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} ‘ ; : oa * + ” « ~ ® - ; q JUAREZ, Mexico, Ma: * funsom of 5,000 pesos from euch of two the Jease of ~ that ‘his saloon at serecognizing only their own thirst, Jo- 4.) beph McGinty, No. 218 East 98th Street, ‘and August Bausewin, No. 227 Bast AaB, throumh the plate- “’them, MoGinty broke “puiet through me eft hand. Son ‘charges of Agrees to Extension of Use of * Revolving Fund provided in the 'Trans- ony newspapers of May 8, the de- ches said, published statements there was tio confirmation of re- ports that Carfanza had been captured or that Gens, Aguilar, Murquit, Rar- Fagan and Urquizo had been executed. deypaiches (old of ‘a eonfer- Ce Between Generals Obrogon and Boasaivn on May § at Tacubaya, just gutside of Mexico City and said Gqn- @tal Gonzales hod appointed Juan Bancher Azcona and Aurelio Men- @ivil to take temporary charge of the foreign office and the Department of the Hacier4a, respectively. ‘They, also — in Woman’s Room Instead uid Gonzales had appointed Direct- of Office. Inconsistent. | ‘orm General of posts; railways and se ! telegraph lines. | W. Bourke Coofran of counsel for! WASHINGTON, May 12—Demo- “FIRING OF HOUSES Inspector Dominick Henry, on trial Cr#tic attack upon the Republican before Judge Malone in General Ses- Peace resolution was launched to-| ON RANCHES VILLAS gions tor negivct of duty, was ready LAST ACT AS BANDIT to open tne case fdr ine defense this Collected 10,000 Pesos From Two as Ransom. 12. ‘Villa's last acts of violence before the witnesses regarding the nied. Assistant District Attorney Smith In his force to the Sonora rejoutionists’ france, formerly the Hotel Van Cori- “army at Chihuahua City, was the firing jandt, It was testified yesterday by | , Of three ranch houses at the Mood! jerdinund Delenne, proprietor of the| “ gettlement near Ortis, und the carrying [Or a” arance, that he had paid! ff of the owners for ransom, accord- ing 10 reports reaching here to-day, | Henry $1,000 as a commission for ob- Villa was said to have collected « taining an extension of ten years un of the hote of the fermers. It is not known how) To-day’s inquiry was directed to much he obtained from the third. The goging out why @ policeman seit to stay Reid et ae a, the fiesses tbe Hotel after the Aree Biorénce Harding there was not btationed in the Usite extinguished by the chieftains cl office, as Smith sald was custom: ‘Yollowers. : jary, but was put in the woman's room ied tllaehitieee BREAKS 15 BOTTLES on ‘the second floor. smith suid he would show that in consideration for OF WINE HE STOLE the hotel the policeman was intro, |duced through the basement entrance Besides That, De Linko Is Arrested ing put in the room in such a way “the street and broke every one of the fifteen bottles. He pleaded guilty to burglary He was held in 61,000 bail for the Grand Jury in Harlem Court. ~ It is no fault of Charles Keitman No. 310 Hast 93d Ignoring this fact and Henry's staff. Policeman John Hebron, formerly of Henry's staff, now in,the West 47th Street station, who arrested the Hard- ing woman, was called. Hebron said he went to the hotel on an order from Lieut. Gunn of Henry's staff, who said Matron Sullivan at Police Headquartors said if a detec- tive were sent to room No, 304 in the hotel he would “find something.” Hebron, who was living in the hotel under orders to watch the patrons, went to the room, found Florence Harding and a man named Hyman Rubin and arrested them for v rancy. “Did you have an officer assigned to the hotel?" asked W. Bourke Covkran, Henry's counsel “My partner, McLaughlin, did’ re- plied Hebron, Q. Why did you ask it? A. The woman sold she had valuable prop- erty In the room and asked to have a man left there to protect it. Street is closed. “226th"@treet, were so angry when they . the door locked this morning care itis charged, oe threw an trolman Martin jay and Kot a Then he penttes. men were held in te: ‘pail each in the Harlem Court malicious mischief. | » SENATE COMMITTEE _ WOULD AID ROADS $300,000,000 Revolving Fund to Fifteen Years, “Eandiords will get the same fair] ceived word, practically direct sone aa WASHINGTON, May 12.