The evening world. Newspaper, September 26, 1921, Page 3

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WONDER GROWS IN WALL ST. OVER RYAN-ENRIGHT DEAL —INPOLICE BUDGET Explanations So Far Made Only Increase the Puzzle for Brokers. QUERIES MANY ASKED. Was It Plain Stock Transac- tion or New Way of Un- derwriting an Enterprise? The amazewont of Wall Street at the details, 7 between Alles E. which che stoc A. R; and Richard right, Police Commisstoner, by the latter profited to the athount of $12,088, has been increased by statements advanced by Ryan ‘ansaction iends of which purport to explain the transaction. A transcript of the ledger of Allan A. Ryan & Co, shows that the latter firm on April 17, 1919, purchased for the account of Enright 5,000 shares of Morton Petroleum ut $20 , and for of this weed of stoc the execution a commission ight has testified committee that and Ryan had a conversation during the latter part of 1918 regarding a possible stock transaction, he had no knowledge that he had been com- -Mitted inethe market in Morton Pe- troleum to the extent of 5,000 shares I the transaction had been com- by the sale of these shares nd he had received the check repre- enting profits. before the though he Wall Street finds great cause for wmazement in the rtion now being made by friends of Ryan that the stock was not purchased in the open market, but that Bnright was made a member of the underwriting syndicate being formed by Ryan at $? a share while the stock was being actively traded in in the open market bove $4 a share. There are many details connected with this amazing transaction regard- ng which Wall Street authorities on syndicates and underwritings would have information. Points which are proving puzzles are: like to (1) Why is it that, if Rnright | ENRIGHT PLEADS FOR BIG INCREASE Jump of Nearly | Over $28,000,000 Allowed ; Last Year. ! Police | peared before the Board of Commissioner Enifgut" ap- imute 2udget Committee in City Hall to-day and asked that he be granted $1,859,- 141.26 more to run his de |19 artment in than he was allowed in the 121 De- is tary ‘budget. The cost of the Police partment during the current yea $28,849,407.64, ‘The Enright bud request for 1#22 amounts to - 548.90, The examiners who have gone over the police budget Nave, in cordance with th yea “polley economy, refused salary crease and in force fut, to use the language of Mayor HyTan to-day, this action is only ten- tativt, and is for the purpose of get- ling the requests and the cuts print- ed. If the ions of examiners are followed there wiil no new and new Jobs or salary inereases. Police Commisstoner said wanted 1,587 new patrolmen for 1922, and that 500 of these alone would be for the enforcement of the State Pro- ditton Law. The Commissioner said he really ought to have 1,000 men do- ing nothing but Prohibition work. He might struggle along with 500. He also asked for 200 second grade detectives with the salaries of ser- geants. The present salary of a first grade patrolman 1s $2,280. The sal- ary of a sergeant is $2,750. ‘The re- of the 1" of in- every in the recommenda the be civil policemen no he quest Commissioner was, therefore, for an increase of $470 in the pay of the new appointees he seeks. It would add $94,000 annually to the appropriation. Referring to the traffic situation, the Commissioner said 191 new men are wanted for existing traffic posts and that he contemplated 133 new traffic posts. He declared that last year 700 persons were killed by auto- mobiles and that there has been a 29 per cent, increase in the number of autoinobiles in this city, bringing the total in Greater N York to 500,000. Commissionc: ants wth which to obtain ev t bition violators and to t svid evidence when i vas be tained. “The entire police force is to $5,000,000] THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1921, First and Second Prize