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nme es “IF IT HAPPENS IN NEW YORK IT’S IN THE EVENING WORLD”’ TO RENEW EFFORTS FOR EARLY TRIA WARD To-Night’s Weather—CLOUDY. . —>— fork World) by Press "ery rere § NEW YORK, “TUESDAY, UESDAY, JUNE 20, 1922. Pro-Treaty Candidates Win 47 Seats and Republicans 26; Labor Gets 10, Independents 12 W hose FORD PLAN TOBUY MUSCLE SHOALS 15. “ASSAILED AS FRAUD, a House Report Says He Offers 'U. S. $5,000,000 for Prop- erty Costing $85,487,900. Countess Markievicz Ldses, Figgis, Whiskers Were Cut, Wins— Dublin 7-1 for Treaty. DUBLIN, June 20 (Associated Press).—The position of the various parties in the Irish Parliamentary elections so far as reported in returns received up to 6 o'clock this afternoon were as follow Coalition Pro-Treaty, 47; Coalition Republicans, 2 POLITICIAN-MADE TARIFF MEASURE panel and independent candidates eee Would Keep It Free of Special favorable to treaty and 10,920 for the Republican panel nominees. Privilege and Party Interests, Labor, 10; In- “FRENZIED FINANCE.” led One of Most Insidious Propagandas Nation Has Witnessed. In Wexford, Alderman Richard Corish, Pro- Treaty Labor, was elected. In North, Mid and South Tipperary those elected were: James Burke, Pro- Treat: Daniel Morrissey, Labor Joseph MacDonagh, Anti-Treaty; Patrick Moloney, Anti-Treaty. In Cork, Michael Hennessey, Indepen- dent Pro-Treaty, was elected to the third seat in the East and Northeast Cork district. | In Cavan Arthur Grimth, President of the Dail Eireann, was elected, re- ceiving 13,101 votes; W. L. Cole, Panel Anti-Treaty, 6,490, and Sean Milroy, Pro-Treaty, 6,080 were also elected. . In the Leix and Offaly’ division of, WASHINGTON, June Henry Word's offer to purchase and lease the Government's power and nitrate proj- ects at Muscle Shoals, Ala., was at- Wracrea to-day in a report to the House Drepared by Representative Kearns, Repubdiwan, Ohio, and signed by Rep- resentatives Morin, Pennsylvania, Parker, New Jersey, Crowther, New York, Frothingham, Massachusetts, and Ransley, all Republican members of the House Military Committee. The WSpert ‘declared dissatisfaction with 20. By David Lawrence. epinions already presented by other |old Kings and Queens Counties Wil-| (Specs! spsaiigs <5 lll ata . Yam Gavin, Labor Pro-Treaty, headed 2 t members vf the committee and a the poll. Kevin O'Higgins, Panel Pro- WASHINGTON, June 20 (Copy- mounced that the signers were deter- mined to tell “the people” the “real facts about Muscle Shoals and the so- called Ford offer."” iat Representatives Kearns sald Repre- aentatives Parker and Frothingham signed the report although they, pre- viously had endorsed another minority opinion. He expected two other com- itteemen would sign later, he said, making a total of eight Republican signatures on the. report Declaring the betict that “the try little understands what it is that Mr. Ford is offering to do, or what, if anything, he {s offering for this great plant,” the signatories first de- mounce what they describe as ‘tone the most insidious propagandas that ‘the Nation has witnessed for many a day.” Many of the Ford advocates, report says, have been misled as to facts of the offer and points to the provision by which fertilizers would be manufactured and says that despite “persisteht reports that he will compel the fertilizer manufacturers of the country to sell thelr product at one- half of what they are now selling !t,"" Mr, Ford “does not agree to make fertilizers at all unless he can make them with a profit to himself. The committeemen declare ‘this is a hollow promise made to enlist the support of the farmer and not founded en gny fact either contained in the contract or existing ontside the con- tract,” and charge that propagandists fall to tell the people that “the prin- right 1922).-—-As the élimax approaches in the debate over the tariff, President Harding finds himself confronted with a choice between surrendering to Congress on the question of elas- ticity and flexibility in the making of tariff rates hereafter, or making a de- termined fight for the extension to the Executive, or a tariff commission, of power to correct such inequities a- may develop in the actual working out of rates in the pending bill. For Congress will not, of its own accord, deviate from the course fol- lowed in the past—namely the mak- ing of a political tariff, and only the impetus to be furnished by Executive appeal to public opinion can take the tariff out of politics. Treaty, a member of the delegation that recently accompanied Arthur Grifith to Londen, and F, Dulfn, Panel Pro-Treaty, were also elected on the first count. Fourth