The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1922, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SEMIN Sy Tae Ke we growth that has caused tho trouble. Outside this, Mr. Davison ts in good health and better prepared, the doc- tors think, to stand to-day’s opera- ion than he was the first. Several members of the Morgan rm were expected at Glen Cove, and special telephone wire has: be nected between the house and lorgan offices. An Aladdin-like eet Was the carcer of Henry ‘oy Davison. It carried him a school teacher's desk in Troy PENN. RAILROAD — {PSVCHO-ANALYSIS n con- the ; “Pa to an eminence in the world of Anv — ican finance which few men | " . . 7 Yr: 4 he ff reached, It took him from rompa Ruling in Wage Case] French Physician Says, Scien- tive poverty to great wealth, it made and Shows Body Must Be Respected. im an international figure drought him distinctions which held to be among the enviable thin of this world. And the greater niin- ber of these achievements were his before he reached the midday cf his Aife. He was a power in finance be- fore he was forty-five. . « During the last twelve years of his crowded life, Mr. Davison was con- cerned in many of the greatest finan- éfal undertakings in the chronicles of Wall Street. His position as leading tifically Handled, It, Has Great Possibilities, By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, May 6 (Copyright, 1922).—Careful study of the decision of Judge Page in the locke diche, ¢ Dr. nsldered by many as the fore- most neur lichi, whe choanaly: ‘ederal Courts} fect on thi to-day, wa is deeply interested in psy- bed tines country of its study, brought oe te tate vot with most | of Chicago awarding a victory to the] Ax a fad he considers {ta moral of the smportant financial affairs of | Pennsylvania Railroad in Its contro-| anger, merely a pretext for Icen- Sonttea i ert eee Vin Atay, versy with the United States Matl- Faantinie gHElter for eet Pethececkcat +4917, to be Chairman of the War Coun. | road Labor Board, has brought Gov-/tion, On the other hand psychoan- oll of the American Ted Cross, and to | ernment lawyers to the conclusion|alysix, scientifically and — adroitly qeeel athe adiniistration of them that first impressions of the decision] handled, the physician says, is cap- _ dons the American people contrivul foward the relief of the victims of the , World War. *To this t able of opening up for us the world of the subconscious, and it is nothing more or less than a@ sclentific form of psycho-therapy Asked whether psychoanalysia wns the popular fad in France that it is as circulated in the press were erron- eous and that the verdict was by no means a blow at the Labor Board, In fact, ft now Is doubtful whether the Government will appeal the case ak he devoted as much Vifne and energy as to any of the per- ‘ptexing financial problems he faced sand solved or aided in solving. Many mimes he crossed to Europe in the in this country ond if it had aroused wer, spending months investigating | to a higher court. The reason is that | the same interest, he sald: abe workings of the Red Cross at th | close inspection of the dectston reveals} “Interest? No. Curtosity? Yes.” ‘gf the battle Hnos and lear that the point decided is relatively not | Referring to the results obtained ning how the stewardship of the Red Cro: Being administered. For the su of his direction of Red Cross afte irs lie was decorated by Itaiy and France, Mr. Davison was born fn Troy, Pa, June 13, 1867. It had always been his intention to enter financial life in and soon as ne akg » eet away from the routine of teach- a Se eat Ne nterod the busking | # considered of far more significance. ,j\ouse of his uncie in Troy. He came] The Pennsylvania Railroad, inci- +, feel in a short time that Troy was | dentally, won, from its viewpoint, an Milo ‘small a place for his ambitions, by the psychoanalyst, Dr. Gorodiche sa was | essential to the successful of the Labor Board the other hand, the statement Judge Page that the law creating the board is constitutional and that de- cisions of the board must be respected operation in future. On he psychoanalyst, tangled by