The evening world. Newspaper, April 21, 1921, Page 1

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To-Night’s Weather—SHOWERS. WALL STREET EDITION GERMANY IN | Che {Circulation Books Open to All.” | Copyright, 1921, Co. (The + by The Press Publishing New York World). NE — Post Office NOTE ASKS U.S. TO Wi 1a, . “Circulation Books Open to All.’ | Rotered ay Second-Cinas Matter EDITION sig PRICE THREE CENTS 28s ¥. Now York, %, W YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1921. TO COST $27,000 City Chamberlain Calls At- fention to Enormous Cost of Effort to End Liquor Selling. * (MAGISTRATE 1S SUED. Saloon Man Wants $50,000 From Him, Also From Police- { man for Malicious Prosecution. | According to City Chamberlain Ber- vizheimer, the trials of all the persons already arrested or to be arrested for violation of the State Enforcement Law will cost the city at least $24,- 600,000. This will go into extra ex- pense for jurors and court costs. And according to Police Commis- sioner Enright it 18 going to cost the Police Department $3,000,000 to make New York bone dry. The Comrnis- sioner is not sanguine of immediate results in that direction. While pub- He selling of ceased, surreptitious sales in “blind whiskey has almost tigers” and private homes are on the increase and offenders of this sort are harder to locate and catch than saloonkeepers have been doing business openly. SUES MAGISTRATE AND COP FOR $50,000 EACH. ‘ At the conclusion of the examina- tion of Giuseppe Cinque of No. 308 ‘West 44th Street, accused of violation of the Mullan-Gage act In West Side Police Court this afternoon Fred- erick Goldsmith, counsel to Cinque, werved upon Magistrate Charles B. Simms and Policeman Clarence ‘Weaver, the arresting officer, Su- preme Court summonses and com- and bartenders who plaints In suits for $50,009 against each, alleging malicious prosecution. The policeman was served in the court room and Magistrate Simms aid he would accept service after the conclusion of the session. Weaver arrested Cinque at his grocery store in West 44th Street fast @unday morning and charged him with being the possessor of a small @uanity of gin and a jug of wine. ‘When the case was called to- Mr. @oldsmith asked for an adjournment to permit of chemical analysis of the fileged intoxicating liquors. ‘The court said that the Board of Magistrates and the District Attorney fhad decided that the chemical analy wis was not necessary; that th timony of the arresting officer was gufficient to hold a defendant for the Grand Jury. Mr. Goldsmith declared that this was a violation of section 208 of tn? Code of Criminal Procedure, whic defines what sort of evidence is re- quired to hold a man for the action ef the Grand Jury “The Mullan-Gage (Continued on Second Page.) law as inter- Sunday World Classified Advertisements Should Be in The World Office On or Before Friday Order Sunday World Classified Advertising To-Day. The World TRIALS OF WHISKEY SELLERS WILL GOST CITY $24,000,000; POLIGE DEMAND $3,000,000 ‘BIG BILL’ HAYWOOD FORFEITS HIS BALL; ~— JUMPS 10 RUSSIA Sailed From Here on Oscar II. —Arrival Reported From Other Side. CHICAGO, April 21.—“Big Bill” Haywood, of the Industrial Workers of the World, has fled to Soviet Russia to escape a twenty- leader year jail sentence for violation of the Espionage Act, it became known here | to-day. | District Attorney Cline, who or- dered a sweeping investigation, said he is convinced of the truth of reports seeping out of Russia that Haywood arrived in Riga and was now in Mos- cow | I. W. W. leaders here last heard |from Haywood on March 31, the date ‘he Is reported to hi Oscar Il. for Russia Hayward, fleeing in the biggest I. W. W history of the organization, stands a broken idol in Chicago to-day. Both leaders and followers charge the midst of ‘Dattle in the that Haywood's act was that of a coward, Members of the I. W. W. sald he had broken faith with his jorganization and stands repudiated. Threats were made that “Big Bill” will be a man without a country. The Soviets will be warned*by Amer- lean radicals to have nothing to do with the "man who threw over his industrial followers