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SCHWARM FAMILY [SSUES STATEMENT .. cerning “Prince's” First Marriage The following communication has, been written hy members of the fam {ly of Harold Schwarm, alleged Rus slan prince, heir to French thro ete.: “To the Editor of The Herald “T desire the fololwing to be pub- lished in your paper “A correction of the ments of Fred Sunder! wife “The statements made by the above persons in regard affairs Harold Schwarm are greatly exag- gerated and untrue, stating they aid that when Harold 1 Ethel Abetz that he lived with folks. He did not—they lived mother. Also FEthel Abetz years of age when married to him the age of 15 The claim that support her is also a always worked, and, married life his untrue state- and and to the of as ed her with his | was at Harold falsehood did net as he ifter a while of desired to work rather than do housework in doing which went against her wishes. ‘At the time of his iliness she did not work as stated, though they had nothing to eat while money was found by her to go to pictures and his fam- 1ly had to care for them both She was never forced to work and went of her own accord “There are many other items which might be corrected and a great deal said in his favor, but the old adage of the “least said, soonest mendec is perhaps best “Signed by His mily: “MRS. E. SCHWARM 66 Prosvect Street, wife she z0 “August 9, 1922." Answering the claim that the local man served a three-months' pail se tence at Palmer, Mass., members of the Schwarm family that the facts relative to t incident Thad been badly distorted “doctor”” had tendered ment for his board. Several days be- fore the note was to become due, it was handed over to the police and Schwarm was arrested. He was di charged in court, local relatives say They deny absolutely that he had been confined to an institution for his financial dealings. C ATHOLI( S DEM -\\ D assert A note in pay- WAR ON BOOTLEGGERS | To‘ll Abstinance Union Urges The Maintenance of Law and Order As a Civic Duty. Philadelphia, Au adopted by the ( stinance Union of America, annual convention, upheld maintenance ot law and order as a civic duty and rot as a political issue, and declared that only by toleration of differences of opinion could a cause ar- ray themselves successfully against a common enemy With references to prohibition laws, the resolution sa “Whatever may be the whole trut about the results of prohibitory legis- lation in the United States, there is abundant evidence of many evils of alcoholism in many quarters. ““We believe that sincere horror for such evils suggests unrelenting war upon bootleggers and other criminals rather than vain discussion of actual or hypothetical conditions. Every duty is one of tHe hour and the sup pression of the bootlegger and attend- ant evils is the duty of this one.” The resolutions were presented the Rev. J. P. O'Callahan, former president of the organization MADE BOYS FIGHT 10.—Resolutions tholic Total Ab the lovers of by FOR PUNISHMENT | Children’'s Home Supt Plan To Tame Unruly Inmates. 10, —The Rey tandent Cincinnati, Aug roll H. Lewis, superi Children's Home, believes the plan putting hoxing gloves on inru boys and making them fight each o er has had a salutory effect upon both John Cable, boys, tried to obtain a warra the Rev, \Ir, assault and fused The Rev. Mr, “Harlan Cabhle, 1 r lay ward at the home, had heen very u ruly and unmanageable and had bu lied his 11-year old brother, Stuart The authorities aiso had trouble with another boy of ahout the same a ‘ho also imposed on a younger brot} er.” When all methods failed, Mr. Lewis said, ceived a request from Harlgn Cable's mother to punish him severely he put 12-ounce bhoxing gloves on the two boys and made them fight were exhausted. He stated felt they would not injure each other with the eoft gloves, hut that there would be enough sting in the punches to make them realize they cefving unnishment ““Attendants of the home and self stood by to watch that fair ‘was given,” said Mr [ewis 1 kept the boys at it for ahout 12 minutes. of the two a father of one of the ant against battery, but re it was Lewis of punist and he had ment re. that he my JAPAN 1n DENBY IN Yokahama, August f:na foreigners alike as a rule put ..eir morning suits away with the coming of summer and appear every- where in informal and cool dress. It was therefore somewhat noticeable with the arrival of Secretary Denby and his party to observe the contrast between the visitors looking warm and uncomfortable in silk hats and dark suits and the reception committee in white summer kit. Secretary Denby stuck rigidly to formal dress except when visiting Perry’s monument, but ‘other members of the party appeared {n their lightest sul'u and dresscs. Japanese his | |, to | The self-styled | Adopts Novel | l.ewis, charging his with | play | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1922, CROWDS IN BUFFALO | DEMAND JITNEY RUN esent Order Against Operation Buses Whose Drivers Now Are “itleggers,” Demand- operation a crowd Buffalo |tng that N. Y., ‘Aug; 10 the order against | of Jjitney buses be rescinded, estimatad at 1,500 stormed the city ’hm at six o'clock tonight. Police reserves dispersed the crowd and the leaders were told to organize a com- )1 return tomorrow when of- would be on hand to receive | mittee | ficials | them When told that Mayor Schwab was |not in his office the crowd raised a [ery let's get Pooley.” Justice (‘harles A. Pooley granted the writ of mandamus on Monday ordering the to enforce the law against jit- of mayor | ey operations | Other crowds assembled at various | starting points for the buses and the Iolice had to disperse them Operation of jitneys ceased com- r\hw\\ Jate today when Mayor Schwab ppealed to the Jitney Drivers' asso- _«:,mm to quit and “see what the In- | ternational can do.” The mayor h lcontended that the street railway has not enough strikebreak- company ers to give adequate service ARMED GUARDS AT ~ YARDS IS OPPOSED Trainmen Will Walk Out if There Is Danger, They Insist Chicago, Aug. a(By Associated Opposition to armed guards | about railroad properties as reflect- | ed in statements of leaders of the big four brotherhoods, today added a complication to ~the nearly seven weeks' old strike of shop cratts work- menting on the situation at 10 Press.) ers. (o iat ' brotherhood men quit work as a protest against presence of troops in the vards, Warren §. Stone, president leveland: such cases soon | gineers, said at C “There will be 100 conditions are not changed.” The head of the brotherhood of railway trainmen brotherhood of lo- comotive, firemen and engineers and | switchmen’s union of North America | supported the statement, and also Mr. further announcement “that the men can not go to work without having irresponsible armed guards endangering their lives, they may go home and stay there until the dition removed.” The brotherhood of railway steamship clerks, freight hand station and express employes also an- nounced its men had been ordered to stay away from their usual places of employment whenever thelr lives were endangered Meeting Today. Hope for resumption of service in the Joliet railroad yards centered on 1 meeting today of Elgin, Jolirt and Eastern railroad officials and leaders | of the "big four” brotherhoods. Un-' less there was an agreement, it was service on the entire Chi- | cago “outer belt” inlet and outlet for| such industries as the Gary steel mills| would be crippled seriously within 481 hours Meanwhile the situation at Chicage national center of the strike, marked time pending the meeting tomorSow of rail heads at New York and shop workers at Washington. if Stone's | when co and SCHWAB IN CONTROL OF STUTZ (0\1PA‘\'Y Guaranty Trust (nnlpanv Disposes of ¢ Ryan's Stock to Steel Master and Associates, —The Guaranty York has dis- nterests associated substantially all tz Motor Car com- rchased for its own auction Aug. 2, * York comp, to p M | the stock of the pany it p | account public Aug. 10 | posed with y of which at 1922 ouncement was made last itz Motor Car com- througt Guar- his ann At by [ pany of |anty | “Atan | rectors of the St Americ Trust a meeting e Réard of Di- itz Motor Car com- | pany of America, held Aug. 9, Eugene R. Thayer and Willard A. Mitchell Were to fill vacancies in made This M Schwab, as- sociates ma- ority of the stock of the company lLewis resigned as sec- urer, and Mr his place. Mr in president and independent com- 1ed in the two ge fact th o elected the hoard ¢ha s of Mr now reasor Thayer and certain own, or control a ‘George F retary Mitchell was elected Thompson will the business as an pany wil and tr he contin as where approximately 1,-| of the brotherhood of locomotive en- | lers, | | want to speak to me you can put = WOOED N WAR, BUT HIS LOVE HAS