Winners In Jackson Heights Baby Parade | PAOL HAVENS TEIN THEO DO = UNDERWOOD nue ONDERN OSS PANT PRESIDENT OPENS FEDERAL DEBATE ON UNEMPLOYMENT: SAYS ALL WORLD S WATCHING inne Present Stagnation a Natural NO “SIR” WALTER Aftermath of World Wa:,, STUFF FOR THIS He Says, and Affects the) PLAIN CITIZEN U.S. Least of All. |Somebody Played Prank on Mr, Pouttney That Got Him Honors at Pier. WASHINGTON, Sept. | tional Unemployment | which the Administration hopes will! j,4 Lorraine of the French Line ar- evolve means of putting the Na-| rived to-day and reported that she tion's Involuntary idle back to work, | escaped the tgrrific storm that was} y | encountered by the big liners getting in on aturday, A representative of the line w -The Na- Conference, As was formally opened here to-day b: President Harding. Addressing the | s at economic | half hundred industrial, the pier and greeted one of the pas- r e: c rT e con- | Sengers as r Walter” and wanted and labor leaders comprising the con- | sengers te “Sir Walter’ and wanted ference, the President described the | could do for “Sir Walter's" comfort. sir Walter CRAIG TRIES TO END | RIOTS IN BELFAST; ~ SDEAD, 40 HURT | U er Premier Will Organize Special Police in Parts of . North Ireland. FAST, Press).—Sir James Craig, the Ulster Sept. 26 (Associated | Premier, after a conference here with tie military and police this afternoon, «tnounced that it had been decided | to mobilize special constabulary in] certain parts of Northern Ireland for | the maihtenance of crder BPLFAST, Press).—Belfast was quiet this morn- | ed | Sept. 26 (Associa ing, a half dozen shots fired on the | Newtuwnard road being the only out- ward indications of the excited feel- the distutbances of | | Ing aroused by Sunday night, in which several bombs were thrown, three being killed during the rioting persons und some twoscore wounded Fears were expressed, however, that, there would be action In reprisal for] the bomb throwing and the resulting deaths unless the military took vig- orous action’ to suppress disorderly tendencies. The fnilitary during the morning was engaged in erecting barbed wire and sandbag barricades in the Bally- macarrett district. Pickets were posted at the danger points. Little work apparently was being done in the district. Later in the morning a shop assjst- ant was shot through the jaw in My Lady's Road, in East Belfast, by one of a crowd which, disptdsed after the shooting without the culprit having been apprehended, A gang of men working on the new football ground in Queen's Island was attacked and three of the workers were badly beaten, BELFAST, Sept. 26 (United Press). —Sporadic fighting between Catholic and ‘Protestant mobs continued throughout the night, and early to- day the military were still trying to disperse the battling factions. The "Riot Act” was read in Bel- fast’s disturbed areas this afternoon 30 LOST FISHERMEN TOWED HOME AFTER NIGHT OF EXPOSURE Engine on Their Smack Broke Down and They Shipped a Lot of the Seas. Thirty-five fishermey who went out from Stapleton, 8. I, at 7 o'clock yes- terday in John Heney's smack, Myrtle, towed into Tompkins- ville at 1'o'clock this afternoon after the were an experience that none of them will for ¥ had been searching in vain for the rot. several hours the maring police smack, and some feared that it had been lost in last night's storm. Loulse uff, daughter of Louls Stuff, of No, 138 Canal Street, Stapleton, gave the | alarm early this morning, saying her | father certainly would have tele- Phoned if the boat had landed any- where ‘ It Stuff who told the story when the boat did come in, “We were starting back yesterday afternoon,” he sald, “after eating all our provisions. At 4.30 something went wrong with the engine and we was couldn't fix it. Darkness and the storm overtook us and we were driven out beyond Sandy Hook. ‘Our light—a lantern—failed