The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1919, Page 1

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/ Coppa, me by a tek ae _ _PRICE TWO CENTS. NEW YORK, MONDAY, 1919. “Circulation Books Open to All. PRICE TWO ‘CENT AUSTRIA Y PEACE TR TAR AND FEATHERS FOR LANDLORD, I$ THREAT ON CARD SERA ER Realty Man’s Exhibit Pleases Hirschfiekl, Who Advises Cut in Apartment Rates. WIRE AND RAIL RATE BOOSTS BY GOVERNMENT ARE UPHELD INOUPREME COURT RULING Fixing of tain Intrastate Tariffs] RUMELY LOSES APPEAL - Under Federal Control AGAINST EXTRADITION Commissioner of Acommts Hirsch- field had an open set-to to-day with Approved. Sidney C. Lewi, President and Treas, ri . 8. Dewey, Inc., owners ot Supreme Court Upholds Dismissal | ""e" of 1% & newer: ihe. of TEST IN FOUR STATES. of Habeas Corpus Move to No. iss. Manies Aventign tg BHted. ‘The tenants had complained to the Commissioner that their rents had WASHINGTON, June 2—Dismissal by : been raised 4 $12 a month within Federal Courts of habeas corpus pro- a year. bashes dhs ig! ceedings instituted by Dr. Edward A-| Tenants testified that since they be- Rumely, former publisher of the New| gan complaining of the increase in York ‘ail, to prevent his extradition} rents, water pipes ran rusty water, WASHINGTON, June 2.—Inereased|io Washington from New York to the steam heat was cut off, ceilings answer indictments charging violation Prevent Trial in Washington. Hines and Burlesog Win Every eaitincte. men Point in Tribunal’s Verdict, FORMER WIFE OF VICTIM telephone and telegraph rates put of the Trading With the Inemy Act was into beret sient aad fs to-day by the ter Géheral “BurleBon, ‘dispobing of appeals brought by swore upheld to-day by the Supreme | Rumrly. ; Rumely, who, the it alleged, purchased the New York Byening Mail with German money, was indicted in both New York and Washington. The Government decided to prosecute un- der the Washington indictment and Rumely asked for a writ of habeas corpus to prevent his removal to the i ‘ho eame time the court upheld inereates in freight and passenger railroad rates made last June. Im the wire decision the court held that under the joint resolution by which the telegraph and telephone pyatems were by the Gov- |Natlonal capital, ernment joe Has euthorty for in-| He contended that his removal would one arith int to eden: | be a denial of his right of speedy trial under the New York indictment and ‘The Court set aside South Dakota charged that the Government had given Napreme Court decrees enjoining the him no reason for its desire to bring ta Central and three other tele- him here. iphone companies, from increasing inr| Chief Justice White dissented from trastate toll rates in compliance with | the Supreme Court's ruling. the Postmaster General's order. Federal Court decrees permanently restraining the Postmaster General ‘from charging increaged telegraph ratés in Illinois were dissolved by the Coart. Colgate and Company Win tn Sherman Law Case, WASHINGTON, June 2—In disposing of appeals brought by the Government, the Supreme Court to-day spools Fed- jeral Court decrees an_in- Massachusetts decrees dismissing 'dictment charging Col meee * S ba "4 * ts toll ea, the (tate Public Service injunction | Pany, wae rere, ol let art icles, were affirmed and original proceed~ ings brought by Kansas were dis- missed. Justice Brandeis gave the only dissenting opinion. In the railroad case North Dakota | act. $10,000,000 Mining Judgment Affirmed im Part. ‘WASHINGTON, June 2—Optnions of the Federal District Court holding that the Butte and Superior Mining Company Supreme Court decrees enjoinging the | was gusty of infringing upon a patented Northern Pacific Railroad and Direc- | process owned by the Minerals Separa- tor General Hines trom enforcing any thon, Sees ot and 4 srarting the latter onder of the Railrdad Administration | Sproles, Hot Buoreme jnereasing rates in that State were | Court in aan fram ts reversed, Cirouit Court of Appeals, which reversed | The deurt also est aside lower| WD modifications that judgment, evtlon 16 the alread’ controll ARMY TQ TRY FOR RECORD IN FLIGHT ACROSS COUNTRY Ast pre-existing intrastate rates re- mained in efféct as lawful police regulations, ‘The Court hgld that the authority] F : conferred by resolution and the|New Wright Bombing Plane to Be act were war | powers conferred on the President-and that the power of ~%%e Federal Government was ‘“su- preme and conclusive.” The opinion was unanimous. | Used in Mineola to San Fran- cisco Trip, WASHINGTON, June 2.-—A record- breaking trans-continental flight from Upheld by | Mineola field, New York, to San Fran- cisco is to be attempted by the Army WASHINGTON, June 2.