—Logisiation| @ That was the only reason for) treatment In fhe fou te isnt] from the President, Anicia\ve vita oiedy ag asa ar aaeaa desigued 10 ald the rallrouds and ‘ship- | A#K'nx for » policeman to De jata-| MAY expect,” said Justion Morris, much displeased with my reply vith a Stenger of the. infantry pers in the car shortage situation by | tioned there? A. Yes. to his cablegramy that it did not | 4.0" ' Redatlog tie use ot the 4399,000000| SMITH ASKS. (P POLICRMAN| ADMITS RECEIVING .| ¢ his citleorans that 1 6 stands charged with ordering that WENT THROUGH BASEMENT. Q. (By Smith) Don't you know that the policeman was let Into the hotel through the basement and sent up by a back elevator and locked in the room, A. 1 don’t know anything of the sort. Q. Did you ever do such a thing before? A. Yes, Q. When? A. At the King James Hatel. The ciroumstances were ex- actly the same, Q. Didn't Inspector Henry tell you in making thé arrest and putting a uniformed policeman in there to “pro- teat" the hotel?, A. No, he never did. Hebron said Henry divided his dis- ‘portation Act from five to firteen years and also amending the law in other wespects was agreed upon to-day by the mereka Interatate Commerce Som? ET , isieonpplipioneesin Palice Chief Arrested, EVANSVILLE, Ind, May 12.—Chief ot Police Edgar Sohmidt, two detec- tives, and a Captian of Police were ar- rested here to-day by Deputy United States Marshals on indictments re- urned by the Federal Grand {Wnahenapeus in’ “connection with? aut * alleged fiauor smuggling conspiracy. tn - me ‘Two Injured in Ol! Explosion. Frank Howard, No. 66 Sherman Avenue, Newark, and George Frey, No, 28 Brill Street, Newark, were " in e efin-| im the archives of ‘sops for the ) pairing tanks of, the Prest-O-Late| trict into zones, Zone No. 2, in whieh | rial. bs the namieh eatat cour sy Ral simple.’ * jompany in Newar this morn-| Hebron w ctive, Burgeas was employed by the firm o ec y the , + BMliaine en an explosion Wrecked tho Hebro! on oY hie bounded Wd Henry L. Doherty & Co, No. 60 Wal!]though the daring and successful at- SIMS BELITTLED U. 8 NAVY IN ing, burning both men badly,|45th and 49th Strect; between ixth y M ? TALK WITH CONGRESSMAN, they were taken to the Newark C10 | Avenue and the North River. Street, and it was charged, stole tholtack on Zeebrugge came much lal Gaehane GER is euieatSe a itespite . & ch he turned to Cooney. va erent | y 24 Hebron could remember the names |r Mee oe ees a’ Tndianapolis, {At might have been a very different! jetter from former Representative Ralph G. He: of only two persona arrested by hiin,| Virtually all of the shares were rocov-|story If it had been undertaken earlier) Carlin, of Virginia, dated last April . though he wad he had arrostes very lered in’ & safe doposit yault of thelwhen the Navy Department was urg-| 20 and stating that while Mr. Carlin y ¥|Mount Vernon Trust Company, was visiting London in December, CINCINNAZI, May 12.—Ralph G.I many. He could not remomber dates oe some such plan, all of which Ad-| i9ig Admiral Sims had “disabused" Hemingway, an Judiana glass manu-/or places, Te Continue Second Class Mall Matter, Sims thought ‘impracticable’! his mind of the view that.“our navy’ facturer, widely known in this country and abroad, ts dead. _ DESERTS ANARCHY FOR U.S. IDEALS AND IS FREED BY COURT Indicted Man Pleads Guilty, Recants and Others Are Expected to Follow Example. Policeman W, J, Smith of Inspector |- McDonald's squad, tha next witness, in telling of the afternoon arrest of @ woman in a big apartment house in West Sist Street, sald he saw a man in the apartment “sitting around in his B. V, D's.” “His what?” exclaimed Cockran in apparent bewilderment, “My = term- inology, if the Court pleases, is being rapjdly extended.” | ex-| “He means linen underwear OSES ZIMMERMAN, |plained Juror Juilus Goldstone, twenty-six of No. 136 For. |Ceekran thanked him suavely, Wetec une wah ic Policeman Meuchner of MrDonald's squad aded to the list of raids made over Henry's head Cookran wanted to know if Dete dicted for criminal anarchy last December, pleaded guilty before We ai es Bartow Bm. Weaka in the tive Mcl au in Hebron's “partni * Criminal Branch of the Supreme Baik raping She *) Gourt to-day, and recanted fully’ fing ‘ ‘ | Bis radice: betiets, ' we certainly will,” said . t t Co H He told the court that his atti- Poltewen Gucchan Auibics. tor | tude toward American ideals and |merly of Henry's staff, but usaighed | + institutions bad undergone acom- |to MoDonald’s staff, last with plete change and that never again |the prosecution, sald he went 80 long as he lived, would he at- | {iote! Stanley, Ls 5 ne af- town, and was introduced to a young filiate with any radical or com- | womi seventh floor “by a munistic orkanization. bellhop.” Cockran made diligent in- Dacian; ieaatrloe’ a tter quiry to find what a. “bellhop" was, und found out. “Ah, L see,” he said, Rorke asked the court that sen- teow upon Zimmerman yended as he believed that “this a8 waiter boy-——a boy who answers a ell be sun. pman's example will be followed ee tae eae the Heel by others.” : od Judge Weeks granted Rorke's the office at the desk,’ said Jvequest.. Thirty-four other erim- ye yo ee = ‘ mt anarchy caste are awaitin: | jy. ho placed him there?" asked Ule ; [tai awia tne policerfan, G day by Senator braska, like and next year by Michael J. ant, at $62.50 instead of the $70 aske by Dougherty. Justice Morris heard the complaints of thirty-eight tenants of No, 886 Catd- and. pron their petition against the landlord on round that it was unjugt and un- STOLEN SECURITIES Raymond F, Cooney Pleads Guilty Raymond F. Cooney of No. 148th Street pleaded gutity before Judge Crain In General Sessions to-day to re- colving stolen goods and tenced Friday. Donald G, Burgess of No. 601 West 185th Street, indicted with Cooney the theft of 200 shares of Cities Power and $1,000 a share, pleaded not guilty ant was remanded to the Tombs to await WASHINGTON, May 12.—Hxisting| when urged by the Navy Department.” ) had been of great importance during ‘second class mail rates would be con-| Admiral Sims told the President he| the war and had accomplished splen- tinued until July 1, 1921, under @ bi!l| had been shown studies of the ¢e- small measure would postpone for one year|of submarines, Mr. Daniels sald, and the British Navy, and that our each of the two authorized automatic achievernents had amounted to car ole ani ayant N wy TF SAYS HENRY HITCHCOCK nes ‘PROTECTED HOTEL CONGRESS POWER AFTER AN ARREST. TO MAKE PEASE Asserts Policeman Was Posted Deciares Esihedins in Knox Resolution Ridiculous and | Adin inistrat —_—-— afternoon if his motion to dismiss the Who deciared in addressing the Sen- | 7 casé on the ground no crime had been ote that he measure was futile and " way Three Farmers and casé ont Carried Away described by the prosecution was de- inconsistent und inimicai to the | Treaty of Verauities | Hoe denied that Congress has the| Franciac) closing the State's case questione1 power to make peace although it has/ activities of authority to declare war. Teported surrender of a large part of Henry with relations to the Hotel de! voted unanimously Congress peace-making juriadiction, he said, Reviewing the course of other peace | resolutions Mr. Hitchcock : vious resolution by Senator Knox was “abandoned on the Senate doorstep its predecessors.” “But the effort to do something to escape from the constitutional method of making peace was not he continued, done.” Senator Hitehcock criticised espe- cially the proposal in the resolution that the President be asked to negoti- ate a separate treaty with Germany, Inly a few months ago, “the same Senators who now propose this request were violent in condemn- ing any such suggestion. demanded that the President unite » Ami Here's Another Hard- {not to interfere with the business of de with other nations in making WAR CRIMES FOR ry ri the hotel. ‘ 2:10 iets ss _ Luck Liquor Story. aun Police Captain James McCauley of uilon! the wahatoreoninued, it i WILSON TOLD SIMS Maximifiian De Linko of No. 317/14, west 47th Street station was pated tune the United States does not q «Bast 114th Street stole fifteen battles) ag about the arrest of the Harding| walve any of its rights under the = | et. wine trot @ restaurant in that) if6 said that a policemtan|(reaty it has rejected. Could anything (Continued From Fest Page.) | street to-day. re request} ©2, More ridiculour than to assume ‘A policeman saw him coming from} Was sent to the het at the - Sk and Indicate that we have any rights ‘ tes t and| Of @ policeman of Henry's staff. The} to waive after we have refused to] than on the English coast and in reSix fi is ahidi ema of “the restaurant an) policeman was removed four days| ratify the treaty whfch grants them?"| the channel. 4 in| Forty-Six in List, » Including He dell down a flight of stopg acrosa| later at the request of Lieut, Kelly of es GHA Go ee bow.the necedaary Prince Ernst, von Bulow $70 RENT ASKED; $52.50 ALLOWED Bronx Justice Does Not Take Fig- ures of Bronx Landlord Seri- ously and Tenant Wins. Justices Scanian and Morris in Rronx Municipal Court to-day disposed of 170 heard 112 cases and settled most them on the basis of last yea plus 25 per ceht, Justice rent cases. set the rent to Ay nm in $200,000 Case—Loot other office | army surgeon, Dr. Ovcar Michelsohn, . is accused of caust: the death of Recovered. Admiral Sims's reply to the Presi-! Siok and wounded in his chargo by Fuel Company PIMLICO ) ENTRIES. ihe Saat thane, BemnS. AN REDS ee ee the Admiral should be in the many simi aud be e by itish ° RACH TRAGK, PIMLICO, Md., May people of jeu since the begin: | Stytieh Navy and on, their pay Lore he SnLUAs. Can Seernorraw TRONS | ning oF the wat. Aad BI, Denials, Admiral Sims's charge that the PLitsy MACH Mason” tn gvar Sims's cable to the President sug-| wavy Department refused to send longs mh, 30; Qiiven Leaerel guested that the proper policy to Pure | cnough, anti-submarine vessels to the iio. ree Welln. “10: Hasson bus was to adopt the recoimenda- | War cone wus disproved by the Ads ¢ Water, 107, Lngaores! tions he had made to the department, “ a " | The’ Gisamon miral’s own language, Mr. Daniels “most of which had been decided | testified. He read a cable from Sima upon and put in operation before Ad- . . oy “4 SO eee eeeg them,” secre. (dated April 28, 1917, stating that . pont, WR | tha Wantne tatd | twenty American destroyers operating 0. Jodmie i, a ‘ Po e » Stu, 18} wo “remarkable and significant Hr GLAST OoD pie Buu cona Keberae Cael corpo 2, | HMLAINETLS 4p Agmival Bune Ae down, By the end of’May there were TACK Maiden | shires warolla \ Daniels as evidence that the Adinjrai ren ght destroyers and two | gator, 118: Vying Frog, tex. STturnie + was so “hypnotized by. British influ | tenders at Queenstown Bia gsi 10a: Mie, Hela Maar cnees that he was willing to try to| “Thus: we had despatched, within POUR ACE at lure the President af the United} month, more than the iritish Wat palming: six States into the ing that regardless | Council an: dmiralty had decided "id! shank aveet, Of future developments we can al-| Were needed to ‘put down’ the dan- Ths, {ways count upon the support of the | ferous submarine activity in that area hein Hidieap British nay and ‘keep/it down," declared) Mr tiny. ), 1203. The first Was that the views he had | Daniels Vip Master ' Will,’ 102; | expressed were in all cases “an inde- & nyrectolater (tmp. 110; pendent opinion based on — specific | Wondon Wilnon An | facts collocted in the Admiralty and “im, RACH The Anvapolin th other Government départments.” The| LONDON, May 12.—Prestdent Wil falle i nk Mee nae Ae) second Was as “follows: "Depend |xon's uddtress to the officors of the’ At Sanh (aps ties ite Talter ‘\upon the fact, which I believe to be|jantle Fleet when America entered th: SOhaibe! Scan |true, that remurdieas of any future|war, in which he advised them to. ‘win developments, we can always count|by the audacity of thelr methods,” was PA WNTH HACE “ Teuton. fom: Pe id, 88; Widow asanon ‘Ajppreitive allowance, Hitehcock of ne} \ “Something had to be Morris refused ous attention to the by Daniel J. Dougherty, landlord of th apartment at No. 3080 Dec scheduled to become but little during the war,” wrote ne year later Uicable, | r. Carlin. “TL remember that “He evidently sought to discredit! gfter leaving the Admiral | told «rain May ‘Rich "Bachelor elor Victim 0 of Midnig ht Photographed With Group 5 of fon spokestnan, The States | agaipst giving | id a pre- abandoned.” FE, RVECKERT AND CROUP ALLIES SPECIFY BRITAIN HELPLESS TO POINT OF PANIC, he said, They hotly military supplies and supplies of food and fuel oil are to be de- livered at British ports in any other way within the next few months than under adequate con- voy. There will presently not be ships or tankers enough and our shipbuilding plants may not be- gin to yield important results in less than eighteen months. “1 believe that you will keep these instructions absolutely and entirely to yourself, and that you will give me such advice as you would give if you were handling and if you were running o navy of and U Boat Commander. BERLIN, May 12.