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THE 'EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1922. HTYAGMNlffi PLEA 10 JOIN SUIT OO EVENING WORLD TEN-SECOND NEWS MOVIES CK DEFIED EFFORTS TO i, i-wwv - atruinnAri.r - j-jwwmjv j-.-u-jirunjwwxru-irwi ... .. , y Miners' Chief, John L. Lewis, Tells How New Yorkers Are Milked on Coal Prices OVER PHONE RATES GET HiS PRISONERS Subscribers Must Pay Ofd Rate, but Money Will Be Held. Application of the Now York Tele phone Company to prevent tho Pub lic Sen-Ice Commission from putting reduced rates Into effect under an order Issued March 3 was argued to day before a statutory court consist ing of federal Judge Hough, A. N. Hand and Knox. Tho reduction was to havo taken effect on April 1. but a. temporary restraining order was granted by Judge Hand pending hearing and decision by the statutory court Appeal from the decision of this court Is to the V. 8. Supreme Court nlonc. Tho city, which had already at tempted to Intervene In the action and was denied that right by Judge Hand, made another attempt to-day and "was ngaln forbidden, but a rep resentative of tho Corporation Coun sel's offlco was told a brief might be submitted. John W. Davis, former Ambassador to Great Britain, appeared for the telephone company. He stated tho litigation would probably requlro a year for settlement. Mr. Davis urged the Impounding of tho moneys represented by the reduc tion, amounting to about $3,000,000 a year, saying that If the people should ret tho benefit of the reduction Im mediately, pending the outcome of the litigation, the company felt It would never recover tho money without the Institution of TS7.000 suits against In dividual subscribers. The company, hp claimed, was en titled to 8 per cent, upon its invest ment. On tho advice of the Public Service Commission, he continued, the company had increased wages $13. 000,00(1 in order to obtain Increased ellleiency. Figures weie produced by Mr. Davis to show that the company's Income In 1919 showed a profit of 5.72 per cent. Tn 1920 It was 1.37 per cent. The average for 1921 was 3.55 per cent. In January, 19L'2. the average for the vear was 3 52 per rent. Former Judge I.edyard IV Hale, repiehonting the Public Service Com mission, ntttirkcd the company's de preciation fund of $65,000,000. which he said was $33,000,000 larger thnn it should lk SPEYER MUST QUIT WETS OR SALVATION ARMY EvmiKPllnr Ilnntli Itrriien .tank er'.. Service If lie Orixxri riiliililtlun. Coininandr Pvangellno Tooth of the Salvation Army says James Hpeyer banker, must give up the ehnlrmanahlp of the committee in the Jinny's $500,000 drive or change l 's antl-Prohlbitlon at titude. Mr. Speyn, who is head of the banking hous of his name at No. 2 Pino Street , is an officer of the organ nation that at Carnegie Hall Thursday night Held a Pig antl-Prohlbitlon meet Ing. Commander Hooth says that as the Salvation Army always has been for Prohibition it will not allow Mr. Speyer to be connected with tho drive so long s lie opposes tho dry law. Xlr. Speyer, whose homo Is at No 1058 Fit th Avenue, Is at Hot Springs. Va., und will not return for a week. CIVIL MARRIAGE HOLDS, IS JUSTICE'S DECISION Dlnillnic In ipltr of PrnmlMe nf IIcIIkIuuv CV.reniony Later. A civil marriage cannot be annulled on the ground that It was contracted by the brldo with the understanding that a religious marriage would be performed later, according to a decision by Justice -Uantion in tho liiooklyu Supreme Comt lo-day. The case was that of Mrs. fier trude Stein Wulstcr of No. 425 East 26th Street ugalnst Charles i). Walster of No. 338 4Sth Street They were married In Borough Hall Brooklyn. In Anrll. 