The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1921, Page 1

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’o- Night's Weather—CLOUDY, FRESH WINDS, 99 Copyrtaht, 1 Cou! (The "New York World). N21, by The Press Publishing Entered an Second-Class Matter New York, Post Offlee, ». Fis STREET ! rio, EDITION _Cirealation Books ["Cireutation Rooks Open to AT”| to am” To-Morrow’s Weather—FAIR AND WARME! N.Y, TH SIDES READY TO YIELD N CHIEF DEMANDS 10 END v SHIPPING STRIKE, S REPORT -——> - to Take Less Than 15 Per 'CAN'T TELL WHICH nt. Pay Cut—Old Work- IS GRANDDAUGHTER, ing Agreement to Stand. WHICH GRANDMA! RENCES ON, Law in Chicage All Skirts Are f Parties at Washington Short, Says Police Chief. Parley — Owners’ Wage CHICAGO, May 6 ry | URFEW is doomed in this Body Meets Here. | © atty, and “sh ls oe the answer. * te. ohtef of Police Fitzmorris VASHTIN N. May 6<-There is| Wants to enforce the law com- era T ON: May Gr paste pelling children under sixteen to ag probability of an agreement! Pe ot nome before 10 P. M reached at a conference here] Rut the policemen say they afternoon which will end the} cannot enforce the law Ddecause rine strike. all skirts are so short they can’t tell the children from the grand- mothers, Chief Fitzmorris _ Scratching his Bessiy DE VALERNS PLEA strike is much r settlemen than ot 4 Board offici ® the final} | Sir Becretary of Labor Davis, Chair- Benson and representatives of marine engineers tried vainly un- ah early hour this morning to per- an agreement that all parties Ja accept. The night conference) finally adjourned without definite ion, with the understanding there wuld be a continuation of the dis- ion this afternoon. isa tll James Craig Could Not Accept Such a Basis and | Conference Ended ting hard qput ind again ons IBLIN, May 6—The conve: nd Eamon over the question of a republic for was the Ireland. It is stated De Valera in a jal of the conct lengthy appeal tried to win over Sir ir departn Jame the idea of a republic for the |whole of Treland, Sir James replied that no negotiations on such a basis ‘could occur and the interview termin- jy Its acceptance of the provisions ot the Government of Ireland Act and by Its undertaking toward them, t the pay of unlicensed Proposed 15 ALLEGED DRAFT ‘DODGERS’ LIST HERE INCREASED BY 23 “Writing Not Mi Mine,” Beauvais GUIDE WHO CALLS | Naines From Brooklyn and Queens Are Given Out by the War Department. ! OPINION BY DAUGHE RTY i Says No Liability, Because of issued by the War Department wit! be published in the Congressional Record, it was reported from Wash- ington. Representative Johnson, Re- Publican, a former service man, re- quested such pubilcation in the House of Representatives, and met with no opposition. The War has made public the text of an opinion by At- Department torney General Daugherty that no Nability, because of errors in the lists, will attach to the Government, War Department officals or selective draft officials, This, it was said, will prevent those unjustly accused from doing more than erase, so far as pos- sible through a presentation of facts, the stigma entailed by the publica- tion. Many inqgu! been received by the military authorities from men who said they served in the war but | have ernment netween Sir James Craig the matter of |e Valera is said in well informea|feared inclusion, through error, in he situat is - hed an impasse | future slacker lists. They were ad- y | @uarters to have reached an Impasse) \i4.4 to file Immediately with the Adjutant General in Washington the date covering their claims. No one on Governor's Island has authority to alter the lists forwarded by the War Department, An example of the inaccuracy of the slacker list is furnished by the vad conferred |) 4 there, case of Thomas C. McDonald of No. wich representa | "yr ene a explain the attituae| 1 Bast Sith Street, draft order No. r ice Uniont 1096, who was one of a number of [adopted by the Ulster Unionists At) voce whose names appeared in the their meeting in Belfast to-day, at a result of this and of the effo Kh thes decided to take, nojftst lst to protest against thelr in- Bederal Mediator Frederick Day