—Forty-six Ger- ranking from commander mans, an simple figure on the Allies’ first specified list of war criminals to be arraigned army corps to a private, the in the Leipsic Supreme Court. Among them are Prince Ernst of Saxony and Gen. yon Bulow, com- mander of the 2d Army Corps, who logether with some of their subordi- nate officers are accused of cruelties in the Namur district of Belg,um. Justice Scanlan of rent to pay seri- figures produced ur Str your own.”, . ey von Rite onarts oe von be paid for tho/SIM8 WROTE AMBASSADOR PAGE “C¥{litz will be tried for allege: Norton, a ten- cruelties committed at Kalisz, Po- ABOUT WILSON’S VIEW. _ Mr, Daniels also read a letter from Admiral Sims to former Ambassador! Page at London, written Aug. 7, 1917, which in part said: “In this. connection | Have a suggestion to make. | have re- ‘land, and the submarine commander, Arnauld de la Perriere for torpedo- | ing Italian vessels. ‘Three ether sub-| ‘ae commande v Neumann von! Nostitz, Werner and Patzig will be | tried of the charge of torpedoing re- | spectively the English hospital ships tly threw out change hii that he regarded me a by the Admiralty and so pro-British that he seriously considered the ad- | visability of replacing me by some | | Prisoners and wounded taken by his | brigade be put to death, en. Kruska is specifically charged h spreading typhus among prison- in the Cassel camp, while an ers dent told also of plans for a combined) gystematic {ll treatment. Gen. “von sea and land attack to turn the Ger-| Oven, former Governgr of Meta, will 7 be tried for atrocities alleged to have sh dc r man right flank and cut off Zeebrugge | Pe [ried fon Bere et ope under hie 206 West will’ be sen-]48 a provisioning base, Mr. Daniels) command in the villages of Eastern said. | France. “That was the kind of ‘bold and| ” seni acai for} audi¢ious’ thing the President and the Navy Department had been urging from our entry into the war,” declared the Secretary, “But even then, Ad- be hoped that if Admiral Sims has such assurances he will send a copy of the pledge in writing with tne name of the ‘important Government official’ appended thereto to be filed stock, Valued at that he considered the scheme imprac- the Navy Departinent’s plans by say~| my son, who with me, that upon the support of the British Nav: ewtentialiy the attitude of an fm) tlent ODAC me 12, 1940, ‘Assassin lis Girl. Friends [OF PRIENDS WEAPON THAT KILLED RUECKERT IS TRACED: SOLD BY PAWNSHOP (Continued From First Page.) in the man who called Himself Berger was his apparent familiarity with re- volvers of every make, I thought a man like that was worth studying, so while he fussed and I waited I gave him such an examination that I wi! know him when I see him again.” Two suspects picked up on the Hoboken waterfront were under de- tention at Headquarters when the de- tectives came in with the man who pawned the watch. He shook his head and the men were permitted to go. The watch owner placed himself at the disposal of the police and will travel with thom for thé next day or two, Chief of Police Hayes was asked to-day if the killing. of Rueckert might not have had some wartime connections. “During the war,” the Chief said, “Richter and Rueckert between them bought Liberty Bonds to the value of $150,000 and War Saving Stamps to the amount of $50,000. . “There was enemy money in the White Metal Manufacturing Company, but-there also was a large amount of American capit I have heard tha’ the Colgate interests were in it. The American capital appears to have dominated for, although the business was taken over by the Alien Property Custodian, it never hay been so!d.” FUNERAL OF RUECKERT WILL BE HELD TO-NIGHT. The funeral of Mr. Rueckert will be held to-night in Volk's mortuary chapel at No. 633 Washington Street. The pastor of a German Lutheran chureh will officiate. ‘To-morrow -the body will be cremated and, fulfilling the wishes of the deceased, the ashes will be sent to Rueckert's mother ip Germany Elsie Clara Vorrath, the Hoboken girl whom Rueckert was to have married, says he was not at all his usual cheerful last. Saturday self ta night when they saw “The Famous Mrs. Fair” together at a Manhattan theatre, went to the Hotel Astor for supper and motored home. “From the moment Fritz left me at my door,” Miss Vorrath told her mother, ‘I was disturbed about him On the previous Saturday night he had hearti noises on the roof of the apartment. He and is valet had gone up there. He was disturbed by this incident. { tried to tell him it was the wind, “But last Saturday night Mr, Rueck- eit, who was always happy, appeared to be worried. J think he must have had a premonition, “From the moment I reached my own room I kept thinking that some- thing was happening to him. When the bell rang I was the first to get to the door, I was shocked but not surprised to learn that he had been shot." iside Trask was not at Ruegkert’s t on unday, ‘Miss Trask,” her lawyer sald, annot understand the statement at- tributed to the Mother Superic ask in the ny persons saw Miss Ti tia. We insist that ‘Miss Tragk was to ture | E have been assured of this by im-| eye” the Standard wail, to-day portant Government officials,” para te aanen Twas Sheckgul ihe 4 ee ineonceiv, c possessed prudence even + fmt gerne, \pepacelyanis dea ny lit’ was condemned by Wilson.’ | Oter ffi dmiral could have regarded such | wise, it said, the President's advice te, 110. | gagurances as worth paying t to might have resulted in defoat for the ‘Tack gond, transmit,” sald’ Daniele “It is to ‘ilies, ¢ ' i] way of litigation, her attorney said will We dacided at that time, have married Rueckert, and that the ‘SPLIT is CERTAIN IN BOTH PARTIES OVER THE LEAGUE (Continued From First, Page.) Follette on a platform opposing the entire treaty and League and reser- vations. | Support for the third party will come jfrom friends of William Jennings | Brya., who will probably wage an | unsuecessful fight in the San Fran- cisco convention against the Wilson | platform, though Mr, Bryan himself | would be prevented from supporting a third party which condemned the treaty and the league inasmuch as he himself is ready to accept the Lodge reservations in the interest of a start toward peace. Support for the third party will also come from those Democrats, partic- ularly of Irish extraction, who think Article X of the covenant interferes with the prospect of Irish freedom and they are lining up solidly behind Hiram Johnson. Of course Republi- cans fond, of Johnson will join a third party if he or some on® of his view- point heads a third ticket. The new party will acquire strength from the so-cadied Liberal or Radical Wings of the two big rarties. LEADERS ON BOTH SIDES ARE GREATLY CONCERNED. This readjustment or realignment of political forces is causing no little concern to both Republicans and Democrats, The Republicans are su- premely confident that the defections will not be considerable. The Demo- crats think the departure of John- son and his following from the regu- lar Republican Party will make the league reservationist programme easy to attack, and that the real friends of the league will see the Democratic platform as the only means of bringing about an early partnership of the United States in the present League of Nations. ” But irrespective of the Treaty is- sues, the personal questions in each party are getting more and more vitals William Gibbs McAdoo has thé edge on the Democratic nomina- tion, By insisting on uninstructed delegations and keeping himself out of the office secking class by ma- neuvers of receptiveness only, he has impressed Democrats in the capital here as a shrewd politician, Mitchell Palmer is well liked and probably has more strength among the members of the Democratic Na- onal Committee than has McAdoo, Palmer began. Delegates were tied to the McAdoo bandwagon When that ndividual was Secretary of the Trea: ury and Director General of Railroads, le got an early start. Added to this are the mistakes made by Palmer— or rather the groups he has rightly or wrongly antagonized. He is under ittack for failing to reduce the cost of living, for alienating labor by his policy in the coal injunction suits and for his wholewale raids on so-called “Reds.” INFLUENCE OF RADICAL WING AGAINST PALMER. ‘The last charge influences probably only the radical wing of the Demo- sratic party which, in any event, would not stick with the Wilson kind ot democracy no matter whether Palmer, MeAdoo or any other beir of he Wilson policies were nominated. This group still holds Mr. Wilson Fifth Ave. at 35th St, vesponsible for Postmaster Gener y Burleson’ repression of “liberal? Fiteroy 1234 periodicals and considers the treaty and league objectionable as not being liberal enough, not containing more of the doctrines of internationalism. But on the whole Mr. McAdoo, by keeping out of public office since the armistice, has seemed to improve his ances with the rank and file of the Democrats, while Mr. Palmer has been under fire right along. Gov. Cox of Ohio