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“Oppo the public.” He dwelt at length upon VARSA . Fes ¢ ol } lepend 1ons. theoretical increase 578,000,000 he cae its stitch bende bg ag: vi the allegiance feature of in wal ‘ tee ee Alig Dindenrala willan kAoubler| eos nee coe: Raise baie eases tie Ug “ aevalsra that Paine cho diamalie i ue Hisckefolen pntunaa telat hr ty meta-| ent, invelghing in impassioned tones |PTess).—Stlveater Cougrove, agent of | Ms trap to eatch the men Implicatud in ernment to-day won its auit to com- | ) : . + Bete Appeared to pty cloro attention , Invelghing in Impassione ; crosser, a publicity hound and alll ringenteld'a information. When the pel me Aya ae rae, (ton decree of the United States Sus jof Standard Ol shares alone gens to the argument he advanced that ghe|°S*!8t what be declared would be he American Department of Jug] tyat does not affect the solution of i pel members of the American Havt- jreme Court stocks of companies that} sideved. it into the Inish “Tis moy be the tast time I will ave the chance to address the Dai,” remarked Collins at ope -polnt In his rensarks. As tor his qwn part in the negotia- tions, he said he had known that as a representative ef the fighting forces in Ireland, his country would be of- fered better terms It he went to Lon- do® han if he were mot there, =| Mr,..Collina comcluded with a plea ; eauee | am for peace, not war.” ‘3 i ton Saturday evening, Instead of F ‘ , i 3 ; 4 | 000 in market value and now are fig- Lemeine the bait uct to ahift the rec} He @egued that the Irish people Lindenfeld Gives His Name] saying, as ne did thon, “We know All| oily took place before the police mut Justice Brandeis, Dissenting, "* Prompted Wall Street #iatlstle | ira at $9,835,000, 000. e would aver be reconciied to the} and Cai ig Wife Spied aout iu he sata to-day, “We think | any confidence tn him. : i : clans to figure the value of vartous| ay the timo of the dissolution of ir Mo: ooptgyh and Claims His Wife Spie. i ‘Then the First Branch Detective Calls Attention to Steel ; ‘ f Coin Erase Ciliiders, Secretary of the] sxTeement. we know all about It." AR ae eel : . units of the Standard Ol1 Company the company the Rockefeller faintly Gefogation to London, who hua teen] MF. De Valera vigorously de- | on Morgan. Rut Mr. Burns was positive in nis | Bureaws of which Seret. ati Nes rust Cas compared with Dec. 15, 1911, or | owned 30 per cent, of the stock, ‘There warmly seconding Eamon De Valera 10) years tho greatext revolution ever amade in the world's history—a revolu- tion seeing these two countries stand - ing out apart, not a3 ¢nemies but as equals and friends.” Hearty applause was given him as he resumed his seat. President De Valera then rose to! move the rejection of the treaty. | “Tam against this treaty because it | will not end the conflict between | Great Britain and) Ireland,” he de- clared. “1 am against the treaty be- | mounced the treaty “subvertiag the ignominy of therish people tak- THE EVENING WORLD ALLEGED MAKER OF WALL ST BOMB SAD TOBEINULS | | | BURNS | _ SUSPECTIN (Continued From First Page.) was when he arrived from Wasbing- faith in the general outline of Linden- feld's story. into the radical union and was ap- pointed a member of the “entgrialn- rent committee.” He accurately )-re- dicted several explosions which actu- then a member—despite his present denials that he ever knew anything trap was sprung Lindenfeld was the | MONDAY, DEGEMBE= :9, 1921. NSPLANNING TO BRING BACK = | WALL ST. BOMB CASE COMBINE MUST END HS CO-OPERATION, wood Manufacturers’ Association te “HARDWOOD MEN'S $678,000,000 ADDED TO FORTUNE OF Oil Stocks Market Value Since Dissolution Decree. The recent vitlue of all shortly before the first ye: —__—__—. ——— ROCKEFELLER IN TEN YEARS Have Appreciated $2,261,000,000 in pronounced rise in the, composed the original Standar Ol! securities | Company have appreciated $226 andard * of In| fore, since dissolution there has been Constitution of Ireland, as that! of tlee, has sent a cable despatch to! the bom) case," said Mr, Burns. “He ope ‘ne: 'ae the oath of gileriance to the | yw, M ta vot, th 1 ; {only man caught in it, He was ban- (inte cooper fa be ave r Canada, depended upon the actiowof} HM Mo s er ok Washington giving the name of a/!