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le BS) France into * tention | aa wa To-Night’s neta WORLD® VOL. LX, NO. 21,947—DAILY. $$$ FINAL Che. - Circulation Books [* Cirealation Books Open to AT1.”| to Ali | Circulation Books Open to All. | yl | i worl} EDITION Copyright (New York World) by Press Publishing Company, FORD ENDS HIS NO TREATY CHANCE, POINCARE IS TOLD BY LLOYD GEORGE Paris Hears New Premier Will | Consent to Take Part in FORD CALLS OFF TO REFORM FIN AND MAKE MON New Campaign Annou WASHINGTON, 16 (United: Fress).—Abandoning his fight against Jan. Genoa Parley, CHAMBER MEETS JAN. 19. Crucial Test for New Govern- ment Will Come Then on | Vote of Confidence. PARIS, Jan, 16.—The Department Aft to-day held of Foreign turned Briand, 3 was formally over by ex-Premier who the Foreign port- folio, to Premier Poincare, the new Foreign Minister. The transfer was effected at 3 o'clock, and shortly afterward M. Poincare received his fi oficial visitor, Lord Curzon, y ‘for Foreign Affairs. S are that the Premic q British Late ve will recede largely from his policy of hostility toward the Briand a,r ment and that he will go so far an to consent to participation in the Genoa Conference. The crucial test for the new Goy- «mment will be when the Chamber of Deputies meets Thursday Senator Paul Deschanel, who we President of France for a few mon in 1920, resigning on account of health, has filed a mand in the Senate for an interpellation on the foreign policy of Premier Poin In his letter of notification to the Premier M in exchange Deschanel suggests that of views is indispensable in the present circumstances. It ix reported here that M. Poin- are, in his talk Saturday with Lioyd Georg ked for drastic changes in the Cannes agreement, and that the request was sharply rejected. The statement is made that Poincare forward the idea ‘of converting propos the J compact between Britain and military alliance for ance ana execution of the ailles. Lloyd Georg however, n it quite clear that no British Government could go beyond the proposuls already made at Cannes. | It is significant of the underground complications of French politics that of the new ministers, six were in M, Briand’s Ca binet—MM. Barthou, Maginot, Le ‘Trocquer, Sarraut, Berard and Dior, With the exception of the Colonial Minister they may be said, however, to have formed the Right Wing of the former Ministry. The radical M. Sarraut owes his re- to tho fact that he is at] Washington and could not very well be turned cut without torpedoing tho Washington Conference, M. Tardieu’s attitude toward the new Government takes on special in- the mainte! Treaty of ) terest in view of the current rumor that M. Millerand called in M. Poin- with the intention of getting his ntly necessary term of office and then asking Georges cal Di over with Clemenceau to form a Ministry. M. Tardieu’s written weply to the Premier's invitation to join the Cab- inet is said to be so insolent that M. Poincare feels he cannot reply to it. M. Tardieu himself told correspond- ents, “I prefer to watch and wait.” A demand is being made for a clear Pronouncement on the Genoa Confer- ence. Se eS BANK IN WOODEN LEG YIELDS BAIL FOR FRIEND Newark Police Startled by Big Roll of Bi A man giving the name of Charles Schetzer was picked up intoxicated on the street and locked u in the Ist Precinct Station in Newark, N. J., to- day, After the lapse of a few hours a ragged, grizzled old man with a wooden Jeg appeared at the station and offered Dail for Schetzer, “The pall will Walger. ‘The old man reached down, touched ® spring in the top of his wooden leg and removed from a cavity therein a roll of bills that Walger said must have contained at least $1,000. He dug $25 from the roll, deposited it and went y with Schetzer b; eh?" 1 tapping bis be $25, said Lieut. he remarked to lox, | the. International Jew," Henry Ford this week will open the greatest bat- tle of his caree nationwide carm- { paign to readjust the basis of Amer- ican money. He made the his just announcement of new campaign in Washington, before leaving for home. While hg was in Washington pres- sure was brought uponFord by cer- non-Jewish financial houses to anti-Jewish campaign | tain continue his WAR ON JEWS ANCES OF U. S. EY CREATE WORK nced to Put Country on, Productive Basis Over Protest, Manu- facturer Says, of Interests. HARDING 7 NAME A FARMER. MEMBER OF RESERVE BOARD aay arena ane issue atone.” | Amendment To-Day in Senate the Jew,’ he said, es bring be Provides for Additional Mem- oney question to the front. But fs the world cannot et back to work| ber of the Directorate, and prosperity until