his of | own thory and the slave of doctrine founded on an ttogether fragile hy- pothesis, compels the enrvous, unbal- anced and anxious patient to accept an amazingly unexpected and often humiliating explanation of his tls. Burnet Hershey, correspondent for a newspaper syndicate, was another He important point. The controversy] Passenger, said Egypt wants {¥6 he moved to New York. But his| arose over the attempt of the Rail-|merican banks and an American ®Wour had not struck, and on the ad-|road Labor Board to prescribe rules|Steamship company to establish a wvice of EB, C, Converse, himself a and regulations whereby employees of|CO#st route. power in the Street, young Davison | the Pennsylvania would select their] _kdward W. Thompson of Stapleton, oe GEER etieey thereon ha any spokesmen or representatives for the]: I., returned from a sojourn in oe Ct Mie Kate Truhee wait | #0-called regional railway adjustment| Germany and Holland, with his wite boards which have been provided for|He told the tale of all travelers 4a 1898 married her. ky His rise in the Bridgeport, bank was | by law to settle disputes over wages,/®bout the way Americans are over- In Dusseldorf, he Fapid. In 1891 he returned to New] Working hours and conditions. The] charged In Europe. srk as paying teller in the Astor| Pennsylvania Railroad argued suc-|said, he had to pay 1,000 marks for a ace National Bank, The manner} cessfully that the United States Rail-]hotel room that a German could get road Labor Board has no right to tell/for 300 marks. “ta which he obtained this position was characteristic of his determina-lany raifroad or workman how] “I'm going to stay in America here- tion and his confidence in himself. | thor respective spokesmen should befafter,” he said He first wrote to the bank seeking |p rected, ‘The great pets on the France were epee ot the eat eae on ws| ‘There have been many charges by| the four barelegged fresh air children bout it, he walked into the institu- | fallroad workers that when provision] of Mrs. Paul Laporgue, wife of a tion one morning and, utterly un-|!8 made for the settlement of a dis-] Paris Banker, and formerly of Denver. known, asked for a job, He so con- | pute between “representatives of em-| Mrs. Laporgue ts on her way to spend Vinced' the hends of the bank that he|ployers and employees” there is no| the summer with the children in Colo- ‘knew his business that they decided | wa yto make sure that the companies|rado, They are Paul Alain, seven; ‘to try him out, do not select friendly representatives| Louis and Antoinette, twins, four and pede yee i this Uli he ta ae aed or see to it that the balloting brings] half years, and Jacques Philip, six. or Pia bil tiger ay ee out spokesmen favorable to a com-| Jacques E. Goux, the automoblilist henna peceey pany’s cause. The United States Rail-| who holds the record for road driving, yerbial. One day a crank appered at window with a draft for $1,090 |T0ad Wabor Board tried to overcome} having done 91 miles in an hour last id he presented jointly with a|this difficulty but was defeated in| year and the winner of the Grand aded 38-calibre revolver, court. Prix of Italy, a 600 kilometer race, “Mr. Dat smiled blandly, said,| But it is a fact that the law does| arrived with his wife, who was Miss Sertainly, sir,” and then, to attract} enable the Railroad Labor Board to] Ruth Davis of Indianapolis. They _Bttention to his predicament, read}take jurisdiction over any dispute] will go to Indianapolis, where Goux ny, beth ee eee iroadsyit which is likely to interrupt the Na-| wii! drive in the race there. ne f Abmighte Ged the pny | tion’s commerce, and there is a spe-| Frederick C, Nano, the new Charge elo the order of Almighty God the sum »@f one thousand reife when pind cific provision permitting the Railroad] q'affairs of Roumania, assigned to sented by Charles Freeman. Penalty | Labor Board to decide a dispute if no] Washington to relieve Prince Bibesco, jf forfeited, Death!” conference between employee's and| who is to be transferred to London, “You will have to be indentified,” | employers has been held or if the con-] was another passenger. He was