The evening world. Newspaper, March 15, 1920, Page 2

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tional regime, {t was reported here. A Berlin despatch says that repre- sentatives of the Entente missions | conferred with Kapp in Berlin Satur- day night. ‘Troops are patrolling Brunswick and Leipsig, it was sald, adding that demonstrations have been | held in in the industrial centres of | Rubr, Bssen and Duisbers. | dante KAPP COMPARES FLIGHT OF EBERT TO THAT OF KAISER) Says His Cabinet Left Berlin With- out Making an Attempt to Defend Itself. BERLIN, March 15.—(By Wire! to London)—A proclamation issued by the new Government this morning says: “In order completely to exterminate the monarchist idea from the minds of the German people, the former Gov- | ernment, and especially the Socialist members, poured out their venom and contempt on the flight of Pmperor William, which they characterized es a desertion of the colors, although that flight was accomplished in cir- cumstances justifying less severe con- demnation, ‘That same Government has now forsaken its duty and left Berlin without so much as an attempt to defend itself, as it had every pos- stbility of doing. “The statement that the troops were amreliable was uttered solély in order to cause its own flight to be more favorably regarded, A Government] ang Majority that was really capable of ruling should, have possessed the strength to carry the troops with it. This deser- | correspondent tion will stigmatize the okt Govern-|insisting that ment in the eyes of the German people | should give up thelr coalition with the AT AGERMAN PLAN TO NULLIFY TREATY SURE TO FALL, THE OPINION IN PARIS of the Military and the Pan-German Part) PARIS, March 15,.—The latest advices to the French Foreign Office from Ber- lin, it was said to-day, indicated that the revolution in Prussia had thus far been confined to the Military and the Pan-German Party, and was without dent of the German General EI demned the movement, From all the information thus far re- weived, it was udded, the impression in official circles was that the Military long the state of uncertainty for some time, possibly a month or two, but that without the support of other political he movement was doomed to failure. to Questions of Newspaper Correspondents. BERLIN, March 15.-Ignatius Trib: iteh Lincoln, the chief censor, called a halt when the correspondents began to heckle Dr. Kapp after his formal statement yesterday. One of the cor- | Technically Foch, but War Department S President Must Fir: respondents sought out another official and put to him the direct question: “From whom did you get your man date?” We represent those who have been working months for this achievement, was the reply. Ananalysis of the new Kove position in the light ofknownd ments indicates it Is receiving popular or political support, e fim No enthusiasin is publicly mani- fested, udurpers, but Baden, Wurttemberg and Saxony are openly in oppesition. Ham- -bure ‘The new government ralivs mainly oh the support ‘EBERT ASSEMBLY Assembles at Stuttgart, Where the Old Government Has Estab- lished Its Seat. BERLIN, March 15 (By Wireless to London).—The erman National As. sembly has been summoned by the Bhert Governinent to meet at Stuttgart Tuesday, March 16. Berlin adv! that the old « established its apital of Wurttemb webs EBERT REFUSES TO TREAT WITH KAPP CABINET) Gaps } “We Take the Ground That New | Government Is Merely a Few Partisans,” He Says, | LONDON, March 15 (United Press).— ‘The Government. of F nt Bbert ha orted had Stuttgart, the night re SHUNS COMPANY Spends Most of Sunday Pacing in Garden and Misses Church for First Time. AMERONGE Emperor William to-day in the garden of Ben- tinck Castle, where he paced up and down with every evidence of great nervous ten. Religious serv held regularly there ry Sunday, being under The terrible strain of the events | few days seems to weigh 80 heavily upon the mind the former others, and he makes every effort to get out of doors. | 3EN, Holland, March | Crown Prince Frederick William on hearing of the counter-revolu- tion became very much excited. He motored several times into the village in an endeavor to learn it | Burgomaster Peréboom had late news from Berlin. hlihainihiatiaiaeein Slebieiellloi! Prom Sunday, March 14. greater part of 8, which were omitted to- Emperor that he the company of Press).