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btm!" en Are Herr Gorster, who js Mayor of Ruremburg; Captain Cuno, who is the Director of the Hamburg-American Steamship Company; Merr Bolts, and Herr Silberschmidt, who is the Leader of the Builders’ Trade Union ‘The*newspapers generally do not ap- “pear fo be satisfied with the make- whi ‘@f the Cabinet, expecially the Sock organs, which consider that the cores ‘of events has entitled them to expect | NAVAL OFFICERS DISOBEYED DANIELS TO GAIN RECRUITS Bireng leaning to the left in the | ent's policy. The intent | ot Cuno fe paritcutart pleasing to them, he being regarded as a mem-/ f the Right To-Aay's newspapers report that the) Prussian Cabinet has resigned. It is an Rclodted. they add, that Gustav as Minister of Defense . in the new Prussian Cabinet. Lokal Anzeiger reports ‘that Capt. Fisher Cuno has declined to ac- wept the Portfolio of Finance in the new ministry. EBERT HAS AGREED TO WORKERS’ TERMS, SAYS PARIS REPORT Consénts to Formation of Labor Army and Disarmament of Kapp’s Troops. PARIS, March 25.—The German Government has reached a definite agreement ‘with the workmen in the Ruhr Valley, where the general atrike haa been paralyzing industry and swhere hostifities between soldiers and workers have been in progress for sdveral dayn past, according to news French semi-official © y from Berlin. The bases of the reported agreement are as fol- . ‘The formation of a workmen's army dharged with maintaining order. The remoddiling of the Cubi- * net, with labor union, partéctpe-,. jon. ‘The disarmament of the troops whith took part in the recent coup d'etat. “Tee passage of laws for social reform and the carrying out of Adthinistrative reforms. ? The soctalization of the mines, particularly the coal mines and the potash workings. The dissotution of “counter-rev- otutjonary” formations; improve- ment of the food supply system. AM ithe majority parties, it is de- have accepted the conditions. ‘The despatches represent the majority parties as of the belief that a new reactionary movement is not im- possible. They point out that Gen, ‘von Stecht has failed to disarm the Baltic, troops, which are still concen- trated a few miles from Berlin under tne and of their former chiefs. KNOCKED UNDER CAR IN FIGHT Al AND | KILLED Driver Blamed fo for Truck Loader’s Death Taken After Chase in West End Avenue. (1! Shortly after 9 o'clock this morning & man raced into West End Avenue at 79th Street from the direction. of the river. A half a,dozen men aeveral yards behind him shouted “Murder!” “Stop him!" “Police!” In ‘@n instant windows were filled with spectators of a chase that gathered 12 fig wake a crowd on foot and in auto- mobiles, Patrolman William Gilman and i)otectives Joseph Leonard and Richard Golden joined the pursuit for a block on foot and then commandeered an auto- mobile. The chase led down West Bnd Avenue to 70th Street and thence to ay where the policemen - took the tive, who? anid he Was @ tru ver, of sath Btreet. sakes oe it was learned that Neal with Balvatore Vetia, ‘No, ‘Sit Ea pis Btreet, « truck loader, ori the reet pier, It was Neal struck Vetia down with « club. | The — fell under the wheels of a truck yas Killed. Neal. the police say, ndfaiteen Striking Vetie, bul said the oad coe arn bim frat. The city at ran over Vetla was iStiven by by Sal Fe ay ort before Magistrate H, aide Court an a homicide “and ‘held , bearing to-morrow —_—_—_— THOS. W. LAWSON ARRESTED BOSTON, March 25.—-Thomas W. our- rendered to the authorities here to- day. He wes arrested on four counts, Lawson, broker “and financier, @harging violation of the State law governing advertising and sale of mining 6! on, who Delegate at Large to the Republica: National Convention, denied charges. that he would be attacked on hi activit be withdraw from the race, Four other operators and brok firested yesterday, including 1. iper of New York, former Seere- tary to Lawson. NEW BANK SUPERINTENDENT Gee. V. McLaughlin ef Breokly Is Named by Gov. Smith, ALBANY, March 26. intendent of Banks, with the bank- | Ding the rich in vengeance for the He will sun. | Wrongs inflioted on the poor.” He was whose term as, ound insane, The salary is $10,000 a year. + tt hae $300,000 SHORTAGE CHARGED WASHINGTON, } Blumson, head of the ing Company, who Chiago lasat July, was ar to-day and is being held, for the Ch Hoe, whys char from ¥200.00 to. 8 ecoounts with the company. —_ tn'tne National Cabinets will be offered | ke. Bail was fixed at §2,-| lineman for the fe a candidate for n He said he bad been warned not ov. Bmith to- Gay nominated George V. Mol.aughtin of Brooklyn for the post of State Super- Mclaughlin is at Present Deputy Superintendent of Banks partment expire —Herman real Mill- | of her action against the New York con- e that he was sbort jo his ba oe Blames Secretary for “Procrastination.” WASHINGTON, ‘March %.—"Pro- crastination on the part of Secretary Daniels” was responsible for a serious shortage of personnel which proved “the initial handicap of the navy in the war,” Capt. Leigh C. Palmer, war time Chief of the Bureau of Naviga- tion, testified to-day before the Senate Committee investigating the navy's conduct of the war. The Secretary, Capt. Palmer de- Necessity for obtaining and training tion of war. “Even after war was declared,” the witness said, “he used to say we have too mahy reserves now.” Just ®efore the United States Joined the Allies, when the Bureau of Navigation was striving to recruit naval reserves, the witness continued, Secretary Daniels ordered enrollment in the reserve stopped. “Did you stop?” asked Chairman Hale. “No, we needed the men and went right ahead. | d to Daniels the other day and he doein't remember anythi na About that,” said the witneeey, “but he did order me to stop enrofiment then and several other times.” Describing diffiouttion Daniels’ approval on important pro- jects, Palmer oid the committee he le to get authorizations for it Great Lakes training | obtaining tion, Chicago, but went ahead and built the king Congress later for the money. Palmer said requests from Sims for additional officers to assist him were granted whenever possible. “Fnlisted men were sent to Sima as fast as we could train them,” said the witness. “I did not know he did not get all he nted until this investigation cane bah, When tho enlisted men did get road they didn’t have Parracks for them.” Sims previously had’ told the com- mittee that failure to provide him with adequate assistance early in the bbe was one of his greatest dificu!- jen, While Palmer was testifying at the hoites. the Court of Inquiry at the avy pat stasat beeen is rer ating: the charge of Rear Adm| ral W. Ph Fletcher that Admiral Re Start just cause removed him from com- mand at Bri mrhie ‘Court is considered to be peruen Ponsa od attack to Sims's charges, as the in- / was present wat 3 pa th a state ment of hig previous experience in the navy to show that he was quall- | ‘fled to command American forces in French waters. Fletcher pregen| ~ copy of an order fram ‘A (ine in August, 117, which plaved (Capt. R. H. Jack- son, mayal representative at the Frepch Ministry of Marine, in command of “All American navel and aviation bases” in France, Sims told the court that “aither the copy or ‘the original” contained a typographical error; that he had in- tended to order Capt. Jackson to com- mand only the naval aviation bases. The inclusion of the “and.” which made the order amply to all Bases, was declared by Sims to be # “rank absurdity” on its face, fait a ONE DEAD, 5 HURT IN BRIDGE COLLAPSE Superintendent ~ of | Construction Carver Held on Technical Charge of Homicide. As @ result of the killing of Charles P. Metsroth last night by the collapse of a construction britge over the side- walk at the northwest corner of Sev- enth Ayenue and 49th Street, David Carver was to-day held in the W. Court in $2,500 bail for forty- eight bours on a technical charge of homicide, Carver was superintendent of construction. The overhead tritge is said to have been piled with brick. Four men and one woman were seriously burt when it broke under the foad. Metsroth, a telephone oampany, lived at Ne, 873 Chaffee Street, Brook- lyn, Rudolph P. Miler, Superintendent of Butidings for the Borough of Manhat- #ltan, said to-day that the bridge had been inspected sixteen times since Jan } and wag las! examined at 2 o'clock at peeeney, by Inspector James Shields. At thal Lime, Miller suk, there were no piled upon John Coffey, dry goods storea in Boston, Milwaukes, Chicago and Detroit, was committed to the Matteawan State Hospital by Judre who confessed robbing = Nott to-day. He had secreted himoelf in Bloomingdale's overnight and od out with $1200 worth of silks in case in the morning. Coffay described himeclf aa'& “modern Robin Hood, rob- *|WEEPS TELLING OF WRECK Yeomanette, Disaster, Broke Down On ‘Sta Miss Veronica Murphy, @ yoemanette attached to the Fleet Supply Base in Brooklyn, broke Gown and wept while on the witness stand to-day in the trial golidated Railroad Company as she told of the Malbone Street tunnel wreck 4) 1918. Mike Murphy asks $20,000 for in- juries suffered in the disaster, when wore. kitied scores injured, Murphy is "a" graduate of the Brocklyn Training Bchools for Teachers, Chief of Bureau of Navigation | clared, was unable to appreciate the | men in advance of an actual declara- | os THE RVENING “WoRwp,. fTHURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1930. A petition containing the names women was carried by hundred as “BAttle Italy”) in a demonstration through the Bast 116th Btreet neighborhood (known urging the setting aside of more playgrounds for Children Parade Carrying Posters Demanding More Playground Space for New York’s Young of about 6,000 ls of children held yesterday played. the young folks. A commission of five boys will present the claims of the neighborhood to the Com- missioner of Parks. This photograph shows some of the children and the striking posters they dis- NEW YORK 10 CURB RENT PROFITEERING AS WASHINGTON DOES (Continued Front-First Page.) a grime for a landlord to shut off heat, Nght and water in an effort to get a tenam. out of an apartment. The landlord is permiticd to make an increase of 25 per cent. instead of 20 in the sighing of a new lease. It 18 explained that this will not pre- vent a landlofd ‘whose tefant may hold a three, four or five-year lease from demanding more than 25 per cent. on the ing of a new lease, but the landlord must prove tb the satisfac- tion of the court that his demand is not unreasonable. ‘The re-shaping of the landlord curb- ing legislation was the result of & conference of the Joint Housing Com- mittee with Speaker Sweet and Ma- Jority ‘Walters of the Senate; whith lasted all yesterday, afternoon, nd a t conferepive of Sen- ator Walters witb the Senate Com-/ mittee Cities, Senator Walters then announced the following bills covering the entire field of anti-rent profiteering legislation “Which ts to be speeded to Gov. Smith: 1. Putting upon landlords the burden of proof in seeking to eject a tenant on the ground that he ip objectionable. 2, Amending the Ottinger law by providing that instegd of ver- bal Yeases being from month to month they’shall in all cases énd on Oct. 1. LIMIT OF 25 PER CENT. FOR RENT INCREASES. 3. Increasing from 20 to 30 the number of days’ notice required trom landlords to evict tenants. 4. In holdover cases after de- fault of takes or assesements, Providing the place for the tenant to deposit rent either with the court clerks or the judges. 5. Where a precept is return- able, the court may determine the amount of rent due and grant « judgment. 6 Making more than a 25 per int jnerease in rent during the preceding year presumptive evi- dence of oppression. 7. Repealing section 230 of the Real Property Law granting to landlords double penaity against tenants holding over without con- sent. 8, General stag bill, permitting Municipal Court Judges ta grant stay of dispossess proceedings for not more than nine months if a tenant can show he cannet find a place im the neighborhood to which he can move. 9. Making the Civil Code har- monize with the summary pro- ceeding law amendm 10. Amending” the Fenal- Law by making it a crime for a land- lord to deny normal and natural service to an apartment. 11. Prescribing the same de- fense in actions for ejectment as allowed jn the new suromary pro- ceeding bills. 12, Exempting mortgages of up to $40,000 in the hands of a single individual from the State Income Tax Law. None of the bills affect office or store rent, They apply only to!" ‘phe month of October is the be- dwelling places. | ginning of the cold spell and the end The series of laws is to remain) Of the vacation season, and the prob- | forced to eign @ tease meanwhile at what.ihe deems an excessive increase, his relief ia the same as if he had not signed the lease. PLANS TO HOUSE upon the statute books until Nov. 1, 1922, Hore is the proposed measure which the conference framed for the pressive agreements for th ment of rent having been and being now exacted by landlords from tenants under stress of pre- vailing conditions whereby the freedom of contract has been im- paired and congested Housing conditions resulting therefrom have seriously affected and en- dangered the public welfare, health and morals, and a public emergency existing in the judg- ment of the Legislature by reason thereof, it shall be a defense to an action for rent aceruing under an agreement for premises o¢cu- ied for dwelling purpos: ment under which the Souigie to be recovered sive. “Where it appears that the rent has been increased more than 25 the time of " If @ tenant has beon| 3,000 HOMELESS AT PELHAM BAY La Guardia Urges Immediate Tak- ing Over by City of the Navy Cantonment. President La Guardia of the Board of Aldermen urged upon Mayor Hylan to-day the immediate taking over by the oity of the United States Navy cantonment at Pelham Bey for SPECULATORS IN REALTY OPERATE ON NO CAPITAL With $2.50 on Deposit, One Gives Check for a $26,000 Option. HE way of the apartment house speculator Is as tortu- ous and devious as that of the serpent upon the rock—you never know just which way he is going to jump; nor how far he's going to crawl when he starts wriggling. Here's an instance of how far he Will go if given a chance: A speculator Game to Isaac Son- ensheim of No. %0 Penn Street, Brooklyn, several days ago and asked to purchase of him two housts of four familfes each in Bedford Street, Brooklyn. Mr. Sonensheim said the houses were for sale at $26,000. The specula- tor got an option and gave his Personal check for $500 but took care to delay signing it until af- ter banking hours, 60 Mr. Sonen- shelm could not deposit it until next morning, In the few hours intervening the gpeculator bestirred himself in the hope he would be able to sell his option at a handsome Profit before the check reached the bank, but he failed. Mr. Sonen- gheim presented the check at the bank designated carly text morn- ing and was greatly shocked to find that his prospective customer had $2.50 to his credit! “That trick ts being plaved every day and mostly it is successful,” said Mr. Sonensheim this morn- ing. “The sale of property is going on at such a feverish rate that men with even less than $2.50 to their credit have made fortunes. I dare say if I had de- temporary summer quarters for 3,000 families, made homeless by ‘high rents and gearcity of tenements. Major La Guardia also urged the building by the city of emergency tenements for 20,000 families ox city property, asserting that the Corpora~ tion Counsel's opinton againgt the le- gality of the erection of permanent dwellings by the city did not affect the power of the Board of Health to order temporary etructures built to mect an emergency threatening the public health. The city could charge a rent, he said, which would cover the cost of erection. pa, SEES DANGER IN ENDING ALL ORAL LEASES 0 ON OcT. 1 Lawyer Appelbaum “Points Out Objections to One Bill on Rent Relief Programme. Julius Appelbaum, associate coun- | World to-day gives his upon at Albany. minating tenancies in October will place tenants at cious moving men. able inability of tenants to proper housing accommodations | all temancies were to time will create a cris bills sound and constitutional: “Unjust, unreasonable and op: purpose of making the rest of ‘me eal, r. Appelbaum urges tals the sel for the Mayor's Rent Proftteering Committee, in a letter to The Evening personal views on tho rent relief bills agreed He objects to the one which provides that oral leases the mercy of the parasitical landlords and the avari- find ee B+ ot oe serious than is now predicted tor fl the instead of arn jatreduced by Senator layed a few more hours in pro- senting that check he would have sold the property and made a profit. I have since sold the houses to another person.” drafted by counsel to the May committee, which provides that .un- less otherwise specified in a writing, signed’ and recorded in the same manner in which a deed may be re- corded, an agreement for the ocou- pation of real property in the City of New York @#hall create a tenancy for one year, beginning on the date when possession commences under such agreement This dill also has a novel provision that, “Unless, at least two months prior to the termination of the term, the tenant serve upon the landlord or bis agent, or the landlord serve| upon the tenant, a notice in writing to the effect that such party elected not to renew the tenancy, the term of the paid tenancy shall be ex- tended for a period of one year.” “This bill,” says Mr. Appelbaum, “has received the approval not only of the tenants but also of the fair| landlords.” CURES | TO PUSH BUILDING PLAN. | Carren Wants 810,000,000 girl Stractares on City Owned La Borough President Curran says at, to-morrow’s meeting of the Board of | Exstimate he will introduce again rs r inelebs. (Of Dale from: iment 40 his resolution for the appropriation month, ag under the present law, leet “uslems ctherwise agreed; be | St 820000000 fort the erection of til Ovt. 4. He says: : housea by the city on city owned! land. This resolution was aide “This bil ts objectionable. It will ri ‘ jt by Comptroll create a condition in October far Laoag met Wiidey by dail worse than is now throutened, Ter- d | i| Mr. Curran also will call up for | consideration to-morrow the offer of | Samuel 1, Feiber, who lives at the| Angonia, to give the aity the use of | @ block of land he owns near the Queensboro Bridge Plaga, “within 5 cents of any job in New York." He proposes to pay the taxes and assess- ments and to let the city remove the houses it may build when bo emer- gency ends, f a foreign settlement. | HOUSE ASKS WILSON Loring M. Black jr, which is 1S MARNE LAND TN CHINA KULTWOCOLES Go Ashore at Request of Brit-|S. ish Consul, but Later | Withdraw. TOKIO, March 17 (Delayed).—| American marines who landed at) Kiukiang at the request of the Brit- ish Consul killed two Chinese coolies, acording to reports here They later withdrew at the request) of the local authorities. | ‘The British Consul asked the ma-/ lrines to land to quella fight be-| tween Chinese policemen and coolies. | ‘The feeling against Americans and Europeans is said to be intense. Kiukiang is 130 miles south of| Hankow. It Is a treaty port and has ABOUT U. S. TROOPS) Passes Resolution Seeking Informa- tion on Status of 17,000 | Soldiers in Germany. WASHINGTON, March %.—The House to-day called on President Wil- | son for a statement of the status of the 17,000 American troops in Ger- many. In two minutes it unanimously passed the resolution of Representa- | tive Kabn, California, Chairman of the Military Affairs Committee, ask- ing that Congress be advised immedi- ately under what conditions and by whose direction the United States forces can be used. An official estimate by the State De- purtment today placed the number of | Americans in Germany at about 8,000, of whom approximately 400 are women. All American travelers in Berlin, were given opportunity to leave on spe- cial cars provided after the recent ou! breaks, but many failed to leave a they felt they were safe SPEECH OPPOSING CH THIRD WILSON TERM) CHEERED IN HOUSE Repiésehitative Humphreys, a Mis- sissippi Democrat, Gets Applause on Both Sides of Hall. WASHINGTON, March 25. OTH Democrats and Repub- licans cheered a statement in the House to-day by Rep- resentative Humphreys of Mis- sissippi, that President Wilson should make an immediate an- nouncement that he was not a candidate for a third term. Under no circumstances should Mr. Wilson ask for re-election, Mr. Humphreys said, recom- mending passage of an amend- ment limiting Presidential eligi bility to one term. Public advoc- acy by the President's friends and members of his Cabinet that he run a third time has allowed the country to believe that he | "Dr will break an ancient precedent, the speaker said, MRS. THORNE TELS |". HOW DOCTOR PUT HER IN BELLEVUE ys Dr. Milliken First Tried to Get Her in Sanitarium and Failed. Before Dr. Seth N. Milliken, alien- ist, placed ,her in the Psychopathic Ward of Bellevue, on, June 6, 1918, Mrs, Mary Casey Thorne testified to- day before Supreme Court Justice | Lydon and a jury in her $200000 suit against the physician, he had failed to find room for her in a sanitarium at 90th Street and Central Park ‘West. Mrs. Thorne, a graduate of aBrnard College, was married in 1911 to Joel v Thorne, banker and society ; man, She is satd to be receiving $750 @ month alimony pending the trial of a suit for separation. n spite of my insistence that I did not need \t," said the plaintiff, Milliken had persistently ad- vised that I take a rest cure away from home. The place at 90th Street |and eCntral Park West looked like a | hotel. “I did not liear what Dr. Milliken said there, but I heard one of those in charge say: . “What! ‘Take the woman in her sane, sober senses! No, thank you. 1 have no taste for a suit for dam- ages.’ “Thereupon Dr. Milliken told me there was no room for me “He then suggested that we drive to Bellevue. ‘I know you have heard terrible things of (Retievue,’ he said, ‘but it is a splendid place, where you get the best of care and an oppor- tunity to rest’ “The place looked dirty, as if it were for persons in need of charity, A nurse took me by the arm and led me to Ward 23, the ward. I saw Dr. Millken no more “The place did not look at all like a rest qure, nor a place in which I I said 1 would would care to stop. not stop. I stamped my foot. Some | one told me I would not he allowed to leave.” It was six days, she said; before | and | she got in touch wita relatives was corpus, Ape RENT UP $107 KICK: $2 OFF. i 4 idan of habeas Woman Tenement Owner. Consid- ered Compromine in Boont. Mrs. Clara Morer, owner of the tene- ment at No, 628 Dumont Brooklyn, which houses twenty ants, was before the Mayor's Coni- mittee on Rent Profiteering today explain why she is going to raise the rents of the apartments ${0 a month after April 1, after having increased them $3 since she purchased the prop erty last November. She explained that “‘the had deen raised.” Whe: twas that the ineurance on the hous p at the time of purchas stood until next November, mitted that she pay It, very well h them.” psychopathic. Avenue, ten- to insurance shown had decided to raise the rent $10 “because If the, tenants but If they kick I can come down to §% apd maybe com- Values Supreme! 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OCOLATE =BUNNIES— MILK detielous Cunning little chaos: just as oh imported i cliccis In. pleasing and. axtistic. des ins, Kuch 5c & 19¢ + velvety Choeo= » and Mavor, Special Noll Cm 80c boxes | CHOCOLATE ASSORTED FRUIT: ERED mit oY le rh ang the epitalner AUTO HITS POLICE PATROL, Suffers Broken Armqitiwe Prisoners Injured. An automobile driven by Howard ©. | Baun ran into the motor patrol wagon lof the West 30th Street Station in front of the Yorkville Court this @fter- wrecking the side of the poliée One noon, car. Police Corporal Dennis H. Mitehetl’s arm was broken and he was taken to Flower Hospital. Policeman Philip Fitzpatrick was seriously cut and bruised, risonere, Vivian Ar- Two Weng of BLD 248 yy, Lombas Pte Bereet, ¥ yoth charged with unlaw- fully having narcotics were seriously ‘bruised ‘hird Avenue, and her of No. 12 merély an ideal article of use on which tired limbs may recuperate at night, but a pleasing accessory at all times to any FRANK A. HALL & SONS | Bedding Specialists fer 0 26 West AIT S—= A Van Dyk Store is a Food Specialty Shop. We must sell Better TEA Better COFFEE Better BUTTER Better EGGS or there would be no reason tor you passing the ordinary grocet and coming to a Van Dyk Store. Coffee Persuaders _ Maracaibo Cottee is so good that many dealers charge a tancy price tor it. It costs less than Java, so we sell it on a basis ot cost. . Best Mara Coffee, 41e lb. 5 Ibs. for $2.00 Duchess Cottee is an expert's idea of pertection. It couldn’t be better at any price. Une doubtedly—the Cottee Su- preme. Duchess Coffee, 48c lb. 5 lbs. for $2.35 Combination Cottee with the addition of roasted Cereal and Chicory | in scientitic propor- tions reduces the Catteine con- tent, making it heaithtul and economical. ‘Tastes fine, too. Combination Coffee, 30c Ib. 5 lbs. for $1.45 Price tells, but it is the Quak ity that keeps people buying at a Van Dyk Store. VAN DYK 50 BARCLAY ST., NEW YORK CITY CITY BRANCHES NEW YORK. 50 Barclay St. 330 West 125th St. 1478 Third Ave 2187 Third Ave. 2u Willis Ave, 505 E. Tremont 2551 Webster Ave. JAMAICA. 389 Fulton St. ave. WNE NAME IN EVERY PAIR A wonderful “suede” finish makes our substan- tial duplex-fabric DOETIE - identical in ap- pearance with undressed leather, Smart, econom- ical—a revelation in Spring GLOVES ,FOR MEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN