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| i FORMED ON RUINS wee mm OL SMASH OLD FU NEW CENTRAL BODY Wild Meeting at Which Fists and Chairs Are Freely and Vigorously Used. VICTORY FOR GOMPERS. Radicals Opposed Consolida- tion and Hostility Born During War Is Crushed. Several local labor union leaders are | “pursing blackened eyes to-day, and af least ong has a broken nose, as a re=; sult of riotous scenes, but the Central! Vederated Union of Manhattan and the Central Labor Union of Brooklyn; ve been “scrapped,” & new Centya!! ‘Trades and Lubor Council of New York and vicinity erected on the ruins and & decided setback given to the radical element in the Federation of Labor. Trouble marked the meeting at the Central Opera House in East 67th MRS JKENT WHETEN. Many Surprises Likely in Total Street last night from the start. ‘The of Ballots to Be Printed radical element in the C. F. U. opposed : the consolidation plan. No secret has Monday. been made of the fact that this was designed to offset the radical tendency of the Manhattan organization and their defiance of national leaders in supporting the separate Labor Party movement, ‘The call for the meeting incladed every union affiliated with the A. F. All ballots for American Beauties World Monday. A few changes took compiled, s i _THE received at this office by noon to-day will be counted in the grand total, which will be printed in The Evening place in to-day’s reckoning, but ft is expected that there will be some surprises when the final total ia The results of the contest, and also a number of pictures submitted [ENRIGHT GUIDED _EVENING wos tp, aasuapay, SEPTEMBER 11, 1920. This Is the Last Day of the Contest ~ To Pick America’s Prettiest Girls _NOE BRT. CARS RUN AS UNION MEN SEK SETLEMENT Through Service to Coney on Brighton, Sea Beach, Culver and West End Lines. Continued improvement marks the | service of the B. R. T. system, while the strike leaders aro hoping for something to happen witch will bring about a situation enabling the men to return, The service of the elevated and subway wan almost normal ail through the night and the Park Slope and Flatbueh-Seventh Avenue lines ‘were operated until midnight, with- out @ sign of violence or sabotage. To-night the Flatbush Avenue line | will be operated between the barns and Borough Hall. Receiver Garrison is out of town for the week end, but he sald yester- day that there would be no additional lines put into operation until the pres- ent abreviated service is perfected ‘stem thoroughly established. clock this morning 185 trains, comprising {909 cars, were runring over the ele- vated and subway tracks. On the sur- face 61 lines with 737 ours continue to be operated. Four lines have been carrying pas- sengers from Coney Island right through to Manhattan since yester- day, exclusive of the Smith Street surtace cars, The Brighton Beach L runs from Coney to Franklin and Fulton, transferring at the latter ata- tion to the Fulton L for Park Row. IN PROPER SETS BY: SOCIAL SECRETARY vt L. in the city, and there were 750 qceredited delegates and 600 others present, Samuel Gompers presided {and between 8 o'clock and the ad- * journment at midnight used up three { wavels. Mr. Gompers himself was greeted with cheers, applauded dur- ing bis speech and given a rising vole of thanks without a dissent. ‘Then the call for the meeting was read and the lid was off. HOLLAND'S NAME STIRS RADI- CALS’ IRE. The outbreak came when President Gompers appointed a committee of fifteen to draft a constitution for the new organization, The radicals were pot given much recognition. Every name read! was “booed,” but the trouble reached a climax when Mr, }Gempers named James Holland, { 2resident of the A. F. of L, in New we State, and Peter J. Brady, apervisor of the City Record ‘and Fepresenting the Allied Printing ‘Prades, to the committee, While the mention of every name put forward by Gompers for the com- mittee brought cat-calis, hisses and tureats, thea imeargents In the me ing savea most of their trouble-m: ing for Holland and Brady. The first fight started when Hol- jand’s name was called. The booing had lasted ten or fifteen minutes each © a name had been put forward, , but when the New York leader's nom!- nation was in the made, chairs bégan to rear of the hall Fists and eyes and chins and ears, and Gompers could not make Dimself heard. For more than half an hour the battle raged, and the casualties were many, But it was not until John Marcal, a delegate from the Painters’ Union, having been hustled from the Dall, called for the police of the East 67th Street Station that thero was eny outside Interference, When Marcal returned to the hall, ouncing that he had been thrown ownstairs, the battle was still at its Leight, and the painters’ delegate found himseif in the middle of it. And when the pollee—four patrolmen, in charge of Sergt. Van Twistern—ar- rived, they found Marcal almost “;nocked out,” with at least twenty chairs piled on top of him, He said $40 had been taken from him, The arrival of the police caused the ridters to stop for a. while, but when Brady’s name came up the fighting was on again, and this ume John Heller was the delegate who got more than his share, During the second hattle the police ' were outside the hall most of the time, finally showing themselves when called for, after Gompers bad failed to settle the difficulty after Bfteen or twenty minutes of rioting. ‘After there was some semblance of quiet, Delegate Heller got the floor @nd almost precipitated another out- break by charging that he had been ewuck during the mix-up by Holland, Thi. charge was denied by Hopand, end be seemed to have the support of the majority in this respect, for many of the delegates afterward sald that he could not have got from the plat- qorm to the back of the ball and into the mob around Heller, But this wasn’t enough trouble for the meeting, ‘There were several ciher outbreaks of shorter duration, especially when Gompers called on Holland to state his position with re- gurd to the demands from various parts of the hall that the New York President decline to serve on the Committee of Fifteen. Holland climbed to the platform as hisses and boos came from the groups that led the fighting, Ralsing his voice above the uproar, he shouted: “l have always fought #ho Bolshevist element in labor, and J will continue to fight them, I a6" rot the appointment.” 4 moment tater he was joined hy Biuuy. ooo depounced ibe men whi by readers of The Evening World, will then be sent to E. 0. Hoppe, the celebrated London artist-photographer, who selected the five beauties of England, and asked readers of The Evening World to help him select five American Beauties. The éfanding of the contestants 1 ast night, according to the ballots of readers of The Evening World, was as follows: . Mrs. Lydig Hoyt. . Mrs. Preston Gibson. . Mrs, James Macartney. . Mrs. John Barrymore. Misg Mary Millicent Rogers. . Mrs. Gurnee Munn. Mrs, Angier B. Duke. . Mrs. Charles B. Dillingham, . Mrs. John Wanamaker jr. 10. Miss Betty Hale of Brooklyn. Pera opposed him as “a collection of self- ish Individuals who sought to make the labor unions the tail to their kite.” . The assembly was.attended by three delegates trom every local un- jon in New York and represented a membership of more than 750.000, | which embraced the five boroughs! and vicinity. While the credentials of eaeh dele- gate were being examined, Mr. Gomp- ers addressed the crowded hall and! was recelved with the utmost en-| thusiasm. ‘The trouble that led to the down- fall of the Central Federated Union really dates back to the outbreak of the war, Several of the organiza~} tions included in the Federation were composed of men of German birth or parentage, As the situation grew more tense and America’s par- tlcipation in the mighty struggle be- came more and more of a probability those \pro-German sympathizers let No opportunity pass without pushing forward their propaganda, The con- nervativés found themselves trapped ‘on several occasions because through the disgust engendered by the tactics of the propagandists the meetings were not as fully attended as they ordinarily would be. When war pn Germany was de- clared by Congress the, pro-Germans hooked up with the "Reds," who are numerous in several of the trades, and open hostility was shown to Gompers and the Federation of Labor, who were squarely on record for the war and ail it meant. The power of the malcontents grew to be a positive menace to the standing of the, labor movement and last night's crushing action was the result. A resolution was unanimously adopted lending moral and financial support to the strikers of the B. R. T. DRY AGENTS SEIZE L. I. HOTEL MAN Daclare They Got In by Signal and Had Choice of Gin or Whiskey. Archibald Haddon, who has a little hotel at Ocean Avenue and Merrick Road, Rosedale, L. 1, was held in $1,000 bail by United States Commis- sioner McCabe in Brooklyn to-day on a charge of violating the Volstead Act Prohibition Agents Thomas Connelly, Thomas Hayden and John Collins said they were tired from a hard day's work when they got to Rosedale about 9 o'clock in the evening and looked iptui- tively at Haddon's hotel, They hid tn some bushes and saw a number of men enter the back door, Then the agents crept closer and learned the signal, they sald. It was two raps, one soft, the other hard, and the two spaced about three séconds apart, ‘They tried it and were admitted by a man, who, they sald, offered the choice of whiskey or gin, The agents took whiskey at fifty cents a drink, they declare, and thon pinched the place. alee Tarkish Crown Prince Flees, Is © he. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept, 8.—~The Crier, NOTICE! Complaints have come to this office that persons representing themselves as agents of The Evening World have solicited money to “pay express charges With which to send pictures of entrants in the Beauty Contest to the judge.” Such solicitors are frauds. The Evening World employs no such agents, and if they call at your house have them arrested, if possible, and notify The Evening World. NAAR AAA SAYS GIRL STOLE PURSES IN SUBWAY Detective Charges Ruth Krenik Robbed One Victim Twice in Few Days. Ruth Krenik, twenty-two, No 159 ‘West 82d Street, charged to-day in the West Side Court with taking. a pocket- book contatning 6 cents from the pocket of Miss Lilllan Parker, a stenographer at No. 20 Barclay Street, has @ poor memory for faces, according to Detec- tive William Raftis of the Pickpocket Squad. Raftis, who said he caught Miss Krenik taking the purse in the sub- way at Times Square yesterday, de- clard he remembered seeing her acting suspiciously near Miss Parker two days previously at the same place. Miss Parker sald her pocket had then been picked of a purse containing $1.62 and some trifles. Miss Krenik it is charged, led them to where she had left the first purse after extracting the money. BRONX CHURCH LAWN PARTY. rade of Ope’ 820,000, with 2,000 schoor children participated head- Starting a ‘parade in which ed by President Bruckner of the Bronx, the Church of St, Simon Stock, 182d Street and Valentine Avenue, Bronx, opened a three-day lawn party this afternoon. The Rey. William G, O'Farrell, of the church, hopes to obtain’ $20,000 to build @ basement for a new reh to replace the present frame dwelling now In use, Sess - SOUGHT TROUBLE; GOT IT. Man In Alterent Over Nolse of stor with Neighbor hildren Held. “Puns in the corner” resulted in Sal- vatore Valenti, of No, 102 Oliver Stree being caught off a corner by Magia- trate Schwab in the Tombs Court to- day and held in $1,000 bail for the ac- tion of the Grand Jury, Charles Fer- randi, who lives in the Oliver Street house, van annoyed by the uproar of the children playing the game at the door on Aug. 29, so much so that he tried to stop them. One of the Valenti children complained to Valenti, who got into an altercation with Ferrandi, The latter was slashed in the forehead. “You came out looking for, trouble and got it," said the Magiatrate, WOULD BAN TICKET TRAFFIC. |: Begins Action to Re- Comm An action to restrain all persons from leasing out commutation or family Turkish Crown Prince has made an unsuccessful attempt to flee from this clty of Anatolia, He has been arrested and placed under rigorous control and his motorcars and boats have on relzed, Ho han not concealed that hi —— Ratha rallee tickets has ,beon begun in Supreme Court at White Plains by the New York Central Railroad Company. The defendant» are all from White Plains und One’ Sew. for Sept All Invitations to Functions Passed _On Before Acceptance. Among the many distinotions ap- pertaining to Police Commissioner Enright there is one in which he out- shines all of his predecessors—he is the proud possessor of a social secre- tary. However this may read, it Is no laughing matter, because the Com- missioner is such a social fellow, with So many functions, dinners, luncheons, teas, perhaps, to attend that he'd never ‘be able to tell whether he was getting In the right sets or wasting his time if it were not for the guild- ance of his faithful and discrimina’ Ing Social secretary, and mentor. ‘The fact that this important polite adviser is carried on the pay roll of the Police Department as a stenog- tapher does not in any way lessen his high and confidential office. He'd never be able to scurry around with the Commissioner if he clung to a notebook or a typewriter, The name of Commission En- right’s social guide and watchman is Henry W. Dearborn. He lives at No. 206 West 824 Street. By those who See him from time to time at Head- quarters, where he has q most private office, he is described as “a natty dresser, Weighing in the nelghborhood of 300 pounds. A nice, genial sort of guy, you know, who tries to be a Sood fellow, see?’ Dearborn was appointed to the de- partment on Maroh 3, 1919, as a ste- nographer in the office of the Second Deputy Commissioner (at that time it was William J. Lahey) at a salary of $1,350 per annum. A short time thereafter his salary was increased to $1,500, which is its present figure, unless Commissioner Enright values him more highly than heretofore, Mr, Dearborn has an office Just out- side the sanctum of his chief, and there he presides over a desk which has five telephones on it—certainly not the least busy desk in the police dullding. Whenever a civilian comes to call on the Commissioner the card of the aspirant is first taken to Mr. Dearborn, who examines it critically. ‘Then, when it's a question of social appearance in public, all invitations are referred to Mr. Dearborn for his judgment. And whenever you see the Commissioner at any of the banquets or other ceremonies around and you'll se Mr. Dearborn, posi aay PHOTOS SHOW CRASH WITH ENRIGHT AUTO Dr. Charles R. Dayton, of No. 132 Herkimer Street, Brooklyn, will ap- pear in the Gates Avenue Court, Brooklyn, early next week to testify regarding a céllision betwen his anto- mobile and that of Police Commis- sioner Enright, at Pacific Street and New York Avenue, Brooklyn, yester- day. The case was originally set for to-day. Dr. Dayton had taken a number of photographs witt. a camera borrowed from D. Charles Seydill of No. 1 Pulton Street, He was sure they would prove that it was by no fault |of his own that the police car bumped with his, knocked his car halfway jacross the street and against an elec- tric Nght pole, so damaging it that It was towed to a garage for repairs. According to Dr. Dayton he wa getting himself together after the ac when he saw a man from th jal car hurrying to 4 of making the ap aiclun expected, the ma d Dr, bi hande rgeant a Dayton 4 court summons —_ BURN TO DEATH ON BOAT. BALTIMORE, Md., Sept. 11.—Four men were burned to death here fn @ fire aboard the steamship Aeolus, formerly the Hamburg-American line Grosser Kurtuerst, which Is being reeen- ditioned by the Bottimore bry and Able Nibiline Comuunns Doves ahs * k| given by a “gre A shuttle service was put on yester> day between Bay Parkway and Co- ney, connecting with the Timés How 75- Year-Old Couple, Now to Wed, Looked as They Courted 57 Years Ago MART SAN GABRIEL - BLOTTNER Unkind Fate Kept Venerable Couple Apart for 57 Long Years, ‘The young man and woman in this picture are now seventy-five years old, When the photograph was made they were eighteen and engaged to ‘be married, but through the Jealousy of a third person they were broken After fifty-seven years ‘of separation they will be married on Wednesday at 2 P. M. at the home apart. ih ‘SHOT BY TM FOIL $3,000 THEE AT AO CEN Jacob Mendel Knocked Out a8 He Counts Receipts From Restaurants. No. 111 South Elliott Place, eeveral other concessions In the Grama” collections shortly before 1 A. M. to day and went with the jast two money ~ restaurant on the subway level. | The collections concessions amounting to more them, $2,500 had been made and locked im his safe a short time before. Mr Mendel after locking the door of big office emptied the money from the two remaining collections on his desl and began counting It. Behind paper boxes peep holes had been cut, as It de veloped later, a man wan blag , While Mr. Mendel was sorting hea ee Wn etna oe bills the man slipped behind him and - The bride-to-be is Mrs, Morris struck him several times on the head Blottnor, a widow of Flushing, L. ly with. some blunt inatrument. and the bridegroom-to-be is Bdward Remsen Teller, who owns a large stock farm at Montvale, N. J. Twen~ EZOUWARD REMSEN TXL LR , Dragging the dazed man behind the boxes, the robber sat him if a chair five years after the engagement and bond him, hands behind him, was broken they dlecoyered, how they with a torn waiter’s coat, Then the had been victim: y @ fake 1OV© thiet put the on the deiie: letter written to Mr, Teller. They T® phen ee about toon tats hie poahanale solved then to marry if the course of nd a . , human events over made it possible. took from his victim a key and un~ ‘Pwo years ago Mr. Teller's wife died, locked the safe and stored the money and five months ago Mr. Blottner there in a small black bag he had | failed to report for work. Square-Bay Parkwhy line. The Sea Beach and West End trains and Cul- ver L are running direct from Coney to Manhattan, This morning, for the first timo since the strike began, the old fami!- iar clang of the stationary bell punc was heard on the surface cars, The new conductors are ringing up the | fares and the days of “get the money boys” are over for the strikebreakers, BOY HELD PRISONER HTCHED TONAL, HE strike ‘situation. The Governor !s to Fed Onl meet Samuel Gompers of the Amert- can Federation of Labor and James A. Vahey, counsel for the Amalga- mated Union, on Monday. ‘What his plan is he did not reveal, and union leaders were silent on the! Claiming that he had been tlea with subject. As Gov. Smith sald nothing a rope to a nail for four days in the plain his determination to have noth- other, Mr. and Mrs, Gunther Pflock, Ing to do with the Amalgamated, !t of No. 634 Fifty-seventh Street, is belleved the Governor may have in Prooklyn, Joseph Pflock, ten years view some other means of breaking of age, was the accuser against them the deadlock. when they were arraigned to-day in A number of Amalgamated leaders the Fifth Avenue Court, Brooklyn, were in Albany Thuraday in regard charged with endangering the boy's to the Buffalo strike, and it is known ji, and morals. They were held in they also took up the Brooklyn strike sso tail each for examination next with the Governor. Wednesday Amalgamated officers and repre-| joseph in in the care of the Chil sentatives of the American Federa- any ootety, He declared hia atop- tion of Labor told « poorly attended oiner tied him securely with a rope meeting of strikers in Brooklyn tat ee eae ne ee itaned ane BIRDY Shas 16 Hey (81008) BAL. ENOY see Haden pang that only bread would win. The men were informed B ” . that the strikebreakera were desert- “4 water were given to him during ing and that at least 400 had already an pei lt ne he Namal ae “We are going to pin this atrike,” “That ts all that prisoners get.” sald Vice President Shea of the! The only kindness shown him dur- Amalgamated, “All we want you to 'N6 aisles ese the Ber iesia do is stick it out, We'll win through Was when Anna |; & neighbor's the conference Monday attended by child, heard him crying and stole in Gov. Smith, Samuel Gompers and |to give him some bread and milk. other prominent officials and labor! When finally his father released leaders, So certain is Mr. Gompers him, Joseph said, he ran to the home Sarre are going to win this strike of an aunt, who notified the @hil- vhat ‘he cancelled an important en- |dren’s Society, causing the arrests. gagement in another part of thé| pPrfiock declared the boy was incor+ country to participate in the gonfer- | rigable and Mra. Prlock, while ad- ence with the Governor.” mitting that he had been. tled up With the B. RT. officials, the idle "A short, time,” inalsted It was to former employees, and the Brooklyn | 1ystaln & tendenoy to run away an public heartily sick of conditions, the |‘P*t 50 cruelty had bean practiced. chances for a settlement Monday are | regarded an good, | AUDIENCE WON'T LET A humorous touch to the strike wae M’CORMACK SING ly on Bread and Watér Father and Step-Mother Arrested. " crew, who tried to take a Vanderbilt Avenue car from Coney Island to Manhattan. Not knowing the route, the strike-break- ers turned the car off |ts course at Park Avenue. It was greeted with jeers from the onlookers, until, at Marcy Avenue, the cries grew so loud the motorman and conductor} seemed to think they were in danger! and deserted. Boys, thereupon, took{ charge and ran the car back and forth and rang up hundreds of fares fore reserves from the Vernon Ave- nue Police Station arrived, John Russo of No. 7] Ellery Street, a striking guard, was arrested, de spite his declaration that he was al passenger on the car and had paid Concert in Australia Broken up— Noted Tenor Accused as Sinn Feiner, ADELAIDE, South Australia, Sept 1L-—The concert «ivea here Thurelay evening by John MeCorinack, the notud tenor, was broken up by & demon- stration, a part of the audience rising and singing the British national anthem and some of them shouting that Me- Cormack was a Sinn Feiner. Mr, Me- Cormack has cancelled the other con- certs he was to have given in Adelaide. The audience, it appea: resented the omission of the anthem from the programme. In explanation the ten Australia on a tour of t his fare. He was locked up on a, Wio J# in Aust ; world which he ata charge of malicious mischief, In- | \Xst May, saya he had undertood spectors took the car back to its! anthem was usually sung only when route, but last night the deserting |the Governor was present. crew was said to be still missing. ~er ee en STAYS ARNSTEIN HEARING. BAPY'S BODY IN BUNDLE, « os aceraer Ghipice Fron utes Maa An ted Trying to Drop Ma Delay Until Me vy. Packaxe Inte Sewer. After Saul Myers, counsel for the Na- Policeman Dent followed a man he/ tional Surety Company at the bank- had seen try unsuccessfully to force 4) ruptcy hearing involving Julen W. bundle through @ sewer grating in Kast | sy) Arnstein, had ‘declared that 16th around into 17th Street, where he vepeuted delays in the proceeding made another attempt between Avenues to ® public scandal, Willan A and B at 4,90 A. M. to-day, On be-| Pallon, attorney for Arnstein, went be- ing questioned, the mgn said It waa a palr of averaila, but’ the ult Judge Manton fore policeman! and obtained @ styy until Monday, yesterday made him unwrap it He had just been dented by Com- ‘The body of a two days’ old boy baby | minsionen Tullman a delay that hy was revealed. The man sald he was! might obtali 1% deviate Lous Mastry, thirty-nine, a dotl| of Judge as ee maker tiving at No. 185 Seventh street, | {tein to answer the Whether He wns arreated, There were no marks the potted knew he the body, and yelgoner did tic th Pha bey ee te aera mtb a . the mattress. it caused font’ and filed. the neighborhood half dressed forelgners. CUNARD LINER DAMAGED, $2,000 Fire Breaks Out om Kale e@rin Auguste Victoria, Fire In a compartment on the died, ax no now they will carry Out ico vent for the purpose. thelr wish after all’ these years of) 4." the robber was unlocking the office door to escape Mr. Mendel re- covered consciousness, tore himeelf loose from his flimsy bonds, seized & + |revolver and fired several shots. | Great excitement followed through- out the station, Special policemen, commuters and others ran in all di- rections, A few of the timid hid in” | telephone booths. Somebody shouted - “There one them goes” to Policeman | Dolgardo of the East Bist Street Station, and Delgardo seized @ man ®| who later described himself as Carl Klentz, twenty-nine, No, 215 Weat ae 105th Street] jieves f i While he was trying to subdue his Thieves Scared Off and Police} | Wile he weee shouted: “Here's Turn the Stuff Over to another.” Delgardo dragged the cap- Uncle Sam. tive by the collar to a “blind” stair- Ic ad way nearby and found sitting at the . head of the steps a youth describing This telephone meesage was re-| himself as Frederick Hardia, elgh- colved carly thix morning at Coney} teen, No, 150 West 45th Street. ae Island Police Station: “Come quick! | Police sty he was trying to hide ; his legs the black valise; that Mendel There are burglars at Somer’s Gar-| identified him as a former employee den!” in his restaurant, and the man who Capt. Sackett and a eqnad of de-| tied him up and robbed him, and tectives raced tothe Garden, which| that all the money stolen, $3,065, was 19 at Surf Avenue and 20th Street, | found in his pocket and the bag, and found Frank Grovsbard, the pro-| He dented it all and fought the” prictor, standing beside a loaded truck | Policeman until knocked down. In front of the door. He sald he had| Later the police went to Hardis’ waked up just in time to see three|Toom and garrested Thomas Berry, men louding the truck from liquor| fifteen years old, who lives there. | stores in the Garden cellar, and had| Kients ts suspected of baving been rushed out, succeeding in frightening | the “lookout.” Berry is charged with Sg ote aay, make wae ant eine (eaelaeai | The truck was peace bacaid = H cases of whiskey auld to be 100 proot ie, merEency Rospital in the stne “wet” and was piled with mattresses| the rest of the night, He and bedding as camouflage. Capt. Snckett directed the truck to be eS driven to Coney Island Station and SETS FIRE TO BED, notified the United Stats Marshal SLASHES THROAT in Brooklyn to come and t it, de-~ U spite the fact that Grossbard had a| Insane Russian Sent From Boarding permit to deal in liquor for drug- House to Bellevue in Sert | An alarm was sent out for the ous Condition, The truck was found to have been| Smoke In Joseph Allen's emigranta’ stolen trom Nedler Alaski of No, 209 | lodging house at No, 297 Tenth Avenue | West 10th Street, Brooklyn, The | was traced to a room on the aixth door | quer wa svalued at $1,000, ocoupled by Rada Kedensky earty to } sa day. Allen couldn't open the door and alled Policeman Peter Donnelly, gag thre QUOTA . ‘When they had forced their way im they found Kedensky standing on « XCESSIVE burning matgress alashing his throat | National Committeeman Declares | There Is No Slush Fund and | Will Be None, The Republican campaign quota for New Jeraey instead of being exceasive | i entirely inadequate for the purpos: lof an efficient campaign, according to \s statement issued at Elizabeth to-day by Hamilton F, Kean, Republican Na- tional Committee member from New Jersey. Kean recently confirmed Gov. Cox's char of large Republican cam- palgn quotas, ldeck of the Cunard liner | “Theme is no ‘slush fund’ and there | Auguste Victoria, moored at Pier 64, will be none for the use of the Repub- North River, caused more than $2,000 lean Party in this campaign,” sald! damage shortly alt Kean. “No renily large sum—Iin the) night. No Nght of the wide area over which it| A stewar {x to be distributed and the manifold tre legitimate purposes to which it is to guined headway. |be put—ls proposed to be collected. | the compartment : ‘ound ‘Of the money to be collected in New pat Mn ng ns ‘Atter half am Jorney, 80 per cent, Ig to go to the Na-| work the flames were extingulshed Ulonal Committee, whhe 40 per cont. iy! About 1.200 immigrants Isft, the ves. Supposed to take care of all the work Se! .A 8 O06 Me, ' of the State Committee and the county, grette among the mattresses, arf local campagne. | salin to-da, “The significance of Mr. Haya's state- ment that he has limited to 81,000 the amount that will be accepted from any individual hardly’ be overestimated In. view. of the that the Democrats have cannily neglected to put any Hmit on the amount of the single contribu: | tions they will rec BATTLESHIPS OFF MONDAY. Go for # Ranwe Target tice Off Ch joake. THY OUR POPULAK PECL MILLER’S The battleships of the Atlantic feet EIGHT CONVENIENT STORES | anchared A the Hudson iter witt be) Breage A bar eave @ londoy and wil! not return unUl Saturday, Sept, 25, wages During thelr absence the ships will eaten ; hort range target practice | | 9h Mteetm Anpouke Capes. At. this paid to those beige money. is Hokies alin * boxes to his little office under the” Es from nie other € im owhieh | \ steerage Kaleerin a proprietor of the restaurants an@ Central Terminal. finished making file: er rene me Ne OO OE RE ERT