{ title: 'The evening world. (New York, N.Y.) 1887-1931, December 22, 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/sn83030193/1922-12-22/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-12-22/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-12-22/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030193/1922-12-22/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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I ?vuKt i Luvt nur Bmu5, HIRSHES SOB IN JOY ATHER ACOUITTA L fears Sear Scarred Cheek of Husband Shot at Reine ' Davies's Party. DREAM DEFENSE WINS. pplood of Drinks at Regular oar icsuiiea to oy Witnesses. Oscar \Walllo\ Hlrslj and Tils pretty fclondo wife, nazcl, aro back In their ITrecport homo y preparing for their \happiest Christmas,\ following1 Jier acquittal last night at Mlncola on a chargo of shooting: him through tho Jaw aftor a lawn party at Rclnc Da-Vlc- bungalow In Frccport last June. LIko two happy lovo birds, they Bobbed out tholr joy together after they heard Foreman Ogden of tho Jury announce \not guilty. \ Her head had fallen over on the counsel tabic. In an Instant her husband's arms were about Jier, his scarred check against her icarstalned face. Tho tiny defendant had maintained h. perfect polso during tho trial and whllo tho Jury was deliberating for on hour and eighteen minutes. Tho rear-tradge- had a moist beginning last June, and after tho success of the \dream defense,\ as District At- torney Edwards called. It, had been proven, It had a very wet ending. Tho, pair sobbed together and sepa rately. \I am very, very happy,\ said Mho. \This is tho best Christmas present J ever received,\ said he. Airs, Illrsh was tried for shooting her husband on tho night of Juno 21, following a party at tho Frccport liome of Rolno Davlcs, sister of Mar-in- n Tint-te- \cerorn wt.nr nnil iln llr-l- it rr City Magistrato Bernard J. Douras. IB? Witnesses yesterday described this party after n fashion to creato a thirst even In a hardened Volstead-ia- n. In tho \rathskeller\ In the basement of tho Davlcs homo, said one, was a regular bar, tended fault- lessly by a \professional bartender\ Who dispensed Scotch whiskey, high- balls, cocktails and beer whllo a Negro orchestra added Jazz. Among the guests were the lltrshes, who, when tho fun was at Its height, disappeared. Soon afterward a shot was heard upon the lawn and. Magis- trate Douras and others testified, 1J Irish came running toward the house rrylng out that his wife had shot him. Mrs HireX tho Magistrate said, was seen running toward her own hotnt. Later, according to other testimony. ffS'aho came in ..nd leaned over her hus- - .Land and he kicked or struck her in tho face, blacking and cutting her eye. and calling her n nnme. Yesterday tho Hlrshes tdd their Btory on tho stand. Both Hlmltted they were drunk and Hlrsn ui'tnitrd he was the drunker of tho tuo Their Inability to recall impo-t-i- ut jveuts of the evening led Mr. KcKv.rda tn characterize their testimony ss a \dieam defense.\ fpLIVING COSTS CONTINUE WAY ABOVE THOSE OF 1914 Sllulit Increine Ileiinrteil llclirbcn Orl. to nnil Xo. Tost of living on Nov. 13 was CS. I percent, higher than In Inly. 1J11, to the Investigation just coin-.ilite- d by tin- NuliiMiul In.lnMilnl r BuiiHl An miMfl'iaj vl 1 points, or elcla-leiith- s of 1 ii..r oini . ceeunvd between Oct. 15 uid JCov 1C, '3S2I. due to continued incraaite.i m food, clothing and coal prices mil higher Vents. The avciage cost o nundrics de- creased. Between July, 1320, when the peak gl the rlsu In tho cost of living sine? Illlt Nvns reached, and NovemDer. 1322, the cost of living dropped 16.1 points, or 22.5 per cent. i,iiriiBiinize tiinsiiafi urufcu, Scrap If or Revolutionize It, Say TwoNew York Business Men William F. Dix and Randall Salisbury Write Book About How Business Men View Church as Institution Wouldn't Abolish It, but De- nounce It as Founded on Ignorance, the Enemy of Science and Slave to Su- perstition. Compare Religion (Not the Church) to Spiritual Ra- dio, Each Soul a Receiv- ing Station for Altruistic Messages. Marguerite Moocrs Marshall. \The Christian Church as an in- stitution must 6c cither scrapped or revolutionized. 