ' I'm not so wull lo-d- a. All thlH ex lieiii.-u- l und wm i y luiMll't doiio ino mi) n\il The hah) WttH uniiiiially lieallhv. welghrd rifle\\ oiM li half pounds, hiul n Ihi'Ru f\io. k f I'll\ h hair, wi.- Hpieml liv'i' til l\ f\ , i'iuI a Imhu h i I ul' I ...i I, i,.fr . u i' i iti'ui ii i iic I'm uU tuut j ' ''J lauli.ng, s MAN LuKtD HtR Rl h n m E. LEFT HER IN CLEVELAND laroKl Richmeter Deserts Livelyn Schmedcs Who Is Back Home. Deserted In Cleveland by tho man itb uhom bv. rlopcd In a double ilopement two months ogo, and who descried a wife and baby to leave with her, according to thp police, Evelyn Schmedcs. n pretty nineteen-year-ol- d lenograplioi: ban returned to the home of her mother, No. 619 Van orst Place, Union Mill, N. J. fthe decided to return after she had been located by tho police In tho Y. W. C. A. rooms In Cleveland. Harold r.ichmeter, for whom she left home luii been unable to find work In Cleve land, where Mlsa Schmedcs was jr ii stenographer, and disap peared. The other two parties to tho double elopmi'iit, .Madeline Oclan, nineteen, Kvelyn'a chum, who lived at No. 530 Van Vorst Place, and Krank Postlur, twenty-on- e, of No. 177 Clalrmont voiiue, Jersey City, remained In Cleveland whoro they both found em ployment. They had been married. aeeordlng to Evelyn. Mrs Richmeter, with her baby of less thnn two years. Is living at their home, No I0 Kccond Street, Mo-- I mkeii, nod linn preferred charges of ch set linn and rt against her husband \I thought f loved him,\ was Evrlyn'H only explanation of her escapade to Ltout. of Detectives Charles tilllmaii or the Union Hill police, who questioned her last night She would not tnlk to- nowspaper men. Evcljn aid that on the day of the elopement the loin met in Moboken and went to Philadelphia, later going lo Pittsburgh, t'liveland and Canada. Mter sevoinl hi)H III Canada, she Haid, liny returned to Cleveland, tlio two girls going to the V. W. ('. to live. KwImi obtained employment a Hlrnogiuphcr and Madeline took position an a clerk m a department More. I'obtlcr went to work for a .illroad, alii said, hut Itlcliinetur was limbic to find work and dlsappcaud us than two neelts ago Be soothed by this fragrance from the East. The all-Ccyl- Tea BERLIN BURGLAR SHOOTS N. Y. WOMAN BERLIN, Sept. 29 (Associated Press). Presence of mind saved Mr. Albert R. Iouls of New York from possible death last evening at the hands of an unidentified man who forced an entrance Into her apart- ments In an Unter den Linden hotel and committed aulcldo when he found capture waa likely. When the Intruder, ecrulopcd with burglar tools, entered \her apartment Mm. Louis called for help on tho telephone, tlio burglar firing at her . aa she did so, and Inflicting a flesh v.\ wound In the left arm. Mrs. Louis ;i, then rushed from tho room. Em- ployees of the hotel responded quickly and tho burglar shot himself Just as they reached tho door. Mrs. Louta and her husband, who Is registered as being a merchant of New York, have been sojourning In Berlin for several weeks. Investigation hero revealed that Albert It. Louis Is a dealer In an- tiques, ut No. 13 East C7th Street. At that address y M1m Lillian Louis, his sister, confirmed the pres- ence In Berlin of her brother and sister-in-la- and declared they did considerable travelling In Europo und Aula In search of antiques for s'alo uere. They have no permanent Now York address, who said. 57 \Just right\ Rich, smooth and me- llowyet full-flavor- ed Heinz Prepared Mus- - , tard adds a delicious taste to everything on which it is used. Care- fully selected mustard is ground in Heinz spot-le- ss kitchens and kept 1 right up to Heinz qual- ity. The tasteis justright HEINZ PREPARED MUSTARD \Standard of the World\ Deal known and finest cycles ever made and at reasonable prices. \Bojcie\ j t Its- - 3 Bicycle Atk Your DriUr to thoir you \ColumbU ' Hovi vdf. tied tilth Cutler Control and Biby CurUcc CATALOG oa rtq'-a- t. STEINFELD.Ioc, nGW.32a$t.,N.Y. White Rose fa: 13