The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1921, Page 2

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it as to the amount of "9 income. wi jeves SS | TRADE WTHRUSSI y thought which him. Clearly she is to & proper allowance of ail- ‘and counsel fee. Mr. St.Jiman to be fair and generous. Mra. herself and the of the child. We leave the she should have to the judz- of the court. I call attention to Whe ‘fect that the amount asked.) ENINE) IS CHANGING. Action of Great Britain Resuming Relations. heretofore in the history of the couit,| Willing to Allow Foreigners to the Gould case, in which 1 was) Come in and Work Coun- try’s Industries. By David Lawrence Special Corresponde f T - ASKING FOR GENEROSITY | ‘ ming weray ne nN MRG. STILLMAN. WASHINGTON, March 23 (Copy- take this case and get| right, 1921)—The Harding Adminis- dress tacks,” said Mr. Bren-| tration will consider seriously the making of a trade agreement with the Rumian people provided certain con- ditions are fulfilled which will lead to the industrial recuperation of that country. ‘The communication from Lenine . Brennan said that in the past |*PPealing to President Harding to aPeey follow the course of Great Britain “asin Tae ee aad oe and resume trade with Russia has of his children and 940,000| Pened up discussion here in a sig- % nificant way. is Appt kath gee Mban Os ar Broadly speaking, the Harding Ad- eer, with his expori.|™!Mistration is as anxious to dis- would do the proper thing. courage the growth of Bolshevism in the world as was the Wilson Admin- erage stare! io proteet|istration, 80 if it were a question 4 a 6 | of giving moral recognition to the olt's wt ° vind said triumph of Russian Bolsheviam, the "Testimony ri sm boralh sedges matter wouldn't be given the slight- Teiidin that He other pt est consideration by President Har- / ding and his advisers, is the father of Guy Still- “The referee But the situation hae changed, Three policies have been always pos- sible with respect to Russia, and _ while one of them has failed, the oF ort trom the record. Of course, others remain as possible sequels of could render testimony 5 Satter parent the present state of affairs, These { @oReerning the child. Nothing i re-| ciicies and thelr effects as dia. cussed by members of the Harding Administration are as follow: fe want an opportunity t these warrior-like in the wilds of Canada especially to know what they to do with this case.” ‘Mr. of the child, Guy Stillman, Brennan, apparently reading First— External invasion, This has the stipulation, said that Mr. had Paying Mra, Still. ‘been tried both by the Allied Powers pore Trmsath pikes thelt bind ‘ eon tee rene ears ele- hua'iek panes Mian Anne as the support of the Alles, The effect has ‘been to Ne expenses 0 the oxtent Of [strengthen the Bolsheviats rather than 4 between July 1, 1920, and) vocken them, for it has given Lenine 2, 1921; bad paid out $6,484 19/4 nanner around which to rally the @ame time on account of James} pissiang And $2,600 on account of) seoond—Revolution from the inside, The American. Government in com- mon with the British Goyernment Is unwilling to contribute anything to the situation that may upset things = inside Russia without bringing In- custody of the children,” #a!4/ ternal peace or external trade, Fur- Brennan, “With tt we ask $10-/) thermore, more revolution means ® month alimony, which 48 very! chaos, anarchy and complete disinte- more than the expenditure Mr.| gration and a more complex recon- mys he iq now making for) struction problem in the end than at wife and family.” preacnt. MG@HTS OF CHILD SHOULD BE) rhird—Bvolution with the assiat- a GUARDED. ance of the United States and the | Phere is one thing that you both |Allied Powera This meana resump- y "Justice Morschauser | tion of trade as Great Britain has interrupting sharply, “The | already done and the gradual ,wear- of the paternity of the|!ne down by morad factors of the While 1 cannot make aa allow- Leong oe eer a mere to his guardian, the counsel | eo obnoxious to the outside world. ine come waa in this case snould be made to| ep “destrd woul, Lite by litte. he his defense. The most im-|hus abandoned the tenets of Bol- thing, in my mind, io the | spevism and permitted the return of the child, 1 can take Len ar ye theory. he gave in to the demand of the question of the alimony | the masses for the private ownership you have sub-/of land, Then he surrendered the no. tion about equal wages and permitte the payment of differential wages— the cornerstone of capitaliam. Now he is willing to allow foreigners