—Former Sat tS Cabinet. This the Majority KAPP GOVERNMENT }» «». Kapp Government has informed the postal and telegraph officials that strict and sharp measures will (be taken against them in the public interest a is Said to Have Only the Support|GEN. MANGIN MAY BE SENT BACK TO RHINE) Former French Commander 1 Has a Conference With Premier | te Millerand, any wate lander C. Knox of Pennsylvania, hi self a former Secretary of State, ex- | 000,000 available Pressed it several months ago only to be denounced immediately as a pro- 15.—Signific other political support. Leaders of the|attached to a conference which Pre- conservative parties and such industrial | mier Millerand had this morning with leaders as Dr, Walter Rathenau, Presi-|Gernal Mangin, former Commander- lectric | in-Chief of the French forces on the Company, it was declared, had con-| Ryne, here with Gen. Begoutte, at pre in command, but it is not forgotten that the name of Mangin means far Party might hold possession of Berlin|™More to the German Millarists, No|PPrehension that th and other important centres and pro-| confirmation 4s obtainable of the re- ports that the French forces on the Rhine are being n the Pan-German Party | Was said at 7 The attitude of the French G ‘ WHO IS BACKING HIM] nae ise oft Rrench Govern: upon she German revolution concerned about the execu-| skilful plot of the wealthy Treaty of Versailles, than is more tion of thi German Chief Censor Calls a Halt | who controls the ¢ Under Direction of | Powers are not ated under American not participate into Germany tlons Press).—While technically still direction only nation having Rhine which has not be- | to to the Treaty of Ver- | the ¢ xplained, and cons merican detachment | home across the Atlantic. d by the terms of the|ish Army has gon sivle military action against Germany the re followed here, Interest] and declined to as «@ being closely centred in Marshal F Allie in the at consist of about SUPREME COUNCIL MEETS TO TAKE UP | GERMAN UPRISING LONDON, March 15,—The $ Council of the Peace Cc Mfce to-day gazetted | and the othe te Ls We neoonee sked up with enough not to want -in-chief of the Bri- | manufacture refused to negotiate with the Berlin revolutionists, Hbert dec! terview at Dre arding to a des. patch here to-day | Bert was quoted in the interview as} expressing (ull confidence in the out come of the present situatior “The new Berlin Government a hae offered to negotiate with us, but y have refused absolutely," Dbert said, ac- | eording to the despat We take the | ground that the new Government in Berlin does not represent any party gropp bat ix merely o few partisans | who have seized power temporarily." LONDON, March 16 (Associated Fress),—Ohaneellor Kapp, according to fhe. Berlis correspondent of t Ex-| @angse Telegraph, yesterday negotiated | Srultisely in an endeavor ty induce the | again, Ker | Army on the Rhine, 4.1 an -|NQ STRIKE ORDER | 'tistach’"is to bisine ¢ ISSUED BY ALLIES "20" 3 e Notice That Public Utilities | works Must Not Be Disturbed in Occupied Districts. | pply of Independent Soclalista to enter the new STREET FIGHTING IN | CONTROL Negotiations between the Independent > Socialista may e Tee garded as having broken down, the _THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1920. Kapp to feceslaiiah the constitu- | EX.KAISER SHOWS Battle in the Str ° . GREAT TE a eets in the Heart of Berlin ONS COMPAN During Early Struggle for Government Control wees: ONRESERVATIONS. (Continued From here sequence of ace impos is the wa German. But recent pressions isfaction is felt ent indemnity IN MOVEMENT. Indeed, not vern- rmany eudy t out from under, Al Berlin Government has U.S. ARMY ON RHINE, Ji a judge of wnat rms TO MOVE ONLY ON WILSON’S ORDER here. For the truth is the + posit rmany ately to make ( Rhine, Act. France has s March 15 (Aasocle| ferent parts of Germany ; Assocl-/ hundreds of thousands large numbers of whom ized, But Germany is w of Marshal Foch, an analogy one, T @ United|ment of its terms. overninent of the latt knows it. Amefica’s arm: those terms they| the earth technically to the] tically di mobilized, Only Marshal Foch as the] pressure can make Germany behave and she thinks the pressure of the Stops being taken overseas for pos-| peace terms is Worse than anything that could possibly be done to her if ands in despair arry out the terms is reason to be many did hope for the a of the United 1 after this conference he| coupled with that of Great B a a meeting of the Supreme War Council represented on that council American forces on the Rhine 13,000 troops under ution we she threw up her wh’'s conference | of th d commanders | jie port from | influenc treaty. ‘The 0 of! United states ts] ag” ing upon — her. ake “Germany pay” b Allen many, Many of the finanelal pe Government think th whole business Hes in I say the Associated T ipreme sin Europ L, N. Morland to |!8 mueh from urope, the Leag urope w te And the strug , 18-—The Attea|Neros of the outer world fiddle H the occupied districts {OWN Particular national airs tructed the toc — Re reat Sat alties for O41 nforming the au-| be held respansible | Hon to-day announced | Berlin, whieh | turned on 620,000,000 LOAN the “cruel and harsh 4 upon enator Phi- the Board of Education told of th difficulty of building operations even when there is plenty of money Jable, He said there was about §: and ments from Great Britain have indi- |" cated that the sober second thought of the peace-makers has been one of| DOESNU’T BELIEVE PRICE OF | Would not go ahead with any building | ceived a letter from President Wilson may have im- | posed upon the vanquished foe terms of peace which made it impossible for reinforced, but it| him to earn the money to the Foreign Office that it.was quite possible the reserves of the Rhine army had b in preparation for inability to procure ‘building mate. ee * ee ls. ‘The greatest shortage, he said, | Iron Erectors’ League, Mr. Brindell | If you’il do that, the treaty will be |» nh brought up HINT AT NULLIFICATION SEEN few people here who would bear the gr ‘man Government, |est burden of the indemnity, treaty It will fulfill—those that seem, “just and reasonable.” This is ¢ tual hint of nullification, and i mittedly having a disquieting | stated that brick would be imam | thousand when navige ys a has about 15,000 troops on. th England has not many more. areely 100,000. This, acec 1 rout muni- troops on the Rhine would| tions and military opinion here seems any Allied advance|to doubt that she is courting fresh without specific direc-| trouble with the alli President Wilson, it was|It is rather said to-day at the War Department. tion in Ru Officials said the situation so far as Prussia :4 counted ga supporting the|the American forces were concerned was States is troops on th come a par sailles, it was quently still is govern MEETS TO-MORROW [ars uuject orders supreme Allied commander, on the y to the ~ when the Bolshevikis agreed to the treaty of Litovsk and assumed an attitude passive resistance to the It would cost the Allies a good deal orce peace upon Germany, and to the far ends of The French Army is prac- was made by Mr, the Iron League E who said hi to bind it erectors would not give preferenc union Inbor, He admitted the iron erectors had stood out against the representatives o the terms which was 90 instrumental — in Moreover ction pledges of Lloyd George to Ve now been superseded by a strong labor senti }ment which openly advocates a vision of the terms of peace with G the industry in the Buildin KEY TO THE SITUATION NOW LIES IN RUSSIA, | preferenc wers have building for Americ] are under Allied policy has wavered and hest- | ur up | t that was neces ms of peac f Nations. America say ave gotten out depending much on financial aid from the United | and dricklay (lists and Monarchists in Berlin the proverbial conflagration while the j talk of rent legis ranging from PLEDGED 10 AID HOUSING PROBLEM (Continued From First Page.) avail- and that 22 schools were now under contract or construc- tion, He asserted the gr at trouble 1y in apparent shortage of labor and was in bricklayers. BRICK WILt BE RAISED. William K, Hammond, President of the Natior tion, declared that he did not believe the present price of brick would be, por the bricklayers, John Gill said| , According to another report which advanced during @n agreed upon they had been on strike since Jan. 1 |building period. He laughingly an nounced that because of the law against price fixing and the threat Of) worked the Lockwood Legisl to put price fixers in jail, it would not be safe for him to give public, positive assurance that the brick manufacturers are willing to adhere .