The evening world. Newspaper, April 4, 1921, Page 2

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» BF easst ing these exsist. would be | § M AY PLAY LON |PRINCE OF GREECE te make them public. if te public |QJ, | SLAIN IN BATTLE Pres® quotes you correeuy, you mean id joréay, “we were somewhat discoa- » i by the amount of the alimony yandZcounse} fee." “T did not think vou would be, IN MAKING PACTS | Ib developed during the hearing to-| ARTeements With Other Na- maid the Justice smiling, “from the admitted amount of the gentleman’ day that counsel for Mrs. Stiitman! tions of Europe Will Be intends to apply to Justice Mors- 3 fi | hauser for a commission to go to| Made in Her Own W | Three Rivers, Quebec, to examine | certain witnesses among the camps | near the Stillman camp to try and refute the evidence of the witnesses | Yor ‘Mr. Stillman wh testited of | Will Point to War Victory Part| ‘things they alleged to have existea| « . . detween Mrs, Stiltman and Fera| if Mandates and Commer- cial Freedom. EQUAL VOICE DEMANDED! Beauvais, the Indian guide. When W..8 commission will be granted is fot known, but probaly before the . €04 of the week. By David Lawrence. »- “When court opened Mr. Horsey said | (Special Correspondent of The Even- itmt he was not wccking to delay the ing World.) Proceedings but that the formal or-| WASHINGTON, April 4 (Copy- ‘Gar had been submitted on Saturday Teh —1921)—Buropean diplomacy ““efternoon without notice being given) wiih 9}! | *s shifts and turns, ready at ‘that Ht would be moved for to-day, 4nd) any moment to take “Chat he did not consider that quite poreuees ‘peodrding 10 professional etiquette.| “ MMuence of the United Staten in Ho also said that when the order was, ‘RE present state of international at- sent to the office of Mr. Nicoll that|f'rs, bas fastened itwelf on the Mr. Nicoll and Cornelius Sullivan, Washington Administration with th» ‘who had been active in the case, HAG @. oweg Nett tor tne day. DELAY ASKED | PRINCE ANDREAS OF GREECE. uable, if it supports Mrench policy purpose of using the moral hep, if not the physical assistance, IN WIFE'S 61 .merica to achieve certain objects discards the Treaty of Versailles. 11 tm haste to establish innocence.” Sw Justice Morachauser said he “Rot intended to dictate to the referee aa bo the time of holding hearings, and that unless the lawyers differéd ‘Tadically with tbe referee Mr. Glea- sof could fix his own dates. -;Mounse! for Mr. Stillman will ap-/ peal to the Appellate Division not England. Meanwhile Italy lone hand in Southern Europe -|haus her own understandings with the countries in her sphere of influence. made the first move. She knows thot the Harding Administration is di inclined to ratify the Versailles Treat She doubted it for a while, but th reports of former Premier Viviani,| after his talks with members of the 1S CRUMBLING SLOWLY. “gury ammunition to rebut any legal “efforts on the part of the plaintiff, especially if an appeal is to be taken j The truth is the Knox resolution is not A peace treaty and never can be Its danger lay always in the possi- | without ratifying that document. The Knox resolution specifically declares that the United States d . $16,666.33 in three duys; (he second ing and Secretary ment ten days later and the bal- Hughes time in removing such an « lost no | an associate in the war earned cer- , ppreben-|tain rights which she does not pro- | hostilities against the French, ‘ancd in thirty days. sion when they dispatched an infor-| pose to lose simply because the pea After the agreement was signed the | imal communication to Berlin notify-| Peace treaty was unsatisfactory to KOHLER ESTATE order Was indorsed by Justice |ing Germany that America consid. | 2° : : ¥ onsid- | America, in a nutshell, will play | (aforechauser, Lawyer Horsey said:|ered her morally responsible for the|an independent hand, — makty OVER 4 MILLIONS | AF We shall fie a notice of appeal from el innoey war and obligated te pay for the dam-| agreements with the uge done. FRIENDS OF KNOX RESOLUTION Germany and whole order to-morrow. The ap- will be carried to a finish in the Division.” harking back the part she played in RENEW T! war as a basis for demanding an < w EIR ACTIVITY. equal voice in all questions such as | Piano Maker. URT TO DECIDE With such a @titement proclaiming | imandates and freedom of commer-| | ti - aa 4 pro-Ally policy. the friends of the | cial opportunity, Heyl AN Bethe Mets ar ceeearien sno See oe te Slowly the Harding-Hughes policy me ees ea a8 po USE OF WAR FUND | knox resoiution nave renewed their is crystalizing into un independent deceased head of the Kohler & Camp- ae" activity, The White House lus} force in the world and is strengthened dell Compary, manufacturers of plano’ . = . spoken no word of encouragement to| largely through the breaking down by O'Gorman, Battle & Van Diver tn x Cooper Procter ASKS 0] tne “irreconcilable” group, and it ig{Of the Allied solidurity which If em- the Surrogate’s Court to-diy {t became -Be Relieved of Care suggested that the visit of Senutor|Purrased’ the Harding Administra. RROWD Wat the eatate is valued at $4,- of $113,000,“ Knox to the White House has been| tion, but which when disintegrated 061,139. Included in the assets are $1 4 ‘The Evening Workd. |! examgerated to mean an immediate | Plays directly into the hands of the 079,000 of New York City bonds. Other i terecuseracre, perc sragie passage of the Knox resolution in the | American Chief Executive and his sets are $1,023,000 stork in the Kohlor Sprocter, multimillionaire soap maru- | #tme form wa it was presented ai the | tule Secretary of State. | & Campbell Co.; $625,000 stark of the * r a tthe — Auto-Pneumatic Action Co.; $903,000 . Bfacturer, has caked the court to relieve | last session. stock of the Auto-Piano Co. i si {$350,000 him af the care of $112,000 recently con-| Two things, however, stand in tho\SAVES MAN'S LIFE, INJURED. siocu of the standard Proumatic Action Aributed for disabled war heroes of the |way of such a course. One Is thi! ——— | Co; amd $400,000 War Finance Gorpor- ATAirty-third Nivinion of the A. KF. |the Harding foreign policy iy noi| ™AMMter Overator ME by Ble ation stock “ane wishes the funds 90 contriputed | vjtogether formulated, and there is WSLUE Anse ne Cat Tit accounting shows that the tms- Gproed with the Ohio organization of |e nocd for haste because the wene| THAN Shanley. sixty, foreman of! tees had on hand on Dec. 31,1919, a athe American Legion. The case came | iit, which movis again next Monday |S" Pulmotes sqund, who lives it No. | yatance of Income of $1,831,085, and “wp in the Court of Common Pleas here " o Pa “ince, Brooklyn, was knocked cos ren sf to-day, and the poli ‘of Nestaeiy 45 eet t dispose of the Colombian Able ive uty tihinea by Pe mute eH ‘S Sea alien fee ea Rae Spipecied to take throe wooks. Testi. | (TOY and the other is that the | mobile while responding to-day ton call | petition also shows that Olga. Kohier r thas been’ taken urging the fund | Harding Administration realizes ful!|ty revive Arthu found over-| Merman, daughter of the deceased, was Gibe used for publishing u history of the | Well that if It puts its support pe- | come by Ill Ly Mappers BL ALA T ‘S f ‘ ; i mrkson Ave ar raced on foners are the witow, Mra, PAmerican Legion, und ofticials of the |hind the Knox resolution which | wite> knocking Veronica Me Kohler of 14 Wem sith Prame, instead of assisting cripled World| merely repeals domestic | Neense nu Street, und former Corporation Counavl iy intend esislation, | otman of Kings County Host William B. Hilson, of No. 251. Wea j aa cocladaally, "tak ; 4 Bustman of Kings y Hos aiiison, 0. 251 Waat nee he taken front day to |, must at the sume time announce | pursued it in the ambulance 104th Streot, trustecs of the estate. Mee ana une our Ie entitled that the |BY What method it will make peaco |” Detevtive Filagerald arrested eee urposes of the contributors to the fund| with Germany—and there a Connolly, twenty-six, night forem Agha £50,000 Fe ap in no de-| satisfied. A garage at No. 29 Kast 29th ision on that point | Brook! = yet n, who he said ark Much misunderstanding prevails | FArase in the car ah THIRTY-THREE DEAD | throughout the country as to the | cmettatere throurh scope of the Knox resolution. It ne BerAylsKion 8 | | Simply a declaration by Congress of | IN RAILROAD WRECK garage Connolly w the Flatbush Gourt, charged wit 7 i Peains jn [ithe ending of a state of war, but it] oeny and felonious assnuli Freight and Passenger Trans in|, So ement in international law | Brom" woe ugha Alision on xian until negotiations with Germany ; National Line. funk perotiations with Germany| EX-SERVICE MEN SCORED. broad policy that America will come EAGLE PASS, Tex., April 4—Thirty- oe to the aid of Europe if circumstances three persons were in a collision) should arise again to threaten wor! between a freight and passenger train! | peace is something which must be on the Mexican National line at Villa sanctioned by the Executive to Gartra, between Parradon and Mon-| force in international Pwo Sentenced for Hotd-Up F Surprine of Court, How men could their country attuek other ¢ rish thelr fives i and then come oan relat | reassure Kurope that the ending | Americans are among the dead. the night af March 12 and got to, afpeal. 1 never intended to ex- | WITH THE TURKS puhke"them from tbe record.” HAND) IN GERMANY -—~—— “With our frugal minds,” said Mr. | whether the United States ratifies or other words, the French are making BEHALF. puree @ bid for American support at a mo- pei bile fia thetr sue is ay ; | es ment when they think Bngland and tetresting rapidly, Correspondents Poe ta ren inen took exception 10) Almost overnight have come the|the United States arc estranged over at Brust say that hundreda of Sei inial Wullans vecaeet a files on the chessboard of world|the trish probiem, wounded Greeks ure arriving there. pared nae ke Teunies ‘woudl lomacy revealing President Harding} The British are absorbed tn in A Turkish communique dated April a resumed unt! May 1%, “in| Unt Secretary Hughes ina much mora] dustrial troubles at home us well us 1 says the battle on the Hek(-Shebr » Web: aiva Ha aMAnARAT Usse to | enviable Position than most people im-| Irish affairs, and they have had con- front lasting nine days has beeh con- “Btde: ap e agined would be the case afer a cam-|Siderable friction with the lrench cluded, Biledjik being recaptured. establish her innocence. A rite -. jever since America’s influence was “wTanocence,” said Mr. Horsey | CUED 'D Which the prevent League of/ withdrawn from European councils By in abcess Nations was the object of so much|through the delay in. ratifying the Prince Andreas of Greece was the rather a 2 | condemnation, France is eager to make an third son of the late King George of haley. “is supposed to de carer 404! Srance, more anxious at the Resa even alliance with the Greece. He was born in Athens on DY! United States on almost any terms us had MOMent to have the moral nelp of the|a counler-check against Much 4 pos: United States than anything else, hae | sible entente between America and plays a and |PRECIOUS ALLIED SOLIDARITY and ‘Turkey are at war and s x precious Allied solid which —> — valone. from that part of the arder fix- | United Btates Sennte, have cauned the|was to compel the United states to 5 dug $1400 a month alimony and $47,000| F¥ench to abandon, for the time ut|forsuke a policy of isotuion tor « TURKISH ATTACK | scoutse! fees but also becauac Jus-| least all talk of the Le: | burtnership with Europe is crumbling | {lot Morschauser failed to allow the| treaty and concentrat en ranging aM ON FRENCH DENIED | ’ . | and concentrate on ranging! President Harding: and Secretary = = Gamiasion cf the alleged “confession” | America's moral help alongside Mrance | !ugh observing the disintegration = ie and the Bewuvais letters. In the controversy with Germany over | Of Allied unity, st qutety, in Ww Orders Sent to Cease Hostilities, ayy 5 ington exerting the moral influent ani . “the plainuf should be stayed | the payment of reparations Vat the United tkates alone broad kad Delegation in Paris from proceeding any further until) Byen the Knox resolution which |seneral lines without specific obliga- Declares ‘the counsel fee is paid,” Mr. Brennan | was so distasteful to Europeans be- | ton or pledge. ‘There !s, moreover, sald. capee tt plied ts thera: the ‘tiegin- [aocetre y Cable ththe clone cage Pere APrl AvReports that: the “You, are t, counsel,” Justice e begin-| secretary Colby in the closing days , se dt nad ning of weparate peace negotiations |«* the Wilson Administration where- Turks had attacked the Frenoh in Morschauser broke in, “counsel for|with Germany is now reganied as|bY the United States seeks {0 pre Ciliela and that the Angora Govern- uthe defendant rhould have the neces-|perhans not so obnoxious after all, [SCrVe, itll the rights and privileges contained in the Treaty of Versailles ® eget Of the rights it ob- resentatives of the Turkish Nationalist oat xy’ order. Dillty that It might Be construed| Comme wader the urmstion vor the Assembly here to-day, The Turke, on| After a conference between the ut-| abroad ds a withdrawal of the United | Versatiles ‘Treaty. Of course America the contrary, declared they looked upon dorneys an agreement was reached. | Stutes from its association with the | Cannot claim any rights under i tho agreement as a prelude to a more ‘Whe alimony will be pad monthly in| Allies and us the sunal for a new |(Trrty which fas not been ty ‘ified eneral accord between I'rance and the SAdvance and the remaining $47,600 in| understanding between Germany and|the Hriiah note on, mandates hax Ottoman Empire Mhree instalments, the first instalment |the United States. President Hard-| made use of Secretary Colby's rea- The delegation declared it had re- soning to the effect that America as rest of Hurope in her own way and to the armistice and winning the na 1S UP $400,000,000 | understand,” dge Bayes terey, according to reports received | ;, ent Hi ar = v Rare to-day, Wiis tiene Gf tne socident| tee Tce ne elfeady pro: Brooklyn ateneit ee wit atten; claimed for America a doctrine of Chacles Te 49 Wyckotr - i ‘A : | to Ave cars ith prison and p only body identified ix that of aancoietion bal th the Allies in the | Andrew Flaming ‘of No. 1 Veahinate Vietor Villareal, candidate for Mayor| Matter of German reparation, and | sty EE AG uate of Picdms Ne Gras, the town opposite! there will be similar statements | prisoners are ove war Eagle Pass. The report says several They held up Frank PRINCE ANDREAS KLED AS BREE ARMS DEFEATED Brother of King Constantine and Once Aspired to Throne. | ‘TURKS WIN BATTLE. Hundreds of Wounded Arriv- ing at Brusa and Larger Army Is Being Sent. TONDON, April 4—Prince Andreas of Greece, brother of King Constan- tine, has died from wounds received In fighting near Bruea, suys a Con- stantinople respatch to The Evening News, quoting a Turkish announce- ment, The Turks also assert that Gen. Viachapoulos, who was in command, , bas been killed in action. Word continues to reach here indl- » cating that the Greeks have been badly defeated in the recent fighting HENDERSON HINTS ATOVERTHROW OF BRITISH MINSTRY Labor Believes Mine Strike Will Force Election and End Lloyd-George. — ea Copprielt. i021, by the United Prem.) LONDON, A ‘Arthur Hen- | derson, most powerful labor leader in jreat Brituin, to-day virtually chal lenged Premier Lioyd George to a Reneral election on the issues raised by the threatened industrial revolu- tion in the United Kingdom. | Premier Lloyd George told the| House of Commons the coal strbe | will be discussed fully to-morrow, AY that time, he sald, Sir Robert Horne. | who had charge of the negotiations will make a statement. No negotia tions are proceeding now, he added. In an exclusive Interview with the United Press Mr. Henderson indi- cated his one idea now is overthrow of the Lioyd George Government Radical and conservative Laboriie, he said, have been cemented by the crisis brought by the great cou! strike. A for Inbor with on vietory Jan, 20, 1882, and served in the Greek Army during the Balkan War of 1912. He once aspired to the throne, Following the return to Athens of Constantine, Prince Andreas was ap- pointed a General in the Greek Army, and Iate last month was sald to be in command of a division at the front, ment had repudiated the Francd-Turk- ish agreement negotiated In London month were formally denied by rep- ceived telegmphic information that the Turks had rec@yed orders to ceuse Widow Applies for Judicial Settle- ment of Affairs of Deceased Aah-Can Acctdent. Suit for $50,000 was started to-day by Miss Leoni Van Winkler against Alie I. Rrady, of No. #4 West 70th Street, owner of the building at No. 208 West th Street, Miss Van Winkler alleges | r dress caught on an ash can stand-| | tue on the xidewalk in. front of the | 20th Street building and she was thrown violently, suffering Injuries which sent her to 4 hospital BILL FOR DRINK. IN GREAT BRITAIN Is Still, However, 24 Per Cent. Less Than Before the : War. WASHINGTON, April 4. RPAT BRITAIN'S drink bill G | 206 West 46th Street, Lioyd George an outcast and a Labor- ite government based on socit will result from the next election, he declared. justice Contemptuously referring the “imsinedrity, inconsistency and in- constancy” of the Premier, Hender- son declared Lioyd George's purty ling to pieces “Phe Labor Party will not only | survive Lloyd George's attack, but will be sertngthened by it he de- clared. “His hysterical attacks are not deceiving any one, even himself.” Henderson refused to announce the complete labor platform but made clear that “when labor wins,” it w ‘reoonstruct society, impoverish: and disorganized by the long war, on | the principles of socia] justice and economic freedom.” | “The Premier fs a man who feels | | that his force is spent,’ Henderson asserted. “He has aligned himself! irrevocably with party privilege and | property which he « ed with | fa vehemence of tongue and reckless- ness of spirit which no laborite ¢ excelled. “Lloyd George people's cause." | Phofiteers and exploiters of labor will have short shrift if labor te em- powered, Henderson — vitriolically those two classes, “They put Lloyd George where he now stands,” he declared Henderson said that | labor saved Lloyd George more 1} politically but that “now cynicism unequalled in the his British polities, the Premier hus in- augurated campaign of unsc lous misinterpresentation against one party now y to realiz the! has forsaken attacked haa | an once own discarded aims. “More than once,” he “Lieyd George privately Jon alliance and a working partner- \ship with the Laborites whom he now assails." ‘The Premier has lost forever the support of Labor, Hen- derson stated. 1 The Labor leader, was certain this | withdrawal of support would mean collapse of the Lloyd George Govern- | ment and the Coalition Party, giving | Labor its opportunity to seize control | and institute his own programme Sketchily touched wpon, Labor's pro- | gramme, it was indicated, would mean not only a gre ge in| working and economic cx ns (but | would have a startling t Upon | Irish, international and internal situ- ations. Changes made tionary,” he indicated, but hastily | disclaimed Bolshevist ‘tendencles of | his party. He did not use. the word Soclalistic, although associates ad- mitted some theorles to be tried out are Socialistic. —— GRAYSON BOOK MAY | ANSWER LANSING Admiral’s Story of Eight Years With Wilson Expected to Offset ls Ex-Seeretary’s Attack. | Rear Admiral Cary T. Grayson, for- mer President Wilson's physician, ia to| write a book from material contained ‘n/ a diary he has kept during the eight years he has been Mr. Wilson's doctor, It is waid that, among other things, 't will have a lot about Robert Lansing, and at least to some extent be an an- fwer to Mr, Lansing's criticlam of Mr. Wilson. In fact, there !s a rumor tt will be the only answer of the ex-Pre Gent's friends to the former Secretary of State. iis ae | MOVIE QUEEN FOR $40. | Mawint # | Anna Suyada, twenty-two, wanted to be a movie queen, She answered the afivertisement of George R. Cole of No. who guaranteed | © Forces Manager to Re- the Fee to Miss Savada, not only to fit ber for a part, but to t her a position. She told Magistrate McQuade to-day, after she had the alleged movie directo: arrested, that he had given nin lessons, each consisting of the recita of some He told her that h liked her and that instead of charging her his regular fee of $75 he would take $40. The last poem he had given her to recite, she said, was “On Our Wedding Night.” Meugistrate MeQuade at first said that he would hold Cole for the grand jury in a $1,000 bail, but he gave him {ie treodom "when he paid back the $40 the giri pald him. anos Body Found After Three Months. ‘The body of P, Kueanat, thirty» n years old, of No. 319 Hast 16th Street, formerly a boiler tender in the amploy | of the MeAlpin Hotel, was found thia| morning {n the Hast Tuver off Pier } 80, Brooklyn. He had been missing | since Dec. 18. The body wus identities: by a key bearing his “turn” number The dead man had no friends tn Bsn eat | of w technical state of war with Ger-| cash and jewelry, including increased by more then Irish Pend. ship with Germany, | watch back to him the next day, agree compared with 1919, says a report ‘An appeal for funds was made by tue; France is disposed to look favorably | ing to reward them. They mot ich- | to the Department of Commeme Women's Greater New York Committee |on this procedure, After all, the |"Iyted them. tala) ive 4) from Consul Hunter Sharp at of the American Committee of Relief in| French say, why should America bo Se = Edinburgh, Scottand. ee ety ee ee re | piamed for refusing to ratify the| Newre Lynched in Minsheatpp ‘The amount #pant on tntoxicat- EFRRA, Grover A. "Whalen spoke, saying | Versailles ‘Treaty when Italy and | BRANDON, Mibe. Apel se—pendy ink: tues) ty he Ueiled Sine: he came, ea roprenentative of MAYoT /Great Britain openly disregard the Thompson, negro, who shot and kitty dom in 1 the Consu) says, is 5 because * 1. W. Dobson, a planter, near here 1 estimated at $5,285,795,060 as F business. Martin Conroy, Chair-| provisions of that same treaty? From a tynched near tank’ “ ian Of to Groater New York Commit-| tne French viewpoint, th help | ozs mas Wached moar Langford during against $1,878,469,000 in 199. ‘The =, Several red persons | ‘he Frenc wpoint, the moral help] the night. The body was fy™pd to-lay jotul, however, is about 24 per were of the United States is just as val-| swinging from the limb of a %s, ; vent Less than before the war, a ” “ers city and We hotel management will bury the body, _THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 4, 1921. BROOKLYN GIRL SAILS TO BE WED AS PROPHECY SAID Fey stile Mies LILLIAN JEWETT MARVIN amore ay kamen Miss Marvin to Become Richaré peira in Canal Zone. Miss Lilllan Jewett Marvin of No. 1989 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, is to- duy bound for Cristobal, in the Canai Zone, to become the bride of Richard Lapelra, representative at Lima, Peru, of Lanman & Kemp, wholesale druggists of this city. belleved their honeymoon will in Peru. A mutual triend Miss, Marvin to Mr, Lapeir Ts ago as his “wife-to-be, and the prophecy made jokingly has come true. Bride of the Ir be spent presente four y SOLDIER DENIES CHILDREN ARE HIS Ofiwial Birth Records Wrong, Says Bernstein, Who Sues for Divorce. Justice Mullen in the Supreme Court to-day set the date for the trial of the divorce ction of Leo Bernstein against Helen Carson 1 nstein for April 29, advising Mrs. Bernstein to engage counsel at once to contest her husband's representation that her children, one, two years old, and an- other six months old, are not his ccording to Bernstein's complaint he separated m his Ww seven months after their marriage June 2 1917. He decame a soldier and ays he called on his wife just once after that at her mother's home in Wyatt Avenue, the Bronx, There was a man calling on her at the time, he said, and he did not see her or hear from her until after his discharge from the army. In October, 1919, he met her on the street wheeling a baby carriage, he sad; she told him dhe was working for the Y. M,C. A. and the baby in the carriage belonked to a friend He did not see his wife again, he swears, until he went t r hpart ment at No, 1804 Amsterdam Avenue last January intending to attsmpt a reconeiliati He found two babies jn the apartment and he states his belief that one of them ix the eame child he had seen two years before in the baby carriage, A search of the birth records showed him, he al leged, he had been officially set down as the father of both children, Con trary to the ruling in case, Bernsteip was allowed to into hns complaining affidayyt statement that his wife had made a confession to him or FUNERAL SERVICES FOR DEAN WHARTON put would be “revotu- | Student Body and the Faculty of | acuse University Will Attend. (Special to The Emning World.) SYRACUSE, April 4.—The entire un- dergraduate body and faculty gf Syra- cuse University will to-morrow attend the funeral of Dean John Herman Wharton of the College of Business Administration who was slain Satur day by Prof. Holmes Beckwith, who then killed himself, The funeral ser- will be held in Joan ©. Rouse College. Although Beckwith in one of his let ters had asked that no funeral vices of any kind be held over h remains a prayer service was read by the Rev, George R. Mott undertaking chapel and the to Rochester. There it will be and the ashes seattered a8 hy Beckwith was an atheist and at a body sent cremated directed socialist TRUCK RIPS TROLLEY WIRE. Cork Load Catches Fire and Brook- lyn Traffic Delayed, ‘Traffic Policeman Nicholas Smailey was leading a blind man across E ford Avenue at Fulton Street, Hrook lyn, this afternoon when a luce truck passing under the olevated railrond ripped loose a trolley wite, which coiled | and spat the strest to the peril Of all wittin reach. Ry the time Smal ley had taken the blind ma as piace the truck was in flames. It was foaded with baled cork, which was scattered over the strect by the Fin Department. After about twenty min traffic. was resumed he truck was owned by Jar rry of Vanderbilt and Atlantic Avenues and driven by Bugene phy, No. 32 Rochester Avenue, ———— Fatture. David Siegler and Abraham Messer. partners and dealers in furs and skins at No, 138 West 28th Street; Morris Reinstein, Nathan Ressler, Pin Kupferbers end Morris Kupfbers were indicted to-day by the Federal! Gran6é Jury. charged with violation of the National Bankruptey Act. It is charged that in May, 1920, the spin to throw their firm into bi rupte al ough it had ffieic {funds to pay all customers. they concealed $14,000 in oe MEDIC! 7 Miynaihaan. 54 FATHER JO) Pure food toule—bull At wht t the Stillman | the | ser- | Joes) IRISH ATTACKERS STARR J. MURPHY DIES IN FLORIDA Rocketeller’s Counsel and Per | Hal Representative Fails to Stand Second Operation. DAYTONA, Via, April 4. Starr J, Murphy, counsel and personal rep resentative yf John Db. Kockefellet s died at hospital here to-day, lowing uw second operation performed IElying Columns of Republi-!e9 hin yesterday tn an effort tu re : eve hin ae indigestion. HH cans Officially Reported — fwas frst operated on early in the in Five Counties, SAGs ——— Mr. Murphy Was appointed personal | DUBLIN, Apr 4 (Associated | representative and counsel for J) Press).—Fiyifg columns of the Ireh |D. Rgekefeller in his benevoience ‘Republican Army are officially re-|1901, He was a member of the | ported to be operating in Fermanagh. eral Educational Board, Rockefelle | Armagh, Tyrone, Kildare and | foundation; trustee and secretary of Counties. There has been | the tockefeller Institute for Medigal | etion of roads and in| Research muny cases nidation has been re- He was also Vice President and a sorted to he columns Javariably |director in the American Linseed |disappear on the approach of Crown | Company and Colorado Fuel and Iron i the official report suys. ) Company, as well as an officer and | A fight occurred last night in, the |director in many other corporations hills near Dundrum, four miles south | Mr. Murphy wee a men of Phi © DabiiNy Ce ft had pro. | Het Kappa and the Whitehall Club, OF ner oe eC. SOrNee a He was born in 1880 and his bone ceeded to the hills in lorries to in-| was in Montelair, N vestigate reports of firing, They SS Caos ree lfound twenty armed men, some of WIDOW WHO SAW whom, after firing at the military, | [mingled with women and children | GHOST IS INSANE who were picknicking. For this rea Sa con the Crown forces refrained from | Physicians Won't Say if Alleged using their machine guns Apparition of Husband Is They p he others, however . They pursued th Msi MN Cause. who were escaping to another hill and shot two, The remainder set tire} TRENTON, April 4.—Mrs, John Koch, te the shrubbery on the hillside | ¢ of a suiclde, whose ghost, it fa iS i io thes Mn BleE) WekS EI has been haunting her heme, ea oO Y RL eat lr takon to the Stute Hospital WORM NAA, Ita Chew Hanes of} for the Insane here, ‘The hospital | bomb throwin, Two bombs were| physicians suid she would be under oty- hurled at the men guarding the Ulster| servation for several days, ‘They would Club, at which Gen. Baint n/| not indic ther they believed her command of the troops in U is mental disord ig due to what she be~ frequent visitor, Only one lieved to be the appearance of her hus- bombs exploded, however, and this! Kond's ghost or whether the apparition caused neither damage nor cusuallios, | , sri alawee te although it produced much excite 1 in her unbalanced mind. ment. The bemb throwers escaped Special ag intel 55 on pectalixt to Do Clinteal Work. AUTO SHOW. | Dr b, Immett Holt, speciali#t on HYLAN TO OPEN e|chitd disedses at Columbia University, — - will en Carpentier Profe on it Will Be in the Broa, for Benefit | June 30 to become Clinical Prafe of Second Field Artillery. | July 1, it was announced by th ike autos | Verity to-day. ‘This change w Mayor Hylan w iste ue e ae UK, | the request of Dr. Holt, wh {mobile snow tM Bie » be relieved of all administrative w The exhibit w held azithe Armory i order tovgive His entire time to clit of the Second Field Artillery. 166th |" "TM tents “wees treet and ares nklin Avenue, and an <—_—- —— honor detail of veterans of that com en Sei i hone SHiL escort the city Chiet Ex: |ILLQCTINS DATGETER THROW v Mt . twenty-two, of No. Sixty-five dealer Manhattan and | ai a da of Mor- ene Nis ne ris Hillquit, lawyer and Socialist, was Hundred acce | thrown from her horse and slightly in- jured wh riding on the Bast Drive thlet in Cer Park at Sth St yester= Second 1 day afternoon, ‘The horse stumbled but did not run away Miss Hillgui with aftern was assisted by Patrolman Garvey of 8 winding up! the Arsenal Stauion. Saturday even 16 declined medi- t home. eal attention and we Chocolate Covered Pea Home Made Fudge. 54c Value. All Qvington mirrors are subs ect Co the discounts of the sale, | : = PENNY A POUND PROFIT. = —_ Special for Monday, April 4th Our Regular 59c Goods. Our Regular 49c Goods. For Tuesday, April 5th Assorted Molasses Dainties. Chocolate Covered Marshmallows. Our Regular 59c Goods. ee) nut Clusters. Pound Box, s 24c Pound Box, 39c 24c 44c American Filled Confections: POUND Pound Box, Pound Box, The move uptown brings prices down. “The Gift Shop of Fifth Avenue” will be more con- veniently placed for you whenit moves to 39th Street and Sth Avenue. Until then, you will be repaid by the discounts for what you may miss in convenience. For as long as our old home is open, discounts of 10% —20% ~-30%o — 40% and 50% pres vail upon all the charming things for which Ovington's is so well and widely known. OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of Fifth Avenue’ 312-314 Fifth Ave. Near 32nd St.

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