The evening world. Newspaper, April 1, 1913, Page 18

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| ' f WLSIN RAST. R; NO TRUSTEE PLAN TO RULE TRUSTS That’s the Progressive Idea— Opposes Government Part- nership With Monopoly. OUTLINES PROGRAMME. ‘Says Trusts Control Govern- ment, but Partnership Must Be Dissolved. ‘There te very little comfort for the trust magnates of the United States in an article from the hand and mind of President Woodrow Wilaon which ap- pears in the April number of World's Work, the editor of which has just been appointed Ambasmador to Great Britain ‘The article is one of a series entitled “The New Freedom,” and it is te Neved to reflect President Wilson's Keas on trusts and monopolies and what should be done to regulate them. President Wilson makes {t plain that he beHeves this Government has passed Inte the hands of the trust magnates— thet the Government has been for many years in @ sort of partnership arrange- ment with the trusts, He also makes It plain that he purposes to end this ar- rangement, and he doem't mince words about ft. Here is the concluding para- wraph of his article: “Our purpone in the reatoration of freedom. We purpone to prevent pri- vate monopoly by law, to #ee to it that the methods y which monopolies have Deen fuilt up are legally made Impon- sible. We design that the limitations on private enterprine shall be removed, so that the next generation of young- eters, an they come along, will not have to tvecome proteges of benevolent trusts, Out will be free to wo about mating their own lives what they will; #0 that we shall taste again the full cup, not of charity, but of Nberty— the only wine that ever refreshed and Fenewed the spirit of a people.” TAKES 'S8UE WITH THE ROOSE- VELT POLICY. As a theme the President takes the Platform of the Progressive Party and the Roosevelt plan of regulation of t trusts, He takes issue with the Roose- velt policy that ahy monopoly should be legalised. He asserts that the Govern- ment ehould govern the trusts and not enter into a working arrangement with them and their exploiters. The idea is quite clearly expreased in the following extracts from the article, the sub-title of which is ‘Benevolence’: “If the Government is to tell big bus- ineas men how to run their busine then don't you see that the big bust men have to get closer to the Gove! ment, even nearer than they are now? Don't you see that they must capture the Government in order not to be re- strained too much by It? Must capture the Government? They have already captured it. Are you going to invite ‘those inside to stay inside? They don't have to get there. They are there. Are you going to own your own premises, or are you not? That is your choice, Are you going: to way: “You didn't get inte the house the right way, but you are tn there, God bless you; we will stamd out here in the cold and you can hand us out smething once in a while? YUNIOR PARTNER HAS BEEN RUNNING THE BUSINESS. “At the least, under the plan I am opbosing, there will be an avowed part- vernment and the trusts. be ostensibi: member. For I take it that the G: ernment of the United States is at east the senior member, though the younger member hax all along been running the business, But when all he momentum, when all the energy, when @ great deal of the genius, as Ko éften happens in partnerships the world Children Cry her washwoman. several women fainted, THE EVENING WORLD, News Oddilics a ts No one may catch or have trout befere May 1. So the Manhattan man who makes a catch before that time Will do well to sneak home and not “blow | q @bout his @kill, : i ——— In the past two days 13,084 immigrants have landed on Elis lelend. King Nicholas of Montenegro smoked too many cigarettes and they knocked : him out. Now Vienna hears he is going to abdicate. ‘The Turkish “oles” are Committee of 1,000 Demand more deadly than their guns, New. Term ‘For Mayor Who A letter from Bt. Louis addressed to “the Divorce Judge in Camden” has reagied Vice-Chancellor Leaming of New Jersey. It reads: “Dear Judge: iT ” ” Pleane wend me a divorce at once. I will need ft, as iam sbout tomove and want| Has “Served City So Well.” to marcy again, 1 was married in Camden and hope you will send the divorce tight away.” ‘The Committee of One Thousand Of the 7,490 insane in New Jersey institutions 2,667 are foreign born and | formed for the purpose of promoting the Btate officials are making efforts to have them deported. the candidacy of Mayer Gaynor for re election isnued a circular to-day invit- ing voters to join