is a serious contender, but just now Mr. McAdoo is in the lead. That is not an individual opinion, It is the onsensus of the Democrats who are on the inside of things and who know what the leaders of delegations are apt to do on the final count at San Francisco. LOWDEN GROWING IN STRENTH AMONG REPUBLICANS. As for the Republican nomination, the strength of Gov. Lowden grows. His pronouncements on the League ot Nations are satisfactory to the Lodgr set auguring harmony with the leg- islative branch of the Government, N Randolph Newman of No. “20 Broad Street, Mins Mae Trusk’s at- torney, said this afternoon, speaking for his client, that the sister in VANILLA AND CHOCOLATE charge of St. Mary's Hospital was in re : narge Of GT ah diated’ tat Mise |] | renee afe delicious blendings of Cream—Chocolate and Vanilla choicest San Blas Grated Cocoan resistible combination. SPECIAL wedding was to have taken place this BARLEY SUGAR 5 seep ' we, We also insist that his en- curs: ae a Co viaten CHOCOLATE gagement to the Hoboken girl was ete Mo a FReat enone months ago. pe Ros pai ot Le olcest speci Newman sid Rueckert made a new Secular a’ cdlean, will Inst Sunday, in the presence of || Prine cushion shape (io witnesses from Montclair and Tren- “eagle yp eclyerae ton, An earlier will, found in the ee na ne Apples and Rueckert apartment by Mr. Richter, petites Pati # said to have been largely in fay in plesning variety of . vs first dipped tn lor the Haboken girl, The later will, Fru be Mats Ming Stored: New Ye ke wal with our Newman believes, makes provision and Splee rooklyn, Newark, orld famous vee for Miss ‘Trask. Attorneys have ten |} | flavors. 49¢ Segaee cre cause a 5e days wiibin which to file it, What, if POUND BOX telephoge directory, BOX vnything, Miss Trask may do in te vut the‘latter was in the game before |{ reservationist group, and he brings 223 Sixth Av., tsth St, moreover an administrative record in 350 Sixth Av.t aad St, vernment affairs in Illinols as well zor Nasvau, at Ann St, an experience in Congress as an West 4ad_ Street. . ae % ; POUND re Our Big Daily Special * For To-Morrow, Thursday, May 13th as an efficléney programme inthe xed ve end. Major Gen. Wood has a splefdid organization and has surprised eyen his admirers here by the way he has moved forward. Bul if the teath be told the disinterested leaders are afraid to name a soldier candidate, The way the fight.on the onus bill has fluctuated is an indication of the uncertainty here @s to what might happen to a soldier candidate, and the opposition to universal military train- ing which killed that measure in the House of Representatives is another sign of the unexpected weakness of the soldier element in our politics at the close of a big war. ‘No-day thé situation is, of course, full of uncertainties—but to-day it looks like McAdoo for the Demécratic’ nomination, Gov. Lowden for the Re- publican, and Senator Johnson for the third party with the chances of Her= bert Hoover being the Republican candidate still not an impossible con- tingency. His chances for the Demo- cratic nomination are gone. He has read himself out of that party by his attitude In the California primaries. And he has failed to rouse Republi- ean strength by his hesitancy to de- clare himself q Republican, His ad- visers have hurt Herbert Hoover's chances, ‘but he is probably, at fault” for lletening to therh. Lowden, Me- Adoo and Johnson are‘in the ffont Batter Strack Out; WAUKESHA, Wis., May 12.—Williara F. Daebel, fifty-eight years af age. tied of heart disease when a batter on the home team struck out at a game here. Daebel was known as one. of the team's most enthusiastic rootert pectator Dien. 1442—Silk Moire Bog $8.60 AS indispensable as furs for the winter costume is the street bag for spring and summer. Ovington’s wide selection in material and style carries an equal variety of prices~-from the most moderate up. OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of Fifth Avenue” 9314 Fifth Ave. nr. 32d St. Fur Storage: Repairing Remodeling est & Co. “Save the Pieces” Take them to our nearest store and get a new lens ina few hours. Accuracy assured. Any Lens Pupllested from the broker pi Lenses, $1.00, $1.25, Fe $50, etc, le DE hilich kstablished 58 Years New York: 184 B'way, at Jonn St. 1 Brooklyn: 498 Fulton St. tor.Bond i COCOANUT CREAM KISSES: the richest Sugar flavored—and the ut, forming an ir- POUND BOX