The evening world. Newspaper, June 3, 1922, Page 1

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VOL. ‘LXIL NO. err a ne ‘7 To-Night'’s Weather—FAIR. PINAL WORLD Ii = BD TION . 22,066—DAILY. Copyright (New York World) by Press Pablishing Company, ons’ NEW YO TO LOCKW {@ Senator Orders Him to Pro- duce Papers in $251,- 000,000 Deal. PRIVATE, HE CLAIMS. $20,000,000 Fund to “Make Market” for New Stock ales Samuel Untermy uttorney for the Lockwood Hou Commit tee warned Mortimer 1, Schiff of the banking firm of Kulin, Loeb & Co at to-day’s Invest gation of the $251,000,000 North American Steet Company merger, that if he con tinued to refuse Te was lable to answer questions The bank to go to jail ing firm is the synd cate managers of the merger Mr. Schiff, who had fought Mr Untermyer almost every minute of an hobr of cross-examination, defying @oth ‘counsel and/the committee to compel him to produce the merg Fecords, furn shed wa fittir limax to 9. tense morning when he leaned for- ward in ¢ witness chair and shouted at “TT go Unte myer company." “1 want the Schiff that he is not duwn in his ing room now,” said Mr. Unt “And don't think you are down n », either,”’ shot back Mr you would cail your If you don’t, Vl chairman to warn Mr ank- yer refuse to ch answer and take ces on thi “If you don't you'll take your chances of going to Jail,’ threatened Mr. Untermyer. “Tf I go to jail you'll bear me com- questio ‘ons answer nCeS. questions pany,” replied Mr. Schiff Thomas L, Chadbourne, counsel in the North American Steel Company merger, who followed Mr. Schiff to the stand, refused to furnish the com- ‘mittee with accountants’ reports .of the assets and earnings of the com- panies concerned in the merger “T decline to do so,’* said Mr. Chad- bourne, ‘‘on the ground that they form part of the confidential relatign ship between tawyer and client In addition they were given to me with the distinct unde anding that the figures of one concern should not be diseloxed to another + Mr. Untermyer asked Mr, Chad bourne if he would honor a subpoena to produce all the data of the merger Mr. Chadbourne replied t he thought he had already answered that question. “I think the witness is in con tempt," sald Mr. Untermyer. Chair- man Lockwood whispered to Mr. Un- termyer and Mr. Chadbourne was ex- cused. A subpoena will be served, (Continued on Fifth Page.) ee Good News and Plenty of It for Vacationists The World’s Annual Summer Resort Number will be publ'shed to-morrow, and as usual it wi'l contain a vast ) fund of desirable and practical infor- mation for vacation secker#, It will \ be one of the largest and most useful 4 / Summer Resort Numbers ever \ rinted by a New York newspaper. | ead the ads. carefully and plan your Summer vacation accordingly, 41,351 Yvan: 29 15 vy) More Than Any Other ’ New York Newspaper. * Health—Rest—Pleasure WHERE BEST ENJOYED Read The World's ‘Resort’ Ads, v @ OD COMMITTEE © YOUNG WIFE TOOK NEIGHBOR'S MILK AND IS ARRESTED) Magistrate Succeeds in ing Charge Against Mrs tle Dropped. Lechmer RK, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1922. To-Morrow's Weather—FAIR, Entered ax Por ENDS HERFIGHT TOSTOP WEODIN Father of Mathilde Withdraws Consent to Her Marrying Oser. REMAINS AS GUARDIAN. Told to Give Heed to Charge That Swiss Is Fortune CHICAGO, June 3 Mathilde ‘The court fight Yormick's inter- against Mc Hay-] national x age to Max Oser ended abruptly in less than two minutes’ . proceedings in Vrobate Court to-day, when Mrs, Edith Rockefeller MeCor- mick, the girl's mother, withdrew her petition for a restraining order to pre- Innis, Negro elevator boy | vent Mathiide's marriage to the at No, 281 West 69th Street, looking | Swiss horseman. from his car this mofning saw Mrs.{_ Judge Horner in granting the mo- oe uae stop in front}@™ added that Harold F. MeCormick . : would be-nppointed Mathilde’s legal of the door of Miss Evelyn Piciard, an} cuurdian without further delay, but actress, Took around and secrete afthat he wouldexpect the father to ex- milk bottle from Miss Piciard’s door- mat under her raincoat ecute his tr parent should’ guardian and a and that he would also expect Mr. MeCormick to ke into Innis, when Mrs. Castle, whol oop ation all the points in Mrs. arried George Castle, a shoe sales-] McCormick's answer n, last January, reached her own} This was interpreted as a warning door, accused her of the theft that Mr, McCormick should consider “Please,"” she said to the boy, “let| very carefully his attitude toward me put it back. I just had to have| Mathilde's marriage rn It was some milk for breakfast ang I had|also said that Mr mick was spent all this week's housekeeping|soing to be sure Oser’s love was for allowance.” Mathilde and not for her riches, be- is refused. He called Welix|fore he allowed the marriage to go Kolenz, the superintendent, who made | ahead. a ch of petty larceny against] "Mr. McCormick fully realizes his Mrs. Castle to Policeman Kenny off responsibilities as guardian of Ma- the West 68th Street Station, thilde,” Lawyer Cassels said. Mr. Castle reached West Side Court] Mrs. McCormick's swer had Just as his wife was arraigned before} charged that Oser sought the mar- Magistrate Simpson. She burst into] r hoping to ob sums tears and clung to her husband while] of money and financial gain” and de- she ro was true and sorry and she wi married to anybody but she had n was Vv wanted a glass of milk so much in h life and she just had to have it. Magistrate Simpson regarded provingly the husband's efforts to back to quiet and then said the complainant in this her thin ought th side require circumstan He ought to making a charge of against the young wife.” sobbed that the story told by she "t fit to be to take Into consideration all whether the interests of justice theft the| plored the disparity in ages between very, | the two. QOser is 44 Asked what the next move would c be, Mr, Cutting sald there “wouldn't be any next move." HARDING IS WILLING TO BECOME ARBITER IN ANTHRACITE CASE. WASHINGTOD Harding, probably point a tribunal to arbiina ap- > pet if case Sone -President would agree to ap- » differences June lutely," said Mr. Kolenz, on whom af (miners, if DOU) Sie vite House’ to- great light seemed to have broken. | j,y That's’ right,” said the magistrate |" "No direct comment on the proposals to the superintendent, and to. Mr.Jor the anthracite operators to the Castle he said: fake your wife] miners in the meetings at New, York, home and be good to her.” Mrs, Castle went out with her head inst her ‘husband's shoulder NAVY BALLOON LOST, AVIATION MEN SAY suggesting such action, was made, other than a statement that the Administra- tion was hopeful some basis for a set- tlement soon would be re ad. NINETEEN HURT IN TRAIN WRECK CHICAGO, June 8 (Associated] Qurcac e 3,—Nineteen Press).—Lieut. W. F. Reed, Naval] CHICAGO, June 3. gidbesnh Pilot in the National Balloon Race, | 80ns were injured, two seriously, last which started at Milwaukee, Wis. | night when Chicago and Northwest- Wednesday, elther is lost in the wilds|ern Passenger Train No. 6, from of Canada, Dr has met with a ser accident, Government Weather au officials and ayiatton author here said to-day, Omaha to Chicago, was derailed near Quarry, Iowa, according to official re- ports received at the railroad’s office here. ious Bu- ities NATION AL LEAGUE FIRST GAME. AT EBBET'S FIELD— Phila, ....003010 Brooklyn..O10110 Batteries—Ring and Henline; Re uther and DeBerry FIRST GAME. AT POLO GROUNDS— Bostzn... O00 203 Yankees... 00101 Ratteeries—Quinn and Ruel; Jone s and Schang Washington at Philadelphia (bot> games), postponed; rain. ARPLANE, FLOWER AS ENRIGHT LEAVE Hylan Helps to Give Commis- sioner Rousing Sendoff at Pier. WILL TOUR JROPE. Police Methods in Several Cities to Be Studied on Trip. Police Commissioner Richard F. Enright sailed on the Olympie to-day and the farewell demonstration In his honor was almost royal. The Mayor and the Mayor's wife and a host of police officials and underlings gath- ed at the pier. The Police Glee Club and police band and the Muntelpal Rand sang and played to him ahd a police airplane hovered oyer the ship like guardian angel. When the Mayor, the Commissioner and Rodman Wanamaker stood. to- gether on deck to have their pictures taken, Mr, Wanamaker described the group as “Civic Virtue,’ but Enright offered a correction—"Blessed Trin- ity.” Enright also said he noticed that Great Britain “is sending two nel regiments to Ireland because one cop is golng there."’ “I'm going first to Paris,’ Enright told the reporters, ‘Then I'l! go to Venice, Rome, Vienna and Berlin, back to Paris, then to London, up to Scotland and through Ireland. I am going to make an investigation of the police departments in the chief Eu ropean cities, especially Paris and London, learn what new ideas they have for pqlice work and try to get the heads of their departments to come to New York for the international police conference in September, “It is important that the police de- partments here and in Europe get to- gether and work together in a way that would amount to something like the, establishment of ar international Police force.’* . Col. Jefferson de Mont Thompson, head of*the Aviation Department of the Police’ Reserves, sailed with the Commissioner, as did also Rodman Wanamaker. Other passengers were: Field Mar- shal Ear! French, returning from a visit; Col. Michael Friedsam, of 1 trade conditions for President Hard ing; Marjorie Schweinert, a dancer; Bull Montana, the movie actor; E Paul Yaselli, Assitant United States District Attorrey; Josef Hofman, the pianist; Irving T. Bush; Dr. J. C. Everwyn, the Holland Minister to the United States, and Howard Heinz, the pickle man, CHLOROFORM MAN IN EFFORT TO GET HIS FINGERPRINT NEWTON, N. J., June 3.—Sussex County authorities chloroformed «a prisoner, whose name they refused ty reveal, in order to obtain his finger prigts, it was learned to-day. The reason for his detention is kept a secret For eight days the man has suc cessfully fought off all efforts to take his fingerprints, it was said. Yester- day a'physician was summoned, the prisoner was surprised in his cell, the chloroform fumes liberated and th work accomplished. He quickly re vived. ee GEN. WU THREATENS WAR ON SUN YAT SEN PEKING, June 3.—(Associated Press).—General Wu Fei-Fu, who re cently erased Chang-Tso-Lin, Man churian War Lord, from the slate of Peking politics, to-day declared that if Sun Yat-Sen, President of the Ré Dublic of South China, resiste in op- Posing plans for the unification of China, he, too, must be eliminated by the sword. ao TAF WORLD TRAVEL BUREAT. Pulltaer (World) ‘Butidl 2-08 | N City, Telephi nan Cheok room for baggage and par open day and night, Money orders and Wavellers’ cheoke for sale.——advis lapsed."* cate which one, ‘irculation Books Open to All.” | Office, Second-Clasn Matter New York, N. ¥. PRICE THREE CENTS “WOUNDED PRISONER IN PHILADELPHIA "MAY BE THE MISSING MAN WARD SHOT -SGHIFE REFUSES TO GIVE —MRS.MVCORMICK BAND AND RUFFLES BOOK DEALING WITH WARD BAKING CO. STEEL MERGER DOCUMENTS _ FOUND ON PHILADELPHIA PRISONER WHOLE WARD HOUSEHOLD SUBPOENAED BEFORE JURY TO CONFRONT CUNNINGHAM + Wife, Father, Nurse and Maid to Appear on Monday and Tell What They Know About Mysterious Blackmail Plot. District Attorney Weeks. of Westchester County, while his agents served subpoenas on Mrs. Walter S. Ward, Miss Lulu Barrowsand Miss Amy Mild, nurse and maid in the Ward household and on George 8. Ward, Walter 5. Ward's father to appear before the Grand Jury Monday, was receiving the report from Philadelphia regarding the man under arrest there in the belief that he may be one of the men implicated in Ward's story of the attack of blackmailers in which Clarence Peters was killed May 16. The description of Guizo, or Guido, the man under arrest, hardly cides with that given out by Sheriff Werner last week as that of ‘Juck,'* the chauffeur who, with Charley Ross, drove away, according to Walter Ward's story, after Peters fell Werner description made ‘Jack" out ty-faced man with black hair, not conspicuously of heavy build In Walter Ward's statement to the authorities he said that he fired sev Charley to be a eral shots after Jack and Ross and ‘thought one of More significant the apeparance of to Mr. the Weeks suspect change for laborers work, was dismissed from the Marine racks at Paris Island, 8, C. gators at Paris Island have repc that young Peteres repeatedly stated that being without funds did not worry him, because he could get “plenty of money from rich friends in New York’ and would “have no trouble in getting to New York in an automobile if he could once get to Philadelphia. He reached phia not earlier than noon, May the day before his body was found. The Grand Jury will be presented Cun- the race track adventurer, rum-runner case with the statement of James J. ningham, movie’ scenario writer, and hotel beat brought Into the by the New York American Jail attendants said that during