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aa ETN NTP ‘THE yEnINe Che Fee Sere Boat Open to All.” | =—S—— WOODEN CAR IS TELESCOPCD, CROWD IN PANIC: 17 INURED - Train, Slipping on Rails, Col- lides With ard at \\ infield, L. BRITAIN WILL PAY oss U,S.$200,000,000 FAILED TO SE Passengers Trampled and Cut by Flying Glass in Battle to Get Out. ————— A Second Avenue train of two wooden cars, partly filled with pas- Nounces Completion of sengers and bound for Corona, crash- Arrangement. \ ed into the rear of an empty Inter- | eos borough subway train of six steel! LONDON, Nov. 9 (Associated cars at Fisk field, near Corona Avenue station, Win-| Pyess).—An arrangement at 6.20 o'clock this} made to the has been begin paying visi % the anterallied indebtedness, hook and lad- not conduce to the friendliness of the feeling between Am selves to discuss t e scene. A ambulances from Long Island City, hurried to t der Si. John’s Hospiia! iruck and two matter YEARLY ON DEBT a and our-| ARMED MARINES, GREAT VICTORY IN ARMORED CARS, AHEAD IN 1922, TOCUARD ALS DEMOGRAS VW. ATESTADAIO INR T.GRASH NEAR CORONA ss = Holes tor Eitoteun Fire Be Used Here. LOCKS ONLY ON INSIDE Post Office Inspectors Over Work of Three Sus- pended Officials. Beginning to-morrow there will be a | marine with a loaded rifle and fixed bayonet on the seat of every truck ear Chancellor of Exchequer An-) rying valuable mail through the streets of this city. There will be sntries on the platforms of the New rail Jersey d terminals where mall is handled and on the m: | forms of the New York Central and | Pennsylvania Te-minals, at the Man- It does| Work Four armorea trucks, enclosed with sheet steel except for aper- at ail|tures for ventilation and loopholes were called, It was feared that a! at present.” | through which pistol or shotgun firo \ lent had coourred. —— Jean be directed at bandits, hav serious accident ha d ‘ he But found that the seventeen PACKERS TO CUT WAGES |!) ordus ll 1) use in a ranent 4 ANS ‘ . j tation of valuable registere injured persons had only been cut by OF THEIR EMPLOYEES in this city and will be deilvere? 1 yruised and after benig at- ithin ten days. giaas or bruised and fe RENE 8 CAG ‘ov. ¥.—Notice was nerved | tended by tie ambulance surgeons sp Sauna Ayouice was served) Dr. Hubert Work, First Assistant they went to their hones that wages must be reduced imme-| Postmaster General, who has under- - / , fons Gatton taken the task of reorganizing the i Those: Injured! Were: i big five” packers informed com-|New York Post Office to make it W. Serrat Andrew ‘Catlo, “Thomas desire of the em- yoceh against robberies such as the unjons of t Award Grif-| pioyers @ open negotiations Dominick Riss, at once te fin, Peter f a An i Seranti, L,|#'range a wake cut Modoner, O Boscoe, Benjamin Ser- 5 rano, Joseph MeKenna, William |MILLER’S DISTRICT ig Whalen, Michael Figarre, Alexander | GOES DEMOCRATIC Mearara, Anton Philip and Dominic Griffith. | The accident occurred in this way: | A train of steel cars. in charge of} Switchman Thomas Farley of Ne. 12! nal to The Ksenivg World SYRACUSE, Nov. %—Gov. Miller's home district, the (th of the Fifth Ward, went Democratic I: yesterday's lund West 60th Street. Manhattan, had | slide _ heen taken from a storage track and| Dem, got 250. and Settle, switched to the Corona-bound | Rep. in readiness for the early morning |=——— = traffic. It as stopped at the Fisk EE ECTED MAYOR There the two-car Corona and driven Avenue station, ON PLEDGE TO JAIL train, bound for hy Motorman Gus Kessler of Fim-| at y WHO PAY TAX hurst, crashed into it i ae Kessler declared that he did not see | | the lights which would indicate a|Eccentric Victor in Youngstown tain close ahead of him, and when An Favors Slenpine: All he did see the rear of the steel tran} 5 i and applied his emergency brake, the Street Car Service. rails were so slippery in fas eratak YOUNGSTOWN, 0, A Ariggle that it would not hok . i sel oll ger ac Ra ioe impant drove the root of the) 4 MAN whol haw lived) ty f first car of the wooden train over the| Youngstown only three mo iths, roof of the last stec and its trucky| nd whose platform provided fo ‘under it to a distance of twenty feet,| discontinuance of street