the committee. Co- incidemt with lauding the adminiatra- tion of the Mayor the pi sional com. Mittee signing the circular attacks Dis- trict-Attorney Whitman, although not naming him. “ “A group of citizens has recently been formed with the avowed purpose of Gghting the next Mayoralty on the In- suet Of the brothel, the gambling den and the saloon and of nominating for the head of the municipality a man whowe whole public life has been epent in contact with the underworld,” they announce. “As Police Magistrate and as District-Attorney he has rendered some service to the community, but can It be doubted that his long contact with vice in its various expressions has given him a distorted “lew of human rela- tions? Can any one doubt what kind of & campaign his supporters, if he should be nominated, will wage in his behalf? ‘The ‘brass checks’ of the discredited Jorome will be flung once m@ge on the var of public opinion to influence mor- bidly inclined voters. The newspapers will have to be exchided for weeks from the homes of those who would preserve the domestic atmosphere from pollution and visclous suggestions.” The circular, which is signed by Louis Annin Ames, John Adikes, Benjamin Doblin, Philip Hano, Willard U. Taylor, John R. ‘Butler, Henry Siegel, William 4 Van Cltef, Sol Bloom, James Ous Woodward, William J. Underwood, P. Inanc Williams, a negro at Nutley, N. J. was given money to buy files by two mon, who, he saya, planned with him to rob a bank, He spent the money for beer and as he #1 mellow told of the plot. Charles Van Viiet and Harry Blaser of Monroe, alleged pals, are with him se Nutley jail. ‘The mysterious absence of President Wilson from been cleared up. It wasn't flood news that kept him had “took.” Oh, piffiet rch on Sunday hes y. Hie vaccination William Frazer coughed up $87 te the police at Yonkers after hie arrest yesterday, No, thie ien't @ graft story and he's in jail, He had tried to ewallow the evidence when arrested for theft and choked. Mra, Cecelia Natkine, wife of @ real estate broker, is being sued in the Hupreme Court for $10,000 on @ charge of false arrest by Mary Louise Butler, It appears that Mrs. Natkine had deposited $46 in her “hank,” then forgot it, and the “bank” went into the weshtub. It was found there, but the $45 wasn't. Then she had the washwoman arrested. Lightning struck twenty feet from a crowd waiting for a train at Branch- ville, N. J., and a score were knocked down by the shock. None wae hurt: but Joneph A. Cohalan, the Boston Marathon runner, known to surgeons of Boaton and New York as the grittiest patient on earth because he underwent ‘St least thirteen operations as a result of injuries due to exertions as a racer, has won healiii and @ bride. He will marry Mins Margaret Elisabeth Fits- werald of Ashmont, : member of the Boston Opera Company, about April. 18. They have known each other aince school days. Ira L. Davis, arrested as @ bigamist at Atlanta, admits having three wives, but has pursled the Court by this defense: first wife was alive when he marrie’ hin second, #0 the second wag void. The Gret wife was dead when he married the third, eo the third was legal. over, is with the junior partner, I don’t Soombs, William Lu: ten think that the superintendence of the vuliy “= Pipioeg as foratar ce scnior partner is going to amount to nounced that headquarters have been very much, And I don't believe that benevolence can be read into the hearts of the trusts by the superintendence and suggestions of the Federal Gov- ernment; because the Government has never within my recollection had ite opened in room No. 3 at No. 1 Fifth REPORTER IN YARD avenue. It is highly laudatory of the yor. “The Mayor was conceded by all a Se who were in a position to know, to have Dows Must Answer in Special eliminated much of the police graft which present prosecutions are bring- ing dally within our view, and he was proceeding to further eliminations,” the cireutar declares, “He knew how little ot good had been accomplished in the Past by mere exposures of graft, wit- “There is no hope to be seen for the people of the United States until the partnership is dissolved. And the busi- nean of the party now entrusted with Sessions For Midnight Rese the Lexow and Maset investiga- power is Koing to be to dinsolve 4 gh tlona, * ¢ © His attitude Is still the “The National Administration,” Joke on Caller. same, With the same charity which clares President Wilson, “has for six- teen years been virtually under. the reg- ulation of the truats, I don't care how benevolent the master