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t THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1921. DISARMINGPOLICY | Waiting to Buy Milk at Station on the West Side; Some Early Arrivals Who Got Supply for the Day | MEANS DEATH FOR ANGLO,AP PACT Pact That Affected Fate of China and Far East Never Liked by U.S. . ENGLAND SAW MISTAKE. Helped Out of Dilemma by - Harding’s Injection of Far St Problems, ( Third Article of Series. ) In this the third of a series of sig- nificant despatches, David Lawrence, the famous Washington correspondent, tells why the United States considers the alliance between Japan and Great Britain as @ menace to America and the inside story of how the coming eonference on Armament happened to de called. By David Lawrence. Cooreins New Vox retina Works ‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—The United @tates has never liked the Anglo-Jap- nese alliances. Republican and Dem- weratic Administrations alike have felt What alliances only led to dangerous (ieunderstandings. Europe has re- fwealed the mischief which a system @& alliances develops. The formation @¢ em aAlance tn Central Europe be- tween Germany, Austria-Hungary and Uely was offset only by an entente woriiale between Great Britain, France 24 Russia, It led te war, But the objection to the Anglo-Jap- F--pnese alliance has not been merely Phat % ects up England, the greatest pavel power in the world, as a work- {ng partner of Japan with whom (America has been having in recent years some troublesome disputes. It ‘a that, spurred on by the knowledge ef such a partnership, the Japanese bave assumed an attitude toward Ohina wherein American, French, Ww TAKIS ANG PEORL! = = WAITING AST -THE.SITATIONIFOR Mu. ment when we know that we reduce our navies till there agreement on diplomatic especially in the Far Hast? To which Ambassador can't is an tions, Harvey AMERICA SUFFERING |ELEVATOR GIRL’S JF.PRYOR TAKING A | SUP PLYAORAMILK “HOME FROM “CHARTOLOGY” MARRIAGE NULLIFIED CAFE OWNER SHOT INRIOT FOLLOWING DRY AGENTS RAID Free-for-All Fight in Old Broadway Place. Three shots were fired In a raid to-day on a former saloon at No. 64 Old Broadway by Prohibition agents James Morris, proprietor, waa shot in the leg and a free for all fight ensued in which the saloon was left littered with broken bottles and chairs, A crowd of 1,000 persons was drawn to the scene, thinking the fracas was a atrike riot Agents Herman Wittenberg. ard Gallant! and John Carrigan, in answer to complaints that milk strfk- ers were receiving a supply of |whiskey at different places in the neighborhood, began a cleanup move ment to-day. Dressed as strikers the Leon- first two entered the establishment and Wittenberg, ordered whiskey, which he said he got. fe then started behind the bar to search, revealing his shield. Morris. he alleges, seized him by the throat and Gallanti fired a shot Morris ran into a back room. Other persons in the place locked the front door, and Carrigan, on the outside, fired two shots through the door. The patrons of the place then began breaking up bottles, the dry agents charged Strikers, seeing Agent Carrigan armed with a revolver and dressed as one of thelr number, ran to his aid. Bottles and Chairs Smashed in} .,, Others closed in on him too, their sympathies apparently being against the strikers, The street was quickly filled with a surging when Policeman Hanrahan and other pa- trolmen ran up. ‘They held the crowd back and then ordered those Inside the one-time saloon to open the door There they found Morris, covered the dry agents, bleeding from a flesh wound tn the leg They sert him the Knickerbocker Hospitai where the wound was treated. He then taker to the 125th Streut and thence to the Jadl in the Yd Street Station, \efe he ordered held pending Urraign- before the Federal aut sovitie crowd to charged with violating the Volstead Law Before Lieut! Ivy at the 125th Street Station Morris demanded that gs and Gallant be arrested, with asaault, «He sald he did not Know ther were Federal offl- cers, The Lieutenany. retavey to do 80, advising him to lay the matter before United States Commissioner Hitchcock when he is taken there, lator, however, Magistrate Simpson in the Washington Heights Court, ts- sted at Morris's request a John Doe summons which will be served on Gal- lanti when