car splintering the wooden car for twenty} service. turning the 1 car feat to “jitmey buses and for jailing Genera] Manager Keagen of the In-| any citizen who paid taxes unde terborough hastened to the scene with} a recent revaluation, yesterday a wrecking crew and in about two) was elected Mayor over candi hours had the rails cleared. dates backed by the major ty = = ——$==| organizations. He is George L. Oles, who came n from the country, established a residence In a hotel and ried on an eccentric advertising cam- | | paign without the support of any | Classified Advertisers Important! Classified advertising copy TeewSeoasy, World should ‘be ta The World office On or Before Friday Preceding Publication THE WORLD particular element or organiza- tion Other “planks” in Oles's form included permitting “spoon. ing” in city parks under protection, dismissing the police force if it “doesn't mend its ways,” and @ prom his salary to charity. The women's vote is believed to have been responsible for Oles's | election. plat police entire e to turn over Jinons t j had | Broadway mail truck hold-up, said to- |day that three armed guards would | ride on each truck. One will sit with the driver with a sawed off shotgun loaded with buckshot in his lap. The two others will lock themselves inside the truck, which will have no outside They will have “suitable equip- ment of weapons.” Under direction of Dr, Office Inspectors W, P. Collis and —. A. Schwab have taken over the duties of Superintendent of Mails Blijah M. Morris, who has been sus- pended pending the investigation of the robbery. They will undertake careful checking over of the ree- all employees handling mail, so that men with known criminal as- jons may be weeded out. Inspectors I’. L. Reidy and R. P. n will over the duties of indefinitely si erintendent of Regi Kiely, superintendent of the Grand Central Branch Post Offic will act with these men in the | reorganization | Postmaster | lock Work, Post ords of take ry Lippman, Su pended as try. John cess General wi IH, Hayes (Contini Ninth Page.) ed ANTI-RED REVOLT STARTS IN RUSSIA in House of of Southwestern Uprising LONDON, Nov. 9 Ceell } Secretary for Fe | Announcement mons Com- (Associated armsworth, Under eign Affairs, replying stion in the House of Com- -day, stated received a Bolshevist Press) to a qu the Govenment report that an anti- revolution had broken out the southwestern part of Russi. He said no information had been re- celved regarding a report that Gen, ura,. Ukrainian leader, en- the revolution from Rou- was " ' \With Elections in Take Congress, It Is Believed marine ‘Conference were momentarily i plat- | tions, interest j.4ttan Junction and Hudson Terminal | morning, telescoping one of the wood- | on the debt owed by Great Britain! stations of the North River tubes. A en cars and injuring seventeen pas-/to the United States at the rate of| reserve guard of marines will be sta-| sengers. £50,000,000 (approximately $200,000. tioned at all hours at the Central Post A panic followed the collision gn@ | 000) yearly, it was announced in t¥e| Office and at the Grand Central and there was a wild scramble of passen- | House of Commons to-day by Sir] a Hall a Ratlone, . gers to get out, Many had been flung! Robert Horne, Chancellor of the Ex- ’ Eee aetede Were warmed Out tts chequer |day at a conference between Lieut. from their seats and splinters of MeN Aimmiae (ate) umeonaes |AUGE 1avstatsea iaohackale® Marine wood and glass hurtied allout them: ont in a statement on the Bute {| Corps recruiting ‘here and assigned to The loud evs of the collision amd prospects. He aded with emphasis: | mail guard supervision the com- he « f passengers roused the “| hope this remark about the debt; M#ndant at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, entire neighborhood, anu the police we owe America - :Il not be made| Postmaster Edward M. Morgan and wiown station were| tl Occasion for any discussion of| First Assistant Postmaster General | that he loat |be that the elections this week re York and New Jersey Especially Worry Republicans. ALL-POWERFUL PROTEST Can Be Carried by Democrats at Next Election. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 (Copyright, 921).