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The evening world. [volume] (New York, N.Y.) 1887-1931, April 16, 1921, Final Edition, Image 3

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7
THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL16, 1921.
SB"
ONSOLIDATED
B. T.
WQULB CUT
Evening World Contention for
Change Borne Out by At
torney for Cmpany.
Prices to Consumer Would Be
Reduced if 22-Candle Stan
dard Is Abandoned.
By Sophie Irene Loeb.
'J'hiit New York City need not
rny $1.50 per thousand feet or
an such exorbitant gum for gas,
us is now being charged pending
tin' .Supremo Court decision, is
evident In the light of The Even
ing World's Investigation.
By changing the gas standard
f om a 22-candlo power to a Brit
ish thermal unit standard, which
ii. o- not impair the efficiency, a
drop in prices could be secured,
and dmibtless all the court cases
eliminated.
As explained in these columns,
the gas oil is one of the chief clo
nic nf- tnut goes to making tho
'"gf puce of gas. To inaKo t' o
letont requirement of U2-c.mdlo
newer, winch includes an approv-im-iie
average of I'.oQ H. T, U
ri .Uir a about 4 1-10 gallons of
gas oil per thousand cubic feet.
To make, say, a 32S British thei
niJT un i gas would require only
three gallons of gas oil.
The Consolidated (Jus System
mono lost your used 140,000,000
gallons of gas oil to fhako 37,000.
ooo.ouo reet of gas, approximately.
This would mean a saving of
over $5,000,000 in gas oil alone,
at tho present rate of 12 1-4 cents
imr gallon, which the Consoli
dated is now paying.
As Is generally known, the
price of the gas oil has dropped
since this contract was made by
the Consolidated Company for gas
oil, but the gas corporations have
one way out of this contract, and
could avail themselves of a
cheaper gas oil.
How?
In tho frame way suggested tiy
Tho Kvenlng World changing
toe standard of gnu from candle
power leipilicmrnt to Hritish
thermal unit measurement.
According to the statement of
William L. Hansom, Counsel for
the Consolidated Gas Company,
made only last month, tho fol
lowing slgnillcant statement
gives assurance that It could be
done :
"Th Consolidated Gas Com
pany has made but a six months'
i
contract at 12' 'z cents for 70,000,
000 gallons with a provision that
if the New York authorities adopt
, B. T. U. standard, that this
would be immediately reflected
in a reduction in the contract
quantity of oil that the fjas com
pany need be bound to take.
"Thus, if the 525 B. T. U.
standard were at once adapted,
such as Connecticut, Massachu
setts and Philadelphia now enjoy,
at least a gallon less of oil per
thousand cubic feet of gas would
ba required and this would be
nearly 12 cents saving from the
present figure of $1.50."
Another significant statement
made by Mr. Hansom about the
name tune, showing that rcdue
f ns eun he made and that this
high contract can be changed If
now standards mo adopted, is us
follows:
"At the piesent time a late of
t.30 will do no more than pay
actual operating expenses and a
return of nut more than 7 per
cent, on the actual investment at
computed by the court.
The rate at present fixed by
the company will, accordingly, be
$150. This rate will be dec-reuse
when and as the operat
ing costs decline. The company
frankly doeH not expect to de
. .-ease the rates of pay to Its cm
o'oyees. If the cost of gas oil,
generator coal and gas coal
comes down, decrease In this rate
will be promptly made."
The counsel for the corporation
t plaius the making of this 12 1-4
cents per gallon contract as fol
' lows:
"Counsel for rome of the de
fendants have tried In tho public
pies-s to fasten responsibility for
t'us increased cost of gas upon
tills company's present contract
for gas oil, which is at the rate
of 12 1-4 cents per gallon.
"This explanation does not ex
plain. In 1920. down to the mid
dle of December, this company
paid only 7.1 cents per gallon for
Its gas oil. whereas other com
panies were paying 12 1-2 cents
to 15 cents per gallon."
But the counsel adds:
"The company has said many
times on the record in court, and
now repeats: It does not wish to
pay more for gas oil than is
necessary to secure nood quality
and certainty of supply."
i (H.i.KfiRs r.irr cwixkcii: aid.