'On Fifth Avenue you can see four or five million dollar churches ulilch run six hours a icceh. What department store could do business by such mcthodsT \Tho reason ichy the business man stairs away from church is because, ioicti he goes, he liears so much that offends his common sense. \llcllglon to tio is spiritual ra- dio. Kith each individual soul a re- ceiving station for the messages of Kindness, courage, generosity lit one word, altruism broadcasted by the rilL'fiio impulse, or Ood. Prayer should be the tuning tip' of one's spiritual receiving instru- ment, or soul, that one may get the messages as clearly as possi- ble.\ That Is tho cxticmely Interest- ing constructive and destructive criticism of modern religion, niado not by a clergyman but by a hnrdheaded Xew York business man In fact, by two business men. It Is also an answer to tho question, \Why doesn't tho aver-og- o man go to church?\ Tho two bravo critics aro well known In Downtown Now York. Ono of them Is William Frederick Dix. for sixteen years the Sec- retary of tho Mutual Life In- surance Company. Tho other is his lifelong friend, Randall Salis- bury, manager of tho Manhattan Mottgago Department of the Tltlo Guarantco and Trust Com- pany and Assistant Secretary of the Bond and Mortgago Guar- antee Company. They have written a book, and it isn't about lionds or trusts or mortgages or Insurance. It Is about God and the souls of men and tho failure of tho Christian church y fitly to servo either. \Founded In Ignorance of tho true' teachings of Him for whom it was named,\ these authors of \Man and tho Two Worlds\ wrlto of the church, \built up upon dogma and intolerance, flourish- ing under a rule of fear and ab- solutism, guilty of countless In- tolerable persecutions, of pride, Jealousy and avarice, it Is a monument of man made laws, misstatements of fnct, an enemy to sclenco and a slave to super- stition and convention. \s I think of the1 vijst falluto of tin' uliurch in Its control over men during thu huniblo years of the nioat ;u, 1 feel that as an institution it must either bo .\crapped or revolutionized. The first thing the Christian church should do is to embrace Chris- tianity!\ AH of which Is startling enough. Hut when I went to sc5 Mr. Dix, in lils offlco at No. 09 Cedar Street, I told him that quito tho P A N T O M I ME -- I'll WWMH I I x I i ' \ THE EVENING' WORLD, gIHD AY, DECEMBER 22, 1922\. most amazing featuro of tho new- ly published book of which ho Is Js that two busy and piosperous men In Now York's financial district should feel moved to wrlto a wholo volume abouU their self-ma- religious views. \I'orhaps Walb Street Is maligned,\ I said, \buy It Is gen- erally supposed to be short on re- ligion. And you're only a block away from Wall Strcot!\ \Tho business man of ,\ answered keen-eye- d, quiet-voice- d Mr. Dlx, \often seems to hnvo lost his interest in religion. But I bellevo that tho reason Is religion, as organized In tho modern church, simply Insults his coiumon sense. He goes to church and he hears that outworn the- ology, that condemnation of science, that primitive conception of God and His relation to man whloh they'ro still talking In tho churches. In ono sentence, ho hears a lot of stult Jic cannot pos-hib- ly believe. llu doesn't go' again! \A man caino to seo mo tho other day whoso llnanciai Interests run far Into the millions and who Is perhaps the most scrupulously honest and clear-thlnkl- person I have ever known In tny life. His first question about any big deal is, 'Will that bo ethical?' and, moreover, if It Isn't ethical ho puts his finger Instantly on tho weak spot. Sitting right In that chair whero you aro now, he told mo that ho had read our book and found In It nothing with which ho could not