we have estab-| aes ae lished our money on a basis. of pro- WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 ( ductive energy. Our money must] ciated Prese)—Creation of pecans the gold in the world,| ditional director of the Federa! We have millions of unemployed,| Reserve Board so as to pave the Germany has no gold. Germany has| way for the appointment of a no unemployel. Germany 1s the) «dirt farmer’ by the President, is of a new busis of value behind| Ment to the Federal Reserve Act, money, eliminating gold, It is his| offered to-day by Senator Kel- theory that money should be issued | Republican, Minneacta, aj: gainst great Governinent projects, sé lie oticinal ae which in themselves ereate work,| 0 such as the Muscle Shoals project. “We had enough material on the | =a ‘International Jew’ to keep up the | By David Lawrence. campaign for five years," Ford said, | (Special Correspondent of The Eve- explaining the shift in his plans. ning World.) “We have had offers of a xreat deal| WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 (Copy- > important material since Washin campaign on the ‘Interna- Jew’ leads us naturally into the money issue because the ‘Inter- national Jew’ is the greatest money chant in the world. came convinced several t the money ndously more nined tv close Jews at the o the next line of pace at ll ACTRESS FINED $100 FOR SMUGGLING GEMS Muriel Sprring, moving picture actress moi n in om tional question was tre- important, L deter- up the campaign on end of the year and tack, on and former show girl, Inddicted for smuggling $3,000 worth of Jewels and s when she returned from Burope Nov. Ity Court, t ed dy to: Judge t mpl plea of States Distriet fined her $100 Miss Spring was the the courtroom, y accuss oorike tenders ouier Alieged. violators the Vo act, She wore a startli ind evidently expensive costume embe with brilliant jewels, and at- 1 more attention than’ she ever mhen she was a member of the en- Uaitea Knox only woman was fee 8, bootle I have | When I be- | months ago | right, 1 President Harding has | assured the agricultural bloc that he intends appoint a Bou farmer to d the deral Reserve Senaters | Kellogy of Minnesota and Kenyon of who to-day disc the Iowa, President Congress tive would farmer, gave | teft the W persuade sed with the proposals pending in reby the Chief Execu- required to appoint a the impression as they House that they would their colleagues in the Sen- te ate to abandon the project The basis of compromise, if, in- deed, the concession of the White House to the agricultural bloc can be be described, is simply that the Ex- NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 1922, Entered as Post Office, Second-Clasn Matter New York, N.Y. PRICE THREE CENTS IG WAR ON THE JEWS FATHER KILLS WIFE, GIRL AND SELF AS | SON FIGHTS IN VAIN | Months of Quarrelting Ends in | Triple Shooting on Outskirts of Hackensack. BOY SHIELDS MOTHER, Youth D but Parent to Yard, Valor Proves to No. Avail. Peter Pepe, a farmer living at Little |Ferry, on the outskirts of Hacken- sack, N. J., to-day after killing his wife and wounding his daughter, Mary, who died in Hackensack Hospital at 12.30 this afternoon. Neighbors have known of bitter Ajfferences in the Pepe family for months, Mrs, Pepe recently caused the arrest of her husband on a charge of abandonment and non-support and had him taken to Hackensack from | New York City. For the last three weeks he had been living at the farm, in constant quarrelling with his wife and daughter. 3eorge Pepe, nineteen years old, who was sleeping in his room on the second floor, was awakened by a suc- cession of revolver shots and his mother’s screams at 7.30 this morning. He ran down stairs in his night clothes and found his father brand- Ishing a revolver and chasing his mother around the dining room table jin a wreckage of knocked over fur- niture and broken dishes, George got between the two, canght 1s mother in his arms and carried her out t, the back porch, closing the oor ater them, Pepe wrenched the door oper, the latch closed, n other and son off the ste they la’: on the snow, stepped 4 hold pushed both ‘s wife, He then ran back into the houst, met his daughter in the hall and shot her in the head. Walking into an inner room, he then in spite of the boy's efforts to! shot and killed. himself | na, waite | Fear, wn | < fired another bullet, the fifth, into | hot rimself through the head and fell |!" charge of Brooklyn and WPeputy F. | quickly followed, i ecutive will do what the agricultural bloc wants, but the latter will, on its | dead. « part, give up the idea of actually| George Pepe called neighbors by scifying hy statute what the Presi-|t ephone, When the Hackensack dent Ido in the way of future ap- | policed and Dr. John Finke, County | pointments Physician, arrived Mrs, Pepe was dead, The agricultural bloc Wes its ex- istence to the very fundamentals which are involved in the present | PIRATES RAID RUM controv Pho fay feel that SHIP AND KILL TWO! the Federal Reserve Board was un- | (Continued on Second Page.) PRINCESS MARY Cloth for ‘Trousseau Was Bought by Queen Several Years Ago, 18 Mary's LONDON, Press),—Princess Jan. (Associated wedding brought by the triumph of native manufacture, The dress will have a train of ivory silk shot with silver, which is being woven by handworkers at Braintree, Essex, an old English silk manufac- turing centre, where the art of silk- weaving has been passed down from generation to generation, are finished each day, hands of the embrolderers gown is to be of cloth of silver, of magnificent design, The material was Queen from India some years ago and is described as a So great is the care taken in the manufacture of this material that only a few inches The train is expected to be ready soon, and it will then be placed in the Many schemes for presenting wed- ding gifts to the King's daughter are "S GOWN TO BE OF INDIA SILVER afoot. The Lord Mayor of London {8 opening a popular fund for the Purpose, with contributions limited to one pound sterling Rumor has it that Viscount Las- |celles and his royal bride may spend part of their honeymoon at the beautitul Villa Medici at Flesole, near | Florence, Italy. The villa belongs to a cousin of the bridegroom, Lady Sibyl Scott, whose first husband was the late Bayard Cutting, at one time Secretary to the United States Em- hassy in London It is officially announced that Princess Mary's bridesmaids will be Princess Maud, younger daughter of {the Princess ‘Royal; Lady Rachel ICavendish, fourth daughter of the Duke and Duchess of Devonshir Lady Mary Thynne, youngest daug ter of the Marquis of Bath; Lady Victoria’ Mary Cambridge, elder daughter of the Marquis of fa bridge; Lady Doris Gordon-Lennox, younger daughter of the rl of March; izabeth Bowes-Lyon, youngest shter of the rl of Strathmere dy Diana Bridgeman, lest daughter of the Earl of Brad- ford, and Lady May Cambridge, only daughter of the Earl of Athlone, Ten Arrested in Mississippi as Result of Fight on *Cuban Smuggler. BILOXI, Miss., Jan. 16.—Diseovery of the bodies of two men, apparently foreign sailors, on the beach here las led to ten arrests by the local police, who assert the men were killed in « ight which followed an attempt last week to raid a liquor smugeling schooner at anchor near the The polloe theory, \@substan will disclose what is sald to be first instance of attempted piracy onnection with rum running on the Atlantic Coast. . About the middle of last week conling to the police, a Cuban fishin smack, rum leden, dropped hor near Dog Keys, and the captain made an agreement for a party of Biloxi: to carry the liquor in basoline lau to rhe mainland. Or Friday, the police asve party made the trip to the Ouba ovci¢ame the crew and brought < 0 livndred cases of Hquor here of the liquor has been captured, police declare, What became of the foreign boat aot known, t Mc the Se eeneasatipeteeeesiee THE WORLD TRAVEL BUKEAL. Arcade, Pulltzer, (World) “Building. 5 an Telephon Weekina 4 ange and Tarcels open, day, 820 Money orders and trarcliunw” coats far 60 FIREMEN NEAR _ DEATH AS WALLS TOPPLE AT BLAZE |& Tobias | tumbled tn, MILLIONAIRESS WHO WINS SUIT TO DROP GUARDIANS MRS. P igacrtedl B. HONEYMAN, dr. Ox “ersrem tae able a Three Chiefs Also in When Parts of Brooklyn Factory Collapse. Two deputy fire chiefs, a battalion chief and sixty firemen had eesapes when a big water narrow tank parts of the walls collapsed in a four- al and jarm fire early to-day in the Pincus shoe factory, Nos. Lexington Avenue, Brooklyn. 150 tenants of apartments Nos, 284-236 Green driven to the street, 15-21 About in the Avenue, w The first alarm from the four-story building Battalion Ch Charles Furey sent a second, bringing Deputy Chief John O'Hara was automatic. Fire Commissioner Thompson, William Third and fourth alar and “Smoky Jo Martin went over from Manhattan, | For more than half an hour firemen could not get Into the building. They finally stretched lines of hose through tenement yards in the rear and reached the blaze in that way. As Deputy Chief O'Hara was di- récting thirty men in the front of the building the wall bygan to crack. He shouted a warning and they got out of the way just as the wall, from the third story to the roof, street in In the rear Deputy Chief Fred Goodison and Battalion Chief Furey were directing thirty firemen when the water tank on the roof bi topple. The order to run was and the tank, with a big section of the wall, fell and scattered bricks where the firemen had stood a mv- ment before, The blaze could be seen for miies. Power was shut off from the waost- bound tracks of the Lexington Ave nue “L" so firemen could fight tre flames from the structure, Greene Avenue surface curs were diverted in- to De Ka'b Avenue, For a time the Lexington Storage Warehou ot 08. 25-27 vas menaced, but firemen were sent te the roof and kept the Peril! | Speedometer Corpo MRS, HONEYMAN'S 2 GUARDIANS ARE REMOVED BY COURT Heir of Speedometer.Manufac- turer Wins Contest Over 2,500,000. Estate. FATHER- IN- LAW NAMED. Taylor and fachance, Re- moved, Expected to Bring Case to Higher Court. Mes. Robert 1. daughter of the late Honeyman jr. John K. Stewart, millionaire speedometer tnventor and manufacturer, won her case against w York guardians in a decision handed down to-day by Surrogate Robert 8. Pelletreau at Riverhead, L. Mrs. Honeyman petitioned the Sur- rogate last November to revoke the letters of guardianship of Martin Taylor and Leander H. Lachance of Chicago, who were appointed’ guar- dians of Mrs, Honeyman and her sister, Jean Stewart, in 1917. At that her time Mrs. Honeyman was Marian Stewart, fiftcen years of age, and Jean was about five. Mrs. Honeyman in her petition! claimed she wasa resident of Hlinois, | under the laws of which State she | was of full age and entitled to full) the Suffolic County Nutional Bank of Riverhead. The right of Taylor and Luchance to the letters of administration rested | solely on their g Honeyman, the Surrogate uently failed if no longer her Honeyman is next of kin of the Tayloe and time th y uardians, aat-law sister Jean we heir and Lachance stated somep ago that they intended to tale it court In New the Surrogate’s Court here, isa cousin of | Mrs .Honeyman, and is President of| the Stewart Manufacturing Corpora- tion and Chairman of the Board of| Dire 8 of the Stewart-Warner tion, both of Chi cago and both organized by the late} John K. wiewart if they lost in Lachance ALLIED DEBT PLAN Points Objected to by Mellon Cut| Out of Refunding Bil by Committee WASHINGTON, Jan lied Debt Refunding proved to-day by t Committee, after most of the provi sions objected to by Secretary M of the Treasury Department had be eliminated Democratic members The was 16. ap- ate Finance ton n of the commit- blaze from epreading, The shoe fuc- tory was destroyed, the fire being con- fined to that building. A published report that eleven fire- men had been overcome aid many others injured was denied by Deputy Chief O'Hara, who said nobody v hurt, anne SURVIVOR OF LIVINGSTON EXPE. DITION DIPS. LONDON, Jan, 16.—8ir John Kirk, | who was chief officer on the Govern intot expedition of David Livingstone tobAfrica died yesterday at tho age of ninety years, tee voted against the pill in its per- fected form, Provisions stricken out called for semi-annual interest. payments and for interest at a rate of not less than) 6 per cent. | The bill is practically by the Housm It sets up | sion with authority, sul the approval of the Presiden to refund or convert and to extend time of pay -!in the Privy Council Chamber. | Quella wero selzed, made following Information recely WINS APPROVAL): ‘BRITISH TURN GOVERNMENT OVER TO IRELAND: TRONGS SEE ‘FALL OF DUBLIN CASTLE: Lord Lieutenant Transfers Full Au- thority to Cabinet Headed by Col- lins, While Crowd Watches Eng- lish Regiment in Last Drill. DUBLIN, Jan. 16 (Associated Press).—The governmental powers for Ireland, as vested in the British authorities at Dublin Castle, were turned over to-day to the Provisional Government of Irelan?, as consti- tuted last Saturday under the Anglo-Irish Treaty. The transfer was made by Viscount Fi zalan, the Lord lieutenant, ————$r ———__——® The Viceroy awaited a telephone message this morning in the Vice- WOMAN CLAIMS vagal ‘Lodee ahbvunsineitHe’ ihalna WORLD’S RECORD | Ministry had arrived at the Castle, IN VW OTHRERHQOD but not until 1,28 o'clock this after- noon did the cheers of the crow out- ride announce the arrival of Michael Collins, Prof. John MacNeill, P. J. Hogan, Joseph McGrath, Kevin O'Higgins and William Cosgrave, who drove up in taxicabs. Immediately afterward Fitzalan, with two aides Mrs. Had 31 Chiktren, 13-0f Whom Are Still Alive, Viscount SVELAND, O,, Jan. 16. cL arrived in control of hei property, dhel.aino Mrs. Mary di Gregorio of Cleve- | motor car and they all proceeded to made sensational charges of mis-| Jard to-day claimed