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-BIGLOSSES SHOWN =BY THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PAPERS we nancial Condition Revealed in eRenewed Effort by Trustees %» to Prevent Removal. b ® BOSTON, Dec. 20.—The contro- ray between the directors of the iret Church o. Christ, Scientist “wmother church), of thie city and the Bustees of the Christian Science uplishing Society came before the reme Court again yesterday. Shis ‘Bourt recently held the directors had wer to remove the trustees. “Sherman L. Whipple as counsel, ‘Wed a petition for an injunction to the directors from removing trustees pending determination of between them. Reference was to an exchange of notes, includ- letters from the Board of Di- to Trustees Herbert W. tace and Paul Hervey, calling them to appear yesterday to Jghow cause why their places should Bot be declared vacant. SyThe letter to Eustace asserted there been failure to fill the place as @frustee of Lamont Rowtands; that WBustace and his associates had so Swismanaged affairs that paid circu- NAtion of the Christian Science Sen- 1, Christian Science Journal and = ‘Christian Science Monitor had do- Qelined between Jan. 81, 1919, and Dec. poy 1921, respectively, 70, 75 and 80 per i ithe net carnings of the soclety, it “Was said, had fallen from nearly $500,- ea “00 a tc “less than nothing.” It “ rged there had been wasteful , wro.gfe] use of the society's ds, al tha the trustees had re- to pay over to the Treasurer Sof the chusch any profits since March, <The plaintif. trustees assert there ist no facts which warrant their re- val; thai ths charges in the letters meseratiaasane fare frivuious and baseless or in- “Bufficient; that the defendant direo- ‘tors cann>t constitute a fair tribunal ‘fo determine the question Involved. ‘The trustees, however, it is stated, ; Wo not desire to continue t° hold thelr They desire only that they By lay duwn their trust in an order- ‘ly manner under the direction of the eourt, and that a decree be ent ischarging them from the trust and Bs ; nolnting.thetr successors “after an : © ninatfon of their stewardship and > ante.” © court ordered a hearing be- #.¢ Justice Crosby this morning. ‘Mr, Bustace in his reply to the isc’ know in your consciences that josses have ocurred in spite ~~ ahs beat efforts, and in conasc- ence solely of the things roe yore ‘ou Scientist knows full well, ry to our leader’s splendid inju iblications lies at your door, that has been caused by the insidious which you have wholly |- red and approved.” 3 obestons Boycotted By Individual Churches _ Since the beginning of the contro- sy in the Christian Science Church a dividual churches throughout t he 4 ‘country generally have boycotted the ‘three publications of the Publishing Rocket. In 80 doing it is understood Fh they were interpreting the attitude of the directors of the Mother Church, vwho now blame the trustees for the decline in business. The three journals were not dis- buted in the churches, and the va- us reading rooms maintained by AUTHORITY TO GURB PICKETING UPHELD BY SUPREME COURT Highest Tribunal § oels Aside Arizona Law Prohibiting Use of Injunction. WASHINGTON, Dec. 20. — Tho States tn tho exercise of thetr police power have no authority through leg- {slative action to prohibit the courts from enjoining picketing in labor dis- putes, the Supreme Court held yes- terday in a decision involving an act of the State of Arizona. court divided five to four, it was held that the lower courts erred in refus- ing to consider any application for an injunction which was sought to restrain certain methods of picketing. Chief Justice Taft delivered the opin- fon of the court. Justices Holmes, Pitney and Brandeis separately stated dissenting views and Justice Clarke joined in the opinion announced by Justice Pitney, “The legisiative power of a State can only be exerted in subordination to the furdamental principles of right and justice which the guarantee of due process in the Fourteenth Amend- ment ts .ntended to preserve,” de- clared, the Chief Justice, “and a purely arbitrary or capricious exer- cise of that power whereby a wrong- ful and highly injurious invasion of Property rights, us hero, Is practically sanctioned, and the owner stripped of all remedy. is wholly at variance with these principles.” The Chie! Justice stated that il- legality of the means used in the pres- ent case to drive customers away was “without doubt and fundamen- tal’ “This makes this plan an unlawful conspiracy,” the decision continued. “The means used aro tne libelous and abusive attacks on the plaintiffs (employera) reputation, threats * ¢ © of such attacks or would-be customers, pickoting and patrolling of the entrance of their place of busi- ness with these accompaniments and the consequent