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Daily News from New York, New York • 63

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
63
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1923. SOCIETY WOMAN LEAPS TO DEATH FOREIGN NEWS 15 POLICEMEN KEEP IN CHECK EAST SIDE CROWD AT FUNERAL OF ROBERT PERLES mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm iimjiiiiiiimiji i i miiiiiiiiiiu uiju .1 j.i man 1 1 Stresemann Scores Point. Hunt Amuses Man Hunted. Coajl Strike End Foreseen. Abd-el-Krims Terms K.

Od. BERLIN. Foreign Minister Stresemann scored a victory in the reichstag in his tight against th nationalists' de- HER PLUNGE MADE FROM WINDOW OF A DOCTORS OFFICE Mrs. Peyton J. Van Rensselaer," 56, prominent in society of Newport, R.

and Boston, committed suicide at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon by hurling herself from a window in the "office of Dr. George R. Satterlee, 9 East 40th st. She died instantly when her body struck the sidewalk near the curbing, narrowly missing two pedestrians. Mrs.

Van Rensselaer, according to Dr. R. K. Johnson, associate of Dr. Satterlee, had been in New York for three or four days in a hospital for nervous ailments.

She had for years, he said, been suffering from nervous and mental troubles and was being treated by him and Dr. Satterlee, a manas tor a sterner policy on the security pact issue. He received a vote of confidence, 235 to 158. EDINBURGH, Seot'and. Joseph Victor Collins, instructor in Stevens Point, normal school, who was sought by Foreign Minister Stresemann Heard Window Opened.

i NEWS photo) Retired Rabbi Harry Semowitz slit clothing of Mr: Perles and her husband (to her right), a symbol of their grief-torn hearts, a they gated mournfully at the little casket in which their son went to rest in Mount Judah cemetery. Scotland Yard because his family thought him missing, was amused at the excitement. He said ho had sent his wife a postcard. HALIFAX, N. S.The end of the Nova Scotian coal strike Inoms in the resumption of 'negotiations under the sponsorship of Premier Rhodes, who is seeking a settlement on a 10 per cent, wage cut basis.

PARIS. While the peace terms of Abd-el-Krim, Riflian chief, are viewed as unacceptable, French authorities report military gains at two important points. CAIRO, Egypt. The beginning of another revolt against European rule is seen in the reported fighting between Italian forces and Se-nussi tribesmen in Tripoli. MELBOURNE.

f-teen dinners, thirty-nine nine smokers, theatre parties, spi. MRS. MARCO SETS QUARREL AT DOOR OF OTHER WOMAN Parents Take Drowned Boy To Last Resting Place. They buried him yesterday with all the lamentation of an east side funeral Robert Perles, 4, of 272 East 3d Mrs. M.

Blacklock, telephone operator in the offices of the physician, said Mrs. Van Rensselaer arrived shortly before 4 o'clock and asked to see Dr. Satterlee. When told that he was not in, she said she would wait and wtnt into a reception room. A few moments later Mrs.

Blacklock said she heard a slide open. Sne looked into the waiting room a minute later and saw an open window but the woman was not there. CHINESE SLAYERS OF AMERICAN HOLD 5 OTHERS CAPTIVE London, July 23. Chinese bandits are holding five Americans captive in the region of the Sun-gari river, near Harbin, according to a dispatch from Tientsin. Dr.

Harvey J. Howard, eye specialist of the Rockefeller Founda Her marital unhappiness has been caused1 largely by the sup- whose mysteri- posed friendship of her husband, disappear-William Morton Marco, with an-! ance Sunday other woman. Mrs. Stella Davis aroused the Marco declared yesterday after her I whole city. Fol- Traffic Blocked.

hearing on a disorderly conduct owing a mgnt tion at Peking, whose capture charge was adjourned in WTest concerts and movie shows have Side court until Aug. 3. In her separation suit she refers to this woman as Anna Doe and been arranged for the entertainment of the American fleet here and in Sydney. during which his parents mourned beside his straw funeral bed, after his body had been dragged from the East river, came known today, is the only one of the captives mentioned in the dispatch. Two-unnamed women are said to have barricaded themselves on the ranch of Morgan Palmer, where the captures were effected, and thus to have escaped The late Robert Perles morning brought The building from which Mrs.

Varn Rensselaer jumped is occupied almost exclusively by physicians. Several were at her side a few minutes after her body struck the sidewalk? but a cursory examination satisfied them she was dead. Fifth ave. at the 40th st. intersection was blocked by the crowd attracted and reserves were called to open the way to traffic which was tied up for fifteen minutes.

