The evening world. Newspaper, October 29, 1921, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

.eeee nen aa narrennebamecaapemene canes ane Fs ae sevemeememerinco na CELL LE LEONE LENTIL: . for the game of last fall, omedt drive but the blue line qguldn’ Barron on; the next attempt and great star, shot over the lin for the first score'of the game. Lyman kicked the goal. The Georgia Tech sections were | an uproar, the band and cheer lead ers running around like Indfans. Their joy, however, was ity-yard line. Dodging one Yel Yow Jacket after another, quarter sprinted clear down th it side of the field with the entire mad Atlanta team in pursuit, The race didn’t end till the ball was ove: the goa! line. goal, ‘This sudden break sent the Penn- @ylvanians into wild cheering. Penn State kicked off to Harlan who sifpped back twenty yards before going down under four State tacklers. The Southerners quickly punted Kiilinger. ————— WILLIAMS TEAM LEADS COLUMBIA IN FIRST PERIOD! Forty Yard Run on Forward Pass Gives Visitors First Score of Game. SOUTHFIELD, Oct faced the Blue and White of Colum- dia on Southfield this afternoon be- fore @ crowd, which filled évery seat i nthe stands, and overflowed on to the side lines, when the opening whistle sounded. Estimates place the attendancé at 11,000. A slight haze hung over the fleld when the Purple team appeared for its’ preliminary arming up. FIRST PERIOD. Fargo kicked off to Capt. Scovil, ‘who came back ten yards before he was downed on the Columbia 30-yard Mine. Moszeeznski gained two yards. on kicked to Mallon to Will- jams's 20-yard mark and he raced back ten yards. Minjo kicked into Columbia territory and a fumbe! gave the purple the ball near midfield. Mallon unleashed a forward pars (o (Pease which was exectted perfectly and Peacé raced diver the chalk mark forty ‘yards to a touchdown, Fargo kicked an easy goal. Score, Williams, 7; Columbia, 0, ‘PRAYING COLONELS’ READY TO TACKLE HARVARD VARSITY Sensational Team From Kentucky’ Little College Draws Gate of 45,000. CAMBRIDGE, Mags., Oct. Centre College eleven, with “Bo” M Millin and other “Praying Colonels, whose gridiron exploits have made famous the little Kentucky colleze they represent, were seen again jn the Stadium to-day, lined up to do battle with the Harvard Varsity, As thousands ame to see the sensational South- @rners. It way estimated that 45,000 would witness the contest, seats for | which were sold out severa! days ago, A Gloser game than the 31 to i4 @ontest, won by Harvard last year. | was forecast. Centre, which found then that ite scintillant backfeld could not operate at its best without improved line play, came North this time witlr a bolstered bulwark as its front rank. It was a much improved team, coaches and players said. The Harvard eleven as it lined*up to-day had behind it the benefit of all the detatis of the Harvard em, aithough in men it was not the beat 'S that the Crimson will show this year. ‘The probable line-up: ‘Marvard. Position, Contre, B. i sri Past ee COLGATE FAVORED TO BEAT N. Y. U. Capacity Crowd at Binghamion Will See Teams Meet for First Time. BINGHAMTON, N, Y., Oct. 29.—At an early héur last night, every seat in the gtands at Johnson Field had | been sold for the Colgate-New York short- , Georgia Tech kicked off and s caught the ball on his own the Penn Lightner kicked the to 29.—Williams 29.—The | t and Boston College ele come to- Rether this afternoon at Bhbets Feld, It has been five years since Brooklynites have been afforded an coportiatty ie witness such hth class teams in a on the gridiron The game is sure to be ax well played As it will be florcely contested. The bet- ting on the game is strictly even. Each team has suffered one defeat. Fordham Jost last Saturday to the powerful La- fayette team, while Boston College was beaten a week ago by the heavy Uni- veraity of Detroit aggregation. Both teams showed a good deal of form ih thelr fast practice sessions yes- terday, The local lads had a long sig- nal driit on Fordham Field. Cavanaugh took his charges over to Brooklyn and sent them through a light drill at Eb- bets Field. The probable line-up of both { follows: Fordham, 6 in d e Fi teams Position, Breunan Fallon Woodward’ COLUMBIA READY FOR GAME WITH WILLIAMS. | Williams tnvades South Field this afternoon and will attempt to accom- plish what it could not do last year with the famous Benny Boynton lead- ing the attack, Columbia won la y a score of 20 to 14, This sea- the Williamatown outfit is not strong as (t was when they could roly upon Boynton to furnish the fire works, On the other hand Columbia is @ petter rounded out team Percy Wendell, the Purple coach, has been drilling his mén In new formations all. week and expects to spring.a few, xyrprises on Columbia, He hae developed a strong attack and wince he Is coaching slang. the Hat vard lin Willams, Bure to have a sturdy defenne. * a JAPANESE ENVOYS TO ARMS PARLEY | LAND AT VICTORIA VICTORIA, B. €., Oct. 29.