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P. pi | jee Inspector TO-NIGHT'S _ WEATHER: Unsettled; continued cold Peace Basis The IED UP BY OUT SABOTAGE IS OPENLY URGED IN CHICAG 21,403—DAILY. Copsri 1920, by The Press Publishing 4 (The New York World 1 peas Police Official, Detectives and Restaurant Men are Held in $2,500 Bail Each, COURT OLASH HEATED Bourke Cockran Asks Judge io Declare Smith in Contempt } of Court. Inspector Dominick Henry, former commander of the 4th Inspection Dis- trict, Detectives John J, Gunson and Joseph Moloney, of Henry's staff. Petar Giolotti and two of his waiters, all of whom were indicted by the March Grand Jury yesterday, wero arfraigued before Judge James T. Ma- lone in nerd Sesions this morn- ing and held in $2,500 bail cach for trial, Through their attorneys, the In- spector and his detectives pleaded not fuilty to the charges against them. Glolott! and his employees also plead- ed not guilty. Moloney was tho first to be ar- ruigned. He wis represented by Mu- gene MeGee, who asked for a week in which to file necessary This was granted. James E, Smith, Assistant District Attorney, asked the court to fix bail at $10,000, do- claring that the was a are pending.” Jude accept his recommendation who followed Moloney, was also rep- resented by MoGed, Henry, 'w indictment vad charging poring over thc bim with criminal ne falling to stamp out seventy-odd dis- orderly houses in bis district, in com- pany with 1 W. Bourke Gochran, was then culled to the bar. atton ey, After entering the formal plea of not guilty, Cockran demanded an im- mediate trial for client. Stmitin Jurnped to Lis feet and said “we will try this case after we Yrive finished others already set by motions. | | HENRY PLEADS NOT GUILTY: TRIAL IS SET FOR APRIL 22: PENDED BY ENRIGHT nost |stated, will pr Yirlous one and that other charges | whether it stands for exeoution of the, Malone did not} tre Ganson, | lect of duty in] Control, have been sent to the Gov-| Bishop's house wero aroused and | And, second, on strict execution of the WOMAN S LED, DARING RESDUES A FRE EAR STH AVE Fireman Swung From Roof by Legs Saves Girl on Fourth Floor of Dentist’s House. ANOTHER FORCE. ACROSS RHE |Sick Man Pulled Across Area way by Human Chain—Doc- tor’s Wife Seriously Injwed. Alice Ward, a maid empinyet in the home and office of Dr. Isaial N. ss «,. | Wheeler, a dentist at No. 60 West Indignant at British Opposition | si street, woko at a little after 4 and Calls for Discussion —jo'ctowx .tnis, morning, aaa found by Powers, smoke pouring into the door of her e | room, which is at tle back va the She where fourth or wp floor of the house, ran screaming inte the hall, the sinvky wag thicka; and hotter, Wha then up to the root whd down into the boarding house of Miss Mabel Misho, at No. 62 West Sist Street. ‘The fire ia the nouge had started on the first of ule two fours used by the dentist for offices, had been burning for. some time when Miss Hannah Lyons, the doctor's BHRLIN, April &—Preneh reine forcoments have been sent to Frank- fort, according to the Tageblatt. The newspaper sald pipee ‘Haptititnts of infantry and many tanks crossed the Rhine yesterday from Strasebucg.} PARIS, April 9.—Ther Aritish “attl- tude regarding tho French occupation of Frankfort will cause the opening which of a diplomatic conversation between the powers of the Entente ¢ 4 ‘nie coacerning | secretary, who had a room next to the whole subject c | gard to Goreng. ton with re- | that of the niald, was awakened by day in official eirien US "| tho scroams of the mim, run to her The Fi i | dor and was driven back by smoke soe enol altttnias will G6 baned | na amen, “Shu climbed Bee on the Pe ae Meaney OE de EnLOR tas IS as wallilay enlodking iis rear court |and screamed for belp. On the widewsi) of the next room to the east was Mary MoGuirk, the | cook, who had also been driven back nds that Germany dishand her| 2M (he Nail, but had lett her door nd retain only 200,000 men wih | ee spice pa Pegs bvks Treaty of Versailles, France, tt is bly ask Great Britain the colors, presented at Berlin on oven | Wednesday by Gen, Noilet, President | 4¥: of ithe IstoNAliied Commission, ie] mene Wie boarders: to M oruments of various German atates by | ¥®P leaning out of the windows in the Minister of (ue Interior, says a| Melr night clothes shouting for help. Kerlin despatch, | ‘The fire alarm was sent from two BERLIN, April §.—~1he German coge |MAHODS One AE 49th Streot and witth ular troops which crossed tho | A¥ONUG And anothor trom S24 Suvet River Ruhr were withdrawn yeste and sixth Avenue, and also by to the northern bank of thal strram,|BNOne to Fire Headquarters. it is anounced her. Was some confusion and dolay Lieut, Count Kainain, who wag! Of @ failure to completo the 49th str Killed yesterday near Nieder Wolle |@@m™ by pulling the hook in the 4 had this court.” tadt, sixteen miles’ north of Franke bas: COCKRAN DEMANDS SPEED TO) fort, was sto: by a re patra, | ‘The first firemen to mach the honw SAVE POLICE MORALE. according to & somi-official despateh | Were Acting Chief Kelly and his driver “We are ready to show that there} from Mrankfort. |Phillp Fitzpatrick. closely followed by @ax no deliberate neglect of duty by comer - 'EEnginw No. 6 Fitzpatrick, in re. my client,” Mr. Cockran Aad BRITISH WORRIED |sponso fo eries from Miss Bishop's is charged with huving failed to - |boarders, went up through the board- eal with seventy disorderly houses | BY FRENCH CRISIS ing houso to the roof. He was closely in his “district. Wo will show that a | followed by James O'Reilly of No. 65. geven houses of that nature could not hove existed for any length of time “My client is in command of one ef the most important police districts 4m this city, and the charges against him should be settled at once. We know that the order maintained in this city with tho cleven thousand police is most phenomenal, but the morale of that force will suffer if charges of immorality are allowed to (Continued on Twenty-fitth Page.) oo PAKE BELL-ANS AFTER MEALS and seg few fice GOOD DIGESTION makes you feel. Adve Classified Advertisers CLOSING TIME 5.30 P. M. SHARP SATURDAY FOR The SUNDAY WORLD’S Classified Advertisements BRANCH OFFICES CLOSE BEFORE 5 O'CLOCK Positively no Classified Advertise ~ Pments will be received for The Sunday World after 5.30 P. M. Advertisin copy for The Sunday WSN ghould be in The Worid offic: ON OR BEFORE FRIDAY DING PUBLICATION | sovernment Press Severely|_ Over the edgo of the roof of the ree ’ house Fitzpatrick see Criticises the Attitude burning house Fitzpatrick could see | Miss Lyons clinging to the window- sill below, With O'Reilly first holding his fect and then sitting on them and (Continued on Second Page.) |MUTINY OF GERMAN MARINES REPORTED of Lloyd George, LONDON, April 9.—Tho keynote of all the editorials in tho Landon morn- ing newspapers with remurd to tho divergence among the Allies over the French move into Germany ! anxiety as to the effect of Ure situation upon Anglo-French relations, The opinions differ tn appartion- ing the blume for tho crisin The anti-Government pross severely scores the Lloyd George Cubinet. Some of | Forces That Supported the Kapp Uprising Said to Have Killed Officers. the newspapers ure mare or fess on the fence, and*on at last larplies that France is chiefly culpable, The Times and the Duily Mall are TFUTLAN, April 9.—Two battalions of the Balllc Marine Hrigade at Doe its Camp, near Berlin, mutiniod Thurwiay r night, Killing several officers, it bi ra pronounced in thelr criticism of the! parted. brigade was ar the British official attitude. The Morn-| chief suppor of the revent Kapp in- urrection, It refused to disband as or- dered by the Government after the Kapp movement dissolved, Capt. Blrhardt, commanding th ing Post raises the question whether the House of Commons will “tolerate the desertion of un ally at a ertueal moment.” The Telegraph cills for fie ¢, claimed the fighting © ¥ between the withdrawal of Gen, Von Wuttor'n | Krade: cluime a yee G poste aay nis troops and attacking Jisichswehe, trespassing forces, ‘The Dilly Newe| put this state 4 dented from suy- says France precipitated a singularly | wrat sources f the brteuste unfortunwte siturtion Vos ag oa mutiny Railroads Lose trie Canat Rating.| al plana ey ALBANY, April allroads may | their leaders. . not condemn erie Canal for | purpo ¢ oltics traversed | | Cranbegrtes are 1 to purchase the | Xave lands from the reet, park or | other munielpal purposes, acwording to TUE WORLD ThAVEL BUREAU, RG RS, Laeggi ne | Araade,, Pustaor (World) Building, its “Dee decision by Supreme Court Justice (oer Y Gin,” Telenbone Hsekmas suue Irving R, Davendorf, made public by tor Attorney General Newton, 3 2 "| said, “for the benefit of all tenants, tert era's 4 _NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL MAY HALT JERSEY TUBES; : MEN OUT ON ALL N. Y. LINE NO RENT INCREASE: BY OUSTING TENANT FOR NEW OUPANT Cowt Relief for Renter No| Matter How Recently | Leases Were Signed. * RATE TANDS Landlord Can’t Charge What He Pleases Under New Law, Says Magistrate. A YEAR. Justice Jolin R. Davies In the Sov enth District Municipal Court made | a decision { which indicates | that thousands of New York apart- ment tenants, no matter what their leases say to-day nor how recently the) Images wore sigued, mny go inte court and have their rental cut down, Landiords why suppused that the new laws could do them no hun be~ youd preventing additional extértion by new increases wore ln consternu- ton when the Davies decision was made known, Briefly the devision is Chis: Uf # tenant is paying a rental whieh bs more thun ‘25 per vent. wove thy ren tal of the same apartment in April, 1919, no matter who the tenant may have been at the time, he can have his rent reduced, lease or no lease. Tte case that brouptit out the de- cision was that of thirty tenants at No. 66 West 139th Street, ‘They said they were paying 331-3 per cent more than in April, 1919, and that the landlord had demanded a new in- crease. Justiee Davies ordered ail! rentg reduced to the April, 1919, fle- jure, plus 25 por cent, a substantial decrease. / “But, Your Honor,” said Charles| Moors, the agent, “some of these ten- nts have not been advanced, because xome of theut were not in the houss at all in April, 1919." “rhat makes not the slightest dif- ferwnee,” sald Justice Davi And then he proceeded to claborate his tn turpretati “Phe new laws .were drawn," ho | whother they have lived in one wpart- ment for years or ouly weal, In fixiuy rentals the law provides that the | aunt the inte of April, 1919, shall be busin, regardless of why the indy ive been. “The courts are crowded with lords who seek to oust their te ten and unit thinking that onge they get thein out, they will be allowed to churgs what they please in renting to new ocvu- pants, Such lundlords are goig to be baily fooled if they succeed in thelr evictions. ‘They will get no additional rent (by ousting a tenant, and they might as well retain the present occupants,” A case was culled unofficially to the attention of Justice Davies, It a Washington Heights riment, Last October the vld tenant was ousted and 4 Now one went in at a lurge increase, “Lf that new tenant will come into court,” mid Justice Davies, “his rent | will be reduced on the basis of what | the old tcnant was paying « year ago. | Any tenaat in New Yurk can take vantage vf this provisivn, all ty he need do is to show what the old rent was and what Iw own rent is. Any lease cun be thrown out if it violates this ruie.”* In another of the 250 cases the landlord suid he would aceopt the ront, as ordered by the court, for this month “Hut hh raige it next month,” he said. ee ou won't,” sald t court | ent faed now Will Htund for | n | ‘There we Ju | mat i 4s were (old (Conti n Twelltin Page.) | RESTAURANT, Fraay), Apri ®, 1920; nv.a “Iver ‘salimon,’ maitre | Ghotel, Ser oes loin of fresh Jersey ‘pork and | table d’hote diamer, oe,” 14th vi i ia Ba SABOTAGE OPENLY URGED IN STRIKE BY ‘OUTLAW? CIE Chi go Strikers Shoot Man Who Urges Them to Return to Work. CHICAGO, April 9.-—One man was shot aad sovdral| slugged at meetings of fie strtkius-tailroad men last night, police learned to-lay, John Krinta, a striker, who propuscd that the men return to work, was shot. Me was spirited away in an wutumubiie by friends. “rouble broke out at two meetin; of the mewly formed Chicago yard- men’s usgoclution when members suggested a relurb (o the ranky of the established Brotherhoods. botage was advoca by one of the speakers, E. C. Esty, a. Chicago Yardme Association organizer, who participated in the Gary ateel strike and several labor disturbances he They call mo a rebel,” Esty told the strikers. “I’m proud to be » rebel, tn 1910 | had charge of a railroad strike in Minneapolis and St. Paul. The men all went out and, stayed out. TELL HOW STRIKCRS WRECKED PASSENGER TRAINS “1 went down to the I. W,.W. head= quarters and got some help. Then one day four passenger trains wrecked. The next day seven freight trains were wrecked, Then we sent word to the railroads that if they did not come across we would tear down the round house. They didn’t answer, We did. The roundhouse was torn the railroads begged for merey und usked to meet us. We told) them to come to us, ‘There wan a meeting. ‘Phe union drew up a cont tract und the railroud refused it. ‘The next we blew bridge. ‘That night an lev-jam formed in the river ywn the rest of tbe bridge and tore se they don't know to this day who dig the Joh But we won the strike, 1 did ninety days in fail for Wook= Ing the mails, 1 get Of light because 1 tuld the judge 1 didn't know the uw. But, of course, I know It then as wei ag I do now,” Congestion m the yards here grew go great to-day that seven of the elght rajlrvads entering the Dearborn Street tation were unable to run pas- emngur erains downtown. Thoy are discharging pasengers at suturban stutloms 10 courplete the trippon ele- vuted or surfice ers. Juhn Grunau, President of the in- suryent union, the Chicago Yard- masters’ Association, declared to-day that the question of wa: ind hours hud become of secondary importance and that the real fight was for su- premavy over the older brotherhoods. “We railruud men are tired of re- ceiving nothiug but promises from our leaders, We demand results,” he wad, “Brotherhood officials thetr spent (Continued on Second Page.) MARY PICKFORD COLLAPSES. Re- Nervous Dreakdows Follows povts of Inquiry Into Hee Div 108 ANC Cal, April 9 Pickford Fairbanks was under the cars of & physician at her in Teverly Hille to-day, following: what was said ly have been & nervous collapse whit | workin: at bor studio Her collapse folows reports that the State of Nevada i# to begin Judic proceedings to investigate the legality Jor her hurried divorce from Owen Moore and her equaly speedy marrt: {to Duglas Fairbanks, a moving pictur actor, At oped in Nevudw that there was collusion in obtaining the diverse decree. a 4 ewriel FOOD PRICES SOAR WHEN RAIL STRIKE ‘DELAYS SHIPMENTS TR Meat Dealer Suggesis Unload- ing 17,000,000 Pounds. of Stored Frozen Anny Beef. Joseph E. Conron, President of | -Conron Brothers Company, one of | the sley’s lergent receivers of fresh, meat from Western inde- | pendents, to-day suguested The Evening World that nuw is the time to place upon the market the nearly 17,000,000 pounds’ at frozen United States Army béet stored in freezers ’un the upper West Side, & “NO fFesl ihent Had beak droudtn tute Now York," he said, “since ¥ v'clock lust night, Luckily, pur- chases for the present week had been completed befor the strike. broke.| New York, therefore, should nut feel tho pinch before uxt week, by that Ume, unless the strike tngle strulghtened out, there will be an} actte shortage of fresh meat. | “There alse will be a shortage neat | Week of live poullry and other prod. | ucta originating Lis side of Chicagy.” | Wholesale produce expressed | concern whout iarge nuunbers of car: | | loads of Southern vogotuubles Lhet piling up on Pennsylvanian (aeks in |Jersey City. As a rile these vege | ables are under ice, wien cannut be | roplaced. On Now York Central tracks, tevin Yonkers to 33d Street, deere suid, | are cars of potitoes and apple trun! the Preific coust which hive been | there sinco last nights Dorty thousand oases uf am ¥: dewlers reported, are on New York Centr, teks or in the Jersey minals, where the 1 reach them, In a few cases the cats happen to be whero trucks ean backed up to them, but tnly was a] matter of chance, | Wednesda: by the sirike. to are} | ter= reeui vers eau be ot live pouttiy, due were held wp wt Mumisto | ewe GUM were Inuved | (Continued on Second Page) REPORT JOHN REED SHOT IN FINLAND) Has Been Held Prisoner Since Try- ing to Make Way Out of Russia in Disguise. ORICAQO, April %&—An unconfined report that John Reed, masazine wititer, had oon exccuted in Finland has been rooeived here, Liogd B. Hoth, Awmtstant District Attorney, announced to-day. Reed is under indictment here charged with conwptracy to advucate the overthrow af the Govermmunt by force Reed, an atelve adherent the Lenine-Trotzky roKime, represented the of | ent Scale and Will Give Com- TO-MORROW'S WEATHER? Unisettiods: |New York Central and New Haven Yardmen Quit, Tying Up All Freight—Tube Workers Vote To- Day on Strike—Jersey Trains Stopped. ; The so-called “headless strike” of the switctting crews in the yards of al! (he railroads with terminals in and about New York brought outs suing and incoming freight traffic nearly to a standstill to-day and. serie ously interfered with the handling of passenger trains, ‘The strike, without the authority of any of the interuational railroad. brotherhoods, without a statement of grievances aid without: warming, reached New York City Jale last night.from Chicago, from whieh it- has been spreading over the country, for several days, d * A strike vote of the workers of the Hudson aad Mapatran tubes is YOUTHFUL SOLDIER | iS LEADER OF NEW “OUTLAW” UNION Formed United Engiuwmen's Asso- ciation Six Weeks Ago and Now Claims 14,000: Members, | (vated to ‘Ti Rovetrg World) CHICAGO, April 9. f { #2 IMNADINY, wow leader of the United Engine- iten's Asoviation, com- éuring more vuaed vf former anombers of the |! plans were made, Figs Brotherhood vt Lawinntive bire~ | Tague of Jersey City, for an otter. inen und Mwsineers, is one of the | 100n meeting at Grand View Hall, for yuungvnt wen Ju raiirvud vorvion | which arrungementa ware made at He is Also one of the youngest votunena uf the late workd wur uid Way among the first to go vver vhe top. Hye wont over aa Fischers Hall in Newark 4 a Kdward Rice uf Chicago, @ tra representative of the American P¥4aa. eration of Lavbor and shad * u SAR pein 9 SESE wourvite aod came Muck as & | the Brotheriood of Ralteoer 5 sat Wirst Leutenmnt, men (trackwalkers and swutchmen), Hv asoorty mute tmn 14,000 | Appeared at inte menting. It “ craslivers, fromen, howters, yard | inade known that Rice headed. the men aid roundiuse men fave {delegation which emuse reds Citeage mcned up hn ple ongunization, | and other cities af the Weat yemere which tm devhuey wifl suou be | day and pumoed the wudden asd anode setivned in Na Keats : jeodieg strike order, ) @ fandful of inen he [+ sieruxt the “robe” union six TEND Bec MORKERS Al- TEND 8TRike MEETING, With him anet Thoome B Heay anil Joseph Straten of the Marine Alliliation and the ftaltway Port aod minal Workera, Bernard Kenuedy, weeks ago. He is now une of the most powerful of the wew leaders m che lwbor world, His men wie to DVL ige weit and recognl+ hyn of Uleir ongwuimtion infers | Execntive Comimittseman of the dor they will veturu to work “wy City Ingurgent locals uf the Mruthe ‘tre mage dowatds win $1 an lerhood of ‘Trainmen, and sepremotes hour tor firemen ard § for |Uves of the Hudson aud Munhat erginwers—the sane, he points | lube aystamn, baad veut, as iy paid carpenters, ‘Rica, who hus the feputation boing an effective speaker in pea. strike enthusiawm, wus to make the Prinolpal address at the Grund View Natl meeting and then come to thie city to addreas the Gauily meeting of the harbor strikers at Webeter (Hall, Ratlrond officials were navt onty surprised by the strike but Dewiidered, ‘vy the evidences of careful prepare~ lon of which they Inarned Curt’ the day, It was teurned that nut onty was the strike mesmge pussed to the men appearing for work at the yarée in the Bronx, Manhattan and New Jersey at eleven o'clock last RBigtr, mt that delegations af picketts were out ail night calling at the homes oe men who were due to go to work om phuabers, rivklayers und aleo- tricians. He said the u Be~ ceded frum the “Lil four” broth erhvods becuuse the officers of ‘the old reyime failed tu obtain a sattstecwury adjustment of the wage requests, 980,000 WORKERS TO MAKE DEMANDS FOR HIGHER WAGES Declare They Cannot Live on Pres- panies 18 Days to Raise It. Rolsheviki for # time us “Consul-Gen- eral’ at New York. He was cuptured | by the Finns last mouth white trying to foave Ttuasia disused us a stoker aboard a stcammip. Cable reports wid a large number of diamonds and quantity of Bolshevikt propuginda, duced to inicroscople ind printed on photographie wits found yn his person. \ Teed, who Is mutt to be @ graduate of Harvard well-Kiuwn miss " at nine (lms, wana | sina writur before, ho, capunnud cause | - ann MEN'S SUEE OK TOPCO NT, The “HUM Cloulung Conver, Uroalwa Barclay Stowe (Opn, Wowlwort thuuidiing, wl (eday aud Satunday 2,000 mw v's Spr 1 browua, fancy wixtures; mingle 4 douube. ng military style, slaab ot jetty model», all stylem UUF siweial price for to-day and Natura, $20iN, Uther at $52,00, Oyen Saturday aigbe ul 10. MU OUSTULEN, Bovedway, cor, Basay o—aan, of Bolsheyiam. 05 = aud ats ti the day shifts Greept for the meetings called at. halla there were no gatherings of strikers near the railroads, and the police posted about rattroa@ proper- |ties had no trouble with whieh to deat except to keep curtous onlovhers tu, | motion. | Brotherhood officials are trying des- Wage demands CHICAGO, Apel! of five groups of ratiroad employees ninibering 940,000, will be pushed im- mediately an the result of the spread atrikes of awitehmen and ven, GA, Worrell, General ‘irman of Uhe Railway Cuerks Or- Kunization of the Chicago and North weetern ayaten said to-day, putt Rtuwtlway clerks, Lelewraphers, sig perately to check the walkout. Grand sien, ntenance of Way employees | President L. K. Sheppurd of the order nd wtationary firemen and oilers, the lof Railroad Conductors sent the fal- roupes Nved, will BrAAROE: de-llowing telegram ty M. C. Mhateery, Indy to every caldera in United | chalemnsiiee Uni: Gear ve roel WareAllaaia jairman of the General Adjustmnsit Committee of the order: “The existenee of the order is | Mireatened by un legal strike, Bvery |moemter working in the yards should romain at work. Ryadmen would be Justified lo guing in yards under the cirournstances,” G auptiance, are ut t reel firtos tiny will be igranted irae fend nt im the ‘resident Wil. ane the wagos If oost of living was The living Ww tured t months the teriatly reduced. ts are just us igh, if ype suid on pr tn mix not being Laken this atternoon, Strike sentiment seemed to preva.” Ree vt highe We etniine w= ot waane” "ee i enemies”