place lle between Dr, Patrick McCartan, for- mer Republican envoy to the United States, and J. P. Lynch, with Dr. McCartan’s chances the better. AS a protest against alleged irregu- larities in the Sligo and East Mayo elections the independent candidates, Hinniger aud McGowan, have with- jdrawn from the counting and have protested to President Griffith. Those declared elected are McCabe, Devins, Carty and Dr, Ferrar. Fifth place is in contest between Tom O'Donnel, Coalition Treaty, and John Hennegan, Independent. orge «~<Gavan Duffy has been elected from Dublin County; Cathal O'Shannon, Independent-Labor, from Meath. Dublin City voted heavily against the treaty opponents. Its twelve seats In the Dail Bire.an were he:1 by seven treaty advocates and five by antis. The seven treatyites won, but four of the antis were 4 a ae dependent candidates who favor the treaty, and one of whom is a Laborite. The only adherent of Ear:on de Va+ lera to come throzch safely is Sean O'Ceallaigh (John O'Kelly’ farmer Sinn Fein representative in Parts, who, although low on the list of firet preferences, got in after repeated dis- tributions. In addition to those previously, an- coun- Many times in the last few decades have public men advocated the re- moyal of the tariff from partisan in- fluence, on the ground that tariff rates made by Congress reflected the political desires of the most influential groups in American industry rather than the true interests of the consum- ing public. But the moment has never been as propitious as to-day for a fight to vest in a tariff commission the same broad powers to make rates as is given to the Interstate Com- merce Commission to fix railroad rates, The reason for the favorable opportunity is really the unsettled condition of Europe. Trade conditions are subject to so many changes from day to day that even the most ardent protectionists admit there will be in- equities. To correct these, Congress would necessarily have to keep con- stantly revising the tariff upward or downward as circumstances require. President Harding has heard many complaints that the high Tariff Bill, now inthe Senate, would injure the (Continued on Seventeenth Page.) ———————__ BOYS SAVE DORCAS HOME IN MIDNIGHT BLAZE Matron Org: vie jpal business of Mr. Ford, should he and Hose Briga: American foreign trade. His pet es, this gigantic plant, would be the! CHICAGO, June 20.—How a group of | Measure, too, the Merchant Marine facturing of other articles. | seven and eight-year-old children saved | Bill 1s already being attacked by tor which he would be allowed to sell at the Doreas Home for Children at High Democrats, on the ground that no in I any price that he might seo fit. sh-laubsidy in the world will enable land Park from fire at midnight became known to-day. The fire was discovered in the coal bins in the basement. Mrs. Ann Ariis rang the bells for a fire drill. With the children all outside, Mra. Ariis left the older girls in cl of the infants and organized a bucket brigade among the bo: The young firefighters removed two HOLLOW PROMISE TO ENLIST AID OF FARMER. “The only thing that is kept be- fore the public,” the report continues, “is that he is to make fertilizer and well. it cheaply to the farmer, only ing for himself a profit of & per gies ton the production, No one has American ships to conrpete with for- (Continued on Seventeenth Page.) FORMER. U. S. VESSEL NOW PRISON SHIP FOR SINN FEINERS 'y8" Gi wver suggested how he could make] tons of burnin, coal from the fertilizers and sell them cheaply or|and extinguished the flames wits en | BELFAST, June 20 (Assoctated The fire wi uit when outaide aid ar- | Press-)—The former United States (Continued on Seventeenth Page.) Stormont Castle, “White House” Of Ulster, Fired On at Night ‘Sir James and Lady Craig Were Asleep During Attack, Having Just Moved In.° rived, Shipping Board vessel Argenta hax been refitted as a prison ship in which to confine the Sinn Feiners captured by the Ulster Government in its re- eent round-up. Siz. hundred cubicles or cells have been built, wire netting being used extensively. The vessel, which will be stationed in Belfast Lough, will be ready soon. Accommodations for the prisoners are provided by the flush deck, run- ning for half the length of the ship. he . The compartments are divided by <8 BELFAST, June 20 (Associated Press).—Shots were fired early to-day |stee! wire netting and will have elec- x in gm the vicinity of Stormont Castle, which was purchased by the Ulster |tfe fans for air renewal, Tron bunks umid I Government as the official residence of Sir James Craig, the Premier, who] *7e, Provided with wire springs and ne 14 with his wife took up his residence there for the first time last evening. | pie Poe ley on the up- amit, Jp TH developed thie afternoon that] rm per deck, which has wash besins and ‘was even more serious than at first Craig were sleeping. dre enclosed with steel wire netting. | MOB TRES TO HANG WIFE BEATER, BUT POLICE RESCUE HIN Jersey City Crowd Gathers When Woman Flees House Moaning in Pain. RESERVES JUST IN TIME. Husband Held and Innocent Friend Freed After Both Are Badly Beaten. Mrs. Josephine Maliszaki, No. 360 Grand Street, Jersey City, bleeding from wounds in the head, ran out of her home this morning, collapsed on the steps and moaned that her hus- band had struck her. everal persons were passing and one of them called Patrolman Acker- man, who went upstairs and arrested the husband, John Maliszald, and his friend, John. Chimanski, of No, 359 Grand Street. Meanwhile a crowd had been gathe |! ering about the injured woman and when the policeman came out, with his two prisoners they were imme- diately .aken from him by force, Both were badly beaten and somebody in the crowd cried: “Lynch 'em. . . . Get a rope.’’ The cry was taken up and a group of men hurried away, supposedly to find a rope. Cooler heads, however, realized the danger and somebody sent a hurry call to Police Headquarters. Reserves arrived within a few min- utes and the two men were rescued from the mob, They and the woman were then taken to the City Hos pital. The husband was treated for many bruises and then locked up. Chiman- ski is believed to have a broken nose. He was released after the woman said he had nothing to do with the assault on her. She was found to save a severe scalp wound which required several stitches. She mado a formal complaint against her husband, charging him with atrocious assault. She sald th:y had an argument and he struck her with w pitcher. PRESIDENT AB ABANDONS JOURNEY TO ALASKA White House Says M Can't Make Trip. WASHINGTON, June 20.—President Harding's tentatively projected Alaskan trip this summer has been abandoned, IL was definitely announced to-day at the White House Harding seaped Convict Is Captured At Harmon After Hiding 36 Hour In Baseball Stand at Sing Sing Eludes Guards by Swimming Around Prison Wall, but Is Caught After Battle With Baggageman. Charles Greer, the convicted murderer who escaped from Sing Sing Prison late Sunday night, did not leave the grounds until 4 o'clock this morning and was captured shortly after 9 A. M. to-day about 3 1-2 miles north of Sing Sing at Harmon, N. Y, Greer's arrest wo3 brought about¢¢———————+—_ Vn seat es"apec| SISTER OF WARD, tered, in a clump of woods about a} WHO DENIES SHE KNOWS OF PLOT half mile north of the Harmon sta- tion. ane “While detectives, guards, police- men, sheriffs and troopers were look- ing everywhere for me,” young Greer said, “I was hiding under the grand- stand in the prison ball field. All that bothered me was hunger and the rain. I am wet all through.’ Harry Sharp of Groton, a platform hand at the Harmon station, was the first to see Greer and identify him as perhaps the escaped convict. Sharp ‘was coming down the track to work at 20 when he saw the young: man in the woods; Sharp 4id not tell Greer of his sus- picions but continued on to Harmon and told Station Agent William 6. Rogers, who promptly telephoned to the office of his friend Warden Lawes at ging Sing. Six prison quards.were immediately despatched to Harmon and within a few minutes Greer was on his way back to a cell. After telephoning to Sing Sing the agent at Harmon called Peter Bran- nigan, his baggageman, and hurried Brannigan up the ‘track to place the supposed Greer under arrest for “trespassing on railroad property.” Brannigan found Greer without any difficulty and entered into conversa- tion with him. The convict said he hoped to jump a west bound freight. Brannigan suggested that Gree’ go with him to the railroad station. promising to conceal him on a train. “I'm afraid there'll be a ‘bull the depot,"’ the convict said. Assured that this was the “bull's” day off, he agreed. They were pro- RUTH SUSPENDED AGAIN FOR ROW WITH AN UMPIRE Laid Off Three Days for Dis- puting Decision in Yester- day’s Game. CHICAGO, Juns, 20 (Associated Press).—Babe Ruth to-day was sus- pended for three days by President) Ban Johnson of the Amprican Leagué for the altercation im yesterday's Cleveland-Now York game which re- sulted in Umpire Dmeen putting the home run slugger out of the contest after he had disputed a decision on Nunamaket ‘of Cleveland at second base. This is Ruth's third lay off of the season. Ruth was out of the game at the start of the season as a result of a suspension by Baseball Commissioner Landis, and recently was given a one- day layoff and a fine by Johnson for an argument with an umpire at New York. When he suspended Ruth for the dispute at New York, Mr. Johnson let It ‘become known that in fixing a ight penalty he had taken into consideration the fact that Ruth un- doubtedly was in an upset mental condition over the Landis suspension and his failure to ‘hit when he re- turned to the game, Mr. Johnson said he felt Ruth was “not himself,” and really wae not responsible for his ac- tions on the day In question, Prev- lous to this season Ruth had been Sa MRG. LELAND S. WOOD.. MRT ONRAH by CaRt EEN. HUTCHISON MAKES ceeding toward the station when punished by Mr. Johnson only once Greer, casting # glance over his during bis DAO Ie league career, shoulder, saw half a dozen armed “. guards hurrying after them. The convict started to run and Srannigen legped upon him. They were strugglt when the guards ar- BONUS ; BILL FAILS , TO REPLACE TARIFF 78, TOTAL 149, BUT A cella wae, quicely over: KIRKW () | FADS Harding Sanctions Delay of “what made you run away?" he Month for Ship Subsidy was asked: Bill. WASHINGTON, ‘You'd have run away,” was answer, “if you had as long & ehead of you as I have.’ He the hit has June 20.—An ef- Has Amazingly Low Score in] ort to get the soldiers’ bonus bill be- cee auacribed as fg ttentmare the} British Open Rounds— | tore tho Senate to-day failed, the thirty-six hours he spent beneath the Barnes’s Tota ul 154. Senate adopting, 51 to 22, a motion grand stand, He had obtained an ex- vy Senator Watson, Republican, In- The President was sald to regret ——— Sreatly that he saw no possibility of/t™™ uniform hat, coat and trousers, | 7 ) diana, to lay on the table a motion leaving Washington under pre | which he left in the attic of the cell ANDWICH, Eng., June 20 (AS-| yy Senator Walsh, Democrat, Massa- conditions in public business and . —— sociated Press),—Jock Huichison of} chusetts, to displace the taritt bill lative matters, (Continued on Seventeenth Page) | chicago, British open golf champion,| with the bonus, turned in a card of 78 for his secon] | ‘The | Massachusetts renaler an qualifying round in the British Open| NUNCed that Senators interested In a the passage of the Bonus Legisiation Championship to-day. This gave him] proposed to put the Senate on rec- an aggregate of 119 for the twol|ord as to further delay in acting on escribed by Chicago Surgeon|..:: Sue = Hutchison's second round was noth-| _ Preateent Harting has given ‘infor. Dr. Clark Tells American Institute of Electric Scalpel—Patient on (Special to The CHICAGO, June 20.—A cure for cancer by the use, of radio currents was announced before the meeting of the American Institute of Homoe- opathy which Is holding its seventy-e! Dr. T. Howard Plank of Chicago. | who performed ‘he first treatments two weeks ago and who has the only machine in existence, told of his work. “I use an electric scalpel,” Dr. Plank told delegates to the conven tion, “the current in which js the same as that used in sending radio meésages. The electric scalpel iy a departure in bloodless surgery. “I have performed the operations with the radio current. The patient is rendered unconscious with seep The operation is performed and the patient is out of bed tn four or five days and on the street within a week or ten days, “Cancer operations with the knife have heretofore required two or three weeks in « hospital, and it was oftes mal sanction" to Republican House leaders for the postponement of ship subsidy consideration for approxi. mately one month, it was said to-day at the White House. Ing like his sensational showing of yesterday, but he playe nevertheless. He had that he did not drop r I sound golf, luck, too, in Street in Five Days. than one Evening World.) stroke at the seventeenth, where he|“——— : badly topped his second. His card h aa The [ im shth session at the Drake Hotel. Out A454 TS e to In. 4465544 Jim ‘Barnes, American Pack Your Grip and Take a Trip This is the time of the year when champion, turned in a card of 72. This gave hifn an aggregate of 154 for the two rounds. Barnes played brilliantly going out His golf was flawless and he reached the turn in 83, two er three months before the 1a- tient was restored to normal conul- tion.”*” SHOOTS SELF TWICE, RELOADS, TRIES AGAIN Coming home he made some mis- Nature calls upon us to forget our takes in play, taking 39 for the worries and enjoy the good things sh Your . & ge she Hine Tony Sivlles: eneae Im Weak | Co vasy, so pleuteously provides. Mountain NESTARK ie Rarnes*was in some danger of fail~ Sea Shore, Lakes and Farms, T' NEVARK. 3 me June 20,.—Benedict ing to qualify during the duy's play, World's Summer Resort Ads. men- ae paren tegen Fi poh MS but pulled himself together in mag tion all the worth-while places with four bullut wounds in the head, all] tra wens fashion. He was hunkered at 3,250 WORLD, “Summer of which, police say, were self-inficted, | Me Second hole, but made a splendle . Resorts” Last Week. Friedman was found in the kitchen uf |"COvery and got his four his home by his wife, aroused by the} At the fourth he hoted a five-yard 1 823 More than any other sound of shota, putt and at the fifth he holed « putt ’ New York newspaper. Police found he used « revolver which |f eighteen yards. On the next green fires five times. Only two carfridges|however, he took three putts. He } tas , had been exploded, ‘and it to believed [pulled Into the rough tron: the four. | Lhe World's ‘Summer Resorts’ Friedman fired twice, reloaded the weapon, shooting twice again. He Is expected to die. teenth tee where the wind was blowing Vor Information Aegarding ‘icalth—Pleasure—Recreation (Continued on Ninetesnth Page.) WARD TO RENEW EFFORTS FOR EARLY TRIAL AND SAYS HE'LL TELL ALL ABOUT aot Former Justice Mills Will Move This Week for Ex- amination of Grand. Jury Minutes, He Announces. * Five Neighbors of Slayer Sub- poenaed to Tell Jury of Party on Night Peters Was Killed in Westchester. © Former Justice Isaac M. Mile, newly retinéd as additional counsel for Walter S. Ward on the charge of having murdéred Clarence Peters, said to-day that before the end of this wook, and possibly this afterneon, the defense. would renew its effort to get an immediate trial, ~ Mr. Mills further promised that/it the prosecution makes out @ case:/ shows that it 1s doing something than fishing for information the Bérs of the Ward family wilt the nature of the blackmail ae which they hold justified Walter Wate in shooting Peters. “Every fact relative to: the defeise will be brought out at the trial—i¢ necessary,'’ Judge Mills said, “Walter 8. Ward cannot be blamed for belhx unwilling to bring) humiliation on ‘hin family until it is necessary. “If the prosecution seems to out u case we will of course as complete x statement as the public can desire—and we hepe it will satisfactory. “We cannot be expected t put our defense until the prosecution made out a plausible case. We not been able to learn by our own efforts or from what we have read-{n the newspapers that a caso has beep established. Before the 4nd of week John F. Brennan and if will move for a copy of the min- utes of the Grand Jury. It is the precedent in this county to grant sueb motions just as it is the precedent grant an immediate trial when fendant requests it. “We shall ask, if we are not su¢- cessful In having the indictment dig- missed for lack of adequate evidence to support it that Justice Morechauser extend the June term of court into July and preside at a trial to begin about the middle of next month. When © I was on the bench here It was alwayy my ‘custom at the end of the term to ask the District Attorney if ther were any cases ready for trial and q there were the term was extendey and we tried them,"' Mr. Mills intimated that George Ward, whose testimony as to @ biagis mail plot ts urgently needed by Dit trict Attorney Weeks, will not return where he has to tell ail he knows about biackuuiiers until he beliarsa his absence puts his son In danger of conviction. Mr, Weeks may make thé return of George 8. Ward a condition for consenting to an immediate trial. Subpoenas were issued to-day fot witnesses to give testimony before the Westchester County Grand Jury morrow {n addition to that gat! in the Morschauser John Doe hy on the charge that the elder is in conspiracy to prevent full tice In the case. Among those called are Dr. O. Pa Schell of No. 86 Meadow Lane, New Rochelle, who was called to the Ward home when Walter Ward drank todine about two weeks before the killing nf Peters, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Shuman, neighbors who, went to the Ward home during the stir caused by the efforts to relieve young Ward af ter the poisoning. : Mr. and Mra, 4. J. Hook, neigh! of the Ward's, who are believed to been at a party given by Mrs, Wi the night before the killing of have also been summoned and an fort is being made to serve Mra, W, Curtis of No, 151 Arlington Ave. nue, Brooklyn, Mrs. Ward's mother. The testimony already taken at the John Doo hearings will be read to the Grand Jury. ‘The purpose of the whole Ings is to determine whether there ground for indicting George &, (Continued on Seventeenth ,