Evening Star Newspaper, December 10, 1922, Page 21

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HYLAN RAPS RING INCONTROL OFU.§. “Gotham Mayor, in Chicago Speech, Scores “Rule of Corruption.” I HITS KLAN, TARIFF LAW| - Biitish and Wall Street Blamed for America's Entrance Into War. i TR | BY the Associated Press. H CHICAGO, December 8 —Mayor John F. Hylan of New York tonight brought his attack on the existing | volitical and economic order to the | dle west in a speech before the | Cook County Real state Board. ! He assailed both the republican and | democratic parties. the “powers of greed and corruption” in Wall street, denounced the Ku Klux Klan and all other organizations which, he said. seek to divide the electorate on racial | or reli s lines, blamed our entry into the war on British misrepre- sentations and Wall street greed, and scored the tariff law. i *h was under the sponsor- e ! his court, conferen Would ba continned during his visit : here, both cutives were non-ce mittal on the subje will leave for New York Monday noo Iays Wealthy “Dictators.” A small group of “excessively wealthy individuals” control both the major political parties, he told the 1tors, and through the exercise of “powerful. sinister and too often u lawful influence have become the vir- tual dictators of the destinies of more than one hundred and ten million people.” They have dictated nominations for the presidency, he said. written the vlatforms and party pledges, and be- cause of their campuixn fund con- tributions arrogated to themselves the right to dictate governmental policies. Pubiic officlals who dare to oppose this power, Mavor Hylan said, are driven to “an earthly as well as po- litical grave” or compellee promise with their co become subservient tools. The interests of Wall street bank- ers, the mayor added, “are common with those of their ilk on the other side of the Atlantic” and "this, he asserted. was “evidenced by our en- trance into the war.” “Americans Misled.” |Man Innocent i ME, ASSERTS WHITE Great Britain and the allies. he charged, misled Americans by their; sorship and edited and doctored per dispatches to make them! conform to their cause. America went into the war. he sald. to pro- the foreign investments of the Wall street bankers and because the! great munitions manufacturers want- «d the additional profits that would ! 2 are now urging, he clared. that America remit the 0.000.000.000 loaned to the allies, be- would have a ance of “collecting their own for-! eign investments. He attacked Sec-! retary State Hughes as a tool of the Standard Oil and a “former Rockefeller Sunday school teacher. Turning to the tariff law, Mayor Hylan declared the Aluminum Com- pany nf Amvnra of which Andrew M oEa iy of the Treasury, is/ of approxi- through | | 2 “gift mately $23 a year the tariff act The K ux Klan. he continued, | probably 'was engineered by the ruling minority of money lenders of ate disscnsions among the different ereeds and races of our people. thus diverting attention from | their own sinister machinations | _— DRIVE ON STOCK FRAUDS WILL BE NATION-WIDE Information Service to Protect Public Against Get-Rich- Quick Schemes. Ry the Associated Press. 'EW YORK. December 9-—A nation-wide information service d».| signed to protect the public against promoters of fraudulent schemes has heen put into operation with the co- | operation of the National Vigilance 1 21 been done an injustice by the admin- better | 3 : did not wholly believe. The governor Committee in better business bureaus «of thirty-eight cities of the United States and Canada. it was announced | ioday. Lew! Pierson, chairman of { the Irving onal Bank and a mem- ber of the advisory council of the bu- reau, made the announcement. “Every effort will be made to turn the public against fake promotions and stock selling schemes as they ap- Mr. Pierson said, “and to pro- | the Investor before he has traded | savings for worthless stock.” The New York bureau has saved the pub- Jic an estimated $50.000,000 in the past | e montk work In several schemes the radio -blind_pool” and other fraudulent operations. The aid of large industrial con- cerns and business houses, bank: chambers of commerce and labor o zanizations has been obtained in dis- | seminating the results of the bureaus nvestigations. RETURNS FROM SMYRNA. | Y. W. C. A. Worker Is Near Col- lapse After Hardships YORK. December 9.