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14 444 THE SUN AND NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 28,1920. SHEVLIN GIVES CASE AGAINST TIERNAN TODAYj: ney In N.w York Stale and protege ' Tljn ATI 1TI) fl I Til or judge TMrnuii. no u n. liirrilir II I II I J Lll in I n Jllrivn's lirlvutn secletury. HUM Wim elected to office through Tlernan'a In fluence. The small group that coutrols Staten Island M)ltlca Is not "In" with Tammany Hall, and aenaatlonal develop ments In the Kckert case are ascribed by them to political rivalry. Maloy said atttruy : "This talk of bootlegging and ola- tlvea of nolltlclans In the case .a, I believe, an effort to Intimidate mo to. drop It. Thay will find 1 am going the limit In anile of them. It la well anowo ' DtlUM mW 'neman. and I inn glad of It. Thj Hot ON PALISADES TOLD SEES BRITISH LABOR NEAR BOLSHEVISM Bishop of Omaha Warns of Prevailing Attitude. Judge's Before Hilted States Pis ti'ict Attorney. J1AY0I! ORDERS SHAKBUP Directs Suspension f Police lirgeant and Sends New Mag istrate to Staten Island. Developments yesterday In P01" leal scandal growing out of the murder f ft irlck Eel it. Staten laland boot- IHUll, wore ns follows: 1 Federal Prohibition Agent hatfja hortly l fore midnight last night gave out ihe following Bte.tement: Tim case against William Tlernan Ire that hla brother'a name has been men-1 yJ(,; uoneu will not irii my ri,v, w proaecute. 1 aaw William Tlernan about j a week ago at one of the lickert haar-1 lngs In Btapleton. I do not Intend to ;() Official preaa an Investigation against mm. Max Kata, the harkman, urreated two days ago, was held by Magistrate Simp son for two days more at Mr. Maloj ' requeat. Although he haa been quea tloned almost continuously for forty eight houra und appears haggard troin the long grilling, Kati haa failed to throw any light on the murdar. There waa tome comment yesterday on tha action of Asslstnnt District Attor ney Alfreil Norton In appearing; before United States Attorney How and urging tha speedy trial of Henry and Wolium Knppoy, Staten Islanders, rnargeu wmi violation of the Volatoad act. They were flnod 1100 each In the Federal court yesterday. Director Sherlln'n exonorntlon of til enforcement ngeuts was complete. The only connection McCuIre and Weldon Iiad with the Eckert cuo and with boot legging, Mr. Shevlln said, was through their legitimate business on Staten Island. They were working on bootleg- Man Wild Had Been Friends With Mrs. Schulz Supplies List of Admirers. , ' r ll it III, (the Whit SLAYING HINTED n ' . ' 11 Ull I I V uin la Puttied to fpitUty. Declares He Will Order Quick Inquiry of Gangl at Work. nrltlah labor la much nearer Bol shevism than American labor and al ready calla Ita central federations aovlata," according to the Hlght Itev. V. Hhayler, Kpiacopal Bishop ol ma)in. who returned yesterday aboard White Rtar liner Bsltlc, after at- he Lambeth conference of An- jtllcmi bishops. He had been chairman pr the committee of forty blahopa as- draw up the conferences labor BOi nuVully hna u change of conscience i V'orld will be Bolshevist In fifteen Stf.t.n Island la eomplete. We will . v H.I1..1 arlnir sta mm.m .I t ' ... lima , , t' Him nnlhl, , eviacnoa hcrore tne - "'""-," "- " ' " , 1 ,w .uuru, ui III... H"fc .,.., mnpm- nresent s. i... niatrlnt Attorney In Brooklyn tomorrow morning. There Is nothing more to give out until then." Tlernan Is the brother of County JudKo Tlernan, of Richmond, and all i., n imentlonad several tlmea In conned Ion with the oiieratlon of the. M-,..,n...l ivtiltUev rlnLT t Mayor Hylan ordered Police Com-J Took Hospital Funds HJM imnieumieiy to nu- HUfflclcnt evidence to make arrests. SUSPENDS SENTENCE ON GEORGE WASON Court Lenient With Man Who Isliiloner K peml Sergeant John r, Sndth of the Mice Department, who for tha lat two or three nic nt In hftl been nttacned to the West New Brighton police station and rtcentlv was !H!gncd to the oce of Dis trict Attorney Joseph Maloy o Jllch inond county. 