in America,” it was said. Haywood was out on $15,000 bail pending an appeal to the United States Supreme Court from the tence to Leavenworth by Federal Judge Landis. Christensen said that he personally had put up part of the money. one SEIZE SKIPPER’S PRIVATE STOCK Raiders Take Capt. Dyne’s 14 Bot- thes of Whiskey After Halting Ship's Sailing. I Einstein, a Prohibition Enforce- ment Agent, under protection of C: toms Guards Baron and McAda delayed the sailing of the Steamship Princess May of the Di Giorgio line for the West Indies for two hours to- day while he led a search of the ship for liquor, Captain Coulson Dyne pro- in yain that a departing ship was not one on which 4 lawless impor. tation was to be found. The search went on until it reached the n’s cabin apt. Dyne's locker the raiders rteen bottles of whiskey which r sald was his personal store he customs guards made the point that it wis not entered on the manifest pnd was thorefore contraband and took it ashore with them, ‘Phen the ship sailed en Next Week, April 21.—With the earings ament will n Affairs nnounced to-day tblienn, CUDAAY'S SUICIDE LAID T0 LOSS OF HS BG FORTUNE His Mind Said to Have Been | Unbalanced by Failure to Raise Loan. HEALTH ALSO BROKEN. | Wife, From Whom He Had | Been Divorced, Living With Him in California. HOLLYWOOD, Cal, April %1.— Mental depression and financial) | | worry were given to-day as the cause of the suicide of John P. (Jack) Cud-| ahy, son of the late pioneer packer, Michael Cudahy, from whose $12,000,- 000 estate he received $1,500,000, part made into a trust fund, Mrs. Cudahy denied a report there had been an al- tercation between her and her hus- band before he ended his life, or that | | they were to separate again. | ‘The man whose picturesque career had brought him so often into the limelight went into his bathroom | about 10.30 yesterday, according to the story told by his wife to Coroner Williams, got the Winchester shot-| gun he used for trap shooting and took it into his bedroom. He did not | seem to be more despondent than usual. | 2 ater there ania the | port and he was found with the top| of his head almost blown off. He had} stretched himself out on a bed, | clasped the gun between the knees |with the muzzle under his head, and discharged it, His wife rushed in from her dressing room nearby. Downstairs were his seventeen-year- old daughter, Anne, and his fourteen- year-old son, Michael Following a nervous breakdown after the war, Cudahy had for months been under the care of physicians, ‘The official investigation showed that early yesterday Cudahy had re- ceived a message from the Northern Trust Company of Chicago stating, “We do not want to carry a perma- nent loan, and unless your sister can vouch the loan of $10,000 which you ask for, we find it impossible to grant your request.” It was learned that Cudahy had re- ceived a telegram from his sister Clara, in Santa Barbara, Cal, con- (Contin HUSBAND ILL, SHE | | STARTS 800-MILE | | HIKE WITH BABIES | an | ‘Wheeling Infants in Go-Cart Plucky Woman Would Work Way to Indis Mrs, Mary Allen, thirty-two, wheel- ing her two children, John aged two| and Charles jr. three, started from Newark to-day for Elizabeth along the highway, She is without funds and is walking to her home at Wa- | bash, Ind. 800 miles away, to get to the bedside of her husband, who is ill. | The police in Newark housed Mrs. Allen and the children last night, and | this morning c ted enough money from men on duty at the Sixth Pre- |cinct Station to buy food for the day. They would have collected more and intefested charitable organiza- tions in her case, but Mrs. Allen aaid: “lam not going to accept charity. nd I can do housework | the way, und I'll get along all] I am strong Alien t »pping with) friends at Rutherford, N. J., when she| received word of her husband's ill ness. She was unable borrow | ir i Rutherford and walked the cight miles to Newark yesterday, it took Mrs, Allen all of the afternoon and until late in the evening to make it. She was almost exhausted, cording to the police, when she ap- plied at the station for lodging PERSHING HEADS NEW STAPF CREATED 10 KEEP U.S. READY IN TIME OF PEACE FOR WAR Will Be Entirely Separate From Office of Chief of Staff, Which Will Continue Present Functions—To) Have Skeletonized Staff Like That He Had at Chaumont. WASHINGTON, April 21.