—Federal | air service. Court decrees in the so-called du Pont| ‘The new Wright bombing plane will stock suit, dismissing proceedings | be used, Tho schedule allows 61 hours brought by Philip F. du Pont against and 28 minutes. Pierre S, dujPont and eleven directors of the du font Powder Company to declare i he the purchase for $14,- 006,000 frony T. Coleman du Pont of $1,250, 000, 000 Bi BRITISH LOAN. gtock having a market value of $57,-|New Issue Authorixed for Early 000,000, we effect sustained to- Want ae dans by the Bupreme Court, which ro- 1 a to review the case, LONDON, June 2.—JIn the House ot had fallen and had not been repaired and no wall papering was done. Mr, Lewr tox Mr. Hirschtisra” (iat) iis initial investment in the property | $3,000 and that the yearly rent | ‘was $4,200. He admitted that his taxes this year were less than last but insisted that his overhead ex- pénsea were slightly more than a year ago, As a justification for his attitude toward the tenants he voluntarily exhibited a postcard ad-| dressed to him from Philadelphia reading: “Tar and feathers for the rent Bragter. You bloodsucker. You dirty loafer. You bum.” He saw no reason for considering the feelings of persons who wrote such things to him or who had friends dn Philadelphia who would write such things, he said, in effect. OF TITANIC WHO MARRIED. NOBLEMAN IN ENGLAND MRS, JOHN ASTOR AND BRITISH BARON MARRIED IN LONDON “T advise you to cut your advances in half,” said the Commissioner, “and make one year leases with these people.” “IT shall do nothing of the sort,” said Mr. Lewi. “I shall enforce a $3 raise right now, with no lease.” ‘There was a shout of dissent from the tenants, Mr. Hirschfield leaned over the desk and pointed his finger at the landlord. “Look here,” he said, “I don't care what the real estate brokers of Now York think of me. I am here to protect the poor people who are ‘Deing oppressed by such men as you. If you do not follow my suggestion I am going to get in touch with the Health and Tenement House Depart- ments and I am going to see that you a@re taxed on an assessment which is comparable to your ac- knowledged profits. As for the pos- tal card, I think it may state facts. I am glad you exhibited it because it will get publicity.” “It these people will get out,” said Mr. Lewis, “I can get even more money for the apartments.” “Now you have let the cat out of the bag," .said the Commissioner. “That statement is just what I need- ed to justify me in assuming that you are a profiteer, out to make all you can get.” LS ee ee VILLA AND ANGELES ATTACK CHIHUAHUA CITY Wires From Juarez Cut and Car- Pag Commons to-day a, resolution was 4 2.75 BEER CASE UP JUNE 17. | passed authorizing the Treasury to raise | Tanza’ Officials Make No Attempt a loan to a@ liimt of &250,000,000 (ap- to Restore Service. Argument to Ye Hear@ on Us S.|proximately $1,250,000,000) (@ cover the! Sanpy Mexico, June 2—Reports Appeal Agatast Writ, estimated deficit for the ye&r and any from reliable sources to-day are that Argument on the appeal of the Goy- |sym required for the repayment of ma-lcninuanua City waa attacked In force ernment against the granting of a ‘turing soe urities and the cremton ofa yesterday y Gen, Villa and Gen, An- temporary injunct Judge Jul ing fund, geles. “All communication is cut off M, Mayer restraining Mederad author J. Austen Chamberiain, the Chancellor \petween Juarez and the southern city. ties from inte v ef the Exchequer, suid It had been de- | Mexican Federal authorities at this end facture yor t sided to ake the fssuo immediately lor the line are making no attempt to cin the Circuit Court of Appeals on |u-ter Whitsuntide, June $ restore them, Reports from Mexican Wisstey, June 17 - sources are that the fight at Chihuahua Federal authorities to-day fijod an wor ee ‘i AUBANE. City is still ta prenrens Le alleging thirteen errors in thy 2 eee Bie si io mw Frac of the order to the Jacob Viesh nb m watch Neb Bass ee loftmens. Brewing Company, Tie Ava bt mah Widow of Titanic Victim Becomes Bride of Lord Ribblesdale. LONDON, June 2 (Associated Press). In the column of paid marriage no- tices in the Times this morning is one saying that Mrs. John Astor was mar- ried to Lord Bibblesdale on Saturday at St. Mary's Churob, Branston Square, London, ‘The Daily Express, the ony news paper announcing the marriage in its news columns, identifies Mrs. Astor as the first wife of the late John Jacob Astor of New York, who was lost on the Titanic, Mrs, John Astor is Mrs, Ava Will- ing Astor, who divorced the late John Jacob Astor some years a§0, Bhe is the mother of