DIED Lieutenant Seeks Divorce--Wife Asks Separation New York, Aug. 10,—When Dudley A, Beakman, lieutenant with the Am erican forces in France, pictured in glowing terms to Mlle. Reine Mar- guerite Pugnoud, the slip of a French girl who had met and loved him in Base Hospital No. 6, at Talence, France, he did not tell her anything about the American divorce courts. They were both so happy and so young such talk would have seemed a sacrilege, Mile. Pugnoud and the American lieutenant were married in France, December 28, 1918, and at his request she preceded him to this country, be ing met at the pler by his mother, Mrs. Agnes Vail Beekman and )\\’ liam Holloway, his attorney. Lived With Mother-in-Law Until the following July, when Lieut. Beekman returned home and was mustered out, the little French bride lived with her mother-in-law Then she and her husband went to live in a little apartment at 1046 Fast 14th street, Brooklyn. In an affidavit, filed yesterday, with Supreme Court Justice Lydon, Mrs. Beekman asks alimony and counsel fees to defend the divorce action her husband brought and prosecute her counter claim for a separation She relates that after a while her hushand's love, protested so vehe- mently in France, changed to indif- ference. He struck her several times, she charges, and then hegged her to give him grounds for a divorce, ad mitting his love for her had cooled The husband, who is 28 and lives with his mother, says the indifference | was all on the part of his wife, and on Christmas eve, 1920, left him His mother essayed the role of de- tective and in an affidavit filed with her son’s papers, Mrs. Beekman tells ‘Of trailing her daughter-in-law and | Aime Dumaine of West 90th | street, Manhattan, from the latter's |home to TInspiration Point 1724 street, on Riverside drive Other Automobiles Near | There, she says, she and Samue Tuite, a friend of the family, watched | while her daughter-in-law and Du maine made ardent love in the ton {neau of Dumaine’'s automobile. | The young wife denies there was anything improper in her conduct. “On the occasion in question there were at least 100 automobiles on ali sides of us with their lights burninz.” complaint states Dumaine, she adds, is a country- | man twice her age to whom she had gone for advice concerning her mar- tial troubles. Included in the papers are letters Beekman claims to have received | from his wife. One written to him on the day of her alleged departure {from his home, Dac. 24, 1920, reads: | “Dudley—as you toid me, I am gone and shall never come back. If you want a divorce or separation T am ready. You shall have it. If you red ribbon at the window and you can meet me in front of the house here downstairs. T hold no grudge against you. Guard a good remembrance of me." Quite different is a letter alleged to have heen received some time later. “Dudley, dearest,” it reads: “Take me hack Listen, my Dudley dear Take back your little wife. If you knew how unhappy I am since 1 left you. I cried for you all the days, but too proud, I did not want to come [back. I have no more courage to suf fer any longer and I want to come back. T wish by my love and my lnd»hv\ to make you forget all the bad {1 did you. T0 BRING GOAL HERE Themselves To Underwrite Cost of Coal For Public Sale, New York Aug. 10 A group of | New York bankers have pledged | themselves to underwrite the of all coal shipped into this state resale to the public,under the fede allocation program according to gene H. Outerbridge, chairman of the state coal commission ated to dis tribute the kers take up all bills of ng as the coa line and dealers wi banks accordin coste | coal crosses the state later to Mr reimburse the Outerbridge EVERYTHING IN FURNITURE If you are ahout to furnish a home | we can outfit it completely. We carry | a full line of Furniture, Stoves and | Floor Coverings at prices that will | surely please, A. LIPMAN Second-Hand Furniture Tel. New and 34 Lafayette St. | The Mlller Hanson Drug Company | 30 CHURC antil they | H STREET Get For better resnlts, let us de your Camera and Supplies at | For Your Vacation were re- | Our Store. velop and print your pictures, Slx room cottage w tion. Here’s a chance f |small living. CAMP REAL 272 Main Street Phone 343 ith store in a good loca or a man who wants a If you’ve got tired of working in the shop, you can make a good living here, Money to loan on second mortgages. \ ESTATE CO. | Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg. | pemssessss ) 1329-2 | = | age, | necessary FORD BLAMES WALL STREET FOR STRIKES Says Moneyed Interests and Big Cap- italists are Directly Responsible For Conditions, Clayton, N, Y, Aug 10-~Muzzle the financial kings of \Wall street and railroad and coal strikes will be end- ed, Henry Ford declared in an inter- view aboard his yacht, the Sialia, which docked here yesterday on the way to Boston Big financlers are entirely respgn- sible for the two great strikes which now threaten to paralyze the indus- trial life of the nation and bring suf- fering on countless thousands of in- nocent persons in the coming winter unless they are soon settled, Mr. Ford asserted, “There can be no settlement of these strikes' said Mr Ford, “so long as the moneyed interests of Wall street continue in their efforts to dominate American industry. They are behind these walkouts, as they are behind every disturbance in the ranks of labor or capital. Get them, and you will succeed in bringing in- dustrial peace. “Let the manufacturers treat their men like men, pay them a living wage and give them working con- ditions conducive to self-expression and you will have gone far toward eliminating strife.’ Mr. Ford declared there was not a single union in thb country formed primarily by the men themselves or run for their benefit All unions were engineered by capitalists, he added, who knew that men could be more easily handled as units than as individuals. When asked his opinion of the Harding Administration, Mr. Ford re- plie “Harding? 1 believe he has done pretty well in his term of office, don’t you? Things seem to be run- ning about as well in Washington as they can, and that's well enough.” Mr. and Mrs. Ford spent some time walknig about the village and went to the farm of May Trwin, just outside the town. Miss Trwin offered to sell her former summer home on an island near Clayton to Mr. Ford, but the manufacturer did not bu saying he had a summer home of Wi own at Detroit sad would not have uge for the Trwin place. THE EARLY MORN’ R Let us deliver cream and milk. We want *~ to serve you with a worth while milk that has won a host of friends by its your % uniform quality. It's real good milk. “Your Milkman" PARK STRELT Galbraith & Pattison Bullders and General | ESEIBERT G- SN . PMONE 1720 3 Carpenters, ! Listimates Cheerfully Given— Jobbing Promptly Attended to. Tel. 092-3 C—————me—— CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-12 Estimates cheerfully given on all )ohs’ ELECTRICALLY BOSTON STORE DONNELLY, MULLIN CO. New Owners REORGANIZATION To Dispose SALE — NOW GOING ON— of Stock of This City’s Oldest and Most Reliable Store We wish.to thank the Public of this city and surrounding towns for their generous response, and wish to apologize for our inability to cater to the big crowd on the opening. The sale will continue for a limited time dle the crowds. and in future will be prepafed to han- BOSTON STORE Donnelly, Mullin Co., Owners ALIGHTS IN GRAND CANYON Washington, Aug. 10.—The first alr- plane landing in the Grand Canyon of Arizona was made yesterday by Lieutenant R. B. Thomas, officers’ reserve corps, of Kansas, at Turtle Head, Ponto Plateau, near El Tovar, the National park setvice announced. The landing place was 3,000 feet be- low the rim of the canyon. When you're broke, ain't got a cent And you're feelin’ kind a blue, An’ the clouds hang dark and heavy, And won't let the sunshine thru. It's a great thing to remember That insurance policy With its cash and loaning value, See H. D. HUMPHREY ROOM 208 NATIONAL BANK BUILDING For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Aduts. THE OLD HOME TOWN raT FER — ] LET US SERVE YOU || | —THE— COWLES ELECTRIC CO. 392 STANLEY ST. 2229-4 New Britain Royal Cleaners. TEL. I will exchange for New Britain real estate a splendid 135 acre farm sit- uated on West street, Southington Consisting of 2 houses, 5 barnes, gar- tool house, running water, 125 tons of hay, 28 cows, 4 horses and all tools and equipments, W. J. PHELAN Bristol, Conn. Telephones 388—119: VISIT OUR DINING ROOM WHEN IN HARTFORD Call At 24.30 STATE ST. Live and Boiled Lobsters Soft Shell Crabs . Fresh Crab Meat Shrimps Steaming Clams Chowder Clams HONISS’S BY STANLEY WELL BoYs | FOUND THE STAMPs- 1B THE POSTMASTER EXPLAINS THE ROBBERY WAS ALL A MISTAKE — MARSHAL OTEY WALKER HAS NO_THING TO SAY —