* not the only agent on whom Welignea ¢rom Headquarters, which he ‘Crmnate co-operative selling me is |MEXICO’S UGLIEST’/MAN@ the Hritish Parliament, and that ng. He paid tribute, how-| 1 i who Wolfe Lindentela,|CPomd- We knew the worst about! so mequented so busily that many O@% and agreements alleged to have 0 | Chur freedom must be derived. fem |C¥e? t@ the delegates who algned tas | '| Lindentetd, but wien we are hunting | Daa freawonted 0 bulilly tae RY yoen adépted for the purpose of elim- SWAMPED BY PROPOS+ fet T the Britigh Govermmence | Pact, Saying what they did “was :n|alias Willlam Linde, alleges manu-| scoundrels we donot expect to get our | Pe™mons thought he was a city deo) ating competition among them- ] ) z fiohert ©, Marton took the floor 1o| Mt ekeese ef love for Ireland.” tactured the bomb and engineered| information from angels. We “have| ‘°Cllv®- ne Selves and to maintain and Increase Heine tte ates dp Aoi keeebtik be ' Mr. De Valera, continiing his argu- used Lindenteld with a full knowl-| After that he began running to (he yo Rigen oe OWen ee oxpiain why he signed the treaty. | tnt tor pajection, declared: the details of the explosion in Wall ; ba full know!-| mice of Burne Agency with “tips”; Priess eNRIeH chee Bias NISC GE Bafton suid he and George Gavan | UCM for rejection, declared: . ‘edge of his weaknesses and have re- y . i P @he Government charged that tne Q p DRE es el Dupty Were amninst signing, bet when |, /{ Mins George came over to open Street in 1920 end received the) teq on hia information only when it | Peeanding the activities of radicals in Beauty contests hetd frequent! | the Irish Parliament, you would see the establishments of cllents of the “8 persons-and corporations engasrd & S pe C01 | trouble ° eat bo ATs (BAK cOntonis (iseunnce ot ctions restyainin, ¥ es Sia etean i N be vegurded as confdentiad until he} would come to Dublin. (Cries of “Nc! /statements that the plot was {1nanced | Wnreey "ge tie ee eae ao ote eae Seer emu itt cHcas Gane: Me eae hee coenae put forward bis own proposal in che | No!" ¢rom hia supporters). Ho mennt, in Moscow, and that the motive Was) y porter, le Associated Press| plated by the Communisis whieh Pleketing was in ead far da 2Orced her with threats of ari For Christmas & pable ression. Arthur Geimth and] ho sald, an the Presidents of Americn to kill J. P. Morgan, stetiking terror | Porer would be of a*character to spread )the Supreme Court to-day, Ko Tat 0” blackmall to sign a paper discontinu- Michae: Collins protested against 2/ or France should come, as the head: Into America and showing the world) j, That's dunt the point, said Mv.!terror all over the world. We had | It prevents court intenterence w : ing her sult egainat Mra, Gouraud There's hearts course which they declared would re- | of ¢riendly states. that Wall Street was mot beyond aen-| 2UE8 mysteriously, “you can get(no great confidence In it, but did peacofil picketing. tn tie cant Mrs, Schill charged Oldmtxon Inst | delight / FN, sult in keeping trom the Lah people! ‘There were loud cries of “No!” wheu une. At the time of the explosion FE eee ne to eo Der enacin cia, | Laue th eeray can tO ae Ot Willam roux a others, under week with extortion. He was arrested | delight in Ke what such an alternative proposal! My, De Valera sald the Irish army Mr, Morgan was In England.) a o. clients in the financial district to be consideration by the courts It WAS and released in $2,000 bil pendiag | . - Sikis's Se Gey MERGE REE ORTH | LRAA RIN RU RUATECIEAT | Mr. Burns refused to go into details|on thelr guard. Lindenfeld told us held, however, the methods of p CootuGih MERPLGE Gish Wan Heal bee presula ela Mama a esp ane th = ‘ regarding | a. t the extent of the informatio 1 e actly : ing used were illegal and should have After some heated discussion tne! Irish Ministers His Majesty's Min! | lls movements since March of thls) wich ne got from Spas aires Lal Cale nee Ae Sa eaia ra De lee nienioined i : fore Magistrate Simms. lor Bpeaker said he could not allow de- | tere, year, now in the hands of the Polisi 4 pfore | where the explosion would take place. | been enjolinn. ‘ She testified in response to ques- ) al ff sf { se! " Farvnals . Justice Holmes, in dissenting, op- > 34; ~ vate on this point. Yo thie Mr. De Valera reaponded |polittea) police, 1s sald to show aE fe ata bore ye perpen ate alah a Aes aL tea a and | | ded instructions to the State courts tions by her attorney, Harford T. er umes After Mr. GriMfth moved adoption | that time would tell he has been working against the| cr cin. DN GRESEENCDS CAGK| HG) OUADBEREGE: fo issue an injunction in the present Marshall, that two weeks after she i uld tell, is -sgainst | of justice." ‘The first step taken by the Burns h the Legislature of that | of the treaty Commandant McKeon of | ‘The Republican President asked if Poles, In co-operation with the Rus- arth ahd Mal i det when the Legislature of that fied sult a man named Ostro, who | | Exquisite feagrancies in beautiful boles County Longford, one of tho muat| the Dall representatives had been |siam Communists. te Tuaaian uaeier eticte sme to Oe eee see PAURHGA Ge oh hin ited. Me ACHone Ia) ot Pctaee _ sald he was a private detective, came | famous of the Irish Republican Army | “lara when they said the people st} OM behalf of Lindenfeld, his friends) wet ant Street and sass he ferent Se betare ties fund Hine Former | ee a to her home and took her to Old- leaders, seconded the motion, sayin: | the election had demanded a republic. say he lived humbly with his tather| a.horized agent of the Soviet in rhia| “MPlovees oF the Burns Agency am gy ANGLEY HANGARS mixon's office. Ostro said to her in "The Irish people want substance, | He was against the treaty, he d:-|while in this city, and they discount) country, denied emphatically to-day pee oe ace he was being sought 4 Oldmixon'’s presence that her suit mot shadows. clared, because it did not reconci’e|the Polish accusation that he was in- th iar - and that he had gone to the pains of DESTROYED BY FIRE ‘4s nothing bat & Krall scheme Speaking to his motion, Mr. Griffith | Irish national aspirations with as-| volved in espionage plots in 1906. rene meat eee a eee aaa racmlne (Hee the and that for filing it she was liable said this was not a question of the|acciation with Great Britain, and it |They assert that te never displayed | pete ith uve Wall wtacet eicia, [cries When ho did appear at the Lae : to arrest, She was frightened, she | mere rights of the people; It was a| did not satisfy the national sentiment. /much money in thelr presence and| sion. Mi Recht hae b pity expio~ | urns office the agency olficiais wers Investigation Ordered Into Mys- | swore, and signed several papers pre- aucstion of the lives end fortunes cf| Perhaps the supporters of the|that when not with his father herc| ry vemiscte ee te earns! for delighted to find that such informs-| serious Blaze Causing $200,000 sented to her by Olamixon without Be Pete cp Tiglleh cad ba au et | Cea” ACEC, Toe VENTA. Wald: IRN ihe Neuse Woe wit valaticen OE Lede [oe enn a Eurernuist 9P) thon Be had wan oxaatly like tasis)) “7 ‘One Plane Burned, | ERONIME what they were. She idon- Golme to hide tren the Tria poopte|“wnaten” an election and eccure a | Altendart seve tho mtatement adds | cnr whe were oe) as aes gum, exeent that it went more into amage— a urned. | | tiged one as a notice of discontinna- eg? what President De Valera’s alterna-| majority, because a war-weary peo-/made a statement to the effect that| was Fe sapere ‘ ne He ori le ("Se told them where the materials,. NEWPORT NEWS, Dec, 19—Four tion of her suit against Mrs. E tive proposal would mean, ple would take anything, but the peo-|when he was in Moscow last August | Zaranko, Pre ease, a for Wiisiam | the chemicals and the scrap heap !ron large frame hangars at Langley Gouraud | { eco With Greve tedlbng taal ble Wield No dinentighed| and’ would||srs) tans ily Nissin Denis, Boviet| Conte) Cone tied eee eee Ren aie HELM wield wera destroyed by fire thx, | (OR croaniexaniinaton alle dence |. Sinn ‘Fein Forelga Mislater defined| start up ugain, as they did after the| premier, and Leon Trotsky, Soviet| him over drawing Uppal araa ade Rae cy lied Wheto plnecs Kod ae morning, entailing a loss ofmore'thin knowing where her husband is now, ay the agreement reached with the Brit-|Union, and Mr. Lloyd George would |war Minister, with reference to the! | sch atin reine by-| (Old that these things had been sold $200,000. The origin cf the fire i a but admitted she heard from him anti! By: ish plenipotentiaries in London. underga the same experience as Pitt.