Mrs. Van Rensselaer was Miss Mabel Mason before marriage. Her name appears in the social register, which gives her address as 93 Rhode Island Newport. a retired rabbi, Harry Semowitz, to perform the solemn Hebraic rite handed down through the ages. Outside a crowd surged women in shawls and aprons, grimy urchins, wailing babies mostly pushing, jostling, poking each other's shoulders in an attenipt to secure vantage points to see the small coffin borne to the waiting hearse.

Scarcely had the force of fifteen policemen in charge of Sergt. Batto and Cant. Patrick Kennv succeeded Mrs. S. D.

Marco A. Spencer Feld COAL STRIKE SEPT. 1 IMPENDS AS WAGE RISE IS REJECTED Atlantic City, N. July 23. A strike of anthracite coal miners on Sept.

1 seemed imminent tonight, following the flat refusal of operators to grant the miners increased wages. This development came from the miners-operator' conference here. W. W. Inglis, chairman of the operators' subcommittee, asserted that not only were the operators opposed to an increase, but that there must be a reduction in the cost of producing coal.

The conference continues deadlocked on the miners' demand for establishment of the check-off system, whereby union dues would be taken out of wages. Efforts are being made to effect an agreement on this angle and make it the basis of a compromise to avert a strike. It if i "'if? 'Jt Read the Pink and other editions of tomorrow's DAILY NEWS for further developments in society suicide. in clearing a hollow square in front BLIND GEORGE HAS NEW JOB WITH NO STRAIN ON HIS EYES Along Broadway they call him Blind George. Any day, between the hours of 1 and 6, Blind George Woman suing her husband and her attorney.

charges that in the presence of Anna Doe her husband knocked her down at Broadway and 83d st. Her husband's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius L. Marco of 304 West 89th have a higher regard for this woman than they have for their own daughter-in-law, Mrs.

Marco also asserts. With her attorney, Assemblyman A. Spencer Feld, Mrs. Marco appeared before Magistrate Barrett yesterday to fight her husband's charges that she used unseemly lenguage and caused a disturbance in the apartment of his parents. Mrs.

Marco declares she went there to obtain financial aid. ox toe uuur man uic tiuu aiancn back again. At length a police flivver was shoved into a position to block effectually further advance. The father, Samuel, supported the mother, Jennie, who was sobbing louuly, while she walked to the automobile which bore them to Mount Judah cemetery. A brass bell tolled dully a the cortege stumbled along the stony path toward the plot with a little open grave.

"El Mole kochomJn!" "God have mercy on his soul!" some one whispered as the coffin was lowered. CANT SEC A SQUAD OF WOMEN MOBILIZED FOR HOMELESS CATS ROUNDUP By Pacific Atlanticl Dr. Harvey J. Howard, American eye specialist, who was kidnaped by bandits near Harbin, China. being seized.

Palmer, head of the Manchurian Development company, was slain. Bandits, steamers report, have been active throughout the district during the last fortnight, murdering and robbing whites and Chinese who fell into their hands. Be Sure to Have THE 0 NEWS Ctew YdAs 'Picture Newspaper Follow You on Your Vacation By Mail, Postpaid: Daily and Sunday-One month Daily and Sunday One week 25 can be found hobbling up and down Broadway from 42d to 46th st. The regulars know Blind George. He taps his way along the street with a cane.

Most of his gains are dropped into a battered tin cup by sympathetic people unacquainted with the big stem. Yesterday must have been a bad day for Blind George. So he changed his game. The cup in his pocket, the cane on his arm. Blind George was acting as a come-on guy for one of those corner sock salesmen who snap their valise" and run whenever a cop approaches.

George's job was to examine socks minutely and assure the salesman that he couldn't find a rip or a hole in any of them! Who says there ain't no evolution? Howard is the second American hostage seized by Chinese bandits, presumably in an effort to obtain some of the Rockefeller millions. Two years ago Lucy Aldrieh, a relative of John D. Rockefeller and several other persons were held in a mountain fastness for several days, but eventually were freed. The mangy cats whose cries surge out through the n'ght; the starving cats which slink in basements and in alleyways and find their food in garbage cans and in refuse in fact, all those cats whose only hope in life is to overcome a fat rat may at last have their chance. The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals announced yesterday the mobilization of a special squad of women who will man wagons on the lower east side to rid the streets of cats.

It is pointed out that while the society at all times works to keep down the number of homeless cats, establishing shelters for them, this will be a concerted drive to bring in the thousands which still exist. Some of those who will make up the wagon crews are regular employes of the society, but most, of the women will be volunteers, lovers of animals and particularly lovers of cats. She thonKht more of a rarrrr than a-, us ha lid, but nft to the wroitK pri-Non to a divorce. Itrnd "Thf Coat Of A Illvorr." today's true story romplrtf paitr -1. Send Orders to Subscription Department, 25 Park place, Neu York, N.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1919-2024