to come in and work Russian judustries, although he is reluctant about per- mitting Russians to do the sume, be- cause he says naively that the wove ra bul eannot always safeguard itself against machinations of an oligarchy of justrial captal: : Sullman. = "Of course,” remarked Mr. Nicoll, are ready to look after their and their education,” we are hez2 usking for the na, Prime Minister Lioyd George has paralleled the foregoing Line of rea- by_members of the Cabinet here. The British Prime Minister in his latest speech to Par- insists that Lenine has changed his views and that the Sov- jet system is being abandoned as an impossibility. He points out that the soning as ex were keenly aware of show their eolicitude| British trade agreement is by no the He calls it de facto recognition. with the rest of the world on the cap- italistic theory and that the recent speeches of Lenine are intended to convey that impression unequivocally, The Government here has been given to understand that a coalition be- tween the Bolsheviki and the Menshi viki is likely as @ Gna! proof of t! earnestness of the Russians to get back into the family of nations. Everybody here realize trade agreement is but the forerun. ner of recognition, The ly of the tothe, American Governmet of Lenine, therefore, will to pave the way for recognition eventually and to assist evolution than revolution, If the condi 8 which the United States Gov a ernment has upon more than one oc- easion outli are accepted there lv ho doubt that a trade agreement with Russia similar to that between En, land mated. ns of foreign policy. begun the of Nations dis- EEE 8¢ ih ites « o(U, §, WILL CONSIDER |?" vse | UNDER CONDITIONS Discussion Opened Up by means complete political recognition, | newspapers of |"'rhe viewpoint of Lioyd George Ia Justice Dowling, in June, | pointed to Washington os an good wanied to Mra Katharine Sree for Conn ag Caria Gowid $36,000 a yoar all- | Pint bas ae pare B, say Cabinet members here Mr. Nicoll's mem-| what the world will face if a start Is not made with the existing Russian by the resumption of to be that the Bolsheviki are ready to do business that a and Russia will be oonsum- The Harding Administration has again been spared the necessity of of ing an important ticklish ques- a8 taken the initla- ce MRS. DAN R. HANNA SUES FOR DIVORCE; CRUELTY CHARGED Bill of Particulars of Action Begun Month Ago Is Kept Secret at Pittsfield, Mass. PITTSFTHLD, Maas. March 23.— Divorce proceedings have been start- ed in the Berkshire County Superior Court here by Mrs. Dan R. Hanna of Lenox against Dan R. Hanna, son of the late Mark A. Hanna. Cruel and abusive treatment is charged, and Mra. Hanna secks alimony, Papers were served on Mr. Hanna at Great Barrington by Deputy Sheriff Pierce about a month ago, it is learned, but absolute secrecy has been preserved, No information was available from attorneys of either party, and the bill on file in the office of the Superior Court was not allowed to be scanned The case has not been pet for, trial, but divorces are in order for hearing on Monday, April 4, at the April ait- ting of the Superior Court, and it 19 likely the case will come up then. The divorce proceedings are. thé culmination of a long period of separation between Dan R. Hanna of his private secretary. retain posseasion of the Lenox prop- erty deeded to her several years ago. | Although Mrs, Hanna seeks alimony | im ber divorce suit, no atachment has | gramme of the Lusk Investigating Com- been piaced on any of her husband's ittee, paased last year and vetoed by Gov. Smith. It was opposed to-day by Minority Leader Donohue and other members of the Minority Party. three Goclalist members were recorded in the negative. —— First Action Was in 1897 When| JAPAN TO PROTECT KAMCHATKA RIGHTS The charges of cruelty made by the Fy fourth Mra, Dan R. Hanna are the |Amouncement in House of Peers third set of such charges brought against him in the four divorce suis in which he has figured. real estate holdings. 