to catch the eye of anybody on passing stl We shipped a great deal of water and we were kept busy alf night, some of us balling, otae~s work - ing on the engine. At 4 v'clock this morning the engine was working again, but again it got out of order when we were near Sandy Hook, we anchored. We lad tried to anchor before and fatied to hold on, but this time we succeeded. “The worst of the expertence was the lack of food.” All through the morning the fleet of searching boats was augmented at intervals, and this afternoon just be- fore the arrival of the Myrtle the Coast Guard sent out the cutter tresham, which was afterward re- called by wireless. The Myrtle was towed in by a motorboat from Sea- bright, N. J. Seca ees Stevens Institute Op Stevens Institute of Technology opened in Hoboken to-day with an enrollment os 790 students. Thirty would-be fresh+ BLUEBEARD TRIAL OF WOMAN OPENS: ~- HUSBAND IN COUR | ' > He Sits at Side of Mrs. South ard, Accused of Slaying His with the murder of her fourth hus- band, Edward F. Meyer, opened to- day, The State alleges she also pol- | soned three previous husbands—Robert |. Dooley. of Twin Falls, William | McHuffie of Hardin, Mont, and Har- lin C. Lewis of Denver and Billings, Mont., and also poisoned the t | year-old baby of her flest husband ind her brother-in-law, Falward Dooley A special yenire of seventy tales- men has been called and it is not be Heved the jury would be completed before Thursday. ‘The State has swb- poenacd 137 witnesses and tho de fense will, call than fitty. Mrs. Southard charged with poisoning Meyer with arsenic obtained from poison fly- paper a month after they were mar- ried on Aug, 10, 1920, In order to col- lect $10,000 life insurance which he is said to have taken-out at her re- quest. The insurance companies re- fused payment, Mrs. Southard dis- appeared and later that year mi ried Paul Vincent Southard, a petty officer in the navy, in Los Angeles. At tho time of her arrest, Mrs. Southard expressed the belief that she was a “typhoid carrier,” two of her husbands, a brother-in-law and her baby having died of that dis- ease, according to the death certifi- it is believed, more is specifically cates, By the defendant's side when the trial opened were her husband, who had obtained # furlough, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs, W. J. True- blood, who live on a ranch near Twin Falls; . —— Newark Favors “Buyers! Week.” ewark business men are preparing to carry out plans for a “Buyers' Week,” it was stated to-day by Mayor Archibald of that city. He said he had conferred with Gov. Edwards and had found him keenly interested tn enlisting co-opera~ tion among business men of the entire a nl HUMAN RACE TO BE “FAIR CRABAPPLES, f BUT NOT PIPPINS” | a ve |Prof. Binder Makes Sad Predige 09 | tion Before Eugenie | Congress. j | “Pair crabapples of the human) spec but very few pippins,” is. the prospect held out by Prot. Rudolph M. Binder of New Yor! | University, unless the mentally and physically unfit are made fit ¢| Predecessor for Itistiratice. | the fire species /peRmeea | second Eugenié Congress in the TWIN FALS, Ida. Sept. 26—Trial| American Museum of Natural of the case of Mrs. Lydia Southard,| History to-day, predicted an over- alleged “Female Bluebeard,” charged| W5¢!ming revolution if the @u-* thorities attempted to prevent the. unfit from marrying. § $ “Nearly 50 per cent. of the men examined in the draft were found to be unfit,” he pointed out, “and of %,000,000 school children in our country 15,000,000 suffer from de- fects.” The remedy, Prof. Binder said, ix to make the unfit fit. Eugenics alone cannot make a perfect race. He then derided the commonly” accepted belief that geniuses are® principally physical weaklings,” ind pointed to Sir Isaac Nwton, Herbert Spencer, Kant, Hegel, ” Shakespeare and ‘j A race," “means moxe many others. he stronge