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Sa ae sf ety came / THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1920. thE composition of the Red Army tn the) Rab: Region is that tt was re for the most part Loren ee fron workers and not the min: Military organization atbids 6 also a the civ vorvices, and the post office ‘end the telegraph lines are in controt ‘of the communists. are also many .old shock and veterans among the Red | ‘They are well organized, stip- ied with artillery, machine guns mine throwers, and have bat- of .77-centimetro field guns with Plenty of ammunition. Majer Beerfeld, a relative of Maxi- Harden, is commander of @riiiistice and also January, 1918. LONDON REPORTS MORE FIGHTING IN GERMAN CAPITAL LONDON, March 22.—Heavy fighting @courred in the Moabit quarter of Ber- hight. but quiet prevailed according to a News from the Retchswehr is pow- to 4eal with the situation, the Geapatch says. “The food situation, particulatly in the arger towns, is causing alazm. In the Halle destrict the position was ‘worse from a Government as Counter-action among a section at the workingmen is threatened (rough the calling of a strike if a @oviet republic is proclaimed. Com- M@uunists are declared to be preventing ‘men from resuming their work. pecan hae GERMAN TROOPS BARRED FROM RUHR BY PEACE TREATY Mort's of Ebert to Crush the Reds Said in Paris to Violate Pact. PARTS, March 22.—The occupation the Ruhr district by German é in direct violation of Arti- abd 43 of the Treaty of Ver~ dt was pointed out at the For- Office, which added the com- Ment that this was the first act com- ‘mitted by Germany in violation of tthe treaty, the other violations being {ese of omission. i . 2nd ee ‘or maintain any fortification either en the left bank of the Rhine or on ‘the right bank within 50 kilometres of the river. Under Article 43 the aasembly of armed forces either permanently or temporazily, 1s for- Widden. Article 44 provides that a violatien of either of the above ar- ‘ticlés shall be regarded as a hostile ection and within the forbidden gone.) ‘Two German officers bave been sent by the Phert Government to acquaint the French authorities with the situ- ‘tion in that district. ‘St was indicated that the French Government would take no separate @etion in the circumstances, acting after consultafion with the Allies as to what measures were necessary, pees arial GENERAL STRIKE CALLED IN MUNICH. Councils of Workers in Wurttem- berg Plan to Take Similar Action. STUTTGART, March %2—A fen- eral etrfke has bean called tn Munich, emt ft is expected the movement wil! extend throughout Bavaria un- ‘eas it ts stopped ap a result of the Negotiations now in progress to set- tle the demands of the workingmen - @uring the period they were against the Kapp “Pufectings are to be ted in the ‘Wurttemberg factories by the Coun- efils of Workmen to consider if simi- lar action should be taken through- out Wurttemberg. Reports received here from Nurem- berg paid that city was quiet on Sun- day, following some disorders the mus night. Further disorders at jc on Sunday were reported, mien GERMANS WARNED BY U. S., IS REPORT ‘Threat Said to Have Been Made to Stop Food if Soviet Is Declared. PARIS, March 22 (United! Press) The American Mission in Berlin has Presented Premier Bauer with a communication deciaring the United Btates cannot furnish any more food to Germany if a Soviet Government 4s. established, a Berlin dispatch to- day enid. tos a $75,000 for Husband's Death, iw. Emily S. Sriyder Mled sult to-day at White Plains for $75,000 damages Gov. BLOW TO GOMPERS IN COMMISSION'S REPORT 10 WILSON, Report of Second Set of Indus- trial Investigators Favors Shop Unions. . IS BACKED BY BIG MEN. May Form the Bases of Party Platforms in Dealing With Labor Questions. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, March 22 (Copy right,1920).—Capital—meaning there- by employers gonerally—beas won a vietory in principle in the report jst tssued by President Wilson’s second Industrial Commission, But the vio- ‘tory is not one of class against class, ‘but @ recognition of the unwisdom of | the policy advocated by Sampel Gom- | pers at the first Industrial Confer- ence, a policy of unionization of in- dustry to the excluston of shop or- ganization unless unionized. This was the rock on which the first conference was wrecked, The decision of the Second Commission is supported not only by William B. ‘Wilson, Secretary of Laibor and for- merty an official in the American Federation of Labor, tut by Herbert Hoover, Vice Chairman, as well as Democrats like Martin H. Glynn, for- mer Governor of New York; former General Gregory, former Stuart of Vinginia, like George W. Wickersham, Oscar 3. Straus, for- merty Secretary of Commerce and Labor in the Roosevelt Cabinet; for- ™mer Massactysetts, Julius Rosenwald of Chicago, and Independents like Rich- ard Hooker, Bdttor of the Springfield Republican, and others in a unani- mous report. REPORTS POINT WAY TO PO- Attorney Henry C. and Republicans Samuel W. McCall LITICAL PARTY PLATFORMS. respective platforms at San in origin or purpose. ing: “The guiding thought of the conference has been that the right relationship ‘between employer amd employee ¢an best be pro- moted by the deliberate organiza- tion of that relationship, That organization should begin within the plant iteelf. Hs object should be to organize unity of interest and thus to diminish the area of conflict and supply by organtaed co-operation between employers and employees the advantages of that human relationshtp that ex- jated between them when indus- tries were smailler, “Such organization should pro- vide for the joint action of man- agers and employees in dealing with thelr common interests, It ghoul emphasize the responsi- bility of managers to know men at least as intimately as they know materiale, and the right and of employees to have a AND COMPANY UNIONS. Federation of Labor, John visloud of Rye, driver of proposed of) Leaders of the two political par- ties who have been wondering what planks they would write into their Fran- cisoo and Chicago wil be able to take their stand squarely on the Indus- triai Commission’s report. It is by no means too friendly to labor, and ‘therefore cannot be logically con- demned by the Republicans, who usu- ally have to reckon on the support of business men generally, por is it likefy to be disapproved by the Dem- ocrate when men ‘Witson support the decision. In a campaign year when most con- @idates are straddling and trying hard not to offend either capital or tabor, the industrial report furnishes the ideal way out. It is not partisan ke William B. Perhape the most significant para- graph in the whole report which tells what a group of disinterested men thought about the principle which wrought so much havoc with the first industrial conference is the follow- convention, condemning shop unions and all other organizations not affili- ated with or a part of the American But while Mr. Gompers must natur- ally take wuch an attitude in orter to hold together the American Federa- tion of Labor and to keep his own hold on it, the truth is that the pian by the Second Industrial 4 Reman at Street, MS ‘i Y high Hascrot, a business man of Cleveland, e , neaay seit, ast ts be VY eee: —_>— Industrious Bath Beach Flock Yield Palm to Hen That Sings of Record Feat. A hen which tends strictly to busi- ness, never asking for more pay or worthy of honorable mention and pub- Me commendation. Mra. J. Knudsen of the Bath Beach which throughout the long, hard win- ter have been laying at the rate of 288 eggs each per annum. Mrs. Knud- sen thought this was doing pretty ‘well, ag indeed it was, but when one of the hens took to delivering her eggs right into the icebox, and then sing- demanding shorter hours, not only sets a good example these days but is gection of Brooklyn has eight hens ing about it, Mra. Knudsen thought it “Biddy” Lays Eggs in Icebox So Owner’ll Have Them Fr oe a Vv} was time to write to The Evening! Wortd about it. Her letter reads: “Editor of The Evening World: Tf always thought my elght hens were the best ‘in New York, at least in the Bath Beach section, for they laid five eggs one day and six the next | and have kept this up since before Christmas. “But now I am sure that you can’t beat them. Outside of my kitchen, | you eee, is a storm shed in which I keep the ice box. A few days ago I been blown open by the wind and as I ees I heard one of the hens singing in there. I found Biddy on top of the ice box. Nearby was a little basket, and in the basket was an egg so fresh that it still was smoking. J want to know if anybody in Greater New York has a better hen? “M KNUDSEN, No. 130 Bay 10th Street, Bath Beach, Brooklyn.” any plant from becoming affiliated with every other plant organization and thus maintain an industrial or crafts organization AN the advantages of union labor are retained thopgh the operations jana power of the walking delegate are to some extent limited by the in- sistence that the troubles be settled at the bottom—in the individual plant itself before outside assistance of counsel is brought in. But there is a recognition of the principle that workmen can be represented by per- sons of their own choosing—a princi- ple which the empioyer group was unwilling in the first conference to recognize. NO PLAN FOR COMPELLING EN- FORCEMENT OF PLAN, But unfurtunately there is nowhere outlined or practical means of com- peiting employers to recognize the spokesmen of the men even though elaborate methods of choosing thege | spokesmen are indeed provided for in| the secret ballot and impartial elec- prevent another Judge Gary maying he will not deal with the spokesmen of the workmen. There is only, of course, the force of public opinion when once the facts are pub- lished. establishment of regional boards of inquiry which can of their own voli- tion call in representatives of the workmen and employers Just as the Senate committee did, tit even the report of a Senate committee had re- latively little effect in the Steel strike. The hope, of course, is that as the plan is worked out the counrty will get behind it, and the regional boards as well aa the National Industrial Board will acquire a8 much prestige ag the Federal Reserve Board or per- haps the Supreme Court itseif. ‘There is the distinet advantage, in- cldentally, of leaving a good deal to the voluntary action of employers and employees, but with the new and vital provision gor full publicity and in- vestigation by impartial tribunals. in the report any moral punishment | tion machinery. There is nothing to| from | The difficulty is partly met by the! FIGHT FOR S-CENT FARE TO CONEY WON BY EVENING WORLD (Continued From First Page.) ruling that a ride interrupted by a transfer was not “continuous.” ‘The campaign for the single fare to Coney Island was begun by The Eve- ning World in 1906 by urging.the pub- to refuse to pay the B. R. T. a 10-cent fare, with the result that Bor- ough President Coler, Stephen C. | Baldwin and others joined in the, or- ganization of the Five-Cent Fare League. When Dr. J, MoFarland of Brooklyn was arrested for refusing to pay more than five cents a decision was given by Justice Gaynor on a | habeas corpus proceeding that the 10- | cent fare was jlleral. ‘The company used all its resources in the courts and in the Puplic Ser- vice Commission offices to | reduction of fare until now. General Manager Menden, for the B, R. T., to-day confirmed Mr, | Dempsey’s| announcement and said that not only would Manhattan pa- trons have the through ride for five cents but that all Queens could reach Coney Island for one fare by trans- ferring at 42d Street. ae CARS ON BRIDGE TO BE , RESTORED. Evening World ‘Wins Fight to Re- sume Service Over Williams- burg Span. « The Evening World won a victory to-day in behalf of the workers em- ployed above 14th Street, when the New York and Harlem Railway Com- pany announced that it was willing to restore serviee on the Williams- found that the door of the shed had | van SENATOR FRANCE SUES TO STOP CITY (ANDERSON SILENT PORTER, PLEADING URGES NEW PARTY FROM RUNNING ALL) ON ORDER KEEPING } NOT GUILTY, ASKS © TO FIGHT DRY UNS OF TTS BUS LINES, DRY FUNDS SECRET ‘Wet Plank Cite PI Chief Plank in ‘ Taxpayer Also ‘Would Enjoin| Refuses to Discus Discuss Edict Ex- New Republican Liberal Organization, ‘WASHINGTON, March 23.—De- daring that both the Republican and Democratic Parties are “as decadent @s the issues which first quickened them into being,” Senator France, speech to the Senate outlined the platform of a party he sald would re- | Store American liberty. France called his party the “Repub- Hean Liberals.” One of the princtpal planks in “the | liberal platform is for repeal of the Prohibition Amendment. On this point France said: “We unge the repeal of the Bigh- | teenth Amendment to the Constitution jena @ reconsideration by the people of the great question involved in it under conditions which will insure an |Unimpassioned consideration, un- clouded by the temporary conditions | incident to a state of war and un- | attected ‘by the hysteria and prefu- dice which were Incident to its sub- mission at a time when full and free discussion were impossible. “We recognize the great problem involved in this question. We admire the sincerity and zeal which have inspired many of the advocates of 4otal and drastic prohibition. If it really be the will of the country, expressed in accordance with the terms and spirit of the Constitution, that this proviston te continued as @ part of our fundamental law, we shall hope for the beneficent results which its advocates have prophesied. “But we fear to deprive large num- bers of our people, who sincerely love our country and its institutions, of that which they deem it their right to possess, except under conditions which safeguard the rights of these people with scrupulous care, “We desire to remove the deep- rooted feeling ‘from the minds of a lange proportion of our people that there has not been fair play on this issue. Many of us feel that while tho use of certain alcoholic liquors ehoutd be prohibited by local option statutes, enacted in accordance with the will of the people, the recent measures adopted have gone so far that they may, with justification, be considered by some as an undue infringement ‘upon personal self determination. “But whether we believe in total prohibition or not, those of us who are Republican liberals believe that any such drastic changes should be secured only in accordance with or- derly processes and after a full, free ‘and unhampered discussion of the is- sues involved, in order that no man may feel that He lives under an auto- cratic system where all liberty is in danger. Other planks in the Liberal plat- form follow, in part: Operation’ of railroads by repre- sentatives of capital, labor and the public, under Interstate Commerce Commission supervision; rejection of the “iniquitous” Treaty of Versailles and immediate establishment of peace with Germany; reduction of the high cost of living, with economy of Fed- eral expenditures and reduced taxes, and a navy second to none and a system of military training, but post- ponement of immediate universal training, Other demands were: Woman suf- ‘frage, a budget system, agricultural development, Federal _ employment agencies, abolishment of, child ‘labor, “generous compensation” for service men permanently disabled, and de- velopment of the merchant marine. Plas ad B. R. T. MEN WANT BETTER CONDITIONS The consensus of opinion in 4is-| jure Bridge. The only c . interested quarters here is that labor i oi Se only condition stip: PS will have much to gain and very littde | Ulated was that permission could be ; Peet ear em ‘ to lose by accepting the Industrial | Obtained from the New York Rail- Ask ‘Hylan’s Aid in Support of Bill plan as a start in the right direction, It refuses to give the American Fed- eration of Labor a monopoly. seems to be no doubt on that point But it makes every provision to give union labor a [scapes deal. CAFFEY AND \ND SWANN CLASH OVER MILK District Attorney to Turn Over His Evidence in Sheffield Farms volving an order curtailing. the produc Dairymen's League, to confer this afternoon with Mr. Swan: and another ing upon production of milk. American Dt BERLAN, March Flin. 22. — Frederic! tn!O,, died here There has an appointment who is expected at the District Attorney's office 1s Leroy Von Bomel of the Sheffeld Farms Compang, said to be the author of the order ca'l- the dairymen to curtail the ways Company to use track on Delance mission of the city bridge. Asa result of the announcement of R, EB, MeDougall, manager of the New York and Harlem, the héarings con- ducted by Deputy Public Service Commissioner Donnolly ended, More than 25,000 workers employed above Fourtenth Street and living in Brooklyn have been subjected to un- necessary since Feb, n Receiver, Hedges, of the New York Railways Company, a small strip of Street and per- to go over the CARRIED A “LUNCH” ‘What you got, sonny? ked. unch for the watchman at Pier 6, the wayfarer, a id the cop, tehel were eleven art bot: tles of fine booze. the police hurried the tents to the Pop! f s ine bans we Wermer,. ay yey hardship He must be @ mn i to Go to Albany—No Strike Threat, A committee of Brooklyn Rapid ‘Tran- sit employees to-day asked Mayor Hy lan to lend his support to legislation to better thelr working conditions. He readily gave his assurance of all pos- sible aid, the visitors said. Morrix Drubin headed the committee. P. J Shea, an official of the Amalgamated Association of Street and Hlectric Rail- way Hmployees of Amertoa, who led the B. R. T. strike last Summer, went to ars oe: the nduatey, ite Case to U.S. Prosecutor, turned the Fourth and Madison Ave. | City Hall with the committee but dit knowledge oe ey Diatrict Attorney Swann teday re-["U lines back to the New York and| not accompany its members into th processes and policies. Employees : Tey United States Dis. Little Railway Company, ‘Trolley | Mayor's office. Mr. Drubin tseued the need to understand their relation |celved a letter from United Btutes Dis auribe over the Willlamsburg bridge | following statement to the joint endeavor so that they | ttlet Attorney ¢ ‘affey taking him to task | 1. ‘The Kvening World immed! “We havo an agreement with the com- Tee hia tue be beedtive > ementa Mr, Swann was alleged sleiy took up the fight in alt of Ach expires in August Lh ee Soe seta to made indicating thay he and] the public, and Public Service Com. | 2&0Y Which expires in August and have sevacens <8 Tame Work Mr were working together cn| missioner Nixon pronfised ¢o investi. | !dea of striking, Our visit to the PERMITS SHOP COMMITTEES | ino sheffield Farms Company case, in-| 5° Mayor was simply to get his approval and support for a bill which we intend pushing a ‘scooter at Weehawken, N. J -| Clerk Willard Starker of Park came along in his automobile an intervening rail. A heavy stanchion fell upon the child's head, ube instantly. peaney si No. Maryland, a Republican, to-day in a- Seven-year-old Philip Sheehan was over the viadudt which cromes the Erle Railroad yards , to-day when City Ridgefeld ‘The front wheels of the car struck @ loose plank, which tipped and broke tron wad the son of a real estate Spending of $1,000,000 for _'More Vehicles, Supreme Court Justice Newburger to-day ordered the city administra- tion to show cause why it should not ‘be enjoined from operating bus Tines jin any part of the city, from appro- priating money for sudh purposes, and from putting out the’ $1,000,000 bond issue—or any other bond issue —for the establishment of bus lines. |The order is returnable to-morrow. ‘The injunction was asked by Ed- ward Schafer, No. 25 West 85th Street, a taxpayer. ascertain what damage has already been done by the city’s bus ventures and how much waste has accom- panied the entenprise. Mr. Schafer was represented by the law firm of Guggenhelmer, Unter- myer & Marshall, The defendants were the city, the Board of Dstimate, the Mayor, the Comptroller, all the Borough (Presidents, and the Commis- sioner of Plant amd Structures. The petition alleged that the city ie already sponsor for fifteen bus lines from which it gets no revenue, the owners being private citimens who pay no license. It also alleged that more than fifty city employees whose pay in six months amounts to more than $65,000 have quit work for the city and given their time to the bus system. ‘The injunction is asked on the gen- eral grounds that a ibus service is not a municipal purpose, that there is no legislative authority for ft, and that no franchise has been issued, mn slipiean otis CAN'T INTERFERE IN MIDLAND CARS DECLARES RECEIVER Fivé Cent Fare On Staten Island Means Daily Loss, Bremer Tells La Guardia Jaca Brenner, receiver for the Staten Island Midland, Railway, to- day wrote Aldermanic President La Guardia that “neither the officials of the city nor amy one else can use or | interfere with the property of the | Midland Company withowt first mak- ing application to the court which ap- pointed me receiver and with notice to the cred’tors for permission so to do.” ‘This is in reply to a query trom Mr. La Guardia as to what (Mr. Bren- ner’s attitude.would be dn the event the city operates cars over the line abandoned "by the Midland Company. In other words, before the city can operate the road whidh the Midland Company refuses to, it must obtain he permission of Federal Judge Chat- field, who appointed Brenner. Mr. Brenner's letter, to use the words of President La Guardia, “beats about the bush and says nothing in particular. ‘Mn ‘Brenner says the cars of the Midland Company are “merely tempo- ranily detained.” ‘The receiver adds that the Mid- land's books have repeatedly been ‘xamined by certified accountants nd by the Richmond Grand Jury, and that the conclusion of ail is that | a five cont fare would mean a daily | loss, He declares the city’s bus sy: tem in Staten Island is being operated at a lows and that petitions by the) public consenting to an increased fare have been ignored by the Board of Estimate, In conclusion he says: n my opinion, a reasonable, just and law respecting attitude by the Board of Estimate toward the appeal of the people of the Borough of Rich- mond, keeping in mind the situation existing on Staten Island which 4s en- tirely different and separate from that anywhere else in the Greater City, would remedy an_ intolerable hardship and injustice towards the residents of that borough, and at the same time save the city at large from a willful waste of funds. ROBBED BY MEN THEY KNOW. 1 Police Be- ys Fear to 7 ef to have introduced at Albany, tending The foregoing together with the de- | tion of milk. ar Saiey wrote that he peor omer etd ory eo cause of Ne Jy Gambilom Law. tails of the plan proposed, not onty{bad not heard trom Mr. Swann in re-) TN 1 QUART-BOTTLES not talk about {t until the bill la framed,] A crap game in the rear of a cigar permits shop committees and com-|!4{0n {0 int Cie. ut any. stat — Wo have been promised ai store at New Brunswick, N. J., was 01 eaves ig ™ “4 ; ence with the Mayor when broken up early this morning by seven pany unions, but leaves open the) oot said Mr. Swann, “In which I aaid]One ‘Was “Broken by Accident’’|{s ready... This is a matter holdup aE Pa ottainna about 31 question of an open or closed shOP} what the Federal District Attorney In Wh tins side of the company and there ts no} in moncy and jewelry. to be settled in each factory or plant | tended to do. I did predict, however, hen Police Halted Youth threat or demand Involved.” masks and alt of them, arc as circumstances develop. Small won-| (hat prosecution might be instituted With Satchel, ——— the men they robbed. | rhe victims do Hot dare make & complaint for fear of or that Samuel Gompers denounces against tho Sbefleld Farms Company | he putging antchet carried py a man| LOOSE PLANK CAUSES DEATH] prncscution or, gambling. the whole thing, for the American |under the Lever Act. T intend to turn|in pineapple Street near Columbia Nal ~ Pt here were, between Thirty and seve Federation af Labor is on record In a Jover to Mr. cate ali the evidence 1] Heights aroused the curiosity of Police. | THX om End as Auto Passes and! bers drove up in an automobile, ¢ olution adopted at its Atlantic City | have gathered in the case, man McOw t ae ye Loonens Viadact Stanchion, ered the men with revolvers, lined th; = “ Roswell B. Cooper, President of the en at 3 A. M. to-day, up and searc hed. them. "A" former sas loonkeeper lost $2,000. Some of the victims gave informa- the police. eee Strike “Wife Held An Shoplifte: Following her arrest to-day in a Mrs, Lena Rosen, $05 Park, Avanué, Brookiy Hepes. She said hi ate on bs ese ar He asked thé Court to’ tion to inquirers who had heard rumors of the robbery, but would not report to Brooklyn department store on a charge of stealing five waists valued at §30,! Sn ee aa cluding Public From Knowl- edge of Gifts. After many weeks of experiment reporters to-day found something Wiltiam H. Anderson will not talk about. The Superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League refuses to dis- cuss’ with hig usual facility these words taken from a Bulletin to the Speaking Staff: “The amount of our pubes tions is a secret from the public and should be kept within our own cirdle.” yt admonition to Anti-Saloon League exhorters for funds was is- sued by the Superintendent of the League's Agitation Department. Speakers were cautioned “against as- sorting and displaying on railroad trains or trolley cars or in the pub- lic office of a hotel, where the public can see them” the subscription canis from Sunday services. Selections from the Bufletin to the Speaking Staff were made public at Afbany by the Rev. William H. Free- man, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church at Carlisle, N. Y., who was a member of the speaking staff for a time tut quit last December because, he says, he was shocked by the money end of the propaganda. One of the Bulletins to the Speaking Staff, the Rev. Mr. Freeman says, contained this paragraph, which is the first thing Leaguey about which | William H. Anderson is dumb: “In this connection let me repeat again the old caution about reporting Sunday returns to each other in the dining rooms of hotels or talk among yourselves on the train, where your conversation can be overheard. The amount of our subscriptions is a se- ceret from the public and should be kept within our own circle.” Mr. Anderson was perfectly willing: to chat about the report ‘tpat Assem- blyman Cuvillier might move to have him brought before the bar of the House for his repeated verbal assaults on Assemblymen, ‘TH be there,” he declared, “any time they want me. I'll be up there to-nigl HELD AS ROBBER, DENIES HE’S POET Prisoner (Alleged to “Have Made Verses While Tapping Till Knows Metre, Though (the Gas Kind). James Smith, twenty-six, of No, 468 West 47th Street, held in West Side Court to-day in $5,000 bonds for ex- amination to-morrow on the charge that he is the robber who recited original poetry Sunday morning while he emptied the till of the Howard Bakery Co. at No, 438 West 48th Street, was as mad as a wet hen to-day at the poetry charge. He never had time to make a rhyme Smith said to reporters who visited him evidence. to trial. for delay. Loeb and ‘vice ring.’ attorney years.” also made Gunson ¢ a Porter arrest the of them, ‘The youngest interviewer asked the prisoner if he knows anything about “metre.” ll say I do,” said Jimmy, tegister- Ing. interest for “the “tiret. ‘time: y work for the Gas Company. —>—_____ FUR ROBBER PLEADS QUILTY. entence Wed: enday for Leader of Police-Burgiar Band. Bdéward Werle, thinty-ive years old, fourteen of which have been spent in prisons, to-day pleaded guilty as a fourth offender to a charge of burglary in the third degree before Justice Faw- cett of the Brooklyn Supreme Court. He will be sentenced Wednesday. | Werle was the ringleader in the | $15,000 fur robbery from Gtarobin & Dubin, No, 716 Herkimer Street, Brook- liyn, Nov. 1, 1919. Two policemen of the Atlantic Avenué Station were in- volved, One, Herman Creuse, was sentenced to five years in Sing Gin) The other, Otto Rueger, has not yet been tried. DELAY I INTRA Smith Demands nabs Spbedy Hi ing on Deputy Accu: by Vice Raiders. When Augustus Drum Po! peared before Judge Malone eral Sessions to-day to ple guilty to an indictment chargin with neglect of dtty in failing to the prosecution of the keeper of illegal resort in which two pot said they found him during a last November, Hendrick, asked for ten days in to submit motions, Hendriok said he wished to certain investigations un whic ‘base a motion permitting him to spect the Grand Jury minutes ceding a motion to ask for the missal of the indictment as bas: incomplete, incompetent and Assistant District Attorney shook ‘his fist in the faces of Hend and Porter and said: “Mrv Hendrick gave a statement’ the newspapers yesterday saying ‘was never intended to bring this o We want it to come to t1 as Soon as possible, | Thursday of this week for the fendant’s motions. | “The trial may put a stop to public utterances of certain high o cials (referring to Commissioner |right's speech at Name Society breakfast yesterd | that there is an organized gang seek- ing to belittle the Police Departmen, The official who said that failed realize that ‘the gang’ Is composed 99 per cent. of the community.” Judge Malone set Thursday hearing the motions, Hendrick clashed with Smith again by appearing for Jennie Carelo a Kitty Daly and asking for tcave to 4 spect the minutes of the Grand J which indicted Pol Were acquitted of abduction two ye ago. Hendrick said it was his purp to show that Rebecca Melyado, principal witness against Detectl yungon, who has been indicted, charged with abduction at that tin “The Assistant District Attorne; he said, “has tried to couple my pearance for Col. pearance for these women, and it appear that I am attorney fo! in civil actions for Judge Malone said he had heard such insinuations. Eugene McGee of Gunson’s cout ‘and Jury motion was granted. ‘The Grand Jury this afternoon ff superseding charging count that he specifically neg! his duty by forbidding the police they found in his company in illegal resort. in West Side Prison. Asked about 4 Dudyard Kipling, Swinburne, Keats and Notice to Whittier Mr. Smith said he never heara || Advertisers: Adve: orders for either the week 4 Morning World or The Event World, if received after 4 P. the day preceding ptblicatt can be inserted only as sp may permit and in order ceipt at The World office. Advertising Supplement Sections of Sunday World must be by 1 P. M. Thursday p ublication, and releases ¢ received by 2 P. M. Advertising copy for the Mi Sheet of The Sunday We must be received by 6 P. ; of the preceding Frida: releases must be received 12 o'clock noon Saturday, Copy or oders received than as provided above omitted will not serve to discounts of any character, tract or otherwise, his counsel, This motion I ask Your Honor to the Police Ho liceman William Andrew Bonecastle, Porter with my I have ‘been Col. Porta m a motion to inspect minutes. indictment _agal in. an additio woman whom they ising copy and copy for For Monday, March 22 MAPLE NUT FUDGE—That ath ion made way. These ble creamy sauares are richly favored with soancied mith tasty Nutn giving them an added Uclictousness, A wonderfal value at the special inten ay witeh she, 2” POUND lomdayy 34 Cc For Tuesday, March 23| CHOCOLATE "STi i Special Feely our Big dully FOUND BOX CHOCOLATE COV ERED PEANUTS—The choicest full flavored Peanuts from Dixieland, perfectly roasted and Individwatly covered ONTED dioes Ona thts ft collection Dopular Mik Cha with our Unexcelled, rich, fragrant, velvety ‘one Fai di Helly coveres famous Pi box