The evening world. Newspaper, November 18, 1922, Page 3

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anal * argument 7 SIAC RETR TIO TE PE, ON BONUS REVISED, CAPITAL HEARS May Even Propose a Plan to Congress to Solve Tangle. NEW IDEA SUGGESTED. Co-operation of States With Nation on Behalf of Ex- Service Men May Win. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve-" ning World.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 (Copy- right).—Prohibition and soldier bonus were of sufficient importance in the last elections as to be considered to- day by political Washington as the leading domestic issues before the eountry. President Harding has hinted that there is a shifting of views on Prohibition and there are rumors that he himself will do some shifting on the bonus. Authorized spokesmen the President say he wiil veto any bonus bill similar to the one put up to him eariler this year. Before that comes a concrete bonus proposal may be ex- pected from the Executive. Whether mention will be made of It in tho message to Congress at the December session is not yet determined, but dent's friends advise the initiative and pr 1 y can for > unite on. The latest suggestion to find sup- port in Administration quarters, though {t cannot be sald that Mr. Harding will be won to it, is that the Wederal Government and the States enter into a fifty-fifty combination. just as in the case with good r The Federal Government approp! on condition that an equal sum be raised by a State, the quotas being divided uccording to the needs of th States. Twenty-seven of the forty-eight States of the Union are willing to give bonuses. t week Illinois, Towa, Oklahoma, Kansas, Montana and ( teen States acted Maine, Connecticut, otts Michigan, Minnesota, Missour Ne braska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Jand, South Dakota, Vermont, pshington and Wisconsin n addition, Colorado voted $200 each to ex-service men for vocutional (raining. New York State went record in favor of a $45 10,000 b but it became tangled in constitutional difficulties, Pennsylvania's Legisla- ture, in 1921, authorized submission of a constitutional amendment involv- ng $35,000,000; this is expected to be submitted again by new Legisla ture. Twenty-seven out of forty-eight represents a majority, but it doesn’t reflect the true extent of the bonus sentiment, for many tes have been waiting on the Federal Government and the bonus movement hasn't re- ceived the impetus would other wise receive if the States were to mow they were required to co-op- evate with the Federal Government. Harding in principle has been that the in fave His who Fe President the bonus is Government couldn't afford to add to it# national debt, He hasn't con tended that the Uniled States wasn't vealthy enough to pay « bonus, but e has plainly feared the eff t piling the public debt highe: burden on the the pose the lebt with States would fat bette same ts original y posals and there is a chance that some plan of this kind would win Ex- ecutive tavor Six ate Indiana, Tenne have consklered the bonus with sand Utah— uit fa vorable action, but if the Feder ernment submitted a propos co-operation there ts reason to the question would receive ireatment. The grant of a bonus ma. —— effect of making many States tak better account of their fiscal condi tions, The income taxes of the State ¢ not efficiently athered in al The appropriation of a bonu would have a far reaching effect on State taxation There I no doubt be an attempt made to make tates shoulder the entire bu the American Le gion woul ut tooth and n as ng-drawn-out pre wit! ravorah| One how th would unblr Gave propo President back of plan Gover passed legislation promising to part the Legion would probab' f of a loaf was better than nd would assist in the cam- in the State a > SPITE FENCE ALL RIGHT, IT MUST HAVE ENOUGH ‘PORTHOLES’ BUT Jersey tw Vi Hopes n WIL Set Quarrel. f We 1 be st New York wf ate well Ne all the rem eventh chbor, heir Deci- ighbors* ture must cv mun Gust who b: eleven yards of da and aware ffense at th off to the that lows uint went t u SURFACE CAR HITS HOSPITAL AMBULANCE the te Patient ‘ Whe ord Applies to Commerce Commission for [ssue $1,000,000 Securities WASHINGTON Detroit t (By Evening World Steif Photographer To-Day.) | Ford Ask Authority to Put Road! He Owns on Profit Sharing Basis’ |GIRL Permission to to Employees. 18 Henry iWhority to put to-day 7 Ironton, a s afac nn turing 4 WEST INDIAN COOK | KILLS SELF AND WIF rbably Mure Inte Relative Disctaims Icnowledwe of vo Pall on Him, Motive for | 1H 1 r | Both y | Indias | Mra » | Boy, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18 HARDING'S VIEWS Crowd. Cheering “Tiger’’ as He Rides Up Broadway and Official Welcome by Notables at City Hall 1922 GRAND JURY'S RAP ATDAY STRANGELY)” HELD UP IN MAIL Federal riqatiy Likely on Delay of Letter Addressed to Mellon, What happened to a letter written by W. De Saussure Trenholme, for: man of the Federal Grand Jury in which the administration of Ralph A. Day as Prohibition Director and John 8. Parsons, Chief Enforcement Officer was called ‘lixgracefal’® will probably become the subject of a Federal ju- dficial inquiry, The letter was written