is going to be I will not live under a mi That is not what America was created for. Anfrica was created in order that every man should have the same chance every other man to exercise mas- tery over his own fortunes, What I want ¢o do is analogous to what the authorities of the city of Glasgow aid with ‘tenement houses, I want to light And patrol the corridors of these great organizations in order to see that no- body who tries to traverse them is way- taid and maltreated. If you will but hold off che adversaries, if you will but nee to it that the weak are protected, 1 will venture a wager with you that there are some men in the United States now weak, economically weak, who have brains enough to compete with theae gentlemen and who will presently come into the market and, put these gen- tlemen on their mettle. And the min- ute they come Into the market there will be @ ‘bigger demand for labor and 4 different wage acale for labor. “We have a great programme of gov- ernmental assistance ahead of us ithe co-operative life of the nation; but we dare not enter upon that programme until we have freed the Government,” he showed to the misguided mantac who tried to assassinate him, he re- ‘David R. Dows, the playfully disposed Millionaire, who in the early morning of March &% threw @ blanket over the head of Albert Johnston, a Times re- Porter, and locked him in the back yard of the Dows home at No, 121 Haat Sev- entieth street, was heki by Magietrat Murphy in the Hartem Court to-day in $100 bail for trial in Special Seasions, Before holding him the magistrate strongly intimated that the reporter should withdraw the charge of assault in the thjrd degree, which he had edged against Dows, but Johasten re- fused to do a0. Johnston testified that he had called Dows on the telephone earlier in the evening to Inquire into the facts of Dows's reported attempt to ride the trick dorkey at the. circus, and that Down had told him to come to his hone {f he wanted to ask questions abeut that Incident. As soon we he was ad- mitted by: Dows hiinself, according to the reporter, somebody standing in the rear of the hall threw a blanket over his head, he was bundled up so that he could not struggic, and then carried to the back yard, where he was dumped unceremoniously onto the cement puve- ment. After he had rovsed the nefebborhood by pounding on the iron shutters in the rear of the Dows house with the top of an ash can, Dows opened the back door, Johnaton sald, and told iim he S The ik Me a WATERBURY, April 1.—The New York police have been asked to keep a lookout for Mendena Membrino, daughter of a shoe dealer here. She 1* known to have gone to New York with] could go. Dows ordered two Hetmes de- . Her sinter says the two ttracted by the nolse, to take The girl te er to & police station, James Ely, counsel for Dows, tried to Prove to the Magistrate that what Dows had done to the reporter did not con- stitute amsault even in the third degree, and he offered In evidence a copy of a letter of apology Dows had written Johnston, 3 i SRE pameagayy | . and Was In the graduating class at the high school, for Fletcher's ve. Bennett, that Heinze bought tock be- Tdephone Builds Business uisite for doing business to get at a customer. tore customers you can readil get at, the more business you can do,” G, W. PERKINS, in “The Evening Journal” “The 1s TURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1013, fused to join in the i 1 cry against] 44 7] the policemen who hi betrayed the city, for he knew that is not the way in which regeneration Hes." The circular closes with an fof renomination of “the Mayor has served the city #0 well.” HEINZE SUES FOR $975,000 LOST IN MORSE “ICE POOL” Declares Dividends Were Fictitious, Paid to Keep Worthless Stock Up After Collapse. The suit brought by the Richmond Assets Collectiny Company, assignee of Arthur P. Heinze, against the Charles W. Morse “‘Ice Pool members to re- cover $976,000 which Heinze claims he lost because of stock manipulation will be followed by other suits, it was said to-day, in which heavy recoveries will be nought by persons who Maim they subscribed to the pool and failed to receive due returns. ‘The summons filed in the County Clerk’a office designates Mra, Dellora R, Gates, widow of John W. executrix of her husband’, on, Charles G. Gate at al who executor; Charles W. Morse, Charles M. Schwab, John M. Flagler, Robert M, Thompson, Isaac Guggenheim, Carroll, as executrix of the will of John F. Carrotl, and James W, Bar- ney and Ashbel H. Barney, as execu- tors of the will of Charles T, Barney. Heinse's claim is based on his al- leged losses in stock of the American Ice Company and the American Securi- tles Company, both Morse enterprises. Heinze was led to purchase the stock, he claims, by false representation and manipulation. ‘The sult became actionable,” said an wyer E. M. Bullowa, leinge's counsel, “after the decision of the Court of Appeals which held last week, In the case of Ottinger | Mrs. Theresa R. leving the dividends being paid by the Ice Pool were bona fide earnings. He learned that the dividends had no exis- tence, but were merely distributed to ‘buoy the market when the pool col- lapsed, and its stock was found to be worth little of what it was represented to be worth.” ————_ POPE HOLDS AUDIENCE; RECEIVES AMERICANS. Gives Personal Greeting and His Blessing to All Presented— Ap- Pears in Good Health, ROME, April 1.—Pope Plus to-day held a most important audience, at which many prominent Americans were . Kennedy, jean College in Rome, Judge Bordwell, of Penfield, of Con- necticut; Mrs, Katherine Bolande, of St. Loula; Rev. John Cavanagh, president of Notre Dame University, Indiana, and Rev. James A. Burns, superior president and professor of moral theology at! Holy Cross College, Washington, D. C. | © The Pope spoke to each of those pre- sented and gave all the Pontifical kiss, ‘He appeated to be in very xood health. first r to be ab TO COURT ON YEAR-OLD ORDER IN $20,000 CASE Attorney Says Promoter Dodged Him a Year After He Got Judgment. J. Edward Addicks, familiarly known as “Gas Addicks, who for six years deadlocked the Legislature of Delaware #0 that his State had only one Senator, was arrested and taken into the Su- preme Court to-day on a “body attach- ment,” pursuant to an order Issued by Supreme Court Justice Lehman more than @ year ago. The papers show Ad- dicks failed to appear for an examina- tion to discover such ptoperty as would enable Hiram N, Burton of Boston to collect a promissory note upon which Burton had obtained judgment to the amount of $20,000, David Welch, Burton's lawyer, told Justice Newburger, before whom Ad- dicks was arraigned by: Deputy Bheriff Philip Donohue, that he had been trying to catch Addicks for more than a year and had not been able to land him until to-day, when he was seized leaving an apartment in West Fifty-seventh street. Mr, Addicks declared there was no Jegal judgment against him and that ft was a “trumped up case.” Welch asked that bail for Mr. Ad- dicks (be fixed at the amount of the Judgment, but this the Court refused to do and ordered the prisoner in the cus- tody of the Deputy Sheriff until he had engaged counsel, _—_—_—_——— APRIL FOOL JOKE SERIOUS. Bakers Fight With Kuives After Bang! went the April 1 cigar in the face of John Fletenstein when he was preparing to go to work in Max Vogel's bakery at No. 1431 Fifth avenpe early to-day. “Har-har! Oh, har-har!" roared Phi- lip Folkowitz, the donor of the ex- plosive April Fool's cigar, also @ baker employed in the same shop, But Fletenstein could not see pis dignity outraged that way, to gay noth; ing of Ris Mustache. He seized a bék- ers knife and started for Folkowits. Folkowits defended himself with an- other knife. They fought until Police- man Doerhola burst in and arrest both the duelists, Hi One with five stab wounds on his arms and body and one with a rip in his arm, they went to Harlem Hospital. Both are under arrest for felonious as- sault. James McCreary & Co. CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought has born the at; ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his supervision for over 30 years, Allow no one m endanger bealth of Children Experiimee against Experiments What is CASTORIA rmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pares Seis, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither jum, iMorphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de= stroys Worms and allays Feverixshness, For more t thirty years it has been in const: use for the relief o| Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colle, Teething Troue Dies and Diarrhes. 1s reaulates th Atomack ane wels, asain e Food, givin; ealthy and natu aloe The C m’s Panacca—The Mother's Friend, a The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of in Us For ‘Over 30 Ypars THAW WITNESSES HEARD. | ve Grand Jary in, ry Seam | Dr, J, W. Runsell, former Superinten- dent of the Matteawan Asytum for the Criminal Insane, and G. C, Roeder, a re- Porter for The World, were witnesses to-day before the Supreme Court Grand Jury whioh ts» investigating the Thaw bribery scandal, William F., Clark, for- merly Secretary of Gov. Sulser's inves- tigating committee, will testify to-mor- row, He will be followed by Alfred Henry Lewis, who 1s said to have been retained by the Thaw famtly to write magazine articles to place Thav tn a Vetter light before the public, Thaw is to be heard by the Grand Jurors and the investigation may be completed this week. Three, or possibly five indictments are expected. pesca A oil WOMAN PALLS FROM WINDOW Lenses Balance Shaking Ont Ci Planges Dewan F: Mra, Elisabeth Goets, fifty-five years old, living on the sixth floor of No. 3 Kast Highty-seventh street, to-day fell jout of her window to @ scaffold at the , second floor, @he was shaking out bedding and lost her balance. Dr. Stewart removed the woman to the Reception Hospital. He said that her back and hip had been seriously injured and that she was suffering from internal injuries.. Little hope was ex- pressed for ber recovery, As it is “the mind that does business” and “the tele- phone gives the mind wings,” you can do more busi- ness by telephone than in any other way, because you _can reach more customers. And you reach them in a personal, voice-to-voice manner, that builds business. Do You Make Full Use of the Tel e in Your Business? @ NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY C™ “makes of Laces, suitable for trimming the newest 34th Street 23rd Street { On Sale Wednesday, April and STATIONERY DEPARTMENT. Engraved stationery in correct forms and letterings, at moderate prices. Estimates submitted for Wedding Invitation Announcements, Reception, At-Home Cards ani Visiting Cards. Monograms, Crests and Coats of Arms, Book Plates and Address Dies. : , Especial espe po Ay Paton by unusual large assortment ig le Writing Paper in the prevailing shades, also Dinner and Tally Cards. * Special Prices. Cabinets containing four quires of Paper with Envelopes,— White only. 40c per cabinet Cabinets containing 120 sheets of Paper and 100 Envelopes,— White, Gray and_Blue. gis . 5c per cabinet Cabinets containing 24 Cards with Envel plain or gold edged. 25c per cabinet Desk and Library Requisites, Smokers and Game Sets, at attractive prices. FEATHER NECKWEAR. Chiffon and Marabout Scarfs, in White, Pink, ight Blue, Taupe, Natural or Black. 5.25 Light Blue, Taupe, Natural or Blac vate an Marabout Capes,—Black or Natural. ..2.75 vaiue 3.75 Ostrich and Marabout Capes.............. values 5.50 and 6.50, 3.25 and 4.50 Ostrich and Marabout Stoles... .... 350 value 4.75 Marabout Stoles, with tassel ends....3.50 : value 4.75 Special Sale of LACES Linen and Cotton Weaves. Including all the desirable widths and various cotton and linen materials. Filet and Antique Laces.......8c to 1.10 yd. i value 12c to 1.45 Linen and Cluny Laces, 1 to 2 inches wide....... f value ssc 2c yd., 2Oc doz. yds. valuc 1.75 9c yd., 1.00 doz. yds. Linen Cluny Laces 2 to 5 inches wide............ ' gfe Ise to $0c, 10c to 25c yd. Calais and English Valenciennes Laces....... 1% to@ inches wide. 25c, 35c and 45c doz. yds. : value 50c to 1.00 2to7 inches wide..............100¢ to 25¢e yd, value 20c to S500 WOMEN’S NEGLIGEES. Special Values. of Messaline and Crepe de Chine — 12.50 end 15.60 values 18.50 and 25.00 Negli of Albatross, in a variety of models. — 6.80 and10.80, 4.50 and 7.50 Kimonos of Crepe de Chine, trimmed_with shirred ribbon. value 10.50, 7.95 Kimonos of Flowered Silk...2.75 and 3.7: oven values Ss aod 78 i of Plisse or Flowered C: fc disauten aire irs wo 3.80, 1.35, 1.78 and 2.28 A ‘arge variety, showing all the new models. Materials include Voile, Marquisette, Batiste, Crepe Voile, Cotton Ratine, Chiffon, Crepe de Chine and All-over Laces te prices. ite C) de Chine Waists, with low neck and py dete, finished with velvet bows and buttons to match. value 4.98, 2.95 Waists of Stripe Habutai,—model with turn down collar. value 3.95, 2.95 Chiffon Cloth Waists,—attractively trimmed with shadow lace. as value 6.95, 5.00 All-over Shadow aists, in very effective models. value 6.75 10 18.00, 5.00 to 12.78 White C. de Chine Blouses,—Robespierre model, with frill down front and on sleeves. ; value 7.80, 5.75 Waists of Fine Voile, in All White and White with colors. vaiue 3.25, Crepe Voile Blouses, finished with double frill down front and on sleeves, value 3.28, 2,00 French Voile and Batiste Waists, trimmed ith dainty laces and embroidery; high h collar. 2.95, 3.95, 6.75 to 15.75 | 34th Street 23rd Street Negli waitann Olamae models.

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