Morris is arraigned to-mor- Commissioner Hitchcock. row before oo BURNED BY BONFIRE, CHILD IS NEAR DEATH Stopped to Warm Her Hands While on, Way to School. While warming her hands over a bontire near her home, Dorothy Kearns, five, af No. 8,Tarrytown Road, White Plains, ignited her clothes and received burns from which she may dle, The child was on her way to school, Eluding neighbors who tried to sop and help her, the child ran to her home w her ther tore the burning clothes from her body, receiving severe burns, Mother and child were taken to the White Plains Hospital, where it is sald the latter has a fighting chance of *e- covery. The mother went home after treat OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & © 34th Street—New York BISHOP ALIMONY CASE | . AGREEMENT REPORTED Hushand Had Fatled to Keep Up £10,000 — Year Payments, An agreement between Mrs. Abigail Hancock ham Bishop, her former husband, of the trustees of the estate of Heber R, Bishop, his father, was indicated to-day in the striking out from the Supreme Court calendar of the motion af the receiver for a referen: to determing the nature of Investments made by trustees under Heber R. Bishop's will and the Income therefrom, The receiver, George Medalie, was appointed on the application of Mra Bishop, Pennay! ments of alimony at the rat yearly, as required in a modified wcaes in her decree of divorce, It was wey forth in the motion that M Riehop was tr ed. Mr. Medali ad been directed to receive from th rhistees mulated income arid come yet due and turn over to Bishop $1.90 due to si 19, and $192.31 weekly from that date Mre 684— Colored Bohemian Glase table decoration, $20 ROM 39th Street and Fifth Avenue, gifte are sent every day, to every stute in the Union. Even as you are reading this now, some- body, somewhere between Newport and Pasadena is getting a new thrill from the freshly arrived Ovington gift. OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of 5th Ave” Fifth Avenue at 39th St. Bishop and James Cunning-_ t % . he i * | : | British, German and Russian interests ight with propriety Have aalae Manufacturer Says Nation In Too ° ° . were likely to be permanently injured. | MEMt with propriety have said: | |" " payy Studying Diawrams, || —————————__— Rich Clabman's Plea Was Insanity A Special Shoe Offering Thursday Of course, for the moment, Germany| cerned with what happens in the} The United States, W. A :| POET D’ANNUNZIO’S at cies Be (Wee: ; and Russia are out of it, but| Pacific—many of our own people are|Cleveland manuf in —F BOSTON, Nov, 2.—The marriage of i essentially it ts the grouping of | OPenly saying the next war will be] imdustrial “R © ion fr SON OFF FOR EUROPE |John Baker “Romeo” Keyes, wealthy vit Japan. Ye would like to see Cincinnati clubman, and Florence Girar- Europe and America on the one hand| fray}: session at the Astoria to-day ¢ ’ : ’ ‘ar Eastern questions settled so that Mi Leaver 5 a » din Keyes, a former Harvard Club, and Japan on the other. Would Eng-| aueHesters, questions seltied 80 (hat lig’ sutroring from a new disnase—|Veaven om the, Parte—Adriatie Aleo| City Gin" was annulled to-day. Keven Women’s and Misses d land stand by her European friends| have an equal opportunity alongside | “Chartolog , atts. had ‘brousht mult for ‘dlverce but Inter . and her American kinsmen, and would | Japanese, British or French business, || Mr. Grieves had just listened to a) Mee nee eater linac Paria (el his part at the time 6! the marriage. : as the case may be.” long speech on the une byment situ. | Burope to-day o1 ¢ French liner Parts, ‘eased in the height of 1 eho bring Japan within the circle of | "ang {he British statesman might lation iluctrsted by ciaborite, charts) AMONK them were Ugo d’Annunzio, son| fashion, was called into’ conferenes.to= international concord and compel her} have continued thus: 7 1 ing e: of the Italian poet and war hero; the|day and the new turn in the case was + > eguiar lines forming peaks 4 military leaders to refrain from acts| “Fine! If the President of the ST bored wattiner iia |SUBHE, Rev te, Catholi. |exbinined to her, Keyes's petition was ; ; Biich spaliedcultiniaterdomination sof Ates calls a conference on rd aUniDeE peers ey ei) of Geneva, Switeeriand, who has | then Aled with, her consent and Judge | Ohina and Eastern Asia? Would und. there s/s discussion 77 ian ane realicien of the, enaiel i ting dignitaries of his chutch | iiferstood that, an_ alimony seitiement f Suede, Patent Leath d Sati rhe | 2 ? of Par Bastern questions in connec. to do with the rea of the condi-| i thix country; Antonio Burgos, Pann- i 1 etter > hese | England help or hinder the task of| tion with it, we will not object. The tions Allmiater to, Bwitgariand: Antonia | was reached tn ¢ povals comcrensss of Suede, raten eather an n | making $apan play the game on al initiative will come from the United “Whenever a state arises ,sufficiontly 1 Dr. Ledoux Lebard, of the|Londom Jews to Pray for Arms plane of equality with other nations?| States and re rt pet be in the po- acute to provoke discussion,” said M on his ‘way to Parley Succens. 1 Would Japan pledge herself to help| "ton of offending Japan. irieves, “countless experts and eee the White| , LONDON, Nov. 2 (Jewish Telegraphic * So President Harding issued the : n the Whit /ONDON, Nov. 2 (Jewish Tolegraphte 2 which has become the catspaw of na-| was somew! eapneleg tne from, former Ghancellor of the lx. | ence will be held tn all Jewish syna- : ? Bux 4 one juer and now Chairman of the Lon-| gogues and temples on the Sabba s Ley , has insisted that her| that doesn't happen often. Before and Midland Rank, and | preceding of the confer- Values to 10.75 s Great Britain has insiste ee her! the formal call was issued by Presi- ne it Amos Tuck French of | en Dr. f Rabbi of Great — 4 alliance prevented her from making |gent Harding—twod yas, to be exact— Britain, has made the request we } protests to Japan, It has been left to] Prime Minister Lloyd George almost Fnited @tates alo! eop a vig-| let the cat out of the bag by referring ‘the United! stares )al ne to keep @ Vig-| cn ysteriously to a diplomatic note WoRrOvaala ait, i {lant eye on Japanese pretensions.| which had been sent to the powers fh * ‘/ SO GRAG , ] ENGLAND HAS EYES OPENED BY |and to which replies were expected — a oe \ COLONIES. before the next move in the Anglo- : ‘The crisis came at the time the Do-| Japanese situation could be dis- ; sp ; rhe{cussed. It had been hopd that in- } minion Premiers were in session. The) formal soundings migh. develop * British Government didn’t want to| whether 7 -an would come tuto such offend Japan by publicly refusing to]a conference and then formal an- - ; renew the Anglo-Japanese alliance. Fauneament could be made, . Shop Opspinatlions What would be the good of that, it}JAPAN FORCED BY WORLD ’ er i was argued. It would only drive] OPINION INTO CONFERENCE. | FIFTH AVENUE:AT 38™.STREET Fashioned: on the newest modified French ” Japan into an attitude of hostility. ; ; | . é izing the natural grace of the foot te Japan need not fear impoverished| but, it didn't work out that way. last, emphasizing e foot. mt : fear impoverished) sir. Harding issued the ca gave Runes oF helpless Germany: She ne''| tho facts at once to the press, Ja . . rt Britain and the United States. Fin.| MIEN have | teen dente iuio T. ° Shoes also on Sale in Our Brooklyn and Newark Stores : ancially distressed vs is the British be per ee ae R SDA y— -Al R d d P ‘ : Empire, Japan might feel herself ca- | eee on na i ra ee epe eauce rices * able Of Raine St alone in the et 4 Secret. With invitations {ssued to . ritein waa too mush absorbed in de_|the major powers of the world, Mestle trou ie tho United States waa| J2Pan could not afford to quibble and oe Sear Tite ea sehinag| Resitate. She was compelled by i Oe ane Lj Oe ve ce na's|world opinion to enter the confer-| o | A 3 ence. 7 er people were already sick of wat expenditure. Japan, however, had ex- pended little money during the war @nd was near enough to Chine to offer the Japanese imperialist golden op- portunities for commercial gain by exploiting China's resources, Great Britain counselled against the ebrupt cancellation of the Anglo-Jap- nese alliance, Couldn't some other way be found to accomplish the same end and at the same time prevent Japanese aggression? Diplomacy moves in strange ways !ts wonders to perform. Couldn't the United States fend a helping hand? Just about tho samo time that the | Imperial Conference was meeting in London and the Premier of Canada ‘was expressing himself frankly on the subject of renewing the Anglo- Japanese alliance, public sentiment in the United States was being mar- ehalled in favor of a reduction of ar- mament, Senator Borah's pleas were being heeded. The tax burden was fo heavy that the calling of an arma- ment conference to stop the race in armaments was advocated on every side. President Harding didn't favor the Borah resolution, because it lim~- ited the conference merely to Great Britain, the United States and Japan, He insisted that it ought to include all the major powers. ‘Then it was that an unwritten but gignificant chapter developed in Lon- fon. President Harding admitted publicly that he had been sounding out the powers on the subject of an armament conference. Ambassador Harvey Was intrusted with that mis- sion, America wanted an armament conference called something done about problems—she anxious a graceful way be found to lead her out of the dilemma in connection with the renewal of the Anglo-Japanese alli- ance. The alliance, it had been de- elded, would remain in effect for at least another year, or ever, more un- leas specifically abrogated. ‘What more natural thing than to England wanted nar ES ‘ar Eastern have Prime Minister Licyd George or Lord Cusas, Foraiga Secretary, sit gown with Ambassador Harvey and gay something like this to him: pall @ gonference on armma- Meanwhile, Prime Minister Lloyd) Gearge went out of his way to laud, the “initiative” of President Hard-| ing, and Premier Briand said the same thing in the French Parlia- ment, all of which was designed to remove any suspicion that the Brit- ish were trying to start a world par- ley which would do away, with the Anglo-Japanese alliance. Yet that is the cold fact. Sooner| or later Japan will realize that when America projected Far Eastern qu tiong in the Conference for the Lim| tation of Armaments, that act sealed | the doom of the Anglo-Japanese al-| Hiance, though it might well be said that Canada and Australia had al-| ready made it impossible for the British Government to keep the pact much longer. In any event, the issuance of the call for a conference on Far Eastern questions simply revived the hole controversy which has been inter- | mittently bothering European chan- celleri ever since Secr to establish | and ever since the Shantung dispute | at the Paris conference gave China| on the one hand a chance to lay her case conspicuously before the world, while Japan stood off and made plans to take advantage of the disintegra- tion of Russian unity and the Siberian debacle. LSS CHARGES POLICEMAN BLACKENED HER EYE John Cullen, a patrolman attached to the Butler Street Station, was accus: in the Fifth Avenue Court, Brookly: to-day by Miss Catherine Larsen of } 142 Hamilton Avenue, lacken eye at his home, Street, Sunday night beca rot act as bridesmaid for Julia, Cullen said two guests had brought to his home a stranger who disappeared with hls overcoat, that his sister hud 4 to the guests and that one of ed her @ liar, Then, he sais, he struck at the guest and ‘the bic caught Miss Larsen, He Was granted) an adjournment, = she his sister, THE MAJORITY FUR TRIMMED RICES anticipate midwinter reductions as the suits themselves anticipate midwinter fashions, in models as varied as the events on youth’s cold weather calendar. 7 MISSES’ SUITS Youthtul types of moussyne, mochatex or duvet de laine with opossum, mole, nutria or wolt tur, 58.00 Formerly 69.50 to 85.00 FUR TRIMMED SUITS 88.00 Godet, straightline and belted types of moussyne, duvet de laine or mochatex, including reproduc- tions of imports, with beaver, squirrel, wolf, opos- 4 Formerly sum, mole, or nutria fur. 98.50 to 125.00 110.00 FUR TRIMMED SUITS Individual fashions, reflecting the influences of Paris models, in mochatex, veldyne, moussyne or duvet de laine with caracul, squirrel, mole, slynx, beaver, wolf or kolinsky-squirrel fur. Former! 125.00 to 150.00 MISSES’ SUITS—Sizes 14 to 18 yearx-THIRD FLOOR for Small Women Individuality o Taffetas and Georgette and Lace in bouffante and Specially Featured Thursday Misses’ New Dance Frocks Sizes 14, 16 and 18 Years. Also Suitable With the Smartness and Costing Much More Than Tomorrow's Spe 29.75 combinations of and fashionable ‘‘high” also with elongated side panels. OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & G 34th Street—New York to 36 Bust. f Frocks in pastel tints shades, sunic styles, w—_ = 2