via | n ; hich eh 2 clusion. McDonald reported at Gov- htative proposal, or more correct. | urther concess Ae la Hlowing |°7R0F Island, claiming service in the Ip sugcettion, for a basis of set- | Sir James nee i. nee ME} Navy throughout the war. He pro- de. It was this: Soe etn ew waving| duced Papers showing he enlisted in sed workers on ships | Yersation with ee ae alere ge May, 1917, and was honorably dis- paduction of $28, 4. COSUrT#d) and: Wistar. haxing’’s ¥| charged in 1919, He was given per- mission to return home on his own recognizance, pending investigation of official records in Washington average reduction Arising petit aH ponseaions n| Similar action was promised tn all would be $34.7 arther discussion will be entered) cases like McDonald's, The wisest tig’ would} nto. When the Parliament has been . ratio wou That : move, the authorities said, for any eed men establis d and the Council of Ire- —_———_ ae ws land constituted, there will be the! (Continued on Twenty-third Paxe)_ necessary constitutional link between ‘orthern and Southern Ireland,” Sir Jamea requested the n the forthcoming election to hurry ment stand —P MANAGERS N MEETING HERE MAY END STRIKE ued on Second Page.) ——>—___ BABE RUTH AGAIN HIT. (Con: Reiburn, candidates day he appeared by counsel, Michael EB. in the Third District Munict- N. Y. FOREIGN. BORN WHITE POPULATION TOTALS 1,989,216 ie This Is 35.4 Per Cent. of All in Thin Time He is Sued for Default City, Compared With 40.4 Ass on 8400 Note. Per Cent, i ss er Cent. in 1910. and W. A. Montgomery, Chalr. Babe Ruth the home run king is be- z b Committee atl ginning to achieve the penalties of a _ WASHINGTON, May ¢ fat income. Recently he was fined $25. HE foreign born white popu- in a traffic court for exceeding the lation of New York City speed limit with his autuomoblle. To-| was announced to-day by the Census Bureau as 1,989,216, or 35.4 per cent. of the total popula- pal Court and filed an anawer to a] tion as compared with 404 per sult, instituted April 20th, to recover cent. in 1910. from him the sum of $400 with Interest : , ly note to 100 H. Cohen in Chicago| bere with 479,481, Italians num- nday World 1 Sept. 18, 1920. bered 388,427; Irish, 202,833; Ger- “ a It appears that Cohen discounted the| mans, 193,558: Poles, 145,257, and note with Edwin P, Oakes a Chicago Austrians 447. automobile dealer, Oakes brought suit. swer denies algning certain stipuula- the instrument, (Racing Entries on Page 82) It was not paid and Ruth in his an- tions in the note and’ also refuses to recognize Oakes as the legal holder of Thirty nations were represented in New York the annouucement showed, exclusive of those from Canada and South America. The foreign born population increased in the aggregate 3.2 per cent. from 1910 to 1920, ‘Some One Will Pz | | ors, Will Attach to Goy- ernment Officials. | new names ‘trom Quee of alleged we issued to-day by artment with the re- that they be published, to add | t of men “reported by , draft auhtorities as deserters from the military service of the United States.” The slacker lists \ jand was Letter to irs. Stillman ‘‘Doctored,’’ Says Guide, | Who May Testify for Her Declares, Referring “Dearest Honey” M “DEAREST HONEY” | LETTER DOCTORED | to | ive. | BIG MONEY BEING SPENT | y for This,” He Exclaims—Denounces Peeper’s Testimony. By Fred K. Beauvais. tement Made in Montreat To-Ds need RS, STILLMAN no fear of being injured by any letters I wrote w they have been doctored 1 e last three years there has been plenty of time to do this Ry the time I get through reading thene alleged letters of mine I w be able to write love letters. Naturally as an employce of Mrs. Stillman [ wrote her letters, but they were purely of a business nature. The articles mentioned in | the published letter were sent on order of Mrs, Stiliman. I pur- chased them here in Montreal with money that was pnt on my expense account. Copyright, 1921, By The United Press. | MONTREAL, May 6.