obstruction to free access thereto, all with tho purpose of depriving the plaintiffs of their business, to give operation to a | statuto whereby serious losses in- flicted by such unlawful means are in effect made remediless. * * The Constitution was intended to prevent experimentation with the eae rights of the indtvid- The real object of an injunction, Justice Brandeis said, was to prevent injury to persons or tangllbla prop- erty, and unless there was a threat of such violence an jnjunction should not be ited in the Arizona case. “The history of the rule governing contests between employer and em pore: in the several English-speak- Ing countries * should admon- ish us not to declare « rule arbitrary or unrensonable merely because we are convinced that it iv fraught with danger to the public weal, and thus to close the door to expeciment with- in the law,” the Justice assorted, Justice Pitney’s lino of reasoning was similar to that of Justice Hran- deis. The case arose out of a strike in Bisbee, Ariz, in which Wiilam Truax and other employers sought an in- Junction to prohibit former employees from picketing. The State courts dismissed the proceedings, holding churehes did not keep them on Paes or take subscriptions as for- ‘merly. that under the Arizona act of 1914 In the opinion, upon which the} THE EVENING WORLD morosses ocean _|EX-KAISER ANGERS WAR GUILT DENIAL Publication of Letter to Hin- denburg Regarded as Untimely. BERLIN, Dec. 20.—Publication of the correspondence between the for- mer Kaiser and Field Marshal von Hindenburg, which seeks to prove Wilhelm was not guilty of inciting and starting the great war, has aroused more bitter criticism within Germany than has been levelled at the ex-Kaiser for nearly three years or than yon Hindenburg ever received, Intense Irritation has been provoked by such expressions in the Kaiser's letter as these: “God is my witness that to prevent war I went to the utmost Mmit to which I could be responsible for the security and integrity of my beloved Fatherland, There can be no talk of Germany's war guilt, To-day there fe no longer any doubt that not Ger- many but the league of enemies sys- tematically prepared the war and purposely precipitated it, To darken and obscure this procedure, the league of enemies in the shameful Versailles Treaty forced an untrue ‘admission of guilt’ and demanded my surrender to an enemy court. “You, my dear Field Marshal, know me too well not to know that no sacrifice is too great for my beloved Fatherland. But a court wherein the enemy league is both accuser and Judge would not be an organ of Justice but the instrument of po- litical arbitrariness, and would only serve, ex post facto, through my matter-of-course conviction, to justi- fy the unheard of peace conditions imposed upon us.” To try to prove to the world that the Versailles Treaty should be re- vised, by, raising in this critical mo- ment the unnecessary question of the responsibility for the war, has struck every one except the monarchistic reactionaries as the height of folly COROTHY M, THOMPEON.. by Mavsvens WiEwW eo. Ambassador Harvey's Granddaugh- ter Dresses Dolls for Poor Chil- dren on Trip. and as extremely harmful to the German cause, Dorothy Marcella Taompson, six-| The Berliner Tageblatt says: year-old granddaughter of Col.|_ “In Parliamentary circles the publi- cation of the letters is considered highly injurious, Every one believes lit is thoroughly unwise to raise such 4 question as the responsibility for the war nt this moment of suspense George Harvey, American Ambassa- dor in London, has returned to spend the holidays with her parents, She attracted much attention on her arrival in London and was inter- een une e possibiltios,”” © usually rather conservative Theres And. Photographed many) vorsische Zoltung, attacks tho ex- change of letters and asks what mad- ness induced von Hindenburg and his advisers to throw this extra difficulty in the way of solving Germany's trou- bles. This newspaper makes disagree- able allusions to the ex-Kaiser’s aban- donment of the army and his flight into Holland, and questions his right to interfere in Germany's internal af- fairs. It holds von Hindenburg is comparatively innocent, but that the Kaiser, in the publication of the jet- ters, had as his chief purpose “to weaken Ries accusation of desertion ard’s newest liner, the Scythia, in charge of her governess, Miss J. K Lake, and on the irip helped dress dolls for poor children. She was met at the pler by her mother, the wife of Col. Marcellus H. Tnaompson, The Scythia bucked terrific gales but when she made port Capt, William Prothero, her commander, praised the ®| seaworthy qualities of the new liner, saying she had come through the heavy gales “without a scratch.” The Scythia brought seventy-seven first class