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hh sy Prias Bip, va 4 Be aS Were not a matter of life and death, | FT AowSt like the Mik Trust. 1 have } fought it al! my lita} have helped ® At do things It did not want to a But this time the Milk Trust Is ) Might!" Dor't be murderers! Am ) Fight about tis or wrong bs Dead wrong!” shouted G. riges. FF. Sterbensky and Jansen, the striking drivers es. Delegates of the other fnlons,echoed their scorn of the ap- a .Sterbinsky wald augrily Straws didn't know what he ~ Ing t when he spoke of agitation by paid agents, He said the milk @ompaties had refused to have friendly talks with the men. He ns- gerted the unica leaders were forced fo cal}, the strike by an overwhelming ‘majority vote. Mr..Straus rose again to say: “You a@re Going this thing at the wrong time. The great men of the world fre eXhausting all their minds and powgpe to readjust things and you are weekly disorder and murder to gain | youlh@wn scifsh ends, 1 have always J the Milk Trust, but 1 take off to it to-day. As for you, you Ing into the murdering business nm will only realize it.” Hi ia i rderlies Taking Milk Oo rts: Police a rapidly increasing lst of | incldéhts of violence throughout the city due to the milk strike wergepeports of attacks on ordafli¢s taking milk to a maternity | hospital on a street car platform and of a truck carrying milk to Harlem ‘Hospital showered with stones and bottlés until a policeman guarding it had to fire his revolver to stand off his attackers. Shots were fired in other fights over milk wagons, There were a score of reports of milk wagons overturned, | @vivers beaten and stores invaded and looted. The strikers abandoned all efforts to make trouble in the police pro-| tected zone about the milk depots, In- Stead they sent out scouts to mark down wagons and automobiles which appeared to be carrying milk for | Gealers. The scouts followed the wagons in taxicabs until outside the to Headquarters | Police lines and then gave the signal for @ general attack. By this process @ wagon of the Amsterdam Delicates- wen Store, at No. 430 Amsterdam Ave- | nue met disaster %t 10th Avenue and! @9th Street, leaving the Shefield! Farms Depot at 57th Str The ‘Wagon was overturned and sixty gal- Tons pif milk were spilled. ‘The driver Joseph Rabite was not hurt. ‘A Wagon belonging to H. F. Boldt, | r at Park Avenue and 63d conveying milk from the same. Plant, was stopped by strikers at 57t'/ Street, and Tenth Avenue, the door | broken open and all the milk botties | pases on the pavement. Another mil |wagon was overturned in 56th Btreet, near Ninth Avenue, and its con- | :-—Wagons Overturned, Drivers Beaten. | When the case | a quart.” the distributers to establish the open shop delivery force wae successfully completed to-day, In spite of spas- mode disorders all over the city, som of Which Involved revolver battles be t Emergency sales from the railroad y an Mas ep yards from milk trains were discon- — tinued. Trucks and handlera had Major been employed sufficiently to get the | Mmited supply of milk ordered trom Danbury Dollar Curran Says Hearst and His Mayor Have Ducked | the country creameries to the depots on the Issue, and branch stations of the compa: In a speech before the Arkwright nies, where tnereased sales forces Club at noon to-day Major Henry 1. | sold milk to all who applied who Cuan, Coalition candidate for | brought containers, Several score of Mayor, offered a reward of $1 to any additiona! branch stations — were ong who would show one promise established temporarily, SuMeclent Mayor Hylan made four years ago bandlera were employed at the freight that he had kept. Major Curran satd: | yards to clear milk trains promptly. 'T have charged Mayor Hearat's JAN pastuerization plants resumed man Hylan with breaking every peom- | with new work ise he made to the people four years = uate ee ugo. 1 have dared either one of all sta Bronx anxious mothers were informed that the com- them to meet me on the platform and | pany way now beginning to organiee angwer my es, Both have |its new force for house to house de- qucked and s A een liveries beginning to-morrow on & «Now T am gong to gve them a pitta They said (hey Were last chance, There {# a man named a ee ee ause they Murphy up in Danbury who calls feared violence, but who had mado plmself the “Big Indian.” — [ do not ino r willingness to come beok know Murphy, but I know he is with oe i atic police ibiheee one me hecause he wrote me a letter and ayingathicere Madison told ine so and sent me a doliar bill 1 den to help out my empty campaign tveasury. 