agree, but ho added that In tho churches of y ho found nothing which satisfied him. \You know tho situation every ono knows it. When I was a boy all pcoplo went to church. Tho minister was tho most respected person In tho community and his Mord was law. Now what hap- pens? Instead of going to church men go to play golf. Women go motoring. And what sort of peo- ple aro they? They'ie not law- breakers, not Immoral persons. They'ro decent, honest, kindly human beings, and what Is more, I bellevo In their souls they have an utisatlsflf d longing for com- munion with God. They don't all btop to analyze their trouble, but tlio truth la that they aro dissatisfied with tho Ulnd of re- ligion the church olfcrs them.\ And then Mr. Dix told mo about the faith which ho and his friend Mr. Salisbury havo worked out for themselves. Ho expresses It best In the comparison with tho radio phono which I quoted at tho beginning or this story. Nothing ould ho mo.c modi u than sir h .i metupl.or. \If anybody wishes to pu sonify God, let him,\ cheerfully obscned the of \Man and tho Twa Worlds.\ \But it isn't nec- essary for mo to do so, and from my point of vlow there is some- thing unsatisfactory in tho con- ception of an anthropomorphic God, a bearded old gentleman sit- ting up In tho sky out of sight, I prefer to consider Him as a tre- mendously powerful force, radiat- ing waves of goodness, generos- ity, plty--a- ll tin; qualities which may bo summed up under tho naino of 'altruism' and which aro received by the souls of men in proportion to their rcsponshc-ncis.- \ ' Another revolutionary feat mo of this business man's theology Is that God is held not to bo cre- ator of the materinl world. Tho corollary of this btllef is that lod is not responsible for tho evil and suftorlng In the world; that, on tho contrary, Ho Is man'H spiritual ally in tho light to con- quer It. Mr. Dix has writhed under tho smug nssuranco of clerical consolers that undeserved pain Is \God's will Imposed on us for our spiritual dlKclpllnc.\ Ho thinks any such assumption Is a libel on tho Deity, and, (n Its fatalistic implications, bus been responsible for much unnncci human suffering. \Would you abolish tho churches. It you could'\' I asked him UnalU \Not at all.\ 1m declared. \Co. operallun and organization ,uc inr-'ddur- In vop tlilng. 1 do bt. !,. vi' that no pri'Mt or minister tdlic Hi'; poKltlon that ho it a u\-r ii Intermediary be-- l ..:. tin. ir.i.'.dual man nd BOY II ft AMD I IT\ R OES TO HOSPITAL IN GARBAGE TRUCK Driver Hastily Improvises Ambulance to Save Bronx Child. A five-to- n garbago truck was used as onambulanco In tho hope of sav ing the life of Herbert Greonbcrg, four, of No. COG Knst 140th Street, run down at noon y whilo at tempting to cross UrooU Avcnuo nt 118th Street tho Dronx. Tho mother of the boy was visiting in the neighborhood but left him on the sidewalk. A truck, belonging to Sobel Dros., of 110th Street nnd Fifth Avenue, ladcu with 2 2 tons of gaso-lln- o and driven by Clarence Little, bore down on the child. Initio jammed on his brakes, shut off hia gas nnd swerved the truck, but tho mud guard hit tho boy, who received n fractured skull und tight aim. A garbage truck of tho Department of Street Cleaning was nearby. George Schakman, the drivor, gatheted up tho unconscious child and sped with him to Hospital. Tho scrcnirls of tho mother, who had heen tho accident, aroused tho neighborhood. A public school a block away was letting out at tho tlmo and tho street noon tilled with frantltc mothcis anxious for tho safety of their children. Additional pollco I.ad to bo bent from tho Alexander Ave- nue station. Little was ancstod. Tho child Is In a ppecarious Condition. $1,000,000,000 RECEIVED FROM SALE OF U. S. ARMY SURPLUS SUPPLIES War Ilrimrliuriit Mill Unit on lliuid A limit !21H,tl00,ll0n Worth or Mnlcrlnt. WASHINGTON, Dec. 22. Approx- imately $1,118,000,000 has been turned Into the treasury sinco tho armistice from sales of surplus army nnd navy