The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1922, Page 12

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12 "> DER HS PARTNER AND THO MANAGERS |IRSH REBELS SURRENDER FOUR COURS; |=325=3 "rn fnce sam" INDICTED AND ORDERED UNDER ARRES| (Continued from First Page.) Hughes & Dier would be held account- able for any crooked work done by the Dier firm, In May, 1921, the 3 M°! Stock Exchange not only forbade Its i ee ind Tames Peano centyk-|mombers to do business with or for shuren Gf Allied Ol! which are alleced| Die", but ordered tickers of the firm never to nave been purchased tor discontinued, The Philadelphia Stock delivered. Exchange promptly expelled A The four defendante were charged | Hughes. The New York Produce Ex- with “bucketing’’ the orders given by |Cbange, the Chicago Board of Trud: the foregoing customers and also with [and the Curb Market Association tht similar action in the cases of John G, | "Ot take action at that time. ‘Thomson, who directed the purchase Col. Hughes remained for seven of 100 shares. of American Safety] Months as a partner in EB. D. Dier & Razor, and of Henry R~Timball, who] Co., which was organized to take over directed the firm to buy for him five|the business of the discrodited part shares of Pacific Gas & Electric and|nerghip. Parthers of record were five of Sinclair Consolidated Oil. bond of the New York Telepho Showers of legal papers féll to earth Butlin: fnaen COAT nce cad Details are lacking, but it 1s be-] At Letterkenny tho Irregulars, o0- 4s far uway as the North Wau Docks. PuRincan prowiten “Several ur thene|Heved the Irregulars lett a mine be-|eupying Ballymacool House, were A h Land dager’ sf hind 5 sage, esa ouaeet ie roi bain trae. fare in Parnell Square and other van- hind them, and that the building was| given due warning, says the mes: . mente of other documents. * From this it Is supposed that the library section was the part blown up. ter says that Eamoh de Valera, Republican lender, is on active service with the Dublin Brigade fighting for the Irish Republic. ties In the two days’ fighting here place the number of killed at thirty, Harry J. Lawrence jr, and La nee] with more than fifty wounded, the < . i . FOOT NCR TR TA THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUN® 30, 1922 says a] which was blown away by artillery Press).—A_ violent explosion in the| State troops found mines had been besieged Four Courts of Dublin at] laid, but these were disconnected. A 12.30 o'clock to-day, preceded by] large quahtity of ammunition, In- flames issuing from the structure,| cluding twelve mines, also was cap- opened the roof of the building and] tured. showered the surrounding streets} Irish Free State troops have at- with documents from the frchives,|tacked strongholds of the Irregulars according to fragmentary despatches|in Letterkenny, Buncrana and other from the war-torn Irish capital to-|centros In County Donegal, says a day. Central News despatch from Belfast. UPREME CONMAN by cutting loopholes fn the walls. The insurgents oO are in ovcupa- DEVALERA TAKES $ (Continued from Firat Page.) ignited and the mine exploded. Fierce fighting was in progress in Talbot Street, near the Nelson Pillar in the heart of the city, and the Free State troops were known to be pre- hat Siig! oe in eae eersared this| Dating to attack the strongholds of morning, but in abridged form. The Aad aed oe ie eee eee numerous danger zones and the cur-| yt was understood, however, that tailed train services are creating MUCH] these operations would not be begun difficulty in newspaper distribution. | until the Four Courts Building was The Republicans this afternoon is entirely in the control of the Free sued a single-sheet extra edition of] Staters and the nests of Republicans tage points in Central Dublin. They have several strongholds jn houses on both sides of Gardiner Street, in which a lorry load of regular troops after which the house was attacked with bombs, machine gun and rifle fire, The occupants replied, but avon surrendered and were taken prisor.er. A quantity of arms and ammunition and some motor cars were captured. At Buncrana the insurgents surren dered without fighting. They .w re taken prisoner, and arms and ammu- nition were seized. The round-up continued in other di- rections, the despatch adds, the Free _An Irish Republican war news pos- the Unofficial estimates of the casual- State forces occupying telephone ex- Shrimpton and Recklein are charged | H. Starr. latter including both men in the fight-]the newspaper Republic of Ireland, /in the immediate vicinity of the struc- changes, Post Offices and railway eta- with having assisted in ‘“bucketing”’ D. Dier & Co, had three New] Ing forces and private citizens. declaring the Free State authorities} ture cleaned up. tion. these orders. Yor! offices and thirteen others The meeting of the new Irish Pro-| had started the fighting and asserting] De Valera’s present whereabouts is a won DIER BUILT FIRM UPON WRECKAGE OF the business and good will of Charles EARLIER COMPANY |A. Stoneham and Company, paying Ftoneham a commission of $210,000 Stoneham and Company had a total of $5,388,000 in accounts but over $3, In Business Here Just Over a Year When Methods Led to Suspension. Stoneharn clients have since proteste! Rector] against the turning over of their ac BeBe rem ony neys?, 88 tq {counts to Dier and have sought to re- Street, failed Jan, 16. The firm had) cover their losses through the Dier been in business since Jan. 1, 1921,) frm from Stoneham, who is the prin- when tt was built on the wreck of|cipal owner of the New York Nation- hi & Dier of New al League basebal clmb. In that year, the firm had earned a net income of $22,824; and tn the same time it had paid $455,000 sal- aries, of which Dr. Elmore 0, Dior got $310,000. The excess of sriniies over earnings, according to certified accountant who gave the foregoing] Testimony in the bankruptcy pro- figures to the referee in bankruptcy ceedings tend to show that, when Dier took a deposit on a purchasing last spring, was paid out of sums en-} order for a customer they sometimes s Bankruptcy by Receiver Saul 8. books showed Dier drew from $2,000] it out; though continuing to churge from 6 to 10 per cent. interest on the|huse fortress, with hundreds of gnip-| 6; to $3,000 a week, according 0 DIS} ii ciince above the margin which|¢r’ firing almost continuously, and the customer thought Ke was main-|the peril to people in the streets is Dier was u graduate of the Phila-| taining. hourly becoming more acute, whims, for spending. ’ delphia Dental College, He had tried] ~ The proceedings showed Dier knew ei ; Moran’s Hotel two lorries containing to get rich by going to the Klondike, |"omething | lass dat Wie deine. “On| British soldiers speeding toward the the witness stand, fat-faced, bald,| North Wall were fired on by the muti- mournful, he plaintively repeated| neers shortly after noon to-day, 1s be- coming one of the greatest danger “Pm no certified accountant; 1} points. The fire from the hotel was never bought or sold stocks; I don’t | maintained throughout the morning in the direction of the Nelson Pillar, where the Free Staters occupy an prosperity by unauthorized methods.} Dier acknowledged a $55,000 house opposing position. where he adventured for two years. About ten years ago, he encountered “Col.” Henry D. Hughes, who had a seat on the Philadelphia Stock Ex- change. Dier had $50,000. In 1915, the firm was expelled from the Phila- delphia exchange for having attained over and over again: know what I signed; [ don't know how the accounts were kept." Hughes and Dier promised never to}in Atlantic City, a $45,000 pearl neck- do it again and were re-instated. ‘The New York Stock hange in 1918 warned its members that any one making a wire connection with the money. around tue country; at height of | vistonal Parliament, which had been| that General MacReady, former Com-| unknown. its prosperity it was estimated to have | set for to-morrow, has been postponed 8,000 customers. At or about the time | until Friday, July 7, it was atmounced of the reorganization Dr. Dier bought] to-day. had been scheduled for to-day, but announcement was made noon that the Dail would not meet. 00,000 were liabilities in the form of pared the way for the attack on customers’ equities. Many of the|the Four Courts, enabling® the Free Free State Army, has been spending em | because of the many snipers about the afternoon that it belleved the back- city these zones are numerous Necdeae eerie tidak it 48] bone of the rebellion had been broken. advantages. All types, if ” ‘e are = «= Staters to map out the inner defenses, |, The Dublin Fire Brigade had twen- - substantially lower prices. The artillery bombardment had thus |tY-one calls yesterday. The cattle] ME dirested by his. HARDING WILL SIGN 7 been extremely. effective and the breaches in the walls made at the most vulnerable poin' the incessant machine gun and rifle fire had, it wa# believed, leasened the 000 in quick assets turned over ty |™orale of those behind the great walls, Stoneham has, never. been clearly | Making sleep impossible sit.ce the first} napped recently at Macroom, were stated. Some of the clerks of the Picr | Shots were fired fonty-eight hours be-| found to-day dangling from a tre house called before the Referes in| fore the assault. according to reports reaching here Myers thought much of it went to] the operations against the irregulars Philadelphia to save “Col, Hughes|!" from embarrassment; their uttention to-day to meeting the insurgent measures in the outlying parts of the city, taking up positions in dozens of buildings here and there, fortifying them strongly and estab- trusted to the firm by customers, 'The| did buy the stock but immediately sold| ishing observation posts. lace for his wife, a $15,000 automo-| outposts, are displaying frenzied ac- bile, but beyond that he was very|tivity. In Marlborough Street they vague as to what he had done with|are occupying a number of houses and have made them resemble fortresses rison occupying the workhouse at In- GIMBEL BROTHERS Secretary Churchill to-day stated that so far as disorders in other parts of Ireland were concerned he was Informed that the Free State troops in most cases, had obtained control of the situation to-day, particularly in Drogheda. LONDON, June 80 (United Press), —The Colonial office announced this mander-in-Chief of British forces in Ireland, was advising the Provisision-|ment to-day was the action begun by al Government. Cories of the edition|the Free State forces to round up the were posted on walls and distributed] militant Republicans In Courty Done- in the streets of the city. gal, " Gen. McKeon, the redoubt- ‘The street cars are continuing op- {ble blacksmith of Ballfalee and one erations outside the danger zones, but]! the strongest personalities in the Another highly important develop- A meeting of the old Dail Eireann this fore- tomers. Restaurants by G.E. fans have Observations by airplanes had pre- market was held as usual, although},Ouring the assault on the Four mupplies wero short, ‘The buyers got) Courts three Free Staters were killed NEW YORK PORT BILL their cattle out safely along by the “ & ter being four officers, Commandant A North Circular Road to the North] peonard, Vice Commandant Mar-| WASHINGTON, June 80.—Presi- Wall for shipment to England. ron, Lieut. Murtagh and Capt./dent Harding will si; t BELFAST, June 30 (United Press). | O'Toole. ‘a Rah aren AEE —Bodies of three British officers, kid-| When the main part of ‘the Four] N¢™ Yor Bill to-morrow, Represen- Courts was occupied earlier in the| tative Ansorge stated to-day, follow- morning thirty-three Irregulars, were 18s a conference with the President. Ja ELECTRIC CORE Ansorge also said that Harding I made prisoner. The Free State forces 5 wired Mayor Hylan, New York, occupled the greater part of the build- More 6% Avenue at 13St.New York Cit. telegraph his objections on the bil! sat Reevcion ee, o z The large camp near Ballyshannon,| ing, including the central hall and li- Se Dublin were apparently turning|formrely occupied by the British] brary, and the irregulars were forced] and the reasons therefor, so that they electrical milltary and since held by Irish ir-]to retire to the rear of the eastern\{may be considered before the bill is headaiartors seotion sonslderable portion of signed -GIMBEL BROTHERS |::'%: ning by Free State troops, who cap- See Pages 32ND STREET — BROADWAY — 83RD STREET—NEW YORK CITY 11 and G18 The constant explosion of shells and The Free State troops engaged in| to-day. tured the camp after a battle lasting an hour and a half, says a message recelved to-day. The garrison of fifty Insurgent troops was captured, of them being killed and two wounded, the message sald Reports were, received in London- derry to-day from Buncrana saying Free State troops this morning blocked all roads leading to the town, occupied the railroad station, the tele- phone exchange and the telegraph of- fice. At the same time the troops surrounded a house recently com- mandeered by insurgent forces and gave the occupants one hour to sur- render the building. ‘This ultimatum was complied with. The Free Staters then command- eered a train and proceeded to Car-/ donagh to seize the workhouse there. One hundred Free State troops this morning captured the Irregular's gar- The city is thus rapidly becoming a Talbot Street, where in front of The tirregulars, in their scattered The Champion Tennis Bal: Emmy Lou Pump: white -_ a ‘ The Flapper Sandal in White | Men's Comet Baseball Shoe, white or brown duck; Chil- Soe wentilated insole), Chil: canvas; black leather trimmed; leather-trimmed; extra non- Grat6, y Women's\and | Meus. Rea sian: Wotiet rubber heel; 234 to 8. skid sole. 6 to 11. ~ $1.25 to $1.75 $2.00 % $2.50 $5.50 | $4.50 For Other Gimbel News See Pages 82ND STREET — BROADWAY — 38RD "STREET _ NEW YORK CITY 11 and 16 \/ An exceptional purchase of these nationally famous Boys’ Wash Suits enables us to offer this remarkable value! The biggest we've known in years. All new, fresh, first-class suits, in twenty different styles and colors. Wonderful ! 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