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WEATHE?prtbb!y'Lloht Snow. TO'MORROW'9 WEATHER Probably Light Snow; li Final Emm EDITION iSi, EDITION Circulation Books Open to AIL\ I \Circulation Books Open to All.\ VOL. LX1I, NO. 21,945 HURT IN SINN FEINERSFREED Al BRITISH PKISUNd ALL El REJOICES Dublin Stages Demonstration as Released Prisoners Rejoin Friends. AMERICAN AID SOUGHT. Childerf Parry Said to Have Asked ?unds to Fight New Free, State. LONDON\. Jan. 13 (Assoclnted Press). The IrlBh political prisoners In London Jails Brixton, Pentonville ond Wormwood Serubbs were leased this mornlmr, under the Am- nesty Proclamation Issued by King George yesterday. Instructions ware pent to the provincial 'Jails for nlnil-li- tr releases. The Dally Mall's Dublin correspon- dent says Krsklno Chllder's party has front urgent cablegrams to the United in States, appealing for funds to enable Ihcm to begin the election cnmpalgn Jn opposition to the new Fre Stato Government. , BELFAST. Jan. 13. The Ulster Government, it Is understood, will take no responsibility for the release ed of Sinn Ke'ln prisoners. They will,, it Is stated, be transferred ht to southern Ireland, leaving It to the British Government to liberate them. The strictest .secrecy is being ob served with regard to tho prisoners for fear of rioting. DUBLIN. Jan. 13 (Associated Pross) Materialization of the earn- estly desired amnesty of political prisoner has elicited more outward enthusiasm hero than any other do velopment In the peace activities. IHiblin's Mtizcns indulged in lively demonstrations last night, a law crowd outsldo Mountjoy prison wel coming the successive batches of lib erated prisoners with loud cheers. Similar scenes were enacted in Cork and Limerick, where others were re leased. It Is understood men freed from pi- - sons In England will arrive to day, when further demonstrations are certain. Meanwhile, preparations for the transfer of administrative authority to the new Irish Government under Ar- thur Grlflitli continue. Sir Ernest Clark. I nder Secretary for Ireland In the British Government, lias arrived, It is believed in connection with the transfer. , It is understood Michael Collins will po to Kngland shortly to arrange do Uils and until ho returns tho work can continue' only partially. The, (new Government is reported to have protested against tho removal of the documents from Dublin Castle to l Kngland, with tho result that the ! . ...... i i.. .... muvenieiii nu? uuun iciijjuttuiiy sus pended. With regard to tho military with drawal, it is not anticipated that tho work will bo completed for some time, Shipment o the troops, variously es timated to number from 30,000 to 60.000. is tho least part of the under taking, aa after they have igone It will be necessary to disposo of quun'ltles of stores, military bul d ncs and lands. DUBLIN, Jan. 13. A general strike of railway men Is one of tho first nroblems to confront the temporary Covernmcnt of tho Irish Freo Rtftte. About 23,000 workers havo decided to go out a,t midnight owing to a refusal of railroad managers to meet a committee ana discuss the proposal to abolish the wago agree mcnt of 1920. ADVERTISEMENTS for the Sunday World Classified Section Should be in The World Office To-D- ay pr DAILY. Capjrrlcht (Ntw rubtlihlns; PENN, Switchman Found Helpless in Safety Niche After Long, Perilous Trip. ARM AND RIBS BROKEN Drops Unconscious Time After Time, Escaping Cars As by Miracle. A track walker on his tour of In spection through tho westbound tun nel of the Pennsylvania Railroad which runs below the Bast River, dis covered this morning by tho light of his swinging lantern, .a man crouched a niche in theyall .built there 6 protect workmen from pasriag train. The man was lying huddled nriO half t 'cn on the Hoot of the ulralloJv embrasure, four hundred feet wqst of First Avenue, to which he had crawl- - on his stomach, with a broken arm and ribs, for more than fifteen hours through the tunnel. He had fallen somewhere under Long Island City from a train which was bringing html to Manhattan and all through the night had fought his way along, -- yard ii,. ,.nr,i ,,i,tjintlv menaced bv Dass-- i ing trains and the deadly third rail until he discovered the workman's niche and sank Into 'it exhausted. With the greatest difficulty, owing to his injuries, tho man was got to his feet by the switchman, who flagged an oncoming train, put him aboard and sent him to the Pennsyl- vania Station. There It was found that he was Clifford A. Bliss, twenty-on- e, of No. 86 Georgia Avenue, Brooklyn. He was taken to tho New YolK Hospital, whore 11I3 right arm and tlireo ribs on tho left sldo wore found to bo fractured and that ho had se- vere Internal injuries. Ho has u fighting chance for his life. Bliss is employed aa an extra switchman in the Sunnysldc Yards of the Pennsylvania Railroad in I,ong Island City. His eight-hou- r tour ot duty ended at i o'clock yesterday afternoon, and at 6,35 o'clock he boarded the \dead-head- \ train bound for Manhattan. How ho chanced to fall through a 'door while the train wu thundering down into the, tunnel, Bliss has no' Idea. When ho regained conscious- ness ho was bitterly cold and could, scarcely move. A train camo thun- dering down on him and ho flattened himself against tho tunnel wall, then ho started crawling westward. Ho thinks that several times during tho ht journey he lost but managed to fall In such a way that he escaped the trains. When tho switchman found him, he said ho had reached tho niche only a little whfle before. WANTS TO MEET London Hears His Manager May Ask Another Fight Wrth the Champion. LONDON, Jan. 13 (Associated Press). Georges Carpentler, who de clslvely defeated George Cook of Aus tralia here last night, may aa'c an other fight with Jade Dempsey, world's champion heavyweight, after meeting Ted (\Kid\) Lewis, the Eve- ning Standard was Informed v by Francis Deecamps, Carpentler'B manager. CANADIAN STEAMER AGROUND. VICTORIA, B. C, Jan. It The steamer Canadian Observer of the Can edian Government Merchant Marine fleet was ashore at Deep Bay, Discovery Passage, about 150 miles north of Vic- toria on the Inside coast of Vancouver Island, early She was reported to be taking some' water, but In no serious danger. fork World I by Fret CotnyatiJi 11)22. TUBE, CRAWLS CRIPPLED IN PENN. TUNNEL CRAWLS ALL NiGHT DODGING DEATH AS TRAIMS RUSH PAST CARPENTIER DEMPSEY? BRIDE TOOK POISON POLICE SAY, IN PACT WITH HER HUSBAND Mrs. Ryan Said to Have Ad- mitted Agreement to Die After He Accused Her. PARIS, .Tan. 13. Mrs. Audrey Creigliton Ryan, a .young American woman, critically, ill of mercurial ...t. -- r v. r . i Uf..nuni m . p1S''\ c -- if nsejflana, Thomas stpwart Rj'ari,icorftepondent of the Chicago Tribune, has been arrested on her charge that; ho had compelled hor to take bichloride tablets Undor threat of murdering her, Is reported to-d- to hive confessed taking the poison In a suicide pact with her husband. Police Commissioner Frallcq, who visited Mrs. Ryan at tho hospital this afternoon, quoted statements he said she had made to him on what Is be lieved to be her death bed. Sho said, according to the Commissioner, that her husband told her he knew of an Intrigue of hers with a young man, and proposed to her that he. Ryan, and she die together. Thereupon, the Commissioner's re- port of the interview continues, Mrs. Ryan took three of the mercury tab- lets and her husband slashed his wrists and neck. But Mrs. Ryan then lost her courage, rushed from her room and demanded to be taken at onco to a hospital. In Ryan's possession after lie was arrested was found a letter irom his wife, received by him while ho was in India. In it, she said sho had determined to break with him en- tirely. In the liotfi room occupied by Mrs, Ryan were found two letters written In pencil during her interview with her husband. One was addrcssod to her mother and the other to the young man referred to by Ryan. An empty wine bottle, two glasses and numerous cigarette ends were found in the room. Mrs. Ryan, a native ot Sau Fran- cisco, Is twenty-tw- o years old, a Cali- fornia scholarship student of music and a prize winner In the American Conservatory at Fountalnebleau. At the hospital this afternoon It was re- ported that she was \resting easier, wlt.h one chance In a million for her life.\ According to the girl's mother, Au droy was only eighteen when Ryan met her In Los Angeles, fell desperately In love with her and threatened to kill her and himself If she did not marry him. One day the couple on an auto mobile ride Into the country went through a marriage ceremony with tho chauffeur for a witness. The couple never lived togethor, Mrs. Ryan said. Two years ago an attempt was made to get an annulment, but the court refused because the girl was of legal age. Repeated efforts were made to Induce Ryan to give her her freedom, but he refused. \When he returned from India on nr.HtuM.ftav.\ said Mrs. Crelghton, \he came Immediately to us and said he had decided to acceae 10 Auuroy wishes. He begged as a final favor .k. Hin with him. It wai after dinner at his hotel, while discussing the prospective divorce, that the trag- edy developed, which the doctors say can 0B1V ena in- - mo daughter, while she vas on the threihbld of a brilliant musical career.\ TWT WORLD THAVEL MTREAU, Aral. ' rdlltw (World) nuuami. nn arcs nwm fr biifiit snd n u4 !W t,trr trim ni imiU' rtkt Im NEW YORK, if BIBAY, BUSES TO REPLACE MANHATTAN SLAND STREET RAILWAYS Hylan Plans to Do Away With Tracks on Streeft; of Borough, TO COST $25,600,000, 200 Routes to Be Mapped Out, Some to Augment Trolleys in Other Boroughs. The Hylan Administration' has de cided to attempt tho elimination of all trolley lines from the Borough of Manhattan and the substitution of a bus rystcm. In tho Ijprpughtt of Brooklyn, Bronx and Queensi a. bus system also has been worked out to augment tho trolley systems. Track- less trolleys will remain In Richmond. A public bearing to draft legislation necessary to legalize tho Administra tion's plan will be held tw 'weeks from y. An outlay of !5,000,00O Is Involved In the \bus plan. This money' frill be spent as follows: \For the construction of 3,500 mod ern, well built, sanitary, stable, safe ana properly equippea motor quaes, J19.250.000. \ \For the purchase of spare' 'parts and garage equipment, $700,000. For the construction and equipment of a central motor bus repair sliop, $1,- - 000,000. . \For the construction and equip- ment of garages, $3,800,000. \For contingencies, $250,000.\ Tho bus lines would carry about L',;40,000 passengers a day, it was es- timated by Grovcr A. Wlialen, Com- missioner of Plant and Structures. These passengers, at 6 cents each, would pay $112,000 a day. It Is fur- ther figured, or $40,880,000 a year. Fixed charges, Including lntcrrs, depreciation and liability Insuranco, would amount to $9089,000. The ad- ministration and maintenance cos; would be $4,400,000, making the total fixed charges $13,489,000. Tho opera- ting cost for an uverage of 3,500 buses 1n service would be $23,360,000, mak- ing the total cost, fixed charges plus operation $36,819,000, leaving n not revenuo to the city amounting to $4,031,000. Mr. Whalen still has hopes of over coming legal barriers which have been placed In the way of the city's bus programme of the past, for he says ; \Although the initial appropriation made for this purpose by your lion orable board on March 12, 1920, is not available for the service of the people, owing to tho Injunction ob talned by a traction bond holder, it Is not to be seriously believed that (Continued on Second Page.) KNIFE TO SEPARATE TWINS; BOTH FEAR DEATH IF ONE DIES One Is Mother of Eleven-Year-O- ld Boy and Other Is Unmarried-Lin- ked Thirty-Fou- r Years. CHICAGO, Jan. 13. Advisability of surgically sep- arating Josefla and Rosa Blazek, \Siamese twins'' from Czecho- slovakia, will be determined to- day by Chicago surgeons, Dr. Max Thorek, who will be la charge of the examination, ex- plained that the sisters fear the death of one would bring- the Immediate death of the other. The examination will be by the y. The women are thirty-fou- r years old. They recently eame to Chicago to Hva In the foreign colony after tiring of exhibition work, Rosa is the mother of an eleven-year-ol- d boy. Josefla Is ninri!e(). JANUARY 13, 1922. ALL NIGHT DODGING MRS. LOUISE BROOKS REPORTED ENGAGED TO GEN. M'ARTHUR He .Gets Two 1!niSsf- - Leav of' ' ': Abbresurhabty.fbr '.oney'rt.' ' 1 , WASHlfN.fPia, Wasnjiw tn soclet'y\)ft' dlsqussinjs wftfi na!wtttlon-t- ha report idrcufated ,thls morning that. Mm, 'Louise drpmwell Brooks and Brig. Geh. Douglas. \Mac. Ai'Uiur are soon.to announce thclr'on-gaticme- nt to wed. The rumor, first started with tlieap-peaian- of a laconic War Department order granting Brig. den. Mac Arthur permission to. go abroad for two months presumably for a honeymoon. The romance dates back sev-sra- l months. Brig. Gen. MacArthur is, now superintendent of, tho United, States Military Academy at West Point. Mrs. Brooks Up the only daughter of Mrs. 13. T. Stotesbury of Philadelphia by Mrs. Stotesbury s first husband, the late Oliver Cromwell of New fork and Washington, Mrs. Brooks was married to Walter D. Brooks Jr. of Baltimore, whom she divorced In 1919 in France. , FRIDAY, THli 13TH, BAD DAY FOR CUPID Marriage Bureau Does Poor Busi- ness in tlie-Lin- of ' Licenses. Friday the 13th Is a bad combina- tion for the business of Issuing raai - rlago licenses. Up to 1 o'clock this afternoon only 28 such documents lia4 lxcn Issued, by tho Manhattan office in tho Municipal Building; and at that hour there was not a single couple In the ofltco. The average' dally Issuance up to that hour Is about eighty licenses; nnd thero are usually forty or fifty couples waiting to bo served PUSHING A POLICEMAN COSTS PUSHER $50,000 iPatrolmsm Well, Iaartnij Aplae Wins Damstare Verdict. Daniel K. Roche, a former polio-ma- n, living at No. 362 Rant 163d Street, Bronx, was y award a veroiot of $50,000 against Herbert Oliver of No. 409 East l2d Street by a Sheriff's Jury, Impanelled by Sheriff Edward Flynn. Roche began his action on Aug. 7, last year, before Supreme Court Jus- tice Martin. The defendant defaulted by and the Juittc appointed Sheriff Flynn to eeieol & Jury to Investigate, According to affidavits, Roehe to arrest Oliver tn front of the Hotel Commodore to Aujrut, HI 9 Ollvor, according to l0Ote, pushed him, aauslng him to strike his hai on the sidewalk, fraotaring several vertebrae, with sruWejveot partial parly' of hi\ body, Roche we fd nn half pny .Inn 1 ef lul eur l,t i. i i. r.....v.Mnti I5n..'glit Entrrrd a Srronil-ClM- n Mattrr rtxit Office, New York. N, Y. HAND'S ACTION FRENCH FORCES SHOWDOWN dditiqu ALL OVER EUROPE Washington Believes 'Itjs the Most BeneficialrEvenyii;. \ Three Years.. HASTENS REBUILDING. U. S. Will Not SuppbrT Genoa Farley if Poincare Attempts to Force Germany. Dy David Ldtcreitce. (Special Correspondent of \fhe Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 18 (Copy-brigh- t' 1922). For the first tlmo since the European war a French Cabinet crisis 'has a direct bearing on tho V policies of the United States Govern ment. And while It may seem para, 'domical ti. ejiy It the truth Is sym-fyh- y with the outgoing Premier Briand la coupled with an optlmlstlo expectation that- - hie rsslsifitlon wilt prove the most beneffolsl \th'Ipo thatJ has-- ' hsDoened In the Suroesan sltua- - Tho UnlteoT States 'Government has ;refnlned' from expressing itself on :!the subject of European reparations. Vet It was watchine1 with anxious yes' the continuous sniping behind the back of Premier Briand and It knew that no progress could bo mado In Europe until there was u show- down between the extremists, repre- sented by .Poincare, Foch and tho mil- itary crowd w\ho want to force Ger- many to pay the exaggerated figures called for by the reparations agree- ments thus '$r, and the moderates, who, believe world reconstruction binges upon a. conciliatory policy and a shaving down of the reparation obligations. The showdown has come at last. 1'ew officiate here blleve Premlor Briand wailn the wrong when lie re- signed mid., laid tho case before tho whole world. M 'To have kept up nego- tiations whlloero always loomixl up behind him,, the political backfuo of his opponents was simply to Europe In an unsettled stato rnd wako the forthcoming Genoa confeprnc - on economic affairs of doubtful value. The, general, opinion In official circles here Is that eventually Briand will ba vindicated, but that It may take time for the ntw party in power in Franca to come around to h!a view- point. The prediction is that the Tolncare party will eltHor fall at Its task and compel\ Briand to be called to power again or that' the facts of the Euro- pean situation will gradually force Poincare to adopt a policy viittially tho same as that proposed by Briand. (Continued m Flecond Page.) GIRL TRIPLETS ARE-BRIDE- S AT ONE CEREMONY Sisters Alike Even to Dress ' Since Birth Go to Altar Together. OLTDDBN, la., Jan. 18. Toe Jacobs 'triplets ran true to form ever sine childhood. Each trip- let baa done Just what her sisters have done. If Henrietta got a new hat, MathUda and Minnie would have to have headgear ot exactly the Mm style and color, and If Miosis bobbed her hair the other two followed salt 8o Just to be oonalttent the three iisUrs got married at the same tlmo and with ilnglo cersmonr. Henrietta, now Is Mrs. Beanie Holstatn, Bath da's U Albert strath, and Minnie uumsrs to the name of Mrs, John \yi! fhe esramonr was ei y the Rev, II. P. sjohmldt Kaon roup's acted a witnesses fo, 'if tlj.n. two, umisuii TRAINS CRISIS MAI UPSET ILAJIONS AND PUT U. S. INTEERS1 IN PE1 rr-- at NewPremierFormingCabinet,Which Is Expected .to Be Announced To- - Day Lloyd George to Go to Paris to Try and Save French Alliance. PARIS. Jn.,.13. Raymond Poincare, former President of France, to-da- y formally \accepted President Millerand's invitation to form a ;,rievV- Cabinet to suekeed that of Aristide Tho is takenas an indication that he has ben success- ful in his efforts to completa Announcement of the as taken in political circles q mean he wouldr undpub.fedly Head th& next French Government. It took' the former PreiWent-les- s than ty'enfyifottr hours ol' private in quiry among potential Ministers; to Cabine which he will head 'Jtycter: eignAffairsJ The political correspondent of necessary aifd- - rjrbiaMfhaier ifor the Agen'ce RaoTp predictecl'W-Ja- y that the Ministers of the Briand would retain their Sarraut, Colonies ouc'heur, Devastated Regions; Detroc-que- r, Public Works, and Daniel Vincent. Labor. , FREE TEXT BOOKS BILL SUBMITTED Cuvillier's Measure Asks for $5,000,000 and Provides for 5 Commissioners AJDANY, Jan. IS. A free text bouk measure Introduced In the Legislate o lo-d- ay Iby Assemblyman 1mls A. cr of New Yo-.-- would creatp n commission of five members, not motu th'xn three of whom could lb of one political party, nnd one of whom mur.t bo a woman, nnd ob would carry an appropriation of j.VdOO.OOO. Fieo text books would bo furnished to nil public pupils, and after Sept. 1, 1922. no city, town, village or ecliool dlwtrlct would ho authorized to spend any money for text books .uwl nnn nwould ho furnished until they hud been approved by tho nmv com-- j ml.Hon. \TREASON\ CHARGE AGAINST MINE MEN Union Leaders in Logaan County, W. Va., Indicted By Grand Jury. UOGAffs, W. Va.. Jan. 13. Indict- ments charging treason were returned here to-d- against C. Frank Keeney, Presidont of District 17, United -- Mine Workers; Fred Moonoy, Sec rotary -- Troasurer; William Blizzard, Presi- dent of Sub-Distri- ct No. 4,\ and A. C. Porter, Secretary of Sub -- District No. 2. The indictments based on allogcd actrvltlcfl of tho union officials in the disorders last nummer, referred to by the Logan authorities as \tho up- rising,\ were among about 300 re- turned by tho Grand Jury In the Cir- cuit Court. The Indictment allege that the undertook to overthrow Gov. Morgan's proclamation of mar- tial law, raised an army to wage war against west Virginia ana committed acts which, It - alleged, constituted treason. Under the Law treason is punishable toy d itti or by imprison- ment lawyers r d. FRANCE ASK13 FORD IF HE'D BUY WARSHIPS WAfiHI.S'CrrON. Jan. 13 (The Asso-eilat- Priss), The French (Jovern-mon- t hn approached Jlsnry Ford by cabin, uaklntr If ha would ronalder tho puralissn of battleships, In unnounln ran re'iuenl Ihto to. tiny, Mr. Ford nslrt li linrt r'pllH,1 thrtt linl.K I' \lid liny llm nillr. I'lf.M ' - W J 111 ' . S ' A. PRICE THREE CENTS S Briand. secure vttye members of in, acceptance Ministry. acceptance following Cabinet portfolios; Andre Maginot, previously Minister o; Pensions, will take tho war post, he said, and the newcomers are likely to lie Doumcrgue, Justice: Senator Francois Albert, Public In- struction; I.oygucs, whoso. Ministry preceded that of Hi land Navy; Do la Steyrle, Kinunco; Jean. Durund, Agriculture; Mnnoury, In;' terlor, und possibly Herrlot, Minister of Pensions. The statomrnt Is uiiide that th! Interview which took place between\. Premier Briand nnd President Mlltt lerand, following tho return of tli-j- ; Premier from Cannes, was of thj stormiest nature, liriand accused the; President of lmving undermined hlii position both In Paris and Cannes. itl tho latter case by the despatch telegrams. 1; To this the President retorted bj rending tho article of the Constl' ttition which provides that treaty making Is the province of tln Presl?; dent lie maintained, therefore, that,' M. Hriand was acting only as ltlif mandatory In the negotiations am; should have heeded his Instructions!; Tho quarrel was continued before th Cabinet Council, which lasted tw$\ hours, but finally peace was patched up and a pretense of agiecmcnt waf! made. This arrAngement was upsdjj by tho speech of President Boual' Perct In opening tho Chamber ol' Deputies, in whicli ho said: ' \The country will not allow crn tracts to bo undertaken in dlsregaid' and violation of tho rights which we; hold to bo inalienable.\ Lobby gossip for a tlmo suggested that At. Briand would be rocalled by. President Mlllcmti'l and asked to rr-,- , cciiKtlluto ttiu Ministry. This, how- ever, was largely due to a reaction j hij favor caused by the act of rev.;' nation, which Is regarded by many hit supporters as tho finest thing has done for yeflp. PARIS. Jan. 13 (Associated Press)!. Raymond Pilncaro was this morn- ing trying to form a Cabinet 'n succeed that under Aristide Briand,, which resigned yesterday, but it wal recognized that he would find many difficulties In his path and that thes might prove formidable enough t force him to relinquish the task. The manner of M. Brland's dra-mat- lo exit, while on the apparent verge of an overwhelming vote e'f confidence In the Chamber of Depu- ties, has caused a revulsion of feel- ing In his favor, and besides, IX,. Poincare has a string opposition 'n Parliament. Neither Is the former President popular with a largo aeci 'Inn of thu general public. l Painc.e y oonsulteil . .,.!!' AUK irik' Oi ''ie N'fl'lonsl . r '.:.oi, .I'aaer I \ \i