supplies, tho Senato Military Com- mittee waH told to-d- in opening hearings on u bill by Senator Town-sen- d, Republican, Michigan, to dis- tribute remaining surplus supplies among tho States. Of tho proceeds about ono billion dollars camo from tho Army. Tho. War Department btlll lias sur- plus supplies worth $218, 900,000, As- sistant Secretary Walnwright told the committee. Assistant Secretary Itooso-ve- lt said tho Navy has some surplus clothing, but Uttlo else, other than technical supplies. In the sale of supplies the Navy discovered about 25 per cent, of the amount it expended for the supplies, while th Army has recovered about 41 per cent, to date. 920,000 noocii li.WDUi) ritoji ship Detective Thomas Murrjy of .N'ars.m County, accompanied by Chnrles V. Hansen, tingerprint expert, nnd fovrrul other detectives early y broke into a deported oyster house at Bnldwin Har- bor and seized 350 cases and bags of whiskey valued at J2n.000, which were taken to Mineol.i. Tho liquor N pup-pos- to hnve been landed by a schooner seized yesterday. Unring, by as to complications in her hands Miss Harlng Is tho centre of little group. of eacer-cve- d. adoring kiddies. Haring, when asked to tell of her experience, modestly covered a very bravo deed with words In self-prnls- o. from her as.sls:-n- nt and from the pupils who had wit- nessed tho Incident .a moro adequate version whs It seems t.hat yesterday afternoon a beautiful big lollie into the school. Kor some unknown nut-o- n beramo attacked little Krnnces a pupil. The. child was filgbtened to death. One of tlio older girls ran for the janitor. Miss llnriliE, who i noted for her for animals, then took .i hand. \I've never had any leui of dogs,\ Miss explained. \I've uIwujh hrid n of my own. So e:tenl.iy whenl saw this dog, I Just naturally divinity. most religious aro men ot unselllshncsa and high Idculs. They could, if correct tlio defects in oper- ation which tho chut is suffering. Why .should u million-doll- ar church on Fifth Avenuo, for example, run only alwiut six hours a week? a man, I cannot help levolted by such an example ot waste. Why such u church twenty. four hours a d.iy'' immunity nn-di.- . u.ll need, ehuivlie lini it nei-d- s -- Dirraitr.N'T 'm. conrlud-t- d tho thu'i'.l fiiil ro. author of \Man und ti- To World?,\ ono New Vorl ' . . t iti.ni whij Ukt'9 bin m nulla); D I VO RG ED DOTS RANKIN IN SECRET Name of nt With- heldActor Fights Suit-Th- eatre World Surprised. Phoenix Ingrahnm. No. 120 llioad-wa- y, counsel for Doris llarry-tnor- better knowtl as Doris Itnnkltt, Just divorced from Lionel llarrymoro, refused to sco reporters y on thi subject of tho dlvoroc, saying through his hccrctory that ho had nothing to give out for publication. John J. Cur-ti- n, No. 233 Urondwny, counsel for Uarrymore, nlso refused to mnko tiny statement, nnd said further that Mr. llarrymoro, who was In his olllco at tho time, had no comments to make Mr. llarrymoro was described In ap- pearance as being In anything but ac- cord with the spirit of tho Yuletido. In fact, ho appeared downcast. The theatrical world was surprised to-d- to hear that Mrs. Barrymora had obtained an Interlocutory decrco or divortu from Lionel Uarrymore, a brother of John and Ethol Harry more, nnd nephew of John Drow Mrs. Uarrymoro Is a dutightor of McICco Hankln, nnd her family Is famous in stagu, history. Tho divorce, obtained In 11 days, wus based on a referee's finding to Supremo Court Justlco Morschauscr, and will becomo final In thrco months. It Is understood Mrs. IJarrymoru'was awarded tho custody of the only child. Tho person named In Mrs. Uarrymoro's complaint was not made public. It Is understood Mr. llarrymoro contested tho action. Humors of an estrangement had been In circulation tcvoral months, and tho actor was often seen In tho company of a prominent actress. Tho order tor a refcreo to take hearings In tho caso of \Doris Hankln Harrymoro vs. Lionel Uarrymoro\ wus digued by Justlco Morschauscr on Dec. 