—On the ter her experi- Pt Smyrna, where and left at once for her home, | in Springfield. M She planned to remain there 2 week. 00 terrible | describe.” was her only comment. | Robert kinner, American con- a5l Seacest 1ol Tostor: was anctes| nger on the America. sss3: THE GIFT my vecord for the past 30 years. Terme of payment te sult—Ex. “\m‘cl Teanl; [ ot many king Sleanliness ln ows of eec atri Seurs. Rinaly DR. WYETH 427-29 7 Plrl-lh Qppostte Lanburgh & Bro, and Thoroug! pped I"!ll over to operative l-l mechanical { order Most Useful Xmas Gift That Can Be Wyeth and Staff of Expert, Careful, Skilled Dentists. Over 600,000 SATISFIED Patients. Our Long Life Plates and Everlast- sng Bridge Work Will Be a Very! Appropriate Gift. DR. WYETH'S REPUTATION s te But Can’t Get out of Prlson PITTSBURGH, December 9.—In- 1 abilit; Jjucicial salary T PAY LOW, JUDGE QUITS. |U. S. CASE AGAINST ROADS TO BE HEARD JAN. 25 Pennsylvania Resignation Based :‘ Court Sets Date for Arguments for on Living Cost. 'HE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, taneously the Union Pacific arked per- mission to intervene on the ground that its lines connect with the Central Pacific. Arguments on this motion also will be heard January 25. The hearings will be here for the con- venlence of Judges Sanborn, Lewis and DECEMBER 10, 1922—PART 1. the Church of St. Pancras, one of the old ones in Rome. The church was erected by Pope Symmachus in the fifth century. It was stormed by the French under Gen. Oudinot in 1849 in fighting against the forces of Garibaldi. It was restored in of 9 VETERANS’ BUREAU SHIF1 Pay Equalization Causes Dropping of Some Employes. land, famous gin manufdcturers, to- day obtained a license to wed an American widow, Virginia Orth Johnston Delgado. They will sail for Holland immediately after the cere- mony, on December 22. 1857 by Pius IX, Close to St. Pancras are catacombs, where some excavation work is pro- Mrs. Delgado is a daughter of the late Harry Ayres Orth, Washington, D. C., attorney. Stone, who will sit as the district court of Utah, it was said. 1 —_— Equalization of pay of employ« performing the same work In the | Veterans Bureau was declared Severing of Southern and Central Pacific. y to support his family on his was given as the' By thie Assaclated Press. ceeding. The American Academy i | -~ DETROIT, December 9. —The |reagon for his resignation, sutmitted | py 1y Associated Press, MGR. BONZANO CHOSEN -nearby: | Director Forbes, of the bureau, in status of Leo Sauerman, Serving & [to Gov. William C. Sproul today by | ST. LOUIS, December 9.—The fed- J 7 i His Eggsact Meaning. Siwsemens Siast Susntee s ve Se life sentence at Marquette peniten- |Common Pleas Judge Stephen Stone. | eral court today set January 25 next FOR ST. PANCRAS CHURCH MHS DELGADO To WED | ¥rom the Boston Transcript. ¢ !u(,npv_:-rdve:se“:mh‘ r':'.fii'"ld'ffi"{fl';' d‘ tiary in connection with medkg“lls The letter of resignation, effective |for arguments in the government's case & » Hub—Those two old gossips have | charge of « number of emplo: of Alex Dombrowski, 1s Indefinite |pecember 11, declared to effect a severance of the Southern | By the Associated Press. | been setting on the piazza all the While Mr. Forbes would not prom: following alleged mnfem""l‘! l'l! . “That financial lo; increase in | Pacific and the Central Pacific on the | "ROME, December 9.—Pope Pius|Will Marry Member of Famous de afternoon. would be no more redu. vin Brown and Hom"d~ o€l l"| my living expenses and inability to|grounds that they are competing lines. Bas iat ed M B 1 = = el personnel, he declared en here, that Sauerman had no part in ‘| qipport my family on my present | Arguments were scheduled for today, but 8 Informed Mgr. Bonzano, former Kuyper Family of Holland. Wife—Not setting, dear; you mean | ployes who are engaged in work e« he crime. o cuting at- |481ary In the manner in which they (were deferred, it was explained, to ive | apostolic delegate in the United| o "0 b "l T sitting. sential to administration of soldic Paul W. Voorhis, prose “_"':K s have been accustomed to live are the | counsel for the Southern Pacific, which | States, that on creating him a cardi- A - cember 9.