3 WIVES CHARGED CRUELTY TO HANNA Coss Neglect Was Also Al- leged in Petition. ‘The first time he was charged with cruelty was by the former Mas May dren. His second wife, who was Miss Daisy Gordon before she married Major Walter De & Maud of the Britteh Army, charged gross ne- giect of duty, abandonment and ex- treme cruelty and obtained @ di- voree in 197 and custody of one child. His third wife, Marie Stuart, an actress and the divorced wife of Frank, Skelly, 8 former Waldorf-As- tora clerk, whom he married three days after his second wife divorced him, obtained her divorce on a statu- tory charge after Mr. Hanna had made a trip around the world ip 1916 Saalanscenediineeieete Breaking Up. LANDON, March reports from Riga et the 15th and 16th Soviet Armies, stationed ta inity of Pekov, jor and deserting Bixohi from Copenhagen to: area er rei clare THE EVENING WORLD, W Hanna and His First Three Wives, All of Whom Got Divorces From Him EDNESDAY, MAR RELATIVES LOSE* WILL CONTEST Westchester Surrogate Decic Favor of Two Women to Whom Slater ‘Left $250,000. Surrogate George A. Slater of West- chester County to-day signed a decree in White Plains which admits to probate the will of Eugene ‘Tymeson of Yonkers, who left $250,000 to two women triends and cut off his relatives without a cent. This action was \aken upon the motion Alexander of Youkers, | who appeared for Mrs. Lillie Miller and Miss Hattie Federicks, who {nberited | the entire estate. contest ‘brought by and seven other relatives waa tried be- fore a jury, but Surrogate Slater after taking testimony for seven daya do- vided to take validity of the will from the jury con- tending that the evidence was insuffi- ctent to set aside the will The contest developed many alleged eccentricities upon part of Mr. Tyme- gon, who was seventy-three years olo, Among them being that he wore the same overcoat and hat for twenty years. It is reported that an appeal to Appellate Division will be taken Pestbaneh dhe aittes 169,000 ITALIANS CAME TO U. S. IN 1920 Twenty-Bight Thousand Sailed for Argentina and Eight Thousand Went to Brazil. WASHINGTON, grants leaving Italy States in 1920 numbered 169,000, Com- Attache H, C. MacLean Rome reports in a cablegram received to-day by the Department than 28,000 emigrants went from that country to Argentina and 8,000 to Brazil, total of 211,000 emigrants sal!- ing during the year was four times the umber leaving Italy in 1919, Mr. BATTLE OF HEAVIES Dempsey and Carpentier to Fight on Percentage Basis Instead of Tex Hickard announced this after- had just received a cable trom Georges Carpentier in which the Frenchman agrees to forego his $200,- 000 guarantee and wil! Dempsey for the world's heavyweight championship on a percentage baals, Under the new arrangement pentier will receive 24 per cent. of the ross, Dempsey’s share will be 36 ‘The original plang provided for a $500,000 purse; Dempsey to get $300,- 000 and Carpentier $200,000. Because of the withdrawal of William Brady and Charles Cochrane from the part- nership, Rickard was obliged to make @ new arrangement. The willingness of Dempsey and Carpentier to fight and his fourth wife. For two years {Ff a percentage is the first time that Mr. Hanna has lived apart from his & heavyweight championship has ever wife, and a few wecks ago rumors of been staged without a purse belng reement of separation were offered. prevalent in Lenox. Rickard further sald that the lo- Last summer Mrs, Hanna said she cation of the big scrap will be an- had been locked in the house of her nounced within a week and that July husband's summer place at Croton, N. ¥., and escaped with the help of @ chauffeur who summoned a Stato ASSEMBLY PASSES trooper, She said also that she had driven from the house a young N Quast who said she was a nurse and IAter claimed to be Mr. Hanna's seo- ‘ sad i retary, ‘Mite. Yanga said thes abe Provides Person Teaching in Public ad no intention of bringing divorce | proceedings, Several days later Mr. Hanna declared he had left his wife | Ddecause she was unreasonably jealous 6 131, the Assembly to-day passed the ‘Halpern Bill, designed to prohibit the ‘The terms of the separation, it was appointment of any person to teach in stated at the time, provided that Mra, the public echools who haa not exu- Hanna get $26,000 a year for life and cuted an oath pledging loyalty to tho flag and to support the Federal and State Constitutions, ‘The bill is one of a series introduced as part af the Americanization pro- 2 stil) stands as the date. Ha fiies is Saas MOLTEN METAL KILLS FIVE. THE HALPERN BILL School Must Take Oath of Allegiance. ALBANY, Maroh 33,—By @ vote of 04 HARRISBURG, Pa., March 23.—Five ‘men are dead and three are missing, buried under many feet of molten metal and white hot bricks, as the result of a blast furnace Plant of the Bethlehem Steel Company The force of the explosion blew a hole in the side of the furnace, letting out Boores of women ed to the offices of the plant in a panic of fear that retativas may have been in the accident, DIEKSTEIN BILL IS KILLED. Would Have Let Observers of Sat- ork ‘on Sunday. ALBANY, March 23.—The Dickstein Dill, which was Intended to permit per- sone to observe Gaturday as thelr Sab- bath to conduct business on Sunday in New York City, was killed in the As- wembly to-day when, by @ vote of 31 to 96, it Mailed of passage. ‘The bill was termed a ‘purely mer- cenary proposition" Willlam Duke jr, Republican, of All “Those who favor the bill.’ ‘have no complaint that thi are interfered wi molten metal. urday Sabbai Bearing on Vanderlip Concessions, ‘TOKIO, March 22 (Associated Press). OH 23, 1921, —— G00 BUSINESS MEN FOURTEEN KILLED asics TAKE OVER CONTROL OF CHCAGO OPERA Each Will Underwrite $1,000 of Expenses a Year for Five Years, (Special to The Brening World) FASHION’S LATEST Sacque and Pantaloons, With Pock- IN CLASHES IN ets That Might Even Hold a Pipe, Now on View. ‘The smoking costume for women has arrived. Here are items from the pro- Gramme of an uptown fashion show a No. 13. Cigarette, Smoking sacque Aone : | black taffeta coat with embroidered col All Civilians—Twenty Others] tar ana cutts: gold pantatoons, * “= te No. 14. Nicotine. Smoki oq ue, ? 1 3, i ing saoque, Wounded—Four Police: orange velvet coat with tobacco brown men Hurt. embroldery ; cloth of silver pantaloons The pantaloons are cuffed and drawr ‘ in at the ankle, They oan nelther slip CORK, March 28—ight Sinn| up nor down. They are, as one of the CHICAGO, March 23. Chicago) weiners were killed to-day at Dingle,| models observed, most discreet, besides grand opera has gone democratie.! county Kerry, in a three-hour battle| being, she #atd, the apotheosis of trec- At a meeting of the exectttive com-| with Crown fortes. The military| dom, with lots of frgu-frou and with mbushed plenty of room in the pockets for a mittee of the Amwgiation of Com-| 4% ambush merce to-day coritrol of the Chicago Opera Cotfipany péissed from the hands of ita two or three aristocratic backers to five hundred Chicago business men, whose names will be fond in the telephone directory in- stead of the social register, ‘The experiment of democratizing high brow music and making it pay has definitely begun. The 500 will be asked to undertake the expenses ot the company during 1922 and four ars to come at $1,000 a year each. George M. Spangler has been ap. | pointed busines# manager of the company and Joseph R. Noel, Presi- dent of the Association of Commerce, is the company's first guaranter, | Miss Mary Garden, notified of the! plans by telegraph, has wired her ap- | proval and congratulations, The change was made at the suggestion of Harold McCormick, who has borne the brunt of the indebtedness for many years, George M. Spangler, the new bust- hess manager, was appointed to that! position with the Chicago Grand Op- era Company during the New York engagement. Harold McCormick of the Interna- tional Harvester Company, who with his wife had underwritten the Chi- cago Grand Opera Company for the last ten years, paying thousands of dollars deficit each year, is respon- sible for the new arrangement. He told an Evening World reporter in speaking of the contemplated change of plang that the new arrangement meant permanent opera for Chicago. “The 600 whéd have underwritten the new company are leading busi- ness men of the city,” he said. “They have dpne a very advanced and splendid thing in undertaking to support the opera. “Mrs. McCormick and I have been glad to support the company in the past but the expense has been very heavy and we feel the time has come for some different arrangement.” “Will Miss Garden remain as di- rector under the new company?” he was asked. “The company will be practically the same in personnel and policy as now,” was his answer. “The only real change is that citi- zens of Chicago will control the com- pany Instead of Mrs. MoCormick and myself, What pleases me most is that this makes the Chicago Grand Opera Company the only opera com- pany in the world that is a civic or- ganization.” INDIANS APPEAL TO KING GEORGE BUFFALO, N. ¥., Maroh 23.—The Council of Gix Nations Indians, which has been in session here for two days, decided to-day to appeal to appeal to King George of Great Britain against the proposed enfranchisement of In- dians in Canada, . Tho Indians desire to retain their tribal form of government, and are said to be considering a general exodus to the United States. The mensare reads: “Canadian Indian Six Nations re- spectfully appeal to Your Majesty to veto or withhold operation Indian Wnfranchisement Act against them on grounds of sacred agreement be- tween King George IIL and Joseph Brant, Unsuccessful attempts to re- ceive fair eensideration of our cane from Dominion officials prompt this request to Your Majesty direct.” —Japan will be obliged to adopt what- Harrington, whom be married in 1887| °Y¢ action may be deemed necessary after an elopement, while he was in} to preserve her rights in Kamohatke, college. She brought sult in 1897 and|if the Russian Far Kasten Republic obtained the custody of three chil-| persists tm ite course of transferring a part of that penineuba to the authority of the Russian Goviet Government, Viscount Uchida, Foreign Minister, Jo- clared in the House of COFFEE New York’s Own Drink OFFEE to the New Yorker is a drink that, either irritates or satisfies because he recognizes instantly the least falling off of strength or flavor, Most of his life he has been a coffee drinker—New York is a coffee-drinking city—and this intensive training has made him an exacting Judge of good coffee. Go we packed White Rose Coi ve specially to meet New York's dis- eriminating coffee tasce. White Rose Coffee— as fine as the famous After stating that Jepan had recently recetved information that this transfer had been made, he said this country had went @ protest to the Far Eastern Re- public Administration at Ohilte, and had @ubmitted five demanda He de- clared that these demands had not as Japan has extensive fishery interests in Kameha tha, ‘This report of the transfor of part of the peninsula of Kamehatka to the "Soviet Government in Moscow appears to have @ direct bearing upon oconces- ‘Twe Seviet Armien Are Reported | wions granted there to Washington B. Vanderiip of California by the Bolshevik regime in Russia. The concession, cov- ering the explottition of the ofl, coal and fishery interesta of Kamohatka, was granted last year, ‘The rights of the Yar astern Repub- have in the past considered to the tin scons. ce praia pas morning in a battle which ensued ||] Bui a woman's work is never at a constitutional convention to be Evening World Asked to Help Save! ton Street, Brooklyn, to-day asked ‘The Evening World to help her find some APARTMENTS FURNISHED one willing to give blood to save the] COMPLETE FROM #50. to sixty-five, of No. 46 Cook Stre lyn, who is suffering from chronic anae- Q min in the Bikur Cholin Hospital, No. 820 Lafayette Avenue. days ago two porters, a nurse chauffeur of the hospital volun but Supt. Fineman sald Mrs. Seidman’s | blood was 90 poor it could not stand a} . _ rich mixture. A very small quantity, s transfused Monda: nea Mrs Seidman somewhat, he said, but er lif: depends upon p) ant amou he of! eo “> egeqpate nt of the right kind of BET :103° €-104" Sr« pouch or perhaps « pipe Twenty Republicans were reported wounded and four policemen were in- jured, Gix civilians were ‘kilied in the | (7 Blarney district, County Cork, this A man may work from sun to sun, when (Crown forces were fired upon 7 from a farmhouse, The military The burdensome were conducting A a¢arch for wanted f Py men when they were attacked. task of three meal a day is lightened a ih} oI lat $35,000,000 BONUS tremendously for IN PENNSYLVANIA the woman who has mastered the art of Measure Sent to Governor for Pay- |[©"Si!¥ prepared meals. A good ments to Service Men, if Ap- seasoning always proved in Convention, simplifies cooking. HARRISBURG, Pa. March 23.— ‘The Whitaker soldier bonus bill pro- viding for @ $85,000,000 bond Issue went to the Governor for his signa- \ —— ture to-day aT, MADEIN The bonds will be floated to pay auce iD. S. A.) the bunus to service men if approved |11 41 Grocers and Delicatessen Stores aia erat eeu | ce Pritchard, 327 Spring St., N.Y. ———>+>—_ & ASKS, BLOOD FOR MOTHER. | RAPIDS | FURNITURE Anaemia Victim. { Miss Rose Seidman of No, 192 Middle- ife of her mother, Mrs. Rose Seidman, » Brook- OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS” 3. -*1- WEEKLY In response to an appeal made scverap Milam te Ue Le aS Gaerne Oo \73 DOWN ON. *100"" ° JO€*SEL" STATION ar Conan COLUMBUS ‘AVENUE lacing in her v« B. Altman & Co. The Fur Department offers exceptionally attractive values in Fur Scarfs for present-season wear; including Fox Scarfs in brown or taupe . at $35.00 & 55.00 Wolf Scarfs in brown or taupe . at $18.00 & 21.00 Baum Marten Scarfs at . . F A . $55.00 & 75.00 Store Marten Scarfs (Third Floor, Madison Avenue Section) Special Values will be offered to-morrow (Thursday) in Girls’ All-Wool ' Tan Polo Cloth Coats in two models, both lined throughout and firished with leather belt. Sizes 6 to 10 years - + « $12.75 Sizes 10 to 14 years .. 8. 15.75 (Second Floor) @adteon Avnine- Filth Avenue A a Ab CA “ a UR eee oak ——o

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