|to a fixed price for a period which ud-|may be agreed upon by those inter- ested in the building boom, 1 Brickmakers' Associa- Mr, Hammond previously had ion opens at he towing wharfs on the Hudson. ding to thousand at new ‘buildings. Mr. mmond said t! Mr, Hammond attacked bri Klayen for failing to keep their agreements. | “AIL we show the same patriotism displayed by our boys who fought racy,” continued Mr, Hammond, bricklayers realize that in building homes they are shelte suppre part w The first reference to the labor troubles that have held up building Roberts, counsel for ik is that the bricklayers Let ng radea'sm, If they do their “Il do ours.” rectors’ As: ther branches of Employers’ Association SUGGESTS CAR PREFERENCE FOR BUILDING MATERIAL. Builders told of erence met | nx stake In hesitat a grave mistake In K soDougul, a contrac old reet to-day to con-| Russia to trade. ‘This would A- MaoDoumal, a contractor, told situation brought about by {furnished markets for manufacturers| of $2,000,000 worth of contracts on Sat peelety ar taney ae from G y, France, Great Britain} twenty-two buildings, five of which | the big factor that en. d into the situation. ay of « tru cessive strikes of plumbers, glaziers He said the time for constructing a building had th doubled in thi wo or three yea Jand that the cost had ‘been inereased about two and a quarter times Samue) A. Herzog, a builder, said to frighten builders and hold up con struction bert 1 Brindell, 4 lent of the Building ‘Trades Coun told th Mayor 41) of the building trades > ae p aan EARLY STROGGOLE OF GERMAN GOVERNMENT SENATORS VOTING TO ARTICLE TE King and Taft Substitutes for Lodge Proposal. WASHINGTON, March 15.—Paving the way for a final vote on the reser- vation to. Article X, the Senate to-day sen's eubstitute proposing summary disavowal of all obligations. Under an agreement reached Saturday a nnal vote on the reservation must be reached ‘to-night. Senator Frelinghuysen's was the first of the pending reservations to Article X to be voted on, Only Republican and Democratic irreconcilables supported it. ‘The vote on the reservation showed that Senators Wadeworth, Sutherland and Frelinghuysen have joined the Republican irreconcilables as they have been threatening to do, and fore- | cast their votes against ratification. Following rejection of the Freling- : : ebb ib icitictleb let bieleinleieielelenieleloiieieleieleleleieiaieleleieleteieiedoietl huysen reservation, Senator Kirby, Similar combats in German citie s are reported to-day in connection with the overthrow of Ebert by the says, the Independents} Pan-Germanists under Dr. Kapp, the Majority Socialists | lie Arkansas, Democrat, introduced a reservation, to which forty Demo- ,|crats had pledged their votes. It was | defeated 31 to 45. 118,000 men—would stick by their| Genator Kirby followed defeat of present wage agreements throughout | the reservation by offering the Taft the present year, This with the ex-| reservation. Forty Democrats also ception of the bricklayers, whom he | had agreed to support this reserva- admitted had refused to sign con-| tion, It was quickly! voted down by tracts with the employers along with | the Senate, 30 to 46, thus disposing |the rest of the thirty odd unions) of both proposals submitted from the | | | represented in the Building ‘Trades | Democratic side. Council: Senator King, Utah, then presented 5 a new substitute, stating the “under- The difference with the bricklayers, | Siinding” of the United States ot ‘he said, was because they demanded Article X. It was rejected without a $10 a day. All the rest of the building Tel! ¢ oh ‘ dei ee vecatene ye ie nator Simmons followed Senator trades have signed up for $8 @ day! ying with a reservation providing | with the e: tion of the plasterers, that the United States would use its who receive $8.50. Mr. Brindell friendly offices, but not its men, 4 the building trades to 100 per | money. or purces to iprotect other ee Per nations, or to help settle controversies cent. faithful work and said they petween nations, stood ready to put up a bond that Senator Simmons said 41 Demo- they would fulfill thelr agreements, | crate would euppart bis reservation a ed to the Republicans who He said he hoped (before long to ha egal P adh want the treaty — ratified to join