The Carnegie Foundation for the Ad
Fniieemcnt of Teaching announced hero
vesterday It had added Converso Col
lego at Spartanburg, S. C, and Wash
ington and Leo University at Ixlng
ton, Vn., to the list of Institutions as
(Delated with Its work. Klghty-two In-
stltutions. forty-three of which have
-3ya mo now contracture! plan
vu allowances, uuw are associated
Jio foundation.
AMIS
GAS COUNSEL
U.
COST
LACK OF A "LIMP"
AND ALERT ROOKIE
FOILS AUTO THEFT
Man Who Left Cr Lame,
None of Three Who Got In
Limped,' Policeman Saw.
The keen eyo of a rooklo policeman
resulted In the capture early to-day
of three men who are alleged to have
tried to steal an automobile In the
Bronx. Frank McPhllllps, on the
force a month and attached to the
Morrlsnnla Station, Is the cop with
the camera eya
He saw o man, who later proved to
bo Francis Dlnklnger of No. 2247
Walton Avenue, Bronx, drive his car
to the curb in front of No. 3591 Third
Avenue and leave It. He noticed the
man limped..
About 2 A. M. McPhlllips was pass
ing the car again when he saw three
men, none of them with a limp, get In
It." He hurried toward them and they
Jumped out and ran north to 168th
Street.
They paid no attention to his com
mand to slop and he fired several
shots as they turned Into 16Sth Street
Policeman John Graver Joined in the
chase as the men ran north on Wash
Ington Avenue, and, ho also fired sov
cral shots, the noise arousing tho
neighborhood.
Two men were caught at 170th
Street and Third Avenue und the
third ran Into the cellar of an apart
ment hous.e, where MoPhllllpa found
htm. The men denied trying to steal
the automobile, saying they mistook
it for a car belonging to a friend
They were 'held In the Morrlsanta
Court in $2,500 each, charged with
attempted grand larceny. They de
scribed themselves as Charles Cole
man, twenty, of No. 1840 Belmont
Avenue; Joseph Mahon. twenty-four,
of No. 4261 Third Avenue, ana Philip
Karrell. twenty-one, of No. 630 Kast
170th Street.
BAIL FOR PLUMBER
NOW IN PRISON
Knight, Who Is Serving Term With
Hettrick, Gets Reasonable
Doubt Certificate.
John Knight, one of the plumbers
serving a term in the penitentiary
to ue the Hettrick "code of practice"
to restrain competition, obtained
from Justice On vegan In the Su
preme Court to-day a certificate of
reasonable doubt.
Justice Ciavegan said that the con
tention of Knight that he had gained
Immunity from prosecution by the
act of the Atorney General In con
stituting himself as a Magistrate to
conduct an examination before trial
nt which Knight did not have tho
henoflt of counsel, at least furnishes
grounds for the appeal, though he Is
I doubtful of Its success. Tho action
of the Attorney General, the Court
said, Involved tho question as to
whether Knight's rights wero in
vaded under the guise of a war-time
necessity. The Court had no course
but to grant the certificate, he said,
as a stay of the execution of the sen
tence of Imprisonment pending the
decision of the Appellate Division
and -until then Knight may have Ms
freedom under bond.
THEIR LOUD TOGS
LED THEM TO CELLS
Grandmother s Hoarded $10,000
Enables Two Youths to Sport
Thirty Suits Each.
The rcp!endcnt nttife of Oeorge
Welland and (Jeorge Attilo. youths who
shared a room at No 128 Knst 137th
Street and appeared In varied suit
and overcoats and hats and tics in the
company of attractive young women
In Harlem nightly for tho last two
weeks, engaged the attention of De
tectlves Murphy, Shields und'f'u.'lcy of
tho Kast 126th Street Station, who
called on them to-day to ask what tho
"big nolso was nil about.
Welland, according to the detectives,
admitted thnt he had taken $10,000 from
a hiding place where It was kept by his
grandmother, Mrs. ICmlly Welland of No
128 Kast 12"th Street, with whom he and
Attilo lived up to three weeks ago. They
had bought thirty suits of clothes each,
ten overcoats and raincoats, and silk
fchlrts by the dozen. Wei land said ho
had Just $10 left and would as soon be
arrested as attempt to square hlmrelf
with the "three Janes liu hud dated for
to-nti;ht."
The detectives said they found a re
volver In a suit claimed by Attilo. Well-
charged with grand larceny and
xttllo -with violation of tho Sullivan law.
STANDARD
OF GAS
$40,000 IN SEIZED
WHISKEY ORDERED
BACK TO OWNERS
New 'Ruling by Appeals Court
Prevents Such Raids Under
an Old Law.
WARNING BY LEACH.
Liens to Be Put on Property
if the Day Law Is
Violated.
An order signed to-day by United
States Commissioner Hitchcock di
recting the return to the United
States Distilling Company, No. 358
West 43d Street, of $0,000 worth of
whiskey In cases and flasks seized bj
Prohibition Agent Robert D. Murphy
on Oct. 22, 1920, brings tho total val
uation of seized whiskey and wines
returned to original owners In Man-
nauan uunng wie puai. hr ujf iw
$100,000. The order restoring the
seized whiskey to the United States
Distilling Company was made tinder
tho new ruling of the Fourth Circuit
Court of Appeals, sitting In South
Carolina, that the Volstead Act su
perseded the provisions of the Re
vised Statutes of 1868 under which
the seizure was made.
Murphy bought some whiskey from
tho distilling company and paid for It
in marked bills. Then he obtained a
search warrant and grabbed all tho
Unuor the company had. GrlftUhs,
Sarfaty & Content were retained to Scllolar, sportsman und coldlcr. Wes
brlng suit to recover the whiskey and lcy G rirocker. tnt. Harvard Junior
to-day's order Is the result. , who has Just won the Francis Hardon
One hundred and ninety-seven ar- rjurr scholarship "for qualities of
rests have been nude und large character, leadership, scholarship and
quantities of liquor seized in the last athletic ability," Is living proof of
24 hours, it was announced to-day by two facts of interest to every Amen.
Deputy Police Commissioner Leach, can boy and his father.
In charge of police enfotcemnt of The first fact Is that college need
prohibition. Mr. Leach also gives be no "waste of time," but rather
warning to property owners to see fine forcing house for natural abilities,
that no liquor 1s manufactured or The second fact Is that the poor
sold on their premises, on danger of but ambitious and hard-working col
tlndlng their ,property tied up in the lego boy has quite as good a chance
courts, as tho young man of wealth and
"Section 1,21443 of the State Prohl- , social position to win tho highest
bltlon law provides that when persons prizes.
have reason to believe their property , Wesley Brocker, besides the scholar
Is being used In the manufacture or , ship Just awarded to tilin as this
sale of liquor, and suffer such use to year's representative of the most per
continuc, their property Is subject to , feet type of Harvard student, made
a lien and may too sold to pay fines, Ins football "H" In the Yale game
nenaltles and costs against tho vio- last fall, playing as guard.
later said Mr. Leach, "wnne tne
act n'rovldes for the bonding of auto- ,
mobiles which may fee seized in Pro- I
hibition enforcement, there lfl no pro- '
vision for bonding liens on real
In the courts
Prohibition Commissioner Cramer
has ordered tho return of $100,000
worth of wine seized three weeks ago
In tho warehouse of the Garrett Wine
Company, No. 110 IJowery. and In flvo
retail stores controlled by the com
pany. It Is held that this Is legiti
mate sacramental wine to be sold to
Jews for ceremonial occasions.
The remaining $60,000 worth of re
covered liquor went to numerous
small claimants. Griffiths, Sarfaty
& Content expect to recover shortly
for the United "States Distilling Com
pany $80,000 worth of whiskey seized
In a car In a railroad yard subse
quent to the warehouse seizure of
Oct. 22. -
The cobbler snop oi tiosano ljicaio
and Salvator Kiccaro at No. 2C0 Ave
nue H came to the attention of Now
York's hooch-hunting ponco yester
day because so many men wero seen
to enter the shop without bundles of
shoes and to leave without parcels.
Directives Giordano
ana lingers
went In and looked arounu. iney sayi
they saw a man enter ana take a
dasii of whiskey out of a shoe on the
shelf. Then they found other glasses
of nllcBea wnisney in "mcr nuca mm
about five gallons in ooines ajiu
demijohns. Llcato nnd Hlccaro weie
arraigned in Yorkville Court this
momlng and hcldjn $500 bail.
LEFT TRUST FUND
TO HIS FIANCEE
John Glackner, Cigar Manufac
turer, Provided for Miss
Anna Freund.
In the will of John Glackner, whole
sale cigar manufacturer, filed for pro-
bato to-day In the Surrogate's Court, tho
deceased left to his fiancee. Miss Aniiu,
, , .., , i
Freund, one-quarter of a $t00,00 trust
fund, as well as household furniture, fur
nishings, silver, china and glassware.