—Thoughts the of Armamea inte five rupted in the national capital to can- vase the meaning of the various elec- Most of the contests were local, but the general trend of Demo- cratic success has not only pleased the minority hereabouts but given the majority party cause for slight uneasiness about the Congressional campaign, which will develop within the next few months. It is always difficult Jelection results to analyze in {isolated sections. |The Republican leaders professed to see little significance in what occurred Tuesday. The Democrats were over- joyed, pointing out that the Republi- can claim of great gains in Virginia had failed to materialize and that Democratic Mayors had been elected for the first time im many years in swept New York City for Harding had started In an opposite direction by the “wets” on the Prohibition issue did not pass unnoticed bere, where Congress is gettiag ready to act upon do all he could jo help Mr. F huysen’s prestige there. ing- The fact that close contests be- tween the Republican and Demo cratic Parties are indicated in tw such populous States as” New York and New Jersey is impressing ob- servers here, It means that Congress within the next few months will be more closely watched than hereto- fore, and that the action taken on the tax and tariff questions will | much to do with the ve Congress next year would be of tran scendent {mportance, for it was in the middie of Mr, Wilson's second 1 control of the § ongenaus of opinion to-day nate, The seems 9 will have a decided effect upon Republican (Continued on Ninth Page.) a HARDING'S HOME TOWN SWINGS TO DEMOCRATS Republican Candidate for Mayor Beaten—Soldier Bo: Wins, MARION, ©., Nov, %.—Prestdent| Harding's home town went Democratic | in yesterday's municipal election, falrly complete returns to-day showed George Neely, Demoorat, had a lead of 1,045 votes over T. E. Andrews, Repub- lican candidate for Mayor. Neely polled 4,477 votes against 3,482 for Andrews, Marion also gave the soldier bonus amendment a large majority. eeacneaneranas (For Pimlico results, scratches. en- ries and selecti here to point out that the tide which | Nationally speaking, the gains made | political com- plexion of the next Congress, The Democratic gains in the New York Legislature may make things diffi cut for Senator Calder, Republican, | next year From an international viewpoint the change in the political character of Be YORK, WEDNESDAY, MONA 9, ANOREWS WINNING BY UP-STATE VOTE, May Come Bronx W 340,000 Plirality Against udder’s 261,975 Here ie 3,900 DISTRICTS NOT |Scudder Carried Troy Though Beaten in His Home County. ALBANY, Nov, $.—Returns receive of the stion Districts in the State outsi from Elec pout one-quarter 5,20 h City, ee Rotered ay Second-Ciass Matter Post Ofties, New York, N. ¥. PRICE THREE CENTS $200.01 000 000 ‘TO BE PAID U.S. YEARLY BY BRITAIN FIRST WOMAN . ELECTED REGISTER IN NEW YORK MAYOR'S 417,986 PLURALITY EXCEEDS BY 81,098 TOTAL VOTE RECEIVED BY CURRAN Hylan Gets Biggest Vote Ever Cast For Democratic Candidate in City —Only Two Republicans Elected Are Lewis for Supreme Court and Seery for Sheriff of Kings. a Hylan broke ail New York r 2 | Mayor John ecords as a vole getter of New York City, indicate that Su ' i . |in yesterday's election. He received the largest e eer c or 4 Demo- pretmun Court Jastios Willian & An ys Ss Po sao t E received the largest vole eVer cast for BG Ny | arews, Republican candidate for As e |cratic candidate in this city—exceeding that cast for ex-Governor Smith sociate Judge of the Court of Appeals, meh Hast year—and his plurality of 417,986 votes exceeds by 81,098 the total bids falr to overcome tho pluralit y vole cast for Major Henry H. Cursan, The vote and pluralities by which the New York City ballots gave | boroughs fallo’s: to his Democratic opponent, ‘Town-| urran. Hylan) Ranken Plurality send meucaer: « 1 mss | Rep Dem. Soc. for Hylam Reports from 1,312 up-State dis-| ANNIE | Manhattan . 