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- : = Nalera’s document, even People of Treland not en- dangered. The object of 1! mo’ 1 was to Assert the prinotpla that catitication of the treaty Independence was in accontance wita u Boland, just back from the United States, asked for a vote of thanks for “the maxnificent support America has given us.” Roland went Into some details with rogard to the help America had given Ireland in her struggle. He remarked {hat Michael Collins a few weeks avo SURETY COMPANIES INVITE | ~ REFORMS IN BAIL BUSINESS, vHE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUAR 7, 1922. co NOW ABUSED BY CRIMINALS STATE CONVICTS 2 IN 1.964 LIQUOR CASES IN BROOKLYN —>— Watch for Scar on His Face To Apprehend Negro Slayer PASS POLICE CHIEF, MONTH TO MONTH HOLD UP STORE AND TENANT CANNOT PASS HIM ESCAPING HAVE RENT RAISED Haid mado a statement about Ameri- Lighteen Found Guilty in New Two Bandits Calmly Get Appellate Term in Brooklyn exns which had placed him (oland) | Vork tn 103 sa : e: LEY. 95) : “hI is ae silaerransine pontion, ieee . ork in 1921—5,922 Away With $255 Under Nose , Also Says He Must Be Given Collins interrupted to remark . mein ' ; : Arrests Made. | of Town Guede Aah NEA ri nd which every tive American | Bonding Officials Unanimous ee ene ne car thelk aaa | Fown Guardian. | 30 Days’ Notice to Quit. uppreciates. 4 Slean-Up Is Neede: smixcuonsly, ‘This company | - i — Boland continued that he had been That Clean-Up Is Needed [* Whote heartediy in support gf any | Fisures made public by District A tl, well dressed stranger ina \ month-to-month tenant cannot weet a Aimerida to: etrenathen the to Prevent Excesses, lvgisiation that will merease the pab- | At James K. Ruston of Kings car driven by a stocky, Nard-faced be forced to pay an increased rent, He safety and that will clear the sate | county tocda 2 hunds of the Irish plenipote in _ Be rare ie County to-day show that only two oath aireeked hig annudane tite dle eoookdive ta Aanaal aawe London and to demonstrate to Great) |. " The sume idea was echoed by|cenvictions were obtained out of 1964 i . . ae One Be Op LEOt ane . v iMtain that should the nent be re-|/PREE LANCES ASSAILED. mong. A. G. Oakley,}complainty of violations of the Mey beside the Caldwell, N. J, Na- to-day by the Appellate Term of the newed the Irish would be propared to! York offices, at} Mulan-Guge Prohibition — Enteree- tional Bank at 9 o'clock this morning. Xupreme Court, in Brooklyn, nvr ; t, of the United . ; : curry on. ; Avetis. Will Power of Altorele ee ait Guaranty ome {ment Act trom April to Dec. 21, 1991. The two got out, passed Chief of compelled to vacate the premises He had fone to float a bond loan *8* e hE Mad company, he declared, al-| All the complaints recetved have been Potive Harkey, who was standing in {out « month's nouce having been ef the Irish Republic but, tnasmuch hey Cause Most ‘} ouble quently requested, has re-/eupmitted to the Grand Jury, but 619 eRe ed upon him by his landlord ax the negotations were proceeding [fused to grant power of uttorney 0] iin to gn through court : ront of the bani, and entefed the phe opinion, which was written They Deela any one outside the offie The |PmaAln to g court processes, {clothing store of Philip Koonlern, mate in Londoa at the time, the floatation pi Bakes tuirty or forty ball bonds executed) Of the 1964 cases of alleged viola- eitabar. Jen, justice Charles Kelby and concurred Jud been confined to two localities, ving a year are all signed by wal-|tione presented to the Grand Jury ones unde tt Nnby Justices Cropsey and Lazansiy (he District of Columbia and the| Tye pail bond business © the most | 4rd employees of the company. | eheh ware ciemumed : co inside the store they showed states that a month-to-month tenant State of Hlinois, In 1919, when the! odio: ae rare “Ry reason of abuses which this | 1269 were jed—65 per cent, In | revolvers to Mr. Koenlein and his sm. " ates first bond 1 floated, Toland | ous, the rost repuguant and thelcompany has always felt could come| nearly every cago dismissed there clerk and invited thom to give up darcy Lom one who has held 0 leas it nd loan was floated, Holand |imost distasteful the surety compa-Jout of promiscuous issuance of|was evidence of illegal Interfere | ; = rence, (8 Which latter case the tenant holds Stated, Illinois collected $397,000 tn /niog handle, and any action tho Legia- |bonds,” Mr. Oukley sald, “it has al- lity the rights of Sar dae ei POLICE RECORD OF NEGRO SLAYER. pa beatae and any money there over by virtue of the statute in the ‘ 8, at a cont of $80,000. < ay ways declined to lssue powers of at- |‘! z Jr js é might be in the safe, Mr, Koenlela ; : ‘ ud = eartics sd ») B s ce or enforeeme {ficers. Ald A riey YE: aroon: bu . Ther is Gl pCesS y 7 c 4 pubseribed $652,000. I beileva the support ot every, olier| (hat thay treauentiy, ehaeee aaceel: Tie fe ene ea ee RESIDENCE, 482 Lenox Avenue; | COMPLEXION, Medium Blac from Ure safe in tho huck offen and ioeq to notify: the tenant. of ain Michael Collins, Boland declared,|bonding company president,” Willlam [amounts in excess of the official) 07% '” want to trial, Deak! Grryre, Unlawful Entry; BORN, Marylan iis Gold “Watsh, "Tho wlerk cotlttib: Sass car tha padson that dhe. tenant Lad every reuson to know that 6,000] 1%, Joyce, President of the National [Premium rate, justifying tt as for wc. | OF Kullly were entered in 48 case AGE, 21 (1922); OCCUPATION, Laborer: uted $20. WAY: thal Ue IhereuNed rebt : men were ready to come to fight in| Surety Company, told Evening Count of special services, ete. [defendants were found not gulity gt DATE OF ARREI Bee The stranzers then tied the pro- a : y ms atl FEDe ae: ON Jicland, but could not come as a 14. mUNNeer OF He INBERHLT Melateinne inte ae ton coe ity OFFICER SCOTT, (sth Eree'ty; | Peter and the clerk together with “ie 0 yasaiona wishes to. gues a foreign legion because of the Amret-| This characterization of the busi-}surance Company of North Amertca, |’ names BoM) deb | TLAIR, Bact: Bowlegged-—Large scar | (YING. Walked out the back door monthly tenant." the opinion recites ean law. Nevertheless, some had) » Which now is in the limelight) No. William Street, doubted the viquor cases,” sald the District | COLOR, Black; on right side of face. ; cranked their automobile and dvovs “for use and occupation, or upon an come as Eamon de Valera came, and|duc to revelations that second und | W!sdom of en plane tay He telt Attorne H be handled the same - — anpevemainteet emeiohe thine oe away, narrow! escaping cc ing implied agreement for an Increased many had fought. third criminal offenders have no|that the remedy lay with Increased ay other cases. ‘Tho polley of th | Chief Harkey’s coat tuils on th ane He Bauiae aorve tie tenant seit) BOLAND ADMITS AMERICANS |difficuity in obtaining bail bonds,|within the surety companies, Public Office is to give effective administr R We cotta — lects 16 derminate the tenancy, In FAVOR TREATY. was approved by virtually every other | opinion, Mr. ‘Thompson sald, could tlon of the criminal law to all | land sig Oar, ence Mr. Koenlen the absence of stich notice the Innd . ae compel the companies to wipe ot sons alike, with the utmost regatd | a ts eres somewhat rumpled jor can recover from the tenant only Boland added that he was bound) executive in the business here. Some, | ii iwex, He declared, to substantiate /for the rights and Ibertles of the | nied disturbed, tumbled (out cf the (ie former monthly rent dereet fo state that the bulk of the Amer-|!ncluding Mr. Joyce, even went so far] this, that coniitions,are much better people. Infringements of those rights tore anil told him the newuborhood i pon," , j ican people favored the treaty and that so did the American press, like the Irish press, but the people who Dad subscribed money looked on it ws a betrayal. - Was this treay a final settiement?, Boland asked, | “It is not,” replied Collins in a loud} voice, | Tn that case, sald “Boland, world ©pinion would be against the Irish. if they took tho treaty with a mental «-Feservation and then broke it In his speech supporting the treaty, “Joseph McGrath, who is in “touch with the labor movement, de had done his best in Raster week, 2916, but knew they wouldn't get a republic. He was now five years old- er than he had expected to be, be ponarked amid Jaguhter, It took more than resolutions to establish a republic, and in fact the “(Republic had not effectively | established, continued = MeGrath *hey had not carried out thelr fiegt Auties to the people in social poly find had no powers to dv it, He read # letter from Alderman Kelly, Lord Mayor-elect of Dublin, one of the members for that city, who had been broken in health in an English prison and could not now attend the Dail sessions, In this letter Kelly Bald he would vote for the treaty if hie were present. MoGrath argued that Eamon De if it were accepted by the British, would not end the matter or help the repub-| Hicun programme. REVELATION IS PROTESTED BY} DE VALERA. Mr. De Valera rose and protested fguinst McGrath's reference to a document which its author had heen prevented from explaining. H It was at this point that McGrath | made his revelation as to Toland’s miission to America. He was a cour- fuer to Prime Minister Lloyd George, | together with Boland, when Mr. Lioyd been | judicial action whieh as to declare th thing that would deprive further ball bonding. Mr. Joyce not only attacked con-| ditions and abuses which 1 thrown | spicion upon even the best of surety mpanies, but also outlined a cen- structive plan of legislative and would remedy | make further of- tenses impossible, He particularly plored the custom of granting r of attorney to agents who 1 r trade in Magistrate and erim courta and who, because thelr remuneration comes in the form of commissions, seek an ever increasing volume of business, hoped for some- them of} the situation and Double the length of 3% yle the bond required, mak- ing it der for the erlminals to pay the rate and legs desirable for the companies to Issue bai bonds. *nact legislation compulsory for all bi nds signed in the executive offle the companies, This would do it making away with the rovin, power-of- uttorne so that the compantes might know the offense charged which is not now executives of the in euch case, known to the companies, Enact legislation making It nec- easary that consent of the District Attorney be obtained on every application for a bull bond. The record of the prisoner should ac- | company this application. Accept no colluteral other than cash as security, and th 1 panies must be certain tis cast las not been stolen. Roauire companies to report to the District Attorney the kind and amount of collateral or indemnity | in every case. | Give a man on ball the same | status as if he were on purole. | Make it a criminal offense to solicit bail bonds on public pro} erty from any person convicted of a crime or from his attorney. Do not permit cases against criminals to drag along and dic of | old age, Important witnesses are | George was in Scotland, he recalled, and on that occasion Boland had said | fo him: 1am going bask to Anterica on the President's instructions to do an! + nwful thing-—to prepare the people of America for something less than in republic.’ Rising at this, Mr, De Valera said | Ahat in the interest of the nation he could not let that puss. The only chance he saw of getting 4 republ except by force of arms was the plan of external associition, he ex- plained, and he had pointed out d& juitely that this was less than an iso- | Jated republic. “I have not the face of brass tho fome others have,"’ continued Mr, De Valera, American people. I said the isolated republic would have to be changed Into some sort of association, though } J knew it might not be agrecable to the greater part of the Irish people, but I wanted something consistent with the position we occupled, and I knew some of the American people wouldn't be willing to see Ireland nssociated with Great Britain in any way.” Deputy O'Bryne then spoke in op- position to the treaty, and Patrick Brennan of County Clare in support ol it, aEEaaaaeramenE RUSSIANS ORGANIZE COAL AND IRON TRUST Goviet Promises Loan of 25,000,000 Gold Rubles to Steel Man. Dec Moscow, 14 (By hree a Mail). iron properties bbe Donets Ba 4 into a trust by a Rurman company «nich has received # concession from toe Government and ween promived « Joon of 25,900,000 gold rubles or their se ulvalen!, ‘This company is called the 6 uch Russion Steel Company ‘These compaiiies were turmeriy ope s\cd by English, Belgia) and French +s npanies, and formed the scart of tae | i orainian industry ! \nnsiness, or as the fire underwriters jand automobile P| ne | “and I was honest with the bought off, driven away, Inter- fered with, die, or can't be lo- at And. as a matter for the suraty companies themsclven fo mettle, Mr. Joyce strongly urged that they poo apa bait bor aincss with a gen- their bail bond b: oral office and general agents, such is they had to carry on the excise insurance underwrit: ers now have. Rates should be the satie lusiness should be pro-rated | an 41 bonds should be {sued only | as tuey were intended—to relieve In- | ent men from unwarranted {m- prisonment. | \''Mr. Joyce explained that bis com- pany never went into even the limited | bail bond business, as such, until) urgently requested by the City Club and the late Mayor Gaynor to help | jexterininate “straw bondsmen.” It] was urged as a civic duty tt owed| oviety.. The company has strict or- ora not to issue bonds to second of- fenders, and in no case to execute a| Dail bond without the consent of the District Attorney, “We want no bail bond business If we cun avoid It" Mr, Joyce suid, and | then showed orders he had issued | that no bonds be written In erlmes of violence or statutory offenses. “There is a great hue and ery about | the bail bond business," Mr. Joyce| added, “but few people realize that) it is ‘an inalienable right of every person to be allowed to give ball. | Few companies only are in the busi- ness for profit. Many bonds are signed only because attorneys insist | that no surety company has any right to prejudge any man's guilt. The trouble lies almost entirely in the fact that there are not enough Judges tu try cases promptly and not enough force in the District, Attorney's of- fice to run down evidence and prop- erly and promptly prepare their cuses for trink” F. W. Lafrentz, President of the} {American Surety Company, No, 100} | Broadway, also urged strongly in- | creased ball for erimes of violence While pointing out the legal and constitutional questions — involved, ld be felt certain some devised to prevent see- ders from being bailed out pecially emphasized the dangers mitting a inan already out on © « second bail onditions are so bad, erime is so 1h ainpant, that something must be done,” he sa The companies thomsel can do a great deal remody abuses exist, but the should legislation, A mint mum bat f p offenders In ¢ tain lature compel Mik might xed, the Ls compimics 10 jnunctation of pra to-day than @ year 1g0 as a result of) the John Doe Inquiry by Magistrate | Simpson into the abuses of the all bond business | Thomas 1. Purdum, Vico President ind New York manager of the New Amsterdam Casualty Company, No. 60 John Street, one of the largest ball | bond houses, emphatic in his de- | etices now In vogue, | Mr, Purdum also urge: a pooling of all compa to wipe out profits undue. tr ivantages to any one company in writing bail bonds, Now, he said, only five companies write most of the business. The oth ‘companies won't handle it. Another manager, who refused to be quoted, declared that no manager ows the ball bond business, he- ise te does not know what Is be- Broadway, a is company would not go on! of second offenders in se- crimes It the record of the a used was known, | “If any of them get in trouble | pending trial,” he continued, “we sur- | render them. We accept indemnity | only from well-rvated, reputable busi- ness men and have no agents soliett- business in the courts, do not belleve legislation of eny kind which would restrict the com- In nies their business would od, because It would caure those ving bail to suffer. The thing thut’s necessary is for the Individual companies to clean house by having putuble, consclentious agents rep- | resent them and really to feel their! moral obligation to the community | not to write bonds for profeasionul | thieves—that, and the necessity for | the judges and magistrates to fix bail | so high for professional erfminals | that personal bondsmen cannot be | found to give it for them. | J. F. Hughes of Hughes & Bates, | No. 180 William Street, who are in| charge of the criminal bond depart- | ment of the Fidelity and Casualty Company, declared his company as | refunes to, bail known offenders, holdup and gunmen an, ey Rae cs d drug ad f “We have oaly one agent and ohe Sub-agent. We surrender all neraons | who get in trouble ugain, We require | he (either collatera) indemnity or the se- eurlty said. “We do not feel any legislation t restrict ‘the. bonding companion, se necessary, We think, instead, that much if not all of the'erimes by per- | #9n8 out on ball could be prevened if! they got speedy trials. ‘To this end we | would suggest that the Magistrates’ | courta be given greater jurisdiction | in the disposal of minor cases which | are not sent to General and Special | Sessions, and which ..re causing a ogging of the calendars to sucn an xtent that criminal cases are de- layed for months and even years, "We suggest also that,all arralgned riminals be held until "their records! are thoroughly investigated before | bail is fixed, and that bail in every instance of a serious crime be made) large enough to hold the suspect tt ts thought he might o; \~ eer ena 8 berate pend. Hyman Pouker of No, 217 Rroad- way, sole representative of the (1. lumbia Casualty Company's eciminal bond department, who has an agurt In neatly every court in the city, also stated the rules of his company are not to give surety for known crime inala, “We keep in touch with the persona for whom we stand surety, and we not only surrender them If’ they get in trouble pending trial, but we also sometimes sive them up if wo find they are keeping bad company, “It's the duty of the bonding com- pany to nave responsible ageate to see that this !s done and not to write bonds for persona who should be in jail for the protection of the com™ munity. It do not helleve legislation restricting the compantes is what 1s needed, The companies do not wane risky Dusines#. It's up to the Judges to determine what amount of of reputable business," he! bat heeded to keep a criminal tn juit oe Mf he makes it, to keep him straight pending trial.” |ninety-four ple: will not be tolerated.” Only 433 cases of alleged violation | of the Mullan-Gage act were present. | ed to the Grand Jury in’ Lronx! County between April, When the luw was adopted, and Dec. 81. Of thes | 177 were dismissed—53 per cent. The Hronx cases have been pretty. well cleaned up, only SO awaiting dispo: tion in the courts. In 65 cases t went to trial before itt a Jury there were 15 convictions und “11° wequittals. Views of guilty were made in 39/ ases | In New York County only eighteen | convictions were obtained in® jury trials out of 2 total of 454 indictments, total number of arrests in this unty fur violations of tne Mullan- Ke Act in 1921 was Magistrates discharged Here are the recommendations |ing done with farmed out powers of|fendants wn the poliee cou made by Mr, Joyce: attorn |Grand Jury, considered 3,288 Double the number of Jud Mortis M. Becher, sole agent of the | iam Mash Wadena ae Gon F Pua cot 0 ) ridelity and dsit_ Company _0?| ine ne and avoid congestion in cour elity nnd Deposit, Company of} ments, ntage of dismissals to are action, of was 40. There ing Grand Jury defendants taken to cor 2 led guilty and were | fined, Acquittals after ‘trial aum- bored sixteca, the jury discharged nd six cases were taken ns by judges because of idence and the de- | fendants were discharged. Cases | awaiting fur al number 413 In Richmond County, which takes | in all of ten Island, t police | made 74 Mullan-Gage arresta in 1921. All the cases have been considered by the Grand Jury, which threw fifty-five of them—about 20 per cent, lope than 100 indictments aw court action. Only one conviction obtained in a trial by jury, Sev defendants pleaded guilty and were ne | PLAN TO MODIFY PAYMENT TERMS ON REPARATIONS Germany May Pay 500,000,-| 000 Gold Marks and a | TT + at r | Billion in Kind Yearly, } : | i} insufficient ¢ CANNES, France, Jan, 7 (Asso- clated Press).—Germany may be asked to send a representative to Cannes for consultation with the Al- Ned Supreme Council on the subject of German reparations, o leading de} he Council meeting an- nounced this afternoon. The experts dealing with the sub- ject of German repsrations have agreed on a plan for partial remte- aions of cash payments by Germany for a period of years, in olving the payment of 600,000,000 gi marks in cash and 1,000,000,000 ¢ d marks in kind each year. A full meeting of tue Supreme Counc will probwbly be hold this evening to discuss and possibly ratify the agreement reached by the experts to-day. The length of time over which the proposed agreement would he tn force has not yet been deter- mined, j —_——__- ee HELD AS AUTO THIEVES; ONE RECENTLY ON TRIAL Was Freed on Suspended Sentence, Police Record Show Oliver Olan of No, Woodhull Stveet, Harold Johnson of No, 79 Lor- raing Street, and Bdmund Lareen of No. ~ 40S President Street, all of Brooklyn, , JAPAN’S MAINLAND |were arraigned In the ifth Avenue LEFT OUT OF Court to-dw Detectives Priday, PACT | secart roak, charged on the wimissions of (arse: Olen, with PoWuur Announces F gre /Having stolen the automobUe in whieh | lave Agroad ta So i oer ACTOR Kear USERS ate Vreaty Vhe detectives’ attention was | ‘i inatiner of WASHINGTON, Jan 1 Se ee powers, which signed the trea nit Streets. Thay | peesor peace of tie Dw dand ordi to the de- | to ser © Anglo-day ; | said the iiird ave ed to interpre is ad whe 1 . mewlbaeee Jbewn sold on Long 1 Ls Ox ite pr vie | Olsen, according to ds, was| the mainland of Japan, Arthas pal. |convieted” May Rd four sald to-day (Our wae ed. | | towns and cities, (o all of whicen pic. BENG TRALED "IN NEWERSEY (Contiaued From ret Page.) negro ten Nos 20-24. W in ten the reserves of West 68t! vet station had - rounded the block, und a constantly inereasing — force detectives searched every and every vagement ind y ‘The entire neighborhood was in urmoil for two hours, ‘The seavch- ing parties were nearly through when Detectives William Merle and James Mahoney, assigned to the places of Miller and Buckley in the West 135th Street Station, arrived and insisted that some of the work he done over again for certainty. No trace of Boddy was found, though two or three men were pulled out of their beds who looked enough Ike him to have justified the original informant’s repert A similiar though lesser flurry centered about the 96th Street station of the West Side sub when a man ran to the street and told a policeman that he had seen Roddy foing into the station anteroom. The policeman and his informant got to the platform just as a Lenox Ave- nue train was pulling out. With the station guards they searched the room, but found no one. ‘The hunt in New Jersey kept spread- ing during the night. Capt. Breen Newark sent fifteen men to work un- der the direction of the New York de- tectives, ‘The entire police force of Morristown remained on continuous duty. ‘The railroad police reported as fast a9 thelr office could reach them to give them directions, The detectives sent to Montclair reported they arrived half an hour too! Jate, and that Boddy had been s | hurrying on foot in the direction of! jy the Silver Lake section of Belleville, | New| a short distance from Newark. York, Newark, and Belleville dete tlves are to-day combing the negro and Italian quarters of several New Jersey towns, The photograph gatiery at Police Headquarters had turned out 600 prints of Boddy's Rogues’ Gallery por. traits by noon and undertook to finish 3,000 more by to-night. At noon the printing office began turning out cir- culars illustrated by the portraits and fingerprint of the negro, which are to be sent broadcast through the United States. livery policeman tn the city will be furntahed with copies of tho photographs within twenty-four lou The detectives searching in Harlem, most of whom are armed with two re- volvers, because they know Boddy will try to “shoot his way out" If cor nered, doubted he was the man seen in New Jersey until his brother, Joni Boddy of No. 206 Heckal Street, Belle- ville, went to the West 135th Street Station lust night, John told the detectives that neither hia mother, who lives with another brother in Montclair, nor he knew that Luther bad killed the detectives until after he had disappeared trom her home at No. 10 Bay Street. Ho is reported also to have said he not only is willing to ald the police in hunting Luther, but will arrest him bimseif if he gets a chance. Join said that while he was away in the war Luther treated (ietr mother shamefully, refusing to work and causing her great trouble, though she was destitute, This Is one reason John ts eager w belp bring bim justice. While the search fentrer Jersey, it has not been here or in up-river and Ci to tures und descriptions have been sent Special watch t# being kept on one house in Harlem's ‘Little Africa,” Detective Lieutenant Schoenick di covered yesterday that Cora Boddy, wite of the fugitive, had been rs- leased yesterday from’ Aub where she had been police bad he: watehy : to Harlem, where a dozen New York detectives boarded the train. They trailed her to a Hariem address and re watching the house in hope Hod dy ay (ry tu slip in TWEEDS EXTRAVAGANCE SAYS CONTROLLER U. S. REQUESTS MEXICO OWS, —_—~—.—-- | BOOZE SHIP THAT WENT ON BAR FREED BY U. S. —— TO EXPLAIN SEIZURE [Baptist Misston Property Fauen| toy eel tae coue | One ee | ederal Agents Say. (or ) WASHINGTON, Jan tthe stase|, JABHINGTON: Jan, Z—The Britian 41 from $8,000,000 to $15,000, | Hinbassy ‘ty to request of iii upon Oeracoke Bur, off the The astounding fact has now Wit Mexican wat an esplanati na coast, and was lat been established that the Fede Deane ee ne Sale OpE ty ' offiel " serve Board and tre New Yor SUE BRM a Nat Ss ord ° mt Roard of the Southern Raptiat cone partment be serve Bank have apparently sane- \.j Pro Hae! Hoon; Mindat kta AY oned the expenditure for elaborate | popartment against the selzure by Sone | _ Pe pelioy ie uy and stly bank quarters in New) stor parris org ind inves i ‘ York at more than $25,000,000, or tw Phe Invlusted proper her proper " 16 Much as the amount alleged ty operate Misston fs Tine the wae have beon expended by the notorious.» ir Tweed fing in their orgy of extray res RS. ROOSEVELT SAILS TEN JAILED IN PLOT anve for the County Court House New York City. “Lord Bry does not mention what ALONE FOR LONG TRIP) TO BLAST MEAT PLANT and eng! ore Rosevel Viewed repo! ne day on the » Packing Serb esto liner Winiand. > was KANSAS CITY, Kan dan, 7 —Ter ureliltects und engineers alone for! punted on tha ¥ thd stid she pen were Jailed here tosiay tn connir > York's banking templo amount. intended r PRS You with wiiat the police ited Wie the amount of w for reagons not | !@ take a set trip, all alone, to South Hy Malone (cir ' divulged, the Reserve Board carefully | Ageien On Pees uvolded ‘mentioning ‘in its re ores “ — ssi bate an ae eat ha NEW ORLEANS SELECTIONS. isnanit sven) fom un oo. were nose he n Lule of bon MILLIONS SAVED; Al al near area tie ae NO SQUANDERING, n en sg f ae “nee | HAWAIPS DELEGATI DEAD. Wee oe Hcakncth i] HONOLULU, , STRONG ASSERTS |" tien wer sou, Jr 8, | Drees). —Jlonah & Costs of Vaults Alone Cut $1,700,-| 0 s(N 0 ityek tie soo fer Ain Hawa SEVENTH RACE tie Hallybel 600, Report Shows—Big Pay for Capable Mer Mr Williams first made charges of extravagance against the Federal | serve Board of New York last October, when, in response to a Sen- | ate resolution, Benjamin R. Strong, Governor of the New York bank, | i janswered each of Mr. charges. | Ho showed that the new Federal] | Reserve Bullding being constructed the block bounded by N Liberty and William Streets and vy | ! Matden Lane, 1s expected to cost, ex-| ;/ elusive of vault equipment, $17,999,- | * 347. It is to be a ten-story structure and wil! house quarters and employ- ees now occupying #ix separate Duili- ings scattered from \vyall to fourth Streets, The vault cost was estimated $1,600,000, which, he stated was a saving of $1,700,000 on the original | estimate because of tests conducted fo learn how to construct vaults t resist every known «method of at- tack, “Acoustic treatment” {9 Nsted tn} Mr, Strong’s letter at $87,619, “low | tension” at $150,000 and tollet acos- | series at $83,500, The $1,006,500 item Mr. Williams includes the cost of | furniture for the entire building at} $800,000, book vault doors at $16,500, | & refrigerating -plant for two cnfe- | erlas for employees at $20,000, prinkler system, dumb waiters, let- er conveyors, hospital equipment, Kitchen equipment, fireplaces and mantels and Hghting fixtures, refle: tors and shades, mentioned by Mr. Strong showed that the salar Jes mentioned by Mr, Willlams were paid only after promotion In accord-| | ance with the bank's policy of r: ing capable men. Some promotions, he admitted, were rapid because the bank had grown rapidly, but he denied any were unmerited. The man mentioned as earning $22,000 a year after having been em- |ploved twenty-six years by noth to the Federa ngo at $4,200 ne “$6,600 n now retting § 000, came to the Federal Reserve six at $10,000. { yenra ago | phe tdentity of the $25,006 Deputy Governor who Was a "$5,000 law ark ia not revealed, but there ts| only. one $25,000 a year employer ¢ he bank, He received $10,000 a year! prior to his joning the Reserv: Ran Lins” referred tow “M vn aw baving received $1,320 a] prior ‘o and $1,500 2 year on boginning his work at the Reserve Ton, and, after promotions durtns | seven years of mervica, $19.900 @ yaar, : i Williams's | op nie CRORE Race NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES. FAIR JUNDS, NEW ORLEANS 8 for Monday's race A re ws F000 dealers try to sup- ply the wants of their trade. If you want Ferris Hams and Bacon, tell your fee He wil be ela ito " e flavor t 4 pei leas for sixty years. F. A. Ferris & Co., Inc. New York FERRIS HAMS & BACON A little higher sot Adie!) 104 in price-BUT! Wisien, TAte anil SOCIETY OF TAMMANY » COLUMBIAN ORDER You ae in MONDAY walt Hy order uf the, Manhattan, Seas | Diacowney abet Tnatitution iiath DEAD SURROUNDED uRew, Nelson I. Woods, forty-five ywara old, ev of the Jersey Central Ratlroad, found dead to-day in his apartt- BY HOME FUNERAL DIRECTORS. The architects’ and engineers fees | *" a; * pire of $1,106,000 are explained through [0% No. 512 Ww pasa bireek. - dnout Gall Columbus 8200 their employment on various per-!})ow and a quantity of fam daten and Gian atmosphere of refinement centages of cost, in addition-—in a | wines ior found in the room ty whieh ip aie ceniere eee Tew Instances—to a fee for initial) th: body lay : s services, FRANK E. CAMPBELL “*THE FUNERAL CHURCH” lac, (Non-Sectarian) Broadway at 66th St. SUNDAY WORLD MAGAZINE -- TO-MO} OW - Display advertising type covy t ‘eliher he weok day M Dvening World if reeeiven at SPEC. .L genau fae ten » * World Office Copy containing etyrat PICTORIAL REVIEW nn OF THE MILLLON DOLLAR FILM “Foolish Wives’”’ G