to presiding Justice Rufus H. Foster of the United States District Court and delivered to him on Oct, 27 in open court. The object of the letter was to hold up the resignations of Day and Par- sons until the Grand Jury inquiry into the local Prohibition office waa com- pleted. But, according to statements from the Treasury Departemnt the letter, matiled on Oct. 27 did not reach Secretary Mellon until after Nov. 1 when the resignation of Day and Parsons were accepted. Alexander Gilchrist jr., Clerk of the United States District Court, sald to- day that when the letter was handed up by the Grand Jury, Judge Foster handed it to Clerk William Leary with directions to send it at once to tiie Secretary of the Treasury. Mr. Leary gave it to me and it was put in an official envelope ad- dressed to the Secretary of the Treas- shington, D. C. T handed it who ret od to me at ‘3 o'clock and said he had mailed it." A despatch from Albany states that eight Federal enforcement agents as- signed to that territory were dismis to-day on the direct order of FE. Yellowley, the State Prohibition Di- rector. Tf thi is a pres 16, May She’s a Two-Gun Girl With Ways OfaV amp, Is Texas of the Movies Have Followed Her Here; She’s Got Admirers to Burn, You Know. s agent's yarn it is a well thought out one and ought stance it has travelled. The heroine s a cowgirl of the movies, a two-gun girl named Texas, who does vaude- of cutifud girl to get over on account of the long di: ille stunts on the side Whe police and everything are in it, au of Missing Mersons in this F a totter signed by Chinf of lice J of Oakland, Cal ilbert. Salmon, the fifteen-year-old n tomine Salinon of N Me- Il Street, has been missing since July, and his mother, the police © informed, suspects that her fatr ired boy, with blue eyes and two teeth lee and weighing 104 in actress named Planz of it is learned, “Tex,” and to Know all about ton, refuses to say rday that Miss ‘Texas lives on Highth Street, and tpithe t. He was denied admiltance ty vetresa. ‘The plot thickens, He back with Detective Harry Missing Versons Bu suldn't Jet him in V The cop sud he would take “ Attorney, and 1 then, did the two. but » tale there enwich Villas us spun it, the hard law) abandoned riet attorneys and sympathized with the story teller, The boy had come to the stage door of the Oakland 7 6 and wan so persistent she couldn't help noticing him, all. But when he tumed up aga Sani Jose she became interested tokl her that he had been punished his parents on account of his infatua- tion, and she spoke kindly to him and gave him his fare home, He spent in his attentions that That was 1 in He the money for a bouquet for her and followed her to Los Angeles, and then Again she guve him she to Long Beach lis railroad fare, rived in Stockton, 600 miles the north, there was Gilbert She hadn't heard of him since, sald, but wouldn't be surprised to see him tarn up any day. here ts a State Insane Asylum in Stockton But the Salmon boy but when ar. y to she was only an incident in the infatuation of ids who have followed the movie heroine, There was @ youngster down in Ala bama who appeared at the stage door with a gun in one hand and a bou quet in the other, Sho took the bou- (uet. And then two months ago when Texas lust in New York a boy un the east side bobbed up at the stage door, and now sines her ve turn he had bobbed up again Miss Texas surrendered thre her pictures in costume Newman and said with now, since she had been di she would be home to they called rvered reporters it DIES SUDDENLY AFTER PARTY FOR HER EIGHTEENTH BIRTHDAY Sh is from Went nd Jerse p about 2 0! guest at rl friend City via the » Heart 'T hows That Death ne We t, Marcel ens f Jersey City, be itomobile nea urs, Dete J iral causes a le flaborat the party and young f mn y City. The party whom owned a car CLAIMS STEP-MOTHER MARRIED FATHER WHILE FIRST HUSBAND LIVED So. of Mr ley Right as Widoy a. ate In Inyoly gwlity of the marr G. HL Tompkit Riverside Drive to Stephen B kins has been questioned by Tompkins of No, 204 West 65th 8 4 son @ Stephen B, Tompkins, lied on May 21, 1921, A hearing on the younger Tompkin’s allegations will be held next We ay before Surrogate Cohalan. Mrs is adminiatratrix of his Young Tompkins all time of his father's death kins could not have t Tompkin wher hushand) Clifford Ma H was living and that sic ne 4 been divorced from him Mra. Tompkins, however her step-#on's charges and nl she was Informed by Max or that he was dead, and upon receiving this information married Tompkins on June 27, 1920. She makes an Phatic denial of ever having ween ¢ conversed with Magill after ond marriage. NE WAS INJURED, Pig re trom the time he re elved hia hates Alexand: » last night was awarded jury in. Supreme Martin's court, 4 fi pany waa the Markullia vec ae bhiog eee Will Visit His Patients ~ “What Did You See?” Prize Car Now and Will Win His M. D. Next June. Theophilus . Allen will get his M. D. from the Collegeof Physicians and Surgeons, which is part of Columbla University, next June, when he will Join his father and two brothers in the ranks of his profeaston. But, unlike his father, the young= est Dr. Allen, when he starts prage tising down in Milledgeville, Gay won't have to ride a horse when he visits his patients. No, indeed! br. Auen already has an automo- bile—a Dodge—a gift from The Bve- hing World for the best contribution this week on the What Did You See To-Day?" page And probably he'll specialize o baby cases, for his automobtle-prime- winning story is about a youngster and a doctor and a kewple doll in the? children's ward of Bellevue. Anyway, young Dr. Allen has be personality for such work., How twenty-six, quiet, soft-spoken amt has a winning smile. He had written one other “What Did You See Té- *" ttem, but, he recalled to-day, not printed. “I couldn't figure out what was the matter with {t,"" he said, “except that it was @ bit bloody. It was hospital stuff, too, and I got the {dea that struck the editor as too horrible, decided the next one would be more Pleasin So the designing young Dr. Allen sent In the sweet little tem, and he was chuckling to himself all the way, down on the subway to The Bve- hing World office that he was a great Judge of character and knew how ta’ please the Indien, But when he was presented to the “What Did You See To-Day?” Editor, * his jaw dropped just a bit, The “What Did You See To-Day?* Exiitor® wears size 60 trousers and chews* stogies. However, young Dr. Alef was partly right. The editor has @ heart as soft as a woman’ “Well, I'm glad I won it anyway,’ “and an automobile certal: come in handy down our way. Other prize winners for the week includ THEOPHILUS P. ALLEN. $6,400 UNCLAIMED AS BANK TELLER IS ACQUITTED Second award, $100—LEON HARTMAN, No. 527 East 150th Street, Bronx, ' Third award, $50—ADAM KRAKENBERG, No. 479 Raddl Street, Long Island City, Queen: Fourth award, $25—JOSEPH BAER, No. 67 Woolsey Street, Tobani Money Is Not] Asteria, Queens, am iimere 1 UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE His—Bank Has No DIVISION. Claim on It. Firet award, §$50—H. MIky ! sh GRAM, College of the City of Tho police have $6,400 that is} New York. Second award, $25—CARROLL VAN ARK, Columbia University. HIGH SCHOOL DIVISION, without a €lniinant to-day as a re- sult of the acquittal of Theodore M Tobanl, twenty-one, of grana larceny, Jn the Queons County Court at Long Me cnr "Tnieee Wee ke Island City, bey we Second Award, 825—ANNA R. EREE- Tobonl was tried on a charge of] MAN, Girls’ Commercial High’ School, a Brooklyn, stealing $15,000 from the Long —- Island City branch of the Title Guar-| Fhe story which won the Dodge automobile for Dr, Allen follows: THE PROFESSOR HAS A WAY WITH HIM. anty and Trust Company, of which July, 1921 An audit showed that the money was missing. he was paying teller, In jevue Hospita When Tobant was a in his alae ie ser ell , , ‘ be very naughty little girl, age elght, Apartment at No. 6 We 7éth Street, who fought and cried when one of last October, detect s sald they the doctors tried to examine’ het She rejected every friendly ove: found in a clothes hamper pie Winatiy: the, Weatecnens. tase den’ six $1,000 bills and four $100 pills. ‘Tobant de-| gray-halred and stern (his s nied knowing anything about the} think), approached the bed In hile $6,400, and again on the witness stand| dally round of the ward. * © this week denied that it was his. Immediately bid peel] ont ae ° 8 ‘0 woream and kic! Tt took the jury six hours last] gore P aldlnet cay eayeiaen night to decide he was not g che word. instead bb which means the trust compuny eun-| gown and took a badly b ot claim the money and as Tobant] ,ewple doll from the litte’ girt says it isn't his, the police don't] pillow. Gravely he hie know what to do with it Tho case stethoscope on the doll! had been on trial a week, and a safe] He gave the doll io, Corevan eis examination, cal was set up in court to demonstrate : a burglar alarm at one stoge of the for our busy Preteen! Before he = could get away from that ward he bam had to examine all the doll “babi -—- in the place, as well heir proud mothers. ees GRAND JURY DISMISSES 124 DRY LAW CHARGES ANNIE MACSWINEY JOINS HER SISTER IN HUNGER STRIKE, AT PRISON GATES Res of 141 rd Her tn Only 17 Offenders Are Inw tes Prayers dicted in Brooklyn Coart, Staets Fast, sien ek Of 141 cases of alleged violation of 2 ie 2 anon the Mullan-G Law presented to the alatan) Mar in Hunger Kings County Grand Jury in Brook. the jattawalactantion wy tha lyn yesterday, 124 dismissals were. Helio eee recorded with the Court elerk to-day. Seventeen found will be return: indictments which were 1 next Thursday, Shoe arrived at Mo: Mary is Incarcerated, it, aecompanled After ree! ies a THE DOOR Auni donor a e TEN DEMOCRATIC DRY AGENTS TO BE OUSTED plicans to Get Fin Brookiyn. William B. Lord, dry agent in charge in Brooklyn, a ted to that of the twenty-two fleld ¢ q agents in that borough were 1 day to report at the offive of Chiet ement Officer Yellowle Mar hattan, He said he could not give ou any further information From it wa . e Bre tw Joarned thi ber ned Jropped from And it wa earned further « ‘Advertising “Ai Republicans are owalting a telephoned directly as Prohibition enforcement ox nd Call 4000 Beekman, Brooklyn Office, 4100 M are keen Thunkesgiy « 4 ¥ Theophilus Allen, Medical Student, Wins a Dedge Agia

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