ac- “Mr. Davison informed the man with| ference disagrees. companied by his wife. “the revolver. But the later declared} Indeed, even if so-called representa- thet money. to oannr™, of he wanted tives of the workmen did agre to - something which a large body of their sppppital and he wanted it then and} reiow workmen didn’t like, the United ‘onsequences. “Do you want the|States Railroad Labor Board could &mount in dimes?” Mr. Davison |take cognizance of the controversy on asked, and began counting out the} petition from any 100 workmen. So, oy Sime the ank'a detective | Mt al) the law provides a check t. o nk's tect! 3 against misrepresentation. Ree eee see tind behind | “Of much more importance do Gov- and disarmed him. Long before the]¢mment lawyers construc the remari man was on his way to Bellevue Hos-|of Judge Page on the general powers! Newark Police Stop Misses ai, Mr: Davison was attending to|of the Railroad Labor Board, He said is normal work as if nothing exaraor-|in part: Bound to Pennsylvania Over Week-End. Brooklyn Girls, On Hike, Trappe By Cigarettes dinary had happened. “T have reached the conclusion that o Jo Je04 he rose to be Assistant lit wag the belief of Congress that the of the bank and five years “! results desired by the legislation could tater was its President, remaining inl attained through the force of pub- Chis office until 1902, when he was lected Vice President of the First|!c opinion and that that public Hilda Petersen and Genevieve Pen- dreil, seventeen-year-old Brooklyn vir! 4 and would support the girls, might still be merrily on their hoard composed of | Way to Pennsylvania for a week-end hike if the Newark, N. J., police had National Bank, the foremost of what |opinion would follow the publication known in Wall Street as “the|made * * * This was Mr, Davi-|decisions of the eon's stepping-stone to financial dis-|men each of whom would have spe- linetion, Six years later he became | oia) e knowledge of the difficulties not searched them and discovered a member of the firm of J. P. Morgan |, 0 ioe : within and. the neceasitien of the Lyackaxe of cigarettes and matches. “Tt Was in the black days of the|Sroup that he was chosen to repre-)" iia, and Genevieve were seen panic of 1907 that Mr. Davison came under the watchful, eritical eye of| Judge Paxe left the impression that }blythely swinging man-clad legs over S, P, Morgan, the elder. He had|neither employees nor employers are] (he tailboard of a truck as it passed Heard of Davison, of course, but in} sufe in ignoring the decisions of the|Motor Traffic Officer Hecht at Clin- Pee roNe co uene tue pene re | Ome ton Avenue and Washington, Street, contach W 5 $ nin, : #ockily-bullt, calm and resourceful ROOM eer Mmnct tet ang ancreee ‘than who was destined later to be his | world War to discuss the problems| proclaimed her independence in a pair sehief partner and adviser. Excite-lor the times. Although not a Yale . ment prevalled almost everywhere in| man’ that university: honored hin | of overalls and a man’s shirt. + that ‘university honored him) teeht stopped the truck and ques- “fhe financial district, but Davison was | y, rae 2 fool, calm-eyed and apparently de- | Moken ap gang “Lane time he WAS} tioned them, They said they we vold of nerves. Morgan saw his! Arthur T. Hadley crestienta{soing to Pennsylvania on a hike and y in the President's rasp, his Initiative and clear ability} Chair, When the War Council of the|that their parents approved of the Mm time of crisis and evidently made| Req @ jaunt. up his mind then to call Davison toligis, Mr. T Hecht was suspicious and took the efthe Morgan house when the-opportun- pair to headquarters. Here the tell- y offered WH Fi the retirement of George ‘W. ale cigarettes were located. Hilda ross was disbanded in March, vison became Chairman of of the Hoard of Governors League of Red Cross Societ international organization. the an * ray : No. 374 Sixth Perkins from the Morgan firm, Davi- | "Of eapocia on Davison | R2ve her, address ax xth WA the house, excepting, of course. |iourope afier. the war, and with}Sixth Avenue, both Brooklyn, te ee we ie financial | Horbert Hoover and others he