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DEMANDS ALL STOCK EXCHANGE BROKERS SHOW BOOKS AL * EDITION ———————— P 0 dale Ic E ON E co El N T. Copyright, 1917, by The Press ae Go. (The New York W Che YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1917. WILS orld, “Circulation Books on Books Open to All.””| to All,’ 18) PAGES WEATH [Fair to-night and to-morrow, ALL EDITION —— 3 PRICE ONE CENT. ———_——— | $10,000,000 TAX “ON AMUSEMENTS OF STATE PLANNED Stamp on Bach T. Ticket Pro- | vided For in Bill by As- | semblyman Coffey, \EMPT. | FAK COMMITTEE ORDERS STOGK EXCHANGE MEMBERS GIVE DEALS AND NAMES + President Noble, Called on for Rec-| ords From Dec. 10 to 23, Lays} Matter Before Governors—Ques- | NOTHING TO BE yen Church Fairs and Five- Cent Movie Shows Are In- tioned on “Manipulation.” cluded in Scheme. | ALBANY, ne 23.—Legislation by 5 ! To President H. G. S. Noble and the governors of the New York | Stock Exchange the ( sali Rules Committee investigating the | | (00° or more threuwh placing «samp “Weak” to-day made demand that all member brokers be ordered to PTO* | tax mae tleketa wi wee names and accounts of all customers for the period between Dec. | be the Assembly . | Thursday by Assemblyman W. 8 st | pm aes 25, a iY ‘ i ; ‘ . | Coffey of Mount Vernon, > Instead of the committee subponaeing the brokers and sending ac+| one oe such a bill, Mr. Coffey sala +» Countants into all the offices of the Wall Street region, it has called on | to-day, would do much toward solv- the Stock Exchange to produce the evidence of the big short selling and | ing the problem of finances now con- ’ Hear raids during the market slump in the “leak” period. fronting the Legislature. President Noble promised to call a® Meeting of the Exchange Governing | Committee this afternoon to eonsider | which it {s designed to ralse $10,000,- | amusement introduced in Under | bill all amusement tickets selling for cents the terms of the proposed would be taxed and would have that elty contrib- of the amuse- It would ma what the amusement was football, theatres, shows or church b of Rae Id be taxed alike, The testified | stamps would be printed in denomina enough to take in even icture shows.” Held to Ik srtifcation tion for Spite, | lars cach 3 nbers to - utes about 80 5 Mrs. Spielberg S Told Her, ) man L, Whipple, its co & | sou sena * © produce at the Ix charge of the Chatr ing House Committ the accounts which transactions who were sh “The committee word to her motion pictul znars baseball will nd who were show all} gy long and Harold Splelberg, wife | Tanzer'a one-time attorney, trial thi all wo re tojin the Safford perjury fter. | tons sma , {the nickel p does not des names, “I€ the Stock Exchange can- not exert its own authority over ite members then the committee go into all accounts or disclose Ali (noon that Mise Tanzer told her she kil ial dail Wood, Assistant U. 8. Attorney, Rac BECAUSE OF WEAK HEART ‘Tanger had, according to the wit already recanted her first identifica- Melancholia Resulting From Ph tion of Mr Osborne, ving he wi tet n must make its own searches into | ''°" sat aa die sician’s Verdict Leads Him to Eroker effiecs. If what the com- |not the man who had taken her to Silcide ‘ mittee can and will get from | the Platneld hotel in October, 1914, Let aco ‘ Kenneth Husson, sixteen, shot him- self in tho heart in the attic of hi Hollis Court Boulevard, every brokerage house can be sent to the Stock Exchange for examination by our experts, it “After Rae Tanzer testified at the | first Safford trial,” the witness said, i |home on will very much simplify the an- | “and identified Mr. Osborne, I said | Queens, L. I, this afternoon and died alysis of account to her, ‘Rae, you're crazy; you know | immediately KNOWS NAMES OF PRINCIPAL| that’s not the man. The boy learned a few days ago HOUSES THAT SOLD SHORT. “She had told me in my own home|that his heart was weak and that Whipple announced that wha ver|ten days after the suit was begun|he probably would have remain ‘ the answer of the Stock Exchange gov {that she had made a terrible mistake! under the care of a physician for ' ernors might be in the matter of |in identifying Mr. Osborne |time, He became melancholy and to Girecting brokers to produce their| “So when T reproached her she|day said he w inted to be alone for a books, the committer, on receiving it, jsaid: ‘I know it tsn't the man, but| while to do a little revding would go into executive session to de- | Roger B, Wood-—that dirty dog—got| {Ns mother now ane termine what course to pursue in|ie ro mad that I said it was James | Ros ho sald t “4 either alternative |W. Osborne just to spite him. T knew | stantancou If the Governors complied, then the |that he didn’t want me to say that committec’s experts would go to work | Then when T looked at that old man | on the books, and lay before the com. | Safford, when I thought of all he had | mittee what they found out as a basis |done for me that Mr. fer the examination of individua | Satora would certainly be convicted brokers. if I failed to testify, I decided to say ‘PASTOR SAID TO HAVE WED EIGHT TIMES BROUGHT BACK Slade said | 1, N Ja 4 Already, he said, the experts [it was James W. Osborne, I didn't, NEWBURC had learned from an examination |care what happened to r Broken in health and protesting his 4 ef Clearing House sheets the “And after the trial,” Mrs, Spiel. {innocence of criminal ¢ against names of the principal house berg added, “I told all this to David/im, the Rev, Arthur Worthington, which sold short during the per | siade. former Vresbyterian minister here, wedded @ and is charged with swindling a retired minister here out of a large jod under consideration, These the committee would hear in ex: ecutive session, he added, who Js alleged to have wives 4 David Slade is a brother of Benja- |min Slade, Safford's attorney Mrs. Spielberg told, in beginning her | testimony, President Noble was on the wit the story of a visit the sum, was brought here to-day ness etand two hours, answer paid to her on M 6, 1915, wet The seventy-year-old prisoner col questions of Stock Bx meth= late 1 brought sult lapsed tw tacks du with but © rom Hamp \ ods, He hid : of promise against Oaborne x Counsel Whipple. That was ov Miss 'T net ine a Ae question of ethics, whether the Ex id: ‘I've mado a terrible. mistake aah change should invest pools and | James W. Osborne is not the man ton was al combinations making bear drives online witness testified he also tola homes durin tugitive. ie had lived In 5 "7 tath, N. Y.; Johnson ( (Continued on Second Page.) (Continued on Second Page.) 1h oe Pg lO son hol >. - —_ wee * — SOCONY KEROSENE. ‘ FO} (For ia Entries See Page 2.) Wor to-day's advertionment ap Sage &—Adrt, Fotper Joan * \ The enact- | the Rules Committee's demand, He heehee ee he pines Beare eey whether oF not It would) cancelled when presented for ad- be granted, but unless unexpected op mittance, The tax would be increased Position develops it Is understood the jone-fourth of a cent for each twenty: | Bxchange will direct all its members |five cents paid for the ticket , , t iT} ” 3 sort of a tax," Mr. Coffey de. to send in daily statements of their | ‘ h ts with rea clared, “would be one the people | eres ore -ROCOUAYE | would not feel a hardship to pay, In names, not numbers or appeliati New York City alone it would raise “The Committee desl between eight and nine million dol- ee a Sea Horse, ie ‘Latest Fad Adopted by Palm Beach Society) PERSHING’S ARMY _ RECEIVES OROERS TO QUIT MEXICO | Withdrawal of the of the Outposts | Already Under Way, Rest | | of Troops to Follow. |ARMS MAY NOW GO IN. $ CCCSSER < Peeters Embargo to Be Lifted When | It Is Sure Munitions SVill | Reach Carranza. WASHINGTO -With- | drawal of the outposts of Gen, Per- Jan, 28 \¢ |ehing’s force In Mexico has been or (4 dered by War Department with| 3 the approval of President Wilson. The outposts haye already been {drawn In, and the general movement border will was officially the PQS Oo-s- 4080600 northward toward the | follow immediately, |learned to-day. Following Pershing's withdrawal, Siddiscodesorbeccapessoccesgcsbienkecsehanaaecsions the question of lifting the embargo | on arms will immediately come to the front. There is no intention of lifting | the embargo now, however, It is the | | desire of this Government to furnish | Carranza Government with all jthe arms It needs from now on, but! [ani] t must first be definitely determined | { U. 8, OWNED STEEL PLANT CONSIDERED FOR NAVY BRYAN SEESPERIL IN WILSON'S PLAN ays Plan Is Under Dis sion Following Letting of Con- Sec |the arms will get into Carranza andj} not Villista hands before the embargo | tract Abroad. | is sted | WASHINGTON, Jan, 23.—A Ved- No definite date has been set for) eral steel plant, to supply, wholly or sending Ambassador Fletcher to Mex-|4n part, the needs of the United feo City States Navy is “under considera- | ae A new alliance between Villa and Plea for Brotherhood Inconsis- tion” by the Navy Departinent, retary day The recent pronounced unde ding of Hadfields, a British n gainst Carranza was made by representa of the Navy Daniels said to | tent With the Means Sug- gested, He Declares. ives of those two chiefs at a conference at San Andres, near Chihuahua, bid- last week ut | OMclals here are less concerned in| concern, in open com ‘A lals he ° ce 1) concern, o ompetition with pepe 4 the alliance than in reports made by| American firms for the supply of| MADISON, Wis, Jan Wala Villa's fleld officers that they have/armor-plercing ‘projectiles for the| Jennings Bryan is opposed to the) now concentrated in the territory navy, is understood to hu im proposition of the United States jJoin- | south and west of Chihuahua 8,000! pre: men equipped to 1a | paign to carry ou ed the department with wunch a new cam-| for a Federal steel eal) plant. Villa's part noed | ing enforce | peac Commenting on a league of nations to President Wilson’s| chs RICH VAN NESS BROTHERS SCHOOL? GERTAINLY NOT! ALi totes seandartu TO WED MORRISON SISTERS oo Umlsse Budltacve (nati cae “Inseparables” in Everyday Life} spy bas “Was Stolen There, butt hic snot th Lied pede a Also Did Their Wooing Can't Find the Owner \ainapta tieligteai ctl eee tnt | Together, | An excited young woman tele-|!* @ntirely wound and reflects what | | I belleve to be an almost unanimous Marriage licenses were issued in the | phoned to Yonkers Police Headquar- ty Clerk's office in Yonkers to-day | tera to-day and sald her handbag |Seotment," said Bryan, “But I dis- |to Dudley R. Van Ness and Miss Jes-| containing a silver cigarette case,|%¢"t entirely from the proposition \sie H. Morrison and to Theodore R.| two packages of cigarettes and some! tat this nation should join in the Van Ness and Miss Ethel A. D, Mor- | things that were silk and handsomely |¢nforcement of peace tn Europe, It the nations will agree to peace on| lrison. A double wedding will be sol- | embroidered had been taken from the lemnized by the Rey. Charles N. Ar-| hallway of St. John’s Training School, ')* terrae suggested by the Presi- buckle in a few days. for Nu A Yonkers detective was | dent, they will nut need our assist. The Van Ness brothers are grand- | sent to y SAPS, | ee page , | “Ww lady whose cigarettes; “If I know the sentiment of the ms of the late mes Youmans, WHO! werg wtolen?” asked the ultra-dip! AWaritan ‘Gapneo Toh tae tet eft them a fortune in real estate, and | matt ee 1 : i pastor pied the Misses Morrison are th ughters| Not « forty young students | tat they should Ing to put t J A Mor r A silk) would ® lest the smok A joan army and navy at the com. | rchant of No, 3 Caryl Aven and the a ree of he Meche mand ae ternational councd) Not years has one of e Van were sure, oh, certain indeed, that a whi ! arily be Ness brothers been seen the streets | mistake had be made og ‘ at social functions without the! Cigarettes? Certainly not! |» ns, and jother, T have become known as —_ gouncil to decide for us when we would the ‘inseparables,” and the fact that go to war. ch an agreement, in my they ‘courted toporner and with unte. NEW YORKERS HONORED. |Svicmccc, sent mkreatnent: Im my | form success is not tn least su pal Bis Vexea, Bessie | prising to their friend {5 aids une they 5 J J Two Get French War Crow for! unlimited resources | = — Work ta Ambulance Corps, ing tael ‘ctr | Neutral Steamships Sonk, ‘ sein mea & thelr own inte LONDON, Jan Lloyd's reports Haren * pein ty care ts wi bea the the sinking 6 co Swedieh steamship, mendation in army orders 1 ha H h in our ability to} ing of th i reap American Automobile Ambular Sec ie Kamma, 1,516 tons gro reel prepa ape nple than T have in| he Danish steay Ampenbu: by silcnare rton, to help them by indorsing Py, P ros by i re has veral of its members menth ip ther | dor sh | ok bail pets nee Oe tndividually. Robert MacCreary of East plan of relying upon} an} _ 4 Marcellus Wild of | for L terrorism, | ae are named “for th In the President's ay he pre- wilt really exceptional devotion t * | gents t yophy of nerhood wed At the same time H r of and co-operatign, and this is incon iat y York, Marcel du Ca ¢ New! sistont with the propositi ra py York and 1. L 1 DBR. | haaked 44 of r the t \ sorce 25,000 Objects to Visttiow Re onpec BAN y Vres ASHIN President Barnun Chief of Staff the South WASHINGTON, Jan, 2%.—President | yi} plan visit the Capitol fre ern Dewartment, announced this after- Wilson now sees no pros 8D CX: | quer i ion on bia leaisiation noon that the first of the 25,000 Nae ‘tra session of C aller Sia aitaaUeal inane a pal Guardamen, to pe anit home tonday that } oth + all pee under the new order of the War De jtol_ frequently w es, Kepublican, who declared rtment would begin moving on Senators and Represcntatives in wpecd: it indicated @ course of “systematic iday, “ P? ‘up legislation, lobbying’ by the President, | President's Cummins of Iowa offered Jaddress to the § PEACE WITH VICTORY, BRITONS INSIST; N’S SPEECH PRAISED AND BLAMED —-—— + 4 -—_____ ENGLISH PRESS DIVIDED: LIBERALS LAUD THE SPEECH TORIES BITTERLY ASSAIL IT ————$—_—___- “Splendid Policy, Nobly Expressed,” Declares the Manchester Guard- ian; Globe and Other Papers Sav- agely Attack the President. FRENCH PRESS OPPOSES PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY LONDON, Jan, 24.—There is a sharp division of opinion in the conument of the British press on the speech of President Wilson proposing a world wide league for permanent peace. Some of them mindful of the error which led them to attack the peace note were cautious in their remarks. O.hers, like the Globe, savagely attacked Mr. Wilson in sarcastic phrases, In the morning Papers most of the comment hinged on the term “Peace without v With few exceptions they insisted the war cannot end in a draw, The Liberal press as a whole lauded the lofty principles in the speech, The Manchester Guardian called it a “splendid policy nobly expressed.’” Despatches from ris indicate BY THE SENATE [sxvnoe ATTAGK | BY THE TORY Senator | Seis Offers LONDON GLOBE. the bitter editorials Resolution to Begin De- bate on Monday. London Globe, One of was that In the most have read us a homily en nut victory." it said, ad- ; dressing the editorial to the Prest- a laaee, “while the world's greatest crim. inal goes unpunished, glorying in his crime, What have you done, sir, for the cause of justice, humanity, the rights of the weak and the honor of the to presume to school us in the mighty conflict from which you +_| Have carefully held aloot? sident’s; , You did not protest against the | Invasion of Belgium and wrote a note } the Cunard liner Lusitania was peace wit WASHINGTON, Jan, 23,—Senator rong a resolution to-day asking that the Pr ynate yesterday be | brought up for discussion by mem- bers of the Senate Monday Consideration of the resolution w And then you wrote a second note postponed until to-morrow. It 18 be-land then a third, because you were loved it will cause a gendal debate) seeking the suffrage of electors in of all the issues involved | whose ears the last cries of their It ia regarded as possible that | drowning countrymen wero smothered the address may be followed by | beneath the tinkle of piling dollars. a request to Germany for a more You did not dare resent the piracy declaration of when specific Peace Jand murder and now, forsooth, we terms, There are hints that an (who have given our best and bravest important statement may be ex- y the ndred thousand and treasure pected from Germany on Jan. 27, | i,y the thousand million to save the the K 9 birthda: : world, We must at your bidding lay The President intended it a8 AN! Gown our arms and dream with you open n sage to the world of ¢ our ¢ h dream of ce. conditions under which H mead panee ae Hlow then can you ask us to trust cep oo and } he future of lw race, the safety of our empire and peace Congress is tremendously dis- | {2° destinies of all mankind to the turbed over what part it is ex files rantees with which you pected to play in the proceedings. wou co of the world? As a matter of fact the President The n up the scrap of does not expect joint action by | Mi 4 who laughed at your Congress. He used the Senate te unk fresh ships while you counsel with whom and through = Were thinking of fresh phrases will whom to discuss with the Amer respect force and nothing else." can people what he has in mind CALLED. SPLENDID POLICY,: as the basis for a peace which NOBLY EXPRESSED, this country can back up, The The Manchester Guardian calle {t Senate may embody his idea in a resolution, ithe White House {dress splendid policy, nobly expressed.” : yeech in form,” the Guardian ‘was 1 to the Senate, erns ourselves and the war, The intention of taking tho actual negotiations of Phat he leaves wholly eliigerents, He simply comes now to state In unmistale , ms, both for his people an@ ently published fatima r the other people of the world, been placed in the @Yery one of whom Is directly cone cerned, what kind of peace it le which and letters in response | says, « Vast najority ind sident's |?) address but It equally con advers forward to re hat the vpeoratly lenge hands ready ~»