—The | Kalshima Maru, bearing the Japanese |delegation to the Disarmament Con- here after one of th ever experienced ifie docked voy, | ference, stormiest In crossing the pcloihes N ANTI-DRY BLOWUP NEAR C.F. MURPHY HOME | Some sort of apparatus being em- ployed in an anti-Volstead capacity exploded this afternoon in the base- ment of the six-story tenement at No. 845 East Street and caused a pante in the neighborhood, It was impossible to tell from the litter of copper and ‘iron kettles, the barrel of mash and the debris scat- tered about the place just what hap- |. pened, but a little child in the street said. te sa wa man running from the basement when the big ‘bang happened. ‘Che man probably knew, but he didn't stop to explaln.. + The neighborhood, which is only stone's throw from Chapie, Murphy's home, thought a bombs Dytrage lad been ‘perpetrated—that fy, until the people got a giimpse of. the barre) ot mash, or what remained of°i} . There was a sign over the bi windows, both of which were shattered by the explosion, saymg that "cabin't work” was done there, but this may lave been the name of-the product, The janitor didn't know the name of the tenant of the basement. oe RICHARD CROKER ‘SAILS WITH WIFE FOR IRELAND semen: | Suit Over Eatate Seft! ‘© Return in & Richard Croker and his wife sailed to-day on the White Star liner Cedric for ‘their home in Ireland. Mr. Croker has been in this country several months in the matter of a law suit with his sons over estate accounts, He said to- day that the trouble had been settled out of court, He wil! return in the spring. Mr. Croker refuned sto discuss poli- tles, saying he was out of them, ure bie is doing his best,” he said. acd is Job once and I Know how tough it ‘Another passengers on the Cedric was fohn Warwick, « millionalre baker of fast, who had determined to inake his home fh this cit oaying he, tikes moral tone ofNew ¢ rs home to gather his amity cd return here. ————e——— GOULD DIVORCE SUIT GOES TO HIGHER COURT Actre Wite Anka 25,000 | tomar © 1 Fees, Papers filed to-day in the divorce ac- tion of Mrs, Edith Kelley Gould against | Frank J. Gould asking for $25,000 addi- tional temporary counsel fees to prose- cute her appeal from Justice Mullan's order which denied her application to bring suit ther husband in this country. Justice Mullan held that the divorce obtained by Mr. Gould in the French cOurts was binding here. The motion will be argued before Justice Addt- University football game here this|Guy on Nov. 7 afternoon. A special train arrived) Mr. Roi ae Jenks, Rogers & 6 sae cou! for Mrs, Gould, sa a point o! here with the Colgate squad and the| {international law upon which the Ap- entire student body of the University. ‘The New York U vbvad gridiron to become accustomed to it This is the first time that the | niveraity aquad han | ett been here since Thu-sday, practising | was tried, two | ppliate Court will have to pass is that Mr. Gould and hia wife were not resi- 8 of France at the time the action y ag ee MANY BELIEVED LOST elevens of those two schools neve! IN CANADIAN FLOOD met. Colgate is a slight favorite. —. The line-up: VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct. 29.—Many re beg “H. Drapor, | Williams. Soringhied ig Head Lineaman—B. ri FORDHAM MEETS BOSTON COLLEGE AT EBBETS FIELD |o:t trosns, puttermilc evan) Both Teams Show Good Form) navy supply Last Practice Session. Brookiyn comes into its o7 Potbad wold waca we riv . da F, Dolyasaty. ‘Tertecky Her | P2 on | ‘ waren | Friel fr | scene of im the’ was towed back to the Red D prdbam , the fool of Montague Street, Brook yn, jlives, it is feared, have been lost and Morigas | scores of persons injured by a oloud- padeds Ma | burst which flooded and partially swept away the town of Britannia Beach C,, last night, according to*advices | received here to-day Psysicians and nurses the disaster left