—Jean | "Hyb—J mean just what I said. I'm |relief and who are nerr.rmlng their torney, said today, that neither he | reasons why I find it necessary to re- | controls the Central, time to study the |nal at Monday's consistory he will| Ulric Marie de Kuyper, a direct |sure they're haiching out trouble for| duties satisfactarily oy nor Judge Joseph A. Moynihan, who | ¢yrn to the general practice of law.” |government's line of argument. Simul- ' designate him titular archbishop of | descendant of the de Kuypers of Hol- | somebody. ! fear as to retention of their ynl(l(:m $ nced uerman, can order . although they may rec Tiend such action to Gov. Groesbeck. h recommendation is not likely at time, the prosecutor declared, is not satisfled that that killed Dombrowsk:. told reporters today nee forced him to confe: part in the killing of e “I couldn’t bear to see an inno- pend his life in prison for he is reported as hls | r’i COURT KU KLUXED By the Associated Press. FMPORIA, Kan., December 9.—The case against William Allen mporia_editor. charged with ting the industrial court law ng a placard in the window newspaper, was dismissed at_ lock this _afternoon in _district Judge W. C. Harris presiding. Mr. White appeared at the court with his attorne In dismissing the case, Judge Harris declared the rumors arising from the state's refusal to bring the case to trial has done White an Injus- tice, and the judge flayed the admin- istration of Gov. of Henry J. Allen for the way in which the case had been handled. “This case was comm enced ma- liciously or reck- lessly, without in- vestigation of the facts to ascertain whether the prosecution _ was WM. ALLEN WHITE. justified” the! judge said. l White Issues Statement. White, in a statement after the declared he had been “Ku and “by a court that did not have the guts to pull out their shirt tails and give a Ku Klux parad R. M. Hamer, attorney fcr White, 2sked Judge Harris if he would make a statement as to whether White had | tions. After reviewing the information, | nd citing the fact that three times Mr. White appeared demanding trial three times the state refused to him. asking continuances. Judge Harris said: The state has a legal right to a | missal of its case, but it is a great wrong to charge a person with a criminal offense and humiliate him by arrest maliciously or without prob- able cause; the lay mind associates est with guilt. ‘The court is forced to the conelu- sion in this case, by the conduct of the moving party, that this case was commenced maliciously or recklessly, ithout investigation of the facts to scertain whether a prosecution was justified, and in either event the ac- tion was equally reprehensible. “A defendant in a criminal prosecu- tion is entitled to fair treatment. I do not think the defendant in this case has had it. He is left in a most em- bar-assi ition. Judge Harris emphasized the wrong that had been done Mr. White by ses iting rumors which the state's per Sistent refusal to try him has started. To Be Dropped at State’s Cost. application of the state at its c “Of course, I am bitterly di aid in a statement this even- | . “I was arrested during the late railroad strike for posting in my window a placard declaring half-way | vmpathy with the strike. in which I had ordered all placards down. I} defied his order in order to test the i case in the courts, because good lawyers said it was an illegal order. “The attorney general declared that I had not violated the picketing law, ! and would not draw up the warrant. Judze Huggins, chairman of the in- dustrial court, declared publicly that 1 had violated no law. But Judge McDermott of the industrial court felt that an arrest should be made, and is responsible for the warrant, zned by a clerk in the governor's office. T had Gov. Allen's assurance be fore he left for the governors’ con. ference in the east that some way | would be found to get the case into | the court. But Jydge McDermott vetoed him. And so we go into the next labor controversy without an portant point settled which might have been settled. “Under the promise of the trial, over the I am now denied a trial, and, what is more, the state has not dared | to try any one else for displaying that | poster. “Ku Kluxed” by Court. “It all amounts to this: This in- trial court law, which I belleve ! written to establish law and| in labor controversies, will| | never stand on the books if under it men are arrested on tricky warrants | | that the state dare®not defend in du v without warrant of law, are than lawless and labor in their battles. 1 u Kluxed’ and by a court that did not have the guts to pull out their shirt tails and give a Ku Klux parade. ‘The attorney general and the | presiding judge of the court seemed to think they had no case against me, and Judge McDermott, who is respon- ble for the warrant for my arrest, has neither the common decency nor the manly courage to come down and try the case on its merits. 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