8 Aci Chief City Magistrate Jolm B. Met lei hin, under orders from the Mayor, aaslgned Magistrate (Jeorge 8. Simpson to tit In the police court at Ftapleton In plucc of County Judge J. liarry Tlernan, Democratic political boss of Btaten (lland, who has been pre siding ovi r the inquiry into Kckert's dtgth owing to the Illness of Magistrate Frederick S, .Mullen. 4. District Attorney Maloy behind closed doora examined for more than flv.' hours prohibition agents William J. lieOulre and Jamea Weldon, whose names have bi en linked with Eckert's in the widespread whiskey ring alleged to have bad the protection of Federal and county officials. t. Supervising Prohibition Enforce ment Agent Jamea She lln. after the re sult of MeOuIre and Weldon's exam ination had been reported to him, said: "There li absolutely nothing to show the prohibition agents on my staff are in any wny connected with the Eckort murder "i that McGurre and Weldon prere actually Inplleatad In bootlegging operations on Staten Island." Tlernan 't Yet Arrested. I. William P, Tlernan, Judge Tlor r.an's brother, who Is wanted by the Federal authorities to explain how three burp Is of whllkey removed from bond '.iy him came Into the posaesslon of a Staten Island hotel keeper, has not been arrested, but hla arrest Is momentarily expected. HIp permit to traffic in liquor was revoked yesterday by Charles R. O'Connor, state Director of Prohibition Enforcement. John J. Qulgley, assist unt to Shevlln', has been examining Tier nan's bo ka and promised to make a fUU report to-day. t. United -states District Attorney Lo Boy W. Roia promises to make a thoroiiKii Investigation of the alleged Mttakey ring and Tiernan's alleged con flection with it. He will look Into the report that Staten island saloon keepers euntiot gel liquor except through the or ganize,! gang of which Eckert waa a member. In announcing the suspension of Ser geunt .Smith and the designation of Magistrate Simpson, Mayor Hylan Is sued the following statement: "Concerning the alleged connection of a police officer w itli the liquor traffic on Btaten Island, I directed Police Com missioner Kiirinlit to forthwith suspend Sergeant John K. Smith, who for the past two io- three months lias been as signed t i the office of District Attorney Janes Maloy of Richmond county. "Police Commissioner Bnrlght has ad vised me that he assigned additional de tectives from police headquarter! to Staten Island to work on and clear up the case of Eckert, who is said to havo been murdered by the alleged 'whlakey rlnn' operating in Richmond county. Yesterday I requested the Acting Chief Magistrate to assign a Magis trate to sit In the Police Court In Staten Island In place of County Judge' J. Harry Tlernan. who was sitting as Police Magistrate In the absence rjeorgo W. Wason, churchman, who pleaded guilty to having stolen 17.000 of the funds of the Samaritan Hospital In Brooklyn, cried yesterday when County Judge Haskell suspended sentence on him. "There are a number of extenuating circumstances In this case," said Judge Haskell. "It Is not one where It Is necessary to Impose n severe sentence as a warning to others. The defendant has borne an excellent reputation and comes from un excellent family. They have suffered deeply by his pllg.it, and that suffering has undoubtedly been shared by hint, "I feel confident that if a chance Is extended toward him the confidence of the court will not bo misplaced. Com plete restitution has been made. The Judgment of the court is that sentence is suspended. Wason. visit me from time to tlmo and I will do all 1 can to help you. I feel confident that you can reinstate yourself In the eyes of your friends." Wason was led out of the courtroom by his friends. He Is a stockbroker, married and lives at Mountalnvlew, N. J. MONEY TRAIL MARKS FLIGHT OF THIEVES f 1,087 Recovered; Robbers Escape With $1,640. John Zandee went to work early yes terday morning at the stables of the National Biscuit Company. In 175 Mount Pleasant avenue, Newark, but he hardly had begun his task when he noticed that the fldor of the stable was littered with coins and bllla. He began to (rather up the money and found that a trail of coins and currency led through a side entrance of the stable He followed the trail, stuffing the bills and coins in his pockets. It led to the offices of the company across the yard, and when he got there he found that the front door had been jimmied. When officials of the company ar rived they found Zandee sitting In the office with 11,087.91, which he had picked up In the yard and stables, in his pocket. They found also that the safe liad been robbed and that the robbers had stolen 1;640 In addition to the coins and currency they had dropped in tholr flight. ROWDIES INTERRUPT FUNERAL SERVICES Cemetery Official Complains of Conditions at Queens. CharlcB Schleln, treasurer of the Mount Lebanon4 Cemetery, in Queens, wrote a letter yesterday to Borough Presl- ofident Connolly of Queens asking Magistrate Mullen, who had reported borough and park authorities to 111, The Acting Chief Magistrate com-1 take action against rowdies who piled with my" request and assigned , have been Interrupting funerals In Magistrate Simpson to sit In the the cemeterj-. Mr. Schleln declared the Police Court on Staten Island until such I rowdies gather In Forest Park, adjoining time as the present investigation nas the cemetery, and Jeer and yell at the been completed. ,1 ii due Tlernan Defends Brother. ifudge Tlernan was stopped yesterday by reporters as ho was leaving the court at Stapl ton and asked to com ment on the allegations made against his brother. "I do not believe my brother has been incased in bootlegg.ng." he said. minister during the services He also said the rowdies on several oc casions have beaten persons who pro tested" against the Interruption. He cited the case of Charles Newman of 2117 Pa cific street, Brooklyn. Newman was at tending the funeral of his wife when tha rowdies began to Jeer and yell. He asked them to stop and a gang of them swept Into the cemetery and beat New "These utorles foundation. Any entirely without man so badly that he fell unconscious llnic the authorities over his wife's grave. He was In bed for A man describing himself as George Harris, a chauffeur of 47S East HSd street, walked Into the Alexander avenue police station In The Bronx hist night and Informed the lieutenant on duty that he had beon on Intimate terms with Mrs. Blanche Hchu'ix, the young woman whose body was discovered u short distance Irom Paltaadea Amusement Park. He thereupon unfolded a narrative that was regarded na being of such Im portance In connection with the Inquiry Into the murder that Assistant Idstrlct Attorney Hatting wa notified by tele jhone nnd arranged to have the . man taken at onco to his office for question ing. The chauffeur, who disclosed the fuel that he had been In Mrs. Schulx's com pany last Friday night, which was prob ably twenty-four hours before the time I of her death, told the officials that she had often complained to him of the "brutalities" of her husband, Frnnk Schulx, who Is being held In the Bergen County Jail at Haekensack. N. J., as a material witness. Ue said that on one occasion he had purchased a silk waist for the girl, and that she told him later that her husband tore ll to shreds and beat her. He also contradicted that part Of the husband's story In which It was staled that Schulx had purchased his wife certain rings and other nrtlcles of Jewelry which sho 'carried about with her, but which were missing when the body was discovered. Harris said that he had given the woman two Of these rings nnd B gold filled wrist watch, but that she also had olhcr ad mirers who gave her presents. Other Admirers Are Named. He furnished the names oseveral of these other admirers, and late In the night detectives were endeavoring to locale them. They were particularly anxious to find an Italian chauffeur named Joe with whom the woman W'as especially Intimate. Harris