last night Cunningham declared his whole was fiction made up with the into found state- red he had not made, or if he had made sun him- he story object of fooling the American paying him $1,000 before they he was lying. Many of the ments attributed to him he de them, he said, they had been gested by others and uttered by elf when he did not know what saying. He inquired vaguely « utterly without humorous intent to whether he -could take involuntary restraint his morals, The Grand Jury will i and ing hear (Continued on Second Page.) 5 o’Clock To-Day . CLOSING TIME Fo Ld SUNDAY WORLD CLASSIFIED ADS. POSITIVELY NO ADVERT ENTS ACCEPTED AFTER 5 Pr, M. Fou TO-MORROW'S SUNDAY WOKLD. 'gBANCH OFFICES CLUS BAMLLIUIM, coin- ne them col- The statement did not indi Ty Philadelphia, the point to which Clar ence Peters got transportation in ex when he Bar Investi Philadel action ,inst the American for keeping him impair- such WHISKEY PIRATES, THENDDRY RAIDERS GET RUM RUNNERS Tug Robbed on High Seas Reaches Port Only to Be Seized. The champion rum-running hard luck story was told to-day after the seizure by Fedérhtl Prohibition agents ‘of the ocean-going tug The Ripple with 1,000 cases of rye whiskey, ued at about $65,000, in the Barge Canal near the foot of Clinton Street, Brooklyn, The Ripple was a mine layer for the navy during the war and her hard luck story began a v when she was fifty miles off Ambrose Light A small fishing boa alongside and bargained for of liquor at $57 This was ¢ good price and the Nquor was trans ferred from the Ripple As soon as It was safely stowed aboard the fishing tho latter drew off and the crew drew revolvers, and that was the last the Ripple's people saw of the thieves. Needless to say, they had not paid the 250 cases. Andrea Mareilli, who said he the pilot of the Ripple, dectared that this was his first a his ek ago last Sunday t came 50 cases case boat « penny for was 1 would be last experience at rum-running Last night the tug slipped in. As soon as it had tled up to a canalboat loded with lumber, eight faust motor boats crept up and the crew began loading whiskey on them There was a sudden fusillade of shots, the motorboats ducked without paying for the hooch that had been put on them, and within a few min utes a lot of Government men with drawn revolvers jumped aboard, The twelve men in the crew, who, accord ing to the Prohibition Agents, had thrown at least haif a dozen rifles overboard, were made prisoners. They began begging Immediately for food, and the Federal agents sent ashore and bought them all they needed, then sent them to quarters under guard tq sleep until arraignment later before a Unt 1 States Commissioner. Macill!, the pilot, was not aboard when the raid ade. tie had ulroady been arrested. John Cuizo, With Wounds in Chest* and Arm, Arrested After Struggle and Police Are Convinced He Is Mixed Up in Blackmail Mystery. (SPECIAL TO THE EVENING WORLD.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 3—A man with a bullet wound in his chest and another in his arm, who may be the mysterious “Jack” in the baffling Ward blackmail and murder case in New York, is under police guard at the Samaritan Hospital The man is a giant in strength and’stature. Three patrolmen are standing at his bedside to prevent possible escape. Lieut. Belshaw head of the murder squad, is so impressed with the importance of the prisoner and the possibility that he is the man sought in the Ward case that he had him photographed as he lay in his cot in the hospital, and sent a print with a minute description, including fingerprints District Attorney Weeks at Whité*Plains, N. Y. TF The man who says he is John Cla inAy of New York, put up a savage batth« Despite his two_ wounds, both he A which have able to fight’ off two uniformed mez for/ten minutes before he succumbe! the joint use of their blackjacks. In the hospital three Were put on guard to pi tempt to pe become Infected. NEW TRAFFIC RULES UNDER CARD PLAN Traffic Court Had Been Men- aced by Increasing Cases, He Declares. policemen vent any at- He has refused to answer questions, According to Detective Ciuzo has becn unable to furnish an account of his movements between May 14 and 17, during which time Peters was killed and his body found by New York State police. In his possession were found a book dealing with the affairs of the Ward Announcing that there were more} Baking Company and another con- than 600 cases In the Traffic Court on | taining addre es, aMONs them that of Thursday morning, which required | C4Pt. “Marsh’’ of "Mareh’’ in an of- five building at Broad and Chestnut the services of tt Magistrates, | strects , Chief Magistrate McAdoo in a state- TALLIES WITH DESCRIPTION OF PETER’S PAL. . in the minds of ment given out to-day declared it is expected the new ordinance signed by Mayor Hylan yesterday will material- Added significance police, ix guined by the exactness ly relieve congestion in the courts,| With which the prisoner tallies with The Chief Magistrate added that the|t®€ description of Peters’ companion organ ¥ in the confession which obtained functioning of the courts had been| yesterday at White Plains by Distric seriously menaced by the fast incre ing number Of traffic violation arrests, Under the ordinance all drivers of cars are given cards by the Police De- partment. Chief Magistrate McAdoo announced that these cards will punched for the following Attorney Weeks and Sheriff Werner. Early Friday morning, two poltee- men stopped Ciuzo, who was prowling around a hou He refused to an- swer their questions and hit one of them when they tried to ar him. A furious wrestling bout follower, Ciuzo once freeing himself of his eap- violations: could start to run. At the Hunting One way street Park Ay © Station the sontr said Restricted street he was a “special detective of the De Failing to stop on signa Moon Agency, New York City,” and Smoke. he exhibited a deputy sheriff's badge No lights. At the preliminary hearing he s: Improper lights. nothing of his wounds which had beer re-opened during the fight. As he was about to enter his cell the turn key noticed them and reported to the House Sergeant who again examined Cluzo. ‘The prisoner said he had been shot during a row at Greensburg, Pa. Physicians examining the man said blood poisoning had set in and ordered him taken to a hospital efore this was done a hearing was 4 ged be fore Magistrate Lintell ‘This time he declined to furnish any additional information. He refused to fell why he was carrying the memo- No name on vehicle Unnecessary noise. red flag on extended ma terial Unattended vehicle Towing more than one vehicle. Overloaded vehicle “After that, if the wain he is given a brought Into the Traffic Court, where the Magistrate will have the option of taking away his card, which amounts to taking away his licen: sald the Chief Magistrate, He added: owner offends summons and “No o can tell the exact number y An ook or the Wand Ba of cases that this will take out of the cai ear Se ec aaa , er 0 cabs licensed to eg wii bHlene day approximates 22,000, nd the l- ian, hig clothes ar with, Bel pin stripes and of good material, His shoes and other garments also are of good material, His general appear ‘ say the police, fails to suppert vis tale of being an itinerant strike- ' He gave his New York ad- “Mills Hotel."* censing is still going on. The drivers of these furnish a large number of the cases which come into the courts for all sorts of violations. There is park- age enough for only a small percent- age of them, #0 the hopeless task goes on of bringing them into this court for soliciting off public stands. s to the speeders, a constant stream of these comes from Riverside Drive, upper Broadway, St. Nicholas Avenue and Convent Avenue The danger to the public at these plices ts on the crossings. Even if they slow down to fifteen miles per hour the public would not be protected unless dress as No. Seventh a careful ex At the Mills Hotel Avenue and 38th Street amination of the register for a month back did not disclose the name of Gulzo or anything closely similar to it. But it was regarded as of great interest that the name of ‘‘H. Peters’ appeared on the register as occupying 14 and 16, policemen are on the crossings. If|# room May It was im- the crossings on these avenues are] possible to find anybody who remem policed the speeding would die down, | bered "“H. Peters." Employees di vemember that in that week the hate! x of Hotel Astur ay. June ath, 4 of Hotel star cas full of marines and sailors on and hie oro! Pstre, Dancing —Adve. liberty. * ee ed a Pee = pet veB2 tse Sa

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