planned] Mrs. Petersen was reached over the genius was due the American par-|q world-wide cam telephone, She said she kne ' id-wide campaign for th chil-] telephone, new of the Mecipation in the famous $80,000,000) dren, He also directed Red Cross|hike and it was perfectly all right, Hankow-Svechuan Railroad | loan relief wo f and and npiiiich foreign bankers had intended lin eastern Hurope, After, lis revann Sg lg ag EL IPS a Alby from Paris, in 1920, he emphasized Mr. Davison went to Paris in the the gravity of foreign conditions and Summer of 1910, met the Burepean |MAde an Unsuccessful suggestion to Bankers and came back with definite | Congress that it ADHESPTIALS $500,000 = samara nce of (American participation ‘Ovarmen ned Ne es pete is plan for international dev ot id the great responsi- opment of China. This was two years | bilities with which he was intrusted qaiter he joined the house of Morgan. | both in the far-regching financial af v,Another financial achievement ac-| fairs of the Morgan house and those of the American Red Cross during the Did she know that the girls were carrying cigarettes and matches as part of their kit? Must certainly she did not, and if the police would hold the two girls she and Mrs. Pendrell would be right over and get them. The police would, and have, but the girls refused to worry. “Be sure and get our pictures in the pe#per,"’ urged one of the girls, as they lined up happily for news. paper photographers. thedited to Davison was the merger of three great trust companies into tye, Guaranty ‘Trust Company of New We ae War, we re held to be the cause York, the largest organizatien of ity “4 Mr Daviaon's ‘Siret serious ilineas > nd in the world, © took no really active part in Mr. Davison was one of the most] affairs after giving up Red Cross| FUNNEL REPRODUCED sted Meutenants of the late J.| work. His visits to his banking office AT E. G. GRACE DINNER mt Morgan, who commissloned him to represent the firm in numerous oceurred at longer and longer inter- rs vals, and finally he remained prac-| Bethlehem Steel Head Provides ieegpenn! pepotietions rapes. vars tically all the time at his home, Pea Tube Into “Garden of Eden.” Eg a Be Germany in| Cock Point, Locust Valley, 1. 1, 8 Fugene G. Grace, President of the 93908 and in 1915 was one of the siego- “tlators of the $50,000,000 loan of Amer- fea to the Allies, “In politics Davison was a Repub. vere headaches and sleeplessness were | Bethlebem Steel Company, gave a dinner the chief symptoms manifested, and] in the Plaga last night to stimulate in- carly last August there was a con-|terest in New York-New Jersey tunnel sultation of four eminent physicians] building. Twenty men sat around 4 "Mean, but such was his forcefulness|to determine whether he should Le|sunked garden, which a« florist had character, his earnestness and the | subjected to operation. It was thought} transformed Into stones, rocks and “Rrast he inspired, that he completely he might be suff | Mowers to represent a tunnel into a sort eines the confidence of President gon and was frequently at the | Which was affecting his brain, {White House in the course of the | become purtially blind in the left eye. Was @ con- sional singers and R. TOLABOR BOARD) FAD, SAYS DOTOR French Line steamship France, which Leon Goro- jogiet of France, Dr, Goro. s, plans to observe the ef- _THE EVENING WoRLD, SATURDAY, MAY French Fresh Air Kiddies, Pets of Ship, and Their Mrs, Paul LaForque and her children, Jacques, Phillipe, Antoiyette, Louis and Paul Alain, who reached! New York to-day enroute to spend the summer In Denver, former hom e of Mrs, LaForque. RS PAN VARORGUE Wirt KIDDIES VACQUES PHILLIPE, ANTOIR S DMPAOLAALAIND REARING! FROM, KEP TOTO Hic 6, 1922, Live Simple Life, Pay Debts, Get Yours, Be Fair _ To Family, Says Uncle Joe at 8 Great Men and Women in U.S. Than More Vole Right, Ever Before in History, Cannon Shouts Copyright, 1922, by the United Press. WASHINGTON, May 6.—‘Lead a simple life, vote right, pay your hon- est debts, collect all that's coming to you, but no more, and treat your family right." That is ‘Uncle Joe’ Cannon's ad- vice to Americans on the eve of his eighty-sixth birthday anniversary to- morrow, ‘The man who has served more than forty-five years in Congress — longer than any other man and longer than the average person lives—was asked to give his definition of good Ameri- canism, and the foregoing is his view. Uncle Joe,” in his office at the Capitol, paced nervously up and down the room. With arms swinging in his old-time style, he gave the le to the talk that the country and the Government are going to the dogs. "What do you think about the fu- ture America?"' he was asked. ‘‘Do you believe in all this pessimist talk about the people degenerating and the Government going to smash?" ‘Uncle Joe" nearly exploded. "There are more great men and more great women in the United States to-day then there ever has been in the history of the nation!" Cannon shouted. “Some people ask, ‘Where are they? and I answer they are every- where, following their vocations; but when necessary, whether it be in Con- gress, in civil life, upon the bench, or in the State Legislature, whether it be in carrying on the business of the country, whether it be following the plow or working in the machine shop, there will be found more people capa- ble of self-government and ready to defend the flag than there ever have been since America was discovered." “Uncle Joe" gave his ently life on the farm credit for giving him the physical strength to endure his long service in Congress, That, and his habit of eating only when he's “dead hungry.” He seldom eats tunch, but when he does eat he downs anything he wants and all he wants. If tobacco hurt him he would have been a “goner” long ago, he said, recalling that he started to chew at twelve and’ was smoking at fifteen, Uncle Joe” tells the world that, although he's eighty-s nd ought to know better,” draw poker against good, stiff pla: fs still his pet di- version, ‘How long do I expect to live?” Uncle Joe repeated. “Well, if I had a chance to take out an insurance policy that would make me live to be a hundred, but would end me there, I wouldn't have it. I'd pay not to have it. There is probably one man in a half million alive to-day who will live to be one hundred years old and I'm willing to take my chances. . “Uncle Joe's" birthday will be cele- brated to-night with a party at the home of Representative Madden of Tilinois, Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, who grew up in the House under Cannon's wing. Many of Uncle Joe's old friends will drop in to do him honor, includ- ing the President. of the United States, who, for once, will take a back seat. LEAVES $170,000 ¢ TO HER PARTNER AND HIS FAMILY Helen M.° Rickerbacker’s Will Disposes of Estate E: timated at Half Million. ‘The will of Helen M. Knickerbacker of New York City and Saratoga, who died Jan. 30, was filed to-day for pro- bate in the Surrogate's Court of New York County. Mrs. Knickerbacker was head of H. Knickerbacker & Co., 25 Broad Street, To her partner, Robert Gibson, No. 147 Linden Avenue, Brooklyn, is left $125,000. He also is made the residuary legatee. His wife receives $25,000 and his four children $5,000 each. Baltis F. Brennan, an old em- plyee of Knickerbacker & Co., is left 25,000, One hundred thousand dpl- lars left to Mrs. Lavina A, Knicker- backer, widow of her son, is revoked in a codicil, and $5,000 left to her daughter-in-law instead. St, Luke's Hospital receives $10,000, St. Thomas's Church, $3,000, and Dr. Herman M. Biggs “‘my friend and physician,” $10,000. Other employees of the firm are re- membered and they are to act as exe- cutors in the affairs of the business. The vaiue of the estate is not given, but it is thought to be $500,000, THE WORLD TH. F AY i Arcade, Puiltzer World) luhdng 3-48 Park How, N.Y. City. | Telephon 4000, ‘Check room tor baned reels pen day and night. “Mcney Sdete am Wavellete’ checks for sale —Aavt, in excess of Noekman KEEPS DAUGHTERS HERE ONLY BY WRIT Naturalized Austrian Stops Deportation of Girls at Last Moment. Two daughters of an Amer zen pan eiti- from deportation aliens this afternoon by a timely writ of habeas corpus Joseph Gutstein of No. 630 East 11th Street, born in Austria but natural- ized recently, sent for his daughters, Frieda, sixteen, and Pauline, thirteen. They were detaind at Ellis Island on thelr arrival and the immigration a thorities decided to send them back. This morning they were placed on La Savoie of the French Line, weep- ing, while their father’s lawyer, Max- well Wallach, scurried about for a writ, He got one from Federal Judge Mack, ‘The case will come up for argument next Kriday. eee LORD WODEHOUSE MARRIES. Famous Poloist Weds Mrs, Frances were saved as Margaret Montague, LONDON, May 6.—Lord Wodehouse, ‘son and heir of the Earl of Kimberley and famous poloist, who has ‘played against the Americans, w: yea- terday to Mrs, Frances Margaret Monta- gue, great-granddaughter of the second Baron Boston, The ceremony took place in a Register'’s office ‘The Countess of Kimberley, the bride, mother, was one of the few pri GARMENT WORKERS o| JOIN FORCES AFTER ALAHT MEETING Agreement Between Conserv- . atives and Insurgents Means Retention of Schlesinger. CLEVELAND, May 6.—An agree- ment has been reached between the two factions in the International La~- dies’ Garment Workers’ Union, {t was learned, us the delegates gath- ered for to-day’s session of the six- teenth biennial convention, The agree- ment, according to reports, was ef- fected at a secret conference between leaders of the two factions which lasted nearly all of Thursday night. A joint committee equally repre- senting the insurgent New York group and the conservatives will en- deavor to bring about the united front with which it will be possible, it is said, for the union to retain Benja- min Schlesinger as President, Schlesinger, it has been ‘reported, intends to resign because of criticism cast upon his administration by mem- bers of the so-called Communist group. Schlesinger has refused re- peatedly to discuss these rumors. He was not aware of the secret meeting. The points of difference between the factions involve not only union poli- cies but political affiliations with the insurgents, it is said, being made up largely of communists and adherents of the Third Internationale. The convention closed its first week with this morning's brief session. A sightseeing trip was on the afternoon programme, Resolutions are expected to be com- pleted and published ready for action Monday morning. pita AGED PAIR LOSE LIVES IN FLAMES Charred Bodies Found After Fire Destroys Home Near Freehold. (Special to The Evening World.) FREEHOLD, N. J., May 6,—Will- fam H. Brown, seventy-two, and his wife, Mary, y-elght, were burned to death early this morning in a fire which destroyed their home at Jersey- ville, three miles from here, The house was in flames when James Haviland, who lives across the street, gave the alarm, The nearest fire department was at Freehold, and by the time it arrived the destruction was complete. The ¢ harred bodies of the aged couple were found, hours ane Browns were the parents of nine children, all married and living in homes of their own. The cause of fhe fire has not been learned, LARGEST LOUISIANA AAR CRO! IN TEN YEARS. y TON, May 6,—Louisiana’s SEN oep was the largeat.In ten years, the Department of Agriculture yeepunced to-day. 1fs final report on Inst year's cane harvest placed the out- put at $24,431 tons of sugar and 6,454, 8 gallons of syrup, compared with 137 tons of sugar and 4,039,885 gal- tons of syrup in 1920. a DR. G. ¥. VINCENT IN HOSPITAL, SNWICH, Conn, May 6,—Dr. GREEN evant, aad of the Rocke: ree oandation of New York, ts in fallen Rous Hospital with a’ severe i ithught. on by overtaxing his strength in business and public speak- tng. His condition to-day was Improved, om 10,000 MUTINEERS Mother MARCHING TO LOOT ALIENSINTENTSIN FOR GRAND JURORS American and British Troops Organize Outer Line of Defense, SHANGHAI, May 6 (United Press). —Ten thousand mutinous Chinese troops are reported marching upon Tientsin to loot the foreign quarter. The whites are preparing for de fense. i These troops are the remnants of the shattered army of Chdng Tso Lin, seeking revenge for their crush- ing defeat by Gen. Wu Pet Fu's forces, Despatches from Tientsin at 3 A. M. said scouts had observed the mutineers near