124,758 261,092 28,916 136,339 tricts give Judge Andrews a plura- MATHEWS | Bronx 39,718 126,197 21,6: 86484 lity of 85,245, or an avernge of 64.9 leecerie 123,894 257,260 29,808 129,866 in each district. If this ratio should laneens a 87 i 51,797 of the State, Judge Andrews wont Se a con down to the Bronx with S3.200 417,986 Bie ae Bares | The only Republic ans elected to important offices in the city were Petet Bee Wes RALdas ReMeISee TAR Seery, who appears to have been chosen Sheriff of Kings County over York City ‘Mic hael Laura, and Harry Lewis, who, on the face of the latest returas, Districts still to be probably give heard from wi county by by 3.314 w 9,000, 000; Livingston count J Chatauqua county b. Justice Scudder made a remarkabl race in New York City. where hi plurality was 261,975, George A {chairman of the Republican State about 7,000 Upsetting al] political figuring, Jus- jtice Scudder carried Troy city in Democratic sweep of that city by mor than 3,000, but Republicans were hopeful of saving the Andrews. Justice Scudder’s plural York were: county fo Manhattan, 84,000 hyn, 000; Queens, 42,000; 000, and Richmond, 10,000. Th vote in 370 districts was: Scudder 656,952, and Andrews, 829,648 Because the up-State vote in late returns did not pile up the pluralitie hoped Democrats have not con d Justice Scudder's defeat. ——————— 'JUDGE DECIDES Brook for, Bee Hy | will go to the Supreme Court with Mitchell May, Andrews decided ma- are mostly saat eee still ities in New Bronx, the leading Democrati¢ both Syracuse and Albany, hitherto jorities, as they are mostly republica = staunch Republican strongholds. Tho, strongholds. Figures showed that Julius Miller was elected President of Manhattan Borough by 89,076 fact that New York City re-elected its Andrews had carried Onondaga lea and all the juicy patronage of that office now held by Major Curraa Democratic Mayor by an overwhelm-| county by 16,916: Monroe county by| William S Hackett, Democrat, | wilt fall into Tammany hands on Jan, 1 ing majority prompted the Democrats | 15, Orange county by 8,923; Erie Edward C. Riegelmann was reelected President of Brooklyn Borough by a plurality of 104,126, Henry Bruckner was re-elected President of Bronx Borough by 41,617, Maurice Connolly was re-elected President of Queens by 26,743 plurality and Matthew J. Cahill, who looks so much ‘The Democrats! like Mayor Hylan that it is a job to tell them apart when they are standing in Albany laat|side by side, was elected President of the Borough of Richmond by a y| Elected Mayor — Majority | ¥| Between 4,000 and 6,000. | ————- | Borough le| ALBANY, Nov. 9.- S' celebrated a victory Glynn, 5 night for the first time in twenty-two | Plurality of 5,268 votes. the Amti-Beer Bill. ‘The apparent! Con mittee, sald Judge Andrews'a up. Years. ‘The hitherto Invincible poli-| The Assemblymen who voted for the Miller traction bills in the last big ‘eo’ ‘ative gains made by tie Gite wets would be clove to 860,000 teal machine of William Barnes, | Legislature were remembered by the people. Three of them, Leo V. Doherty New Jersey Democrats after «) over arudder ‘which has ruled the entire county /of the 10th Brooklyn District, James C. Moore of the 12th and Louis J. most humiliating defeat last year, has | jyage Andrews carried Syracuse, | with an iron hand since 1899, has been | Druss of the 22d were defeated. Theodore Stitt, who was in the Assembl an importance, however, beyond the! pis home city, by a plurality of 5,867 xa William S, Hackett, Demo- and voted for the Miller programme last year, ran for Alderman in the Wet question, for a United States Sen-| jn the face of a Demooratic victory 0r@Kem William S. Hs y 43d Brooklyn District and was decisively beaten. Frerichs, Republican, of ator is to be elucted there neat No-/in the city election. ie also carries cratic candidate for Mayor, wom BY| 11 oy a8 aisy beaten for re-election to the Assembly, The Demo. vember. Presidont Harding has sensed! suffolk County, the home of Justice | a majority of 7,183 ‘ rae . i mer | 7 ihe qerila of the Naw Tamer political | Scudder, by about 6,000. Nase TiNe Damenrain colebrateay with <s grate, suns phe Auenhrage in Kings, cutting the Republican repre+ situation and hay right along tried to|County gave Andrews a plurality of| jrage, while gloom pervaded Re- is Ex-Service Amendment Is Defeated. The constitutional amendment giving ex-service wen preferenge 1 civil service examinations and promotions and that which would inerease