said that he met the Schulz woman last February and that she wanted him to go to Cuba at the same tlmo she was going there with her hus band, but the trip was called off. Schulz had referred to this proposed trip In his statement to the officials on Thursday. Ho said that he met her last Friday evening and took her to a motion pic ture theatre, after which he remained out with her until ft late hour. She told him that she Intended to (to to Keyfiort, N. J., with her husband, and asked him to meet her there on Monday or Tues day. The Bronx county authorities got Into communication with Assistant County Prosecutor McCarthy of Bergen county, N. J., who Is in charge of the hunt for the Schulz girl's slayer, and It was ar ranged that Harris should he ques tioned further this morning by the New Jersey authorities. Earlier In the day District Attorney Francis Martin of The Bronx announced that the questioning of Schulx and other witnesses In the case In his office on Thursday had brought to light many details relating to the operations of white slave gangs In his borough, and that he Intended to Institute an Immedi ate probe of viae conditions within his Jurisdiction. It was also said In the course of the afternoon that Howard Faulkner, who la being held with Schuls as a material witness, had contradicted a point in tho story given- by the husbnnd, but this might be accounted for through faulty memory on the part of either one of the two men. Schulx had told Assist ant Iosecutor McLaughlin that he had shown Faulknr a note which his wife had left In his room on Saturday, In which she advised him to wash his face and otherwise prepare himself to accom pany her to her sister's home in Key port, N. J., but Faulkner said ho had not seen this note. AUshop Shayler blamed Sinn Fein and Ihiaihevlst agitators for the state of Hi nfv.-h labor, and said that unless labor gen ill.. year if. Bishop Shuyler's wife and dnug.Vaer accompanied him. Tln Right Hon. W. A. Watt, for merly '.Acting Premier of Australia, re turned .after representing his common wealth At thu Spa conference, but re fused tot dlscusa political or diplomatic subjects. Sir Arthur Pease, British Iron and steel magnate, arrived with Lady Pen'. Ha will Inspect American steel arorkn BAGGAGE STRIKERS ATTACK DRIVERS Ono Chauffeur Speeds Through Picket Line and Hurls Many to Sidewalk. XO SETTLEMENT IN BIGHT Trunks Continue to Tile Up at Grand Central and Penn- t sylvanla Stations. Husband's Stories Conflicting. It appeared that another point in Schulx's story which l.u puxxled thn officials Is his Statement that he was so worried over his wife's disappearance that ho spent about twenty-four hours roaming about searching for her. They thought this strange, because she had left him on numerous previous occa sions without causing him any such concern. Schulx, however, lias explatne 1 that this time his wife took nearly $500 with her a substantial cause for anxiety. They also point out the fact that when he was first describing his wife's disappearance last Saturday he said that he awoke at about noon and that his wife had "gone to work." Later he said that she was "on vacation." Still later it was learned that she had no Job at all. Yesterday In his Jail cell be set to work putting a record of his move ments of Saturday and Sunday on paper so that he may remember them. Schulx also advised the New Jersey authorities yesterday to seek a glrU named Zola, with whom his wife had associated, and who might know Home thing about the reason for her trip to Palisades Park. TEN YEitftS FOR "DR." KOCH. 