—Organization of a war staff headed by Gen. Pershing to take charge of field operations of the armies of the United States in time of war was announced to-day by Secretary Weeks. “Instant preparation in time of peace for active military operations” was given by the Secretary as the reason for the new organization. a a a | “PROFESSOR” HELD AS A PRACTICER |” swiss: = om entirely with problems of strategy, | tactics and war organization. “We are going to have a skeletoa- ized general headquarters established | in the War Department,” sa.d Soci tury Weeks. “Its purpose will be to keep us instantly prepared for active | military operations, “The details will be given out later, but Gen. Pershing will be at the head of the activity. “Details of the plan are difficult to arrange, owing to the wording of the | laws, but the Chief of Staff will con- tinue to direct the administration of the army in time of peace.” Before the World War, Secretary Weeks explained, M@rshal Joffro had | been similarly selected to command the armies of France, if war came, | and organized a skeleton etaff which | was instantly available, Secretary Weeks would not con- firm or deny rumors that Major Gen, | James G, Harbord, who was for a time Gen, Pershing’s Chief of Staff in France and later head of the Ser- vice of Supply, had been selected to relieve Major Gen. Peyton C. March as Chief of Staff of the anny. It was thought probable by some offi- cers that Gen, Harbord might be- come Gen. Pershing’e chief aide on| the War Staff. HOLD UP MEN ROB BANKERS OF $25,000 Five Bandits Take Money From Officials Carrying It to Chicago The organization headed by Gen Pershing will be entirely separate | from the office of the Chief of Staff, Mr, Weeks said, which will continue to direct the administration of the military establishment in time of Woman Says Bagonyer Cast Spell Over Her, and He Is Locked Up. “Prof.” E. I. Bagonyery of Milltown, N. J., was arrested to-day on a war- rant charging that he practised witeh- craft, Mrs. Hilda Hobshoit of New Brunswick declared in a statement to Justice of the Peace Sedam that she visited Ragonyer’s home and he “put her under a spel! by his supernatural powers with the ald of sacred images on an altar in the house.” She asserted that st. was given a box of powder wh he promised, would bring her additional good tuck; that she paid $5 for the powder, and that Bagonyer grabbed her pocket- book containing $13, which ha refused to give back. Patrolma Frank Kirby went to the “Professor's” home in plain clothes and was mistaken for a patron he says. aid the “Profes- and I'll make you eep smilin as he entered, happy for the rest of your Jif Bagonyer was held in $1,000 ball. Being unable to furnish it, he went to the County Jail. Ten ycars ago, it is said, Bagonyer conducted an emplsyment office in New Brunswick. He then went to a spiritualistic school in Chicago and returned about a year ago to a huuze at No. 370 Ryder’s Lane, Milltown, Institution. where, he conducted what he cailed te i peal farm." At one time, it is ae — or a madi bandits : OAL AN the eae reld up and robbed two oMfcials of the sald, te conducted a Leauly Dallst! iene state Bank today of 996,000, | for women, No charges had ever be-| \iion was being taken to the Union fore been preferred against him, the|¢rust Company for depoalt. Bolide-aaid John F. Amberg, Vice President of | in LABOR BOARD CLASH WITH A U., S. COURT thi ank, and Norton F. Stone, cashler, | ench day drive downtown with depoaits. | ‘Phe five bandits stopped them to-day, | took the $25,000 In small bills and es. | caped, Rules That Receiver of A. B. and A. RR. Could Not Reduce Wages of Employees. HOUSEWIFE KILLED BY A BOX OF SALT WASHINGTON, April 21.