passengers to this port. Also 4,230 sacks of niall with 2288 bags of parcel post, the greatest quan- tity of Christmas mall yet received here on one ship. Three mail boats were needed at Quarantine to take off the mail. Sir James McKechinie, K, B. E., was a passenger. He is on his way to Montreal to visit the branch of Vick- ers, Ltd, the firm that built the Scythia, pe TROOPS MARCH ON OUTLAWS. Two Vice Consuls tm Argentina Reported Kidnapped, BUENOS AYRES, Dec. 20,—A renewal of the operations of the outlaws in the Santa Cruz territory has resulted in the Government sending 400 additional troops there. The Spanish and Italian Vice Con- injunctions against picketing were prohibited. suls, whose headquarters are at Puerto Deseado, are among eee reported to Idnapped b dite Hae SUE SST RS CREST EERE FE EREBSIRTRITESS GGED at four o'clock? A handful of Dromepary Dates will keep you on your toes, Nourishing but not fattening, sweet but not too sweet, dates contain valuable properties to give you energy and help your health, THE HILLS BROTHERS COMPANY, 375 Washington Street VG FN: ROEMBER 40, ~ US Al WINS HER BATTLE FOR BUDDIES CAMP AT OUTCALT, N. J iaalaeasinss Legion Withdraws Objection to Mrs, Flora McCloy’s Home for Ex-Soldiers. After four months of guerilla war- fare and sniping, the battle between Mrs. Flora McCloy, owner of the Rest-a-While Buddies Camp for un- employed ex-service men at Outcalt, N. J., and the Middlesex County Ex- ecutive Committee of the American Legion has ended, leaving Mrs. Mc- Cloy in free possession of the fic! Joseph F. Deegan, newly clected Commander of the Middlesex County division, yesterday said the Legion had decided to take no further avtion and have no more controversy. Mrs. McCloy, who is “mother” to the twenty-seven discharged ut “broke” veterans whom she shelters in a building erected several years ago by Bernarr McFadden for a sani- tarium, declared she believed In aub- stituting common sense for official red tape and direct personal relief for aid through a large organization, and for this she had been accused of imprac- tleality and interference with the work of existing bodies. “Why, I've’ been graduated from the Red Cross,” said Mrs, McCloy. “I have been a welfare worker eight years and as Chairman of the Brook- lyn Women’s Club of the Service Flag I was ao daily visitor at Fox Hills Hospital ever since it opened. Rest-a-While Buddies Camp was originally intended as a convalescent home for nervous and tubercular cases needing special care. We opened Aug. 14 with thirty of these boys. “Then the unemployment situation becamo acute, Before daylight one morning in September I went to Bat- tery Park in a drizzling rain. Men were lying there soaked, I asked, ‘Boys, how many of you are honorably discharged, how many want work? Eight came with me. The next time I went to Bryant Park and got forty- one men. To make this possible the men from Fox Hills volunteered to go back to the hospital, releasing enough beds. “Then the American Legion began to fear that jobs and support would be taken from men of New Jersey, although they know the boys’ chief job was working on a township road near here at 25 cents an hour, which no native could be persuaded to do. Officers of the Legion came to inspect the camp and professed to be pleased, but I afterward learned that one of the party even then told one of the boy! TALKED WITH DEAD SON, FACE TO FACE, SAYS CONAN DOYLE Novelist Tells 0 of Otlsr “Com: | munications’—Pictures Heaven | as Just Happy Horhe. | LONDON, Dec. 20.—Sir Ar- thur Conan Doyle, creator cf Sherlock Holmes and one of the leading Spiritualists in England, last night described heaven as a place with all the comforts of home. In a church address he said: “In heaven all old people will become young and the young will grow to adult age. When I am thero I will have my books,!my wife and my chil- dren with me. We will have about us the things we love.” Discussing spirit communica- tions, Sir Arthur said he had been in direct eommunication with the dead, voice to voice, on twenty-one occasions. The writer declared he had spoken to his own son, who spoke in his natural voice, a year after the latter's death, He asserted he had also seen his mother, who appeared to him in a cloak of red light. Perth tithe a en they all would be run out of town by the Legion. Soon our donations began to fall off, and I received a copy of resolutions passed by the Middlesex County Executive Committee to the effect that it would be glad to return the men to their homes rather than have them becOme a burden outside their own communities, “Fortunately local newspapers ral- lied to our support. At a show given by the boys last Saturday night there were 200 persons, and yesterday morn- ,sift of 150 pounds of beef ar- Thomas O'Rourke of No, 