to be the | the Privy Council Chamber. management of the property by Tay-| mochor of thirty-one children, thir- Gein ee ey peer lor and Lachance. Surrogate Pelle- i ¥ e ere clude treau) decissdl that, Mires Housman CCC ee oe ee o'clock and at 3 o'clock all the Pr 1s a resident of Illinois and therefore Physiclans declared this to be a | visional Government Ministers and sustained her claim, He held that it} "ld's record in motherhood. the Viceroy had left the Castle. Waai) theretire, unnecessary ito Gone Mrs, di Gregorio was married | They were cordially greeted as they sider the charges against the two| When sixteen, she declared, Her | passed through the crowds in thelr guardians, oldest child is twenty-two and her | motor cars, After tho death of Jean Stewart in| Yotngest nine months, she sald. The actual transfer of the Adm! Chicago on Oct. 10, last, Taylor and | se istration to the Provincial Govern- La Chance applied to the Surrogate ot | AIRPLANE IS SEIZED ment occupied two hours. Suffolk County, N. Y., for letters of AS WHISKEY RUNNER]. 72°. official announcement issued Iministration of her estate. ‘The es- at the Castle merely said the Viceroy tate was valued iat yut $2,500,000 was receiving the Irish Ministers for The Surrogate to-day denied their |2POCs™t Ram Into U. S Over) the installation of the Provisional pplication, and appointed instead Mesienn Perdez: Government and that the necessary Robert. B. Honeyman, father-in-law | WASHINGTON, Jan, 16.—-A rum-| further steps would be taken with of Mrs, Robert B. Honeyman jr., and |T88ning alrplane has been selzed on the | the British Government to complete Mexican border, according to word re- ceived to-day at Prohibition headquar- ters here. The pilot and rested and the machinery of transfer. From an early hour all approaches to the castle were blocked by a good- humoree crowd watching for what was deseribea as “the fall of Dublin Cas- by |tle.” ‘The castle yard was an the agents that the piane had been op- | @lrsted scene of visitons, journalists erating between San Antonto and | ant photographers, points over the Mexican line for several | ‘Vhe metropolitan months, | friendly manner with ali comers, and | the auxili (Black and Tans) in uniform watched .he proceedings from totr old quar whore they had ex- amined so many arrested Sinn Fatn- two others were ar- 120 bottlea of Mexican to- The arrests were lowe police dealt in a ee REDUCED PENSION CAUSE OF EX-SOLDIER’S SUICID Uraan Mal Letter to Secretary ers Davin an Lant Act. Workmen were engaged to-day in WASHIN , Jan, 16—Action of | dismantling the wire screens erected the Government in cutting his compen- | [0 the protection of the castle sation to $18 a month caused him to| {rom attack. Ashes of burning docu- commit suicide in the Veterans’ Bureay | Ments Were sprinkled over the spec- here Saturday, Andrew Braun, wounded | tors outside. x-service man, stated ina letter which | In the upper castle yard outside he mailed to retary of Labor Davis| the Viceregal apartments, a detach- Just before ending his life, ment of the Cornwall Regiment, on WOMAN MAYOR, 80, TO “SCRUB CITY CLEAN BEHIND THE EARS” Not Opposed to Bob Hair— Preparations, “Twill have this vile u A lage as clean as a pin by spring. “Can Stand It if the My plan ip, to. vecrult, the ten folks to help make this health resort the prettiest place in the State. Any one who refuses to ) rk for me will fed on bread and water, “And bootleg -I have no sym- pathy for them, As Judge of the City Court [ will deal with them se- verely and give every one the limit, ‘The City Jail hasn't had an occupant in three months, but I'll get the cob- Girls Can.” MA The United « Magnetic Springs fashioned administration Mrs, Mary McFadden, cighty, just YETIC SPRINGS, O., Jan. 16. oldest in the st to-day to be woman Mayor tes started in a real old- ment of the principal or the interest or both of any obligation of any for-| elgn Government now owing to the) United States on account of the! World Wi The Secretary of the Treasury would be Chairman of the commission, and the other embers would be appointed by the Presiient subject to confirmation by the Ben- ate, appointed head of this little village,| webs out and have it ready for was busy to-day superintending the | company.’ baking of doughnuts, cookles an@/ Robbed hair and short skirts will cakes with which she will open her! not be banished firat Council meeting to-night. { n stand ft if they can,” she ‘I'm going to give this town a| said, "but if it comes to wearing just rubbing behind the earm, too” she| a belt the girls must wear @ wide elf with official’ sald as she busled he: _—_