The evening world. Newspaper, February 28, 1920, Page 3

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SOCIALISTS CLOSE. _ DEFENSE: EXPECT ADVERSE VERDICT / Sade Not to Prolor to Prolong “Trial,” Believing Decision of J ae | | Already Made. ONLY THREE ON STAND.’ _ Claessens, Final Witness, Re. grets That He Used Intem- perate Language. ALBANY, Feb. 28.—The Soctattst | asemblymen on “trial” before the Jediclary Committee for the past six, “\ Weeks have closed their defence. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday G of next week both sides will sum up. ‘Then the “case” will go to the Judi- olary Committee, briefs will bo filed, and within a week or ten days thero- after, it is expected, the “verdict” will be transmitted to the Assembly by the committee. That the “verdict” will be “guilty,” te include all five accused members, is the general opinion of even the @tanchest defenders of the Socialists. Evidently impreased with the futil- ity ef consuming another week in tac- ties that would make no impression on prejudiced minds, the Socialists closed their defense without calling two of the accused members—Sam- uel A. Orr and Samuel A. Dewitt, however, had any evidence been of- fered even hinting at official obli- quity. The prosecution trained its heaviest artillery yesterday and last evening on August Claessens, assumed to be the most vulnerable of the five Assembly- men and concededly the most flery of the Socialists’ battery of young spelibinders in New York City. A Claessens made at a celebra tion of the second anniversary of the Russian revolution furnished the ma- terial with which former Senator Eiton R. Brown, for the prosecution, to confound him. "Sse referred in this address | due to overzealousness.” Claessens, discussing war, said he mercial, and had voted against the general appropriation bill carrying items for the support of the militia because he did not know that under the Constitution he was obliged to favor the existence of a State guard of at least 10,000 men. Had he known, this he would have obeyed the man- Gate of the Constitution. emo of counsel on each side are to the “case” next week. Morris Hillquht ‘and Seymour Stedman will talk for the Socialists. Unless John B. Stanchfleld comes into the case again, Martin Conboy and former Senator Brown will sum up for the jon. COUNTED THE VOTES TO BEAT SOCIALISTS Lee and Cassidy Apparently Elect- ed Aklermen, Recanvass of Ballots Show. While the “trial” of five Socialist Assemblymen has been proceeding at Albany on the theory that they had some intentions of overthrowing the Government ir ~ ne way or other, it has develope this city tn the last day or go tha. the actual result of an election in two Aldermanic districts was probably deliberately overthrown, to the detriment of the Socialists, by election of of other political faiths, ‘On ® court order the votes in the Fighth and Twentieth Districts are being recounted at the office of the Board of Elections. All but five Gection districts in each case have been ited so far. In the Eighth, Algernon Lee, So- clalist, apposed Moritz Graubard. The origing! returns gave the latter a plu- rality of 238 and he was seated. In the recount Lee gained 344 votes Wednesday, 77 Thursday and 200 yes- terday, # total of 621, which would| . give him a lead over his Democratic | opponent of 383. In the Twentieth, Timothy J. Sulli- | van, Democrat, beat Cassidy, Social- ‘st, by only 37, according to the orig- inal returns. The recount in three days has shown gains for Cassidy of 140, which would make him the victor hy 108 votes, Sullivan and Graubard are now sitting as members of the Board of Aldermen. ie WEINSTEIN HEARING “OPENS. Friené of Trotsky Fights Deperta- tien From ited State: Gregory Weinstein, friend of Trotsky and former editor of Novy Mir, was, placed on trial to-day in deportation proceedings at Ellis Island before a Board of Inquiry made up of three Im- migration inspectors. Weinstein was represented by Lawyers Charles Recht and Rose Weiss, who endeavored to show cause why he should not be de- | ported as an alien who advocates the | overthrow of the United States Goy- ernment, by force The Government introduced « large amount of %afuted propaganda said to seized among "with the literature whom Weinstein | | Schroeder, + jing the stip ‘nto a giide and thus Aviator Schroeder Tells Own Story of Thrilling Five-Mile 7Hk EVENING WORLD, sare “LABOR PARTY HERE ‘MLN Re BIL DEFIES GOMPERS IN| MAY PUT AN END TO Fall in Plane Caine to Partial Consciousness Before Falling Machine Reached Earth. FROZE HIS EYELASHES. | Threw Ship Into "Glide and! Able to Make Safe Landing in Field. Feb, 2%.—Major R. W. chief pilot at MoCook Field, who reached a world’s record altitude of 36,020 feet, then dropped more than five miles in two minutes and landed safely, has told of his thrilling experience. He is in the field hospital temporarily blind and suffering fram the shock of bts un- precedented feat. By Major R. W. Schroeder. ‘The experience was the .weird- est, most startling in its death dealing features than any I tmve ever before undergone. Becoming fully cognizant af the critioal dilemma in which I was placed as soon as I found that the tank containing the life giving element essential in all altitude tests was beginning to fail, unconsciousness, I was aware, would overtake me in a very short time and there was nothing left for me to @o but to commit myself to fate, ‘Then it was that my ship began rapidly descending, my !nstruments indicating that the drop of five miles occurred in less than two minutes. After the drop of this distance I came to partial consciousness, as I had then reached more nearly normal at- mosphere conditions. As thrilling, however, as hed been the drop through gpace, it was at the finish of ‘this that I found myself in the great- est peril. Upon arousing myself I found that my gasoline tank had collapsed, the rocklike pressure of the rapid fall having caused it to flatten, and so, without fuel and blinded by the sud- den rush of air and frozen eyelashes, I groped for the controlling devices. By stleer good luck, and aided by habit born of long experience in aer- jal navigation I succeeded in throw- DAYTON, was able to make a eafe landing at MoCook Field. Being then unable to leave my ship, I was assisted to the hangars and later removed to the hospital. FALLING AIRPLANE LOOKED LIKE COMET ‘TO DAYTON PEOPLE Aviator Temporarily Blinded After Climb of 36,020 Feet; Beats Record. DAYTON, Feb. 28—Major R. W. Schroeder, who broke the world’s air- plane altitude record by reaching 36,020 feet, is in a hospital to-day suf- fering from shock and temporary blindness, Details of the flight, 5,202 feet higher than any man went before in @ plane, stow it to have been the most amazing on record. When Major Schroeder, chief test pilot at McCool: Field, fell more than five miles in two minutes, resigents of Dayton tHougyt {t was @ comet be- cause of ths trail of vapor, The plane had bera up two hours, When the piane settled, attendants who rushed toward it found Major Schroeder sitting erect tn the ma- chine, apparently lifeless, Major Schrosder lost conr ousness when his machine had reached a height recorded by instruments as 36,020 feet. His senses numbed and his eyes frozen shut in a temperature said to have been 67 degrees below zero, Schroeder revained partial consctous- ness when 2,400 feet above the earth in time to rigzt his machine and pre- vent it from crashing to the ground, out of contro). He was bliated and his limbs were | numb, despite the eketrically heated | suit in which he was encased. He! was suffering from the effects of a| lack of oxygen. When nearly seven | miles above the earth his oxygen| | tanks becan.s exhausted, and it was| this which robbed him of conscious- ness and ceased him to fall, At the hospital it was sald his ‘blindness will be only temporary, It will be several days before he will be able to ute his eyes, according to Dr. Howard #. Dutrow. an eye spe | cial'st, calle¢ into consultation, The mark st by Major Schroeder again gives him the record which Roland Rohl ® won from him July 30, 1919, with ai. official altitude of 30,300 feet and later increased in a second flight to 31,0 feet. It also breaks | the record’ of Adjutant Casale, « French pilot, who was credited with an unofficial rcord of 33,137 fee Riding aions almost seven fallen | above the earth in a polar climate | and against :. wind like that which| Peary enooun ered that blows always) | at 100 miles aa hour or more, Major Sohroeder fought foot by drive his plane higher. Officers of toe neld say his ma-| chine must have fallen into a tal! spin, as otherwise his plane would have collapsed when he regained consciousness and righted jt, after the descent of more than five miles. The sudden change tn air pressure foot to ,MAJOR SCHROEDER, | WHO FELL 5 MILES Figures Out How How It Could Elect Mayor and Even Carry United States. IN PLANE UNHURT} from less than three pounds at 36,000 says party to untons. CAMPAIGN PLAN PROFITEER GREED “313,%6 votes cast to-day is: fooled agai Concerning chances of winning the New York City election the statement elected Mayor Hylan. There are over 300,000 union members in and “daugtters who have votes. Add i members who do vhan he had. many havé been then?” ‘Having thus demonstrated to their own satisfaction that they oan take over the City Government, the spon- sors of the new party take @ look at fied and decide that they can “carry the United States.” the national The American Labor Greater New York came out to-day with what cirtually amounts to an open chellenge to Samuel Gompers and the American Federation of La- bor, as well as an attack on “the present anti-labor and anti-democ- racy Congress and Administration, which the A. F. of Ls, itself, now condemns.” Gompers and the Labor Federation have persistently refused to santion any independent Jabor party. policy, as outlined after the recent Washington conference, is non-par- tisan—to work for the defeat of any candidate on any ticket whom they belive has been unfriendly to tabor. ‘The anewer to this of the American Labor Party in circulars sent broad- “Don't wait and be New York. Party of ‘Their And wives not belong A labor party could have taken away from Hylan more votes Where would Tam- Tenants will be relieved from rent profiteering if a bill to be Introduced | by State Senator Dowling of Now| York is passed and enforced. The bill limits the amount which a land- lord can collect in rents to 10 per cent. of the actual value of the property: the actual value to be determined by valuation. The measure was drawn by Don Cartos Bue and Joseph A Crateer, The bill proposes to add an addi- tional pection to chapter 52 of the Laws of 1909, to provide that no con- tract for rental for residential pur- poses of any part in a tenement house as defined under the tenement house | law may be coditioned upom the pay- | ment of rent at a rate greater than value of said property, The measure further provides that the actual valué of a tenement house is presumed to be the valuation assessed for the pur- pose of taxation, plus 20 per cent. of such assessment. Provision is made for the prorating of any additional expense of operation or ma‘ntenance occurring subsequently to the execu- tion of the lease. It in further pro- vided that in every action or special proceeding to enforce any provision of @ contract of rental, the landlord must allege and prove that such con- tract Is not in violation of the pro- visions of this act. A contract in v'o- lation of the act is not void, but the tenant {8 entitled to the excess of rental and the landlord is declared to be guilty of a misdemeanor, pun- ishable by a fine not exceeding $1,000, UAKY adding 20 per cent. to the assessed | 10 per cent. of the net of the actual! Biggest Rep Delegates Prepared une Bren Provides a Reni Limit of 10 Per Cent. of Praperty’s Value. | | =i Miss ELISABETH MARBURY. This State Blazes Way, So Otheis May Follow and Accord New Voters a 50-50 Division of Seats and Voice at San Francisco—Murphy Credited With — Political Sagacity as Well as Fairness and Gallantry. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. this country women have been riven absolutely fifty-tifty rep- Y. Wendirats GiveWomen F°t the first time in the history of) feet to 14.7 pounds at sea level] This conclusion is reached us fol- or fy one year's imprisonment, crushed the gasoline tanks on his|!ows: doth. The act provides that it shall plane and caused tham to collapse, “The total vote in the Presidential not apply after Dec. 31, 1923. besides jolting Major Schroeder to| election of 1916 was 18,528,743. One- ee his senses. third of this is 6,142,914. ‘That is Major Schroeder was dressed| Within a few thousand votes of what CITY POOR BENEFIT heavier than any Polar explorer who | Wilson received in 1912, when there ever set forth. He literally was|were three big parties in the field. wrapped in flexible electric heaters. His flying suit was lined with the fur of Chinese Nuchwang dogs, and be- tween the fur and outer lining, flexi- bie electric heat units, connected by silk covered wires with the dynamo of the engine, heated the entire suit. Chamberlain Divides Profits Into Milk and Ice Funds, The American Federation of Labor. ‘The railway brotherhoods. . . Unaffiliated uniong (at least): Cily or BY “SURPLUS” SALES! Berolsheimer resentation on the “Big Four" from Now York, named for the National Convention of one of the two great | Political partis. The Democratic Party of New York ‘by appointing Miss Blisabeth Mar- | bury and Miss Harriet May Mills as two of its four delegates at large, with Mrs. Maurice E. Connolly and Miss Nettie M. Hewitt as two of the four alternates, once more has made In a ke manner his headgear, © City Chamberlain Philip Berols-| the Empiro State, the first great mloves and moccassins were heated. heimer, as Chairman of the Mayor's| Eastern State to enfranchise women, Major Schroeder wore an oxygen Market Special Surplus Committee sent|a pioneer 4n giving women a square mesk of his own design. to-day to Health Commissioner Cope-| deal, land ‘a check for $10,000 for free milk for the convalescent 25,000 to the Mayo Higedinardooet and oor, One, G jeving Over Mother's Death, Meged to Have Confesned. When three jobbers were arraigned #40000 to the Mayors Free % to-day in Jefferson Market Court mittee charged with having stolen property in thelr possession, detectives told how they had found one of them in his Brooklin home grieving over the death of his mother und alleged that, sur- prised under these circumstances, Mor- ORPHAN ASYLUM CONCERT. A concert and reception under the di- reetion of Mme. Florita Rogovoy will be given to-night at the 7ist Regiment Ar- mory, 34th Street and Fourth Avenue, for the benefit of the Isarael Orphan Asylum of this city. The programme, according to Mme. Rogovoy, will cons' of entertainment by stare of the concert | world, and dancing. followed by an in- 2 us from the sales of army accumulated from "small turned over to th Edwin J. O'Malley, Markets. Tho Berolshelmer committee to da! Commissioner formal supepr te city, Btate and Gov- [ris Brown of ae 973 Dumont Avenue 999 gurplus, The Board of Education| “Equal representation, tifty- Atty) ernment oficials, who will be guests. said sobbingly that he “must tell the recently. recelved $15,000 for aenemie | represe: . * ‘Among those who have accepted invita: |truth” and implicated the others, eer tose Bose and the Slarone | ee eee: wnat Ameren tions are Gov. Smith, Gen. John J.| ‘The men arraigned with Brown, whose Coal Committee received $25,000 for| women voters want,” Miss Rose O’Ryan, Francis M. Hugo and Abraham $. Shomer, playwright A tew of the entertainers who will plave of business {s at No, 168 Eldridge Street, are Henry Warshow and Mor- ulman, each with an office at free coal for the poor. The Market Spectal Surplus Commi! a check for Committee on check for Tce Com- the funds are part of the sees. 000 food: has appropriated §125,000 of the $300,- tee at its present meeting adopted rules The action of the Democratic Party is in shining contrast to that of the Republican arty in New York, which, not content with shoving Sen- Cd alter! one woman Arthui e—Mrs. te} Livermore, Young, editor of he Woman Citizen, ta|the organ of the great pan partisan me. Shomer 3 Broadway. overning disbursements which must! League of Women Voters, which has Rothenberg, kow ne Yvette Gull ugh the adimlasions af Brown, $6 complied with by all aub-committess gue of Women Voters, bert of Jewish foi ives Connelly and Stephens sav, recelving donations, ‘The rulea require | Just held its frat congress in Chi- assisting at p e has been recovered $7,000 worth stringent supervision and accounting of | cago, told me t fahan, “Hans ‘Kronold, Isia ‘Seligman, ‘ot the $10,000 lot of sii Iinings stolen all, funds disbursed and monthly re:| “Tho. Democra ‘arty of New Russlan pianist, and the famous Chailff ,on Jan from the loft of Morgenstern ports of, same subject te the scrutiny | York iq to congratulated most dancers. & Brill, 0, 26 West 17th Street. of the Commissioner of Accounts, heartily’ for taking the right track How Property of ‘Golden Rule’ Landlord Compares With Its Neighbors on Both Sides of the Street Apartment Houses on South Side of West 106th Street, From Columbus Avenue to Manhattan Avenue. on this question, for breaking the road. I only hops the Democratic and the Republican Parties in other States, will follow the exampto of New York Democrats, but, so far, such a just representation of women stands alone. I saw the other day that Iowa had elected four women delegates and ten alternates from its Congressional | @ | “ia j a] a districts, and 1 undg ratana tat Mia- are " or a as sourd has a plan for fi -fifty repre- OWNER OF HOUSE eae 4 Hae | 2 [sentation or women at the National | #8 | she] Hy 3 288 ef ventions, But New York has |_& pene & o x E} blazed the trail in naming just Kelly, “Golden Rule Land: | 1 / many women delegates at large and lives on premises;-refuses to raise | SATA LS. 08 Te re, penis: sakes profit. 6 sees] 68 | 8 | 818,000) 8417.60) Yes) Yes | 5 $30 uhoula' he elected ae omen Bures manuel Finsterer, i | 3 hours) \ belleve that we have in this country 59 Bess ee Steet eeee fiat aivas 70 | 8 | $23,000) $533.60) Nojat night) 5/830, $29, $27 | women of intelligence, women with @ an inkle, care of BE. B. Van definite political contribution and Winkle, 156 West 72d Street. | 68 | 6 | $20,000) $464.00) No| No 5 $35, how can they make !t unless they are Julia F. Maylor, lives on premises. | 62 10 | 820,000] $464.00! No| No & | $30 and 824 | given equal representation with men Theresa M. Ruckert and others. 60 15 | 826,500) $614.80) No} Yes and 5) $25 and 622 [© such bodios as the National Con- Sol. Kahn, 128 West 115th Street | 38 | 12 $626.40! No| Yes and 61690 00 e626 | Yontona? Why should these women William Born, lives on premises | 80 | 10 8580.00| No| No 5 27 play a Be reppeneniad) Uy John H. Muller, 617 West 46th Street.. ss} 0 No 5 fieailtimes iu Whaei we want oie kee oe ———— — _ ended 7 Apartment Houses on North Side of Ws t 106th From Columbus Avenue to Central Park W: Rad i representation is the eee si a a that eae! ne Katherine Kultenbach Estate, care of U j Aye (red Gf complimentary ApROInE: Kultenbach, premises... . oo | 10 #580.00/Yes! Yes —|Yes! 6 ments. How a n represented Eliza Klsppert, 8714 Beaufort Avenue, | | | | for example, of thelr Morris Park, L. I. (67 and 65, 15 1160. 00\Yes Yes —|Yes\6 and 7/860, 852, $48 Rosie Loeweth, 314 West 87th Street... 63 and 61, 24 (105,000 82,436.00) Yes} Yes Yea |Yes\6 and 7/$110 to 865 fF 58 to 59 West 106th Street, corporation,|53 and 55 16 and, | Saline te. VEE ail By duper oN SN 1476 Broadway 37 und 59 stores| $98,000 82,273.60\Yes) Yes | Yes volving the woman's point of view. Galatheo Realty Co., 20 L awton Avenue, Avenue, st Washington Market 5land 49) 10 $90,000.82, 088. 00) Yes| and 6/865 and $50 Katherine Kraft, 15 Waterbury Avenue, | Richmond Hill. 23 10 | 988 000) $765. eo Nee) 7 = |865 and 850 Pombalho Realty Co., care Stoddard & |Yes|s and 6650, 840, @35 | { there Is one vote, for and ninete against. Is thut fair representation?” 66TY® you believe women will play a really important part in the National Conventions Mark, 128 Broadw: 19and17, 20 | g68,000/81, 577. 60] Yea| Yes Yes |Yes 6 and 7 itr, 065, 660 jtnis year?” I aaked Miss Young. Katherine B. Meeban, care George Mee-| | | year leases | saney will if enough reprpsentative han, 92 Reade Street... 10 | 882,500, 8754.00/Yes) Yes —|Yes} 6 | 845 and #38 : a oe | Joseph W. Stinson, 156 Fifth Avenue. ..|15 fee 13} 20 | $54,000181,252.80, Yes! Yes Tlyes] 6 eae, #30, 937 | WOME Are sent," sho replied conf. | Charles Hoass, 55 East 193d Street.....| 11 10 | $29,000) $672.80) al Yes | You [Yoo] 6 | 945 and $65 dently. “Wo always have had « fow Charles Hoass, 55 East 193d Street. | 9 10 | $29,000) 8679.80\Yes| Yes | Yeu |Yes! 6 |850 and $39 | women delegates from the States that Charles Hoass, 55 East 193d Street. t 5 | $23,000| $533.60\Yes! Yes | Yes (Yes! 7 5|have had Suffrage a long time, and New York apartment dwellers of the) city were startled this week by read- ‘ing of @ landlord who absolutely re- | fused to raise rents, as he was making landlords on West 106th Street were charging and to learn how they were adjusting their rentals on the basis of the assoased value of their property, the same as Kelly, an Evening World The canvass showed that in man: that the policy of the landlord was t didn't like tt to get out. | vantages. ‘The table shows that on the south side of the street Kelly's house is the only one heated, with hot water and having any conveniences to apeak of. Despite this fact, with the exception of two houses, Nos, 60 and 66, the rent apartment house at No. 66 West 106th as the rest. Street. He gives his tenants five good| sized, bigh ceiling zooms, steam heated | with hot water and soon electric lights will be in all apartments. He charges $30 a month for all this and now $50 and and . telephoo which formerly existed No assessments on the hor hav 1885, 880, 87 cases there was no fixed charge, bul get all he could, and if the tenant Tenants at Nos. 49 and 51 satd that | country, rents there formerly $35 and $45 are | it,” said 5, without the elevator | plank for the switchboard service, this year there shoukl be many more y|than ever before. Women ought to be given equal repr tion on the Platform Committee and the other important committees In some of | Women have planks they would like & fair profit under the rents he was) esporser made S CANVASS of tae #irest the povees tenets coed pring seer t into the party platforms.” e .| between Columbus Avenue ans n- | Apa: en were paying $10 to 5 hat are they?” I inquired, “Miss PORTE Tne Leen [ene neal tral Park West. different rent. The newcomer, forced | Mills, one of the two ‘Big Four’ This canvass, as shown by the ac-|out of his former home, being |gates, said y jay that if the themselves. Just to get even, this|/companying table, shows that of the |charged all he would stand |Democvats wanted women to come | "Golden Rule Landlord” immediately | twenty-eight apartment houses in the| ‘There was but one elevator apart-| out for them, they had only to give started installing electric lights for|tW° blocks the rent charged by Kelly |ment on the two blocks, at Nos. the women what they want. What is 4s by far the lowest of all giving the|and 68, and the only employees’ |that?” them, same conveniences. In some cases|charges were for janitor service. In| “I believe a plank favoring equal The landlord is George C. Kelly,| twice the rent is charged for apart-|other words, the cost of running and | representation of women at all times owner of a four-story, eight-family | ™men's giving identically the same ad-| maintenance was the same to Kelly | and in all places would be immensely popular with the women voters of this adopted believe a whioh ever party Miss Young. “I abolishment sure constitutional metho labor, would be a woman's e "Other measures of nati says he gets a fair income out of his! charged by him equals, and !n some|been made by the city since 1910, portance for which the League of investment. [cases is lower, than charged in the | outside of for lees than $20 for @ Women Voters has declared Itsalf are To ascertain what rents the other ' othera, . 'oower in | she adhesion of the United States to »|whd'Was President of our State Suf ator Wadsworth down the throats of - women voters whose enfrunchise- stuts last summer. ‘This surplis was | re Women voters whose enfranc Profita and ment he so long and #0 bitterly op-)It is the shrewdest sort of politics, jal committee by posed, placed on its “Big Four’ just Whereas the Republicans have done resentation as to Convention tive and friendly co-operation be- | tween our Government and people | and the Mexican Government and/ ‘ople, free speech, free press and! bre: representation, training for American citizenship, just civil ser- vice laws, opposition to compulsory military training and approval of | compulsory physical training for both | sexes from the ages of six to eighteen. Women,” concluded Miss Young, “if their votes are to count for an: thing at all after being won, must get into the parties, demand repre- sentation, demand office and see to tt that truly representative women, not merely politcal henchwonten for rome man, are put in positions where they can make the women’s Influence felt. | Any other course for women voters 1s simply dodging the full duties of citizenship.” HE widely known historian of the | Woman Suffrage movement, Mrs. | Ida Husted Harper, also assured | me that the Democrats of New York | have led the way in giving women | fifty-fifty ropresentation as delegates | at large, “I am glad that such recog- nition was shown the women,” she | declared, “although I must say I think | it is a little too soon for them to de- mand it, in view of their lack of! political experience. “But Mr. Murphy has shown him self 100 per cent. more clever than the New York Republicans. On the ‘Big Four’ he has placed Miss Mills, fraxe Association, and Miss Marbury, whom everybody has grouped with the anti-Suffragists and their friends. everything in their power to get the women down on them. ‘During our last campaign, when we won the vote in this State, mor. than half our district chairmen re- ported that it was the Republican machine which they had to fight { jtooth and nail. And we lost up-State | —which is Republican—and carried our amendineat by the overwhelming jvote of New York City, which u Democratic. Mr. Murphy could have Killed it by turning down his thumb, Dut we went to him before our cam- jpalgn and he said he would keep his hands off. So far as we know, he did {1 am non-partisan and as much op- posed to Tammany as to the corrupt Republican machine, but those are the facts. Women always have had the Republican Party and its leaders aainst them in the State of Now York.” STEKS DEATH AF PLACING PHOTO OF HSBINDON NER cesta, {Young Bride of Canadian Sol- dier Shoots Quarrel With Mate. Self After Mrs. Irene Tays, eigtteen, of Me. | 1104 Broad street, lat the point of death in a Newark hospital because her husband, Leland failed to kiss her when he left Heme , yesterday morning to look for ajo - Newark, is to-@ay The couple were married last Oe tober in Toronto just after Tays fe turned from overseas, where he Bad + served with throughout the war. the Canadian troops, Thero had been a family tiff, eg@ leave his wife, When the husband fai for , she decided to die. @he took her husband's picture, serine him in uniform, and tiedit about n she wrote a note te SI saying that sho loved bim, could live without him and knew that he did not love her. the picture about her neck when she was buried. neck. Th Irene, brooded over thin 4 to return She begged him to With her husband's service revol-« e Increased Demand for Qur Candy has induced us to build a new fae tory which will provide newer and better’ facilities for a greater out- put of the confections which we have popularized. Watch our daily announcements for sweetmeats of the better kind offered at lowest prices possible. the League of Nations with the feast ver, Mrs. Tays then fired a builet jast possible delay, a policy of construc: |above her heal MILLER’S SEVEN CONVENIENT STORES a! t ere, Crocwery. Meeracttn oe! me pudenda” Cuts Rubber leather, Kinds, SE MAJORS: OS MENT alt Ibe Et. Fe ‘or ~thats why I prefer HO" , | “141-O oat. food is one of the nourishing | most invalids and wel | “Steam - cooking foods for people too. t the mille, | makes it perfectly digestible, “ And its double-toasted flavor tempts the laziest appetite, (signed) The steam-~cooked and double-toasted OAT-FOOD Lhe Rurae jae Se a ‘sient oo ere eed | { |

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