for tho in a special steamer. ieee SHIPS CRASH IN FOG, ONE HIT AMIDSHIPS The Red Miner bound dD afternoon, « Nided, in the fog, off t! foot of 39th Street, Brooklyn, with the ship Prometheus, which bad just arrigud from Philadelphia ‘The Promefheus was struck amid~ ships, but escaped serious injury, The bow ‘of the Maracaibo was crushed in jalmost down to the wtaerline and she at SINN FEIN TOLD ITSULSTER CLAIMS ARE IMPOSSIBLE irish Delegates Demand Nor‘h Come Into United Jreland or Lose Land. LONDON, final Trish conference Oct 24,—Chier mong ends presented @t the by the’ Dail Kireann delegates te one that the ae the six north- eastern counties of Ireland shall 1 united Ireland, accept the verdict of a plebiscite for the fixing of riew boundartbs, it declared by t! r to-day it the had these either come into was was asserted intimated ns Government of Tho Dublin, that no eptance ela impossible, has according implied was fasue heen referred to to the report, and that the Dall swer, which ts expected at the jatest, favorable, Sinn Fein High Counel! In Dub- lin met last evening’ and did nd: ads it was Eireann by Monday ably an- will pro be un- Journ until’ midnight. The council disposed of a number of‘constitutional matters and questions of organization. Born Police B ing Trt BPLFAS at} County’ Waterford, va- cated sdnesday, have been burned by a number of men who tn- vaded the village, They warned the villagers it, the vicinity of the bar- vacks seek safety, and then | sprinkled petrol about and set fire to the biarfacks. : Ww TRUCKMEN VOTE _TO STRIKE NOV.1 \ ocals to Actoff Companies Refuse | to Live Up to Con- ° | tracts. | The two tocals of the Internationa’! Brotherhood of Teamsters voted last | night to strike Nov, 1 if the com- panies with whieh, they’ now have contract4"@o nét live up to those con- tracts, which are to be reconsidered tracts, Considerable ¢\upt was ex-! pressed as to. the pyssibility of strike, Members of the union assert th the United States ‘Trucking Corpor ation, with which former Gov. Smith Is identified, is: veally the Merchant ‘Truckmen’s Bureau, and they have made seperate agreements “with thit | concern, they say there is no reason | for dealing with the. bureau. ‘The United ftates Trucking Corpor- ation. owns 1,080 of the 4,500 inotor | trucks owned chy members. of bureau and 1,018 of the 7,600 horses, | ae SA aaEY 4 KERR SETS RECORD 1 IN CROSS-COUNTRY RUN in, Van! Manual High Boy Victor Cortlandt Park Event Kerr of Manual Training High | School, established a record time over the lengihened achoolboy cross-coun- try course in Van Cortlandt Park to- day, ‘completing the three miles in 13.20: This was in the third race. Hermann, Bryant, was second in 18.25 and Boyle, Mahual, third in 18.34, Team scores: Manual, 25; Evander, 65; Newtown, 90; Commerce, 108; Jamaica, 110; Commercial, 118; Bryant, Vinshing made a low team score of | in thé first race, with Curtis, 58; Richmond Hi}, Hrasmus, 14. end Boys’, 112, finishing in the ‘order named. Greenfege, Flushing, added another first to his string, finishing in 13.26, Dennis, Curtls, was second tn 1345 and I Flushing, third, 18:48, Nikolaides, ‘Clinton, won the second in’ 19.34; "McNamara, George Washington, second, 18.40, and Siegel, Morris, third, 13.49. eam cores: Clinton, Morris, 60; Stuy- ‘ashington, 61 NEW BOOTLEGGING RING DISCOVERED; ARREST DUE phraim, Said to Have Drawn 850,000 of Boose Mlegally. Abraham Levy, proprietor of a pho tograph studio at No, 2102 Seventh Avenue, and who is said to have used the allas Albert Makenzie, appeared voluntarily before United States Com- missioner Hitchcock to answer a charg? of presenting forged applications to the Federal Prohibition Commissioner at Washington for permiasiog to purchase and sell liquors, A warrant had beer Wsaued, for Levy's grrvat but hig attor: Lorento ©. Carlino of No, [troadway, promised that his ‘client would appear without was released in $10,00 he complainant agalr Howard R, Kiroack, @ forcement lowley. of bootlegse! cently and th withdrawa | traced and Gore short tn Lavy with any has been operating here 50,000 cases of Mega already been ely within a no connection int 29.