2. Justlco Morschauscr directed that J. Gordon, an attorney of t'oughkccpsle, tako testimony us tcfcrcc. Duo lo tho luct that all tho papers In tho action aio Inaccessible, except upon court oitlor tlio namo of tho und tho number of hearings havo not been disclosed. From tho dato of the uppolntment of tho refcreo II duy elapsod to tho entry of tho decrco. Lust Saturduy at tho special term of court Justice Morschauscr sustained tho report and directed the entry of tho Interlocutory decree. Tho dato of tho marriago of the coupio was not available In tho mem- ory of frlend3 or In biographical rec- ords, but early In 1006, whon Lionel Llarrymoro withdrew from tho stago, TURKEY PRICES TUMBLE MARKET FULL OF THEM An overabundance ot supplies and n disinclination on the rmrt of consumers to tat turkey for Christmas, with the refusal of storage nin to advance more 30 rents ;i pound on the birds has caused i drop In prices. Tho whole- sale price for No. 1 Wcatern products hns dropped from 4 cents on Wednesday to 43 nnd 45 cents a pound und commercial grades to 1 cents. Texas turkiys lire said to havo como hero In such abundance that it will bu Impossible to clean up tho market, and that many of tho birds will have to be frozen. Retailers, It Is claimed, should able to sell Western No. 1 turkeys from 48 to 50 rents a pound und other ood grades u' Horn Ii to 4S rents. caught him by the collar and pulled him nwny.. Ho quickly turned fiom tho little girl to me hit mo in both hands. That's all there is to it.\ Hut from other sources it was ga thercd that UiIb wiih not all. Miss ' 1 taring, after she had been attaeke.l by tho dog, took the frightened chili! 41... 1.1... I. .. ........ lr...l.n. I uuu lu lilt jMllweifetiiii.il tuuui, ivi ni 'i her in and then turned back to t li collin which hud followed them in mad rush down the hall. Sin got ii strangle, hold on tlio 'dog nftei a struggle. In the meantime u police, man had been sent for. Who lie ui rived hit the inuddcnrd animal on the with tlie butt ot his revolver and rendered it insensible. Th\ owner of e - dojj, ItenJamin Keslor, of No. 712 Am nui', when what had happened, wanted to shoot the dog hut Mis-- . Mating objected. She insisted that i was not mad only maddened .um that ho was too pietty a dog to ! killed. the Newark Health Department is uxuminini; the dog t determine whether ho has i abides er not. \I don't see why the make such a fuss about It at all,\ Miss Harim Insisted. \It was only what anyone else would do. Why thorn would b. i: bettor story In the p.uty rny had this morning Willi Santa Clam.' Hut Santa Clans hud departed air. i' Kcoro of little adoring MddlcH liunA uround their iirnvo tcucher whil\ other unes skipped nw;i with .i happy greeting! \Men Ichrlictma, Mtw Hating\ And to each one tn turn In i p'jur bandaged hand. Teacher, Badly Bitten Saving Girl, Won't Let Maddened Dog Be Killed Now, Newark Kindergarten Kiddies, Witnesses of Bravery, Forget Santa Clause to Worship Her. .Miss Georgia lundciK.im n teacher in the Madison School or Newark. N. J., lias uMirped tho bcatlnc place which Snnt.i ( laus has hold in tho eyes of her pupils bravely attacking u mad dog which broke Into the school yesterday afternoon and turned on two or three of tho small children. j- Miss few Houovor, gatlieied. scampered bo nnil Hooker, fondness liuung dog But lead- ers they would, from eh As business being shouldn't urn ulw.iva reb, Mis. qulto re- ported th.m bo and tlinlr ho head Springfield told However, children littlo gtiyly FORMER DORi5 RANKIN GETS DIVORCE FROM LIONEL UARRYMORE his wlfo accompanied him to Paris, whero for thrco years ho studied etch- ing and painting. A riilladclphlau by birth, tho son of Maurlco Uarrymoro und Georgia Drow, Lionel mado Ills stago debut whon fifteen ycara old. Uo appeared with his grandmothor, Mra. John Draw sr.. in \Tho Hlvuls,\ which was produced In 1S33. llo later uppcarcd In her tupport In \Tho Itoud to Ituln.