{ title: 'New York evening post. volume (New York [N.Y.]) 1920-1934, March 02, 1925, Page 5, Image 5', 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/sn83030386/1925-03-02/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030386/1925-03-02/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030386/1925-03-02/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030386/1925-03-02/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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• St~~r',nll ir.~tn~itt .. i ~1.iiiilfte.8.,O 2~1II' , '.K,' '·',N .. ; 'I 'lilt::' .. ;' ,:' '.'J:: ','S\ ' '1!l1B\I~n' iii on' the tlklrdreadlni; . ' : aad scheduled to oom;\ PIVlsao;e, Senato~ Fearori and hi. adher~l)t-\ Sen· , ,:' '.' , , .. ; . ,atc~ Pltcfte; of: 'w\ 'Karl\ of jority 'ine~b.ers' are 'I'rf'8t'nt~ J\.i~~ -.wh~r~ th~ \~t(lS are coming ,from. to pass It Ii). lh. ;:lenute I. as uucert .. i,n \\ - m'(!n~' th~n' -on~ c~ty at a' tJ~e and o.v~r 'BI) ;i~' gTf'~t a. 'dtstEl:~ce. ~earl~' a d()z~n p4, tHr,\~ ,~ , W€'re' f:;~rit.' ~l) Nf'tW York~ ~'hl\ll~() a'nll Han \ I<'rund~ru, IIp.ly tleven ml,llJ\t'.'i Lf'lng ri\- -----.-. ·a'l;>ay linger .tOve.,r .' 'Original 'English 'Writi!lgsa~,;:, \ Public Library' ., ',: ,-' ! ---~' OF -:AL'k- <ARE ,:r HERE . .,' - \ ' ~ t:Q:,\~lI!''' A<U9,lirP!JIent: t.I.r.~\ '/l-thmtU (litt. ~arch! 2.e-In <ll;det' to sp~ed\ lll> 'the work,!)!!' the Legislature to, , ~p,r\ Ildj5'urnnleilt by ~arch 2:1, a c::la..ss~· 6~atlonof800 bills now before tllellause and Sa,nate 'has bo~,n made here by tbe Re. ');iub~l<ian' steering cummlttee meeting, at tlle RItz Carleton Hotel. A.QcorqJns,- to Msemblymsn Antl,l<lny ;T. Syl'acusa, jr .. ,of Atlantic County, \hurman the only measures discussed were lOG or fACES TEST rOHtGRT\ ~:e::C::;~e::~n;m& ~e Utica, .' .' . \. Unl,,!! Senator Knlg,ltt can Induce at Seriator Must Wean One Vote From Fearon to EliactStatG Fair Reform Bill DRY ACT ALSO.UP AT ALBANY By a StBff Corr6spcmdelf.t least one of them to MOle over to his side the ;18 lost. Non of the three would state hi. posl· tion t ay. It Is ~Eown that the Syra· euse rival of SenatoE' Knight for the mao jQlity leadership has' told them that they \lLl:e free to vote as tbeS' wish, ' q,ulred rol'\ esc bPtl~t. _____ _ PATRICK POSTS AN ALARM 'I'he foul' W(>! Re!>ublkan APnators sttll \ are resIsting frigidly all .• lIe:n:,t!' of tile , dry forc~s t'o brIng publh- \~ntlment tD \lear against thenl, 'Twas Fire ~and Not Letter Box, Bring· Ing Apparatus, Then 'Rlde to Jail\ PHOTOS PHONED 3600 MILES '\' p.alriok lJon0I;lUe,·ri;rty·two. of 41:, WCAt \ \ ___ .__ . For'tY'slxth street, Is unclet' urres! tudu)\ Go From 'Wasl1lngton to San Fral'lcHiGO berause' h~ did not know the difference \' nd Other Cities at Same Time t oetween a. fire alarm an,t a letl,er hox. At a . least tha.t Is what he tolu I1atroJmall Bree When 11 Thornps<m;.Startetljob is done it is well.done\\\ is jl. finished job In the senset~,at it! is a credItable piece otbulldln~1; and not merely a job that has;. been finished. , ' THOMPSON~SiTARRl;TT rCOMPANY' hlCl'ea~!n.itl~ ;m..gn<ltlc, have been tbe Mo:o:gan odglna 1 English man1.l' 1'1\ ,lIlC.llibltJon at the public_Lt. ,bl\itl!J'l-\'if.f!cJl~l\- ther.,- ha.ve deelded to con· !liljlre _f!.nl.;!.l-y t:ise !ll1!:! penlspn bl~.~!nety per cent uf the blllB, it Is said alreR<;ly are doomed because ot the committee's stand for economy. Albany, :March 2.-Benator Knlg)lt', leadership dver the Repllbl!~n majority In' th~ apper house, or the Legislature taces Dynamite is slol'ed 1m tIllS mea.~ur\ ~ well as In the State prohIbition enforce~' ment bill, also B~hedul~d to ('ome up In the Assembly'ror\ ]lassage lonlght or tomorrow, ,The la tter seem!;! &UI'A to p.Re t he lower hcu.~, as only seventeen of th~ Republican Assemblymen are ]Iuovvn to be \\'ashillgton. lIIareh 2,-Tmnsmissioll. of of the West j.\,rty·sel'enth strp\t station, photog\ over telepht)ne wires ~600 when faUJId o-piHll.ng 1.1 fi, e \I~l HI b\\ aL ( miles long Si1l1ll]talll~Ously to thI'E)6 cltle8' F'lfty-slxth street alll1 ~lnth H\ {'flUE' und 1_ was _t£sled her .. t\cloY by the Amerimn t.rylng to put a\ lett,·1' III It, Telephone and Td,'gl'aph Cur]1[!any and \ T!,e alan'll IJrought .Ix pieces of app ... I was del'lw\l·d h.\' (,rflduI.l..l tu bave l)('C'n a ratus, lL batlullu,n dlh'f llnd an in~ur,tn'·f.! I complett, .. ~\lrt.·(I~l-I patrol. UI\,nohue waH locl<eo up In the It \\a.'\i the- fl.r~t \i.m£' RIH'h tratunnlBslnn \\'rst FtJrt~-spventh slrt?et st..t.ti(ln. (·hcl.r~eJ , '. un ttl the end of thiS tonlgllt Its first real test. of phot ograph. Ila~ hee!, at tempted. to with dlsorderly con<luct. coantlng .those :\Vho the guard was not looking, \i\W,~,l:lIe big exhibition room to COUlmune favorite authors through i lle ,'!Ja,il(J:Wrl,tten page. scripts of all of them are ther~, ':';~Jitjje. legible, some !!Ieglhle. But the , ::oha~m Is present even though the writing -:'~nnot be read. , Brooklyn Dye Works Watc:hman Holds ,Off Three-Shot by I Four Accort;lplices . Tb.ere you can read just as Dickens w~'pte it, the first expose4 page at \The __ Christmas Carol.\ and other -Works, wIth, ESCAPE POLICE AMID BULLETS nearby, Cruickshank,' ImperIshable !I· 'I\U'ltraUone, colored. of \Oliver' Asl<ing for . \:M:ore\; of \Mr Bumble and Mrs. Con\y 'Taking Tea,\ of Bill Bikes, In high hat, trying to look concillating behind his own canine muzzle of beard while he holds .. whip behind his back for the cur dog, the (log, questioning and ~earful, debatln£'. Whether he shall respond to Sikes' com· mand; 'and, tlnally. 01(1, \FagIn In the Condemned Cell,\ his hat dejectedly crushed on the bench beside him. fingers futilely to his Ups and great spaces of white showing in his frightened eyes. Rur]lrised by the bandits' ]la.ls as he held dr three Bufe rubbers in the offices 'uf the Arstltlc Dye Works, 103-110 Jewel street, Brooklyn, early today, Dominick Ols.ano. thlrty·two., of 37 Cumberland street, EI'o~l<lyn\ was shot a.nd instantly killed. ('assano, 'n night wntC'hman, had cornel'eu three thle¥eB, b-ut did 111>1 know that foul' other members of the gan\\ stU! were In the building, ' Elsewhere Is \the last line m·ttten by Robert Louis Stevenson, In the un- IInlshed \Weir of lIermlston.\ And the warrant for the arrest of John Bunyan-his sentence to write \PilgrIm's Progress.\ .Also much of Burns-\('otter's Sat uraay Night.\ \Aul<l ~,e,\ and \Highland Mary.\ Thera lJ3 tho will of Keats, \My chest of books CIIvlrie among my frIends,\ There Is also a drawIng of tile twenty·five·year 'Old genius done by his frIend, Joseph Severn, <lono while he sat slone beside the dying poet at 3 o'e1oel, in the morning, Born above a stable-what heights, you wondel', would he not have atta.lned. Manuscripts of Byron. COlVjJer, Boswe11, Thomas Moore. John Rtuart Mill, th.,r\ are-of Robel't, and EII2:\belh Browning, the latter lncludlng her \Sonnets from the Portuguese,\ shown to her Burprlsed hUB' band after, he had run to her with every choice line of the PO'm he was at the time engaged upon, DEMAND NEW VANZETTI TRIAL. Police Sergeant Sulli\an~ wh<J, with a fello\-v officer :gul'sued the banditB in a pollee automobile, WIlS shot and slightly wOll11ded in the leg in a revol,'er battle before the me nescaped, The I'uhhers entered the cb'e ,\ short Iy hefor~ 4 A. l'i They we\e t f)'ing tu nwke their ,vay tu vuults in \.vhich a large n unlber of furs WE're stored, when ('assano found Ihem lIe got ,tho dl'Op on throe and the othel's stepped In, 1lt'lng without warning, He fell dead and the men fled. Sergeant Rulllvan ann Patrolman SeY\ mo\]\, drIving in Jewel street. :saw a car with<lut ligll!s pal'lted at the bull,lu.g. 'Th ... men 1n the l'ar upened fire on the police- men as thr!r car sluwed down. '\ The bandits started uff at full speed In !\Iesel'Dle street. chased by the poliee auto· mobil\ through T\nth street and Kent llvionup. hoth police and ban.dlts fIring'. The l\ lost sight of tile handIt s' car In' North I';lghth stre.t, Rulll,an did not Imuw 11e was wounded untll he reaohed. Ihe (;reenpolnt police station 10 report. Dr, Levine of Greenpolnt Hospital dressed the wound and he ,,'as able tl> return to work. ('assano is survlved by a widow find six children, Boston's Actl ng Mayor Presides Meeting Which A.ssalls Judge The dye 'worl{H \vas robbed n. YEar ago. at ,The loot amllunt~d to $25.000. Boston, Mart\il 2,-,1 mass meetlng'of UOO 1'I'I'ROns. ('ull~d itl the Intel'Psts at Nicola l'iac('o IJk1rl Bart,~lomeo ViD7:etti, oonvktf>d of lho murcl .. of a sbo. faetoTY paymaster and his Inlard at South BraIn· tree In 1020, adoptr->d a resoluUon dpmnnd- in!: a n~w Irll'lL Th\ meeting was pre· sided o\'pr by Artlng !\Iayor Janles T. Jl.lol'lart ~, The r~solllllon salrl that berause ;Judgo 'Vebster Thay('r of the Superior Court, \{II llreslde!] n.t the tl'laI. hlld refused all demands of millions of workers alt over the world for a new trial jn order to pre· sent 4'jnC\untl\o\f'rtihle ('vIdencs of th€'il' inllocence\ hlfl at\titln ('onstltuted a \nlf>n~ ace to the MfRguard£ of liberty gUllran· le~d by tho t'un\lltutlon.\ TWO DEAD IN FAMILY ROW Indiana Youth Kills Moth~r·ln·Law, Himself-Wife May Die Alldprsoll, hill., MarC'h 2,-After kllltn~ his mother.ln·law, MrA. Elizabeth Butler. fifty.on\ anr! pI'nhably fatally wOl1ndin~ his wife, aIrs, Lf'nn Huntsinger. twenty, Kenneth HuntsInger, twenty·one. fired a bullet into his brain and ended his own lire. Domestic diffirulilps aI'€' said to have 'caused the tragedy, :<'1rs, HuntAlnger Is not expected to JlvP. EsUe Butler. t\'tPlv p , who was in the Bull,er hOUle when Ihp shootIng ocrurred. maped inJu1'Y whE'n Rhe crom'bed on--tht: 'i :fioor as Huntsinger turnpd the gun on her, Huntsinger and his wife were estranged. Mrs, Huntsinger haYing reoently tiled suit for divorce. They ha.d one rhllll. It girl. ,McCLINTOCK PROBE NEAR END Jllstice Olson Expects InquIry to Close Today Cbien-go, :'larch 2,-Chief Justlel' Harry- Olson, Instigator ot til\ ('oroner'~ Inquest into the d,ath of \\,illiam l\IpCllntoc-k, whose $1.000,000 estale was willed to his foster.fathPl'. William D, Shepherd. says \\\ :..; 'inquest rna:; dOOle totl'ils, He expressed t be opinion that slne~ bnt)l Mr. and Mrs. Shepherd !'\fused to tMllfy. It would not be ('onslotent for Edwin Hedr,lck. Shpph\rd's a tlorn,,)·. to attempt to present e,-Idonce to Ihe jury, TRAIN KILLS FLEEING BANDIT Accomplices Escape After Getting $12,. 7,50 In Ohio Post Office nt{'n dead man was Identified as John Pi)er, :fIfty,flve, of Lorain. The otnors dIs, , ,It.:ppeared following the acoident. , ( , ~I' Boston Poli()e Head Is III ;:~r1~;~t~~~I~~:::~,;:tI:~~:':ar~\ch 2,-M:lch\'~1 H,9~'owle~', r· of tho Boston police slnc\ siIddenly-m..:wmi edema of >l.Cll~e infection of· tll';- iak~i1 tll a Boston 1l<l'S. l\RREST IN SROO Kl YN H()LD-UP Victim Shouts and PolIceman Captures Ml!n In Chase On h,s way home to 288 HancocJ, atrept, Brooklyn. early today. Oscar Olsen. a boll: prmal,er. \\as set upon and drag-g,d Into a doorway at 3 Rlvlngton street by two men who Ilpat him with theIr fIsts and took $6. Olsen'A shouts were board by Patrolman {;rranpy. who arreste.d. J\a.mes R1ISSO. twenty·thre ... giving bls address as the L'ncl~ . Sal'll Houst',. Bowery. near Houston street. WATER SAFEGUARDS INI)OFlSED City Club Backs 8111 to Buy Putnam, Westchester Land 'rne pro[>osed law authorl7.ing New York (\tHy to 3rquh'p land In \VPfltrheosteor and PutIHl.lll l~ountl~s Cor PI otp('t iof1. of th~ , ~at\r suppI, L\ 'Indorsed by th f! City Club in a letter writtpn hr the sP('l'eta.rY~ Alvi1l 1-:. C,lllett. to Senator 'Whltley, cln.lrrnlln of t ~n I 'ltles I 'ommlttee. and malie pubUG toua)'. [\\'am ping- l)artif'R are on P ROur{' e of pol .. lulion of the watpr. ~!r, Glllel~ said, SPILL KILLS BABY; TEN lJNHURT Boy Jolted Fro,r' Mothe.r's Arms as Crowded ,A!'to Takes PluMge \\·eb.!\I' ~lass., Marrh 2.- Roland AI·\'T. nlnieen.month·old son or :llr, and MrR, Herut?rt A \ery dIed of tnjuri('s re~ (,f'ivfld Whf'll hE' Waf! thrown from his mother's nrry:ls nft UH> C'ar in wf1ld1 they wpro riding l~ft the road nn 1111\ street. pl\lnged dO\\OA a tE'n~foot embankTlIPnt and hit a. tref'. :\fr. and 1\h's, .A .,,-pry and thl'~p other rhljdren, Rnd 1.lr, and !\Irs, Jo~eph Bprnard Bn(1 thr€'e ('ilildl'i\n, who were also in the (\ar ,vere not hurt. SERMON START'S JAIL ROW Prisol1e~ Shouts Down Services, Others -- '. Yell for His S~alp Atlantlr c.~, March ~.---{'o111peli \Ion In yelling rattled the walls of the county jail at Mays Landing when Nicholas Scarduclo of this city objected to the holdil1g of are· llgi.ou. meeting and tried to hreak It up bl' making all the nol\e he could, wnlle other prisoners shouted and pleaded wUh tSheriff Cloud to let them quiet the offender. Searduclo Is serving 0. sentenco of 350 dnys tor dIsorderly conduct. New Yorker Dies In Texas Jail After Stormy Honeymoon JJI.llns, March Z,-Harry B()yd, twenty· f\ul'. of Nei,v yo,'k City, Is dead In a 110s· 1'1.;..,1- here of the ,effects of sloow polson, \\ i<l hy a uthorltles' to have been self·ad· JIIilllstered while 'he' was unlIer arrest la ennnect ion with the pl'-sslng of w<J!'thless cherks during his honeymoon. Skipper, 65, Drowntd':it Sea Newport, R. I., Mareh 2,-Captaln JD' seph Millett, slxty·fiv:c, sklp.119: ().f the fl15h- ing sloop Rell&nce; out of N'olV)JO'rt, WIIS \\\ overboard and lost' while the craft The bill to abolish the State Falr Com· ' Twenty Republh:an volea could be lost Spring Cqmes in Bright., Array to Lord & Taylor /\ Spring-,with all its brilliant skies and languorous days-spring is here'--:- There may be more cold weather-even. another snow storm-but spring is in the air. Fifth Avenue wears a new.expresJion, Every window looks out' on the passtn~wds 'With a gay wetcome for the new season, And with spring comes the urge for new ~hings everywhere. New fashions - new furnishings in the home - elrerything new for the new season. Lord & Tct1lor opens its doors to spritlg,·with fresh- merma.~.On every_ 1loor. Paris hats~ original models, just out of their foreign wrappings. Spring fashions for every member of the family. And finally, the all-important brightening touches the home always needs when seaching spring son-, shine reveals the wear of a winter. FABRICS FOR SPR.ING ~Pri\t'-tfJlJ ~~mort prints-so ft!lIrif tht /4Shion 1,~ {or sprin( fdbTi(:4. Not only ill sllh, 'InIt in soft.\ tim! cotton III4IeJWs.tDo, tht priflt's t/'c tbi;\. Sl>::'IALL THINGS FO~ SPRING Accefrories are all of a CO/07/0 tarry oul the idea of the (Oftume co-mpltlc. ' Nol for daytime only, but for I1fimoc,n I1mi o!'J't1Iing dS weil, all smdrt IUICJI\rleS are of ~he same shade, FOR WOMEN At;rD MISSES No $Urer mdu:atlCJtl of sprmg lhqn the tal' lored falhlOns-suits. [rocks and coats- that all Paris optmngs ha'Vt sponsored and SindT! New York bas aJorttel as Itf own. , FOR SMALL TOTS Spring top (Oatf that go walking In the: Park th<st first warm days -art! Irroth~r and-SlStrr (oats. And brother-and-mler suits made to WI!4r wzth them.' • FOR LARGER BO¥S and GIRts &')'s' suitr are ~try Englrsh m' CU;l. 'filh t!ntlrely straight coal and a lI'aiskoat. girls divtde their interest between t~ mw tnsemble SUIts and the simple frock ()[ nalural kdsha with bOYISh top cwt. FOR THE HOME Fresh curtains to catch the bri\ianc~ IJj d spring day and gay chint~es to draw that brilliance indoor>, A comfortable reading chair close beside a »:incfofll. these bring spring into the home.