—Police barracks * ‘produced fret | the civilian head of a | former liett TILLIE OF TOULOUSE ' DOES FINE WORK IN “AMERICA’S MAKING” MariL DA ie eleCOr ‘ei OF ee gHovsnt “Tillie ef Toulouse’ may ser undignified nickname, but ther real affection. in It and not a thought of tack of dignity when it was con- ferred upon Miss Tillie Spence by thi men of the A. B, F.. who knew In@ in Pranee. She will t ementbered all their lives by men who perhaps ver have known that her name ts And now, the Red ( its eny he bow afte 08s, ons and wark work with in ‘Voulouse and Veraun, she tas come to New York as General Director of “America’s Making.” Che “Exposition of Patridtism,” whieh to-night ens nt Armory tusk of Miss Spence, leveland gir), to bring It who sb sa ¢ n the t0- gether jy harmonious co-operation for | the exposition thirty-two racial groups, with thirty-two assorted sets of racial characteristic which might well have but tor her diplomacy and tact, ey PRESIDENT GREETS FOCH IN THE NAME OF ALL THE COUNTRY (Continued From } ‘st Page.) his respects to War Depart- his call on Gen. Pershing. was un- French visitor to pay ment after Former President Wilson tna few cays: There were about ono able to see the distinguished visito men at ths meetingin Tammany Hall, | wien Marshal Foch and bis party : ti | : and the vote stood 779 to 18. The dl-| stopped at the Wilson home, John trict affected Is in the lower'part of the pandolph Bolling, the ex-Presid city, where most-of the-big concerns | secretary, expressed regret that a are’ locates embers. of the union | re en TERE OPO Bal m said lnat night they would not take | Visit between the two could not be the first step but would atvait the re-| arranged. It was understood Mr. sults of reconsideration of the con-| Wilson's physician advised against the meeting on the grounds that the Presidenv's war emotions aroused by a talk with the issimo and his condi- Marshal Foch then might be Allied Gener tion endangered, his card, Following « iupeheon at the While House, Marshal Foch wilt visit Mount Vernon and place a wreath of flowers on Washington's tomb, |he will be the guest of dinner Frenen Emba: morrow morning the Marshal party leave for Kansas City, will speak at the third annual con- vention of the American Legion and take part in one of the most notable military turnouts in the history of the United States Marshal Poch's advis ing to keep him aw utterance at this time, pointing out he is an American Logion guest and not Identified with the Arms Limita- tion Conference, ‘They anticipa however, that ho wiil bu called as a French ‘military expert, in which event he will a his evening mor at a and his where he at the rs are seek- from polit | SUES WIFE WHO WON'T LEAVE PHILADELPHIA Husband Says She Flatly Refuses to Join Him in New York, Arlo Pardee Hausman, manager of the New York branch of the West Dis- infecting Company, 411 Fifth Avi has started an action for ment against Helen V. K man becau adelphia, where their marriage on Justice Wasser anni she refuses to | she lived 1908 nted Haus- ave to-day to serve his wife by publication, He also directed the hus- band to mail copies of the papers to the defendant has WW Since he came to this clty Hausman says he has made repeated trips to Phil iphia to urge his wife to come to WwW rik. though sh has fuse Hausman alleges. has all her bil la ceeeepreiiiemseren Dentiat Accunw Drawer, Dr. George W. King. formeriy # pros- rows den 1 Brooklyn, of hikh atanding in his profession, pleaded } guilty of unlawful entry before Judge Martin in the County Gourt, Brooklyn to-day on the charge that he had rifled | the cash drawer of the soft drink agency \ of tsadore Weiss, No, 949 Fulton Street Dr ntly arrested on. the Andrew Pettit, both ton Avenue, had juor in their pos layed by Weiss Bed. Pettit liquor returned Dr sill “Little Entent War fons. PARIS, Oct Council Allied Ambassadors to-day decid the charge of ‘Tames arsested last night having held on up and robbed Blot, a chauffeur of No. 2185 Wighth Avenue, | Street, Klmburst, Six automobiles w burned up and the total loss. was | timated at $17,000, | >¥ @ short circuit on one of the autos, since Warned to Cease, The fire was caused THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1921, “ Accuses Hearst of “Deliberate Lie” in Declaring That the Mayor Has Done So. “With Hylan in City Hall and En- right at Police Headquarters vice has |not been driven out of the city," de- clared Henry H, Curran, Coalition andidate for Mayor, last night in a rching arraignment of conditions which: forced Mrs. Ellen O'Grady, Deputy Police Commissioner, to quit ier post when she found wealthy malefactors being protected from ishment | ‘The candidate spoke at several big !ineetings in Queens and was greeted j everywhere by large and enthusiastic |crowds. He charged W. R. Hearst with a “deliberate le” in saying “Hylan has driven vice from New. “and declared the Hearst- Murphy-Hyian forces wee seeking to divert attention from the attempt of the Mayor to “put over a 10-cent transit plan here as was done in Bos- ton.” \ It ts a disgusting stor: he sald, | “that former Deputy Police Commis- | sioner O'Grady told of conditions at | Police Headquarters under Enright, but it is a story that has its parallel |in almost every department where Hylan favorites reign: | “'Here is the story that Mrs. O'Grady tells: ‘On complaint of a | woman, who said her daughter wus wild and unmanageable, she assigned policemen to investigate, As detail | by detail was laid before her, she had three young girls brought into her of- fice and questioned separately.” “Pwo of these girls were seven- teen years old,’ said Mrs, O'Grady, ‘and they told'a story of two men who had taken them into an apart- | ment in New York—these men had ken to them from an automobile Fifth Avenue—and they took these girls Into their apartment, and things happened that should not have hap- pened, and I felt that arrests should be made, These were two very wealthy men--well known men, I be- lieve, at least one of them is very | well known,’ She ordered her policewomen to arrest those men. The policewomen went to the office where the men | were, and there they found the secre- tary to Police Comm.ssioner Enright and ex-Inspector Hurhes, Enright’s | closest friend and boen companion for twenty years, the nan who made a million dollars. ‘The policewomen re- | ported by telephone that Hackett and Hughes had prevented them from ar- | resting the men. “7 told they te | stay there and arrest the men,’ says Mrs. O'Grady, ‘and | they called me up repeatedly: Bur ‘Hackett and Hughes framed the gct- away. She reported the thing to Commis sioner Enright. He asked whether they were good girls, She said thos: is were under eighteen, and wer: thoy black a6 ink, any man who hai nything to do with them was guilt’ fa crime.” Mrs. O'Grady also told her story to the Mayor. She went right to the | otfice of Hylan at the City Hall and told hin the whole sordid story, how Enright's secretary and Enright's close personal friend, ex-Mspector had blocked ‘her efforts t+ se two men. yian move one finger t+ bring these men to justice when he had the facts from a Deputy Police Commissioner whom he had appointed to uphold the law? "He did ry dd “Her policewomen continued their crusade against the places where tha vice that Hylan did not drive out flouristred, places where the procur- | ers and cadets got their recruits She began to feel the burden of the Hy- | Jan-Enright official displeasure. series of petty persecutions began, | mortifying to her self-respect not | only as an offical but also as a_ woman | “After enduring this for a year and getting no help from Hylgn, Mra. O'Grady resigned, and “nright's friends once more breathed freely. Mrs. O'Grady was honest; she too her job sertously and worked as har fig she knew how in the interests ot the women and children of New York whom she had sworn to protect, but | she failed in just one thing. Sae not appreciate that vice ts not vice ‘between friends, if the friend is ‘in right,” She did not understand that a friend of Enright’s is immune from interference by Police Headquarters. And so she resigned, And when she threw she sald: | “"r cannot stay and keep my self- | respect.’ “Do you think that Hea les or H. an drove vice out of New York? ‘Hylan says, ‘ask MeInnesa’ | “I say, ask ‘Mrs. O'Grady.” > her shield on Enright’s desk | tells the truth when he says his tool | | the mystery |torso yesterday are. c it the body of her son's wife. She bh not yet seen it and is reluctan. to | |firm also HYUAN HAS NOT MISS FAYR NOW BROWNEGETS WRIT ARMED GUARDS DRIVEN OUT VICE,” BELIEVED VICTIM INBUDGET FIGHT TO ON MOTORCYCLES | CURRAN ASSERTS OF POND MURDER Only Flaw in Identity Cen- tres on One \Tooth—Also Identified as Mrs. Wagstaff. Sergt. Frank cide Squad ‘Trainor of the Homi- convinced that if one slight point of | xdoptedy the Board of Estimate was difference can be reconciled, the tden- fity of the vietim in the Long Island City pond murder mystery will have been established. | Sergt. Trainor had several pho- toxraphs said to be those of Miss Kila Fayr of Brooklyn, Persons with m were confident of the identifica. | tion until the mouth was examined. Miss Fayr is said to haye had a filled tooth, One tooth of the sigin woman npears to have heen worked on ac- | Acompanied by a man and woman, | left the Morgue to-day| cording to Sergt, Trainor, aminer Dr. Norris, howe: Medical pr, says | tot, The dentist who put in the fill- | ing will be caled to examine the mouth, - Sergt. Ttrainor declined to say where Miss Fayr had lived. The wo- man who accompanied him said Miss | Vayr had been missing a short time that she was to have been married several months ago and that the en- gugement was broken off. he police are also t ing to con- firm through other relatives and| close friends that the torso is that | of Mrs, Mary Wagstaff, missing | of Arhold Wagstaff, a chauffeur ing at No. 174 Veronica Place, Brook- | lyn, who states he is positive it is.| They are also continuing their search | of the marsh lands back of the Lone} Island City Cemetery in the hope of finding the missing lees of the torso. They are no nearey solution of than before, so far as can be learned, but believe a positive identification of the victim will give them clues, At Wagstaff’s home his mother said that all seven persons who viewed the admit the possibility, saying the pho- tograph taken of the body is not con- elusive so far as she is concerned, Arnold, she said, married the sup- posed murder victim in April, 1920. They lived happily, the mother said, and the bride seldom went anywhere without Arnold, but, for some reason not clear to the family, she announced on July 18 that she was gaging to leave her home. Wagstaff saw her once after, on Aug. 19, on Broadway, Brooklyn. | They spent the day together and al- though on the best of terms, the] wife would not explain how she was} living, why she had left her home| and what her address was, The young wife's sister, Mrs. Jose phine Mendoza of Williamsbridge, took photographs of Mrs. Wagstaff to Police Headquarters to-day and will go to the Morgue to view the torso. $11,500 TO $3,000 BET THAT HYLAN WINS What is sald to be the largest wager in Wall Street on the present Mayor- alty election was made yesterday, W. L. Darnell & Co. of No, 44 Broad Street putting up $11,500 on Hylan to win against $3,000 on Curran. ‘The bet $8,500 to $1,000 that Hylan will be re-elected. Fred Schumm, the Brooklyn bet- ting @ommissioner, said to-day he had received about $20,000 to be placed within the last twenty-hour hours. He has placed $3,000 to $1,000 on the election of Hylan, § to $1,000 on the re-election of Borough President Riegelmann and $3,000 to $1,000 on the election of Hy $2,500 to $1,000 on the re-election « Borough President Riegelmann and $3,000 even that Hylan's plurality will be 150,000 The prevailing Brooklyn odds are 3 to 1 Hylan to win, even money that Hylan carries New York County> by 75,000 or Kings by 60,000 and even duction of nearly $1,000,000 in fort Tt tors work eight hours, the tion begun by Mr. |! ) of trying to capture wne may have the effect of bring- the band ree ey ing 4he budget close to $359. 00, ORE rt te Relieved an amount acknowledged to far that th ated the Cleveland excess what the city can legally ap- automobile Nba RAT cropelam Ponte Craig gan band t ut least one stis- stated that the budget must not be Pect under observation hee more than $49,000,000 to keep within Vestgation thus far has not brought the constitutional limits should the to light ee Be taxpayer's suit be sustained, the theory t aw bandit |oudget makers will have a big job Were men ne on their hands to add the additional Tobberies : biel millions and not — exec 2 a $349,000,000. i me ntaining ‘a FIRE ‘CAUSES PANIC al susgeations ed Postmast ~~ Apec n ot IN APARTMENTS (ono joes ok Morgan, is Protessional Band, money that Hylan carries all five boroughs INGLUDEPENSIONS, 10 PROTECT MAILS 1 | Board of Estimate} Must Show Postmaster Announces Precaus- Cause Monday for Leaving tions to Prevent New Out $8,296,531. Truck Holdups, | Profiting by the lesson taught by the recent $1,600,000 mail truck robe bery in Broadway, Postmaster Ed~ ward W. Morgan to-qay put in serv- ico fifteen armed men on as many motoreyeles who will hereafter guard all valuable mail in transit through this elty. With forty-elght maining (before the 1922 budget for the City of New York he only hours re- must served to-day with copies of a writ ot mandamus ordering them to show cause in the Supreme Court Monday morning why $8,296,581 in pension funds should not be returned to the budget. Stewart Browne, represent- The motoreycles, which were bore 1 from the Newark, 'N. J, Post row ing the U a y ¥ - dsciition Cbilneh The nee eet Office, will follow all trucks carrying Mr, Browne contends the Batimate | Peslstered mail at a distance of trou Board has improperly excluded from 0 to 100 fect, ‘The guards: riding the 1922 budget allowances which he them are armed with forty-five- gays are a vital obligation of the calibre automatle pistols. ‘The motor city. Among the pension appropria- Cycles linve side cars attachod, tions he says have been excluded’ Permitting the machines to halt and are: $2,925,000 from the police funds; Start with greater facility. $2,014,948 of city employees’ allow-| W: Irving Glover, Third “Assistant” neess and $3,256,682 taken from the Postmaster General, arrived ftom eachers’ retirement system funds, Washington this morning to take There are pending also three other Charge of the investigation ordered actions of similar nature involving PY Postmaster General Hays'té fix $200,000. . the blame for alleged negligence The pension fund iten ays Mr, Which made the robbery possible. Browne, were contained ih the tenta- Orders to arm chauffeurs’ of tracks tive budget, but eliminated from the catrying valuable mail were tssued proposed budget. The transfers o the department some time ago. pension moneys, he continues, were There is a question as to which ‘oP made partly for the purpose of pro- {¢ local Post Office officials should viding for salary increases and new |! 1 out these orders. salary items totalling $3,188,090. This, estion of the Postmaster he says, is at the expense of the pen stmaster Morgan began sion funds, and that the money must /#st night to collect the keys of mi be put back lat That is why Wagons from vers and he had calls the 1922 budget merely a “cam. 52th them at 10 o'clock paign document.” : this morn Hereafter mat! wagons 4s examiners of the Board of Esti. Will bel t the point of departure mate to-day reported that the buds e opened until they reach total had reached $3 ton Olfice Girl Rescued by Fireman eluaunted ‘eh ave counted the Duty—Ex-Service Men UtomeCnaE wile eeeal ons next Steady Tenants. in Philadelphia.” A fire in the cellar of 1! s do not attach spartment house at Nos. 149-1 a to the letter: but Sith Street threw all of the w vestigate It and warn Phila- families of tenants into a panic to- 4, day. The fire started in mattresses —_——>—__-- ture in the ‘nt a rush of flame up the and furn basement store rooms and s INDEPENDENTS HOLDING NORTH DAKOTA LEAD dumbwaitter shaft and airshaft wh i licked Into nearly all of the a ments. In 27.144 Ahead of Non- Pbyliis Hirech, eleven years old, Purtisan Governor, was left by he> family on the third FARGO, N. D, Oct. 29.—Returns from floor in the general rush for the fire- 999 procinets from yesterday's , rec escapes. Fireman Matthew Redmond *'* tabulated by ‘Independents 17, off duty, it Nes Independent, a of Epgine No. ing and took charge was pass- or 1 until the engines ste arrived. Redmond went np and : et brought down the little girl. ‘He y ludud’ incomplete’ hes aided in steadying the tenants by a it seven of the State's group of former service men who fifty-th ountt were at the Y. M. H. A. house nearby. |" Unofficial returns gathered by Traffic on the Third Avenue and both Non-Partisan and Independ Lexington Avenue lines was defMiyed Sources indicated the for half an hour. eral and ¢ ature and Labor pa aL y with the he Accased of Robbing ‘tore, Posing on the vo as Floorwalker, the Anith : y tabulutec David Goldcorn, describing himself a lodger at the Forsythe Baths in We voting. 23d Street, Manhattan, was held $5,000 ball in Adams Street Cou EUNEBAL DIRBOTORS: Brooklyn, to-day on the charge tha posing as a floorwalker, he stole $5 worth of drugs from the Abrahum Straus department store. q Call Columbus 8200 cme Funeral service « |EVELYN NESBIT OUT OF DANGER Saved by All-Night Taking Morphine When ng Eviction. esbit, who attempted sul- apartment over the tea runs at No, 285 West 52d was reported out of danger morning. In order to prevent from what remained in her Evelyn cide in he room she | Street this de th she awoke and came downstairs for send « note to the Little Entente warn-| something to ea 2 a 4 Accused Robbing a Chauffeur,| ing those nations t dae iin eats ening eee J by tuossengey alia Ono section of Harlem wax without) [ke preparations amelie Hungary, It nies ttre ae source Peis taxicabs to-day, because nearly every] MMs vot yet been decided what to do | was the a of the arrears in rent chauffeur was at Police Headquarters} gite 5 nd his wife, for lack of which she was facing the Washington Heights Court to ee Jevietion when she took morphine, She identity. or teatity ralnat Ja Jon>| ‘gig Auton Desttevea by Fire, | |seld the ni Shane ‘with ‘highwas ‘ay robbery. Ther Fire shortly before midaight jaat | !@" business, but as soon as she put has been an omic of hold-upe, with | night destroyed the Himhurst Motor |! on its feet she was going to Pitts- taxi drivers the victims, Jenkins was le Paint Shop at 83 Carter | burg for a rest Missy Nesbit's mother came on from Pittsburgh and took charge of the business affairs of the restaurant, ' Walk After | | system of the ten grains of morphine | | she took, she was kept walking| all night At 7 o'clock this morning Dr Harold Rossman said the nurse might permit her to le down, The former Mys. Thaw threw herself across a bed and was asleep in an instant After a couple of hours of sleep, | He Looked at It for Four Min- utes and Light Frpm Halo Gradually Disappeared. Copyright, 1021, ivy the Prew Publidiing Co, (The New York Evening World) LONDON, Oct, 28.—That he saw an objective vision of Christ on the cross {s the sensational claim’ of a hard- headed business man, a member of the congregation of the parish chureh at Braintree, fifty miles out of Lon- don. Furthermore, his claim is ac- cepted as fact by the Rev. W. J. L. Sheppard, who has been preaching there, “I'm quite eatisfied the man saw the vision he described,” he sald, ‘The Rev. Mr. Sheppard even an- nounced the vision from the pulpit to toriety had nearly ruined | the startled congregation, saying: During the evening service last Sunday a well knowa Braintree busi- ness man in the congregation saw a vision of the crucified Saviour in the VISION OF CRUCIFIED SAVIOUR SEEN BY BRITON, HE DECLARES The best costs no more.” FRANK E. CAMPBELL ; “THE FUNERAL CHURCH” Ine.” (Non-Sectarian) Broadway at 66th St. Notice to Advertisers nd release orders valng World or The iP OM inserted lortier of re prayer. A bright light from a on the head of*the filled the halo; erucified Christ whole chancel and blotted, out every other object. This ts not a A ey Ri ATA of case of an emotional woman sceing a must be recelved by 1 P.M. 0 of a hard-headed 6 | odvertleng type copy for the Suppie- vision but of a hard-headed man. The |» acerrtising. | for, the Subois. vision must be taken as a divine reve- byl Po. 4 a release must ‘ontaining engravings to be made lust be reeelved by ‘Thureday noon, lation.” The man told the Rev. Mr, Shep woila pard Wat whén he first saw the vis-| nor bes 3 com. (ue cope which has fon he bowed his head to collect his | tii", not, Dean reoatted iin ihe thoughts and make quite sure of bim. | fivtlon onters nat receiwd by 5 BM friday: self, Then he looked up again ani | {ie antes or atte Cmalons, require, rietdly, the vision of Christ crucified atil!| order % [Mt Terlpt and positive release filled the ohancel. He lo Display lensed later than 08 provided will not serve to coutract of athens THE WORLD * —_—— about four minutes the « Then the light from the halo gradu ally faded and the vision disappeared. The Rev. D. B. clay, vicar uf | Braintree, also believes in the reality | of the viston. “I'm quite satisfied the man actu | rae, All “Lost and Found" articles ally saw an objective vision of the Avertized in The Worl crucified Christ," he sald. “Ie toil | fo stast nnd Found Bureha Room me the figu. Was quite distinet on 1038, World Bulla 1g, Will be lated the cross. The vision of Christ dit J for inirty 4 no Hate can be not speak or beckon to him bu Geen at any of Th in World's Ont ces. looked at him w pleading eye Lost and Hound” advertiasmea ean be left at any of The World’ Advertising Agencies, or can bo telephoned directly to The World. Call 4000 Beckman, New York, op The man became quite ill into @ violent perspiration Tho townspeople have been crowd: nd bru chancel of the church. He said he first saw the vision while kneeling in ing the church in the hopes of seeing tr vision. (rookiyn Office, 4100 Main, hesnrapiesnnnsssenmemmmninnetmatoie

Other pages from this issue: