The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1921, Page 3

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5 | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1921. BLAST IN WALL ST. LINKED WITH ORDER TO SEIZE SEAMEN | Bnquiry On to Determine How Connection in Arrests ‘With Plot Started. HELD AS MUTINEERS. Hint at Disciplining U. S. Agents Who Gave Intimation , Of Bomb Information, (Special to ‘The Wrening Workd ) WASHINGTON, March 28.—Quick nd peremptory action was taken % the Department Guy to get five Russian seamen Brought into .New Orleans in chains yesterday were arrested because of ® belief they were implicated in the Wail Stree: explosion, jn which nearly forty lives were lost om Sept. 16 last. But it is known that the order for the arrest of the men three weeks aco, which was sent through a. South. ern port, mentioned the Wall Street disaster, An investigation as to the channels through which the supposed connec- tion of the prisoners with the Wall Street crime became public at New ©rleans has already been started, | with a view to disciplining any one under Government jurisdiction who may have intimated that the men are charged with any other ‘crime than mutiny, Their actions when put un- dor arrest on receipt of the wireless order on the City of Alton and thetr fnsubordinate attitude before the ar- feat are believed to be sufficient grounds for imprisoning them pend- fing further investigation of theig connection with the far more serious “crime. But for the present all persons tn the Department of Justice are in- structed to speak of the five as being *neld on a technical charge ot mutiny.” TWO STORIES TOLD BY CAPTAIN AS TO CAUSE OF ARREST First Said They “Were Seized in Connection With the Wail Street Explosion. NPW ORLEHANS, March 23.— When the Rushville arrived at New Orleans with the prisoners, Capt. J. H. B. Van Weedern, who had imposed silence regarding the prisoners on members of his crew, explained their arrest and his order for secrecy by saying the five had been arrested on the City of Alton off South America in consequence cf wireless orders re- ceived on that vessel from Federal aythorities, who suspected them of connection with the Wall Street ex- plosion. They resisted arrest, he said, so violently that a charge of mutiny was lodged against them, A few moments later, when agents of the Department of Justice had talked with the Captain, he: became silent as to the bomb charges and acquiesced in the official statement given out from Washington that the men were “only charged with mu- diny.” TRIALS ORDERED AT NEW ORLEANS ON MUTINY CHARGE aeaine U. S. Attorney Here In- formed the Prisoners Were Con- signed to New York. Assistant United States Attorney eorge W. Taylor said to-day he had received a telegram from Chief Tol- of the Department of Justice of Justice to- rid of reports that the and German vaying he had five prisoners there consigned to New York, but under charged of mutiny which in ordinary course are tried in the same port at which the prisoners are returned to the United States, Mr. Taylor answered with a tele- gram instructing Tolliver to turn his prisoners over to the Federal Attor- ney at New Orleans for trial on the mutiny charges. HIS $51 DROPPED, HE SAID. Bat Varcie | De Held 4 John J. Kelly, a parole officer, was on his way tothe County Court in Brook- lyn yesterday on a crowded street car when he felt a man's hand slide into his pooket, The parole officer seized him by the arm as he was about alight, In one of his heeds, ly sand, Was a coll containing $51 which but 4 ment before was in Kelly's pocket “You have dropped something,” Kelly euld the man remarked, extending the roll of Dilla. Kelly took the man to a police station, He said he was James Hurly of the Hotel Navarre, Manhattan, In court day Hurly was held without bail mape: —$—»—— mous French Artist Dead. PARIS, March 23,—Jean Paul Lau- rems, the famous French artist, died here to-day, He was born in 1838, and had painted many notable pictures, “The Surrendér of York- Court in Balti- was @ inder of Toy FlowerEp CHIEEON. IN BaAvY AND REO PLumEo WAVY SERGE EMBROIDERED IN WHITE AND SUVER. WAT TR inet TRE RIBBON, BLUR AND BLACK TAM LACE OVER Brown METEOR Wir (ve ey, OnNa. : hat OF memowne MILAM wees BROWN PARADISE saa Wavy TRICOY, DirecroRe COLLAR AnD corEs Ane TRImMmES Wit BRIGHT BLUE Risser ANS BLACK Beam Painted Bull in Arena Tossed Matador | in Air Camouflage Experts Fixed Up Brute, Says Dancer Here From Mexico. If Hilda Moreno, professional dancer, was going to remain in New York and appear on the stage there might be some suspicion of an at- tempt to gain publicity in a story she told of a camouflaged bull when she arrived here to-day from Mexico on the Spanish Jiner, Antonio Lopez. But she is on her way back to her native Spain for which the Antonio Lopez is bound. Senorita Moreno attended a bull fight in Mexico City on Sunday, Feb. | 2%, in the company of three young Americans who served in the camou- flaxge division of the Navy during the war. Juan Martinez, the great Mex- fean matador, had engaged to slay five bulls for the entertainment of the populace. He had killed three With great ease when the young Americans voiced their displeasure. They declared the bulls had no chance. The manager of the bull fight sarcastically inquired if they could propose something that would add to the excitement and they replied that they could. Al they wanted was a chance to do some decorative work on the next bull, Permission granted, they got a lot of paint and camouflaged the bull, irregularly striping him in various colors and painting his tail crimson, When the astonished bull was turned into the arefia the audience rose up and howled with glee. The bull was liveller than a Mexican bean and Martinez tried in vain to get close enough to him to administer the death stroke, Finally the bull, with his horns, hoisted the great Martinez over the barrier and that broke up the bull fight Senorita Moreno declares that! among those who know her she has an unexcelled reputation for truth and veracity, i ae STOLEN “MADONNA” FOUND IN N. Y. CAFE? Alleged Recovery of Raibolini Panel for Which Werld-Wide Search Has Been Made. ‘The alleged recovery in an unpreten- thous east side cafe of an “old mastor” stolen in 1919 from the famous gallery in Bologna, Italy, is to be investigated by Signor Ricei, Italian Ambassador to Washington, 1t is said to be one of the celebrated | “Madonna and Chiki" pan by Rai- bolint, known as ‘ll Francia,” who diod tid “8 ago, and some of whose works are in the Metropolitan Museum and the Morgan collection, § ‘One who thinks the panel found here is the missing “Madonna” Ls Capt. Pierre | Tozai, war hero and artist, ving at the | Hotel Vanderbilt. panel a world-wide search has been made for it, Capt. Tozzt will not admit | it was he who found the stolen painting, but admitted he had reported it to the Ambassador, who, he sald, could tell the detalles. T. F. Bernardi, Italian Coneul-C n- eral, said this afternoon at hia office, No, 20 East id Street, that he had heard nothing respecting ‘a stolen paint- ing of the Madonna and therefore could not discuss its reported discovery in — AN ANCHOR TO WINDWARD, Since the theft of the | } 1920 RR. PAYROLL WAS FOUR BILLIONS Pennsylvania Official Says Roads Had 176,882 More Employees Than Necessary. CHICAGO, March 23.—National agree- ments between railroads and their em- ployees forced the roads to carry oh pay rolls 176,882 “unnecessary” em- ployees in 1920, W. W. Atterbury, Vice- President of the Pennsylvania Railroad, sald before the United States Railroad Labor Board to-da The roads were forced to pay out more than $300,000,000 last year on an! “excess” payroll due to the national agreements, Attenbury claimed Bert M. Jewell, President of the Rail way Department of the American Fed- eration of Labor, attacked the accuracy of Atterbury's figuri “I will disprove the charges of excess number of employees made by Mr. At- terbury,” declared Jew “It will be shown in my formal statement to the board to-morrow that the additional men in 1920 as compared to 1917 required because of increase ness of the railroads.” de a formal statement to n which he quoted Federal statistics to show the total railroad pay- roll for 1920 was, $1,000,000,000. ee SUIT FOR $1,250,000. = Man Here Entimates Lost That Sum im Deal, A suit to recover $1,250,000 was filed to-day in the S\ by ‘Thomas were of bus Park, a mining engineer of this city, against Richard V. Dey, a mine owner of San Francisco, Park alluses that in 1917 he made an agreement to purchase from Dey twelve mining claims, known as the Grand Rees Mines, in Graham, Ariz., for $750,000. According to the terms, Dey was to receive 10 per cent royalties and was to advance $25,000 when Park exercised his option to pur- chase The plaintiff alleges that 1917, he desired to purchase, defendant refused to. sell 1920, Dey sold his rights to the Leasing Company. Park estim losses at $260,000 cash, $500,00( MLL Dey operated the minea and $500,000 value of ore taken out, STUNG IN COAL SALES. Two Flatbush Men Accused of Sell- ing uel They Did Net Own. Charged with buying coal, selling it and disappearing before the first setler appeared to collect; Alfred Roman of No. 95 Lenox Road and his partner, George Adams, of No. 1078 Park Pla both of Brooklyn, were held to-day in $10,000 tail each for examination next Tuonday by Magistrate Geismar in Flat- bush Court in March, the but In M Samuel Bohannan of No. % Church Street, Manhattan, charged Roman with buying in February, 1920, a boatload of coal for $5,310, reselling It and failing to Adams was alleged to have de ed John J. Hallin, Atlantic Basin aler, of $5,200 In a cual deal, a mie Bullding Staten Inland, A modern Masonic building to cont $200,000 ts to be y Rich- mond Lodge, the oldest Masonic lodge yn Staten Island, 1t has purchased the club house and proprety of the ragausott Democratic Club at hmond and Anderson Avenues, ort Richmond, for $40,000, The pres- ent building wil be removed, building will ha banquet ball ji ES Receivers For Liberty Corporation, United States Jude Mayer to-day appointed James J. Lyons and John Inwood receivers for the Liberty Start- ere Corporation of New York City and keepaie, & | connern was @ theatre and Starters (Fran the Cincinnati Enquirer,) tari 0 1918 chiefly te meke starters {op eitplans rition was made Tae om behalf of Howard 8. Torden, whose im 48 for $20,000, ‘The assets are at £1, 600 nnd \hiies am 82,7 Big Flocks of Airplanes Will Fly Over New York For the Service House and their neglect Picturesque and Thrilling Dis-, Renieny bosetiaiss | 5 1 ou ot play, With Some Land Fea-| tf (i, ompisin ot ie, ln ot oO rs e) erefro tures Added, Will Adverts) te ahaa for. we. ver- in Novel Way The Evening | World’s Campaign to Bene-| Mra, Kelley's Ace, ‘This cute little airship is mostly Tt actually tainly intend to make it lively aroun | designed for shopping. J - landed once 4n the midst of the Shop- : Our Wounded and Neg: ping district in Oakland, Cal, and 1 5 HN expect to Hive to see the day when lected Soldiers. | airplane {s as common as automobile ——— |shopping, and the day when aerial oe | police will chart out the air as “One By Lilian Bell. Way Drafts," and when you have to We are buainess, into go carefully through the air on damp and slippery days for fear you will kid. e*You know what this open-air drive is’ for, don't you? It is to raise money for an can Legion Service House, which is to be presided over by Mrs. Char- lotte Furst, who ts able to run he going it seems, And these are our plans, tion them with my heart in my mouth, for of all the uncertainties with which I have had to contend, this business of dealing with a flock of airplanes is about the most un-| table for forty boys at only nixty certain of thei | cents a day, furnishing them at this Ke SP CHOI Bale | price three of the best and m fowever, wind and weather, pro-| WiGlesome meals you ever taste pellers, wings and engines being) and this ehe does every day. Propitious, the entire population of/ | Wounded, sick, disubled, rf Spins sasa yeah ars crossed,(@nd penniless soldiers are he city keeping their fingers crossed, | he streeta of this great city, and fate being kind, we are to have nowhere to go and with nothing fight of airplanes from Mitchel) eat 1, 0) the City of New York, to} Dasa iad . 3 wr, { take these boys dvertise the American Legion Ser=\ Gormitory and. care vice House Fund Thursday of} they may always feel tlus week, at about P.M. awaits them = with Owing to a pol egulation, which they wouldn't let me try to| get rescigded, we can't drop any the airplane I men- Amert- starving walking with to) House is designed to} into a temporary for them that that a home the Ameri¢an| on Legion, Those who wish to live there will] be charged a modest board, for we| literature, so you'll have to read The! do not wish to pauperize our sol-| Svening World to tind out what it is dicrs, but we do propose to give all about, them two dollars’ worth for one. The Might will be led by Mafor| | hope that the appeals made by Arthur Christie, Commander of | word of mouth frm the ainplane Ace Mitohel Field, The second plane will! will not slop the flow of cheoks and be driven by Major Lamphier, Com-| cash into our nd by mall mander of the Ist Aero Squadron.| Make out all checks to Byening Major Abbey, Commander of the th| World Service House Fund, or bring Aero Squadron, will pilot the third|to me in Room 1125 World Building. plane, and after that, in battle for- Many more details of our airplan mation, will come every plane now| to-morrow, If anything happens t at Mitchel Field. delay the performance on Thursda They will fly over the eity for| we will issue rain checks and the about an hour and then we shall see| whole thing will take place on Fri- em winging their way back to their Long Island hangars, Watch us grow. Here are some more tentative - plan Major Horace Keane of the York Aerial — CLUBWOMEN TO AID DISABLED SOLDIERS New Police has loaned Mrs. Edward J, H. Kelley a little airplane, which he js having mounted on a truck for her and which will drive through the city on Thursday after- noon, parking in some available spot, Auxiliary Under Organization Plans Series of Events where some very — distinguished to Raise Fund. speakers wih make appeals for the| |. American Legion Service’ House| Executives and members of the Fund New York State Federation of Won: Among the speakers will be Capt |en's Clubs will be asked next Frida Hugh Robertson, Assistant State] atternoon, at a mass meeting In the Commander American Legion; Col 2 af | Atkinson, former head of U.S. Army | Morosco Theatre, to lend aid in plans | Recruiting= in New York and now|for raising funda for disabled soldiers Regional Directar € neral of Victory The meeting and their families. Medal Distribution; Mrs. Charlotte] the first Furst, Hostess of the Stage Women's|by Mra, Ge: , War Relief Service House No. 1 Weat 45th Street, commander of the several of her boys—wounded sol-| Woman's Auxiliary of the National diers living at her service house. Disabled Soldiers’ League, now being Major Deegan, First Vice Com-lorganized. She said yesterday she maunder of the State American Legion| had on! sted the aid of more than 400 DAZZLING EASTER GOWNS AND _ HATSACIRESS REFUSES CANTON CRE TRirmeao Wi Per LACE ano GIROLED wernt) GREEN mone, Sic SASH, Mat OF BLACK MILAN oe Oe Ne POLICE HEAD TELLS INVESTIGATORS fit USED STOLEN CARS Chief Battersby Testifies Be- ' Pol tied Jer ow cit ple y Commissioners t d for a o whom he ag TOIDENTIFY NOTE IN RILROE TRIAL Mrs. Bourasse Declares Assist-| ant District Attorney Ih- sulted Her in Auto. TOWORK INTO Hettrick Ring Members Mops and Dishcloths for 5 Law Violations, i: we Mrs. Helen Montrose St. Marie! Six master plumbers, ringleaders im, | Bourasse, a motion picture actress, | John ‘T, Hettrick’s codé-of-practionss |was cross-examined before Justice to-day were busy with mops, broomal® bread Knives and dish cloths in the? ombs, where they began se: sentences imposed by Supreme C Justice MeAvoy on their pleas gullty of violating the Donnolly aa ‘Trust Law. The prisoners were Milton onal No. 574 West End Avenue; David Deigan, No, 1439 University Avenue; Joseph H. Jasper, Itidgewood, N. J. Jeremiah L. Murphy, No, 701 Weat, 179th Street, each sentenced to thirty, days; Morris Jarcho, No. 50 Westy 111th Street, and Jacob Jarcho, No. ®, ‘Weat 111th Street, orothers, sentenced, to ten days each, we John L, Knight and Charles Ay Murphy, convicted of the offense te which their associates pleaded guilty, are held for sentence Monday, The, Jury asked leniency for Knight. Franklin Bien, attorney ,for the Jy, McMillan Company, obtalned a sts, pension of sentence for hia client by, ‘a plea in which Special Deputy At” Weeks to-day at the trial of Asaist- ant District Attorney Kilroe and Louis Swarts, ar attorney, on a jcharge of compounding a felony, It lin charged Kilroe dropped a bigamy ‘charge against Napoleon Bourasae, a tock broker, after the payment of $15,000 to Mra, Rourasse. Mrs. Bourasse refused to identify ‘a sheet of yellow paper as “the yellow ‘paper slip" which, she testified yex- |terday, had been handed to Kilroe by | Swarts while they were lunching with her in a restaurant. Her testimony yesterday was that on receiving the note Kilroe said Bourasse might be prosecuted for bigamy, although be- fore that he had not been sanguine about such a prosecution. During cross-examination by At- torney William M. K. Olcott, of coun- sel'for the defendants, Mra. Bourasse interjected that the Assistant Dis- trict Attorney had inaulted her while in his automobile gn a dark | country road and that she had there- ahe torney General Spence concurred. oF upon demanded that he take her im- Deputy Sheriff Burke, formerly gy mediately back to New York. She preaerus ater ot mber on SG said, in anawer to a question, that |,UmvUs Avenie, who was put out business about four years before? she later allowed this insult to escape | Hettrick organized the code, eacort her mind. led his old associates to the ‘Rombas The witness directly contradic Ha | Ee oe asthe victim of the her testimony of yesterday in which| designed to end, ‘but that. such he said she had been told Mrs, Mary |seheme was doomed from the start Coyne Bourasse had left the broker |to set Ns menrbers Into trouble. because she learned he had been pre- ————<»—_—_—- viously married to a woman in Can- ’ TWO HELD FOR EXTORTION. * Which the code was ada, Mra, Bouraswe said she did not recall having said anything about| Prisoners Gatd te Be Involved tm Canada, despite the records ef the Brooklyn Horse Potwoning, — 4 court stenographer to that effect. Joseph, MeCann, twenty-two, of Nor 248 Lae Avenue, and George Dennam twenty-seven, of No. 241 Alnsile Streoty both af Brooklyn, were arraigned fm ‘Bridge Plaza Court to-day, charged w: extorting $300 from Samuel Post, bee Bs was a stable at No. 368 Wallabout Many horses have been pafsoned cently, and as @ result por inte: obtained by detect! was a) reated. Post informed " pinkFict x Lewis he had been told that for Importance was put on this point by the defense, because it is held the marr \o Mins Coyne having been null because of the previous Cana- dian marriage, the Coyne case could not have been used as the basis for a bigumy charge. The defense holds this is the reason the charge was dropped. The witness admitted she had been angry at Kilroe over her ejection from his office, but denied she be- came hysterical when Bourasse was admitted to bail “Mr, Swarts told me," she said, “that George Gordon Battle had offered a $10,000 settie~ hen horses be immune from the er, Lewis ve Post $300 in mark Ln wore te FIFTH AVE.— 37th and 38th Sts. a 5 : ent. That was in Mr. Swarte's office . fore Mackay Committee [Tithe Famonw Players, ‘That made |eutne crue it fa chanced thor maui in Jersey City. me very angry indeed.” ‘at the stable and accepted the $100, - m7 G SS Sas ~ SSE SNS. ——— 7 tichard ‘T. Battersby, Chief of ” id lee of Jersey City, before the lJ Mackay Legislative Committee testi- t { on & Vy, 1 he was in the habit of using an le len automobiles recovered by the sey City police, and for which ivi. nera could not be found, He said A Store of Individual Shops iv had been told to do thie by the } 4 or ow the une hard of the he bef and lied. A the vr ile liceman and turned in, a few days later by poll knc car. Iss: pla. Inte Jacob Cohon of No. 248 C Chief add six of the ers could not be city could not lor existing law ommitte oft a Kt f had ever ‘ore the thereby sr ropl though it testimony, “port some stole lot the it N man both w weeks ans foun¢ Kina) own the car had 4 lef, It was rece ive Ww nan, the it was re: Chief had _— Child Killed by odor Starling Place to-day in frei roadway and 1 auto truck owned in Brooklyn. When from St. Mary's H dead. and Commander of Bronx County | clubwomen. A. 1. will be there and will speak if] A hugo benefit performance, the his throat will permit. He has al-| proceeds to be turned over to the most last his voice through too much |auxiliary, will take place in the public speaking, but it is my private |Apollo Theatre May 10, according to opinion that he will be there and|Mrs, Owens. On May 19 and 20 the that he will say a few words, even if auxiliary has been given the ws he has to whisper them. fof the 12th Regiment Armory, where 7 will be other speakers, both|they plan a carnival and bazaar, In afternoon and evening, mostly from which churches and civic ore the American Legion—for the Service |tions will be asked to participate. House is theirs—and in this way they! ‘The Executive Committee of the «aan got out and root fog it auxiliary ix composed of Mra, Stan- | | Col. C, W. Wickersham, who la now ley Ly Otis, Mrs. Willian G. | conducting the American Legion |, Demare Mrs, ‘Charlies D. Hirst vestigation of oonditiona in pub s Reatrice Hyson, Mrs. Howard health hospitals in and around N« Sullivan, Miss Mary York us they affect our disabled M. Paimer, Mra. diers, will also speak He is ver Mrs, Willlam D, much interested in spe Lek of a Se M. Raynor, Mra, a vice House, senesteys ng Baldwin Smith 24. Mra, George Be *, Mra. PMN ae og ak Robert Leith and Seffera Ennia A Lou O sell from Chief Battersby rs Histromo wt! there are now five * machines for which found and whic for a yea Attor! Bern © asked him | olen au who sald tha Chief Battersby. ax not brought out in er ag reforring t has 1 its way bac 8. Lt wan ad en taken fron nve claimes wher, Thi ported, didn been using th Auto 1 fell 1 and ld Custom Revived At Easter the gift of a fine perfume bas certain symbolis long understood fair women Style tod they her » Oriental r y in perfom dress m by eign eas Give beautiful bottle of FLORIENT (Flowers of the Orient) in the perfume t First est Reasonably Priced at Your Favorte Store 'COLGATE — ev, rfimes | omModbile Ik Club in Jersey CiLy an automo- 1 by a po- h r t <= Because Her Big Sister Does It, Is Right . . QUILTED SATIN COATS . FOR THE JUNIOR MISS FS | t a k «dl n | LATTE sister shares in the | ¥ fashion triumph 47 of the satin coat, participating in the smartness of its “grown-up” vogue, enjoying the distinction of lV, its youthfulness. Brown, Black or Satin | 5 00 | | SIZES 15 TO 19 YEARS OTHER COATS FOR THE JUNIOR MISS 29.59 to 125. JUNIOR MISSES' COAT SHOP. Yim Gran ay the witnesses agninst him could hs, out of the way, the ease armada 5 | i ! |

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