\ Ho put In nearly 12 years acting for tho screen and then went back to tho spoken drama as Col. Ibbetson In Georgo du BIuurler'H \Pctor Ibbet-son- .\ Following this ho augmented his reputation by n vivid characteri- zation of Milt Shanks In \Tho Copper- head.\ His next uppearaneo wan us costur with his brother John in \Tho Jest.\ Tho actor then returned to pictures, his latest release being \Tho Kaco lr the Kog.\ jsssp r Bernhardt Determined to Die On Stage While Playing Role Fighting to Leave Sjck Room, She Already Has ranged for \Last Curtain\ May Hasten End. '\irl-!u- . tM-- '. PARIS, Dec. 2i. Sarah IScrnharilt on tho etngc. That determination, tier the Hfo or the \divine\ tragedienne. Pitting her tteniendous will ngainn thoso of leading physician of Kruneo called to attend her. Mme. Dernhatdt Insists upon resuming nt onco her role In Hacha Ottltry's now play. It whh whllo attempting this role that the \divine Snrali\ fainted iind was confined by her pirrent Illness. Doctors Mild she must take a long rcM. \That would mean tlio end for me.\ tlio actress replied. Friends say she feels the cud Is near. She docs not want It to come when she Is away, resting. Sho wants to bo playing n leading rolo and \let death ring down the dttrtnln.\ Bernhardt hns wotked out every' de- tail of her death as sho hrjpes It will com to her. Going further, sho hns pctsonally arranged claborato plans for her funeral, her friends re- vealed. Consequently, tho sick looit'i sccno y found the great nctrcss exerting all tho powers ot her will In her greatest tolc- - to light off death until fctrcngth enough to enable her to act again Is given her. Bernhardt tosses restlessly on her bed. Desplto optimistic bulletins. It has been learned she Is not Improving n.s fast as had been hoped, and that nervous complications hnvo set In. Tho \dlvino Sarah's\ steadfast de- termination to play that fatal sccno upon tho actual boards of a Pails theatre, clad In a costume sho loves, speaking tho passages fiom tragedy and cotneuy sno lias made famous sho played them, may cost her both her Hfo and her ambitious, friends fear, for, if she overexerts herself, she may never leuvo her present sick bed. ASIIUUY I'AllIC llOTHI. rillK. Tiro of undetermined origin destroyed tho Clarendon Hotel nt Asbury Pink, N J., yesterday, unit for more than three hours thieatened tho eutlro dis trict. The bold was closed for tho uni- son. No ono wus Injured. The da inane Is estimated nt )CO,01'0. to mrsWMiiXii OF Ar I t 1 fr. lias determined lo die while aUtiully friends revealed may fhortcn j -- give \Her\ a I HOOVER j and you give her the best ' You won't feci the cost j only $6.25 down think : of it! a few small month ly payments and The Hoover is yours write j a check today only : $6.25 mail the coupon or phone for name of I nearest dealer. I For Authorized Hoot er Service : I'fiunrn I'iitmlJ00-JJ0.JI0- 2 The Hoover Suction Sweeper ; Company, 710 Marbrldgc : Bldg., New York City ; Please advise mc where I can, : sccThcHoovcrdemonstrated, i hh no obligation. I Name . ! I Address . . 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FOR THE MISS $125 to $175 Coats of natural Muskrar, Civet Cat, Hair Seal, French Seal, Brown Iceland Krlmmer. $250 to $400 Coats of natural Raccoon, Black Muskrat, Hudsop Seal and Nutria. ; FOR THE CHILDREN .120 to $75 Baby carriage robes in a variety of Furs. $12 to $35 Matched sets of all desirable Furs for children. FOR THE MAN $285 to $575 Finest of Raccoon Goats-gre- ater valDes than can be found anywhere in New York. $150 to $675 Overcoats, custom-made- , indi- vidually styled. Variety of lin- ings and collars. Also silk lined Cloth Coats with Fur collars. FUR ROBES AND MOUNTED, RUGS; iIlf jpPpk $75 and uPa large assortment of Fur 1 lined robes for the jiiotor. - SH)) $30 and uPa mounted Fur for the library I Sll mJrtyJ adds a touch ofluxury. by where you buy in safcty jlj .JAECKEL & CO. Furriers FiltliAve.Bctwec.,35,i&36'-hSts.NcwYor- k it- - .1 t 1 . . V 'U.I So it) Kit \! 7 el V