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To-Night’s Weather—FAIR, iy WALTER CAMP TEL How to Watch Plays In Football Games SEE PAGE NINE VoL. LXI. NO.. 21, 509—DAILY. Copyright, 1120, by IS MADE $4,351,423 HIGHER BY “BUDGET SUPPLEMENT” Street Cleaning, Water, Gas and Elec- tricity Departments Ask Largely Increased Funds for 1921, Which Do Not Appear in First Estimates Involuntary but convincing proof of the evidence in the budget that the burden of taxation in this city could be reduced probably by half if ealaries and wages were paid only to those who are required to do the * etty’s work, is furnished by the appropriations granted in the tentative |” budget to the Department of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity and the ‘Department of Stroet-Cloaning. These departments will be the subject of today’s lesson in the hi.) cost of goverument. But before taking up the departments it might be well to state that re bas come to hand a document entitled “: upplement to Proposed | for 1921,” which shows additional allowaices to various city de- | ents amounting to $4,351,423, to be included im the tax levy. The document is mentioned because it includes records of supplementary ap | Propriations for the Water Supply Department and the Street Cleaning | Department which do not appear in the tentative budget or the proposed | budget | EUTESEESS [pene onepapey ~— FORHARD GAME =: AGAINST NAVY: More than it cost in 1917, an in- crease out of all proportion to the growth of the city, In 1917 the department was allowed §$7,- 702,600, of which $5,990,788 was a tax levy assessment. The de- partment in 1917 employed 1,118 persons on salary and 1.298 on a wage basis. | LESS SALARIED MEN BUT MORE “EMPLOYEES ON WAGE BASIS.” ‘The budget for 1921 including sup plementary allowances of $193,841, of | Rival Eleven Confident of | which $165,000 approximately is fo! Victory. Princeton Team wages—will amount to $1049 of a : which approximately $8,691,342 i» to/ are Slight Favorites. be raised by xation. The ar number | of salaried employees has dropped to Pe EEN 3,032 th four years, but the number) prrcpToN, N. J, Oct P S basis has | | les cde aD ciel Tigers nid Middies renewed fo increased over 21 per cent, to a total of 1,578. relations thia Tho amount allowed for wages it | crowd of 25,000, the 1917, budget was $1,097,896. Pe aha lifhig navanibonieyan ware! total allowed for wages in the 1 Dudget is $2,219,339. In four years! the department has increased the number of wage earners 21 per cent. and tncreased the than 100 at The increase of $1,121,443 in the payroll for wages in 1921 is $23,147 in excess of the total amount paid| afternoon vefé in a record atten ance | an early season game. The weather was ideal, e! great concrete uhe by) a warm sun making t stadium comfortable | crowd that w the orange and the blue wage outlay more | f splendent in of Princeton of the Navy be re and black | and gold} were in fine fettle and were confide | of making # creditabl [the T Princeton ruled showing againat Born a favorite, but no Classified Advertisers CLOSING TIME 5.30 P. M. SHARP SATURDAY FOR The SUNDAY WORLD'S Classified Advertisements Scare BRANCH, OFT IOSE WOOK Y rataetatt a “ ae mente will be Sunday World after yAdvertining SON’ On BEFORE roe PRECEDING PUBLICATION Co. (Rhe New York World), | definitely 4 of the NEW YORK, SATURDA he Prone Publishing HICH COST OF RUNNING, CITY. 2G RAL WALKOUT, cont Su) | _ SETFORTO- Nich “TO BE AT POINT OF N PSTD DEATH, 120 DAY oe 1 raken | at Requesi of | Sisters of Lord Mayor, seal | From Prison, Begin Hunger | Strike. | BEDSIDE. | Action Striking Miners to Allow Time for Parley. OUTLOOK AT IS HOPE FUL. | WIFE HIS jations Between Miners;Annie MacSwiney Declares { Premier Lloyd George | Brother Will Commit Sui- Now in Progress. cide if He Is Fed, Oct resaar| LONDON, 28.—Gra prarily, thelr) were in circulation at noon to-dily re- trike in sympathy with the | London Oct postyy reports} ve yoned, ty p Me raed | Karding the condition of ‘Terence Mu¢ quest of the miners’ | eons Ma 2 Cork, a rneandieas thie| y, Lord Mayor of Cork, on the ors at the executive, it vening The miners have accepted an invi- | | seventy-second day of his hunger | strike In Brixton Prison. A statement | tation from Premter Lloyd George foe Issued by the Exchange Telegraph further discussions and the railway | Company at. that hour declared the strike has been suspended pending| Lord Mayor's last moments were at| Jthe miners’ negotiations with the} hand. Government, Oficial announcement | ‘The bulletin of the Irish Self-Deter- of the suspension of the railway | mination League on the Lord Mayor's atrike notices was made shortly after! condition, however, stated the league 5 o'clock han been informed that he was in| The Evening Standard sald it| about the same state an recently. te| understoo the Premier would | Was unconscious, its informant said mula at the confer- | “Howe added the statement. eady had received the} “the Home Office has pluced an em present a new which a nofMficlal approval of several leaders | bargo on the use of the telephone for f the miners. | communicating news to the outside, Info | conversations between the | and has forbidden the Lord Mayor's ernment and individual Jeadora| Sisters, Mary and Annie, to visit the striking British coal m iners | him.” were resumed this morning, These} A special messenger sent to the n8 followed conferences be the emier Lloyd George and sev members of the Govern-" | prison brought news regarding | Lord Mayor to the league In its report of the sinking cond discunal tween F The Secretary of the miners’ | tion of Mayor MacSwiney at noon tho organizstion Was among those con-| Exchange Telegraph Company naid sulted that Mrs, MacSwiney was with the | Representat!ves of the mine owners | Mayor at that hour, and that Father | alan co | with the Government In conseanence of the coal strike the sailing of the Cunard liner Kats- erin Auguste Victoria, for New York, day, has been in- also Dominio, his private chaplain, visited him. The Home Office explained the de nial of admission to the Lord Mayor’e| to sisters as being due only to the be | ne julet for postuoned. The Aquitanta| jee that thelr visits interfered with Cunard Line, however, which| the careful nursing which the pris uses olf fuel, will be able to leave | oner’s extremely delicate condition re- this afternoon and will take some of} quired, {the passengers booked for the Kals-| torq Mayor MacSwiney’s condi erin Auguste Viotorta tion continues critical,” sald the There is division among the rail- | isome Omice announcement. “The | toad with regard to a strike. Al uryy nas been slightly remedied,’ te Annie and Mary MacSwiney, the sisters of the Lord Mayor "Terence| MacSwiney, joined him in his hunger | wtrike to-day. Thelr action followed it, J. H. Thomas, Ge wf the National Union of Railway Men, has authorized the statement ike. mt he Ms Me ay bed Taecutive of [exclusion by officials of Brixton : je ap Prison from his bedside. Annie be ne Assyciated Soctet Locomative coer eey a came hysterical after she and her Enginemen and Firemen it was de- While fow of the 2,000 Middies ac- in compelled to leave the| fer wages in the department four!companied their team from Annap- | °ided to defer decision on the question anes BAe Ret i "agai alk aie a of classroom duties, the |! sympathetic action untll Monday./Prism nated by the spick and span appear-|tnusiastic cohorts. From the count-| Wealthy section of the railway men, ne ny eee ee” Ronee eel ance of the streets and tho almomt) iogs biue uniforms in the south side |2stinct from the National Union of) Torry, cathe 1 HAIL eta: culous removal of garbage every |... ey Rallway Men, and its decision is cun-/thrown out of the yard we will stay es Ml be interested to know | oc me, suadlumn every warship eons) dered imwortent at the gate day and night will cont in 1921—including supple- |, avieniPall: mons, Bonar Law, the Gov ment | night t as if be Lert Oe yor Dy ; ms mentary appropriations of $1 See eee vad thirty atrong, ne-| Wedel declined to discuss it wxcopt to his strength as a result of the for =a grand total of $18,146,037 avy mguad, oh On. F-| ay that the situation was very grave, | [ble feeding now being practiced by = rtyad: early day from Philadel+) is. ya¢orred, however, to the Premier’s| the prison physicians he would take (Continued on Svcond Page.) | PA! for a signal practice, Head Coach | t last evening, and added own life. Robert Folwel) announced his men| anxiety expressed by j riends of MacSwiney, it was le! | very aven | to-day. tentatively ead to peace # 1 the British Home Office nothing will be left UA-| Whether they would be allo his body to Cork, " i ne Government | | REPUBLICANS WHO FAVOR LEAGUE TO | CALL ON WILSON | stood to have mission might be a few montha after hin death. THE PEACE TREATY LEAGUE OF NATIONS Delegation, Headed by Hamil COVENANT ton Holt, oe i White THOUSANDS OF VITAL ise Wes aay. SUBJECTS 1920 Werld A'manac 35c a copy NGTON, Ost VILSON w ft pr Aelerat xt The Newsstands, Booketoros, and at " © headed by | Branch Offices of New York World BUNCE 2 is As tien By Mall Everywhere time to deliver @ apecch on Postage Propaid $0c per copy || \ te langue of Netous, | i *. ¥, CGTCEER 23, 1920. |\Mayor MacSwiney: Reported Ding! In Long Hunger Strike in Prison, STRANGLED WOMAN FOUND “Peeping Tom” U Jnr ares BY STATEN ISLAND HUNTERS He Mure He WEALTHY PASTOR AFTER RENT ROW | Slayer murder of the | woman whose unidentified body young was found iaat ni in a Weat New Brighton, & thie! Hugh O'Hearn, who has con- to being Staten Island's “Pees nahi He Mistook ng Tom and the asnaliant of two| | 7 6 ’ Aa afte Landlord for Burglar—De- | 4 a ac arcusinien aman nies He Had Quarrel. Information ¢ the detectives in-| 3 fluenced them to make O'Hearn look | CHICA Ont: o-Frederick Sex- at the dead won | weal manager of a coal com _ Peter Garrigan of No, 428 Davis|pany here, admitted to-day, police ri ne Sision fh ro ‘ E Hneup jeald, he shot and killed the Rev erally similar in dress and butld to | Frederick Ruff, pastor of the Me- 4 man who walked hand-in-hand with| morial Methodist Church in the ex a woman Wednesday aight down | oh North Shore district and Bard Avenue, near the briar th on of where the hody was found, The] °?~™ ERECT CAERR, | MRDEROARD! woman had been annoyed by tho} D¥idinae barking of Garrigan’s dog which ran| Sextro, when takon to the Rogers towaml the pair, Garrigan, talking | park Police Station, declared he mis- | bach dhe Gen, walitse thee ree took the pastor for a burglar when woman wore uround her head what} he met him in the hallway he th cht was @ towel, To-day be| Sextro cecupled an riment the murdered woman bove the one in which paso oy turban a# the ed. According to gear he had noticed 1 the police, Soxtro 4 with the neighboriood could have | by th * reugt Pelton A " lirpw increases in rent 8 only tw mi © | The tor, hia w three body wa rough Iren no to ney wer ' Ket | {ft O’Hearn waa d Mre, Ruff and the hildren went ton t Cou Ay py Attorney Mualoy'a moein vey ta An « i ted tw her promised to plead t (Continued om Second age) Borid, | Circulation Books = to All.” ke LEE: Entered as Kecond-Clans Matter Port Offer, N.Y. THE EVENING WORLD NEXT WEEK——SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT SENATOR HARDING and GOV. COX FURNISH IDEAS for “WIND-UP WEEK” CARTOONS Drawn for The Evening World, Under Their Personal Direction, by Robert Edgren of Evening World Staff : TIDE HAS TURNED, SAYS COX The St Circulation Books Open to All.” | To-Morrow's Weather—FAIR, INA pall PRICE THREE CENTS Saar as New York, COX IN WHIRLWIND TOUR SEES BiG NEW YORK CROWDS AND SAYS HE 1S CONFIDENT “Soul of America Aroused for League of Nations,” Declares Candidate— “We Have Again the Stirring Fer- vor That Moved Us in the War.” Gov, James M. Cox began his busy day and night of New York City campaigning by sitting on the edge of a bureau in his rooms in the Welorf Astoria after a late breakfast and inviting twenty or more news paper reporters to tell him what New York wanted to know about him: ‘The resulting volley of inquiries covered everything from what hg thouynt of New York's high buildings to his interpretation of the Hitch- cock reservations on Article X. of the League of Nations. ; “AT HARVARD FIELD only ten minutes before starting on Crimson Eleven 10 to 8 Favor) nearly every State in the Union, the his round of luncheons beginning with the ite Over Mystery Team of South. wathoring of the college Democratic receptions, and addresses, clubs in the Astor Gallery and ending 4t Madison Square Garden to-night, COX SEES TURN OF SENTIMENT TOWARD HIM. Govern: ” sald feel strongly the turn In come and the tide je set toward us, It has been setting our way for @ little more (Epecial to The Prening World.) HARVARD STADIUM, CAM-| than two w Interest in the | BRIDGE, Mass, Oct. 23.—The day is { typical one for football—snappy, oniy| 1 ean feel that in the response of a bit of a wind stirring and glorious| audience: | ountigtt, but more of the Inte fall type} hi | than wu Harvard is deep in tha task of solving the mystery team of |the South, which may again live ur to tts 1919 name as a wonder worker The Crimson has on paper a welxht advantage of from 16 to 20 pounds a man, with three heavywelghts on the The sou! of America been awakened. We have again the stirring ferver which moved us in the war, "The mothers and the soldiers have especially rallied to the Leagui 1 am confident. 1 told my friends in September when they talked of results that they rush line, the lightest being Jim ‘Tol were making @ jbert, left guard, who welghs 208 take by holding the election in | pounds Opponed to this bulk ina ruah| their own minds, in September, “Do 1 think the Lodge reservations and the Hitchcock reservations are | similar? [do not. I do not think any- body else doss, Eminent lawyers have been explaining how they differ for ten months and jam not going to enter on a two minute lecture om line of which Ralph Montgomery's 210 pounds Ia the heaviest, the next heav lest Keing Pop Ford, 180 pounds. ‘The backfieldy are about evenly edd | in Red 200 pounds hade him an outstanding fg mat weight, but Kobert sts ure, Conter hag recetved more adver- tising in this section than any othor|‘h® Subject. I am asked’ whether £ team, even Yale, has had, ‘Three. [td On the League with the Hitoh- fourtha of the 40,000 present are in nck reservations, Despite unadieg Jaympathy with the Southerners’ ag. |{:tTpretations of my attitude T aay pirations, Four hundred rootera ac-| ‘N#t @ay One who closer his mind aB- lchenapiad. (shal ltaan) Wi aclutely on the League or any feature of \t and says so far will he go and no further i# an unwise man. In tm. tend to be open minded on the whole formed a small but enthusiast ing section Betting 5 10 to 8 on Harvard s fuewtion: Jwith tt thern money on the ules uth money \¢8 | Gov. Cox, thoroughly exhausted | Coptain Bo MoMillan, quarterback by his trip through New Jemey whien lena teina rence ema erales «. ended at Hoboken ct midnight, slopt liting eleven and selected on last yearn | IMte misxing An eogawament for break all-Amertean team, were human Tam Ot Shy Selo, wim Chereem | points of interest this afternoon. Bo “*°r8* Wie of the Damooratie Seams Us bit Widars. tne ead, an tee and Senator Pat Harrison of the |Atriking difference in uniforms were SPCskera’ Bureau, He had them come 5 to his room and breaktast with him noticeable, Harvard's deep-red stood 9 0s, rooms white F was pum" Addressing representatives of the tatarn Young Amertoare: Democratic League, c Harvard played an uproartonsly cnthusiastic gathers -sihcaes {thine In two Ing of college mea and women at the Micha HinBie (Chu ont AOR] Astor Gallery, Gov. Cow watd In hie Nacing Naa Been a. frat fovery fPst Bpecch of the day win te Crt , Lam In thin Presidential (ght wa. Ge nomluried Sly AEN fettered and unbeund by any came ioe Hat ree ain onte h sea, I have no obligation quart tied tlie teen, Ho extent of promising té . 2 thy in one to a fourth-elase t mut So Woods and gobn brains from the eball pub but started wt thelr one—ihe bese tn ae nr “6 to accept my Cabinet ?* of Amertea and f A A A A AM, fe oc ee eS a men