Muriel Astor and of Vincent Astor, who recently returned from France, where he served during the war in the United States Navy as a Lieutenant. Mrs. Astor dropped the “Jacob” from her name after Col, Astor's seo- ond marriage. Several times since her divorce Mrs. Astor has been re- ported as engaged to be married, Thomas Lister Ribblesdale, fourth Baron of that name, was born in 1854 and succeeded to ttle in 1876, He was married in 1877 to Charlotte Monckton, daugtiter of Sir Charles Tennant, who died in 1911, He served as a captain with the Rifle Brigade, was a lord-in-walting to Queen Victoria from 1880 to 1885, and then became Master of Her Ma- jesty’s Buckhounds. He is the au- thor of “The Queen's Hounds and Stag Hunting Recollections.” Two of his sons were killed, Thomas died tn action in the South African war, Cho Alfred ip the war with Germany. His three daugh- ters—Barbara, Laura and. Dia are married, At the offices of the Astor Estatte in 26th Street to-day it was said that nobody in the Astor employ has any more knowledge of the - Hage (han what appeared To the. news: |FOUR-FIFTHS OF Passing of the Empire of Austria-Hungary ‘Ates in Square Miles Population World Austria-Hungary Before the =» $3 - 241,000°. 56,000,000 50,000 6,000,000 52,000 10,000,000 ~ RHINE REPUBLIC "TREATY TERMS TERMS NOW SMALLER THAN NEW YORK STATE 50,000,000 POPULATION LOST | | \ } Cainhot Buy. Shit a Shirt or Rent a Hotel ‘Room: in. Moscow Without Permission. By Frank J. Taylor. PARIS, June 2 (United Press).— | Russia, under the dictatorship of agi- tators, is a land where liberty is an unknown quantity. The Bolshevik! have surpassed even Czarism in their { efforts to legalizo control of every one and everything. It is impossible to ‘vuy @ shirt, rent a hotel room or go from one town to another five miles distant without permits from the Communists’ Gommissaries. I entered Russia through the Ger- man-Bolshevik’ front in Lithuania, After being passed under guard from the army outpost through regimental division, corps and army staffe-—most ot which were composed of ordinary youths apparently. without qualifica- tion for responsibility arrived at Moscow, Owing to the fact there are now no hotels, I was obliged while still unwashed and anshaved to call on the Foreign Minister to get a pér- mit to live there, The Bolsheviki declare they do not want foreigners inside the soviet do- main, They had forbidden further en- try of correspondents, but relented and permitted me to remain a few Siperty" IN. MOSCOW UNDER BOLSHEVIKS RULE. Like every one in Moscow I had “perfect liberty,” except I could not hire an interpreter, leave town, take photographs, visit factories or schools, rent a room er see too much un- guarded, The Bolshevik Jeaders prom- ished to show me. the constructive re- sults of their system, such as factor- fes running under communism, but they made evasion after evasion and failed to show me anything other than propaganda and how to interview ‘leaders buljbling over with ideas, as yet untested, Taking a@vantage of a rumor in Moscow that American troops were withdrawing from Archangel, | man‘ aged to obtain the release of five American prisoners of war, confined jin Moscow and being exposed to Bolshevism by means of lectures. |The propaganda, however, did not deceive them, They were, Bryant Hall of New York, Glenn Levzell of {Continued on ourteenth Page.) prceaemementpnamnemenreee uh) RACING RESULTS PAGE 15. NOT SEPARATIST, |NLBERT’SNAME, BUT ANTE PRUSIN | Coblenz to Be Be Capital, but Pro- visional Government Will Sit at Wiesbaden. PARIS, June 2.—Coadlens will be the capital of the new Rhine Repubilo, which was proclaimed yesterday in several Rhine cities, The new Gov- erfment and National Assembly wili meet there, but the Provisional Gov- ernment will sit a Wiesbaden. Por- tions of the proclamation have been telepgraphed to the Echo de Paris from Metz by Maurice Barres, One significant section follows: “We declare the autonomous Rhen- ish Republic to be founded in the bosom of Germany. It is a pacific republic which is composed of the Rhenish province of old Nassau, Rhenish Hesse and tho Palatisate, The foyndation reste on the follewing bases: “1, The frontiers will remain the same, including Birkenfeid. “2, Changes in frontiers can be mede only with the approval of other nations interested as established by a plebiscite, “8. The Provisional Government of the Rhenish Republic ts exercised by the delegates of the people. “4. Eleotions for the Rhenish Na- tional Assembly will be held with- out delay according to the methods of the German National Assembly. “Coblenz is to be the capital of the new Government and the National Assembly wilt meet there. The Pro- visional Government will sit at Wies- baden.. Local authorities will con- tinue to exercise control for the time being. The Provisional Government will take the place of the Central Government and the Prussian, Ba- varian and Hessian Governments.” This was signed by tho Rhenish Hessian-Nassau Committee, and the Palatinate Committee, Another passage shows the move- ment not to be separatist, but anti- Prussian. M. Barres says Dr. Dorden, Pr dent of the new republic, is the soui of the movement. He ts from Bonn and before the war was a Magistrate, During the war hoe was a German| officer. ‘The Allied forces of oceupation will | take no part in the movement for the establishment of a Rhine Republic. the Journal says. The Allied powers will Observe an attitude of watchful wa Lag TERRITORY; Austria by Terms of Treaty De- livered To-Day Must Recognize Independence of Hungary and Other Newly Created States — Loses Her Navy and Must Sur” render War Criniinals; nsession a RE at , TERMS FOR AUSTRIA. a Mant hen ue. teri a a Sebi BODIED. Must accept the League of Nations. * Must accept terms of Of peave agreed upon for Bulgaria and Turkey, * Mist surender nao gully of War crimes fo be held by Allies anid Associated Powers. Must accept economic vondition and freedom of’ transit sinnlar to those imposed on Germany. Must surrender her entire navy, including arms and materials. Future use of submarines for wa:, purposes is prohibited: Twenty- one specified auxillary cruisers are tc be disarmed and used as mer- chantmen. All warships under construction must be broken up or a used for industrial purposes. The Brest-Litovsk treaty is annulled and Austria recognizes the” independence of all territories formerly part of Russia. Austria tetains' territory cf from 50,000 to 60,000 sqi and a population of 6,000,000. The clauses relating to the army, reparation, finance and part of» the boundaries are reserved, but it is understood that the Austrian Army will be disbanded, ST. GERMAIN, June 2.—The conditions of peace of ihe Allied pe Associated ‘Powers, with the exception of military, reparations, financial, and certain boundary clauses, were handed to the Austrian plenipoteritiaries at St, Germain tolay. Those clauses which are not yet ready for presen tation will be delivered as soon as possible, the Austrians in the meantime having the opportunity to begin work on the greater gart of the Weaty in an effort to facilitate a.final decision, The Austrian treaty follows the same outline as the German, and in many places {5 identical with it except for the change im name. Certain specific claus¢s which applied only to Germany are of course omitted, and certain new clauses Included, especially as regards the new states created out of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the protection of the rights of the racial, religious and linguisti: minorities in Austria, Czecho~ Slovaka, Roumg-ia and Serb-Croat-Slovene State, pais abil </ BG FOUR T0 REPLY | scnstvomsematt rt ON FRIDAY REJECTING GERMAN PROPOSALS Paris Report Says All Allied Con- ditions Must Be Accepted or Rejected Before June 25. PARIS, June 2 (Havas),—The re- ply of the Allied and Associated gor- ernments to the German counter- proposals, the Echo de Paris declares, will be handed to Count von Brock- dorft-Rantzau on Friday. It will constitute @ refusal of the | German proposals. The Germans, the | paper adds, will be told they must either accept or retuy“ che ‘Allied j conditions before Jute ¥ semen ¢ dees niles tory of between fiifty thousand of sixty thousand square miles, she is required to recognize the com- plete independence of Hungary, Czecho Slovakia, and the Serbo- Croat-Slovene State, and to code other territories which prev in union with her compose ° empire of Austria-Hungary with its population of over fifty million people. Austria agrees to accept the League ef Nations covenant and the Labor Charter, to renounce all her extra Puropean rights, to demobilize her whole naval and aerial forces, to admit the right of trial by the Alliéd and Associated Powers of her na- Uonals gullty of violating the law and customs of force and to accept de- {tailed provisions similar to these of the German treaty as to economic relations and freedom of transit, In this summary Part [ of the treaty, containing the covenant of the League of Nations, and Part XIf> v Excursion via New 46 round vip. Lan D TRE WONLD TRAVEL BUREAU, Arcate, Pulitesr (World) aes, ¢ atalalag the Labor Coavention:# are £5.68 @ark Row, N.Y. po ‘ou. “ eperrentpaetiemncree etal = myers

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