While no petition was filed with tho
document, which was dated Feb. 21, 1919.
the cigar man's cstato is approximated
at $1,000,000. Frederick H. Pcarce of
Hempstead, V. 1.. and the Hankers' Trust
Company are executors and trustees.
After providing for his fiancee, whom
he was about to marry, the testator pro
vides for his threft children by appor
tioning tho remaining three-quarters of
the trust fund to them. A clause In the
will provides that should thu residuary
estate reach more than JtOO.000 an addi
tional fund of $100,000 is to be created
for Miss Freund.
Hoy l ull" t Street From "I." '1'rnlni
rintfonn. I
Abraham Fcrtel, sixteen. No, 11 37 1
35th Street, Ilrooklyn, fell early to-day
from a platform of un eustbound Culver
lino elevated train to the street, a dls- '
tancc of sixteen lent. He was taken to
the Jowisn liosoital. where '.ie is sut- i
1 feritig from a potnlbly fractured skull. J
estate, property owners must awu.i one-half courses dlt leader told the victims to keepl""" "",' ,r""-, , lr,r
in enforcement of tho law, or, when . rradc c in ono courst. . ' , ""' "MM Mr!4 stokes concedes her children
hey try to sell or mortgage property, PUpfle the roml.S or W-fr.hnmn IUl0t nm ,U, , h'U- 'P me" 'Cf A" arc th-lr father and that h.
thev may find It is tied up for years year, he interrupted his college career, soon 08 1,10 l00'- rlsei1 ' victims has been Invariably kind to Uem.
tney ma una j .- , ,i,.hi, .' smashed the nearest windows otxmlni? Nevertheless, one of Mrs. Stoke
Poor Boy Proves Success
At Harvard, in Football
And as Officer in Army
Wesley BrOCker, With No Mil
ionaire Father, and With a
Public School Preparation,
Wears a Phi Beta Kappa
Key, Two Army Wound
Stripes, a Football "Hi" and
Now He's Winner of the
Coveted Francis H anion
Burr Scholarship.
f.fvil toTlw Ktonlre trot hi I
CAMHRIDGK. Mass.. Anrll in
unu n mu jumui cikiu m
"be taken into Phi Hcta Kappu. a few
- ,""iln"h'- - ' " "V"
casir of Wc8ley Hrockcr means that
in ins studies nc made urauo A (inn
tlon of war. His war record is a line
one. Ho had eighteen months of ser-
vice ovirsens, was First Lieutenant,
and aftenvnrd Captain. Ho took part 1
in three major engagements, was
cltod for heroism in tho battle of
Chateau Thierry and was wounded in
uu 11 res uurms iiiik raiiiu,
One of tho remarkable features In
the winning of his "H" was that he
overcame this war Injury sutlleiently
to "go out" for football on his return
to college.
Yet this winner of great prizes from
his college nnd his country entered
aristocratic Harvard without the
prestige of a Hack Hay family, a
millionaire father or even a famous
preparatory school. Ho did his "prep"
work in the public high school of his
native town, Llndstrom, Minn., and
came to Harvard ns a student with
scanty funds.
His own modest point of view Is
that his case Is no exception to tho
rules, that ho only did what any
other fellow with tho will power
might do.
"My ease is no exception, so fir
as Harvard Is concerned," he insist
ed to-day. "A chap has no reason
whatovor to feel that financial con
auicratinn can hinder him tram gct-
ting attend in college. If he wants to
,ifl nnvthlnir. and ha. ro.iiiv ihn -iu
to do it, he will find a way. Money
, imoum never oe considered. Is what
( no wants worm while'.' That Is tho
point, jr it is worm while, then he
should go ahead, desnlte hamlirans.
"The reports of Hnrvnid indiffer
ence are greatly exaggerated. And
the university is no more snobbish
than any other college. Tin- student
of small means has as good a chance
here, If not bettor, than ut most in
stitutions." Iliocker's friends elievc there has
been no more worthy bidder of the
Francis Hardon Hurr scholarship,
which Is awarded annually to the
deserving "undergraduate who com
bines ns nearly as possible Ilurr's re
markable qualities" Francis Hardon
Hurr, or "I iooks -iiurr, ns he Is nffec-
tlnnntcly remkmbere
nred In Cambridge.
was of tho class of "09. nnd captained'
victory the 1908 football eleven
which bent Yale I to 0 nnd started
Harvard's inn? string of victories
over the Hltie. Hurr was first mar
shal of his class and graduated with
distinction. Ho died of tvphold fevrr
two years nfter hN gradnatlim. while
a student in tho Harvard law school
Weslev Itrncker, entitled to wear
war nervier stripes, n Phi tola Kappn
key nnd an "H" on h'i sweater, will
return to college nexl '-ill. anil ,-iir.iin
be a candidate for the football eleven
He is preparing to he n mining en
gineer upon his graduation Never
theless, the New York executives who
nr looklnsr every year for "liricht
vnunt; men," should find It worth
wlille to Interview Wfvilev Mroekerln
the spring of 1922. They need h's sort
!n their h'lslnes'".
Ilnj. seventeen, f.iillty if Murder,
Peter Nunzlata. seventeen, of So. II
vlcted yesterday of murder In the first
degree tiy ttiu yueens county Court for
I taking part on Feb 25 at Woodh iven
BiincKing nnu roimiiig me i.ne nor
Wilfred P Kotkov, professor of phllosn-
phy nt the J Willi Theological Suini-
u.iry, this city. Judge Him ihri'v uet
Monday lor sentence. Tho Jury vaa out
luo hjiui'o.
... . n i. ipNii in mix nn.i nnn. i i r rn r iv iii'ri i mi Ki'nriMi w:ih nvnr 11111 im.i
ft Mr i
annum n minim !
HKVLU DM U o
Y
1
I
,
EAST SIDE PARTY
Line Victims Un Airainst Wall
A Ti . i
Jewelry Five Arrests.
Harry Itrownsleln was entertaining
twenty guests In his apartment on
the second floor of No. 101 Orchard
Street at 1.30 A. M. to-day when tho
door liell rang. Tho Bursts, all men,
are understood to havo been play
ing craps.
Flvo masked men, with drawn re
volvers, pushed their way in when
tho door was opened, and tho lender
gav6 tho order, "Hands, up!" Tho
twenty were then lined up face tu tho
wall.
While ore bandit remained on
guuru me miicis wrni iiirougn ine
pockets of the victims. The police
. .my c"s." waH ou-
1,,,lru' 1 "p v'iins refused to say
"w ". '
onto tho street and shouted for
.tollco.
t,h' m ii. fn., . , ,,.
I olli:eraan J"3P"n Mcl Wrn:m of lho
Clinton Stieet Station ran Into tho
hall nnd captured ono man after a
struggle, and outside Detectives Hums
..ml rrilnnrkn ronirht fnur nll.r.ru
Tho five prisoners denied knowing of
tho robbery. No stolen property was
found on them, and the victims could
not Identify them, but they wero held
for further examination. Three masks
und a revolver were found In the hall
way. ATTACKED GIRL
WITH A KNIFE
Cuts Stenographer's Hands and
Face and 'I lien Tries to End
Own Lite.
Miss Helen Sloan, twenty-one, ot
No. 12.". Mount Pleasant Avenue,
Ncwaik. a stenographer for Swift
Company at Kearny. N J.was work
ing alone In an olllco room ut the
plant to-day when George Waterfall,
twenty-six years old. of No. 214 Kast
30th Stieet, Manhattan, walked in
and drawing a butcher knlro from
under his cont, leaped at her. She
sciennieU and threw up her hands to
protect her taee. Ilo cut her hands
and f.K't. He then slashed his own
throat.
Woikmen heard Miss Sloan's
screams and ran Ui her aid. They
found Waterfall unconscious and
Miss Sloan nearly so from loss of
blond.
Waterfall was tultcn to the Stumpf
Hospitul wh re it wus said he prob
ably would die. Miss Sloan Us in St
Ilanubas Hn.spital, in Newark, and is
likely to ieci. i r.
It Is bcllcwd Wuterlall's attack
was prompted by Jtaluusy.
LIVES 109 YEARTEN DAYS.
II r. ClirlKtlnn AxtIIii'k llotlier'n
I.iiiiucnvII; H VeKetiihlr llli't.
Dr. Uuseiiii Christian of No. 171 West
71st Street, asserted to-dny that bis
mother, Mrs. Harriet Chr.-.tinn. who
died nt Nashville. Te-nn.. .Thursday, at
the age of 109 years mid un days, owed
the unusual lengthening of her life to
abstinence from animal flesh diet or
thu ladt thirty ears.
WIIOm crippled with rheuniaUm which
her pbyslriuiiH deelanil beyond cuie,
mIih adopted the diet adopted by her son,
who had what was pronounced to be an
incurable iitoiiiuch tnaliidj . For a timo
fish and fowl wero the substitutes for
animal flosh but these gave iitmiMt
iiltoprhei to engd, milk and eheeso as
tile only i oniplements ol vmetables.
Uoth bican. nnu. :-i '.
I'hrisnun K.iys, uiiil at thu tlmu of hor
death Mre. Chrlntmn was untiusually ac-
live.
HOLD UP 20 MEN A
the
J Jfl MONTH, 1-3
nr DPfiPFRTY flFFFR
OF STOKES
REPORT
. $ 10,000,000 Arranged to Go to
Son by Previous Marriage,
Says Wife's Counsel.
i
It was admitted to-dny by cni.ns' 1
for both sides that W. K D. Htkr3.
hearing of whoso divorce suit ngtlns'
his wife will bo rrsmned Mondav.
once offered to settle their troublrs
privately. It was about two yiars
ogn. and one version Is that he was
w Ulng to pay her $1,500 n mon li
and to settle one-third of Ins prop- ,
erty on the children.
Mrs Hfokrs In reported to 'uo
been willing to have n separation
but not a dl voice, but was iinw ilinR 1
t agree to tho amount of mom y
specified. Martin W. Littleton, Mrs
Stokes's counsel, Is author ty foi iho
rtiitcment thut Mr. Stokes has now
arranged to leave a $10,000,000 estlue
to young "Waddle," his son by n pio-
vious inarrlugo. Mr. Htokcs said of
the attempted settlement:
"I offered her everything money,
Iho custody of our two children I
wunlcd to havo her suu mo for dl
virce, u secret proceeding, to spuro
her from all this publicity, llut she
tricked me."
Krom Mrs. Slokes's camp the story
goes that she was given twenty-four,
hours' notice tu ugreo to suo her bus-1
hand for a divorce. In return ho
i.irercd to continue the present nll-
ninny of $1,500 a month, grant her
I he custody of tho children and pro-
i
ht for their cniu.
Hcluctunt at llrst to discuss what
clcserlbed as an "abortlvu tit-
mpt," Mr. Littleton mid of .Mis.
tokes part in tne negoiiaiions.
lu-Kn urn ut-t sliortly after the nilll-
um.iiie's charges were revealed pub
licly. What follows is Ills story of
the affair:
Ilefore the suit camo to tllal Ml'
Stokes, through his lawyers, au
thorized a seiii-ti r conferences to
determine the most feiusiblo manner
of clouding the dltllcultlcs of tho
SUikeses from tho general public. Mr.
Stokes's lawyers urged the wlfo o
Institute divorce proceedings uulell.
Finally, after da of dispute, the
millionaire uttered Ills ultimatum if
agreement to this proponal In twenty
four hours.
"Mrs. Htokes does not believe In
divorce and told mo so," said Mr.
Littleton. "That twenty-four hours'
notice did not disturb her and her
answer ns an emphatic 'No!'
"Mr. Stokes was an uncertain fig
ure In tho settlement proceedings.
Wo did not know Just where he stood i
und that notice of his antagonized
Mis. Stokes. Her demand was that!
ho issue a signed stntemcnt to tho
public retracting hiB charges. Then (
she would consider nn amicable set
tlement." I
When the negotiations reached th s
stage they were dropped by common
raiwnnl. Mr Htokes gathered his
evidence. Mrs. Stokes hers, und their
loprrsenianves ciumi'ii iut un wijuii,.
"Katlier than give up my children
i to him, I would have them die, al
though I love them more man any
thing else on ennth."
Francis Wellman, counsel for M.
Stokes, deser.bed the proposed settle
ment as "liberal," although ho woulu
not disclose the exact aiimuni orierrii
"All this publicity could have been Av..ntll) lltl(l ivorl Street. Ilrooklyn,
avoided, nnd my client dcsl-cd to,A"m"-
avoid it." Haul Mr. Wellman, "If Mrs. 1 ami trlod to forco Mrs. .lennlo I'ow-
Ktnkon had not refused our offer. It
was purely a question of money with
her. My client was anxious not to
subject her to the ordeal of tho op" n
court, and the attendant publicity,
lint Mrs. Stokes was obdurate."
Replying to this, Mr. Littleton said
money did not enter Into Mrs. Stokes's
rejection of the olfcr. He continued:
"Mrs. Stokes has enough to live on
sunplv in HinviT, and .she is nut a
woman addicted tb luxury. Sho did
w.int to piiivulc for her children."
Mr Stokes has placid his real es-tali-
into thu bands of a corporation,
aiitomntlenllv depilvln" his wlfo of n
dower Interest, Mr. Littleton said.
Mrs Sink' s bus In gun action to re
st ram thin p iidlnir the! suit
When the trial Is continue il Mondnv
Mr Littleton will have with lilm a
iiiinl.'ituie diary kept by Mrs. Stokes
prior to her marriage und afterwards.
She kept an Intimate record of events
in the period In which adverse testi
mony Is placed.
One of Mr. Littletons trump cards,
It was Indicated to-day, wlh b"
what ts known us tho "pussycat
missive." Thiii Is a letter written by
Mr. Stokes to his children after the
stormy separation of the coupl" Its
contents cannot bo made public, al
though It will bo submitted In
evidence.
PRINCE OF MONACO
HERE FOR MEDAL
To Ik Presented to Him as Recog
nition of lib Work in I jeep
Sea Research.
Pi .lice Albeit of Monar,, uu.wd
hire lo-duy aboard the steamei
Fiance.
Ho will go to Washington to re
ceive the Alexander Agnssiz gold
...n.l..l ihn Mn-hrutt rnrnirnttinii nf tin.'
National Academy of Sciences,
awarikil him for his deep i.ea re
searches. 0RDERS ST0CK ACCOUNTING.
SupruiiH Justice Loiiiuiiii to l''
hnmleit down u decision direct, II it
Sheldon, Dawson. Lyon & i"o. ito.lc
broker, arrouiit for the sli'req u
1,10114 ,n ,n0 " ,v lol"r 1 "
lielorg 10 the estate of Ki.mk llmviid
UalUe. who died lec IS, PHi, h. -
queaUilng 150 share of the . .- i i il
muck of lh l'o-ter Company to bid
wife nnd on
The son. Frank Howard Jr., nn-d the
broker for th recovery of mviii'v
lien nhares of the nlw'k, which he d
h. inothor unlm.'ully pl dged in n.
el in count.' lo cnvci pi'.j.u.l n
dobtedncM. .Mrs. Ila.lto whs tho tx-
I (tutrix ox her buatuiid'a tbu.
WAITED 17 YEARS
FOR HONOR MEDAL
FOR SAVING SAILORS
mm
Clilef l in liner Itobert H. Cot,
IT. S. N . lias received a Con
giessliiniil Med.vl of Honor from
President Harding. Ho earned
the medal seventeen enrs uko
when, with two companions,
then Gunners' Males, ho risked
his life lo extinguish fl imcs that
threatened a ton t powder on the
battleship Missouri. Srhepko and
Monssen, Ills companions, wero
uwnrded Medals of Honor but thu
law did not provide for award of
the medal to a warrant olllrer.
However President ltoosevolt
wrote lo Cox, ilssui lug him that
he deserved such an honor and
would have hud It hut for Ills
tank t'nngiess recently passed
un act awaidlng the medal tu
him.,
TRIED TO ABDUCT
WOMAN ON STREET
Failing, Men in Brooklyn Slash
Face of Mrs. Jennie
Powers,
Two men jumped out of m uutomo-
i,,i.. liii-iV last evening nt Myrtle
ers. twenty-live years old, of Yonkers,
m ire! into the automobile with them
Mrs. Powers wus out walking at the
time with her mother and her four-year-old
daughter.
She resisted the men. and they
slashed her across the face with a
knife. The men were Immediately nr
rested. Acnrdlng to the ollec, they
rave thlr names as John UI Gaetano.
chauffeur, and Oiro IVtrlno, artist,
both of No. 28 Prince Street. Ilrook
lyn The crowd tried t oget the
prlsnmis away from tho illco, but
faiUd. The two men wero held to
day In Hie Adams Stret Court an a
charge or felonious assault In $5,000
bail eiieli, on complaint of Patrolman
John Madden.
SHOOTS WOMAN AND SELF.
Mnrr tlnllen li llrlil n Prltnnrr In
HnapHnl,
t ii. v Mr-nan' iimon. iwpiuy-rivc, til
i. '
lib..
lidiii, Nn 2'.'S Henry .street, was
ii. tin igln bieiMl to-iliiv, nn
,,,. ri'porti d by ll.iriy HhIIcm.
thu ' v -1 ive. of Nn '!i. .ii -on Xircel,
1 ,i, r then -(hut 'i.uitulf mid was le-
inM d t i lo'ivt-riieiir lloxpital. a
pi im,iter
Insist on "Sealed
Tlicsc line Slictficld products nre no
higher in price" tlinn tlie other kind.
Your grocer will sell you "Sealed" il
you insist. Tell hint what you want
(tntl insist on having
Sheffield
(CONDENSED)
minFFin r coNDrNsno
"Make it
ACCUSED BY POLICE
OF GUNTHER KILLING
IN $5,000 HOLDUP,
Wallace Arrested After CIctK
Tells of Being CheaTcd in
Division of Spoils.
Joseph Clements, a clork, twenty-
one. of N'o. 59 Morton Street, was
arrested last night by Detectives
Campbell. Mahcr and 'Shcvlln of the
Charles Street Station. They had
information that he had been talk
ing of being cheated In a division of
tho spoils of the highway robbers
who took the payroll of the Manhat
tan Ilras.i Company from Carlos
Uunther of No. 32 Van Cortlandt
Street. Yonkers, in East 29th Street
Jan. IS last, shooting Gunthcr, who
died In Hellcvue Hospital.
After talking with Clements an
hour they also arrested Frank Wal
luce of No. 462 83d Street, Hrooklyn.
They made a search for one Galluccl, (
a friend of the first two, and another'
man, but learned they hnd been cent
to Sing Sing by Judgo Glbbs In the,
Hronx for from seven to fourteen
years for highway robberies In the
Hronx.
The detectives say that Wallace Is
the man who shot Gunthcr and Gil
lurci struck Ounther's bodyguntd.
Richard Schllmke, on tho head with
a wrench, fracturing his skull.
Schllmke Is still In Hellcvue Hospital.
Clements told them, the detectives
said, that he received only $S0 of the.
$5,150 taken from Gunthcr and was'
tuld to meet the rest of tho party In
lluffulo, where there would be an
other division. The four quarrelled
in lluffalo, ho said, and ho left them
ibecause they threatened to kill him
ir he did not cense his demands for
one-fourth of the stolen money.
Margaret John, of Follies Had
Known Man Only Four
Days.
(.4vrM in 'n Kiciiinl World.)
LOH AXOKLKS. Calif.. April 18.
Uouglas Fairbanks ran counter to
("lipid yesterday and convinced Miss
Margaret John that tho little fellow
really could not be trusted at all times.
Miss John was to marry an cm.
ployce of tho Fairbanks outllt with
whom she had lioon acquainted only
four days, but was sure sho lovod.
Mr. Fairbanks nppeared In tho Su
perior Court late yesterday In time to
Induce Miss John not to marry. She
Is a former member of the Zlesfeld
Follies Compnny.
New York hotel men on California
tour wore tho guests hero last night
at n banquet tendered by the Los'
Angeles hotel men. James Woods,
taken unexpectedly 111, wn unablo to
attend. The visitors left to-day for
Santa Harharn.
GIRL, DAZED, WALKS
OUT IN KIMONO
Drug for Toothache Supposedly
Affects Miss Malian, Who Is
Revived in Hospital. 1
Miss Ellen Malum, twenty-one a
enthlrr living at No. 3H West 7tst
Street, was found clad In a blue ki
mono near her .homo at 2 A. M. to-Jay
j In a dazed condition. She becimo un
I conscious before the arrival of an am-
balance Pollcomtn Uayen called from
Flower Hospital, and when revived sev-
trnl hours later In the hospital lind no
recollection of how shn happened to bo
I In the street.
Yesterday sho had something In
jected Into her gum for the extraction
of a tooth, according to members of the
family, and because it still was
troubling her when 'ib went to bed
she put a hot water bottle to her cheek.
The doctors think the lio.it nuy havo
caused the drug to affect her.
(EVAPORATED)
miik co., inc., nhw york
uith-.viilk"
dl
DOUG. FAIRBANKS
INDUCES GIRL NOT
TO WED HASTILY
T
w
u
-i
i i
l
t
i. ,ii

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