the bricklayers in line, Democrats in adopting the reserva- Rega nding the controversy with the | tion. pledg ratified,” Mr. Simmons said. id the ‘building trades workers | Goncerning reports that he had re- on which the steel had been erected rejecting the Lodge substitute reser- by non-union workers. Ho charged ion, Senator Hitehcock to-day said that the Iron Erectors’ League. is | that he had not recetved such a letter, ss saa S/put had “verified his belief that the dominated by the United States Steel | president would not accept the Lodge ive Committee representative of a bricklayers’ union, means $87.50 » were 150,000,000 | brick on hand and he didn't think | ©M¢° the price of this would be advanced. | for democ- ng humanity, iation, organization had refused If to the closed shop. He said work was going | open shop basis and that the iron ahead on the to troubles in getting shipments of building materials owing to car shortage, ‘They suggested that be given to cars loaded with roof, with $600,000 worth of material on the ground—all of thi tied up by a strike of plasterers, He said labor was Davis, representing the City By and Suburban Homes Company, told on Work halted by sue- ution Was operating Corporation. | substitut enator Hitchcock declined to verify, *\the President instead of writing a let- an hour against $1)ter in reply to an inquiry from Mr. they | Hitehcock concerning the Lodge sul stitute, wrote across the face of the reservation : “This is not aceeptable-—W. W Mhey asked $1 for the other trades ‘becau fewer hours, owing to weather conditions and lack of inate- | rials, than any other trade in the! Tica denise DN ave anliteaideeanee:| LZ ROM LOST SHIR | RESCUED AT SEA if the Mayor would nge a confer- | layrs’ a ence between the ‘br tion committee and the empl association FOUR HUNDRED ATTEND THE, a | Another Boatload of Men of Nor- wegian Bark Sydnaes Still MAYOR'S CONFERENCE. Missing. Four hundred leaders of finance.) ,. mei tas : labor and building material industries, | The steamanip Vaart from Genet ne and representing many hundreds of| munications Office here by wireless millions in realty capital and 500,000 to-day she had picked up Capt. A. An- | skilled mechanics atténded the confer-|dreason and eleven men of the Nor- | wegian four-masted steel bark Syd- yor Hylan, who presided, said|naes, from Norfolk to Montevideo, is becoming | #bandoned at sea March 2. The chief officer and eleven other men from the Sydnaes, Capt. Andreason said, were in |the problem of housing |the gravest in the city.” Causes for Mead ala ckening Of | dhother boat. The Vaarli had heard | building because of the war and the! jotning of the fate of the second boat. | abnormal demand for housing accom-|pye men picked up had drifted 100 modations, due principally to the| miles in an open boat. | stoppage for several years of the an-| The Sydnaes, with a gross tonnage nual erection of 40,000 new houses and | of 2,335 and a length of 283 feet, was |the influx of outsiders with money, PU qn ail raul Eee aap who can outbid the permanent resi- | North Atlantic asking all vessels to Genta, It dg these outsiders, pringl.| seer © lookout fob Whe milaelng Pont, ple we Nee oi een |O. &: DELAY SPREDED REVOLT, SAYS TAFT prices of apartments, the Mayor sald. | He addea that the profiteer is indif- ferent to public opinion and that the} Moderates Under Ebert Needed only law he fears is one with sharp Moral Support of America, teeth. . ‘ade , Continuing, the Mayor said: “The Declares Ex-President. }fundamentals in a building pro- | gramme are men and money, Unless jth are those ready and willing to) Belief that the revolution in Germ |work and ma mortgage money |was hastened by the failure of the available, there can be no building, Senate to pass on the peace treaty "There must be definite price fixed tae ue iat if there Is. to be | Was expressed here by former Presi- | stability in building | “If the material men will heed the} “The tes under bert and lea of New York. surely we may | Noske were Republicans at heart, who i ntly expect that the build needed the moral support of this ‘ctora and operators’ will ale suntry, which should have been sup. theniselves to conduct an in- ied by the passage of the treat tensive and uninterrupted programme he. rit Fale ener erro CT ee same period || xia, where he will speak