191D. Walster nrom- ised a religious ceremony two months later. He failed to keep his promise and ihe bride left him, but Judge Gannon held the civil marriage is binding LOCKWOOD COMMITTEE WITNESSES QUESTIONED Investigators employed by the J.ock- ood Committee to-day brought to the "diflce of Deputy Attorney General Stan ley Rlchter a number of prospective witnesses who will testify before the committee when It icsuines its sessions after Kaster. Mr. Hlcliter said that these wltneHex were questioned in order that the char acter of their testimony might be hull uated to ilr. l'iiti"tin er when h yutt tlons tlu-iii on the witness ManJ, ni'TTRii m Mucin noiiai;i oi- .-,o Two armed men Invaded the P. A Butter Maiket, No. 630 East 13SII Street, Bronx, next door to the (Hun ters of Knglne Company No. S3 at 9.30 last night, and piossing revolvers, to 4Jie chest of Kollx Maelwurm, a clerk took $5,0 from tho cash icglstcr and fled. ii nni: s itrcsos snrcrirr iiv Itl'I'OHM I.KAdl'i:, The National Civil Service llrforni league, of which Secretary Huglits I a Vice President, Issued u ittitcmetit to-day asserting that as un act of slm pie Justice President Hauling nhoiiM give his reasons foi dismissing th Director find thirty-one eninlojecs o the I!urcnu of I'ngraving and Pi luting. to wipi: opt . o. p. nnnr, At it 1'iiicheon to John T Adams, ihu new LThnirin.in or the llenubllcan Na tlonai Committee, ut the Downtown Chili yesii'iiinj pledges for $177,000 were made tow nut wiping out the 1381.000 denclt remaining from ihu liurdlng uopaun, "The operators ad mlt thnt ,coal at the pit mouth costs them $&2a toii." Coal Operators' Charges Milk New York Consumers, Says Miners' Combative Head of Shows How Owners Demand $7.50 at the Mine Mouth for Coal That Cost $3.92 and Railroads Tack .on Another $3 Miners Ask Part of That Overcharge in Wages. By Lindsay Denison. Some ot us have been In a po llre court when a plausible, al most respectable looking Indi vidual has assured the Judge that his only reason for being a thief has been to keep starvation from "the little woman and tho kids at home." Then we havo heard a hard-boiled probation offlcer re port that tho prisoner has not been near, his homo for six months, that his children are liv ing on the mother's earnings as a scrub woman. John I.. I,cwls, Tresldcnt of the 600,000 United Mine Workers whoso strike has threatened tho tires In the factory and the power house and tho locomotive llreboK and the kitchen stove, reminds one very much ot the ptobation offl cer. One asks him If the success of the coal strike will not mean that the prlco of coal Is going up as a means of gutting a living wage for the miners. Mr. Lewis is a heavy man. To get a good photograph of him one :must ask him to take his hat off, becauso ho wears the brim very low over his eyes and the picture wouldn't look like him with tho brim turned up. Ho hns a heavy, fighting aw. His eyes light with fight at tho very first suggestion ot combat. H is hard for him to keep the growl out of his voice. His heavy head of reddish brown hair fairly bristles at the back. "The companies will tell you," he said, "that their actual av erage, cost of production Is $3.92 a ton, to get the coal to tho mouth of the mine. That includes what the operator pays In royalties to tliu owner of the coal deposit (who doesn't work a lick and doesn't, to my mind, really own the coal). It Includes what he pays to the miner. It includes ull his expenses of operation, management, equip ment, depreciation and depletion. "All right!" A weary, patient smile lighted the grim earnestness of his frown. "You take a wagon and back it up to the moutji of the mine and what will they charge you for that $3.92 worth of coal? They charge. $7.50 a ton, and not one cent less." "Pretty nearly 100 per cent, right nt the start," one ventured to suggest. The Lewis big baud came