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to South Dakota; and fo, of Calltom ge a “dat, be sald, Have Sole Charge of Canvass ing W “Delegates and ; Men Delegates. ‘know thow| ‘The work of me. SO Shegeten hae been { practiéally turned over to the women’s organizations by ‘the national managers of the various candidates, Probably the first women’s organi- mations to take up seriously plans for ‘thetr candidates’ prope- through the wives of the dele- gates wore the Wonrn's Lowden . | League of Illinois, headed by Mrs. Frederick A, Loren: aud the Women's division of the Lowden Campaign Committee, of which Mrs. Fletcher Dobyns {8 (Chairman, ‘The latter body, which claims a mémbership of ‘hey were tak- ver- af set i £ EF Mrs, Benjamin F. Langworthy, has taken over & ‘boilding near the Coliseum which will be known as the Jobnaon, | “Hoover House.” At that place women he said, “That the | delegates and delegates’ wives will be ‘Wag the limit for the Johns00 | omtemained, Voluntoer workers for vatitage point in ait wutomobile at a busy corner and display to:the crowds ® series of posters containing short sentences laudatory to Hoover. Mra. ©, C. Pavey of Columbus, Ohio, is head of the Harding-for-President ‘Woman's Club, This organization will uarters in. the Congress headq ‘Hotel. Mrs. Payey and her co-work- ers have found ‘the telephone superior other methods in. getting in with women whom seek to in their candidate, | and tena; chante. tee Witham 'G. McAdoo. not know whether in aii the country. adjoins the in the Congress Brought Out Revolver—His Pather Aryested. tello, five years old, of No. String Up Dammy, Matthow Pluhar, President of the ted ‘Textile Workers’ Union, night vored te “go on atrike dpe aemreen omemareneremreeer ¢ $12,300 RENTAL FOR com oye F. Bolan. | jacent Lie ewd a4 & scarecrow, alo sent it. ; a We ——— Inepector of the Sia~| Many Sall om Adriatic To-Day, ya ‘Tne White Star Line's Adriatic salls 1 edie Usa aOR this afternoon for Cherbourg and Mange Self in Apartment | So . Among the passengers vy Mouse. will be Charles A. Btone, President of early to-day Bert | the American International Corporatio: y Ray ed Avenue, the my w the. Hinwlish Boxer Mr Welking wpstaire tn en} Jane id the iumphs ey Davy Roileston, _——— a , WIM Bring Reliet to Central Kurope. om Brtdmes) Albert Weiss, a wealthy real extate wi td i gece man of Yorkville, Was appointed by anor ‘S| Mayor Hylan yester¢ay a Trustee of ; Witen a Park ow bound Court] ing College of the City of New York, ok while cross: | to, succeed Col. Landecker, yj Pedted to start for Londonderry to- Street and o k Cap an Ender the seat of the car Accenirhelio-~daswt OO COOPER UNION GRADUATION. ¥ due’ Two Constables Killed in Lat- est Sinn Fein Attack— More Troops Sent. stables were burned to death in a wing of the barracks set fire by a band of more than 100 men. Ten constables were in the bar- Tacks when @ fusillade of riffes gave the first indication of an attack. The Sinn Feiners were stationed at win- dows of nearby houses, Bombs éontaining burning of and Paraffin were thrown upon the roof of the barmacks, setting fire to one wing in which Constables Keane and Morton were ‘endeavoring 26 fight off « mob that attempted to break through the door, Hoth men were severely wound- 4 and were unable to escape. Their charted bodies were found in the ruins of the burned wing of the barracks. Reinforcements were sent to Kill- ™mallock, but arrived after the at- tackers had withdrawn. An airplane flew about the barracks all last aight, Marching orders have been tesued for troops at Aldershot and other points in England and these forces were ex- day. ° Premier Lloyd-George presided at & Calyinet conference last night at which it was understood drastic ac- tion to cope with Irish disorders was decided upon. Flying 66lumne of ‘cavairy have been sent to Killmaliock. A motor- ¢ycle corps has also been organized et Kings- town last night. Army lorri have been rushed to Dubin ger, No. 208 Mast 2th Street; Baward Burke, twenty-one, unemployed, No. 2129 Lexington Avenue; Louis Jacobson, twenty-two, unamployed, No, 300 Tenth ty- Btreet, Pot desta Pag five, au! 3 Walter iT = ‘mechanic Nor 82 nti er igi Wat Mitts Buren to the Wetectives, priate ity ¢ were selling for $400 A bl ight were Tend —— Diplomas Awarded to 269 and Cer- tiflentes te 75 Others, { Ff Sete dvess was giver ey, Commissioner of ae, State, , Director ‘ted the degrees Lif XNNBROOK, L. 1, May 29.—At a special meeting of the entire school dis- trict bere last evening it was voted to Heuutgctive, penn tet the erection ot hid ve 2 new Hig! hoo! Builds: bvullding, Me is eald, will byt ors be one of the (inest on the south shore of Long Island. A FRUIT STAND ON BROOKLYN BRIDGE City Gets Record Price for 107 Square Feet in Manhattan Terminal, What is believed by Grover A. ‘Whalen, Commissioner of Plants and Structures, to be the highest rental ever paid for similar space, was bid yesterday by Pericles Gianopoulos for the use of the little triangle back of the police booth (approximately 107 square feet) on the promenade floor at the southwest corner of the Man- hattan terminal of the Brooklyn Bridge. The space is to be used, Qs now, for a stand for the sale of soda water, fruit, candies, Cigars, periodicals, &c. The price ‘Did iv $12,300 a year, the lease to expire Aug. 1, 1821. The lessee, who now maintains the stand there, paid $5,004 rental for it last year, The city furnishes nothing but the floor apace. EVENI Bi] socks and neckwear. 4 w 4 3 * 4 N. poss oll ‘OC ents in Great Debate ING BOMBS dat; Federation SHALL ALL BE SAMUBL.6OMPERS ve shot COMPELLED TO LABOR, FOR, a socuery ! QUESTION 1S THE DIVINE, RIGHT OF aRDER, QUESTION THE RIGHT, OF THE MAN TO GO ON STRIKE — WHAT WE me GoM PERS TO HIM TO GO ON STRIKE! Gov: +HENR ht to Strike”, % ALLEN SOOTHSAYER SEES THRONES SET UP ALL OVER EUROPE Noted Hungarian Prophetess De- clares Also Next War Will Begin in Mexico, BUDAPEST, May 29. ITARTLING prophecies rela- tive to world peace and po- litical changes impending tn Europe are made by Hungary's national soothsayer, Mme. Sybil- Une Béllaugh. She says: “Thrones will be re-established all over Burope, including France, Germany, Austria, Poland and Hungary, within a year, The Hohenzollerns will return to Germany, but the former Em- @Mercr will go maane and the ‘Crown Prince will be murdered. “There will be sanguinary up- ‘hheavals in France preliminary to the conetitution of a kingdom. Bolshevism will end in 1921 tn , Russia, Mexico will be the start- ing point of the next war. “High prices will abate and European exchange will be quoted at par in two years. There will be the greatest exodus of Jews from Russia and Central Burope in history; they will hot go to Palestine, but to Argentina VIEWS OF TWO GREAT DEBATERS ON RIGHT OF LABOR TO STRIKE ‘The debate between Gamuel Gompers and Gov. Allen of Kansas at Carnegie Hall last night was @ quiet affair until near the close, when disorder developed and the speakers were repeatedly interrupted. Some of the priticipal points made by the speakers were as follows: Mr, Gompers says: ‘Unions of workers are nob trusts, None of their achieve- ments in behalf of workers or society at large can be con- fused with the selfish and per- niclous activities of such illegal combinations, All the efforts of old to sup- press by law, or edict, the strug~ gle of a people for their uplift have failed, The man who will not struggle to bring about a better day for himself dnd his dependents and those who follow is a poltroon. Liberty is the right of a man to owe himself to do what best conserves his interests and wel- fare. y There ie but one ground upon which any justification may be assumed to tie men to their jobs and make strikes unlawful; that is the Confession that republican institutions ‘have failed, ~ Make what law you will to out- law strikes but depend upon it, and Mexico. FARE BOOST PLEA_ | OF I. R. T. IN COURT) Nixon Ordered to Produce Data | Basing His Decision Turning | Down Request. On complaint of James L. Quacken- bush, counsel for the Interborough Rapid Transit Company, Supreme Court Justice. Giegerich to-day issued a writ of certiorar! directing Public Service Commissioner Nixon to send up for re~ view @ certified copy of the data upon which he based his decision that he was powerless to pass upon the Inter- borough's request for mermission to in- crease its fare, STEAL SILKS WORTH $3,000. Police It became known to-day that $3,000 worth of goods were stolen between last Saturday night and Monday morning from the haberdashery of R. W. Bennett at No, 814 Manhattan Avenue, Bhooklyn, A hole ‘was out through the floor. Most of the goods taken were silk shirts, silk ‘The store ia a block and a half from the Greenpoint Police Station and a few doors from the store of I. Horowitz, which was robbed of $10,000 worth of goods in the same manner recently. — COURT CLERK IN CONTEMPT. Fatied te Comply With Mandamus to Issue Dispossess Notices, Supreme Court Justice Faweett in Brooklyn to-day adjudged James W. Twomey, Clerk of the Seventh Munic!- pal Court, In contempt of court for his failure to comply with a writ of manda- mus, signed by Justice Faweett, dircet~ Ing the clerk to issue disposseas notices to three families occupying apartments at No, 1650 Pitkin Avenue, This action was taken on complaint of Milton Herz, atterney for the No. 1660 Pitkin Avenue Construction Com- Bast New York. Herz also ac- it will be futile. ‘The right to exercise the nor- mal and natural right to stop work, is one for which we con- tend. Gov. Allen says: The Kansas Industrial Court Law does not forbid to any man the right to quit work. We have not taken away from any man his divine right to quit work. We merely have taken away from Mr. Gompers his divine right to order -@ man to quit work. Many of our miners last wine ter did not want to strike. Many @aid they wanted to go back, but somehow they had lost that boasted liberty which the dis- tinguished President of the American Federation of Labor base told us about to-night. And we are oriticized because we say in behalf of the sub- merged nine-tenths between cap!- tal and organized labor that they sball have protection, Capital hag rights, labor has its rights, but above all are the rights of the public, ‘When we passed our Industrial Court Bill labor called it com- pulsory servitude and capital called it State Socialism. Labor ‘wanted a law with teeth only in the upper jaw. Capital wanted teeth in the lower jaw only. We gave them a law in the public interest with teeth in both jaws. WHEN EAST MEETS |ARMY OF BUYERS NEAR EAST—BLOOIE!/ ATTACKS FOOTWEAR Yee Ton Sandbagged, Robbed of $58 and Armenian and Turk Are Captured, Yee Ton keeps a laundry at No. 663 lith Avenue, and at 630 o'clock this morning, wp with the lark, he was mas- saging a shirt when two men entered ‘and presented a ticket. for laundry, As Yee Ton scanned the ticket—a bogus. one—one of the callers hit him on the head with a sandbag. ‘When Yee Ton pulled himself out of the wash some moments later he con- fronted William Horan, a new proba- jon cop. He found that his gold waten and chain, gold link cuff buttons and 958.52 had disappeared Horan chased two men along 434 Street to Tenth Avenue, They stopped after Horan had fired several shots and were locked up on charges of assault and robbery. Ye Ton identified them as hie assailants, Then men said they were Lewis Georg, a Turk, of No. 373 West 224 Street, and Sam Papoojis, an Armenian, of No, 442 West 46th Street. On the latter, according to the police, yor, foged fe cree severe ty! a Jashligint, e sandbag was found on the floor the laundry, The nilssing money and Jewelry were not found. The mandate of Magistrate Max S$, Levine in the West Side Court wan that the Turk the Armenian be held for examination on mext Tuesday in $10,000 bail each. Sane eT AUTO SPEEDERS PUNISHED. Deputy Secretaryot ite, an Magin- trate, SuspendsDriving Licenses. Violators of the anti-speed laws had a hard time: of it ¢o~day when Addison B, Parker, First Deputy Secretary of Stato, sat as a Magistrate tn the Crim- ‘mel Courta Building, Mr. Parker sus- pended for thirty days the motor driv- ing Heense of Joseph 8. Keough of No. $38 Bleecker Street, for three months patent th Homage to American Soldier Dead et Javigny. the American Committee for Devastated France has been asked by the American Legion o(- ficlally to represent it at a Momorial Day demonstration in the cemetery at Juvigny to-morrow, according to @ cablegram received ‘here to-day from ‘Miss Anne Morgan an@ Mrs. A. ML. Dike, tives of the American committe 9 demonstration, in honor of American poklier dead, will be participated m by French soldiers and elvilians, Mangin will conduct the services on the site of his own bat- thefield, > Late Pope's Sister Dena. rae 29.--Teresg Sarto, sister ‘ope Pious X, is dod that of Golomon Zisack of No. 1834 Madison Avenue, that of John Schneider of No. 817 EB Third Street for 60 da: and that of Rockwell Burraus of 570 West 1824 Street for 40 days. Schneider had werved five days in e ‘Tombs at the time of his arrest for speeding. He had refused to take to the hoaplt wo: he hed seriously fre net ar Diston Badare ead 18th Btiwer, Bik wht domly io, Straus Bank om Windsor, Hotel Site. S. W. Straus & Co. have leased the northeast corner at Fifth Avenue and 46th Street from Robert W. Goelet and a holdii ny for a long term of years and will bulla © ninesstory. bank: ing house costing §4,00( The plans are by Warren & Rui ore. The con- struction will begin as #00n as workmen have razed the remat < Windsor A whtta. wee ny AT BIGGEST SALE Big Dent Made in 900,000 Pairs of Shoes at Grand Central Palace, When the Lexington Avenue en- trance of the Grand Central Palace was opened this morning for the gi- gantic shoe sale of the Nemours Trad- ing Corporation there were 2,000 peo- ple in the waiting line that stretched back through East #5th Street to Depew Place. In the first hour of business more than 1600 pairs of shoes had péen sold and 8,000 people were waiting to be served. The corporation placed on sale 900,000 pairs of shoes of all kinds and sizes and styles. There were twenty booths, each as large as a city shoe store, wrappers and 40 cashiers, The pricts of the shoes for men and women ranged from §2 to $8 and those for children’s shoes from $1.50 to $260. No restriction was placed upon cus- tomers as to the number of pairs they might buy, and one fireman went out of the building with six pairs in his bundle. Customers were admitted at the Lexington Avenue entrance and made to go out by way of East 46th Street, were two watohmen in: pected all @uspicious bundles for fear that there might be an attempt to reduce the high cost of shoes otherwise than by paying a low price for them, cocemp=tsiolatprntininnenens GOV. SMITH SENDS CHECK. Contributes for Monument to Lower Bast Side Heroes. ‘The fund for the erection of a Bat- tery Park memorial to the boys of the lower ‘east side who gave their lives in the World War was increased to $650 to-day by the reosipt of Gov. Smith's check for $50. William A. ‘Thompson, secretary to Judge Malone and treas- urer of the fund, sald five of the thirty- n six young men resided within a stone's throw of the Governor's home. ‘The monument is to ‘be erected tn time for unveiling on Armistice Day, Nov. 11. It will cost about $2,000, The comimitiee hopes to get the Governor to deliver the add: ralgeaibinicnnionas “Quiet” Divorce Upheld, Answers of the Committees on Profes- sional Ethics of the New York County Lay Association to questions coa- cern! me the divorce parties live'in New York County uphers Pathe verses h bale — i nen NeW Kansas Governor \ PPT NEW YOR HAS Lost FOURTH OF FRE “TRE WS YEAR (Continued From iret Page) ! ! ‘actual and alarming is furnished by j Seures rélating to loaded freight cars berger eg compiled by the Port | an arbor Commission, These fig- [ures apply to 1918’ and preceding years. ’ Four of the leading trunk lnes ‘with terminals in New Jeracy han- ons 20 per cent. fewer incoming led freight care in the Months of 1918 than in the ‘Sponding ton months of 1916. same Farsighted, energetic busine men in other sea) or on the At- lantio com neo the fall- ports jane lag of of Mew York in at importance — lon: fore it apparent here. T! started ont’ te. -greb. business while the. ~wtae good. have led or pon- and en q ir facilities in tracted for ii more: thar x years. Poideiohia and Balti- largementé ring the period New York peweiy no’ ‘4m har- bor improvements design to at- tract or fagilitate the handling of freight. And it would not surprise longer the foremost po: but the third port in importance, lag- behind both Lendon and Liver- the Port handling Baltimore, Norfolk and New Orleans, where direct contact between the railroads and the ships !s accomplish- ed by means of railroad tracks ©: pliers, cannot be used here; that .t! expensive lighterage system and the criminally wasteful plan of collect~ ing Oveari freight by here because with 260 salesmen and | Mi necessary New York is « harbor of islands. If this be vital then New Yo: might ki her foreign and oa ports, gaining are rapid; b New York ie rapidly losing It te claimed that the terrific d of commerce from New this time is tl ce But the fact remains that New York lost commerce in 1915, 1916 and 1917, when there were no strikes, just as steadily as she has lost commerce © under a succession of strike urbances. Investigation by the Port and Com- merce ion has covered every phase of the trucking situation in New York. Trained observers em- loyed by the commission rode on all Tonme of horsedrawn and motor trucks day in fo day out over a riod of mont! Pemhess men were provided with charts on which they traced the course of the truck to which they were assigned from the time it was taken out in the morning until it was turned in at night. The work was not always done with the knowledge of the driver. Thousands of charts were turned in showing the time spent by trucks in loading, unload- ing, standing idle or moving. The commission will not reveal the analy- is made from this comprehensive vestigation in advance of its re- port but {t is safe to say that the report will reveal New York's truck- ing system as about the most waste- ful industrial operation in the world. ‘The preliminary report of the com- mission gives the result of a six-day watch put on @ certain two-horse truck serving a Manhattan concern which prides itself on its up-to-dateness and efficiency. During the time it was under operation the truck carried on an average only 28 per cent. of a load and made only 36 per cent. of the distance possible and its efficiency was only 10 per cent. —_—— NEW YORK SHIPPING FORCED ELSEWHERE WILL STICK THERE “Better labor conditions in Baltimore and its more efficlent handling of freight and “its better docks will per- manently hold much of the business which has been diverted there from «on account of the strike.” New SE Welling, Secretary of C.D. allory & Co., Inc, who run @ steam- ship line to the Mediterranea: ‘Spney. have far better piers in Bal- timore than we have here,” he con- . “They do not have lighters. Riven pe Yo do there is to run your cars out onto the piers and they are unloaded directly into the ships. The railroad companies own the piers and a sare put up by the cl fey of them, “grain elevators are being erected there ‘better ‘any we have re in New York. hers tppers have.experienced such dit- feulty in getting their freight througn here that "a good many of, them ary Eforoughly disgusted. Cars have stood on sidings in| New Jersey while the Shippers’ credits have expired and their fargoes have missed sailing after sail- ing. i sequence is they have tried Baltimore’ and Philadelphia and found the service cheaper and quiccer. And you can bet ur bottom dollar they rr ing to “No faiuimer ris steady and re- Mable whereas here we have a ver: strong foreign element with Bolshevil and unrellable tendencies, There jongshoremen own thelr homes and live near thelr work / they have unions but you never hear ‘of a strike there. “One reason why Baltimore ts so ef- ficient ie ita bees : semoarss and Bx- ports, w! evs LJ entire time te ne tages of Baltimore ‘a port, Concrete results are attend- its efforts for the Municipal Gov- ernment under consideration a rogramme for extensive pier building. Govand a doubt Baltimore will get a jarge share of New York's export busi- YC G, Grimn, ‘Traffic Manager for tne “Globe ‘Line; whieh operates ships er ports, wala: fro dave no doubt New York will Tone much by this strike. 1 understand ex- porters are opening offices in Philadel- phia and are settling down there for a steady and permanent business. This strike has been an eye-opener in so far as it has shown business men they get better service in Philadelphia. There they don’t have to bother with the te- dious nt expensive ligtherage #ys- tem. 8 are #0 constructed cars are unloaded directly Into the ships, ch “i jong handie freight hy é on etm, oa Gietlaine wnt we nny! lager a s%, Se SEeeee ee roads received: in the. first t months of 19 vent, more loaded freight. cans im the cor-’ responding months of 1! ™ . in Philadekphia, | GLASS LOOMS WP AS WILSON OIE TO HEAD TOKE (Contynued From Furst Piste) ‘who will be the Domocratic ne wives, The principle held good when Gepub Nean Presidents were In office ang it holds wood to-day. It ts that the man In thé White Hons yoke ithe nominee of his party There ig this difference, Lowers #his year: It ts that Mr. Witgon hi self is embarrassed by the fact {his son-in-law is an aspirant for th Office, and also that most of the othe: fesndidates are of hin branch of the ; Democratic jodge.. Mr, Wilsop inay mot exactly pick a man, but he can véto the cholce of any one who doesn't subscribe to his principles. Much talk of Vice Prevident Mar- *Tehell is heard; but"that speech whiéh the latter made fn Indiana was not sufficiently “pro-League” and “pro treaty” to'earn the coratal approval of the Incumbent of the White House. Similarly, Bryan and Edwards haven't subscribed with undying fervor to the principles of the covenant and the treaty framed by Woodrow Wilson. Senator Oscar Underwood of Ala-| bama is well liked by the President j and unquestionably his selection as Democratic leader in the Senate was pleasing te Mr, Wilson. By conserv- atives in the Democratic Party he !s looked upon as a dark horse, He re- tains much of the strength which he had in 1912, But Presidential favor seems to be Unlikely to descend on any but those who absolutely pledge their afl on the Wilson treaty stand. The hidden but effective politica hand of the White House reaching out through scores of Federal office holders and stanch Wilson men to the delegates of the convention itself will veto those who haven't the nerve to embrace the Wilsonian doctrine on the League and peace treaty as enun- Giated in the platform of Virginia Democrats. Thus far it would seem that the following are eligible for the Democratic nomination from the Wil- on standpoint: 1, John W. Davis of West Virginia, Ambassador to Great Britain. His name was recently presented to the public by the New York Times—aa unprecedented action for that news paper to take. Though one Adminis. tation Democrat humorously ro- marked that the praise given Am. bassador Davis by that consisten: critic of the Wilson Administration, former Attorney General James M Beck, was enough to make Democrats suspicious, there is nevertheless a friendly feeling for the American Am bassador in White House circles, It would u.* be surprising, Indeed, to see President Wilson favor Mr. Da sis if he favors anybody. The American Ambassador is a remarkable orator and @ great lawyer. Supreme Court Justices, it is whispered, say he ts the best lawyer who has argued before the highest court in the land tn taiv generation. 2. Gov. Cox of Ohio is in good favor at the White House. He has expressed hiuself on the treaty ques- tion in terms favorable to the Wlison viewpoint, The general feeling bere is that while Mr. Cox would make on excellent man to head the ticket, the party may draft him in the end for the Vice Presidency. 8. Senator Carter Glass |s the kind of Democrat who comes within the Wilson category of “patriotic men who know how to serve their country and mankind.” The fact that he comes from Virginia is of course no obstacle in Mr, Wilson's eyes, because ‘the President is a Virginian by birth. 4. Secretary David Franklin Hous- ton is another White House favorite He thinks along the same lines that President Wilson does. He 1s cred- ited with being the President's con- stant adviser on economic and inter- national questions, He isn’t spectac- ular or dramati¢, however, and is of the quiet tyne that doesn't magnetize. politically speaking. Charlies RB. Crane, Minister to China and an- other one of the inner circle at the White House, used to talk of Secre- tary Houston as best qualified for the Presidency. If left to a civil service examination, Mr. Houston would probably win the nomination bands down. To these names should be added Attorney General Palmer and former Secretary McAdoo as men to whose respective candidacies the President has already said he would have no objection, But it is hardly likely that Mr. Wilson will ever express a pre! erence between these two men for reasons best k.own to himself. His Influence will go toward the man w can in his judgment make the best campaign for the League of Nations end vindleation of the Wilson pol cies. Cordon &Dilworth ORANGE MARMALADE Se Authorized Exchange Dealers NEW AND USED BUICKS Glidden Motor & Supply Co. 239 West 58th St. DIED. KILDAY.—FRANK, OAMPBELL FUNE- RAL CHURCH, Sunday, 1 P. M. KING.—ELLIOTT H., suddenly satur- day, May 29, at his home, 2021 Ditmag’ Avenue, Brooklyn Funeral notice hereafter. NEWELL-—FRANK, CAMPBELL NERAL CHURCH, Sunday, 8 P. af FANNIE, CAMPBEUt FU