1 now offer this Danbury dollar as a reward to Hearst or Hy- an or Hettrick or any one else who can show me one Hylan promise that Hylan has kept.”” And he showed the dollar good one. it is a was arrested at Third Avenue gind 2d Street on a charge of having a | concealed weapon—a plece of rubber hose loaded at one end with lead and to Hospitals Attacked by about sixty strikers, After Patrol- nde man Whalen had mode a report at Two cases of milk were selzed from the Bathgate Av Station two! Wagon which Goreta Lamauro of patrolmen were placed on duty No, 1381 Nostrand Avenue was driv- each of the railroad bridges on ing from a SheMeld Farms Company isuth Avenue, between 7th and |depot, and dumped th the street at Street New York and Atlantic Avenues. Na An atttomobile iad of strikers than Liebowitz, No, 441 Barrett ed the grocery of Louis C. Casluun | Street, a former driver, was arrested. at No. 677 ilake Avenue, Brookiyn,| Wiliam Borch, No. 1016 Bedford and went inside to destroy his stock. | AY¢0Ue armed pls BAA They took cans and bottles from worm- Joseph Brigante, No. 792 Kent Ave- nue, while Brigunte was on his w to work at the William Evans Dairy Company, in Lexington Avenue, was held in $100 bail in the Union Avenue Court. Four Bayridge en cystomers and cuffed and hustled | wemen who resisted, The screains of | the women attrac Policeman Harry Baier, who arrested Jacob Kleimer of No. 88 de Salles Place and Samuel, Wittman of 4u6 Wyona Street. war called in court it | was learned Cushdan had been called to the door by a stranger who had| accompanied him away. His daugh- | ter, however, persirted in remaining to testify against the men, George Weidnuin, No. 25 Courtland Avenue, Mount Vernon, a former Bor- den driver, was errested ut 18ist Street and St. Nicholas Avenue, He shad bought ten cases of milk and was sell- ing from his own cutomobile to former customers who had-bables or sick peo- ple in their fu:ntiles, Strike plekets accused him of being “one of those profiteers who peddle milk at 50 cents The police searched Weid- man's car and urrested him on a charge of haying a blackjack. He was fol- lowed to thé West 177th Street Station by Joseph F, Newman, said to be a striker. Newman was arrested on tho charge that he too had a blackjack. Each of the prisone-p claimed the kjack had been “planted.” They arraigned the striking employees of branch of the bail each for examination by Magis- trate Reynolds in Fifth Avenue | Court, Brooklyn, Policeman Edward | Johns@ said the men jumped Into | the wagon driven by George Dodes of No. 6528 20th Avenue and tossed a| number of bottles of milk to the| street. 7 Arthur Miller, a salesman in the Harlem office of the She Meld Farms Company, was arrested by Policeman Miller for refusing to stop threaten- { g clerks who were dishing out milk to customers. He was fined $15 by Magistrate Simpson. ‘Taxicab drivers who had turned} milk peddlers were chased by a| crowd of strikers at Broadway and 125th Street. They were stopped by policemen for violating the speed| laws in escaping, but were let go on explaining. State troopers were called out to- day to watch the plants of the Wil- wer in For Any Promise jpected. No reports were available at the | Sheffield | Farms Company were held in $500/ tents! destroyed. Wi Harrison, No. 1216 Street, Brooklyn, was held bath in $500 ‘bail for Special Sessions by Masgis- trate|Liota in Coney Island Court, following the destruction by strike Washington Heights Court, RAID TRUCK CARRYING MILK TO HOSPITALS. Forty strikers raided a on which Policeman Baccagiint was riding as a guard at Morris Avenue big truck lowbrook Dairy at Carmel and the big dairy of Bordens at Pawling owing to the strike of the drivers and other em- ployees, There was no violence. Wealthy residents loaned their au- tomobtles to aid milk delivery to hoa- omen ee * pymp&thizers of ninety-six quarts of _ Mili ln the automobile of Max Dom- fie, & grocer of No. 2535 Surf Ave- | mue, Who had undertaken to get mili fer his vegular customers from the Bordea station in Gravesend Avenue. fm capturing Harrison from a crowd @urrolinding the automobile Police- “man Ryan, when bottles were thrown at him, fired two shots which brought help. Willlam Grossman of Schwartz & Grossman, grocers, at No, 6107 Sev~- enth Avenue, Brooklyn, was attacked ‘oy strikers while unloading milk at | this stare and ten twenty-gallon cans were gpilled. The attackers were in fm automobile of which the police Ihave the number. RAG MAN WITH CAN OF MILK FROM CAR. . A crowd of men, strike sympathix- ere, Gfagged a,can of milk destined for the Sloane Maternity Hospital from &@ street car at 59th Street and Tenth Avenue shortly before noon. ‘Phe milk was spilled. Police corralled two men and took them to the Shet- Meld Farms depot at No. 624 West ‘Sith Street. Officials of the company, imstead of ordering the men arrested, took their names and sald the alleged + offenders would be blacklisted and mever given employment again, The men were E. Knoll, No. 128 West 129th Btreet, said to have been employed mine years, and A. Goldberg, No, 720 Bast b2d Street, the Bronx. An automobile truck proceeding from the New Haven yards at 1384 Street and Willis Avenue, Bronx, to the Borden Pasteurizing Plant, at 180th Street and Park Avenue, was ecelved with a shower of bricks on Park Avenue, near 156th Street. Pa- @rolman Michael Whalen, who was on ths truck for the protection of the ° river, drew his revolver and the men | pitals and other Institutions and to the poor. In Mount Vernon, Yonkers, White Plains and New Rochelle the milk companies established special sti- tions, and 162d Street. The truck was to go to a number of hospitals. Baccaglini jumped from the truck and the Strikers scattered after throwing milk bottles taken from a store apparently! Major George F. Chandler an- piled up for that purpose. nounced in Albany that State Troop- On the roof of a tenoment at 1624) ers stand ready to protect milk deal- Street and Morris Avenue eome Of} ers and routes in all rural districts, the men turned on tho policeman | put would not go to New York City Five shots were fired, of which ths] yniess the police fall to preserve order policeman fired three. He then closed] ang Gov. Miller ordered them there. in and arrested three of the men. A! Antonio Carricozo of No. 695 Hast crowd’ of a hundred or more persons] isoth Street was accidentally shot in followed the policeman to the station! the leg at 180th Street and Bathgate and were chased away by the re-|Avenue by Acting Detective Sergt. serves. William Wilson of the Bathgate Rve- The three were discharged because |nue Station while Wilson was recap- the policeman told Magistrate Mc-|turing Henry Kessler, a striker, of Geehan they had been running into]No 1824 Webster Avenue, who had the crowd and not away from him| escaped after being arrested, charged when he first saw them. with upsetting a milk wagon. Kes- Fred Gent No. 1065 Boston}sier was caught, Carricozo was Road, was fined $10 for attacking the|taken to Fordham Hospital. wagon of Louis Bender of No, 1225] A number of Flushing women who Intervale Avenue and spilling two| were active in war organizations af- cases of milk, The Magistrate said} fillated with the Fort Totten classes he would have made the fine heavier| for citizens’ military training, re- had Policeman Mills not bdlacked|vived their organizations to-day into Magistra‘e McGeehan called a con-|thuniel C. Seeley. A train of touring ference for this afternoon of the coun- cars and limousines was organized; sel for the etrikers, ‘the Distri “| the cars were filled with milk for the Raine a crtincy Bolte tanvent San Empire State and SheMeld branches ZI ice spector Dum-|in Flushing and carried 4o homes inick Henry and representatives of /noted on the lst of Flushing chart- the milk distributerg so they could| table organizations and ohurches as know just what was regarded as j1-|D&¥ing sick children. When these had been supplied the cars were sent int legal to make the strike effective. |igolated districts at so great a dls- He gave warning that after these|tanco from the m!'k depots that par- definitions had bieo made anown :y ents were not able to send children AS for milk and then began a distribu- the men jail sentences would be im-|tion to the retail stores all over town posed rather than fines where fhe} which did not have facilities for get- law was violated, ting milk, ‘The light delivery truck of William B, Stedman of the Modern Markot of | ™#* Oyster Bay was overturned at noon] pripgmpORT, Conn, Nev. 2 in Sth Street near Tenth Avenue.| gtrixebreakers were put to work to- About one-third of 360 bottles of milk]day tn an effort to deliver milk as a | was destroyed, Stedman drove on tol result of the walkout of drivers tn Spoiling 1 Bridgeport; rikebreakers Hirea, @trikers on the vieduct running along 12th Avenue, from 128d to 135th Street, threw stones, bottles and other wiissiles at several trucks leaving the recetving station at 1324 Street and 3th Avenue this morning, As a re- wult, Capt. Patrick F. Gargan of the Le Galle Street Station placed a num- ber of patrolmen on duty on the wieduct. Wnteck tm the Bronx was stoned e wi or sympathy with the New York milk | Oyster Bay with the remainder when | Strike. ‘Thousands of quarts of mili |his car was righte 4 were spoiling. i f SS | Pred Zerbst of Astoria, L. 1, a former Borden driver, was arrested at | 0S Seve" ™ 34th Street and Lexington Avenue as one of a group who attacked a tax!- cab from which milk was being ped- BUTLER, Pa., Nov. 2.—"Babe," a Boston bull owned by Victor P. Adams here, saved his master’s life early to- led. All the day, but lost his own, Adams wa died. All the other strikers got | awakened by the dox Pawing at ‘th away, bed covers to discover the house w. Peter Conolivito, No, 894 Second | sire. He escaped by jumping from the second-st Andow, a Avenue, a former Shefficld driver, burned 10 deat SPT, 209 W8 W88 . : ~ _THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMB R 2, 1931, 3,000 MINER INCENTRAL COAL FLOS WALKOUT Ohio and Indiana Most Af- fected With Approximately 20,000 on Strike. PROTEST COURT, ORDER. 350,000 in All May Quit Fol- lowing Abolition of “Check- | Off” Systeme CHICAGO, Nov, arly 30,000 miners in the soft coal fields of the Central District walked out to-day tn protest against abolition by court order of the check-off method of col- lecting union dues. Miners in Indiana j and Olio were the leaders. The men were believed to be in a bad financial condition for a general strike, because of the large propor- tion of unemployment throughout the industry. Frank Farrington, President of the United Mine Workers of Illinois, tel- egraphed to-day to his headquarters | that tnasmuch as the Illindte coal operators have not yet abolished the check-off system, the miners should remnain at work. The telegram in- structed that wires be sent every Mlinols district coal loc: work, “Life of the ization,” Mr. Farrington said, in a critical state, and hasty uction might result in its dissolution and deat! INDIANAPOLIS, No 1 to continue —Wo: the Indiana coal field was practi hf coal flelds of the country were ex international headquarters of the} United Mine Workers of America as to conditions in the sixteen States in- to which messages were sent last night by the union chiefs, advising that discontinuance’ by operators of the “check off," as prescribed by Federal Judge A. 1, Anderson's in- Junction, was to be treated as break-| ing the existing wage agreement. At headquarters of the Indiana miners {t was said the only mines working to-day were a few of the smaller plants, National officials of the Coal Miners’, Union were preparing for a possible walk-out of all its 350,000) members. ALBIA, Ia., Nov, 2.—John Gay, § retary of the United Mine Workers| of the 13th District, to-day indicated a general strike of miners in Iowa would follow an attempt by opera- tors to discontinue the union “check off” system. ATHENS, 0., Nov. Six coal mines in the Hocking coal district employing nearly 1,000 men, were not in operation to-day. No strike order had been issued. RIVAL FACTIONS POUNCE ON VOTERS Polige and Firemen Distribute Cir- ¢culars For and Against Civil Service Preference. Rivalry entered into the distribution to-day of pro-preference and anti- preference literature for war veterans in the City Hall Park by uniformed members of the Fire and the Police Departments. Ex-soldier firemen and policemen were distributing circulars advocating Constitutional Amend- ment No. 1. Policemen and firemen who openly admitted they were not in the military service distri- buting pamphlets urging negative votes on Amendment No, 1, Gather- ings and debates waxed so warm at times that police officers had to in- terfere. Amendment No. 1 provides that any male person who holds an Army, Navy or Marine honorable discharge will be entitled to preference in appoint- were O’Ryan, Col. Whittelsey and othera are against it as “undemocratic, selfish, unfatr and as professional patriotism.” -—_>——_ SAYS HOUSE WILL NOT ACCEPT SALES TAX Fordney, reen Notity Senate Leade WASHINGTON, Nov. 2,—Aroused by the growth of sentiment in the Senate for the sales tax, Chairman Fordney and Representative n, Iowa, and Representative Longworth, Ohio, of the House Ways and Means Comittee, informed Senate leaders to-day that under no circumstances would the House accept a sales tax at this time. Th Sonate opted to inc the. limit Certificates which one from $1,000 to. $5,000 ther, impo: ing a tax on Insurance compan dealing tn life insurance, and one which clergymen occupying panso rent free will not be required to p tax on the rental values of the pa sonaxe. an amendme War Savin rson may ho ry Old Post at a standstill to-day. Twenty thou™and the box containing the gowns sand men empioyed at approximately {Weer Komeda ‘enert ; : etectives visited apart! 500 mines in the state had wi inthe house Besupied By. Pe oman according to early reports re sehode famie wasrgivenlto theni HY vhion headquarters ut ‘Te Miss Naftal, ‘The apartment was * Widespread walkouts in locked and apparently v iy |divor jana WOMAN HOLDS UP MODISTE AND AIDS NS1,00 ROBBERY Gown Dealer Attacked in Apartment Vestibule—Former Customer Suspected. Ray Naftal, shop at No, 69 West 45th Street, re- ported to the police of the West 68th Street Precinct thls afternoon that she had been held up, assaulted and robbed of $1,500 worth of jewelry, a emal! sum of money and half a dozen expensive gowns in the vestibule of the apartment house at No. 318 West 74th Street by a woman and two men. She said she had reason to believe that the woman was a former cus- tomer, supposedly wealthy. “Miss Na scelved a telephone call this morning from a woman who described herself as an old customer and gave a name famillar to the modiste, ‘The woman instructed her to bring six or seven gowns to the ad- dress in West 74th Street at 1 o'clock this afternoon. Miss Naftal reached the a taxicab @t the time set. Carrying the gowns in a box she entered the vestibule. In the semi-darkness, she said, © woman stepped up, struck her on head with a blunt Intrument and knocked her to the floor, With the remark, “I hate to do this but I'm driven to it,” the woman, ac- house in cording to Miss Naftal, pressed a handkerct into her mouth and two uppeared from the rear of the stibul Then Miss Naftal taint she recovered she alon been pd f was stripy ‘our rings had om her fingers, her purse Boldt loot VOICE ON PHONE Broker Sued for Divorce by One } Wife and Another Asks | Annulment. | When an office boy told Mrs, Helen W. Deiderick over the telephone, ‘T do not recognize your voice,” he gave Robert M, Deiderick, a broker, the im- petus which has landed him in Texas and caused his wife, Helen, to sne for » and his other wife, Beulah S., to ask annulment of her marriage. Both wives told their stories to Su- preme Court Justice Erlanger to-day he reserved decision on their various actions, Deiderick, who is a member of the brokerage firm. of Charles I. Willard, No. 17 Bast 424 Street, according to testimony, 1s still in ‘Texa: According to to as wife Mrs. Helen, referred No. 1, she was married to Diederich Mareh 14, 1914, and he left Last May she saw him on Broadway and folowed him to his office. ‘The next day she called him on the telephone and declares she learned there was another Mrs. Deiderich. The latter says she was married to the broker in Aprjl, 1920, Both wives sat together and chatted in court to-day. her March 6, 1 ROCK SALT DEPOSI who conducts a gown|$ GAVE HUBBY AWAY |, PIMLICO RESULTS. PIMLICO CH TRACK, Nov, 2 t ‘. are as follow: ‘Maidens; pronase: ‘antouche, Dolly C, Antiiles, Trantula ina D, St. Michael, Current Events, ural and Chinnie Walsh also ran. FOURTH RACE—The Stafford hanii- cap; for three-year-olds and upward, six ‘furlongs,—a Knobble, 117 (Sande), $5.20, $2.60, $3, won; b Oriole, 11% (Erickson), $4.30, $3.60, second; a’ Dom Inique, 126 (ator), $8, third. | Time— Ls 4-5 dur, Minute Man, Sedgefield, Kin- noul, Carmandale, ‘Knight of the Heather, Pride of India, ‘Tippity Witehet, Serapis and Caligula also ran. a Rancocas stable entry. bJ. K, 1, entry. anes PIMLICO SCRATCHES. PIMLICO, RACE TRACK, Nov. The scratches for to-day’s races aré as_followa: ‘ FIRST RACE~—F¥reeszy Sneezy, Doughnut, Miragie, Man. THIRD RACE—Stanley, Dough Girl, Zed. North Shore, Tuscan Maid. eROURT! RAGE — Dresden, "Rout- c. FIFTH RACE—3Moco, Doughnut, Excuse Me. SIXTH RACHE—Bit of White. SEVENTH RACE — Bribed June Fly, Dorney. —— PIMLICO ENTRIES. Voter, PIMLIGO RACK TRACK, Md,, Nor, 2.—The entries for to-morm#’n races are as follonw FIRST RACQE—To-year-cide; claiming; {ive and @ half furlongs, —*Awning, 101; Tri Tange, 140: seivanc Tireur, 180, ive fast upward: six 29, M5 Afra Go Og, 108: Brom! Cola, 95; *Cock o'' the Roost, 165, Fruit Cake. 108; allard 5 ra ler ent POUT RACK—Forest Park Handicap, three ear-oldn and 0 i jaaritle, is; itungs. Buck, Thunders ‘e hesiget Slippery Bu ye Archer, 100.) altancocas ry, xThree pounds claimed for rider, PH RACE—Govana Purse: three year-olds 3 One mile and @ aixteenti,— Jean Balan er nd hide, 105" ous, 8, 108. alames Butler entry. ; sm i, in 4 Mir, 100; "King ‘Trova, Gomine C4, 11 Paniner, 168, Apprentice allowance of fi ‘Track slow. Weather cloudy. Se te PIMLICO SELECTIONS. PIMLICO RACE TRACK, Nov. Following are The Evening World's lectiona for to-morrow's races: Firat Race—Misdeal, Swift Grass, Hy- erbole, PeGecond Race-Le Marsoutn, Vigilante, Le Cyprin, Third Race—Round Robin, Rhinestone, Arrah Go On. Fourth Race—Rancocas entry.— Sl!p- pery Elm, Bastile, Fifth Race—Major Parke, Attorney, super, ; Sixth Race—Lady Baltimore, O!! Man, iA *Qeventh Race—Devil Dog, Comme Ci, King Tro} : ————— BANK BANDITS KILL ONE AND WOUND TWO Empleyee Op. Pounds claimed, Fire with Shot- gun a Robber: JONESBORO, Ark., Nov. 2,.—Marion Light, a farmer, was shot and killed and two other men were wounded in a battle na bank at Alicia, Ark. twen- 100,000 SQUARE MILES. Largest im World, Extends From Northern Kansag Acrons West End of Oktahome, Fram the 0. $, Geologie Surrey.) Vast quantities of rock salt le less than half a mile beneath the surface of the earth in the United States. In New York, Ohio, Michigan, Pennsyl- vanla, West Virginia and other States there are large deposits, but the largest ty-five miles west of this city, between three bandits and bank officials and employees to-day. Light and the two men wounded were in the lobby and were struck by stray bullets. ‘The bandits, whose attempt to rob the bank was fofled by a bank em- ployee who opened fire with a shotgun, escaped in an automobile. a CABLES GOOD WISHES TO AMERICAN JEWS deposit in the United States, and prob- ably in the world, is that which extends from Northern Kansas across the west end of Oklahoma, the Pan-handle of " and Southeastern New Mexico to area underlain by these great Permian galt deposits 1s not far from 100.000 square imiles. Sir Robert Cect! Marks Fourth An- miversary ef Zioniet Move. LONDON, Nov. 2 (Jowish Tele- graphic Agency).—Lord Robert Cecil, member of the, House of Commons and South African’ delegate to the League the aggregate {s more than 300 feet. On the assumption of an average thickness of 200 fect of salt, the gross quantity In the area of 100,000 square miles is so large, about 30,000 billion fons, that the present needs of the United States (bout, 7,000,000 tons a year) can be supp! ears. ————— Woman Lights Match in Clothes Closet Cauning Her Death, Agnes Murphy was bumed to 1 shortly before noon to-day home on the M de her had apparently gone Into a clothes oxet to look for some clothing, light- 4 mateh, when. ess hanging in Closet caught fire and she fainted, the theory of the police. inet aher Old Timer, im Hard Luck, Lands a Jo Peter Maher, dup at the Dock Department yes- to whom he sald he was broke and out of work, Mr, Hulbert, after much tele- phoning, landed a Job, starting to-day, Yor "the man who once squared off gainst Bob Fitzsimmons and the reat of the best fiehters -f the time, Because of lack of busin: the West- ern Unton Telegraph Company, has than forty years It maintained in the old General Post Office Building. abandoned the office which for more| d That refers t bythe other eid Di of ‘op, "wit do they mean by twad-|eharged arguments advanced} Gavin ‘The lrits of the depostt, espectally to if 2 ment and promotion in Civil Gervice| tho Northwest and Seutheeste have notice Nations Dae cépied his congratule, 4 ; pee Neroertained, ut in general the|tions- and good wishes to American of the Nation, State, county, borough] Grn of thick salt extends fully 60|Jews on the occasion of the fourth an- or city, It does not provide for Wom] miles from northeast to southwest, and |niversary of the publication of the Bal- en, nor does {t provide tor the dis-|{3 30 to. 150 miles wide. four Declaration, which pledges Great abled and wounded veterans. The| The thickness and the succession of | Britain to the establishment of a Jew- ‘American Legion is for it, but such| the beds are variable, but 700 feet ia|ish homeland in Palestine. \ rte man: —_——>_—_ @uthorities as Gen. reported in one hole and in many places COLUMBIA STUDENTS HEAR CANCER ADVICE “Sandwiched in between fire preven- ied for millions of] tion week and election week comey cancer week, and in one sense election week and fire prevention week and all the other weaks are of little importance compared with cancer week. “Twenty years from now, whether Hylan or Curcan ts elected will inter- third floor of the|est neither you nor me especially; but apartment house No. 50 Howard Street. | twenty years from now the scourge of cancer will be just as active as tt ts to-day and may have removed any one of us from our earthly sphere of ac- tivity. And so it will go on, as it has embployed in” New! gone on sinos human records existed, destroying a ceriain proportion of the population.” So declared Dr. Francis Carter Wood, Director of Columbia University old time prise fighter, | mstitute for Cancer Research, to some 3,000 Columbia students in general y and saw Commissioner Hulbert | assembly at the university yesterday. ponent aay cle Trial te Postponed a Week. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov, 2,—Roth sides have agreed to a postponement from Nov, 7 to Nov. 14, in the opening A the trial of Roscoe C. Arbuckle, with manslaughter tn connec: tion with Virginia Ivy . jab, cabot" dstense “counsel, . LEGION CHEERS olds} rolling) six furlongs.—The, Ven- eance, 1 ica ner), 846.40, 97.20 and 0, first; Barly Bird, 107 (Brickson), : id Teo Englan ince, 110 $23.60, Fas Times 1 tirphy, Rack Ein’ Up, Wild fecuueline, Barriskane, Rocham- eau, Grace Foster, Sammy K., alro ran, a La gSBQOND, RACH — The Baltimore ae chase; for maidens; three-year- , ok Hasta Eieak Pa Gus and nk tte milancesPhoenik 180 (Continued From First # (Chene: my be out, Ww Sobrigade, “ “ 180 Gfationey), out, recond; Kathryn 7 Haran, 147” (Kennedy), out, third.Jage. A programme of industrial and Re ite Mine am, 7 .{eocial reform, turther securing the EAE PaviasDosonls Stable entry. | freedom of the press and abolishing THIRD RACE—For three-year-olds; a tendency toward class consclous- ctaiming; one mile—-King ‘Trojan, 108 a (iteupel), $48.80, $14.10, 91.40, won; | ness in Government, was demanded Frank Fogarty, 108° (Carroll), $9.10] in an ant&tted resolution. Penalties Sacha: Bouga,. j11 (Atkinson), | roy renting a building to radical or- ganizations were suggested. The name of Grover Cleveland Berg- doll was hissed by the legionaries when a resolution was read demand- ing his property be confiscated by the Allen Property Custodian and all legal means be used to have him brought here for trial The convention adopt reaffirming the attitude last National Convention ution the e+ Cle at land relative to adjusted compensa- tion. Gen. Diaz of It Admiral Earl Beatty of at Britain and Vice President Coolidge left for the East to-day. Other visitors including Marshal Icch, Gen, Baron Jacques and Gen. Pershing spent a part of the day at the flying field, Marshal Foch and Gen. Yershing having on their programino a trip to Leavenworth to look over the Federal Prison and military barracks the The Amer- ican Genera: planned to stay at the | fort for some time to make an inspec- tion, The two were togleave to-night on a special train for St. Louis. Gen Jacques will also leave to-nig! aboard a special train for Omaha, where he will attend the Internation- al Alr Congress the latter part of this week. Members of the committee on reso- lutions said prior to the presentation of their report that a resolution cen- suring President Harding for urging recomini a ent of compensation legis- A greeting was sent to ex-Fresident Wilson expressing hope for speedy covery from illness, and went on record as urging « world agreement on disarmament >_ 4,000,000 STARS IN VICTORY BUILDING WASHINGTON, State Leg- Jelatures will be asked to appropriate funds necessary to defray the expense of installing thelr proportionate share of the 4,000,000 stars which are to dec- Memorial Building, it announced to-day. Plans are now under way for the laying of the cornerstone. ‘The building is to occupy the square at 6th and B Streets, northwest, which was given by Congress for the purpos The embellishment of the dome wit gold stars for those who lant their and blue fe 1 others *tho the World War, is to be a featui structure, Se SS For Supplies To Ex-Service Men Aiding Unemployed. was lives erved in of the WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—The e tary of War is authoriged to issue blankets, . cots and other surplus army lias to former services men engage alding the unemployed, in . resolution introduced in the House to-day by Representative Longworth, an appropriation of $50,000. is authorized to take care of transportation costs. Care for Your Eyes? Your eyes do a great deal for you. What do you do for them? They surely need attention—they may need glasses. Don’t neglect them. Reliable Eyesight Examination By Registered Eye Specialists ESons | E.t..blished 59 Years New York: 184 B’way, at John St. 223 Sixth Av., loth St, xth Av,, 22d St, sau, at Ann St. est 42d Street B'klyn:517 Fulton St. opp., Namm’s In Case of Death, Call “Columbus 8200” VRANK E. CAMPBELL, “THE FUNERAL CHURCH” lac, (QNon-Sectarian), 1970 Broadway at 66th St. Dowstows Olfiee, Z3d St. & Sth Av. —_—_—_—————e Notice to Advertisers (Display advertising type copy and release order rok das Murbing Word or Toe Office Copy contain je oy Tee Word must be rec caved World Supple M. "Thursday must bo. receive taining engravin, Ly Tue World be received by ‘Thursday nvon. Sunday Main Sheet copy, tybe copy which pot been reocived by 4 P.M. Friday, and Braving copy which bas not been rec ublleation office ‘by th Sf. Friday eertion orders not receiwd by 5 P will be omitted the order of latest order. me IIAy cor or, erdere above, “when omit fara discounts of ‘827 vee . conditiags reat! revel posith characte THE WORLD ~ | e lation was taken up by the cominittec te last night for discussion, The resolution finally was tabled, membérs said, Unotlicial information from y committee room last night while the committee was stl in session, was thut the resolution had been adopted. orate the dome of the National Victory | IRISH PEACE PLAN 1S BELIEVED 10 BE NEAR COMPLETION aap | (Wontinued From First Page. im — counell all the powers of a dominion to abolish reservations to the Im perial Parliament contained in the Home Rule Act and to let all the powers reserved for the two loca) legislatures be. concentrated in Joint Irish Parliament, The 8 Fein delegates are said to contend that such a joint Parliament shduld not be constituted on a basis of equal representation between the minority of the north and the majority of the south, and are asking that a plebis- cite be held in the districts whieh have declared their allegiance to the ‘soutli of Ireland, Efforts are being made, it was said Ao-day, to make Ulster realize i might be seriously prejudiced sf ft |were left with Limited powers under |the Home Rule Act while Southern \Ireland has extended powers. LONDON, Noy. 2—The Irish peace negotiations were resumed to-day, the British and Sinn Fein delegates meet- ing in the Government offices in Down- ing Street. | Oficial announcement was made this afternoon that it was extremely un- likely Lloyd George would be able to sail on Saturday to’ attend the Wash- ington ule Arms Conference, as sched- COLGATE’S cleans teeth thoroughly—no dentifrice does more. ALARGE tube costs 25c. Why pay more? A BT PENNY A POUND PROFIT. f t Advt. on Page 13 H.G.WELLS is a leader in the .effort to make the thinking of men better and truer. He has been brought to America by The Wiorld to write about the Arms Conference at Washington. He will make clear to the conferees what enlightened Public Opinion expects of them. He will help that Public Opinion crystallize on the right things and reject the wrong. He can do this better than any other living writer, for all civilization is his audi- ence. IN NEW YORK, ONLY She World WILL PRINT WHAT WELLS WRITES. 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