—"Where the devil did they get that?" red Beau- vats exclaimed to-day when shown a copy of the alleged “Dearest Honey” letter, which he is charged with writ ing to Mrs, James A. Stillman. Beauvais's face turned scarlet with Anger as he read the all ged lett informed by The United Press correspondent that it had been published in New York as having been used in the Stillman divorce hearing. “IT never addressed Mrs, Stillman in FRED BEAUVAIS, Indian Guide. (Copyrigtit The Nema) BABY GUY COUNSEL AIMS TO EXPUNGE LETTER OF GUIDE such terms,” the alleged co-respond- ent asserted, after a moment. “Some one has doctored a letter of mine, but ——-— this writing ts not mine, They have made a great love letter writer out of m Buffalo Osteopath “Says Mrs. Stillman Named Beauvais as Child's Father. © me one will pay for this,” Beau- vais sald. “So nruch money is being] spent on this case that one can ex- pect almost anything. He denied passages of tho letter which represented him as having sent gifts to Guy Stillman, the child whose father he {s alleged to be. “{ sent all the articles mentioned in this letter, as I was ordered to do, as an employee of the Stillmans,” he asserted. All his stotciam vanished when he came to that portion of the letter In which he was made to refer to the Joys of parenthood. His face became Lawyers on both aldes of the Still- man divorce case and John B Mack, special guardian of the legal rights of two-year-old Guy Stillman, were occupied to-day in seeking to hold their ground in the new controversy which arose yesterday over the right of the former Prosident of the City National Bank to use Dr. Hugh Rus- sell, an osteopathic physician, as a witness as to admissions made to him by Mrs, Stillman, a patient. Nicoll, Anable, Fuller & Sullivan, in pele me pe on Brpen'a 2° \for Mr. Stillman, and their associate Foner (sbie 2) soe counsel, Col, William Rand jr., made "T deny all those gatements,” ne | arene at et thet the seat of cried, hoarse with emotion. "I wish | — . A secrecy is removed from confidences I could go to New York. I would tell le ] to @ physician when it affects ail- them the truth,” he declared, ments or matters with regard to! “Welt, why don't you go?” the | Viicn tne physician is not asked to correspondent asked, . give medical advice or treatment, “I havent been asked,” Beauvals| iy chat Mrs, Stillman called on Dr. | retorted, “At present I can't spare Russell to be treated for ‘Vvour~ the tlme from my business. But this| io and not regarding the exmects is getting serious and T may go yet. 1 arg haat W fed birth of a child. Mra, Stillman’s Up to the present there has been ROlhtwyery vainly trled to Make the syidense: Infrecices thatthe ®l paint that the “nervousness” might cnnis ureratee a have been incidental to the other| “My brother Arthur will tel! them |v" 06 | the truth, and rey Wome beable %91 It was admitted that tf Dr, Rus PRaKS = Dis AOry vatiy exercised |8t!!'® testimony remained on the rec- ee eee hace teen (fd uncontradicted and without a eet iiretgiln lt. hl have been | showing that Mr. Stillman knew of | tola by witnesses from Grand Anse | n is ‘ |this “confession” and condoned tt, at the hearing in New York, aa re- ‘ earn sapere which he haa {Mra Stillman's only recourse is to RAUL 1B: NSMAP BESTS Oe |press the charges against her bus- | seen, “George Adams, who {s quoted as having said he saw me in Mrs. Still- | man's room with her, was not on the Stillman farm at the time he testified he peeked through a hole in the cur- |band in which Mrs, Florence Leeds | has been named, thereby establishing that he 1s disqualified to seek a Ji- vorce. | The ground for Dr. Ru tain,” Beauvais declared, “Adams ell's teatt~ was there only when I was alone Mony was preparrd Sy Chaites R. with my own father, mother and Kellar, a clerk at the (roquois Hotel brothera. The Cullmans were In in Buffalo, who first took the stand Beauvais said that the Kast und testified that Mrs, Stillman and Street address, given on the letter. her danghter, Anne Iman, now head of the letter as published, was nineteen, registered at the Lroquuis hot correct. . " "In 1919," he said, “the Stillman (0 Avril 18, 191 , and remained a family was living at 270 Park Avenue, | Week. (pUl April 26, | and moved from the 72d Street house | Dr. ttussell was then sworn, The shortly after the death of Mr, \ (Continued on man, the elder, “That was in the spring of 1918. The family and I went to Quebec for the , THE WORLD TRAVEL BUREAU. summer and returned to New York in QOS, "pli, (Word Bud a baa ee the fall, taking up residemee in the a vaagace pocete pee, toy pen ey ad Park Avenue house,” Be - ei Stili- a Page Twenty-Nine,) | Flutzky of No, 69 Hast \the wo CONFERENCES NOW ON TO END SHII SHIPPING STRIKE MOTOR DRAGS COP FOR BLOCK AFTER GIRL IS RUN OVER Vehicie Dashes Past Policeman | Barry, Who Gives Chase in Another Mi chine. JUMPS TO SPE 4 JING CAR Misses and Chain Pulls Him Along Street Until Driver Is Placed Under Arrest. Just after a big motor truck downtown Inui rushed past alice man David Barry, helping sehoot children at Second. Avenue and Street, at noon, to-day, a woman ran |to the pollceman and told him the |truck driver was running away after running down a little girl aath Street. Barry Jumped into the aute- mobile of William Werner of No, 2 ! West 45th Street. which wan coming ‘wptown and ordered him to turn bout jand chase the truck ‘The pursuers overhauled the truck 20th Street, ‘The driver, Irving 100th Street, according to a statement nade after- ward by Barry, refused to stop when ordered, laughed and increased his speed, Barry made a flying leap fot tailboard of the truck, missed It, caught at a dragging chain. He was thrown heavily to the street. His sleeve was tangled in the chain and he was dragged along the car track partly stunned. At 19h Street Policeman whose attention waa Hed b the yells of persons on tho sidewalk, ran out and stood In front of the truck, Flutzky stopped. He was taken to st 2d Street Station, charged with felonious assault on May White, eleven years old, of No. 410 Avenue, the child he had knocked who told the police he hud laughed after seeing her fall und had not slowed hia car. Policeman Barry, who was severely bruised and scratched, and the little girl, who was badly cut and strained, were attended by Dr. Stokes of Bel! vue Hospital oo BARBER’S CHECK SHAVED BY COURT Magistrate Tobias Cuts a Dollar From One Given to Patrolman for $2.10, of the reasons Patrolman James at the put Curtin, down, J. Shanley of the Fitth Street Station 4 80 spick and span is that its a barber shop often, but he to-day In the Yorkville Court Magistrate Toblas against th $2.10 cheek presented to him in the shop rlatore at No. 121 Hast wel $1 ita 262.7% Antoine and 4 to five 116 Wow 1, 20 to 1 and 10 to 1, second ; Service Btar, 111 (Johnson), Nite 1, § to tw 1, third. Time, 1.08 4-5. 1 Limerty Girl, Old” Dad, | Ast Frances Frizlet Tout ‘O'R, and Chincoteague also ran, Second | | | | t, FRANCE 1S MOBILIZING ARMY TO-DAY FOR RUHR ADVANCE: ALLIED NAVIES READY 10 ACT ‘Swift Land and Sea Action Against Germany to Follow Any Attempt to Evade Ultimatum Terms—U. S. Cabinet Takes Up Request to Join Council. PARIS, May 6,—France to-day began mobilizing a million soldiers to nvade Germany at the slightest evasion of the Allied terms. eee a HARDING TAKES UP ALLIES’ INVITATION WITH HIS CABINET “If any one of the obligations are evaded in any way we will invadi Premier Briand declared as he wen into conference with President Mil- lerand and the Cabinet to complete fina! arrangements No Indication as to Decision on} Aiea demands, Request to Join in Entente's Councils. WASHINGTON, May 6.—Preaident Harding and his Cabinet considered to-day the Invitation from the Allied to enforce the France already the Rhine, Briand ‘announced that even if Ge many accepts the ultimatum, the clas of 1919, just called to the colors, wii has 132,000 men vo» not be demobilized until the youn Supreme Council that the United) men of the 1921 clasx have been Staten send representatives to sit! trained to replace ft, The 1921 clnss with the council, the Conference of| went to its training camps two weeks Ambassadors and the Reparations! ago, Commission. Under prosent§ arrangements & As the Cabinet assembled there was no tndication of the decision which force of 150,000 men will con. firm, army of invas on vitute the would be taken, officials refusing to} If it moves inte the Ruhr Valley it discuss the ete, will take with It 200 tanks, several JES hundred armore ars and twenty id batte: cavalry U.S. LOST $80,000,000, SAYS J. A. FARRELL! motor! Large forees an jing troops are held in Jiness at ac | Duaseldortt President of Steel Trust Believes! “i. strict account! ete es Our Merchant Fleet Should | manded of Germany was shown n Have Been Sold in 1918. | thin atatement by Premier Briand: | “Our Ambassador at Berlin bas been Instructed to notify Germany that she must hand over to us thousands and thousands of rifles and cannons. Cer- tain forts and hundreds of machine guna have not been delivered to us ag yet. Germany also must start de CLEVELAND, May 6—In an ad- dress on “American maritime policy” at the National Foreign Trade Coun-} ct] convention to-day, Jamea A. Far- rell, of New York, chairman of the council and president of the United Staten Steel Corporation, told thelr oiuising the Havarlan Armas delegates the future of American ey ee ee ee ane things th, merchant marine development, in at a se things the Penaltion will be apptied, “Germany must pay without the money due us under the t It is Impossible to hesit ‘There are the facts stake, that the Government lost §800,- 09,000 by not selling it» merchant fleet when the armistice was signed, sug- grated an international conference of | maritime nations to stabilize the shiD-| ot pay we enter the Ruhr ping situation, recommended the| «1¢ any of the obligations are ohartering of the Government feet to| evaded in any way whutever we shall individuals, either on a bare boat] occupy German territory. It is not basis or on time cargoes and advo-| words we want but money. It ts not cated a revision of American shipping |py written promises but action that laws, | we will judge Germany now,” VIVIANI SEES BREST, May 6.--Brest, the Frenon port used by American troops duri she does U, Ss. IN LEAGUE | the World War, Ma day bust sd once WHEN AMENDED |" Wattor an hiten vse werent! <p aan and small craft conditioning Aghting sonia saia| He Cannot Believe We Can Keep] vessels tor the ponsible J ey to Shanle sine of | Out of the Regeneration German inerts the check t out. | 4 At Toulon there was gre tivity I've never of the World. |The cruiser Provence was ordered work.” PARIS, May 6—Ielief that the | prepared to leave at a m vs But, it was a mud m | United States could not stand notice and (wo other cruisers werd pina srsdel bcheapblh cet | anide “from the work of world re- | ordered into fighting trim to join the ma Reue 50 ee . nes ale generation” after the League of | fleet here. why you have Md to give | Nations covenant had been dras- LONDON, May 6.—Hrt s battle u , nt man a mud massage. H teally amended, was expressed | squadrons were ready action joran't look to be x rhinoceros, You ra Ser eS hia Ate L see sale| to-day by Rene Viviani, based on | against Germany to-day 20 mvc off in| impressions formed by his rece Preliminaries w uhead with sa- a ae ‘ oy visit to the United States. crecy It was understood the flewt to stup ‘The League of National will, | would contribute to a naval demon —_> - by the Goptember mecting of the | stration at German ports, out that a0 JAMAICA RESULTS. Assembly, be relieved of its cum- | blockade would be attempted pbecbalib haces bersome, objectionable features —>— FIRST RACE—/The Inaugural; for] through the amendment of the three ide: purse $1,263.16: five snipe re olde; nurse, SUSEVTEL ave | covenant. It will become rid ot | FRENCH RESENT (Zostler), 9 10 5,7 10 10 at v1 'frat:| the articles which make y ap- | FAILURE TO ORDER STAIR AT a Inn i0,'| pear like a superstate ren mst tn S (Riu'| this in done 1 cannot wa | INVASION AT ONCE Te tlane ot Ten Rittons,| OAation tke the United see | Runatrix, | Ma ue tell, No] can keep of from the work of | Paris Officials, However, E t ane Potur also ran ° ” — etbedl =e ND t by works rege - ONT nree-vea to Yield to De- Germany 4.05, mands of Allies, corse: e's} PARIS, May 6—The ultimatum Meee’ |from the Allicy to the German Goy- ernment is in Berlin and an accept- ance is expected hete, The doeu 4 our ke ’ ‘ H ’ i z ! ‘ » | ' ' ’ ' } | i | —

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