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~ PLANS OF ENRIGHT BACKED BY HYLAN IN TALK TO CHIEFS Mayor Advocates Closer Co- operation Between Police De- partments Throughout U.S. URGES CENTRAL BUREAU Says Unemployment Is An- other Big Problem—Three ‘Days’ Conference Begins. Mayor Hylan to-day addressed the first session of the National Police Conference, which opened in the Hotel Commodore, The session was opened by Commissioner Enright. The Rev. Francis P, Duffy delivered the invocation, consisting of a prayer for public officials composed by Arch- bishop Carroll of Maryland. Mayor Hylan was then introduced by former Pollce Commissioner Douglas I. Mc- Kay, Temporary Chairman, who de- scribed him to the delegates as “the greatest city offidial in America.” The Mayor, in welcoming the dele- gates, promised hospitality and drew attention to the many advantages of New York for their entertainment. He outlined the programme he wants to see carried out along the lines of Commissioner Enright’s ideas. This Yucludes standardized police pro- eedure throughout the United States, loser co-operation between Police Departments, establishment of a cen- tral Police Bureau, perhaps in Wash- imgton; standardized method of hand- Lng criminal immigration from Can- @da, Mexico and through seaport! ©0-aperative method of tracing crim- mals, Anarchists and radicals, and in- terchange of information regarding Movement of criminals leaving ‘prisons, “Criminals released from prison in cities can and do come to New York and soon are swallowed up in ‘the elty’s teeming millions, particu- jarly if they are not known to the po- lice of this cit; the Mayor said. Very often the first information we get of their presence here is their commission of crime, subsequent ar- fest and discovery of their criminal record. “Another problem that looms on the police horizon Js that of unem- ployment. To-day in this city alone tae number of unemployed approxi- mates half a million. The numbe of unemployed in all the States of the union is steadily moving from the three million to the five million mark. Business depression is appar- emt in many quarters, with poasibili- ues of further spread. Actual and potential criminals will always be found among the ranks of the un- employed.” Mayor dylan invited all the di gates to visit him at -L145 o'clock Thursday morning. “Come and see me and make my Aoquaintance he said. “Find out that I'in a pretty good fellow and hat I'm not as bad as the news- papers make out.” He said he would co Commissioner FE t urged the delegates to take up his pians for a central bureau for the dissemination of is needed tween in followin: inala and radicals,” he dec we bad had such a bureau when the Wall Street explosion occurred we would have had it solved becuse we would have had tab on every radi- eal and compelled him to explain his mhercabouts when the explosion took plac He declared Ni greatest finger print bur “ id, for which he gav pdit to Deputy Commissioner F ‘ot, and then taking up the problems of the police in appre Is he said the Prison hinderance “The Si ers and 4 prot stead of protecting socivty.” he clared. wry 1 authorities should notify the police when @ prisoner is released so they can follow him and keep lab on his activit ‘The visiting poli mn given in their honor by thy erchants' Association of New York, ut which President William Wellowes Morgan presided. Commissioner En- right spoke again on the subjects he ut the morning session and auded, but the visitors gave ni to Miss Beatrion the en who d dane 100,000 BOYS RACE IN STREETS TO-DAY Many Contests Mark Athletic Day of Boys’ Week in Schools, w York has the uu in the attended School streets are cloxed by the polle from 3 to 5 rmit th isphalt temporarily sed : uthletl thietlc Day" of nization dealing with boys over twelve years has been Invited te thletic contexts, ‘Th take part In the grammes will Include running races, freak races, hant tennis and so wimming contests. will be school. pools. parochial