concluded, | Paterson t Robbed. | ‘The plant of the Hermann & Sona’ Silk Manufacturing Company at No. 376 Eat Street, Paterson, N. J., was robbetl between Saturday night and this morn ing of silks valued at $10. More than 2,000 yards of finished goods, ready r shipment, were passed through @ | front window and Ie nto a truck. | | (ees i | If it were possible to make a better dentifrice than would be making it. COLGATE'S a canis Eitan Ae ee men me ee DT , 4 “Where do you get that for the first time. Reinforcements State. Mayor Archibald ts to confer to- Mecca ay ee SOI GFs Dla) extenta atten Brohibts | Peary ee reer gee | gtuntor asked the passenger, who Wa8| were rushed to the Ulster capital and| men were refused admission because of [ay with Mayor Hylan and Jesse 1 RIBBON DENTAL CREAM ng syndicate, he as able to be- tion violators,” he s h yar e throughou he | Walter Poultney of jaltimore, a re- a! & ey Co., C! ‘ y acne omaver Mi Ay e a | her aru intone gnboriced ue ee gnene ped Mired, mel chante marine the’ last lap| the military and police redoubled | jack of accommodations, while forty Birausiot AH PRE Large Size a5¢ + Medium Size 10¢ ‘A time?” PF 111,000 men in the Police Department,” | Vord ; of his thirty-elghth round trip. It| their ‘efforts to check the sporadic| others wore rejected for’ insufficient tne commiting ak Kem © Ore basineas men Pitious time? suid Alder President La Guat-| “Fundamentally sound, financially then developed that some joker friend | Wtpurats of fighting, whlch, con. | preparation, white fs formulating p , 4 (2) If Enright actually was a | dia Ae percentage of those ar-| strong, industrially unimpaired, com- as Mr. Poultney had ae ed Ge Tuned ‘This is Stevens's fifty-first year. wide “Buyers' Week. } member of the underwriting ed by the po'tce are indicted? ‘ : ship t ter Poultney, aide 5 j syndicate, why was he charged a t it less than 20 per cent?” mer olet ys eee eae pele to the gland, was aboard| Volleys of revolver anc rifle fire,| | eamieion oo lee O The Police Commissioner admitted | Unafraid,” the President ass incog about among | poured down York Street by opposing i Semi nvanicne of for ‘the that the percentage was very smali.| “there ought to be work for every- the pi relessed to the gunmen shortly after midnight, 5 PURCHA of the stock? This tp And doesn't a Grand Jury here; body in the United States who ae Be SO aL TRY brought out the armored cars, and ri ; in se is considered most un- i ‘ow eee Bent OLtibee Hiquor | oiooses to work, U Theodore Seydel of Brussels, peated bursts of machine gun fire usual, and it is suid that if the S ruraY ey are throw-| ‘I would have lttle enthusiasm for’ here to visit. relatives. sald” the avis oa Ni ’ Rae t is true that they are throw 5 the] cleared the battle area of rioters, No explanations advanced by the | ing them out.” admitted Enright any proposed relief which secks either American shoe was sweeping over | © PRA) THO CROWN forGeE Late Che friends of Ryan are correct, an The Commissioner next took up| paitiation or tonic from the public Europe, and the British in order to] sooner had Tees P| extraordinary precedent was es- questio! pernaly aval AREY and Treasury.” aoe at vas had adopted the] scene (han the mobs again came to-| Se Ehede aie acne recommended that the Chief Inspec- | 74 i t rerica ‘ie : F gether. tablished when members of an tor ho raised trom $7,500 a year to| ‘Che President's uddress follows: F, J. Erwin, Secretary to Supreme GH GH cre aan Ren underwriting syndicate were | $10,000; that the Chief Clerk be in-| “I hernnya i You Court Justice MeCook, says Germany| A li inter ; Heese BOON andlia cieauee cf ots Geen tee lie lathe piace to’ go gore aood time onthe death of four. persons. and the charged a commission Pretec cert pea tits co gence) BBall in: advancelot youn labors tholgrafic lure pucenolsa) guia econ HInE/On| (the Heald sof foun petsones and. the j OF) Did’ the (shech ot eee Te Tate Te an Ooe Mocco tee eee| Wide Gf the, Govarntent for your Gente a Heine va erat; erie Ganduee | WoumUne Be ee peace etna elven Mnrigie represent (he prot i orca 1 “| service to the Nati erhaps it is with a few friends and wine cost him | se aga Warsase) lea ania Wanas i its of Enright as a member of | “When item of eighteen police| not too much to say—a service to the ONly $8.48, United States money learned to-day. bomb fel oa ° ] the underwriting syndicate? | Surgeons at $4,400 a year was reached | world, Not so very long since I was Di OER Catitolic mob, but failed to explode. ar S ere in i (4) Why fs it that the state. Aleman le cae A idle | receiving the call of a distinguishea TO DECIDE IN FORTNIGHT "The youngster BAUELLDSLY pleked {t ’ i Fie renders sBorient sald) aot ‘fire every one of the eighteen| foreigner, and in the course of our QN GREAT RAILROAD STRIKE. | & 224 threw tt across the street inte ‘s u show the expenses of the syndi- ons I will vote for. sé in-| conversation he alluded to the con- _ the opposing faction, when it burst | Beato (ress Mhes Cenanleslenee that} ference which Is met this ‘morning ‘Trainmen’s OMetain Gather in Chie] with deadly results, ‘ | rea < J e O a Ins POE ARs Cor Re | surgeons were needed to enforce dis-|4Nd sald: ‘Mr. President, our people cage to Count 150,000 Ballots. Women on both sides fought with ' byndicate a holde cipline, and that tf policemen were|are deeply interested in the Amerl-, CHICAGO, Sept 6,—Whether nzied zeal, supplying men with am tock in that syndic | a bt hysi : tion and hurling bolts and bottl : s 2 es of stock syndica jpermitted to obtain physicians’ cer- | can conference on unemployment be- general s shall be called by | munition and hurling bolts and bottles E f S t BI k S t (3) Was tho syndicate which | tifleates from outelde sources much / cause our problem 1s akin to your s!x most powerful railroad unions isay| themselves. Sometimes during the vening Satins ac atins | underwrete Morton Bete wound He referred to attempts at legisla-|own, and your relief in the United, be decided within the next two weeks. night's fighting bands of women One of the newest weaves shown in a Fine imported quality of a pure deep Up prior to Ap iene only tion as applied to detectives, and he) States will be an added signal of| it was idle ted te-a8y os. amMelaecol | battled hand te hand complete and fascinating range of wanted black dye—ideal for street, afternoon and five days afte: < jclaimed that the! Albany lawmakers! nope trom America to us and other| th Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen| CORK, Sept. 26 (AAsociated Press), | raga ida A tected 5) ? | were Stic.” : pla ‘ abe OH gathered here to count the 150,000 : ental a . cks, s has the owner of ares, and | were “oo drastic”, if thelr plana| oe ne “are iike depressed gathered here t unt the 150.0901 _4 “party of eltizens are reported to | dinner and evening shades —36 in. wide toe ine aie rag he decreed that Was the averase price of | faid, the cost would be $1,000,000 a] “That remark of a distinguished | an SE NGIE Or eaulEa tes cape{ have been halted’ in Maccurtain | Also suitable for bridesmaids’ gowns. ee Ee ea te Ae neeeeicne | the stock of the syndicate $4.50 a | y ; foreigner emphasized our responsi-| ine wage cut instituted recently by the| Street and roughly treated by mem- Regularly 5.50 Regularly 3.50 share, the figure at Wick Ban | nove Dee rule cree tly steerngg| bility. If {t-be true that no citizen| United States Haliroad Labor Bos bers of the British constabulary. j ght’s holdings were disposed of? | CROWN hor : eon is without example to some one}, joni Monday oMcials The women of the party, terrified, (6) Assuming that Envight had Mihenihionre Ouran arrived At — aS Engineers, Order of fled from the scene. At the same become a member of the under- | the meeting a few minutes later than Continued on Ninth Page.) np Onn hour, according to reports, a police e e writing syndicate, why, as such, | the Mayor the latter tela tho stenog. de SA aging patrol of five men was accosted on St. was he charged a commission for | T@Pher to record the time of Curran’s © count Patrick's Bridge by a large patrol of h bl S : * Nits ARSE ERSee ree Stayor travels in a Patm neach |BOY OF 4 DISTURBS | | Pa car cas | BHiah pollon Washable Satins atin Crepe only by the * public trader replied Curran, referring 10 SENATE’S DIGNITY Have n over: | ‘The Republicans are alleged to have A silvery sheen plays over exquisite Supreme in the field of silks at this price for the sale of the k in the gh-powered ear, “where~ mene ae the wage Cut uesording to| been questioned and called “Irish stel colorings which range from palest H ‘ ! 1 market? ome, from Staten. Island Announce swine” and assaulted with batons and pa pr gael soft, lustrous quality in Black, Navy, Pa: | Wall Street is very curious to know |!" one of the city's ferryboats. Strolls Into Chamber and Greets ——- revolver butts. One man was stabbed an to the. gerne balk Liss d Blue, Henna, Brown, etc.—40 inches wide. An ] the contents of the books of the unde JUSTICE CROPSE Members Until Pounced on ASKS $100,000 FOR LOSS with a bayonet. Fo fa " aia gel : ae offering in keeping with other exceptional writing syndicate, so that it may Ryeior ren par OF HIS WIFE’S LOVE! The City Counctt nas decided to or lingerie and dresses je simpler values now being featured in this dept. finally be determined i¢ the syndicate, WILL NOT MODIFY PLE DONS. , forward to the Irish Government in| type. Regularly 2.50 init Was conducted without the expense | aerial th The Bicening World Accountant Sues Director of Brook-| Dublin a statement from the Com- | invariably borne by such syndicates, | BUS INJUNCTION) wasurs ITON, Sept. 36.—Ward len Tacs ania | mandant at Spike Island Temarding and in order that many other inys- hasan BUBB isetehe GUE AAI Od BE WANE | oe eing tine kamuual Gelanania ale ile alleged a0" oF the. Seah terkeus details of the tra tions cf; Supreme Court Justice Cropsey in | S48 Cit Mou amewhal disturbed the of the Jennings Lace Works of| ment of Sinn Fein nterned there, e . the syndicate, including Enright’s par-| Hicollyn to-day received a petitioa|“iafity of the United States Senate urth Street, Brooklyn,| According to statement, In- ticipation, might be 1 up. | signed by 5,000 residents of isenson- when, without ceremony or} affections of his wife,|terned men who were severely dis- Le “een hurst and Bath Braeh asking him to Previous announcement, he calmly | Benjamin Simons tn accountant, lined for singing ip thet huts at L BAND WA maaitsinlainiunclinnteeserscuine rel walked\ down the contra'aiala’ ovhtaullamrabauliinauommaenenen Can inchee comumeateatuein Values 5,000 f Col dc - TOLD HUSBAND WAS DEAD | site ayncton rune | ma eee re erat ca, eM : ards of Colored Crepes De > e fo! 2IP ace: With his hat on his head, the tittle | ewis, No. 59 Court Strect, Brooklyn! upon several armed soldiers beat th e elle jee Berek Anus tos: Foe LBeIF acai r Fay leokedarmund In childish wonder, | Simons says he was married’ on Sept, 2 feo aaed’ arent with cide: cue and Evenin Cre es Canton Cre e Mra. Graham's Answer to MeCfel-| rhe petition was presented by a| While Senators listening to the read- | when ‘Suligman be wifte, including an] Sta several of them with bay- : Innd for Final Divorce: | committee headed by John J. Gorman, |!ne of the Revenue bill looked sur-| automobile, Hoke up thiir home’ ” 'lonets. The soldiers stripped the huts Every shade on fashion’s color card is Brown, Navy and Black heavy Canton In an affidavit filed to-day with Su-/4 peal estate operator in Bath Beach, | Prised. As he surveyed the august |yiel and lives with his wite and two] Of all beds, tables and other con- ead ‘in this sahenat Crepes. Fashion has placed her stamp of ps avegani | Hf . - ney children at No. 298 West 90th Stree fences, The ne: a) » Ins - Te ee oR tEaM Maa {Phe Jurist was told that his injunc-|Company into which he had unwit-|childien at No. 28) Weat doth Street.| ventences, The n BE ONES IBS A TERTSRENGG I. MMA COROPESEDRYS SHON approval upon them, therefore, to be really eee ee GUANA” tion had stopped the operation of the] tiply strayed, the little fellow in- | Nas a ved with teva] alueed (to. Barada on ment of silk Crepe de Chene —40 inches smart one must have a Canton Crepe Wiss whew rat husbinds Cagmean D, bits tine from Ray Kighth Street and | toduced himself to Sextors Kenyon, | eneral dental ut Hie chuarken net Np by locked the doors of tle huts “ : Frock made of this material, 5 MoClelland, ha applied for a final de. Cropaey Avenue to Sth Street and| Hitchcock and ojhers, who smiled as| tM men countered by tak- wide, a : 7 foClelland, has applied for atin SEE eee nia eatin asearkeauer | Giilaahenl waviount iin We jin ‘nthe doors and burning them Regularly 2.00 Regularly 5.50 sso: of lvores, allogea tht at the: time 1 Seni eae. pale tel ‘]the heavy responsibility of his Jor, |LEDOUX IN WASHINGTON | nerwise wrecking the huts ah arried sham she believe hat tine operated in hat section pped q if IN DC Sept. 26. ’rime inis- " M and had committed s and qt midnight and never at any time Baunond PD AY AUD: MA eweaE LRG TO MEET THE PRESIDENT. | ter nioya George will send the Bit: 1 i that she was free to marry Graham, ! vag adequate in gor he needs o¢{ im out of the chambor by the near- | ee {sh Government's answer to the latest 4 | Garrohorutes iis wife, who is the mothe i be aie SREROIYINE TRO Rede OE en noe | wan In| not from Eamon De ny ales a Ivish e i e ; or a fifteen-months-old ba | the residents, Seren | ea thar republican leader, on Wednesday, it| i Mrs. Graham says in ner dep Justice Cropsey told the comm‘ttee he child's mother, Mrs, Boyd Hoo- | Uarmpl Gia arise tere ic das bi ta ia) Hat prior to her martinge to Gr t would be impossible to madity nin] Yer, Was relieved when her missing! wasnt Urbain | _ Fe Oshkosh on May 2% 1919, she. mi injunction, He said that the Hoava| Son rejoined her in the Capitol cor j aie + em eRe Investigation to learn whore McClelland 'njur 4 she ght to i ! ae) Out a ark: Clabs 9 BI ri id her of Estimate should have granted tne and sought to ap M begat ich td Mae CENA! gruet |r out ae’ a earance of Si emnants MaReielland in tis divorce action, which ‘which a certificate ut necssalty shout? | ing him Into the galleries, Once mors ident] IGH, Sept Robert 1. | 4 war tried last apring, charged that his first be secured. ‘Tha next ster ea | Wardman was thwarted ae White] Stone, whose. mind @ unbalanced | at half and less than half off the regular prices fe hi n guilty of infidelity. His (og have the bus operators Hable’ in| durate doorkeeper informed the yp atid be} ough f to work das i ot defend that wetion, ge of accident ‘ Neath Of thew: | that no children under six | ooue ue Poe tbe unemne | cubbed Me wits over the ion fired io accumulation of the finest autumn silks—short lengths left over from previous tanehe Wormaod of Lake Geneva, Wis, atebs had been taken and it was the| mitted, Ih a formal statement he said ne| daugt nd then shot himself. Hi sales, in most pi i s i witre'her family is said to be promnineng, lack of them that caused kim to grant| “Well, I'l go to see the President, | watig try to bring about the publica-|is dying, but his wife and. daughter sales, but in most pieces enough to make a blouse, skirt or straightline dress @wlally, nat eneaiattinlolaleial | the injunction, then,” sald Wardman, disappointedly, tion of a list of war profiteers. are expected to recover, ¥ ‘ 1 » a one ay Y Tt «

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