the salaries of members of the Legislature were beaten in the city by a vote of about 2 to 1 and were also beaten up-State, The other amendments, including that which requires new voters to be able to read and write English, appear to have been approved. William Up to noon today the returns from scores of Assembly districts In the the defeated | city were incomplete and some of the districts had made Democrats ever on the vote for minor officials, With voting machines in use the total that they have elected vote of the city of Syracuse was counted by 6.80 o'clock last county and city tleket voting machines in this city would give the returns in any 4). The Cities of Cohoes and Water-| Ave hours after the close of the polls. viiet were carried by the Democ. uta, “| putting all three cities in the county! now in the Democratic column. John Merrizgan, Democratic candi- Barnes of- jobs | ‘e| for years hoped against hope all eve- ning that the tide of Hackett votes would turn, but about 11 o'clock they resigned themselves to going out in| ~/the cold op Jan. 1 Van| Rensselaer Erving is candidate. The | publican headquarters a ficeholders who have held city . no returns wha © Barnes claim their night, and wh election within r The Socialist vote, which was expected by the leaders of that party to show increased strength because of prevalent unemployment, showed « falling off of about 43 per cent. Judge Panken, running for Mayor, re- date for Member of Assembly from | ceived 83,169 votes whereas he received 146,489 votes in the city when he AGAINST PEGGY | ‘te 24 Albany County District, will) ran for United States Senator a year ago, and Hillguit, Socialist candidate : be re-elected in spite of a hard Aght! er Mayor in 1917, received 141,739 votes. CHICAGO, Nov. 9—A dec ene te Bee A pepublicans Mrs. Harriot Stanton Blatch, Socialist candidate for Comptroller, re vorce was granted J. Stanley Jo¥ce.! Gaters, Republicans, will be re- celved 95,002 votes—about 00 more than the head of the ticket. The millionaire lumberman, by Judg elected to the Assembly from the! Socialists did not elect a single Assemblyman or Alderman, Algernon Loe bath to-day upholding Joyees’s: orner two districts. and Edward Cassidy, the recently seated Aldermen, being defeated for charges that Pesy Hopkins Joyce ‘caanenmenigiticeatt re-election. rag pace mulity of misconduct) BUFFALO ELECTS The lates! afternoon returns gave a majority up-State for Andrews Republican candidate for the Court of Appeals, of 340.000, which should GERMANY. FIXING UP \ INDICTED BREWER elect him over Townsend Scudder, the Democratic candidate, by abou EMBASSY AT CAPITAL Frank X. Schwab, Opponent of 80,000. Volstead Aci, ‘To Be: Next Joab Banton’s majority over John Kirkland Clark, Republican candi- WASHINGTON, Nov. §.—Work of re: | Ma date for District Attorney, was 83,680. 8, John Block, Socialist candidate modeling the German Bmbassey in an Ly ayer Nov. a—Pramy | Rolled ! 887 votes te tpation of the revival of diplomat BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov ran aasaa Mme lele tie ie PX ee . ; Heintlona with the United Stater has | Schwab, a brewer, and President ot| Percy Nagle’s majority for Sheriff over all was 45.548. His majority Vestn seared nie the Mohawk Products Company, who |°¥*T John F. Shea, hfs Republican opponent, was 73,780. | The embassy here will be severely | —— In the Brownsville section of Brooklyn Republicans and Democrat | plain, in direct (Continued on Tenth Page.) mae Pea nina vel Thermann, Ger- | —— = won, In the 28d Assembly District they elected Joseph Ricca, Democra Oe ene aria nae se ii | totake eeingeton Gamer Matra train sere /and in the 60th Aldermanic District former Police Capt. Isaac Frank find Just two rooma of the embassy > Democrat ? filled for residence purposes, The retinue arcade intaer 1 W a LE BOREAL, Judge Alfred J. Talley, without a Republican endorsement, made Of servants and sveret will pe aw NM Smee smen 1000, remarkabie run for the General Sessions bench. -His vote was around 4 : sn revclene”eugshe TF 16,000 Judge Mulaueen. running on both tickets, obtained only about contraat to its richness united against the Socialists for Assembly and Board of and | | | Aldermen