190 Hull Street, Brooklyn, said: “I'm a member of the Legion, but T stand by ‘Ma’ every time. She knows whai she's doing.” eae SENTENCED IN STRIKE ROWS. Workhouse Terms Imponed.for Di orderly Conduct, Benjamin Berger of No. 2464 Wash-| ington Avenue and Dotnenic Ercola of No. 156 Sullivan Street were sentenced to twenty days each in the workhouse, and Angelo Damondi of No. 3% East/| fi7th Street, Jacob Levine of No, 628 West 19th Street and Samuel Shapiro of No, 2108 Daly Avenue, Bronx, to ten days each in the workhouse yesterday by Magistrate Corrigan in Harlem Court, charged with disorderly conduet, In attacks on milk wagon drivers in Harlem, Dee. 15. Magistrate Corrigan also imposed jouse sentences of thirty days each we op frank Stubbs, thirty-three. of No. 429 h Street; Michael Lukowsky, thirty-tw 228 Bast 11th Street, and John Farrell, twenty-five, No. 212 Bast 73¢ Street, arrested Dec. 13 for disorder- ly conduct in an attack on a strikes reake' Will you “put a fence on the cliff”? O you know the story of the dangerous: path on waiting for us in the valley. oO DROMEDARY DATES On Sale NOW Telephone Canal 1191 the edge of the cliff—how every once in a while somebody fell The authorities had to “do something about it” so they decided to have an ambulance down in the valley for the poor unfortunates who fell off the cliff. It did not occur to them at first that the simplest thing was to put a fence around the top of the’ cliff. Foolishness? Perhaps. And yet we are told how to keep our health, how to build a fence around the precipice of sickness —and we jog along, knowing that if we fall be an ambulance and doctors ver? DatmrYMEN’S LEAGUE CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION, INC. It would be simpler to use ordinary care. Simpler nottoeat too much heavy food or the wrong kinds and to include in our diet enough of the best food of all—milk. and Drink milk—a quart a day. If you have good health, it will help to preserve it. If you have poorer health due to wrong food, it will improve it. Then, if you should slip acci- dentally, you will know there is in you the strength and energy to hold you. It seems ridiculous to say it, but the best “fence on the cliff” in your case is a row of emptied milk bottles. off there'll UTICA, N. Y. Complete January List NOW ON SALE Columbia Records Dance Records Wabash Blues. The Columbians NAc. Panic Fox-Trot Old Kentu ow The ¢ Coaahioas ‘Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes (Dowa In ). Fex-Trot Ted Lewis and His Band Ane’ laut Ted Lewis and His Band «Kentucky Home. Fox-Trot The Happy rind bara It’s You. Fox-Trot The Happy Siz Sal-O-May. Fox-Trot Paul Biese ed rgd Catalina. Fox-Trot Paul Biese Triof 85¢ | Song of Love. Waltz Prince's Dance oe A-3504 Plantation Lullaby. Medley Walts Prince’ "s Dance 85e The Happy Siz) A-3503 The Happy Siz{ 85¢ Na-Jo. Fox-Trot Jabberwocky. Fox-Trot Song Hits April Showers. From Bombo Weep No More (My Mammy). Vernon Dalhart’ Cry Baby Blues. No One's Fool, ried me Al ba Who's Been Around? Van and tana O'Reilly (I’m Ashamed Of You). Froin Zi Follies of 1921 ‘an and Schenck A Dream of Your Smile. Edwin Dale Love Will Find a Way. From heh banaih dis hal Maggie Maguire, Edwin Dale & Wltiam Morgan A: LE e/ O'Brien. tae ie * * TUBe Good But F2.Be Levee, once He Took It Away From Mo Bio Southern Opera and Concert Sextette om Lacia di Lammermoor — “Chi raffrens i] mio furore” eer asd te M mos ond Mobar le cea ‘Salut & toi solei Q To Thee, Sun). Long, Long Age. Shipmates O’ Mine. Lad and Twenty Sellormen. Lom Gracewre Instrumental Music ‘Traumerei, Pablo Casats} 31.50 Spring Song (Songs Without Words). § et Wcoeke Jectnen| 488 Berenada, Sescha Jacobeen * * Rocked In Ths Crodie of The Deep. Clyde Doerr }A- 3491 Clyde Doerr Tella the story of the records, explains the setting, and gives you ‘an intimate and hu- man picture of the greatest compovers. Jom what you need to get the full enjoy New Columbia Records on Sale at all Columbia Dealers the 10th and 20th ef Every Month NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS t Advertising copy and release orders for cither the week day Morn- ing World or The Evening World, if received after 4 P. M. the day preceding publication, can be inserted only as space may permit and in order of receipt at The World office. Advertising copy for the Supplement Sections of The Sunday World must be received by 2 P. M. Thursday preceding publication, and releases must be received by 2 P. M. Friday, Advertising copy for the Main Sheet of The Sunday World must be received by 4 P, M. of the preceding Friday and releases must be received by 12 o'clock noon Saturday. Copy or orders received later than as provided above when omitted will not serve to earn discounts of any character, contract or otherwise, THE WORLD, ] !