—The Rail- FALLING ON FOOT road Labor Board to-day ruled that the receiver of the Atlanta, Birming a ham and Atlantic Railroad in reducing| Made Only a Slight Laceration, wages of Its employees, In complance t Blood Polsoning with a decision by Federal Judge §. HL but Blood Poisoning Sibley, had acted in violation of the Set In. init Act The dis not and letter of the Transportation aauratoonediinen | | BOX of a decision of thia| BE LODE AE: DPas Bl leah ab obtikdtion on beth Gebhardt recently tn p at N duty to obey the re than oa the owne ofa $88 HIN Place road,” the decision sald. Glendale, Queens Tr Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlan. It broke the small toe and lace- tle case brought the frat clash between| pated the flesh slightly the bor Board and a Federal Co ol g develo and was the first legal tangle which Blood polaoning 4 loped and the board wee called upon to unravel Mra, Gebhardt died to-day, z Mt. TO MAKE CITY BR PEGGY MARSH'S SON LOSES SHARE. OF FELD MILLIONS Illinois Supreme Court Holds He Is Not Entitled to In- heritance Under Will. SUIT A FRIENDLY ONE. Family Never Questioned Boy’s Parentage—Settlement on Him Until of Age. SPRINGFIELD, TL, April 21— Henry Anthony Marsh, son of Henry Field of Chicago and Posy Marah, 14 not entitled to inheritance of the Marshall Field millions, the Supreme Court decided to-day in ruling that the Marshall Field will specifically ex+ empts from inheritance any ilegiti- mate offspring. CHICAGO, April 21—The Suprenie Court decision exempting Henry Anthony Marsh from Inheritance of any of the Marshall Field estate cut the child off from a share in property yariously valued at from $10,000,000 to $20,000,000 and ended a friendly suit in the Field family to determine the boy's standing. The boy, adm ttedly the son of Henry Field and Peggy Marsh, das had certain sums settled upon hita by Marshall Field 3d, however, for his education and maintenance wnt! : manhood. Henry Field died in a New York hospital on July 8 1917, at the age of twenty-one. Field was born and reared in England and was the son of Marshall Ficld 24. Marshall Field 3d, present head of the Field estate, was his brother, and he also had a sister, Gwondolyn Field, It was while in London that Henry Field met Peggy Marsh, then a chorus girt. Late in 1914 Mr. Field, who drove a Red Cross ambulance early in the World War, was released fram service and returned to the United States and |married a Miss Perkins, a niece of one of the Langhorne sisters of Vir- ginta, Under the will of Marshall Fictd the grandsons and Gwendolyn Field were to receive a certain amount at the age of twenty-one, the entire estate going to them when they were fifty years old. ' After the death of Henry Field the claims of Henry Anthony Marsh were set forth, The Field family never questioned his parentage and joined with the child's attorneys in bringing about a suit to determone whether he should share in the astate, Posey Marsh, the child's mother, recently was married in the east to Albert L. Johnson, nephew of tho for- mer Mayor of Cleveland. —-— |SOLDIER WELFARE WORK IS JOINED Personnel of Public Health Service @ and War Risk Insurance Consolidated. WASHING from the Pubile TON, April 21.—Transter Health ervies and the consolidation with the Bureau of War Risk Insurance of all work, offices and personnel of the Public Heal connected with the medical t of disabled war veterans was or however, In th An to-day by See veption is opera- tion of hosplt, nd Giapons: which in un the Public Health solidation orders the Pres Chicaso, waa Chairm: tw step toward the consol whieh dest with former service men and women Chief of Us 8. Weather Rareng, | INGTON, April 21 Charles F. F to-day by President Harding to be Chief of the Weather Bureau, | -——_—___———_.. GERMANY APPEALS 10 U.S. = oie TO) MEDIATE WITH ALLIES - ON REPARATIONS PAYMENT Washington Asked to Fix Definite Sum and Get Allies’ Approval— Teutons Agree to Abide by This Decision. ' GERLIN, April 21,.—Foreign Minister Simons has sent a note fo President Harding requesting the United States to mediate in the repa- rations dispute between Germany and the Allies, Cermany asked the United States to fix a definite sum for ri tions and to secure Allied approval of it. Ki If this is done, Germany agrees to abide by America’s decision, and pay the amount fixed. PARIS, April 21 (Associated ‘Press)—The German Government has refused to transfer the gold reserves of the Reichsbank, the German’ Iniperitl Bank, to the Coblenz and Cologne branohes of the bank, -as. demanded by the Reparations Commission, it was announced here to-day, ——————$—————————<—<—< WASHINGTON, April Si—nA, Spill from Germany on the reparation question was understood to have ’ }| been received by the State Depart- ment to-day, WHALES AWAY Ay Secrétary of State Hughes refused to discuss the question, but, accord- ing to authoritative quarters, such a MAN F| HI be communication has deen received i from the German Government. ‘The receipt of the communication —_——— comes as a climax ta a number of re Scared Victim Takes Refuge! ports that Germany was seeking to Behind Cage of Wild Tigers | 4%” the United states into the settle, ‘ 3 ment of the reparations question, Until Little Chap Leaves. State Department officials have = a heen convinced for some time that Ernest Cappelman, five feet eleven Germany was putting forth a series of fucber tall, and wetsnthe ine paanearl edi ie areey out the attitude he United States on the doorman at Madison Square Gar-| question and possibly gain one wun den, ran up to Policeman Melicher at | pathy of this country in the repasm 2th Street and Fourth Avente this | tions dispute with the Allies, afternoon and asked him to go into| BERLIN, April 21 (A. “teq the Garden and arrest a man who had pag rama Walter Simons, the _ #3 eign Minister, announced to-day assaulted him and tried to kill him, he would answer interpellations The policeman went jn and Capel-| the Reichstag on the German repara= mon pointed out as bis assailant, Gju-| tions proposals and the manner i seppe Bignol, a clreus dwarf, who is| which they have been prepared em three feet two Inches tall and weighs | Monday or Tuesday. sixty pounds with all his clothes on| Informal discussions are and carrying a cane, between the Foreign Office Bigno!! had a revolver in his|ing Dresel, the American Commige Dooket and admitted he had threat-|sloner, and the German newspapers, ened Cappelman with It. Melichar| to-day discredited reports that thé arrested him and he was arraixned| United States has refused to give. in Yorkville Police Court this after-/| consideration to the German countes. noon on charges of felonious assault] proposals, which etill are in the low and violation of the Sullivan Law, |mulative state, af negotiations gm: According to Cappelman, the|far having been tn the natury of midget tried to enter the Garden| “feelers,” designed by Dr. Simone t@ throurh a door which the circus per-| set the reactions necessary to guide formers are not allowed to use. He) bim In framing his plan, directed the It he said, to| PARIS, April 21.—Premiers Briand e fellow, the Fourth Avenue entrance, where-| and Lioyd George plan etrictly pete upon T leaped up and str vute conferences at the meeting to te. him on the head with a cane. Then , fe-puiay nie the midget started to climb all over (Conttnued on Second Page) —_— FURTHER ECQNOMY IS MILLER’S PLAN him, striking with fists and fect, Cap- pelman claims, and he had a hard the throwing him off. ff 3 late man a s, the midg him in the Garden, trew ALBANY, April 21.—When the matic ol, potnted It returns next January ‘s going to have another to exp nme with the a nan fled to ¢ wif behind of ceonomy In State ade tration and government, he sald to-day, he purpose of the new Board of and ¢ full of cage abandoned the | Estimate and\ Control js to oh: sneaked that very thing (economy tm nto Government)” said the Gows ernor to-day, “and as soon ag ap=| jpela' the board will begin to male: The 'a careful survey of administration te Grecka Het |determing where Curther cuts can be blockade deetroy k to| qhe Governor Is expected to sign! e renee | the bill creating this board in a dag ° i jor two. forces of Turkish ¢ in Conatanti.| ‘The Governor hinted that tf ft were. inople. have lodged ecmed Wise the board would em- k'action. | ploy efficiency experts to study the — administration of the State depart~ (Racing Entries on Page 9) mee ee 4 A c | | | | i : i

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