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Lake RECOUNT Now Waits on Official Tally) and Is Likely Dropped. question of a re-inspection of No court order has been usked looking toward a@ re-in- gpection and it is not beliewed the of- ficial canvass beginning Tuesday will chances of an upset of the un- official result. It 1s believed Robert L. Moran, de- feuted for President of the Board of Aldermen, will be appointed County erk of the Bronx by Gov. Smith to Callahan, elected to the City Court. ‘The County Clerighip pays $10,000 a year. Edward P, Boyle, defeated for Bor- ough President of Manhattan, may be made a City Magistrate or get his old place back as Justice of the Munici- pal Court, it is understood. If he pre- fers being a Magistrate he may be to succeed Mr. whose term does not expire untt) 1927 TIGER STANDS TO LOSE MANY GOOD JOBS. A score of Tammany officeholders succeed Joseph through the election of Henry H. Curran, Republican, as Borough Pres- ident of Manhattan. lst of the more important exempt places that Curran will fill: Secretary of the Borough. cretary to the Presiden’ nographer to the Preside ‘onfidential Inspector Superintendent of Build Secretary to Supt Stenographer to Su; Chief Inspector Commissioner o! Following is a to Com. of Public Work: Steno. to Com. of Public W Supt. Pub. Butidings and Offices Engineer... ... gineer of Sewe Chief Engineer of Highways. Chief Engineer of Sewers. From this {t will be seen that Tam- many has reason to mourn, dition to the positions in this list are scores of minor places, and examinerships, practically all of which are held by Tammany men of the rank and file of the organization. | James J. Hagan, a Tammany leader, ant Commissioner | inspectorships bs at present ef Public Works. La Guardia, elected President of the Board of Aldermen, has only four direct appointments. They are: Assis-| tant to the President, held by Matthew Horgat the President, $2,400, and two examt- ners, one at $4,000 a year and one at attaches of the ‘board itself are all under the control of the City Clerk, who is also clerk of 500, a job now secretury to It appears from the final returns that in the next Board of Aldermen the Democrats have a better working majority than was at first believed, but it requires fifty-five votes to put through financial resolutions, and the Democrats, being fourteen votes short of this number, may have some serl~ In the present board ous difficulti e are fifty-one Dem: Republicans and seven Socialists. In the new board the Republicans will hive twenty-eight votes, and there will be four Socialists. ‘TWO NEGROES ELECTED ALDER- MEN, ONE TO ASSEMBLY. from the returns es were elected to of- George Harris, publisher of a nevspaper, was elected Alderman from | board from nected to the pire In addition the Aldermanic district. negro yoters elected John C, Hawkins Assergbly from the 21st district, Three special elections will be neces- be held in Buf- | »ssor will have to be nator Ross Grave: who was elected City Commission: probably in| ly spring, two special Congre: chosen to 8! which is in Brooklyn, Haskell, elected ents, and one in » 10th district and whieh Reu Judge, repre 14th, which is in Manh: rdia, elected President of the Board of Aldermen. iu both the Congressional districts taken into considera ected in 1918 dclalist, by ap- which must La Guardia was proximately cause the Democrats and Republic The Haskell dis is not so strongly Socialistic, ion of fusion the AN “Tost and Found” articted “gdvertised in The World or reported to “Lost and F 108, World Butid! for thirty days ‘any of The World and Found” advertisements ft at any of The Werle ‘Agencies, or can directly to The Worlds Beckman, New York, ‘Office, 4100 Main, —— | will be listed GUOD JOBS LEFT OPEN ELECTION, WHICH THEY LOST nie Former May Be Named Bronx; County Clerk, Latter to Succeed Curran, PALMER BRANDS. ~ LABOR HEADS AS. PUBLIC ENEMIES Attorney General Says, Too,| | That Profiteers Should All Be in Prison. HARRISBURG, Nov. 7.—Speaking at the meeting of the District Attorneys, Mayors and Burgesses here Attorney General Palmer de nounced the course pursued by James |M. Maurer, President of the Penn- sylvania State Federation of Labor, and William Z. Foster, who has been leading the steel strike. He declared these were critical times, in which the people faced the Issue of whether, there was to be government under law or government by a self-consti- tuted “supreme authority” of leaders! of various sorts who operated out) side of and against the law. | ‘The Attorney General was address- Ing the municipal executives on the! means of combating the high cost of | living, but during his #et address he} took up the subject of the unrest caused in the State by the steel strike | and the declaration in favor of a State-wide strike made by Maurer at of Labor in Pittsburgh. “It our Government should fall to| emergency it would be unworthy ot | protect itself and its people in this the noble sacrifices that have been made by its sons upon every field of bate in its glorious history and un- faithful to the fundamental principles | upon which the fathers constructed | this Government of all the people,” | Mr, Palmer said. “In a statement recently issued by | officers of the miners’ union, reference | lig made to the ‘supreme authority’ of the miners’ organization. The ques- tion which we must now try out is | whether the by-laws of the miners’ | union shall prevail against the great |needs of the people and whether the ‘supreme authority’ of any non-gov- jernmental body can be substituted for the authority of the Government | under the low.” Tho Atiorney General outlined the| efforta of the Government to try to prevent the strike and aid in view | at the time and the circumstances | under which it was called it involves more than a dispute over wages, | hours and conditions of labor. He added that nothing has been done to |Undermine the recognized right of |labor to organize and bargain col- lectively or to walk out by concerted | action under ordinary industrial con- ditions, Mr, Palmer then told how the rail- | Toads of the country under Govern- | the recent meeting of the aaa aaee | ment control made contracts for the delivery of nearly 400,000 tons of coal | a day and declared the stoppage of | railroad transportation, which would | be a necessity through lack of coal, | would be a national calamity that would be destructive of life and prop- | erty. “It would be impossible adequately | to portray the woful consequences | to all the people if the production and distribution of the necessaries of life should be halted in the short dark days of winter,” said Mr, “While the right to strike nary industri cumstances, annot bi are some callings so c! ly relate the life, liberty and curity Ane people that the right to strike in those cases must be subordinated to the |superior right of the public to enjoy uninterrupted service, “Where the right of collective bar- gaining has been recognized, and the peaceful processes of settlement of disputes have been offered and re- jected, no Government worthy of the name can permit the strike weapon to be used to enforce the demands of ja single class of workers at the ex- denied, there pense of all ‘1e people,” |" In denouncing the stands taken by James H. Maurer and William Z ‘oster, the Attorney General said: here are men in the country who no sympathy for our form of government and ho respect for our institutions. They would transplant the chaos of Rusela to American soil. “A striking inetance of this tend- ency was the action of the Pennayl- vania State Federation of Labor in its convention day when, und ‘ames H. Maure r the le van liberty of public assembly.’ be carefully preserved and the wise men who wrote St into the bill of rights were « methods by w ich it should be pre- |served. The lawful remedies are at | —_—— land, It is not ne should be deprived of 8 of life in order to en- » remedies. annot belle the membership of the State ation of Labor, which 1s local |whole peo! the nec and patriotic, will suppomt this revo-| lutionary plan Mr, Palmer said if the people would | Increase the: cost of living would fall 20 per cent. in @ brief period of time. t Pittsburgh last Sun. | dership of , it authorized a gen- | eral strike in all trades in Penngyl- | he guaranty of free speech must | eful to provide the| e that the vast | savings 10 per cent, the | \Po BoRMaAN’s 37 The Rev. Mr. Heald Published Protest Against Exhibition of Shapely Limbs, With the} Result That “S. R. O.” Sign Has Been Shown at Chari- table Entertainments Ever| Since. Bare, dimpled knees in a parada are just a little bit of all right, thinks Port Chester, and the more it sees them the more it thinks so. The advance sale for the entertain- ment in the high school auditorium, where Port Chester's fairest daugh- ters with bare knees do the tickle j toe, indicates that the show could | play a long engagement. In fact, it may be decided to continue the parada indefinitely, ‘The Rev. Harry B, Heald of St | Peter's Episcopal Church, who hap- pened to see a rehearsal, protested against the pinky knees and winky dimples, He did it in the Port Ches- ter Item, which proved that adver- | tising pays, because there was an immediate rush for tickets, ‘There are three kinds of spectators, those who go to see if Dr. Heald is right, those who go to see if he is wrong, and those who go to sea, The Rev, Mr. Heald withdrew his| name and that of his wife from the list of patrons and patronesses, but no one else did, The Rev. William I. Magill, retired Episcopal clergyman, telephoned to let his name stay right where it on the list. The Rev. Richard Townsend Henshaw did the same thing, and besides, bought tickets, Daughters of the Rev. William P, McDermott, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Chureh, are among the amateur actresses taking part in the entertainment. “They're all fine looking girls and it's a swell show,” says Port Ches- ter and as much of the surrounding country a8 has been able to get Uckets, Mrs. Millard F. Scott, President of the Women’s Club of Port Chester, said to-day the parada for the bene- fit for the tuberculosis fund was not being held under the patronage of ber ization. “However, it is being held under the auspices of @ group of women, many of whom have daughters taking part in the entertainment,” she said. “We feel that they are capable of eafeguarding the young womanhood ot Port Chester.” Do Witt H. Lyon, President of the Board of Education of Port Chester, or denied to-day that the patrons and patroneses had been requested to take their parada away from there. “We should not accede to any re- quest that might be made by any one to deny the use of the High School auditorium for the parada,” sald Mr, Lyon. “I have been to the parada and I see no reason for stopping it” Capt, Charles W. Eddy, director of the parada, sald he was greatly upset eald's criticism of the young women's costumes, Capt, Scott said he had been directing paradas twenty years and never before had| Be N Rrntoey UNORe AtED6: DO | beg complaint such as Mr, Heald immediately taken granting the ‘con. | beard a@ compla! stitutional rurhts of free speech and | over Rector H had uttered. “Nobody has asked me to modify the costumes of the young women,” said Capt, Scott, Some of the scandalized pastor's flock said to-day they had no} doubt Mr, Heald, in asking to have | en from the list, had |‘ fe é been prompted by the best motives ary that & | mocy heciared, however, that not hav: ing witnessed the parada the rector |mean ruin his name stric had been a trifle hasty and a little | 200 employes are bit—oh, just the very slightest bit in the world—unjust tp criticising the young women for their display of dimpied knees, Bare, dimpled knees | at a dance were one thing, they said, In a parada their dimpled knees didn't “stand out go, as it were. A part of the parada was to have |¢veniy ‘been given in Mr, Heald's church | the The Carey ed Gonounont, went to prigon, i sa authority that the bas been cancelled, 19, It was learned to-day chelien Nov, on the. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1019. rt Chester Girls Whose Dimpled Knees, In Kilties, Horrified Local Pastor \S LIKELY 10 BE PORTCHESTER GIRL’ “SHOOT, MAN, SHOOT” CRY Dete: Being Done, but Prisoners Are Freed in Court. Charles Anderson and Willam Mc Cafferty, detectives of the Fourth in spection District, charged with the Brave duty of finding out who it ts that keeps atealing Inspector Dominick Hen. ry's filv age, No, 114 West 66th story window. stairs and arre twenty young men they found grouped about a p “We heard them say ‘Shoe shoot,’ the detectives told Ten Byck, “and ‘Kill it’ anil ‘ou,’ and ‘there was a lot of oth r and violent talk, and we thought the was & murde only reason for breaking in without a warrant, Your Honor, But all we found Wag some money lying on a pool table and two little ‘square pieces of tvory with spots on the sides.’ In the ab: of an mation that a crime nitted all twenty pr: missed, ‘The magis marks on the commendable innocenc men who di know the dit- between “African golf’ and LINER TRIES IN VAIN TO SAVE definite infor- com- dis~ made brief re Crew of United States, Here From! Copenhagen, Tell of Hearing Cries Early To-Day. The cries of a man overboard were heard at 4 o'clock this morning on the Scandinavian liner United States as she lay at Quarantine after a voyage from | Copenhagen, Bouts were lowered and searchlight played, but the man could not be found and gradually his cries died out. He is believed to drowned, His name has not learned. water the vessel camo up to her pler at Hoboken, bringing 5 i of them’ frst ce were Michael Fokin, formerly head 0 the Russian Imperial Ballet; Irma Orna, lyric soprano, formerly ‘of the Metropolitan, and Mrs, Sophie Stearn, 667 Madison Avenue, who was in Hamburg, Germany, during the war - ARGUMENT ON DOUBLE FARE. Urooklynites and ‘Trot fore Service Commission. Representatives of the Flatland Property Owners’ Association and the Flatbush Civic Association appeared before the Public Service Commission to-day to question the right of th Be- y Hrooklyn City Railway Company ollect @ second fare at the boun line betwi the old villages of bush and Flatlands. Tne Brookyn City ad been compelling passengers to hange cara at the boundary to make the collection of the second fare easier. A few days ago the Commission put 1 to that inconvenience, Now the ity of the double fare {8 questioned The city and the troliey company were represented - MORE BUTCHERS AT WORK. Organizer Says Many Dealers Have Met Deman Leo Sigal, organ of the hutcher’s Union, reported to-day that about one-third of the 5,000 sausage makers, packing pliant — workers, drivers’ and meat cutters, who went on strike for shorter hours and more pay, had returned to work in shops which had granted the strikers’ de mands, George A. Schmidt, — secretary reasurer of Otto Stab mpat and ablishment sald. ~~ oh bh War on Unrest. The annual dinner of the Chureh ub of the Protestant Episcopal hurch will be given at the Hotel Boasert in Brooklyn next Tuesday evenin Plans will be discussed for wer of the church to the of unrest, Amon, the will be high church officials ind former Governor R. I. Manning of fouth Carina, > REVENUE AGENTS SEE END OF WAR DRY ENFORCEMENT {Root’s Argument Basis of Be-| Astor's home at No. 840 Fitth lief Court Will Grant the Injunction. LEADS COPS 10 DICE GAME es Thought Murder Was) er and seeing that {t doesn't | happen again, were stopped short in their tracks in front of the Lotos Gar-| eet last night by violent sounds coming from @ third-| Harry W, Mager, chief of the United in personal They burst in the doors, hurried up-| enforcement mistic about the outlook when he left That was our |New York this morning for Washing essimistic” in the case of be more trouble t “On top of the emphatic ‘wet! sentt- ections,” said ment expressed in the e Chief Mager, “there will be a bad ef- fect throughout the country If the In- in New York against the enforeament of the Vol- stead Act are granted.” There was a MAN OVERBOARD IN HARBOR junctions would be information, court would do, but everybody had an opinion, and those who were willing said thelr opinion was and the other lawyers for the liquor interests, Daniel L. Porter, chief of the reve- nue agents for this district, returned from Washington to-day to take up the task that Chief Mager had been handling for him du Porter, after a survey, said New York Field agents began to-day to check rectifying machinery that licensed in New York City prior They said there 600 rectifiers and that some of them are believed to have passed into the control of “unscrupulous persons.” the largest rectifying plants, said, there are facilities not only for facture of whiskey 611 SAVED FR The Fasilka Reported Wrecked tn OM SHIP. ‘The British steam of 4.152 Kross last ‘Thursday Bay of Noga! and her 611 pass nip Fazilica, a ves- coast In the States Marine to-day by the Fazilka was bound from Penang and was driven by onto Icobar Island. message said. ——— MILK CHARITY HARD HIT. was no loss | dean of th 170 | e demands | New York Association for Improv Poor nas 55) of the d to, would | ° ness. Abo: put at this plant, he families for whom it rts of milk a day, or 33,000 Three juarts a month it cost the cents in effect, the 5.775 a month, a in- a. 4 In addition to t soviution has about 250 emergency cases $2,970 per month Association about § $5 Whose Arm Was tary skull cap with a nue at half-past nine |morning and rang the himself into the hou my way, 1! am your Astor." s right ear was badly fight. | TraMe Pollceman Rockett Mager means that he fears there will noise from the corner of 65th Street dbeenatfirst}and went to the butler’s stranger at Yorkville Court insisted to Magistrate Ten Eyck that he was “Lord Astor” and owned the house he sought to enter. ‘The tin box was opened by Inapector Eagan of the Bureau of Combustibles. It contained clockwork, but slves, The books were the Book of Common Prayer, on physics and a volume entitied “The belief among| Enclosures of England.” said “his opher name” was Anthony Bodnar and that he was a Austria, He was sent to Bellevue for servation. pe ae TEACHER OF AGRICU GLEARED OF GIRL'S CHARGE Trustees of State College at Farm- xonerate Prof ingdale Button. partment of F yesterday and resumed girl students. ning of Oct. 6, 1919, The, Board of ‘Trust sion Prof. Button attende his wife, would reveal yest «irl student who Medical College, Frank president, and ‘Thomas dean, and the Flower Hospital to coi pel the return of bis diploma last that he was graduated aga doctor of medicine that the diploma is now it 48 @ guaranten’ that main with the institutio he cake was called 1 | the special ter before Justice Francis this) morn or next Friday morning CAN SPEAK GERMAN ONLY. fmese Ch! ‘Their Way to Three Chinese childre anguage but POSING AS ‘LORD ASTOR,’ MAN Butler Grapples Stranger Under Clock-Like Contrivance A tall distinguished looking foreign appearance wearing broad = green rand appeared at the door of Vineent ‘The door was opened by the butler, John Brooks. The stranger pushing Brooks aside, saying: “Get yourself Brooks grappled with the visitor, tin box fell from under one arm and three books that were under the other, Brooks finally downed the man, though torn in the Prof. Tf. &. Button, head of the De- rm Crops and Soil Cul ture of the State Agricultural College at Farmingdale, L. 1, returned to his desk cleared by the Board of Trustees charges made against him by one of the The charges, as stated tn a letter to Prof. Button by A. A. Johnson, director of the college, were that “your languagé and conduct toward one of our young women students, which took piace and near your office on the second floor of the Agronomy Building on the eve ere both ungen tlemanly and vulgar and #0 repulsive ay to be terrifying to the young woman.” Prof, Button after a long execut: which the charges wet |, accompanied No. one connected with DEMANDS DIPLOMA BACK. Dr. Robin Brings Salt College. Julian I. Robinson has brought against the New York Homeopathic college, with whom he of the Sup “and argumen on | jerman-—not came to the United States to-day and presently will be in China, the tongue of their ancestors They are the children of Kinyer Wang, the As- | Secretary of the Chinese Copenh hott father ‘open! nh, nd with thelr father are an Toute Vo Aska TERMINATED SOON onl |Compromise Offered by “Se- ceding” Pressmen’s Locals to Be Considered To-Day. Developments moved fast to-day to 4 speedy end of the printing trades strike fe Promixe lowing the offer of a com- nade yesterday by the Pre idents of the two expelled pressmen’s Jocals, Nos. 23 and 61, whore demand | yy for a 44-hour week etarted the trouble. The compromise offer included re- | instatement of the membership of the expelled locals in the international organization, W-houx week, with 44 hours after Sept. 1, 1920, and a ¥ A week wage Increase This offer was presented to Major George L. Berry, International Pres- ident of the Pressmen's Union, Major Berry's reply to the proposal will be presented to Simons to-day, and if his terms are accepted the Major said |'7*"ned Hand. The action was tak M sti (ae there would be nothing in the way to | Soveriment, who sald that chey | prevent a settlement “within a day or two" of the tangle which has tied up the publication of trade journals a : PRINTING STRIKE ‘|MARY DRUG CLERKS REP fonaea wh FOR WORK THIS MORNING. Some Who Were, Absent Yesterday Say They Were Not on Strike, But Il. J. M. Barry, President of the Liggett Drug Company, operating eeventydite stores in Greater New York, sata thie morning that only thirt~atne deri employed In his stores were not at work yesterday amd that Afteen of these # ported this morning with the statement that they were sic he said, were mostly ne employess, Whose places would not be held open later than to-morrow morning. Mr, ¢ “ id 90 far os be knew the strike waa affecting only « few small establishments on the east si@e and @ few in the Williamsburg and Brownsville districte of Rrooktyn. A canvass of the financial and the rieal districts this morning indideted that Yhe drug stores there were in me | wine affected. In Brooklyn it was reported that only a handful of clerks obeyed tite atrtive : a LIQUOR CASES POSTPONED Ge Ht Attorneys Aske © to Get m in Shape. A large number of liquor cuses, set for hearing to-day, was postponed until to-morrow morning by Federal Judge p the requ of attorneys for the at least a ‘day to straighten out the have swamped thelr of- The cases postponed included that of and magazines here for more than a|the Eastern Hotel Company, whieh fe month. ‘n'l my reply to this offer of a com- promise, id Major Berry, “IT shall | insist first that an amalgamation be effected between the two expelled presamen's locals and the locals which have been chartered to take ternational union and must give evi- dence of their sincerity and assur- ance that they wil abide by the union's rules. negotiations at once with the em- negotiations are pending. and the every effort will be made to make the best terms possible with the em agreement entered into.” Announcement was made this morn- ing that 350 press room emplo: oe to the international. About in six other plants did like- wise, Major Berry reported. the State Industrial Commission to day took a hand in the strike matter predicted that si the Gov, do something of a construe the factions together. Ra ENDS MONTH OF SLEEP. Physicians St Bronx Woman. Miss Dora Mintz No, 140 ‘Trinity Avenue, Bronx, remained asleep to- day after one month of sleeping, For thirty days whe has been at the Wil- lard Parker Hospital, where her mal- ady ls diagnosed as lethargic en- phalists, known as “the sleeping eck nena,” Her condition to-day waa reported | as i Peanut Britth DOR ores their places, The expelled prossmen | VISITS VINCENT ASTOR HOME |r resized tatsor unter the. in- jund: “That will permit the opening of ployers, but before such negotiations begin the men wil be ordered back to work, to continue at work while the | “With regard to the 46-hour week | increase, I can say that) ployers, who already have offered an increase of $% a week. I have no} doubt that an agreament could be reached quickly, but we must be as- sured that the men wil abide by any | sat the Butterick plant had left the ranks ing to have vacated the tempor |injunction issued against it as @ resalt of the rald by revenue officers when they began to enforce the Volstead Act. wage 2 cases on the part of other deal- era who were Fr: are also : pending. Missing Princ nent Found. CON AUT, Nov 1 ~-Accord- ing to Cleveland detectives, J. Howard Metnty school principal, who myk- teriously disapp: d from here last Friday, has bec located at. Canton ‘the name of Fred Mckthaney, RIEND husband is yearning for simple, homey foods. Watch him beam happily | at you across the table when he breaks open one of those wonderful muffins you have made from Wheatsworth Real Whole Wheat Flour. They're great—he’ll say so. Wheatsworth Flow com tains five times as muah body - building substances as refined flour F. i, BENNETT BISCUIT CO, %. of the “seceders” and pledged their | Miss Frances Perkins a member of at the behest of Gov, Smith, [t is may on behalf of | tive nature that probably will bring Unable te Aroune | AATLLER “Better Chocolates aka Lower Price” CANDIES Special for To-day and To-morrow —Lascious golden brown sugar generously studded with savoury roasted peanuts that retain their aroma even in the candy, A candy treat that will satis(y the craving of the most particular lover of sweets. An inviting, attractive pound Cc Extra Special for To-day and To-morrow Pound Box Good with Cold Cuts Milk Chocolate Covered Figs— € big, pulpy figs, carefully se- jected and pitted, ‘Theee are sugared with pure erystal granules and then dipped in pure milk chocolate. 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