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Awakens Wife of Jersey Farmer as thas practically ‘im Alles that they would by the United States. PNEUMONIA DROPS Death Rate Only Hi Only Half That of 1918 Epidemic, Dr. Cope- land Reports, “HEAT” STRIKE HALTED. gituation at first hand, and went home reperted to his Government, SIDES GET COMFORT _ FROM GREY'S LETTER. ‘Viscount Grey's letter was regarded by Senators on both sides of the treaty controversy as vindicating their positions. Republicans said Viscount Grey has proved what they have contendea all along thet the Allies would accept In the twenty-four-hour period ee American ‘reservations, get the United States into | ooo, 10 , " ie at A. M. to-day the number Democrats said his reference to “re- Of new cases of influensa reported to Walkout on Plea of Health Commissioner. Pudiating signatures” tells the whole |the Health Department was 2,673 and | Mory of Presiderit Wilson's inability | the number of new cases of pneu- to compromise with the Sénate, and/ monia 524. There were 94 deaths from t! Fastin ‘th wtand inst mb AB Lae the “flu” and 108 deaths from, pneu- me Senators expect the influence] ™0nia. id Jetter on public opinion to} Compared with yesterday's ficures ip Speed ratification by causing @/(he new cases of influenza showed a of letters to Senators, urging | decrease of 1,318, new cases of pneu- on thé ground that it 18) monte & fall of 141, deaths from “flu” (the reservations won't/a drop of 10 and deaths from pnou- ‘Any bitch’ monia a decrease of 11. ‘Lodge and other Republi-| white the apparent Improvement have said they bave known for/may be in some part the drop that fiat the Lodge reservations| has come invariably: in Monday fir- ‘ot-cduse any hitch abroad. ures,” Health Commissioner Cope- Ladge to compromise |iand eaid, “there is no getting away ‘Preamble to his reservation, BY | trom the fact that the death rate this | elimination of the provision is ati ave bi Kas of he eae ere ner -half that of the epi- it was stated. dl Following are tho yew cises re- Lord Grey's statement wiil furnish ported for the twenty-éour hours ition for the bitter-enders in ; * ending at 10 o'clock this morning: Soming debate in the Senate! hone. Lnfwensa, I'neumonia, 1,114 426 280 28 Mit it he confirms their arguments) pronx .. the treaty. Brooklyn . | Senator Boran said: “Lord Grey’s| Queens . letter te well worthy of the close Richmona ly of the American le. It is and it is very fa! tan Total to-day . ‘b “The statement of Lord Grey is} Total yesterday 665 ad Mluminating,” said Genator| rota! same day 1918. 400 Mivements tant nave tee mise ca | Tota! to date.:...... 8,031 of the Senate and elsewhere. DBATHSs. fe have been told that the six} ‘ors iatiaensa, \’neumone, yétes of agian won the count, and Afantattan 52 49 that the colonies that are given votes|Rronx .... il 7 Sil ret te enters 90s ceeane| root ‘ is no use of equivecsting on the sub-| Queens .. 2 Jock, that all of those who are given hmond . 0 ee ‘al to-day . 109 ¥ Ben i! yesterday 2 to-day At as Nquapomt. [Total same a tion is made Total to date. Three motion picture theatres were me of L-] Meats 7 by . e hen will be Jeparting. for po- ned | cod with the|Slosed for alleged infractions of the Proc tion of tne pact on the tenth| Sanitary Code, and notice to that ef- he feong he co on A pm fect was posted conspicuously at their Reauee ‘and can do so by|@vars, They are situated at No. 412 ahead of the Democrats. Grand Street, Manhattan; No, 351 HEDLEY HIMSELF [11s sematce avenve, Richmond tn ‘A “STRAP-HANGER” Notices were served on the man- | “1 Invented It,” Says I. R. T. Head agers to appear immediately before a | special meeting of the Board of % Who Protests Against ‘West Side Express Plan. fHealth, The change in each case is said to be overcrowding and lack of | Frank Hedley. president of the Int’ Derough, was the principal witness this proper ventilation. violating the sanitary laws the pro- at a hearing before Public Scr- joner ‘Lawis Nixon on com- prietors of places of amusement are Hate to imprisonment for one year of the Washington Heigate Tax- Association, which requested that or a fine of $500, or both While emppavizing the low death company be compelled to use the r track between 96th Street and rate Of this year’s epidemic, Dr. Street on the West Bide subway Copeland showed great concern lest the public get the impression that the express service, southbound in the and northbound in the evening. “worst is over,” and so assume that there no longer is reason for exer- . Hedley protested that the com-|cising the greatest precaution, He lacked equipment. Asked if it|called attention to the number of be poseible'to divert some of the |deaths from influenza and pneu- trains which branch off at 96th | monia reported for the month of Jan- for the Bronx lines, he said: 9 Lhe ak BEES Of ihe Lacartions [OM ih sour years te follows: a € take needed facilitice from the [2174s 1918, 1,543; 1919, 4,529; 1920, 2,62: ity of the people for the conven-| These figures, Dr. Copeland said, of the minority show that in January @ year ago, . Hedley said he had no definite} when the 1918 epidemic generally was for improving the service, He ad-| suppose to be past and gone, there that the travelling public of New | wero almost twice as many deaths the moat, patien trapshanger,’" at least five| which ended with Saturday. In lke “sect, i invented the device now|!nanner, he eays, K may well be that pias we ahall be hearing bad'news of the present epidemic two or three months ICLE TUNNEL TO JERSEY from now. The Commissioner feels, in other words, that eterna! vigilance $28,000,000 May is the price of public health, habit dead On the whole, the Health Commis- sioner says, the condition revealed to- | . E4ward I. Edwards of New Jer- day ta “quite satisfactory.” He re- ,was to leave Jersey City for Tren-| rents his daily call for more nurses. ‘thie afternoon, He said he might!” win reference to the trouble be- tweon the men wao own hotels and apartment houses, on the one hand, and the engineers and firemen who keep them warm, on the other, all of them yesterday agreed on the Health Commissioner as arbitrator, Dr. Copeland. Copeland's appointment sheet for to-day called for two meet- ings, This morning he received Vice President Joseph Munterfering of the Engineers and International Presi- dent Timothy Healy of the Brother- hood of Firemen and Oilers. ‘The labor men presented a formal list of their demands. Later in the i at in to the Legislature to-night the intment of @ District Court judge. speaking of the vehicular tunne! een New York and New Jersey . Edwards salf that the bill would and be introduced to-night it the cost to $28,000,000, LLOWING OF COW VES FAMILY OF 7 OM DEATH IN FIRE ® Flames Reach Bedroom and id She Arouses Others. day a committee representing (he em- 4 ployers was to appear, The threat- fee Boe BARRON, W. J. Ped. § ened strike has been postponed for HE bellowing of a cow saved | forty-eight hours Se) William Foster, his wife and Commissioner Copeland asked to be excused from expressing any opinion “offhand” of the reputed merits of a serum called “serona!,”” described as efficacious in influenza. He-sald be Knew nothing about it and is 80 pressed by other duties that he has no thmo to give to it “All that is known about this dis- ease, Spapish influenza, Russian {n- fuenza, call jt what you will,” the Commissioner sald in thig ex ‘is that it is) hand-conve other words, one can be in +5 their five children from be- i burned to death early tp-day, @ Fosters live on @ farm on the ‘outskirts of the town, About 2 Welock this morning Mrs, Foster wus awakened by the bellowing. jg Flames were ulready cating iw way into the bedroom. She +hroused her husband and children 4nd they escaped through a win- dow in thaty night clothes, The | the door-knob, or by hanging onto an building and much liye stock | infected strap, or in similar ways. Fi cachoancee ded by Leste “We also know that the germ is ian { 7 \ Firemen and Engineers Delay | het 11] from these diseases as in the month) «IN VAIN HUNT FOR ESCAPED BANDITS intense Both Men Were Members of Brooklyn’s Notorious “Green Auto Gang.” wi of Bing Sing, to-day syr- for the two men who disappeared yesterday afternoon between noon and 5.05 #. M. Early this afternoon no trace of them had been found. thet the prisoners did not get outside the inclosure, but the alarm has been spread in all directions and the po- lee of many cities are watching. The convicts were Alfred Fried- lander, sentenced for eighteen years, and Percival McDonough, sentenced for forty, ag former members of the “Green Auto Gang” that held up and robbed passengers and crews trolley cars near Flushing and Ja- maica. The convicts, possibly as part of a supper yesterday. They were not missed until the prisoners were marched to their cells after several hours of liberty in the yard, Nothing has been found to indicate whether they are hiding somewhere within the walls, as prisoners have been known to do for days, or have scaled the wall and escaped. This is the first escape—if @uch tt proves to be—during the administra- tion of the new Warden. He said to- day he did not believe that the men had got out of the prison inclosure, He thought they were hiding somewhere about the yards or shops, waiting a chance for a dash. The Hudson 1s frozen over at Os- sining, and it is believed Friediin-| der and McDonough might have ice to the west shore. Friedlander’s home was at No. 2214 Pitkin Avenue, Brooklyn, and Mc- Donough’s at No, 2577 on the same street. They were two of six men who held up Mh sot ANDREW KALBACH | DIES ON A TRAIN Receiver for Second Avenue Car Line Stricken on Way From Philadelphia. Andrew E. Kalbach, No, 2211 An- drews Avenue, the Bronx, receiver for the Second Avenue Railroad Company, was taken suddenly il and died this morning on a@ train from Philadelphia to New York. He was forty-eight years old. Mr. Kalbach was appointed receiver of the Second Avenue lines May 9, 1917, He graduated from the United | |Btates Naval Academy in 1895 and| If found guilly of |perved in the navy until 1903 when he|ment became assistant engineer of the! Rapid ‘Transit Construction Company Later he was ral manager of the | New York City Interborough Railroad Company, and when that company sold out to the Third Avenue line “he en- tered general practice ing engiweer, He was ned Deputy Commissioner of Street Clea ing for the Bronx in 1914, which po: tion he filled during the Mitchel Ad- ministration STOKES ACCUSED OF CRUELTY TO ‘HORSES Kentucky Holds Up Aheceentinrn of New York Millionaire in Stock Farm Case. (Special Dowateh to Me Proving World.) 4s a consult- as ih ky *.—Following a confere with the local attorney for teh Meroyn Reulty Company, the in+ W.. B.D, Farm here corpormed owner of the Stokes's Patchen Wilkes prosecution of charges of cru to ani: mals against the millionaire New Yorker on account of the allegel nex- lected condition of horses on the farm, Will be hed up for the present Orders Were issued iby the attorney to John Carter, in charge of the farm, to fovide auficlent feed, for ee. several the place. ‘The charges were brought | by the Humane Society. throat. Scientists have been at work on the contained in the nose and problem since 1889, and up-to-date the germ has not been found.” When Dr. Copeland's attention was cent, in the price of lemons, with the itable suggestion of profiteering, he turned the matter over Ole Salthe, of the Bureau of Food and he went forth to find The Commissioner such grabbers and promised to do his utmost to have them punished Dr. Copeland's figures showed that 198 spitters were arrested on Sunday in the five boroughs. More arrests were looked for to-day. The war on epitters is ih charge of Deputy Commissioner Frank J, Monaghan, M.D. Feb. rate in the United States for the highest on record, according to the Census Bureau's annual mortality tistics Issued to-day which 471,637 deaths for the year re Ja rate of 18 per 1,000 popula lf Of the total deaths per cent, Ww Jund pneumonia, jin the la when ane prevailed pneumonia fluenza cau pheumonia, 7 and 284.3 'p shows 1,- nting 996 havin r monthy of demic of the The rate for influens 2 100,000. deaths, 100,000 the highest rates whieh ever peared for these causes, | Forty men under Major Lewis Lawes. tematically searched the prison grounds Major Lawes is convinced, he says,! of} plot, disappeared between noon and| | “American scaled the 10-foot wall and crossed the) hundred pure breed horses and sheep on | called to a reported jump of 60 per) sta-| sera - “ THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1920. JOSEPH O'HANLON IS YOUNGEST FIRE CHIEF IN NEW YORK JOSEPH Rremnaee New Captain, Elevated “at Age of 35, Has Been in Service for Fourteen Years. Capt. Joseph O'Hanlon, New York's youngest fire chief, photographed to- day on his elevation to his present rank. He is thirty-five yeacs old and has been in the department for four- teen ‘This photograph was taken at Engine House No. 32, No. 49 Beckman aoe OPPOSE PLAN TO AID RUSSIAN TRADE QUSANLON years. ‘Miiements of Business Men and Ex-A. E, F. Officer Cried Down by Sponsors of Association. Opposition to the formation of the | Commercial Association | to Promote ‘Trade with Russia” at a | meeting in the Hotel Knickerbocker | today, voiced by a former officer in| the A. E, F. and several business men, cried down by sponsors of the proposed organization, led by Dudley Vield Malone, who said he represented the Lehigh Machine Co., | of Lehighton, the president of | was which, Emerson P. Jennings, presided at the gathering. The opponents advised those pres- ent “to watch their steps and pro- ceed with caution.” These were the sentiments of a man giving his name as Capt. Roseblack, formerly of the American forces, who had seen ser- vice in Russia. A. R. Gormully, of the Ajax Rubber Committee also cautioned against the hasty organiza- tion of the proposed body. W. B. Brewster, of the Combustion Control Co., said the assemblage “was wast- ing it# time in a useless petty movel ment.” He declared that the organ- ization was contemplated by a few for their own personal agfgrandize- oe SLAPS MAN WITH HANDBAG IN COURT| Another Woman T! ee Arms About Prisoner as He 1s Led Away —Two Charged With Assault. Dora Consuelo Landro, sixteen years West 62d Street, appeared Side Court to-day against No. 125 West 61st Street, and Charles Reese of Buffalo, She charged the two with assault, saying that Hunt had seized her on the street in front of No. 45 West 66th Street, carried her away in an automobile and kept her over night in his room, She in the Wes Alfred Hunt, also implicated two other men besides Hunt and Reese. Hunt and Re bail ee were held in $10,000 on the assault charges. and # third man, Nicholas 214 14th Ay Astoria, euch n they » No w on th complaint of Mrs. Reta Blair, formerly of No. 59 West 62d Street, who said she rented a room to the three there until they oarried away $400 worth of her belongings. She slapped Hunt on the cheek with her handbag as she left the troom, Another woman, as he was being led away, threw both arms about his neck ‘and. cried: "Ob, Whitey, what h EARTH SHOCKS FELT |TO-DAY ARE HEAVIER THAN MEXICO QUAKE Chicago and Washington Seismo- graphs Record Disturbances 3,300 Miles Away, CHICAGO, Feb. 2, HP United States Govern- T ment selsmoxraph at Chi- cago University recorded the most pronounced earthquake in months this morning, The whieh continued untit ck, were heavier even the recent Mexican up- heaval. ‘The firet shock was re 5.45 o'el the was reached at 7.40, WASHINGTON, Feb, % — A severe earthquake, lasting more than two hours and cen- tered between 3,300 and 3,800 miles from Washington, was re- ported to-day on the Georgetown University selamograph The shodks began at 6.42 A. M, shocks, 8.45 04 than corded at maximum and very | to cultivate the land. | what they want to do. j the farmer boys who were in the army | ; don't want to come back to the coun- jrealize that there are about 7,000,000 | | thought he could get. | or four and a half bushels of wheat | man is a fool for staying in the HIGH CITY WAGES, CAUSING BIG CUT IN (Continued From First Page.) fice Department,” said Prof. At- | kenson, who for nineteen years was! Dean of the Agricultural College of West Virginia, “shows plainly how) jcity people have been misled as to! ‘ country conditions, I dislike the word | ‘unrest.’ The farmers are simply | distressed at their growing inabiiity | They can't do/| The labor market is rapidly making it impossi- ble for them to feed the country. | Somebody is going to go hungry. ‘Unrest may come as a consequence | in the city, SCARCITY OF FARM LABOR VERY SERIOUS. “The inability to obtain farm labor | is the most serious thing, Before the, war the farmer trained his children and hired help in the country, Now with the attractive wages in the city try, and I don't blame them or any- body else for staying in the city if higher wages are obtainable there. “But city people must realize that as farm labor gets scarce the country must begin offering high wages, and thus costs of production must rise. Add go that the great cost of distri. bution and you see why the cost of living is going up. Why, reckoned relatively, food is the cheapest thing of all. Our city friends ought to farmers selling individually. They | can't be profiteers. They are help- less because they thave to take what is offered them, They have no organ- ization to fix prices and there are no. signs of one, They deal individ- ‘ually. | “Now I know that nobody ever aold | what he had to sell, either skill or labor or commodities, fof less than he We all do it. We should recognize it as a funda-) mental fact. Well, the normal source | of farm labor—namely, the Sons of | Farmers—is almost gone. The farmer boys who went into the army got a taste of the world and city life. They have rubbed up against city compan- jons and are lured by high wages and what appears to them a more at- tractive life, I am told that out of 85,000 questionnaires sent out in con- nection with the demobilization of troops, about 1 per cent. appears to have gone ‘back to the farms, FARM LABORERS LURED TO CITY | BY HIGH WAGES. “Also farm Taborers don't want to stay in the country if the city offers | them better opportunities. Normal) a farm laborer gets for his day's work | the equivalent of a bushel of wheat. ‘The other day I had some carpenter work done at my house in the city, and what I paid for ten hours’ work | would have bought a barrel of flour | country if be can get that much more in the city. | “But some day those high wage fel- | lows are going to wake up and find that there isn't enough food to £0) around at any price. It's something | like conditions after the Civil War, when we paid $$ a keg for cut nails for about four years and then sud- denly the price dropped to about 90 cents a keg. We had been selling wheat at $3, then it came down to 60 cents a ‘bushel and certain people got hurt jn the crash. “There is little use of talking about the high cost of living when you consider the high cost of city labor, The cost of distribution, moreover, is all out of proportion to the cost of food production. What we need is increased production everywhere, in the city as well as the farm, In- stead of agitating for shorter hours and more pay, it would be much bet- ter if everybody in the cities and factories worked hard for the pres- ent high scale of wages. GREAT FALLING OFF IN WINTER WHEAT PRODUCTION, “In the same connection Judge 0. G. Smith of Nebraska, President of the National Farmers’ Congress, told hig colleagues at thelr gathering here that the actual condition of winter wheat to-day showed only 67 per cent, and a falling off of about 33 per cent, in production, ‘The leaders of the farm prgantzations—and they all have National headquarters here. —ingist, also, that people are crowd- ing every bit of housing space in the city, whfle in the outlying districts and suburbs there are plenty of vacant houses. “As for the talk about profiteering among farmers, the leaders pointed to the statement just issued by the Department of Agriculture, which “The average net income of 324 farms in the richest portions of Iowa, with no allowance what- ever for interest on the invest- ment In land and equipment was $3,480, If five per cent, be al- lowed for interest on the ,invest- ment at the value of the land be- the so-called “boom” there left an average of only $1,- 124 to pay for the labor of the farmer himself and for the risk lo the business. On tite basis of average Values of land in August, fore is reached the maximum at about § o'clock and ceased at 9,03 o'clock, 1919, there would be ieft an aver- FOOD PRODUCTION and | terest on the value. of the and equipment “The fact is that the price food rose and the rise in values followed. Prices of food production have moved up in ap- proximately the same proportion as general price and in respon: to the same world-wide causes- war, scarcity and currency infla- tion. If prices of farm products were to any degree lower than they are, they would be entirely out of line with the prices of other products.” So the viewpoint of the Government appears to conform to thmt of the spokesmen of the farmers’ orgamiza- | tion, “Well, what is the anawer, wh we going to fo about itt’ was the question I asked Prof. Atkinson. “There isn't anything to do,” he said. “Things must take their natura! course. People in the ¢ities will not be = of and “|convineed in any other way. There'll be a big smash and prices will fal!—| then“ people will ‘drift back to the 'sarms, and there will be more labor jto cultivate the Jand and produce | food.” U.S. CHARGES PLOT. TO BUY SENATORSHIP WAS HATCHED HERE (Continued From First Page.) on the bridge of the ship and turned. slowly to face the audi- ence, while the camera caught him in this attitude. “He next played that he was pay- ing a visit of inspection to this bat- tleship. “To divert attention from the fact that the film was a Newberry tisement and render it more mislead- ing, the film terminated with an peal for enlistments in the navy BID MADE FOR .APPROVAL OF | ROOSEVELT. Mr. Dailey said the film was distri- buted in Michigan, advertised by vberry agents posing as theatrical advance men, but that “patrons © |the moving picture houses over the State paid the regular price of admis- sion to gee this film.” The prosecutor read a telegram which he said was sent in September, 1918, to Col. Theodore Roosevelt at Oyster Bay, bidding for “his approval of the Newberry candidacy. The telegram stated that $ had ‘been contributed to the campaign by many subscribers, but according to the Prosecutor, the campaign statement of the committe showed that five contributors alone gave $169,900, and named John S. New- berm, a defendant and brother of the Senator; Mrs. Henry B. Joy, a sister, and her husband, and. Victor Barnes and Lyman B American Book Company. How the Government charges cattered was de- 1 by Mr. Dailey. He said it went for automobiles and halls, work at the polls, votes, banquets, liquor, cigars and flow- ers. He charged thgt some cus- todians of money used it to pay personal debts. A $50 bil was placed in a book so that it could be found by one citizen and a banker was given $500 for his infiuence, the Prosecutor charged. CHARGES CHURCH GIFT TO AiD SENATOR'S CANDIDACY. He mid Senator Newberry made a personal subscription to a church to further his candidacy, “The defendants wasted a great dea) of money in an attempt to control the nomination of the opposite party,” he continued. “They arrived at the con- clusion that the defendant, James W, Helme, would be a suitable opponent 000 hired the defendant, William Mickel, to induce Mr. Helme to become a éan- didate for the nomination of United the Democratic Helme $2,000 to enter the race. Dailey said the Newberry ongani tion got up the petitions by which Mr. Helme’s name was placed on the Democratic ticket, managed ‘his cam- paign and “pald Helme a weekly salary.” “While these things were transpir- ing in Michigan there was constant communication with Mr. Newberry in New York,” said Mr. Dailey. Mr. Pailey asserted that on the day when the report of receipts and expenditures was to be filed, the books failed to balanoa by about $40,000 and that “Blair began to scramble to procure the money and succeeded in getting it within a few days.” He said the evidence would show that neither the report of the com- mittee nor their books gave a true account of the receipts and expendi- tures. that county chairmen and sec- retaries who received from $950 to $1,200 “were asked to make repor showing that they received from $150 to $200," and that no mention wis) made of the amounts “expended ‘n| behalf of James Helm New Swedish Steamship. To establish a new fortnightly pas- leenger mail and freight service (be- tween New York and Stockholm, Swe- den, the Swedish-American Line an- unced to-day the purchase of the Drottningholm, a triple screw turbine Iriven steamship of 12,000 tons gross With a speed of 18 knots and @ paasen- ger carrying capacity of 1.600 persons, The Drotiningholm ‘was formerly the age of only $216 to pay the ia- Allan Uner Virginian, re} adver-} Smith of the to Mr. Newberry in the election, and | States Senator on ticket.” | Mr. Dailey charged that Mickel was later told by Charles Floyd that Samuel O'Dell, a defendant, had paid Mr. SIX MORE WEEKS COLD; GROUNDHOG Tantalizing ou Ss | Mocks Us W a San What Is Yet Far Away REPARE to shiver for six more weeks Mr. Ground Hog did his famous Van Winkle to-day and saw his shadow with Old Sol at his brightest, and ducked back j into his under-ground lair. } So its overcoats, rubbers and clanking radiators some more and Yet some more, The moth balls Which have awaited the ulster still have @ long wait on their hands. } It almost seemed “as if there Was a conspiracy between Old Sol and Mr. Arctomy's Monax, which fs the scientific mame for the Ground Hog. Just a.few mimutes before City Hafl clock struck-at noon there was not enough sun- lighyto make the faintest shadow; but just as tho little rodent shoved his nose above terra firma, faint clouds rolied quickly away, and warm, bright rays of the sun.came dow % greet him. 20, New York's respite from the cold weather of Sunday is to be brief. The Weather Bureau says it is to be decidedly colder, Light rain of snow is expected! before to-morrow night. GRAVE DIGGERS WIN THREE-DAY STRIKE 150 at Galvary Cemetery Return at Higher Wages After Holding Up Burials. One hundred and fifty grave diggers american age now in the service, hav- jof Calvary Cemetery, who quit thei {Jobs at noon on Friday just after re ceiving their weekly pay. Fork this morning afte trustees | New Jersey Insurance Man Dies. wad voted them an increase of seventy-| SUMMIT, N. J. Fb. 2.—Fred x five ce ‘This makes the daily aad aa XiEe | pay $4 | in the interval, | cumulating in @ receiving ¥ capacity of the va E it Was not filled when ‘the work © sing graves was r |- There will be tin t bodies had been Hit | tr ow to dig a grave that one in untrozen ground, |ONE SPY EXECUTED, ANOTHER GETS STAY. German Sp For 48 Mours Ow: ing to Revelations Made at L Moment. PARIS, Feb. 2.—L Funck, al ployed in a bank here, but who ac’ @ spy and reported to the |points at which shells of the enemy long-range gun fell, morning. Louis G to have b ee oe IN NEW YORK TO-DAY. Patri Ivania, 6.30 FP. Club n dinner. e gees of honor, Sir, Oliver Lodge, “The Carnegie Hall, 8.30 P. Destiny 0} Hotel 1 Association M rAdog to speak Leagues, Waldor, Exhibit, ila Ansonia, §.30_ P. William meet M. Astoria. 1 Historical ty 1 promote Russia, Hotel Knickerbocker, 11 A. 'M New York Euphony, S dance, Waldor Y. concer 8 M to jonal Civic Federation, Section, meeting, the 135 East’ 40th Street, Women's De partment, Club, No: For Monday, Feb. and’ OLD FASHIONED MOLASSES BARS—Everybody Hikes the good old fashioned Molasses Candy. When | tooth tires of all other varleties of sweetmeats, it Instinctive~ These are bix golden bars, of long, SPECIA | kD FY tt G bars in a ho: the sweet ly turns to this popular confection, lasting flavor amd candy 3 48. * 4c Speci. “POUND" woe Stores: Brookly SEES H iS SHADOW | returned to Austrian, who during am war was em: | ie | Genk mans | Was ‘executed le Representative Club Luncheon, Hote’ McAlpin, 12.30 P. M Professional Photographers’ Exhibit, Hotel McAlpin, all day Loyal Workers, Hote! McAl pin, 2 P.M \ Young Foiks’ League meeting, Hote McAlpin, 8 P. M Manhattan Study Club meetin, Ho tel MeAlpin M American ¥ ‘of Mechanical In- spectors, First Annual Mechanical In apection Exhibition, Hotel Astor 10 A. M. nd daily through till Frid. Z n Social Union, me Chief Magistrate | M. Association to meeting, | Science, M. be City 7.30 New, York ‘Cosmopolitan Other Monday 7 ors ere whene directory. geo U.S. FLYERS FREED BY GEN. MURGUIA , Davie. | | j 1 and Grimes, Relieved at Nuevo Laredo, Cross to Amerigan Side. b RROWNSVILLE [OMera for the release of Lieuts. EL F, |Davis and G. E. Grimes, American avi- ators, who were forced to land in Mexe came directly from suis, military com- mander at Monterey. according to Gen. F unato Zuazua, Mexican command- jer at Matamoros, opposite here. The flyers were set free at Nuevo Laredo yesterday and crossed to the American side. Capt. W. B. Bradford, Assistant District Adjutant here, who handled the mgotiatiots leading up to the release lof the aviators, sald he was unable tu account for reports from Laredo that nm. Murgula had instructed that the two officers be taken to Monterey for |examination. These reports did not lcaincide with statements made to him lby Mexican authorities, he said, hari inca j|CRASH KILLS ACE | WHO SHOT DOWN 12 i, 'y Left Mitchel Field Here for South Only a Month Ago. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Feb. 2— Capt. Field B. Kindley, American aca Jand commander of the 94th Aero Squadron, was killed instantly at Kel- ley Field No. 2 yesterday afternoon. The accident occurred white a group of planes were preparing for an ex- | hibition in honor of Gen. Pershing's visit Tuesday. Capt. Kindley's ma- chine fell when he was about fifty feet above the ground. He came to Kelley Field from Mitchel Field, L. L, one month ago. His home was in Gravette, Ark. capt. Kindley was the premier rling twelve German planes - | credit, to his [preety |shipman, Treasurer of the New York |Lite Insurance Company, died early to- day at his home, Hillcrest and Summ!y [Avenues from, heart disease, Mr, Ships to Summit from’ Morristown ago Piping Hot | | Dishes on a Wintry Day | and “Eddys”’ Sauce to make them deli- cious and_ tasty. at \satice MADE IN U.S. A, At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores, E. Pritchard, 327 Spring St., N. Y. iM iw “A CORRECTION In the Moe Levy advertisement Fri- day, January 30, by a typographical error, $45 and $50 suits were adv tised at £63.50. The correct price should have heen $75 and $85 suits at § Notice to Advertisers Advertising copy and release or ders for either the week day Morn- ing World or The Evening World, if received after 4 P. M. the day pre- IT ceding publication, can be Inserted 1, |] Only as space may permit and in Pig of receipt at The World of- ice, Advertising copy for the Supple- plement Sections of The Sunday | World must be received by 3 P. M. Thursday preceding publication, and releases must be received by 4 P. M. Friday. Advertising copy for the Main Sheet of The Sunday World must be received by 6 P. M. 1 |} of the preceding Friday and releases ||] must be received by 12 o'clock ||] noon Saturday. Copy or orders received tater than as provided above will not serve to earn discounts of any character, contract or otherwise. THE WORLD. P For Tuesday, Feb. 3rd CHOCOLATE COVERED hie TMEATS A the Bis 33° : i e eos ; Jaret) lovetet | ™ CHOCO FRED Te COV- ASTED PRA- You know those red. crispy s that are grown xtestand, Well, New York. in, Nev