down on the little Hotel table with a slam. "Sure!" he said. "Now sup pose tliey were satisfied with 50 per cent, and would give half of the other 30 per cent, to the miner (that'3 mme than. the miner Is asking for) and tho other half to the consumer." The miners, he explained, would havo all they are striking for und "you could loud your wagon at the mouth of the mine for uIhiuI $6 CO a ton. "Hut that isn't "all. Then- - a charge ol $3 a ton tacked on by the railroad U'.tiO for rail trans IKirtation and -10 cents bargo charges) for getting that $7.60 ton of $3,92 coal to tidewater at New York and Philadelphia. "That is Bluer railroad rob beryand It hasn't got a thing to do with the miners' wages. It Is a clear $2 a ton too muoh. "Do you say it Id the railroads doing tho robbciy this time and not tho opouitoih? Court deci sions can divorce tho railroads from the opertit ng companies all theypoii-o: what Is tho diffei ence If both companies are owned bg "Bnclt up n imgon at tlio mouth ot the mine nnJ, they Ay Sand il Aittot ft? "On halt of this profit tho miners could luiTi! nil they ask." Chief, Lewis United Mine Workers the same stockholders, managid by men under tho same conttol? tral? "Now your coal Is here In New York marked $10.50 a ton when it ought, at the most, to be $7. GO. "But do you, the public, get it for $10.50 plus delivery charges and distributor's profit? You do not! And well you know It. Tho distributors are linked up to the operators and the railroads and they keep on rfddlng charges and passing them along. Tho final cost to tho consumer as between $14 and $1S a ton (as It Is In New England right now), de pends on how much the denier can get out of you, how close is the agreement between local re tall dealers." "But some dealers," It was suggested, "havo Jacked up tin) price from CO cents to $1 a ton be cuuso of the strike shortage." "Is that so!" boomed Mr. Lew Is scornfully. "They are selling coal from storage that was mined, transported and piled In their yards months ago at the old scale. They are robbing you, urcn't they? And when you catch thorn at It they say: 'It is the miners' fault.' Oh, say!" It was an unmistakable growl into which the big man's voice trailed off. "Get this," he went on, push ing himself out of his chair to go to the everlastingly tinkling tele phone. "This strike Is not for the pub lic. It is not against the public. The public must protect Itself from robbery. The public enn not ask the miner to submit to robbery Just because the same ' jobbers aro oppressing the public. "The bituminous miner Is now getting $1.08 a ton and paying for his own explosives nt 15 to 20 cents a ton und furnishing his own tofils. Last ear he had 127 days of work; he averaged $S00 for the year. "That Isn't enough to keep a family going less than $75 a month! Hut lie is striking against a reduction. If there must be a cut in the cost of coal for manu facturers, rallioads and other pub lic utilities, the cut must come somewhere else than In tho wages of tho miner. We know where the cut CAN be made. When the whole public knows and Is ready to make Its own light we'll all be better off. "The unthracito miner Is strik ing for a 20 pei cent. Incieuse; he got no increase when the cost of living went up. Ifo Is Just that much woise off thnn the vsoikers whose wage lates kept pace, after a fashion, with rising costs of shoes and stockings and eggs and href. 'Tho anthracite mtneis. 66 per cent, of them, make from ii.20 to $3.60 a day wot king fiom 260 to 270 days u eai. It Is not enough for men of that typo or lalor to keep then families on. Your building tiadesmen, your skilled nieihuniis. your rallioad man, can't live on it. And 20 per cent, more can be taken out of the robber ptortt without affecting the fulr juice of coal In thv least. "How much muio can and will be Jaken out or the robber-profit for the lienefit of the public Is for the public Itself to say. This strike Is iur tho workeis to re cover their shine, so that they and their families can live like decent Americans.'' Kmti:il IMIis llltl'MI I--MII Tartly overcome t smoke while fighting i Liuh firn on his farm near liacKensaeK .n. j . jonn van iiouien. fr.ll .....I .. .. u M...... c. kn'..u it-fcutiJ, dying or burns early yesterday, Thc $3or hrjnglnK It to yovr York Ig sheer railroad rob; bery." POLICEMAN IN BOWERY HOTEL I Night Clerk, Arrested for As sault, Held in $1,500 Bail for Examination. A charge of disorderly conduct against Policeman Joseph M. Dillon of tho Flushing precinct was enter tained In Centre Street Police Court, by Magistrate Harris to-day, after the case of Tallow Jackson, night clerk ot the Occidental Motel, Broome Street and the Hovverv, accused by the policeman ot felonious assault had been temporarily disposed of. The complaint against tho policeman states that "while In an intoxicated condition" ho entered the hotel at 3 o'clock this morning and demanded whiskey and refused to leave- Ball was fixed at $300, which plllon fur nished. Jackson Is fllty-four .jcars old and i lawyer, but for reasons vvluch he will not discuss ho has been for sev eral years night clerk In tho Bowery Hotel. On the witness stand he told thla story. He was at the desk at 3 o'clock this morning when two men, very drunk, entered, staggered up to him and de manded whiskey, One of the men, ho said, was Dillon who was In his citizen's clothes and did not proclaim himself a policeman. Juckson said thn demeanor of the two strangers was so threatening that ho blew a police whistle. They left and he went to his room on the sec ond floor and obtained a nightstick. which he carried down and concealed behind the desk. In a few minutes, he declared. Dillon nnd the other man icturncd, made threats and advanced towuid him. Dillon, he said, swung at him and he swung the nightstick, landing on the side of tho policeman's head Dillon and the other man went out and returned presently accompanied by two policemen In unifoim, who placed Juckson under arrest. Dillon said ho entered the hotel with n friend und asked for a room and that Jackson assaulted him with out piovocution. The policeman's head was covered with bandages and his clothing was bloodstained. .Magis trate Harris commented on the luct that Juckson was unmarked. "I got to him first, Mr," explained Jackson. Jackson's bail wuh fixed at $l.,ru0 Dillon went olf jluly at t P. M. es terday und was duo to report back for duty at S A. M. to-day, lie had him self lepurted sick. He refused to s.iv where he hud lieen after leaving Ins station yestetday. JEWISH RELIEF WORK EXPANSION PLANNED Nrvvr York Men WIM Sprat, nt on ferrncr In Iletrnlt. DHTP.OIT. Mich, April S Tli.- .!- ibh Itelief t'onfereiiee lo In- held h n April 9 will be addressed by a iiiiml" ' of prominent Jewish liaders, and hear messagi-s from President Hard ns and Secretary Hoover, ari-ording to '! American Jewish Keller ioinniiti- David A. Hiowii. national (.h.iirmaii m the campaign for $14,u0(l.uoi) for J,.-l war sulfeiers. will tell how the mini w.i xceoUed ty $3,000,000. Felix M Warburg and lb rte ! Lehman ot New York will piee i programme for reionblruction find r work of the Joint Distribution forum lee in Central and l-Jastern Kurupi- i Ukraine and Palestine and pljim loi v punslon will be diicussed. SCHOONER BOUND HERE AGROUND OFF JERSEY l'"w of Orlando II, Wnnlrn 'I at. Off by Cont Guard. FORKED HIVEK, N. J.. April The four matted schooner Oilando Wooten, from Jacksonville, pia , New York, laden with pine lun.l lost her course eaily to-duy h Kiounded about one-fiuaiter of a " oft this town. Coast guards took off the cie elKht. The schooii. r'- nklppi-r - thought In, cr..ft : it, ,. dungir. IS HELD BY COUR "Conl marked $iqj;0 a ton ut tliti wholesale docks ought at must to he $7.r0V "Tint do you yet It for $1(U0 pins reason nble profits! You do not!" BEATEN HARDING CONVINCED ONE 6-YEAR TERM IS BEST FOR NAT ON Friends Say Year in Office Has Revealed Benefits of Change to President. By David Lawrence. (Special correspondent of the 'Eve ning World.) WASHINGTON, April 8 (Copy right). President Harding has bo como convinced that a single term of six years for American Presidents with no re-election thereafter would better herve.the Interests of tho peo ple than the present method. Close friends say one year In olllce has revealed to him so many phases of the Presidency which would bo benefited by a single term that from nn impersonal basis ho Is of tho opinion now thnt a constitutional amendment providing for the change would be a good thing. How would it ever get started? Would President Hnrding agree not to becomo a candidate for re-election for a four-year term, or could the amendment bo made, to cover the present turm of Mr. Harding? These (UCHtlons havo been illscussut by members of the Cabinet anil con stitutional lawyers In Inner circles of the Government, and many think the amendment could automatically pro long by two years Mr. Harding's term and make him Ineligible for re-elec tion to tho Hlx-year term. 'Theru are too many ill effects from Presidential elections," said one memiier or mo i.aninei. io-u.iy. Vhoie's ulwuys a let -down In busi ness in a I'resiuentiai year. nmr years is too fruquunt an Interval. Six yeais wouul give a i-resuieni me op portunity to put thiotlgli a complete piogramme. I believe also that membeis of Congtess should lie ilected for four years and Senators for six years. 'As for eight .years for an Ameil- ean President it is too mucn. iiu health of tho aveiage man elected to high ofrico will not stand it. We havo alieady seen one President break lown under the strain of eight years. "Hut what check could lie exercised against a President who was in orrice tor six years If public opinion changed?" lie wn.H nski-d. "If one-third of the Senate and one- half of the House inembetshlp were up for re-election every two years," In- snld, "we would be able to elect the nominees of the party opposite to the President und this with the exist ing snength of t lie party in question would be sufficient to make a major- iiv ugalnst lite President. This would be all the rentrnlnt necessary." KILLED IN AUTO BY SKIDDING TAXI Man Is Mortally Hurt When Thrown Out of Car by Collision. I.nuli C. Colloinb, thlity-one y'ars i,l-l, un advertising agent whoae hotiif at No. 18 Kast 108th Sti t. whs ullled early to-day In nn automobile , uillsloii at Central Park West und 1'iiith Street. Un was going home In the ear of hi? f, It-nil, Thomas Longseope of the HuPI I oiilcharlraln In West 08th riti-c t. when i lux I crib driven by Pnitik O-lleiel, No, : i ; Wwt 49th Street, came out of th fug, swerved on th-i stlppery asphalt tinl hit the- automobile, linlloml, was thrown nut on Ids head. II- waa taken to Ki-ron-dne lion ibis ,n,l at IDOlh Street and O mini 1'alk t-si, hut was dead IZZY EINSTEIN'S SON ASLEEP FOR A WEEK I .dibit I.mtteln. eight - yesi - old on Izzy Kinsteln, Fedt-rul prohibition V tut, is 111 from what ii believed 10 be sleeping sk-kness ut Ins home, No 117 lodge Street. The boy baa been alnepina ront.im. iu-.. except when uroo.41 j lor light .jiirlBhmetit, since Inst Saturday, tiuv .m1 phynltliins aro In utteiidaixe. and (.-trday it ftpeelallit wan enll. d It u , - wild to-day the dl.iea h.td not If-en pronounced glwpiug sit kueits, h i'isi iht -'uh -mi-, t, ,i-,n, itiai p. 1 iy. Tho public cannot ask the inliHT to sub mlt to robberj." IF YOU SEE HER STOCKING YOU'LL KNOW HER NAME Hose With Wearers' Identity Lmbroidered on (Them Is Fashion's Latest. ' ATLANTIC Q1TY, April 8. , Names arc to rcplaco tbo clocks and other adornments on wom en's stockings, according to the models exhibited at tho "first annual Fashion Show here. Tho show was given In tho open air and those attend the exhibit were surprised to seo tho names of tho wearers of silk hosiery spelled out in full, not, merely Initialled. In somo Instances In cases whero the nnmos aro long they start near tho kneo and end Just abovo tho shoe-top. The letters aro emhroldored or beaded and aro In harmony with the color of the stockings. Red heading Is used on black ones nnd white on brown. In Paris the latest popular fancy In hosiery Is tlio "dark flesh," n color that In electric light looks llko tho hare leg. HE ASKED FOR "FLOP;" HAD $15,000 IN BONDS Allmii)- Poller, in Whom He Ai-plli-it,' .NiiNprcl Theft. ALHA.N'Y, April 8. A shabbily dressed man, considerably under the Influence of liquor, entered a police idatlon hero eaily to-duy and risked for o "flop,'' vagrunt tetni for 11 bed. When the officers searched his clothing they found Liberty und Industrial bond" nnd War Savings certificates amount lug to S IE, 000. Tho man said nt fliht thnt he vwii James Tolson of WIILes-Ilarte, Pa., but later claimed lo bo Josh .Jones of the samo place. Ho said ho hud bought the bonds fiom IJ. II. Itollins Co. In New Vork. The envelope contnlnlng the securities had been deal to .Ionium C. Jones, No. 203 South Main Strut-!. Wilkes-Itarre. Although the 1111111 iimlutiiliieil he owned tin. securities local police ofll clals communicated vv lilt the uilthoil- tles at Wllkes-fluire to leain If tbev hud been stolen SCHOOL HEAD SAYS BOYS TRIED TO STEAL AUTO Voutlm ertiNi-d uf TrlnK to (.rl Snpt. 0llrleiiN ('nr. Albert Levy, nlot !i- 11 m-ihw old. uf No. l'Jir, Itott.'iH t nut- Jronx, nnd Prank Willis, sixt-t ri, of No. 1S5.1 L'nlouport Itorid. Hronv. iv-re Hi-rc-di-d early this morning, ihurgid with Irv ing to steal the uutomohilt- nf Hern. ml O'lltlen or No. 21 13 Firth Avemn, SuptVlntendent of Public Srliool Nn 61. I'rotqna Parkway nnd 'inrlotte Streii. Bronx. The car was Handing 111 front of thn school tmildlnK Mr O'ltrlen said lhal as hn eiinif! out the bovs Jumped oii of I i.- -.ir nnd ran. Patrolman Kilpttrk-lc of tliu Simpson Street Hint ion rap'ored them after u chase of half a h'.ork They denied intending lo d lw olf in the cu-. PULLS HIS TOOTH SO HEVCAN LEARN TO BLOW A FLUTE Philadelphia Hoy I lappv W In n He Hnds He ..m Really Pla. PHILADELPHIA. M"H A leal martyr to music h.is Ix i n biought to light by Miss Winetta I.. Stacks, Superintendent or the Methodist Kplscnpal Ix-ncnnrsses-Home heio Miss Slacks told oi ono small boy whose life's ambi tion was to play the lliltf Thn teacher stiuggled In vain to teach him hut his Hps would not pucki-i tight. Finally the teacher said' "Joe. I guess you will never leurn to blow n flute betntIHe of th uji that front tooth has giowu. It is III the way." A few days later the lad's mother returned home to Und liei son's face bloody but shining wuh ttiiimph. Ho had borrowed plltis and had pulled the tooth. "And at tho llrst recital of th students nf tho class.'' Miss Stacks condudtd, "In- bb : ti"tt s ou the HuU." ilHke U for Hie worker, to recover I heir hnre, vrli lcli I he robbers Iuito taken." POLICEMAN AT FIRE SAVES MAN OF 80. Rescues Him After Aiding Six Families Fireman is Overcome. Policeman lUniy c. Lelbriled of tin It.ilph Avenuo Station led the six fami lies to safety after discovering flro on tho top rioor of tho four-tory build I on No. ills Hi-Id Avenuo, lliooklyn, ut 3 A. M. to-day, and then learned that John Van Dyke, eighty yoars old, was missing. He lived on the top floor. Hurrying buck, Llebfrled found tho aged limn stumbling a-bout tho apart ment In the Miioko und assisted him lo the idled. Plreiuuu John Walsh uf Ilnglne No, 222, who was .it Ihe head of a lino that went io tho top floor, was overcomo by smoke nnd gin nnd was carried to the street by I'lreman Ixiuls Dlllman of the s.-uno eonipnnV After he had been allcndtd by a doctor lie went back lo quartet a. Tim fire was confined to ihe top floor. SCHOOLGIRLS' DEFAMERS WILL BE PROSECUTED lAnl Oriinue Ilnaril Acta tn MIellee ScmiuIii liimiiicrra. Owing to n widespread criticism of tin- morals of the girl students of the Last Orange High School the local Hoard of IMueutlon hist night decided to prosecute any person spreading mall- cIoum ' in riiim- or scanunious reports concerning any ftudent, The tearhei'S have been Instructed to take the nnine nnd nildress of any euch person. Supt. Clifford D. Scott und School Coinmlsslnner Henry I). Silver man conducted tho meeting. John Maynard Keynes Foremost economist and finan cial writer of Europe, author of "Economic Consequences of the Peace," the book that stirred two continents, will "cover" the Genoa Economic Conference in a series of bril liant articles especially written for (MORNING EDITION) So much depends on this Genoa Conference, affecting the whole world, that an accurate inter pretation of its deliberations is of first importance to every thinking American. It is prac tically certain that America must participate in future con ferences of similar nature. Study this one so as to be in formed as this phase of world readjustment progresses. The Keynes articles will begin April 10. Order The World (Morning Edition) from your newsdealer now. .mw Pullman Passenirt-rs Sec Dun kirk Police ( iliief Ignore Ha beas Corpus tor Captives. - - - - Chlef of Police John .1. Warren of Dunkirk, t'halaiuiua f'ounty had two prisoners, big, tall men. In the train for Dunkirk due to pull out o( thn, C.nmd Centra' Station at 12.15 o'clock yesterday afternoon (leorge Post, soventy-two years old and K. A. Stnrkloff. sixty-live, both credited, with being old offenders, were ar rested here by D"tectlve Joseph A; Daly early this week and held for the' police of Dunkirk, whero they are ac cused of tricking natives out of. money. Chief Wancii had them handcuffed together In a Pullman car In which he had taken a drawing room for their sequestered accommodation and his own. Theiu was a rush along the platform and two panting men climbed on the train. "Hot It's gunmen tryln" to rescue them crooks" a red cap suggested. Kverybody agreed with him at once. Warning wus passed Into the cars, so Warren put his prisoners In the drawing room und locked himself In with thorn. Tho Invaders bore down or) him. Detective Daly and Samuel l-lretenberg, altornej, who had ob tained from J us tiro Delehanty a -writ of habeas corpus for production of the men lieforo him at 2 o'clock. Daly brandished tho writ. Warren likewise brandished his revolver on; tho other side of the drawing room, glass. li'urstrnbcrg shouted, "Hn-, boas corpus. Must be obeyed. Con tempt of court!" Warren waved hls( Pistol und shook his head. Daly and Furstenberg shouted and pushed the-' writ under the door. Warren put his,' foot down so the writ could not get. In. Passengers crowded about them . ull excitement. The trnln started on Us Journey1. Daly and Furstenbejg shouted again. Warren waved his pistol and shook his' head. They played this game through the length ot Ahe, tunnel and to 125th Street. Kurstenborg and the detective guvo It up thero. .lustlco Delehanty Is expected to take action to-day on tlitf alleged contempt of court of the Cha tauqua County Pollco Chief. .!Vf I r .-? -;rr;