on the Leag "| of Nations, in the building trades that the whole | SUN structure of our programme rest They help to end the increasing ny aa _ Notice to Advertisers: HAVANA ENTRIES. Advertising copy and release mun papas orders for either the week day |, eet aA Morning World or The Evening FA i pee I Si World, l¢ received after 4 P. M. | Katherine Beal, 111; Rowate, the day preceding publication, can be inserted only as space may permit and in order of receipt at The World office, Advertising copy for the Sup- plement Sections of The Sunday World must be received by 3 P, M. Thursday preceding publica- tion, and releases must be re- ceived by 4 P. M. Friday, Adver- tiving copy for the Main Sheet of The Sunday World must be re- celved by 6 P. M. of the preced- ing Friday and rejeases must be received by 12 o'clock noon Sat urday. Copy or orders received |; than as provided above, when omitted, will not serve to earn discounts of any character, con tract or otherwise, THE WORLD. OND RACK hrve-yenr-olda SAnpreniice allowance claimed. Lreck faa, ‘Reject Frelinghuysen, Kirby, | rejected, 59 to 17, Senator Frelinghuy- | NASHVILLE, Tenn., March 15.— “NICKY" ARNSTEIN: SEEN IN COLUMBUS Told Actor Friend in Theatre “When They Want Me They Will Get Me.” For th information of Detective Sergt. wan and Detective Grover Cleveland Brown, who recently returned after spending a Week travelling through the Middle West searching for “Nicky Arnstein,” so-called “master- mind of the Great Bond Robbery, the following information is submitted 48 coming to The Evening World from thoroughly trustworthy person: An actor acquaintanc of Arnstein, “doing a turn’ Keith's Theatre, Columbus, O., Tuesday night, March 2, while Sergt. Gagan and his men were in Cleveland, saw Arnstein sitting in the front row. ‘The attention of at least eight other actors who knew Arnstein in New York was called to him. The actor who first recognized him went down after the act and sat out the rest of the performance with him, To the actor Arnstein said: ‘That stuff about their Wbeing after me as master-mind is all bunk. ‘They are really after a man in politics—a man higher up. When they get him they will want me. And when they want me they will get mi GERMANY KEEPS PART OF SCHLESWIG Second Division Votes by 4 to 1 ot to Be Joined With Denmark. COPENHAGEN, March 15.—The re- sult of the plebescite in the second divi- sion of Schleswig has been announced unofficially as follows, a despatch here to-day sai Germany, 48,148. Denmark, 13,025. No violence’ marred the Plebiscite, but the International Commission, de- termined to run no risks, had mounted machine guns and armed squads pa- trolled the streets. The Flensburg cor- pondent of the Politiken telegraphs that the International Commission will ce the new frontiers within a fort- night and it will be put before the upreme Council at Paris for final de- cision, alpen TRAFFIC HEARING PUT OFF. Only One Party to William Bridge Conference Sends a Representative. burg Bridge traffic hear- d to-day before Deputy Public ing, calle Service Commissioner Donnelly, was ad- journed until a week from to-day. Only y, from officers of the Public Commission was heard. New, York Railways Company, ew York and Harlem Railroad Company, the Third Avenue Railway mpany and the city, through the had “been asked to nd representatives, but only the New York Railways Company did so, Girl Stowaway Here. After the steamship Callooh was a few days out from Glasgow it was found that a pretty Scotch girl, Jennie Wilson, had stowed away. She was hid and fed by her flance, Francis J. Hannatin, of the crew. When the ship ived ‘here yesterday morning h claimed her, and they Will be married within a week. They will make New Orleans their hom emy of Jews Killed. LONDON, March 15.—Gen. Bredow, Czarist, who ts alleged to have been re- sponsible for Jewish pogroms in South Russia, has been shot and killed by his own atten Moscow despateh r Wearing of the Imperial These novelties our Famous Pren fect eat cartons Milk Chocolate Pigs Milk Chocolate Hats Everythi underselling power. Mie Comes the Great Day of The Shamrock and Approprio* Offerings to Keep Old Memories Green ferings. we know for this day of [e"inade ‘up of the folowl ed. in emeral ies, 1 ke. Aul; ‘emerald tinted Midget Sticks, Pkg, cpcem tmogrntan 8 AMllk Chocolate Hearts and 1 29 B o Pariays in Kreen foil. 2 Milk Chocolate Fariay# ip FERUKAGE COMPLETE de. T LIS in one of the neatest and most appronriat ik Chocolate Novelties re beautifully mou um Milk Chocolate ar luctions of the various articles they Loads of fun for the kiddies, effective Vors, and delicious eating, Each put up each, 19¢ Milk Chocolate Harps... .each, each, St. Patrick’s Day Novelties Newest Creations, Immense Assortments g priced in accordance with our underbuying- The greatest values in New York NIGROBE DOES NOT PRODUCE GANCER.