'You Are a uaageroan Man," Conrt Na' to Primmer. "I ir." Hdwa.tfil Koch, who robbed women of JowelCji after gaining entrance Into their homes,, was sentenced yester day to ten years ii Sing Sing by County Judge Haskell In llrooklyn. The doctor," apiVklng glibly, pleaded with the Judge for it light sentence. "Your excellent spvech makes me be lieve all the more flrtdy that you are a dangcroua man," said" Judge Haskell. Koch said ha was ,23 years old and gave his address as Ull Allen street, Manhattan. He vlsltii women telling them that he had bee.tj sent by their husbands to measure hem for new gowns and then robbed ft'ieni. Baggage handlers made no noticeable progress yesterday toward ending their strike, but they continued to exert a ter rifying lnfluei.ee over most taxlcab driv ers ami to have fistic exchanges with the few drivers who persisted In transporting trunks nnd bags. Strike leaders had a two hour talk with Alfred M. Barrett, Deputy Public Service Commissioner which was ineffectual, ns admitted by both sides. Baggagl piled up higher and higher at the (ii-And central ami Pennsylvania stations, the accumulation growing fast er than the few cubs audacious enough to defy the strikers could diminish It. Strike pickets nmused themselves by singling out for special chastlmoment such taxlcab drivers as they could lure into carrying bags. One taxlcab chauf feur nearly ended the careers of a chain of strikers who sought to stop him bv stretching their line across tho street near the Grand Central. He put on full speeil and the links of the human chain landed on the sidewalk. James Brady and Arthur McGoldrlrk, striking truckmen, were held In $1,000 hall each for the Grand Jury when ar raigned In Yorkville Court on charges of malicious mischief for the alleged mutilation of an automobile truck be longing' to Elmer 11. Fisher. ELEANOR KENT ONCE ROOSEVELT MODEL Mystery About Heir to $4,000 Annuity Is Solved. Bnmo of the mystery regarding the identity of Eleanor Kent, who by tha will of Samuel Montgomery Rooeavelt, noted portrait painter, received un In come of $4,000 and the use for life of the houae at III West Nlnoty-flfth street, was dispelled yesterday. A petition for tho probule of the will filed by Hurry A Uuttou, attorneys for Mr. Boosevelt, showed that Mlsa Kent was un relative of tho testator. Instead, it waa learned, she had been on the stage at one time and hud posed fre quently aa a model for Mr. Uoosovelt, who was a cousin of the late Theodore Roosevelt It also was learned that Miss Kent had been occupying tho Ninety-fifth street house for some years, but that at present she has leased it. She was said to be travelling In Europe. The eetate left by Mr. Itoosevelt waa aald to exceed $500,0110, Thn testator left to hla widow, Augusta E. Hoosevelt, the uae for life of his town house and his big summer homo at SUaneateles iJke, N. Y. To his nephew, Major Henry L. Hoosevelt, he li ft the hulk of his property, Including the Income from 61 per cent, of the stock of the Hnlg & Halg Trading Corporation. This la the whiskey company In which Mr. Roose velt had Invested a part of his fortune. fttettlnlna Reported Improved. A report of Improvement In lhe con dition of Edward R. Htetttnlua, former Assistant Secretary of War and mem ber of the firm of j. P, Morgan eVCo., was reported last night from Roosevelt Hospital. Mr. Stettlnlus was operated on Thuredny for appendicitis. It wns said he had been resting comfortably since the operation. Man .Mole Portable House. William Kelly of 4o Diamond street, Brooklyn, was found guilty In the United Ktates District Court yesterday of steal ing a portable house from the navy base In Bay Ridge. He will be sentenced by Jndge Garvan on September 3. STRIKE FOR CLOSED SHOP HELD ILLEGAL Newark Court Grants Injunc tion to Prevent Interference With Construction. SAYS AIM IS MONOPOLY Owners of Building Under Way Had Demanded Use of Cnion Labor Only. Vlce-Chancellor Backes, in Newark, handed down yesterday a decision In Which he held that a strike for the pur pose or enforcing the closed ahop waa Illegal and contrary to public policy. He granted an injunction to the Don-nell-Zana Company of Now York re airaining the International Brotherhood of Bridge and Iron Workers of America and tho Atlantic Smelting nnd Refining Works of Brooklyn from inaugurating a sympathetic strike to prevont the com pletion of a contract between the At lantic company and the Lehigh Struc tural Steel Company of New York for the erection of a Newark plant for the former concern. Tho Lehigh company has sublot tho contract to tho Donnell Zane Company. "The principle of the closed shop, namely, the monopoly of the labor mar ket," said Vlco-Chancollor Backes, "haa found no Judicial sponsors. In whatever form organized labor haa asserted It, whether to thoHnJury of the employer or to labor outside of the fold, the ju diciary of the country has responded uniformly that it Is inimical to the freedom of Individual pursuit guaran teed by the fundamental law of the land and contravenes public policy. "On the other hand public policy fa vors free competition and the courts have bean keen to recognize the right of organised labor to compete for work and wage and economic and lociul bet terment, and to uae lta weapon, the strike, to realise Ita lawful asplratlona But none haa gone to tho length of sanctioning a strike for a closed shop which haa for ita object tha exclusion from work of workmen who are not members of the association." Work on the Newark plant was al most completed when Timothy Tlerney, business agent for the Iron workers' union, ordered a strike on the ground that the Donnell-Zane Company waa employing non-union labor on n building under construction In New Tork. The Donnell-Zane Company tried to com plete tho work with non-union lalwr, but waa notified by William K. Lehman of Newark, architect and representative of tha Atlantic Smelting and Refining Worka, that hla company would not permit labor other than union labor to be used. Lehman declared that If non union men were employed there would be a general atrlke of union men In the omploy of the Atlantic company. He also notified the Donnell-Zane Company that the contract had been cancelled he cause one of its provisions waa that the work must be done by union labor. The Donnell-Zane Company and the I.ehlgn company at once brought thn action foi an Injunction to prevent Interftreni a with tha completion of thn work. Re ferring to the employees, Vlce-Chancellor Backes said: "The men were not under contract and Individual have a right to quit work aa thoy pleaae. Aa members of the federation it was tholr privilege to use the strike in sympathy with the en deavor of their New York brothers, and to advocate the common cause of organ zed labor, provided the object sought waa not an unlawful one. It Is plain that the primary and ultimate thing or ganized labor aought was the monopo llaatlon of labor In all lines of the bulM Ing trade within the territory to which the contract applies." This reference la to a contract entered Into between the Building Trades Coun cil In New York and the Employer.' Aa soclatlon. ' ! ... I, J Sicrenma that mav have comn from llm tgtisb to Investigate him he will appear, a week as a result of the assault. Schulx girl were reported to have been lliem gladly. I hove been In I The cemetery i on Myrtle avenue. In i heard by the Rev. Father Anthony J. close touch with my brother and lithe Olendale section of Queens, and j Kerretl of the Roman Catholic Church of the Epiphany at Clirrslde. Assistant l'rosecutor McCarthy was told that the priest, while reading In his study in Crantwood Park, about B00 feet from where tho girl's body was found, heard three shrill feminine outcries. He Was unable to locate the source of these sounds, which ceased abruptly. The time was about 11 :30 o'clock Saturday night. to MURDER MYSTERY SEEN IN SUIT CASE Woman's Stained Clothing Cast From Train. Detectives of Hudson county. New Jersey, believe that they have uncov ered another murder mystery in tha know that he has nol been engaged In there is no fence between the property this Illicit trading. j and Forest Tark. Mr. Schleln asked the The Judge ald he knew nothing of i borough authorities to erect a fence the charge that William Tlernan had which would keep the rowdies from the owned three barrels of whiskey which 1 cemetery. Mr. Connolly referred the cere seized In a raid on Hugot's res-, matter to Park Commissioner Albert C. taurant at St. George. Louis Hugot, Bennlnger of Queens, and he will bring Who waa arrested at the time of the I jt before the Board of Estimate. raid, denied he was the owner of tho restaurant and said he did not know i p rif St AM V rc C rAHlfV about the liquor. He referred the jtllaJm I L.COO 11Tt matter to his son, Henry Hugot, who! FVDIVFD AT I AGtT was found in the restaurant f. Z. Lfl3' Henrv llo-'ot was unwllllnir to anawer questions beyond saying he knew win-l'7"ii Wesleyan' Aims lam Tlernan as tenant of one of his' Please the Methodists bouses. He denied his piace had been; riease inejueinoatStS, raided and said the mention of tils' name in connection with Eckert's i Members of the American National I murder was "an attempt of Staten Aeaociauon oi uancing Masters went Island politicians to put him out 0f' 'nto a trance or ao-nething at their con busincss ' vantion yesterday and emerged with a Dim ...... v ,,, m. dance which they are confident will lenKthj examination of rroiilBitlon nKe tne 3aM nd "hlmmy dances into finding or a suit case filled with woman"s I u . aloiP said he th discard and be the big dancing hlti stained clothing in West Hudson Park, Was nol rued n !).otK,;lng ex-: ot ,h winter. They have named the ' at Harrison. The piece of baggage was io murder, new creation "The Wesleyan," hoping discovered Thursday morning and taken , "Arrests la the police and that by ,hus honoring the founder of . to Harrison Police Headquarters by Au-; Qm pollcj the police Is not to enforce 1 Methndlam they will so Impress the ' gust Effcnberger. a park guard. It is! the prohibition law." was his comment I bishops ol the Methodist Church that believed by tho detectives to have been 'Does I to Htatan Island or ' IM next conference win amend the; thrown from a Newark bound train on cnuren oircipune so as to permit the the Krle Kaiiroad some time early A7oaleyan to be danced. Few of the Thursday morning, dancing masters are Methodists. . ' In the suit case besides the woman's The Wesleyan will be advertised by I clothing was a man's gray coat with those who will teach it at so much a buttons lettered "A. D. T.," evidently lesson as the last word In purity. It the clothing of a telegraph messenger, haa neither shiver nor shake : neither j Some of the buttons had been cut off. turkey trot nor bunny hug. It is not The shoulder of the coat was streaked quite so nice as the avadrille and the! with blood. Other articles In the case polka, nor so stately as the waits, but included a woman's blue serge dress, when danced properly there isn't the ' with blood stains on the collar ; a man's slightest danger lit It, according to the' white shirt, a brown gingham apron, a dancing roasters. But the question Is, blue and white checked apron, a whim will it be danced properly? Or will I cotton chemise. On the man's eoat waa some one stick a bit of jaxs Into it? i a tag bearing the name "Williams." the .v li" " ' he was aked. "It applies to the whole city," Mr. Maloy said. "Undoubtedly there has been a rinii of bootloggero on Staten Isgid, and x. Ken waa one of them, but I do not intend to question William Ilernan." W hen It was pointed out that Fed eral itatutes provide that State officers irfm e the Volstead act concurrently with the Federal authorities, Mr. Maloy aald It was ";.r rmlsslve," but arrests fnr the sale of Illicit liquor were "up to" the Government prohibition ageata. Maloy is the youngest District Attor- Q (D&t (tbXOfefe: lis (3L P.S.ytb fatfor OAAJTtAb LjpUb Cryvtfcb tic&k ffjfflr, flux, UAU l&u,: Quia O'lfc Jbmb& Cl nnvJllun filAiaitU! fote tfiftis WUru tiAJuL Mxx iuuAi q !!!! CUJofif -Jtat Comb faejTu ajlo AinftJUkAaAdt' eufOAtZj l&tiXt (jm fim&Msi Tuua, 9 II Mju t ujfte mouj bit Um. aitoU" Xb4hinjLr -tfvut Q-curu uctt a &ojpimq ! I cr- , ' 0 i amaXsl CftmeC OMj wl tyuJW&rt Cfyaiuite Qxm w ftlmek CU JfW QM, WjOuUo CTV Oj pAAAA,- Ha Mil j MtyUq ttU joy &W fa oat! yyjj"l' ' MM