equipped with contests will be held in well as public schools More than 100,000 b pene boys clubs, Boy Scouts, Osanam and eccial contd, “\obtained but that a year late — — ADDED TO HONOR ROLL OF POUGE Patrolman John A. Conk, In- jured Saving Children, Dies in Brooklyn Hospital. | ——. \ Another name was added to the honor roll of the Police Department, men who have given thelr lives in the line of duty, when Policeman John A. Conk died in Wyckoff Heights Hospital from injuries in- curred last Thursday in stopping a runaway horse which menaced the lives ofghildren at a “school cross- ing” whgkefhe was on duty. It was toward the close of the lunch hour and children were flocking across the street at Knickerbocker Avenue and Grove Street, Brooklyn, when the horse, drawing a peddler’s wagon owned by Henry Schaff, No. 17 Morgan Street, was frightened by a passing automobile and ran away, Conk, shouting a warning to the children, ran forward, leaped on the wagon and made his way out onto the shafts, finally getting astride the horse. The policeman managed to Swerve the horse away from a group of children who were too panic stricken to save themaclyes, Before Conk could bring the horse to a stop the wagon struck a pile of gravel left by the Street Department for repairs at the Myrtle Avenue crossing on Knickerbooker Avenue, and the lurch threw Conk to tha ground. The wheels of the wagon passed over wis head. He was un- conscious when Policeman Joseph Bauman, a short distance further on, brought the horse to a stop after be- ing dragged 100 feet, and then went back to Conk’s assistance, Conk was taken to the hospital, where an operation was performed in a vain attempt to save his life. Policeman Conk was forty-five years old and had been on the police force fifteen years. He attached |to Wilson Avenue Station and lived at No. 1185 Kast 92d Street. A year ago, at the same corner, Conk stopped a runaway and was) awarded a bronze star. Five years ago he saved two lives at a fire in Evergreen Avenue, Brooklyn, and | was given a silver star and a com- |mendation. He is survived by his: | widow and two eons, Ulysses, twenty- | three, and Harry James, eleven years old. |SAYS WHITE WINGS LAY DONW ON JOB | Threatened City’s Milk amd Coal Supply in Not Removing Snow Declares Leo, Street Cleaning Commissioner Leo | explained to-day why he refused to reinstate tn his artment workers jalleged to have fail to report for snow shovelling on 20 “By laying down,” the Commissimer [sald, “the men threatened the ctty's | nit coal su and crippled | transportation and business. What we of the men is honest service and They were dismiss fter Nine hune laid jown Many eae S were of, only exe who! on | | and find that there are 1,000 Mts on the lst. 1 shall ' ft les from this list. If any men working 3 e union, all right _——— /400 PICTURE BRIDES HERE FROM GREECE One Drops Bottle of Cognac to Her Fiance, but It was Lost in the Deep. ‘The King Alexander of the reek Line docked at South Brooklyn this morning with 3,141 passengers from Athens. Forty of them were sent to uid rather work | Hoffman Island for sanitation pur-| | poses, Amo thevoihe S$ were 400 “picture brides—girls who have come to Amer- lea to marry men who know them only by their photographs, One of th rides was an Armenian, Marie rian. Her flance, who had reex her after a voyage around the ship in a “bumboat,” sent her some mations when she let down a cont to him. She returned the compilment by tossing him a bottle of cos but It bouneed off his head and plunged into the deop. He was too dizay to dive for it seteerteattiber |WANTS $25 ALIMONY BOOSTED TO $500 Divorced Wife of Conway Tearle Says Movie Star's Salary 100 a W le, motion picture Conway " was faced to-day with a demand that alimony for hh first wife be in creased from $25 to $500 a week Mrs, Josephine Park ‘Tearte, whose | plea was taken under advisement, | said her alimony was made $65 4 week in 1912 when the divore arle suffered misfortung and submitted to a decrease The motion picture star, she said, WwW earns $1,750 a Weck and has « contract for the next year at $ a week. She said he savings. The actor, she said, in ig liy- ing with dis fourth wife in New York. | itics _THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1921. ANOTHER NAME. ESE ena FOR WEDDING OF MISS JACKSON! MISS BETTY JACKSON, June Marriage Planned at Coun- try Estate of Nicholas F. Detailed arrangements for the mar- riage of Miss Betty Jackson, daugh- ter of Dr. and Mrs. John A. Jackson, . 969 Park Avenue, to Howard W! Maxwell jr, whose engagement Was announced in January, are made public to-day. The ceremony will take place on June 11, at Inistad, the coun- bride's uncle and aunt, Mr, and Mrs, Nicholas F. Brady, near Roslyn, L. I The guests will be taken from the city on a special train. try home of the The maid of Miss Katherine Kent nd the other attendants of the bride Harvey W. Misses Helen and Margaret Maxwell, sisters of the bridegroom La Marche and Miss Melissa Yuille, The ushers Gray jr, Walla ce Hoggson, John A nd Andrew Fletcher jr. gene L. Maxwell will serve as his brother's best man, Oo PRISONER ESCAPES, GUARD GONE TOO Was Left in Detention Pen While iceman Went Into Court twenty-two, No. 84 Catharine Bing Sing record for burglary, arrest for a brief period this morning, then he escaped from the de- was arrested by Detective How- ard C, O'Leary of the Oak Street Sta- with grand $59 worth of stoien clothes in his pos- started into the says he left nd | his prisoner, plain clothes policeman a shield, but he failed to Pelle SCOTCH “INFLATED” 14 TUBES ON SHIP | was we Frozen in Ice and in ¢ the Glendola ‘| GOES TO NEWTON inepectors—ticorge Darron, John Next! whether the of} a lot of crack hip 1s an oll bu American port ee SHOT; REFUSES TO TELL HOW Relatives: Puke With Wound tn 2008 Lexing- to Bellevue Hos ned Callan, | to the operstiny was John O. Darting Diew In Providence, As PROVIDEN( is dead hero, | widely | Ryan He was elo prominent in pol TSMASON SUPPLY Prehistoric: Peru” 10 GONSPIRAG | Will Be Sentenced Monday by | Justice McAvoy—34 Others to Go on Trial, | Pleas of guilty were entered to-day by nineteen members of the 880C1~ lon of Dealers In Masons’ Supplies | when fifty-three members were called for trial on indictments charging conspiracy, before Justice Vernon M Davis, in criminal branch, Supreme Court, Those who pleaded guilty John A. McCarthy, No, 243 West 70th | street, business associate and per- sonal friend of Charles F. Murphy, Tammany leader; Wright D. Goss, No. 46 West 73d Street, formerly a member of Mayor Hylan's Commit- ¢ >, stannia: ., tee on Housing; John A. Philbrick, San Francisco s Notarious Bar- No. 37% Park Avenue; Joseph Phil-| bary Coast Loses One of Its brick, Sound Beach, Conn.; Alden J. hs ‘ Harcourt, No. 608 West 47th street:| Claims to Fame, Shorn by Walter W. Krider, Kew Gardens, &| the Archaeologists of the "1 E. Wise, No, 236 V 01st | . 1 Birets Pg. wheiney, No ge acne} American Museum of Natu- Avenue, City Island. ral History, Who Produce Francis W. Howland, No, 25 West 9th Stre Duyvil; John P. Kane I Hewletts, 14 signs Executed on Pottery William E. Beattie, No. 262 Jeffer- y chmohl jr, Brighton, G&L; turies Ago. Graham Murtha, No. East 83d j Street; James Noonan, No. 155 Fast} gis soy oo : | Meth Street; Theodore C, Wood, Now! got tnn Ait a Ma startling news 2 West 102d Street; Robert W. Main, sete bonne, he Witenes &6 No, 567 Highth Street, Brooklymi guction of by thedans band. Henry J. Jova, Newburgh, N.Y. and “ane oriwinat, jos te anide dh Nc ah bal et e original jazzers have all along pone Myr Rebouneny sas jbeen supposed to have discovered Gsreet, themselves on the Barbary Coast, out Justice Davis said he would pass towards the North Beach of ntences next Monday morning at prancisco, where since the thyace ss 10.30 o'clock. ‘The trial of the other sailors and pirates and other adven- | defendants was fixed for May 18. turers have shivered their timbers and In addition to the nincteen individ- mmingied with shore mermaids In th. uals who pleaded guilty, thirteen cor- terpsichorean mazes. porations of the twenty-nine under! ut prehistoric Peru has the pa- indictment, most of them the con- pers to Missouri-ize its claim, and cerns with which indicted individuals the trouble has been all stirred up were connected, also entered pleas Of yy Charles W, Mead, Assistant Cura guilty. The corporations were: tor of the Department of Anthropol- Bell & Kilcullen, Inc., No, 1418 West ogy in the American Museum of Na- ‘arms Road; Builders’ Brick & Sup- tural History. On the ancient pottery ply Co., Inc.,, West Farms Road and | ang metal objects of art are found 172d Street; Candee, Smith & How- | decorations representing the devious land, foot Bast 26th Street; Murtha & styles of the dance—the jazz, the Schmohl Co., foot East 109th Street; |shimmy, the one-step and all the Noonan Building Material Co. Inc. | trots, 162d Street and Harlem River; Rufus | phere isn't any doubt of it, and Darrow's Son North Rive’ Empire Brick and instruments they used in the orches- Supply ¢ John P, Kane Co,, No. 103 Park Ave-| niente and sleepless nights, The in- nue. |struments picked up from the graves John A. Poilbrick & Bro, 97th/ang ruins of ancient Peru by arch- Street and Bust River; William A-! acologists include drums and cym- Inc. 79th treet and East River; | trumpets and the unmistakable an- Jova Brick Works, 49th Street and | cestor of the obo North River; Standard Building Sup- | oa." Santiuen adioa wore y Company, No. 608 West 147th| Even in those days the lad iets Janklets and wristlets. Bells and rat- were offered tles they were, and there was music ecial De WO AtS | wherever the wearer went, ‘The uku- fhoved for trial by former Juatice tad. |2ele of those fine old days and jazzy |ward A, McCall, Who became counsel nights was the “buayra puhura, |for the nineteen individuals in place | and if that doesn’t sound just like Jaz of Martin Conboy, who announced at TERETE IC a t court proceedings that he had wn from the cise. russa, | hecause of the wealth and political) ‘The huayra pubura we | power of some of the men involved, |¢nig is m pipe, Musica THLGtea BUR teentian i still popular with the Peruvian Indl- forts of the men and their friends to|ans. ‘The flute was a pipe in the old escape without prison sentences have |days, made of cane or bone and of spared no pains gourd carved in fantastic shape. In the recent trial of master |Some of them had holes in the lower rial stretched over a hy participation in]or urrel-top sh ht out, Justice | aeole al sharps hi: m to prise covered that the F their bitters in a bottle or a barre eae The famous double whistling jars | TUNNEL PROBLEM prove that the tumbleronicon wi p or barrel ton, pe, for th ve not ruvians carr }Dutin the c ful memb the scheme MwAvoy sentenc xe of wealthy and power- n't remember the tum was composed of a lot of tumblers 5 oie filled or half filled or quarter filled New York and Jersey Commissions | with water, the music being produced > . by running a baton or a Refer Expenditure Question Sh ane Hand oiee SHA. ¢ Ny a glasses, The whistl to Attomey General. twa Teulon ear the bottom t lowing the passage of water freely from onc to the other, rs of] Near the top of one Jar w Jersey Tun-| whistle, and if you shook both F the water n passing fr one tot ges other, wi fu ee air through the ent and the imusieal notes would be |penditures for improving approaches |the result. ‘The Huaneas, a very nus of the|Warlike tribe, madi r drumheads mt oof the skins of their enemies, and this music was more terribly than the jazn of to-d The bells lay for the Pertivian jazz orchestra were om Will be taken up at a [Made of copper with pebbles for Kes of the Decision to refer to the Attorney eral of New York w York m 1N nS are cmpow Ge the question a the New York nel Commias der their eh er to authorize ex Jto the Jersey City te proposed yehicular tunnel was reached at a meeting of the Comn sions in ey City The qu | fe Abia luppers, and attlos were ge- conference to be arranged with the |) .ted trom shelia, which were plentl. b | Attorne ral Paul Windels,| ful at the seashore or on the mount counsel for t | ow York Commis. }iin top Jed Ly Mr. Wir } But that the jazz and the shimmy 1 ndels, | | | | sion, and atte Deputy Attorn ral Emerson Richards of New Jersey, and Cor poration Counsel Jolin Milton of Jer | sey City n Agreement to place the matter be-|inents except the early closing on: fore the New Yor Attorney Genera us It is Known to-day Th police of wits reached aft ' nrchistoric daya, Hike the poliee of to the New. York re alwa p behind. tended that, eras aero expediency 1 equit Lexingten Avene Sob under which they acted did not erm Tied Up Five power them tom matic block rouches to t «et to work! caused plazas ¢ on the downtown Pats train service In the Lexinug ubway to-day Wh it of order all other were popular in th f Pera the pictures ve the Inte day rpsichorean reve ion in which day, ¥ of an au on Aven Negro Memi ice Kenerve Selzed as Slayer, Walter Ryan, negro member of th Police Reserves at the West 12 Street Station was arrested to-da the slayer of Swen Hans mate of the ster who was shot ar cording to he way at the signal got ally also displayed the danger solo ding to the officials of the Inter \ i heinka Inae Inon Inatend of Ine dope, yal ' ‘ to ciiatams Inspector men, he aald on in hia home last night. Hie wit red two shote wt him an an fired] sid he mistook the poison for med rOLurmy, Hie condition le not Pict rial Proof | MEN PLEAD GUILT ] That Jazz Originated In Land of Incas Daniel Darrow, spuyten{ Weird but Convincing’ De-| jon Avenue, Brooklyn; William H.| Made Centuries and Cen-| un | Te AME Rican Most Ont or NATORAL HISTORY, Send names, photographs if possible, with complete informa- tion of dates of birth, occupation or business of father. Send all replies to Family Editor, Evening World, Inc. 49th Street and giso there are designs of the jazz No. 108 Park Avenue; /tras of those days of the dolce far TWO FAMILIES WITH FI CHILDREN LEAD IN CONTEST Offspring All Born in New York and Living— Brooklyn Entrants at Top. The Family Editor of The offered a prize of $100 to the parents of the largest family FTEEN j Street, is also the mother of tweive Mate! Ww Lawn ey ure all Yankees, Mrs, Holes adds. 129 Avenue C, a tailor, submits the following Max, ftose nie, Nellie, Ida, World, who ha but | York and sul living, has recelved | born in New York,” many letters from To-day's Hst includes two families Sarah and Abraham. Hopkins, No, 298 8. 134th Street, writes he hax a fumily of ten William, — James, rd, Agnes, and two of ten children, Cornelius J, Morris, a grocer, Bast and Avenue 1Mth Street sin the John T. Hettrick | side, evidently for the use of t | of practice” group, pleas of | thumb, drums of prehistoric guilty won leniency from the eourt,|times were made of the skins Brooklyn, William, Margaret, in age from seyen ©) rene, Walt HUNT FOR 20,000 DRAFT DODGERS ON gion Will Aid in the Round-up of Slackers in‘New York District. are Sabina, Joseph, ilen, Cornelius jr, Her! jar even in those days, If you! eronicon, it | Francis, Agnes family of fifteen is en- by Mrs, Mary Anna ih palin | Her children ar two to twenty- officially reporte |the American Lesion will ald in th Jround-up, whieh will be un rection of Major Hl er the dis H. Pletcher, As- the Army elyed the official Corps Area, who rm ka to twenty | ist at Goven ing from elght w rs Island from W The list shows 160,-} throughout the entire and their names are to be} ‘The local Arthur, Charles, Eliz. Louisa and Dorothy > in this are ludes com act Anna, James, Patrick doubt. They had all the move | aad Jownh, Inland City, enters these children is that of M -| BEATEN, ROBBED OF $600, | nd Vnconscion Coney Intand, ohain valued at $75. Mra, H. A, Boles, No. 683 Kast sist fore Manhattan Nirniture Harry, Viola, ter, Mildrod, Charles Wail- reasa, fo, 119 sends In irge, Dorothy. nd Mary the 20,000 draft | in this dis- It is understood | sh | flicials 0,- | ‘This area in-| w Jersey and It Ig understood the lists will not be | publication for several) copies will then be hands of the nowspa- post-otfices, draft boards, Sta County She and United States Ata in Vacant Loe at b \ ret a gold watch and Ho waa a collector bOUve, M }at $10 par and $ {Street | hooks |Jonn TOINDICTED WITH GREGORY FIRM AS STOCK DEFRAUDERS use of Mails Charged in Sale of Securities of American Tire Corporation. Seventy stock brokers and thew agents are listed for pleading to# morrow in the Federal District Court before Judge Learned Hand in cone nection with an alleged stook fraud that resulted In the indictment tate yesterday of Durell, Gregory & Coy Tne, 72 Wall Street, and mem- sand agents of the corporation. ‘The stock of this corporation, which was organized under New York State lawa more than a year ago, is owned hy three brothers—Harvey N., Rhode H. and John M. Gregory. They had seventy representatives in different parts of the Fast. ‘The stock which they were selling was that of the American Corporation of Dela« ware, which is listed aa a $6,000,000 neern with $5,500,000 common stock 0,000 preferred stock: at $100 par. Harvey N. Gregory is in Ludlow nil where he was committed Saturday evening by Federal Judge A. N. Hand for contempt of court in that he refused to produce certain lists of the corporation that were subpoenaed by the Federal Grand Jury, His brothers are not tm jail. ‘Thetr efforts to obtain Harvey Gregory's release on bail have failed. The: indictment was returned om evidence submitted by Aassistane Unite tates Attorney Peter B, Olney and obtained by Post Office In- * tors Monvery and Doran and use of the malls to defraud. It alleges that Duroll, Gregory & Co, Inc., sought an option on the come | mon stock of the American Tire Core poration, paying an average of $2.98 per share and selling at $10 and more Per share, ‘They flooded the matla with literature, It Is charged, which placed the production of the tire fac- tory as 1,000 tires, 1,000 tubes and 10,000 feet of hose a day, Large dividends were soon to be paid, the literature is alleged to have. read, business was rapidly increasing, and the stock was soon to be Usted on the Exchange, thus Increasing ite value, Agents, the indictment charges, were pald largely out of the money they collected from prospective buy- ers, who in most cases paid $10 @ share for the stock, Defendants named in the indicte ment follow: Durrell Gregory & Co., I No, 78 Wall Street, Rhode H, Gregory, Johm M. Gregory, Harvey N, Gregory, Maue rice Hotchner, Nate Schwartz, Isidore B, Kohn, Albert de W. Blum, Conellus b. Roardan, Joseph Vincent Bailey, Arthur Lehman (also known as Arthur Lehmand), Paul H. Manton, Henry Friedenreich, also known ag Harry Frederichs, Sidney Smith, George Lapidus, Peter Saul, Martin Lederer, William Seaman, John O'Brien, Theodore Col- lins, Jerome Collins, A. Frank Wein- mas Lamedin, (also known ‘Thomas Lameday), Benjamin Marion, Henry Dalis, Barney Kar ¢, Charles Carlson, Harry Zime man. Kenneth Kingin, George Mayer, Harry Goldstone, Ralph Lombardy, Samuel M, Kinsler, Henry Niditeh (also known as Henry Netditch), Philp Burns, Edmond MeBrien, C hi. Moore and 8. M. Mintzer, (The. last two are alleged to have repre- sented the company with branch of« fices in Syracuse.) The first names of the following defendants are unknown to the Grand Jury and are described in the indlote ment as “John,” as follows: John Alderman, John. Benjamin, John CI » John Cohen, John Dougheny, John Fields, n Meyer, Shobrink, all of New Haven; John Barney of cuse, John Fos= ter, John Maxwe and John Mory of Buffalo; John Greenberg of Provie dence, ‘Join Gross, John Knight, Job Porter and John Sims of Springfield, Mass John Kraurty ¢ 41 Brooklyn, John of Newark, John MacRae and Reed of Boston; John Adame, Brown, John Fellerman, Jobo John Hoffman, John Kronen- John Leyden, John Rogers and Worrell, of New York City, LUCKY STRIKE | cigarette st on ee