- EXPERT ASSERTS Pee akeee Functional Disorder of Organ- ism Attacked Is Cause, French Scientist Say PARIS, March 15.—M, Champy, well known physiologist of the College ot France, as a result of experiments madé in continuation of those ot Prof, Carrel in the cultivation of liv- ing tissues, has decided that cancer is not produced by an invisible microbe, as has been believed. Chamby believes he has shown by experiments that cancer is engend- ered by functional disequilibrium of the organism attacked, Prof, Carrel's early experiments had led to the con= clusion that cells went on reproduc- ing their own species. ‘Thus the frag ments of a kidney or of a thyroid gland were thought to reproduce renal or thyvol@ glands. ‘This, however, it has been estab4 lished, is not the case. Cells of cul« tures used by Champy lost their spe~ cific nature and became modified. In his own words they become “dif- ferentiative’ and form cells which have all the properties of cancerous cells. Attacking the problem from an- other angle Champy began the in- vestigation of the reason why a can- r more frequently occurs in the old than the young. He had found thas fragments of organisms had thé power of developing cancerous cells when detached from the body. In the. body these organisms, however, preserve an equilibrium. Experiments with organs prove that in a living organism there is an equilibrizing action preventing the in- definite growth of any organism. This harmony is naturally stronger in the young than in the old, as when the body becomes old one or the other of its organisms tends to become atrophied and ceases to perform its functions. The result is hypertrophy of some other organ and the creation of cancerous cells such as were deve oped in cultures separated from the body. Though having in this way estab- lished the nature of the disease, Champy offers no suggestion for its prevention or cure unless it is in. preservation of natural equilibrium of the body or more simply strict atten+ tion to organic health. > $10 A WEEK NOT ENOUGH. Ex-Columbia St nt Held On Charge of Forgery. ; ck Cohon, seventeen, described as a former student at Columbia and recently associated with his father in a West 25tt Street trucking business, was held for the Grand Jury to-day in $2,000 bail in Je rson Court on a charge of forgery preferred by Emanuel Siegel, istant Cashier of the Public National el charges that Cohon put throught checks amounting to $475 In ant signed confession presented in rt Cohon said he was tired of try+ ing to get along on the “measly tena week" allowed him by his father and on March 5 left home with a check Doold belonging to mother, He liked dane+ ing and a ain young lady," De-+ tectives found him Saturday night in @ dance hall at 66th Street and Columbus Avenue. Green Package uvenir of Shamrock, Combination dosweets in individual d paper: 1 pkg. Assorted Irish Kisses, 1 pkg. Ax= EMERALD GEM! famous assortment ded from Hard Candler. pres ure per= sented in a beautiful Emerald tint for thi eccasion. Collection made up of Crystal Blocks, Twista. Curia, Milk Chocolate Pipes each, 15¢ Buttercups. Mlonsomns Milk Chocolate Bishops....each, 19¢ Siig Mestre: , American Strings and m 18e others equally 49e "Sp Box S DAY STATURTTRS: Jelled, attractively mn ys dels, ST. PA Bea ut decorated Mit (These ein be Kiddies, filled) ‘each PEANUT CHL Mite ‘and the krown. choicest. full flavo Peanut, he mpecified weigh Vor exnet loration see telephone directory includes the IMITATION POTATOES, These wre cunning little eandy bexes, which look like genuine Irish Po tutors, They are filled delicious sugary 15¢ nts. PRICE BACH Tuesday, March 16th OLD FASHION GUM DROPS: sparkling nuggets real candy brenented ip Wied lovers bots nd little, Our rem 4c LAL

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