| explosion, J. P. Morgan's name was ene ch he said would have given|there but the storekcopers “couldn't mystery and an investigation will be thlee weeks ago by telephone. ‘ i “Not’ a The treaty, Mr, De Valera argued, . th s © | Zaranko tho much power. remember” anything definite about made by a board of Inquiry. “Do you cash money 0 ‘Not’ once did we demand the ve - « mentioned in this conversation, ac-| ‘Tho Zaranko union, it was recullec,| the purebasers, According to one Oy» Martin bomber and tthe lim In the neighborhood stores i recognition of the Irish Republic,| Was siened under duress, Rather |corging to the alleged statement. i ® With, the rine ‘lformer Burns detective there are ne Martin bomber and most of the, OTe oes by N. 8, Dow, attorney for | knowing it would have been impos-|than sign 2 document which would/ 4itendorf says the statemen adds nw he Brindell union | those in the agency now who are tools at the station were destroyed. (\14mixon. . , | i S!of housewreckers, whose members] wondering if the wily Lindenfeld did — — % “[ occasionally di she answerel 1 temlised that war would reséult| money for the job at No, 100 West| ‘checked’ against other information in the production and sale of hara- but students at the tet * . ‘| . P| agency. He talked much of his as: 4 P Held a Obite At Hue ot lie iNe GeciGhd (OrcIOes | "aie aeccca eng weAklg to (he ASE Ot ee ee eee Ete in caeney othe Pollen Detective Bureau, Wood lumber compared and vx- Halt ii araaice. “deren isms ee eser: Ck sarronar aens” Union, decaring it wi aid lead to ena. (Ceceammith ts supposed to be In the veral reporters who talked with | wich, he sald, had failed toappreciate Changed under an “open competition won without a strugels. ‘ho Dall adjourned without action | tess strito 7" ~|United States at the present tine, | MM Turns at the Pennsylvania Sta- | nim, Inquiries made at Police H Dian =the reports and bulletins con~ Despite his handieap Memije ix sald on the treaty at €.15 @elock ustil/32 | summing up, he alserted the treaty | The blacksmith came to Warsaw |{1oP Saturday cvening understord| auarters by the Burnsofficials were | ering prices, stocks and production. a |to have received countiess dozens eeloc® to-morrow morning, 3 UP, bg diegies in th indenfel him to say that a message to him qwered puardodly, ‘Th Hiee were | Justice Brandeis declared it to be proposals of marriage from “admiring Hvery, seat in the hall was taken| "ae, optirely Inconslatent with Ire | pala (ol Baa ain do a a from tls operatives Cosgrave and) nor inclined to acknowledge that the /“4R extraordinary fact” that the Su- | MTS. Schill in Court Tells of | readers" ever since his photograph wa when th land’s position and that if it were Sceording to Pau! Altendorf, Who) qyong on recel vant bt Viounoounn 7 publigaed in the Mexico Clty néw, when the Speaker, Prof. J @ } j Altendort had been received that a " i epoiren, 10 ad Pole preme Court should alter its decist ‘ Threa yy yn {psssdidds * i Weill patfea the meatag Gone Mac | ratitied Ireland would continue sib- trailed Lindenfeld before his arrest./ternoon at the State Department ana | pymcoed th ed eee Rea RR RAIE He Tha TiAtcac BUAIES Btsai aOriGeAe Being Threatened With papers. nd . | Sa ‘i e neoed then y were dispo as ' bc S = _—— Immediately after the meeting be.| Servint ty Hogiand, [Altendort declares Lindenfeld made| was being decoded to be forwarded| tne ot them sald to-day, “to let Bugne {10 case, where 50 per cent. "of the Arrest. gan argument arse as te whether Lone of “No!” from supporters of ja statement to him that the black-|him. Mr, Burns was positive to-day | yuy a gold brick if he wanted to industry i# controlled, and in the = SEASICKNESS KILLS 104 BEDS, the document tmtroguced by Eamon| ‘Testy followed this declaration. mith accompanied him to Moscow |that he had not meant to convey any| fp Hele ENG terdee, hawivar | United Bnce Ataclinery case, whele| srg diteabeth “BENIN (ONO: Blam eme: ceed. tna cunene-at ca cate Do Valera, the Republican President, | _ U2 Ms address, President De Valera jiagt August, but the blacksmith and| Such Impression. that though Lindenfela was not al. |the country was ‘controlled, ho!ding Cantal te ye NG DENGNIE auabelas Sear an) ') sald that !f a provisional Governmyrt | have hat though Lindenfeld was not al- Manhattan Avenue, who brought suit|ment of 600 Yorkshire canarles and 204 wt the private meeting of the Dutt taut | Sut ‘Hat If 4 provisional Government ‘hig wife, returned to America sev=|°7 Mave mot heard a word from | ways.accurate he was in a position to tem not In violation of the Sherman % il abate, HE Aimee [lithe ‘The Cedvic ran into a territ seek should be Introduced at the| pin n Ba ae ala verarac, (eral weeks ago, Warsaw,” he said to-day. “1 have| get much valuable information when lw, and= should bold in the present (38° mont) against Mrs, Aimee storm last Tuesday and the little bird public session. It transpired that| 5, the joa eK Y 5 oe Fer! ene plackamith's wife, it le said,| “2ktt the State Department to use ali|it was needed by the Burns Agency, "ase that 365 out of many thousand Crocker Gouraud for $100,000 for the /jccame seasick, Gee fixed up a hos the ‘document tm question wes in|?” ‘Be Brople as 8 Yeurpation. They) | b iy te said.) the means in tts power to get a ms-! and was worth all he way paid in the Wardwood operators “cannot ex- alleged alienation of the affections of pital, « case lined with cotton battin ailurmative prenoeed peare agreement | PA! bece chose by! British power sx | a ed J.P. Morgan's office) sage through to me from Warsaw. 1| y, sding the Wall S' sx. (change information without running 6, si e and nursed as many of them as hel MGEWE be EN De Valor: the authority in Ireland, he declare?, (from an adjacent window some tme| cannot understand the delay. Tam | eee ee he Wall Street exe | coiter to the provisions of the Gcarmae secrstary Schill, once Mrs. | io4g, but 72 larks and 22 canaries doa pane wat | Mr. De Valera said this was the|pror to the explosion. | simply cut off f em Velgmens % : . Gouraud’s secretary, testified to-day | ceore the ship reached port torday. ‘ Speaker MacNeill sald Mr. De Vat plycut off fromm: Holand “In June, 1920," Mr. Burns sald, “he | Sherman law, ‘ St Cc é . . ‘4!-| moment when a “grand peace’ was Cosgrove declares that Lindenfeld’s) PSE ch ree a ae Bie DRONIDIEH! Ce heen Te pucet) Police: Cause era had requeste! that the decumen ‘The Associated Press has no|came to us with the prediction that) The Arizona Act of 1918, prohibiting wot Jonn C. Oldmtxon of sible to secure it,” he sald, League of Nationa, The letter also promised the withdrawal of the naval). 4 sourned for luncheon. and military forces from Ireland when the agreement was ratified. Speaking ‘of the plentpotentiaries who negotiated the treaty, Mr. Grit- fith said: possible, and under it King Georg jconfeasion corroborates his previous| give the British authority tn Ireland, | After McBride had spoken the Dati A comparatively small crowd awaited the assembly of (he Dail. Demonstrations favoring ratification ‘were somewhat more in evidence than previously, and painted on Trish Free State was not a mosk that Lindenfeld attended a secret ses- he went to Danzig and purchased a forged passport for $7, how he at- tended the Third Internationale secret | meetings in Moscow, interviewed lea ers, learned much there, including the Internationale’s plans for the future, | inquired for Emma Goldman and talked with “Big Bill Haywond. ———— frame up to cause distrust of the Soviet and its leaders among Ameri- can business men who are on the verge of entering into important Rus- sian contracts and ts done in the in- terest of the business rivals of these concerns who have been unsuccessful thought. of the references in a War- him, watching him. ee | THEATRE HOLD-UP LAD TO AID OF | volvers rushed Into the room, Just |\was adjourned untill next Friday, when | ue cross-examination will be begun, ene NEGROES FORM THEIR Pi OWN KU KLUX KLAN | All Happily Married Mena—Whip| | e “It is for the Irish people, who are | fences and boa Haywood is said to have asked him | in seeking the same opportunities.” Alleged Wite-Killer, H ‘their masters and not thelr eervants, pencen one wallet pen mee tbe, many questions regarding American Mr, Recht's statement was in an- TULSA, (Ola, Dec! 19. Ni ne t 3 , telling Lindenfeld that he =a A a + ‘ SA, " § - Ne @s some people imagine, to say| “Down with communists; vote for prreuts MUNG to SMexigo’ ap soon 2a |ANSY AR ARMnOIAted Frems despatan “Blacksnake Klans" were active here } whether thi fe a good enough treaty." | retigcation.” convenient from Warsaw, In which: Lindenfeld Jauring the night among their own race, He declared Ireland should not de| ‘Pye arrival of members of both > was quoted as saying that a black- Jit became known to-day. ’ | = : : 3 — — er kne as “Tha Black asked to throw away the treaty and | factions was greeted with cheers, but MELD ON HOMICIDE CHARGER. [smith who manufactured the bomb —— r , Fe ¥ return to war over the mere quibbliag| many Induential figures in the Dail|_ 1<u!s Roebling, of No. 168 Fresh Pond | had’ been pald off at “No. 100 West (Continued From First Page.) 6 of the Night” membership ol. words. ka le te D Road, Ridgewood, Queens, was held in| 4oth Street.” There is a Greek res- requirements of which demand that all Hes ar aA muy voice: can-be Henratl or rreueed oan | $5,000 bail in the Long Island City Po-| iaurant at No. 100 West 40th Street ss Dar elnente ee ere ere rae ie ; s hice Court by Magistrate Doyle to-day : * | $10, as in a suitcase. In the aud. |harmony with their wives, took a negro Hq he added, “not one Irishman's life} 4 large number of newspaper cor-|on « technical charge of homicide jn| #4 the place has never been fre-|itor's office were Mr. Matthews und /out and flogged jdm. according to 1 shal! be lost on such am issue,” reepondeate were in attendance | connection with the death last night of; ented by radicals, according to the| Miss Courtright, Mr. Falconer was) (YSPiCt) dlong. who were blindfolicd 4 Mr. Griffith suid that evacuation of| British, American, French and Italian | James Burns, twenty-three, of No. 278 | authorities, It w regarded as ob-] bout to open the safe when an| "hy S’nio Whipped, known as “Super | ! 44 Kingsland Avenue, Brooklyn, whose wrmed man stepped through the door |, ‘s re . Masent en | ' ireland had been trought back after | publications being represented. Mae" Was found at Laurel Hill Boule: |¥!ows that here had been an error !n} 94 the hallway and ordered hin to eine hin eit aPfo" naive" confessed 58) 700 years and that the Irish Army| The council room tn which the Dail pl and Review Avenue near an aban- | transmitting the address, throw up his hands. JB it : med truck. t it awn re- i ang Irish people would see that the|is meeting ts a long apurtment, Mr. Burns was asked what be| Two other men with drawn re-!) ne AD SEVERAL HURT t teaty sham. While Mr. De Valera was in Amer- jea, Mr. Griffith said, he had the re- eponsibility of helping im the defense because Ireland was fighting an eu- ‘emy which was endeavoring to inter- tere with their liberties. But, if they re, the treaty, Ireland would not be ting such an enemy; she would + be Yighting against the sympathy of the world and all the nations that comprised the British Commonwealth, He declared the oata provided for am the treaty was one “which any drishman can take with honor’ and pledge the allegiance of those it to their own country. He the treaty brought peace with gland, alliance with England and @ipant the rebuilding cf Irish hopes, eepirations and civilization. 3 stand as equal and free partl- divided inio two sections by folding doors, The Dall sat in one section and the representatives of the press im the other the Parliament being so faced that Prof. MacNe!!! sat with his back to the correspondents, A few privileged private individuals were admitted to the session, includ- ing several women who have been prominent 1 e Sinn Fein movement, among them Mrs. F. Sheehy SkeMing- ton and Mre. Wyse Powe One of the men present was Darrell Figgis, representing the standing commit! of the Sinn Fein organization, In t) event of a split in the Dall the na- tional organization might have to de- termine which section was entitled to support. © first of the Dail members to ar- cive was Countess Markiewics, who chatted with the women visitors. Next came Mra. O'Callahan, wife of the murdered Mayor of Limerick, in heavy black. Michae! Collins was earliest Bs CHRISTMAS MAIL ARRIVES, ‘The largest batch of mati brought to| New York by any one ship sinnce the war came in to-day on the Scythia of the Cunard Line, from Liverpool, Christ- the explanation. ere were of letters and 2.4gF of London delegation, afterward sat with him looking over the same sheets. President De Valera entered with- out being remarked and took his veat in the council! room, his private secretary seated behind him. Arthur Griffith arrived next and joined the Coiling group, while Erskine Childers and Austin Stack sat with the De Valera group, Sean O'Ceallaigh, the Dail repre- sentative In Paris, sat with Mrs, T Clarke, whose husband was executed in Easter week. Robert C. Barton, one of the London delegates in the treaty negotiations, sat with the Col- Iins group, as also did Fionan Lynch, saw despatch to “a blacksmith who made the bomb who had met Lin- denfeld in Warsaw last summer. “That 18 bunk,” sald Mr, Burns. BURNS TELLS HOW HE CAME TO EMPLOY LINDENFELD. under which The circumstances | Wolte Lindenfelg (or William Linde) came to be employed as an agent by William J. Burns, first as head of the Burns Agency and then as chleg of investigators of the Department of Justice, became known to-day. Mr. Burns told part of the story, Police detectives and former employees of the Burns Agency told the rest. Lindenfeld was one of the most in- dustrious of the paid informers of the Detective Pureau in 1912 and 191% It was a time of repeated bomb explo- sheets of manuscript. Eamon J. @ Cold im one BROMO QUIN of the radical unions at a national then Maher, the watchman, entered | and he too was held up. The bandits tied the hands of Falconer, Matthews | and Maher behind their backs, but did not touch Miss Courtright. { The four theatre people were forced | into a closet and the door was closed and locked from the outside. Ap- parently the bandits had been closely | informed about this closet. turn in their prison door the four be- |< gan to shout and kick, Miss Court- | right untied the men’s hands and | they all took turns rushing at the door, throwing their weight against \- it. They broke it down. In the outer | closet one of them stumbled over a hammer and soon they had broken down that door. | Emerging into the light as they re- entered room No. %4 the quartet faced an open winslow through which the bandits had escaped, The sull- case full of money was gone. But there on a desk top was the packet of bank notes, not concealed fire escapes and roofs and got away AS TRAIN LEAVES RAILS | Acotdent Aln.—Fire ASNISTON, Ala., Dec. fireman was killed The lo aches left the rails, a4 > > beck; Hi ‘Peunaytyani with England, and “make after |Duggan, colleague of Collins on the sine beare the ofgnaiuie gt EW: | Convention, indented got bimelf waitin for’ scans SEROTOGT bas Nace ee Ro } i a é s . . 1970 Broadway at 66th Dewalows tice, 2d St. & a8 prig an i @ number persoris are reported injured, when the of ansas City Special, bound West, was derailed eight miles ‘from here ‘Phe moment they heard the lock |{i-day. ‘The at’ noon | comotive tender and two onja league of Mr. Childers in the ions in factagies of the needle trad 7 y Ww r ece He coucluded his appeal for ratitic| band of the Ministerial group. "Atte secretariat ee ee ON cat tareaee the |aia settee Cakiceenioneate »|his arival in the Council] Chambe oS : eacl t y ation by saying it would make the |PIs airival i toi me alone. caer - unions, which ended by the exputsion' The robbers reached the street by LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS i, eat Mr. Grimth declared the frish | the Irish people should be ready 10 KO! sion of the Third Internationale when Fe ee raat an ieee advance tnene wesinesins) 18 CAN MARE AND SELL GAS telephoned ae t SAimdinee her uate } pienipotentiarice went to London to |? {slavery nti! thelr oppressors |in4 explosion was discussed, and that! strike Inst. the Brindell uni | At about this time a Government AT 83c., WANTS $1.50 gainst Mrs. Gouraud and “to guard perform as difficult a task as could| Were blotted out. What he wanted |i, iy tale ok lank for tavilior | wi Liha e Brindell union, | raid on the flat of a leading Commun- - against her and her friends be placed on the shoulders of man. | ¥@ Deace for the people and not for! Beeman is ‘ atiwhich Wasitobe effective on: the a ist disclosed papers which showed that pypyert om Costs Gives Pigares in “Who advised you to suit D the officials, bombings in America, Altendorf says | of the explosion. Hrindell charg a} Lindenfeld held credentials as an Coney Inland ¢ against Mr ad? (Cheers). Other men were asked to |'DS ON a concluded by auying Lindenteld would go further Into the] that he broke with the Zaranko agent of the Russian Soviet and the = iu Mille: nswered, go to London, but they had refused. . al i by aus ah iponcaivedicfon: execution: ‘nil housewrockers’ on the: ground: that| coc um crmtonale: Phis made nim} Higutes: wers mitted A. S. Be omy husband left me." “w ‘he continued, “and {tut the signers of the treaty, as tar | boil available as a man who could be sent Little, an expert on gas costs, before | ‘The identity of M: wa ‘@ went,’ ee hee | Aimer if he were permitted to reach | they were radicals, refused to become Russia, where, according to his «+ nit ™ bI 5 brought beck a y h wafe-|%% they could, pad tricd to do w | Int sterea TPs Ligaen a : . Ms Chairman William A. Prendergast of the not established. Mrs. Schill admit- Trae Murk tags treaty wale! mT Warnell refiued ito dd--(0 eotbounda- Untied States. He says Linden-| american citizens and to march in an| story, all the suspects Known to him | pyplic Service Commission to-day, show- | ted that when she went with her c guards the interests of Ireland. By | POT Teh of the nation, Thig, ‘fi has agreed to tell the entite bomb | Americanization parade, could be found ing that the Brooklyn Borough Gus to her lawyer she did not tell hi ‘Advt on page 1 that treaty I'm going to stand, and)" {0 the march of the nation. TNW®/ ecaiig ag ho declared he bad heard) zaranko denied all these state-| qpout this time and backed, hin inte ,COMPANY. which Is trying to increase its Toy guevand Was wanted By {he * pag evety, one bebindg Us with @ scrap of) itin stack seconded President De | “em Miscunsed In Moscow, Including | ments ee eee Burns offices ana rrate in Coney Island and Brighton ROUSE. honor is going to stand by it." Valera’n motion, aagiug Weatood for | #aditional pians to kill Mr. Morgan, I néver knew this man Linden-| threatened him with prosecution as, Beach from $1.35 per thousand feet, Mr, Griffith then dilated on tae ent nn dence and nething|, Cosgrove and Altendorf say they feld," said Mr. Recht, “and never] an sores 1y in the bomb outrage be- | fixed by the Commission last Sept : advantages the treaty would bring to| (couriets a 8 \pave proot that Lindenfold waa a|heardef @im until he was arrested in| (ore thé,fact because of his failure to Ler, to $1.50, can mako and sell gas at i te D Tattar whine hed ° : jmearsisat 4 4 give information before the cata8-|q reasonable profit at x charge of 33 Irelan: read Count Plunkett also spoke in yap-|PAMd Soviet agent and that he wi-) Warsaw. 1 am sure Mr, Martens] trophe, Lindenfield, apparently thor- | ants, ‘The quality of gas furnished hy been received trom Prime Minister) |. or the motion for rejection limits serving Moscow in various coun-|never knew him. And I know Mr. ouglily scared, told @ more detailed | inig company is British thermal : Lloyd George early In the negotia Py nn atonride, member from|tie* His statements ure said io| Martens never tind $90,000 In hia ea Peso dl pee oe ee nore ant | tions siying the Government pro- 14.00 brother of Mator John MeBride, |COver All his New York connectjons, /hands at one time while he was in) it was « worth while venture to fend | Mr. Little said he had figured in every posed making Ireland co-equal with who was executed after the Easter and why he left New York, believing | the United States, him to Mcscow to attend the meet | cost from the gas plant to the con- | the other British dominions and to}. 40) rebellion in 1918, supported the |’ Wa under suspicion “My explanation of tis whole Lin-|ings of the Third Internationale—|sumer’s burner, including depreciation | secure for Ireland a place in the ratification of the treaty. They say he wives detaila of how! denfeld yarn {s this: ‘The story Is a with Burns operators, unknown to /and a profit of 8 per cent, The hearing | in Cabinets 200/52 In Holida Packi