the city. The situation is similar to thi which existed in Peking during yt’ Boxer siege, A The whole foreign populf—1 ts taking up arms to assist “the de- fense, despatches reported. One American and one British regi- ment were co-operating along the out- er line of defense, the messages said, id the French Annamite troops were being strengthened by reinforcements of French citizens. Scouts reported that large bodies of the mutineers were coming from the direction of Loafa. They are utterly disorganized, and are marching like armed mobs. The mutineers are fir- ing on villagers and shooting at their own troops trains, the scouts said. The news firect from Peking is not alarming, although the legations of the United States and the other powers have ordered foreigners to abandon homes in the Chinese dis- tricts and take refuge in the com- pounds, General Chang himself is in flight toward Mukden. ‘Thousands of his troops, trapped on the battlefield, threw down their arms, The wake of the great retreat is marked with scores of dead horses umd camels, wrecked wagons, dead and wounded, disabled artillery and ull the debris of war, The menace to Tientsin comes from the Fengtein troops of the defeated army. While Chang is withdrawing in northeasterly direction along the Peking-Mukden Railway, the Feng- teins, who are fierce and savage fighters, are marching southeast toward Tientsin. They are utterly beyond control and are burning, kill- ing, looting and destroying as they vdvance, CHINESE PREMIER DISMISSED AND ARRESTED BY WU PEKING, May 6 (Associated Press). — Sweeping Governmental changes followed to-day the success of Gen, Wu Pei Fu in winning the mili- tary mastery at Peking. President Hsu Shth Chang issued a mandate dismissing Premier Liang Shih Yi and ordering his arrest. Finance Minister Chang Hu and Minister of Communi- cations Yeh Kung Cho also were dis- missed and their arrest ordered. CHINESE WAR ENDS WITH COLLAPSE OF THE CHANG ARMY TIENTSIN, May 6 (Associated Press.)—Gen, Wu Pei Fu, victor in the civil war which now appears to bu at an end, is reported to be at Huaag- tsun, on the Peking-Tientsin Railway, about ten miles south of the capital, where he went yesterday from‘ Fenz- tal. The retreat of Gen, Chang Tso-Lin's forces now appears to be nearly at its end, except on the Tientsin-Pukow line, where it is estimated from 30,009 to 40,000 mem still remain in the vicinity of Machang. Orders for these men to evacuate have been received, according to Chinese reports, The rearguard of Chang's forces, the 6th Brigade, has arrived at Laofa, midway between Peking ani this city, and a request has been re- ceived that a train be gent for it, The Yoreign concessions in Tien- tsin were patrolled last night, Strong forces of Chinese police guarded the city. Admiral Strauss, commander of the American Asiatic fleet, arrived from Peking by motor yesterday afternoon. He was stopped once by Chang's troops, who allowed him to proceed after identification. An Allied military train will leave Peking to-day. Chang Tso Lin, who brought 100,000 troops south of the Great Wall, is believed to have aban- doned any idea of offering organized resistance. His flight was precipitate. eS TWO-FARE PLAN FOR L, I. WAITS ON COMMISSION Postponed Until Wednesday, Ex- pecting Action by That Time. Announcement: Was made to-day that the plans for the recelvers‘to take over the Steinway Lines of Long Island, at 2A, M., Monday, had been postponed until Wednesday at that hour, This, It was stated, was duo to Inability to com- plete arrangements as to fares with the ‘Transit Commission. ‘The pla announced yesterday, {8 to charge two fares on the lines of the New York and Queens County Railroad between New York, Flushing, Jamaica and other points, making Woodside the end of the five cent zone In either diec- ton. The application for this change {s before the Transit Commission. RUM SEIZURE LAW Judge Nott and Banton Draw Up Rules on Which to Base Indictments. bringing In indictments orandum: 1. If liquor be found openly on a truck, or being carried from or to a truck, or be found without search in a saloon, restaurant or other place, save a dwelling, a seizure is lawful without warrant, 2. If @ lawful arrest b emade of ‘one found in unlawful possession f liquor, then the premises or vehicle may he searched for fur- ther liquor and a seizure without warrant {s lawful. Thus, if one be found serving liquor unlawfully in a saloon or restaurant, and be lawfully arrested, a further search of the premises is lawful without warrant. 3. It is unlawful to make, with- out warrant, a search of persons, premises or vehicle merely for the purpose of ascertaining whether liquor is in possession where with- out the search there is no evidence of such possession and no lawful arrest has been made. Thus, offi- cers have no right to go into a restaurant or other place where there is no evidence apparent and demand to search the premises without a warrant. The memorandum was prepared by Judge Nott after a conference with District Attorney Banton. Following the sending of the copies to the jurors, a copy was sent to each of the City, Magistrates, that they may know the interpretation placed on the statute by the Court and District Attorney, and be guided in the holding of pris- oners for the Grand Ju ape HARDING HEARS SENATE LEADERS ON BONUS BILL oe Measure Similar to One Passed by House—President Withholds Decision. WASHINGTON, May 6.—President Harding after a conference to-day with Senate Finance Committee Re- publicans, withheld decision on the soldiers’ bonus legislation until he can study the various plans proposed. Chairman McCumber and Senators Curtis and Watson of the Finiance Committee, with Senator Lodge of Massacrusets, the Republican leader, were closeted with the Executive for more than an hour. The explained in detail the McCumber bonus plan, which is very similar to the House measure, and also outlined the Smoot insurance plan. ‘The Senators said the President had expressed no opinion and that they did most of the talking. Mr, Harding asked about the sales tax, which he previously had recommended as a means of financing the bonus, and was told that this form of tax could not be put through Congress. The Senators informed him that the Me~ tumber plan would entail no large expenditures by the Government dur- ing the next three years and that no immediate means of financing the bonus would have to be found. In consideration of the bonus bill figures compiled by Senate Appro- priations Committee experts are to be cited showing that up to April 1 this year a total of $1,979,260,634 has been appropriated to care for World War veterans. ‘This includes $298,615,000 for family, allowances; $557,150,000 for compen- sation; $23,000,000 for insurance; $224,000,000 for hospitalization; $47,- 000,000 for hospital constructior $469,123,370 for acational trainin, $248,000,000 for the bonus paid the men at the end of their service. Other items include disposition of remains, administration, &c., for the fiscal year 1923, the appropriations under the various items above total $406,- 088,842 in addition. These figures will be sides. Anti-Bonus to show that the already done all it w discharge ita obligations to the former service men, Bonus adyo-~ cates will claim the two billions only took care of absolute essentials, and that the bulk of it was used in one way or another to help the disabled and was in no sense an adjustment of compensation, as the Bonus bill is called. _—o— ORDERS EXPRESS RATES Low. PRED ON FRUIT AND PRODUCH, ALBANY, May 6.—The Public Service Commission to-day directed the Ameri- can Railway Express Company to make reductions in the express rates on ship- ments of apples, pears, lettuce and eu- used by both nators intend vernment has as required 'to cumbers between Scriba Station, Oswe go County, and New York City, holding thet present rates ory. The company {8 directed to establis! within ten days a rate of $1.16 a hun- dred on apples and pears and $1.10 ag lettuce and cucumbers, COURT INTERPRETS ». In reply t6 questions by members of the two grand juries for the month of May, as to how far they could go im, under the Mullan-Gage act, Judge Nott of the Court of General Sessions has given to each of the jurors the following mem-

Other pages from this issue: