The evening world. Newspaper, November 9, 1921, Page 3

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\ _AYLAN HAS BUSY _ NIGHT AFTER HIS — Receives Acclaim of Followers al Receptigns in Two d Boroughs. IS PROUD AND HAPPY Tells in Interview the Meaning He Places Upon Over- whelming Mai vit Mayor doly aie " Now Wie WATCH =~ 00, a matority of w no ma MY Pad ever dveamed of in New York SPEED" Evening World The May who rose which a man ever started to mater MaRTY M&CuE” hin way in the world, after an intense sive campaicn of three weeks, durin SENATOR. which he had undergone the most “THOMAS |. atrenuous experience ever allotted to SHERIDAN # candidate for Mayor Now York Wasn't permitted a moment's rest on 1 the night of his victory, Bo sure were his supporters of a overwhelming victory that they + elaborate arranzements for the re ception of the election returns They hired the west ballroom of the Ho Commodore and invited a select nu ber to be present to listen to the tick ine in of the maiorities from every Assembly district in Busiwick, then to the Kings Couaty Democratic Cinb, aud from there they crossed the brid: again and went to Tammany Hall where the Mayor got one of the great est ovations of his life It was a proud night for Maso Hylan, and the Mayor was prouder tor the reason that his wife and his daughter were there to share the hoa ors with him. Tired as he must have been, he accepted the honors Tammany: paid him with a flush in each cheek and @ tear in each eye. as he shook hands with everybody who came his way, but his heart, after all. was with the little bunch up in the Hotel Commodore, where the workers of the campaign were awaiting him to shake him once more by the hand and say good night as the conclusion of the greatest cam- paign ever put over in the city, When he returned to the hotel he was met by a wonderful crowd of en- thusiasts. Men and women, mostly young men and a lot of pretty girls, circled His Honor, and into the jam that met him as he entered the doors was thrust the representative of The Evening World, who asked him to bide awhile until the latest sketch could be made of him by Sid Greene. He smiled without the least bit of fire in his face and said, “Shoot!” “The underworld,” said the Mayor, ‘can't run the City of New York. ‘That Is one of the lessons this elec- tion has taught, “The milk barons and the increased fare gang and other predatory Inter- ests can’t run the city. Neither can the gamblers and the underworld run the Police Department. The Gary in- terests who planned to educate the child for the factory can't run the Board of Education so long as I'm Mayor. “[ am glad that ‘Injunction Jim,’ “Subway Sam’ and ‘Crap-Shooting Jerome and all buneo up-State inter- ‘ests tbat want to extort the last cent from the city have heen defeated “With regard to The Evening World, I have to say that that paper jas published in this campaign some of the most bitter and misleading edi- torials ever written But I am glad the people have appreciated in the last moments the work that has been done in the last four years. My Ad ministration has been a rebuke to the subsidized press, The papers mu: reform.” i ‘With the exception of a tribute to the late Joseph Pulitzer, the Mayor made a wholesale attack upon news- papers that had opposed his Admin- fatration, the “predatory interests, Samuel Untermyer, William Travers Jerome and the Gary system. He expressed hope that the new: papers would reform now. If they @id not, he said, they would lose cir- culation. Bitterly attacking both The Evening World and The World, be id, by way of qualification: wmrOr course, the elder Mr. Pulitzer was a great man, T admired him very much. Whatever I have accomplished I owe to his teachings. “So far as the newspaper men in this campaign—the working newspa- per men, I mean—are concerned, | wouldn't be true to myself or the peo ple I represent if I didn't mete to them the tribute due for the fairness they have exhibited in their treatment of me and my party during the entire campaign, and I want-to say to them that so long as [ am In the City Hall fhe word welcome to them means all that It expresses and my door will always be open to them.” —————>_—_ ‘oO MUCH FOR HM. (From Milestones.) ughter—Now you've gone and spotl- ed everything. George dovsn't came to see me any more, Mother—Well, what more could I do? Didn't we treat him like one of the family? “Darighter—You aid. And he wouldn't tand for DAY OF VICTORY ~ ANDBABY URED. borough, City Chambe: n id Ha Bevolzheimer invited the Mavor | @ few friends to be his guests east ballroom, and « party of il thirty made merry while the returns were coming in over the wires, and evel) tick was swelling the m. t of Hylan After the dinner, which wa¢ com pleted when three newspapers tad conceded his election, the Mayor and | Wis party lent the+Hotel Commodore ina swift ca: and went to the Kus n District ‘Turn Verein in Brooklyn #rom there they went to the Mayor's smiling mothers behind them, just en-| aan meaenbaeaiee ae - THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1921. |Vietors and Vanyuished Mingle With the Spoils ' And Wreckage i in Wake ot Record City Election ATWELL “WN AUTO ) COLLISION fusband and 1 Father Disap- | pears After Accident, Found Wandering in n Street. Mre Florence Moazzola. twenty- | nine, or No 2097 Bathgate Avenue, Hronx was Instantly killed and her | old daughter, when her taxicab collided 149th Street and the Bronx, Also in vutomobile were John and Frank | Coco, brothers, of No, 661 East 169th Street, @ young woman and two nine months? Fantina, | mortally hurt husband's sutomobile and a j early to-day Morris at Avenue, VICTORY FoR THE PEOPLE” AROUND THE TOWN" THE CAMPAIGN MANAGERS WILL NOW een ‘To: THE. Se |cuildren, all of whdm disappeared ind have not been found, According to the police, ib was on the taxi- the wrong side of the street, The impact threw the woman ind baby to the street and they were picked up and carried to Lebanon Hospital by a motorist, The woman was dead from a fractured skull. The | baby has a fractured and punctured | ull. The driver of the taxi disap- | peared. | A block away, half an hour after | accident, a man describing him- | seif as Frank Magzola, thirty-three, af 27 Bathgate Avenue, was found reeling along the street, Be-| fore an ambulance arrived from Leb- | anon Hospital a taxi chauffeur started to that institution with Mazzola, but | he jumped out. Dr. Alexander in the ambulance gave chase and caught him, He was taken to the hospital and treated for minor injuries, He sald he had been hurt in @ hold-up, The police of the Alexander Avenue Station were notified and after questioning Mazzola let him go, not Knowing of the collision, Later the police said recoras sowed the automobile that was in colfision with the taxicab was owned by a Frank Mazzola of the Bathgate Avenue ad- dress given by the injured man, + .Detectives went to his home and he admitted the hold-up story was due to excitement, and went to the hos- pital and identified his wife and daughter. He said he did not know what became of the others in his car. While Mazzola was. being arraigned before Magistrate McGeehan in Mor- risanta Court, charged with homicide, the clark of the court brought wo-d that an official of Lebanon Hosp\ta: was on the telephone wire asking to Speak to Mazzola to get permissioa trom bim to operate at once op his little daughter Fantina. It was also said that an operation offered the u's chance of saving her life, and that «a that might not be successful. At this Magistrate McGeehan said that as there was much doubt as to responsibility for the collision, the chauffeur of the taxi having fled, and 4s Mazzoia had enough trouble on his hands to bury his wife and care for the baby, he would dismiss the Charge of homicide and discharge Mazzola. A moment later Massola was on his way to the hospital In avoiding a woman who suddenly stepped in front of his automobile, Frank Brasil, twenty-three, No. 239 Hast 80th Street, ran it into an * pillar at Second Avenue and sétb Street at 1.30 A. M. to-day, He and his two companions, bis ali t ter, Mra, William Smith, twenty- seven, No. 239 East 80th Street, and Samuel Pathing, twenty-three, No. 361 Bast Sst Street, were thrown out, Mrs. Smith and Pathing were taken to Reception Hospital in a serious condition, Brasil went home, ae A BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. From the Philadelphia Bulletin.) “Baths are scarce in Europe. Fre- tly you have to order @ tub sent in" that so?” es, and it takes time. “Um, A fellow might do « good busl- ness going around with one of motoreycles with bathtub attached.” BRoapway FoRGoT 5 PRoniBition © «| BET "ONE 7,000 PERSON Even MONEY WHO CLEANED ON HYLAN UP ON THE FoR A ELECTION 250,000 MAVORITY ELECTION NIGHT OBSERVED IN OLD FASHIONED WAY WITH BROADWAY CROWDS AND NOISE Throngs of .Men and Women Parade the Street as in Days Gone and All Shout for Hylan. By Joseph S. Jordan. Noise, Noise, Noise! It was a night of hideous noises, And they thought the spirit of Election Night had been forgotten in the City of New York. Maybe it had, but it returnea with & super-six strength to celebrate the victory of Mayor John F, Hylan last night. Broadway, old neglected Broad- way, returned for a moment to its own. Longacre Square, where there have been so many celebrations over election returns, looked like its old self, barring the blazing cafes and the rollicking jags that made the oc- casion famous, But the spirit was there and the men were there and'the women were there all on their own account, and tie tide of humanity ebbed and flowed as in the days of old. The laughs and yells and cheera of the men, the gurgles and shrieks of girls, and the gurgles of something drawn from the hip in front of the bulletin boards— all went to make up the almost for- gotten nights of Yuletide and New Years Eve and all occasions which have made old New York the famous place It used to be. There were horns a-plenty, and rattlers and ticklers, There were sume obnoxious novelties, disgusting novelties dug up by the cheap caterer to the proletariat; but they all went im the general mix-up of the noisy greetings of four years more for the present municipal Administration. SILENT VOTE IS NOISY NIGHT. ‘Tho silent vote which had been a perplexing issue to all parties sud- deniy found voice. The allent voter had come to life. “Hylan, Hylan, Hylan!" was heard on every corner, and the cops in the crowded thor- oughfares consented to be crowded and handled the throngs with genue forbearance, In Coalition headquarters gloom seemed to nettle before the count be- gan. Secretary of State John J Lyons was game to the last, at least to outward appearances, “I can tell you the results by the returns in the first ten districts shown to me," he sald. “I can fil it by comparing the vote of Al Smith." The returns were shown to Mr. Lyons a little later and he saw the handwrit- ing on the wall, but said nothing, His most intimate friends couldn't his thoughts in his fice. They knew that he had made an uphill fight, but Jack went down to defeat smiling and without # word of comment, Eyerybody~who knows Jack knew what he had been up against—no money and little support. But all was bright and gay over AT at the Hotel Comiaodore, where tac returns were coming to the supporters of Hylan, and all was light and easy and free in Tammany Hall on 14th Street, where “Tom” Smith was the host for the many other hosts who congregated there to listen to the sweet Uickings of the ticker, and there were yells and cheers and’ shouts at every announcement, In the East ballroom of the Com- modore, Mayor Hylan and his wife were guests of City Chamberlain Philip Beroizheimer. There were also at the table Mr, and Mrs, John Sin- not, the Mayor's Secretary and son- in-law, and his daughter Virginia; Joseph O'Brien, a personal friend of the Mayor, acompanted by his wife, Mr, and Mrs, Anning S$. Prall and others—thirty or so in all. And across in the West ballroom they were gay with the returns and shouting “four years more,” and “we told you 80," and dancing the Hylan fling COULD JUSTLY SAY “ YOu so.” Among the best of the merrymaky was John Donlon, publicity director of the Hylan campaign, and Jolin certainly could say again without fc of contradiction “I told you so," He told the writer three nights before that Hylan’s plurality would 481,000, and he must have counted the votes before they were put into the boxes. Some good caller 1s Mr. John Don- lon, and he doesn't have to care a whoop, because there are two bids out for his services for the publicity work he did for Hylan. And sitting in and eying hing was Frank B, Flaherty, one of Tam many’s heavyweights, and, inci- dentally, the proprietor of a lot of paper mills. And while Frank was sitting there very dignified and say- Ing nothing, others were polating at him and saying "That's he.” So after a while the story came out of what Mr, Blaherty bad dow iree weeks ago he het—well, it was a whole lot of money—that Hylan ould win by 250,000 votes, and he bet at even money, and never a word was sald about it until he won tne money last night. Frank's a modest chap, but there's a nolse about town that he won $100,000, But of course that doesn't go if Commissioner Fin right of the Hylan pulico hears about it. John H, O'Brien, a former Fire Commissioner, wandered up to_ the Hotel Commodore after a while. H:'d been in Tammany Hall with Dan tyan as his protector. He needed a protector, aa proved by the story bia good friend Dan told on him. Into Tammaay Hall breaks John, perfectly welcome, to be sure, And there was Congressman Tom Smith giving out the same data that he had been giving out these many weeks and waiting for the answer. WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT BUFFALO, It was almost sure then in Tam- many that Hylan had been elected and that Assemblyman Maurice Bloch out In Yorkville was a close second. ‘Tom Smith was telling everybody who TOLD came into the hall that Yelen was ore to worry about. “lL heard you,” suys John O'Rrten, {Dut how abont the eeturna f-om Buf- ‘aloo “Hylan ts elected,” says Tom sinich. ‘Isn't that good enough?” “L know,” says O'Brien, “bot bow about Buffalo? “Are you ever goin® to bey satis- Ina formal statement given out for him at headquarters evening, Mayor Hylan had eid: he recorded verdict of the people irries a serious and important mes- sage to certain newspapers of the city, L harbor no personal resentment or bitterness toward them, I am concerned solely with the effect upon the publte interest that ensues from the course which they hay: pursued in the last four years. ‘Whether infiuenced by narrow tisanship or bitter personal hatred of me or sinister motives, certain newspapers have pursued u certain course to discredit me and my Ad- ministration by all manner of means, fair or foul. “In a word, their course has be>n # vicious force in destroying the high r@pute which the city should enjoy Yo the eyes of the entire world. “Pue peom@e by their vole have sown their resentment of this course, and the papers the misconduct of which the people have thus rebuked should reform, L call upon thom to do 80, Change their course und hew to the line of truth, fairness aud bon- esty fied?" — retorts the ngressman. | racuse has gone Democratic.” ‘Oh,” says O'Brien, “that’s a ter- riblo Rwat against Gov, Miller: but how about Buffalo?" Well, at omidnight they huan't heard from Buffalo, but Mr. O'lrien declared that was good enough fo- him, and was quite sure the Collector of tho Port, Mr. Aldridge, had been beaten up-State, and that the rebuke to anybody who didn’t like Tammany was quite complete, and that was ail there was ‘to ft And Dan Ryan, who up to this time had aot uttered a word, laughed long and loud und said, anyhow, he hud never taken a drink in his life, But he drank in the reports which came about Hylan’s election most profusely. Dana might have said that he told you so, but he didn't. Neither did Cha-ley Kerigan, who came tn a little Inter with Comptroller Craig. All Charley sald , "See Tom MoCarthy, he knows. HAS HIS JOB ALREADY PICKED ouT. Tom McCarthy used to United States Marshal, was in olfice went out and made the fight for Cr Now Mr. Craig is back again in the vid roost and Tom has to look fora jou, but that's the with those Democrats. The Marshal had already picked his job before the issue was known, Tom is going into busin: for am. George Atwell, tun millionaire kid another interesting figure at head- quarters. What work George hus done, perbaps apparent, but the quarters all am - be the and while be may never be workers around he In 4 careless ‘ound the different. districts the Dawsons, corge is one of the best representatives, not only in Manhattan, but ho has a large voice ip Albany. Another fighter has st ped Into the boxing gloves and shoes of the im mortal Marty McCue, He ls Thomas I. Sheridan, a lawyer, and not a pug- nacious indivi to win the immort behind by Mar into the shrouds but game enough lity which waa left when he stepped of the Surrogate ected and that there wes notning| earlier in tbe] VOTEFORASSEMBLYMEN —_——— MANHATTAN First District Seniff, Rep. $1. Hamill, Dem, 12,148 | Leventhal, Soc, 181i | Hamill's plurality 10,017 Second District Guarding, Rep, 2.01 Galgano, Dem,, 8.14% Lieberman, Soc. 2.14 Galgano’s plurality « Third District MeNamara, Rep. 418i Burchill, Dem, 15.020 Richter, Soc, Burehill's pl ality 11.788 Fourth District Kantrowity, Rep, 100 Dickstein, Dem. 6.004 ‘Tovim, § 2,481 Dickstoin's plurality, 8.0 Fifth District Sohrefher, Rep. 3. Donohue, Dem, 15 Williams, Soo,, 40 Donohue's plurality, 11,9 Sixth District Uliman, Rep. 4.854 ‘Pullin 1 Beardsley, Soe., 4,164 Ullman’s plurality, 700 Seventh District Kaufman, Rep. (0.82) Confleld, Dem 00. Coombs, Soe., 37 Kaufman's pluralit 8,17 Eighth District fetes, Rep. 2.6 Kaha Dem, 4. Berger, Soc, 4,293 Kahan's plural Ninth District Rop,, 10,898 Dem Rayher, Felix, oe 8 plu n Tenth District. Aronson, Rep, 9,048 Rurg, 6,701 Pepper! Aaronson's plurality, Eleventh District Nichols, Rep., 8 Rosenman, Dem., 9,852 Berlin, Soc., 690. Rosenman's plurality, 59s Twelfth District Henle, Rep, 8,981 O'Connor, Dem,, 16,802 Watson, Soc, 1,152 O'Connor's plurality, 12.8 Thirteenth District. Healy, Rep. 7,050. Nugent, Dem., 10,260 Chaakin, Soc., 700 Nugent's plurality, 3,200 Fourteenth, District Bartunck, Rep., 6 Hackenburg, Dem McMullan, Soe. 1, Hackenburg’s plurality, 7.499 Fifteenth District Statnderg, Rep. 11 Cohen, Dom., 7,410 Halpern, Soc., 1,168, Steinberg’s plurality, 4,207 Sixteenth District Hose, Rep., 3,628. Bloch, Dem., 16,857. Germer, Soc., 2.449. Rloch's plurality, 12,229 Seventeenth District Wine, Rep., 2,924. Velenstein, Dem., 6,748. Claessi Soe., 6,020. Felenstein’s plurality, 725 Eighteenth District Adler, Rep., 4,607. Klernan, Dem., 9,303. Gerber, Soc., 3,017. Kiernan’s plurality, 4,% Nineteenth District Rep, 5,984 10 Smith, , Dem., Male's plurality, 2.126 Twentieth District. Diptrro, Iep. Cuvilli West, Soc., Cuviliter’s plurality, 1 Twenty-first District Paim Keargin Carptnter, Soc, 549 Palmer's plurality, 860 Twenty-second Dist: Kaplan, Rep. 6.448 | Rejburn, Dem., 11,748 | Lange, Soc., 604, Reiburn's piuri Twenty-third District. dosse, Rep., 13,09 Dribben, Ds Mailly, Soc., 1, Jesse's plurality 3,4 Sixteenth District Krone, Rep, 206 Bloch, Dem., 1,188 Germer, Soc., 206. Forty-seven election districts ing. inlaw. Beventeenth District 6, Rep, 1,001 stein, D Claessens, Twenty-five Ing. 430. lection districts miss Eighteenth District. Adler, F 340 Kiernan, De roer, VFlevep eler Ninet Smith, Rep. Male, Dem, 961 Griel, Soc, 379 ‘Thirty-eight election ing. jon districts misene nth District Mistricts miss Twentieth District. Di Pirro, Rep., 2,980 Cuvillier, Dem., 4,446 est, Boc., 962. Bight elec ti on districts missing. Twenty-first District. vulmer, Rep., 3, Kearsing, Dem Carpenter, Sov, 245 | Twenty-four election districts arise ng. Twenty-second District. Kaplan, Rep. 4,118 Relourn, Dem, 5,490 Lange, atl Twenty-two election districts m ng. Twenty-third District. Jesse, Rep. 12,289. Dritben, Dem. 8.919 Mailly, Soc., 1,077. Your election districts: missing. BRONX. First Ee strict, Yada, Rep. 4 erhard, Dem., 16,089 § 297, Eberhard’s plurality, 11,803 Second District. Skahan, Rep., 6,970. Patterson, Dem, 17,791 Diamond, Soc., 3,888 Patterson's plurality, 10,891. Third District, Antin, Rep. and Dem, 9.788 Murphy, Soc.. 6,07 Antin's plurality, 2.664 Fourth District. Sehottel, Rep. Meitx, Soc, 6, Schiotlel’s plurality, 2.491 Fifth District. Rep. and Dom, Soe. 67 pluralit Sixth District Re Dem, Lyman, Andon, Lyman’s 11088 Clanchetti MeDonald. Bright, Soc., 989 McDonald's’ plurality Se, 1,698. Seventh District, Hammond, Rep,, 3,360. Kee, Dein, 10.978. Phillips, Soc., 4,148, MeKee's plurality 7,618 Eighth District. Conner, Rop., 9,843. Walsh, Dem., 17,013. Nadeliian, Soc., 1,076 Walsh's plurality, 7,165. BROOKLYN, First District. Warren, Rep. 6 onin, Dem, 8, wr, Soc, 843. Cronin’s ‘plurality, 2.68% Second District. Alexander, Rep., 7,790. Brown, Dem., 8,003 Chatouff, Soc, 4,138 Brown's plurality, 218 Third District. Park i Taylor, 7,167. Zlotom, Soc, 274. Taylor's pluradity, 3,885 Fourth District. Montz," Rep. 4,354. McArdle, Dem., 10,114 Sehachner, Soc,, 1,697. McArdle’s plurality, 6,760) Fifth District. Caufteld jr. Rep. 11,283. Sullivan, Dem., 8,910 riedman, Soc., 746. Caultield's plurality, 2.8.5 Sixth District Crows, Rep., 6,218. Solomon, Dem., 6,470. Pave 3,555 Crow's’ plifraiity, 748 eventh District 4,041 Searle, Rep. Howard, MeNau Howard's pluralit Eighth District. yer, 066. Reilly's pirates 5,465 Ninth District Carroll, Rep. 9 fonry, Dem, 1 Smith, Soc, 1,084 ‘Tonry's plurality, 1,205 Tenth District. Doherty, Rep. 9,648 Gray, Dem., 9,82 Hergman, Soc Gray's plurality, 178 Eleventh District Hiv, Rep,, 11,202. Wallon, Dem., 10,82 Miller, Soc. 506 y's plurality, Twelfth District. Moore, Rep, 9,876. Nivans, Dem., 11,499. Hopkins, Soc. 712, Evans's plurality, 1,623 Thirteenth District. Clitton, Kep., 2,601 » Dem, 6,636 040. Wackerman’s pluraltty, 4,03 Fourteenth District. Yavenda, Rep. und Dem, 6,978 Klein, Soc. 3,847 Yacenda’s plurality, %126 Fifteenth District. Sprunde, Rep. 44 McLaughlin, Dem., Clayton, Soe, 279. MeLatughlin's plurality, 4.618 Sixteenth District. Stverman, Rep, 6 696 Kleinfeld, Det. 10,756 Kritzer, Soc. 2.11 Kleinfeld's plurality, ,0B% Sexenteenth District Keep. 10,1a9 oder, Dem., 8,508 son, Soc., 1,081, lis's pluraitty, 1,613 Eighteenth Distro Wont, Rep, 8.419. Stetneut, Dem., 10,138 8uoa Vhese are in Mahogany, marked them for quick clea Exceptionally fine values them for quick clearance, at Also Odd cases, etc Dressers, to be sold T Court The iast words that Marty said to Mr. Sheridan when he accepted the McCue lance were: “If you don't win Tl knock you tor a goal And Marty ves never kno-* ane eae The WRICHT- 9-11 East Odd Dressing Table Worth from $80 to $175 these. Chiffoniers, C is Week, 37th Street, New York City Odd Pieces of Furniture Regardless After our great Special Parchase Sale, which ended last week, we accumulated a number of odd pieces which will be sold this week regardless of cost. Odd Bedsteads Worth from $60 to $150 Walnut and Maple of Cost We have $29.75 rance, at We have marked $30 to $50 Aa. Tables Beck Regardless of Cost. FOX CO.,Inc. near Fifth Avenue Riley, Soc, 8.918. Stetngut's plurajity, 1,719 } tla aon acid Distr Giaccone | Fasullo, Testa, Fasull 1.903, ‘8 plurality, 1.467 Twentieth District. Gempler, Rep., 10,073 Miller, Dem, 15.190. Clafer, Soc., 882. Miller’s plurality, 6,117. Twenty-first District. Clayton, Rep. 14,590. White, Deni, 10,236. Andersen, Soc., 1,011 Clayton's pluratit Twent -second District. Oruss, Rep. 8,077. Franklin, Dem, 12.491. Sohecter, Soc., 3, Brankiin’s plurality, «414 Twenty-third Distriet. Ricca, Rep. and Dem, 6,277 Goldberg, Soc., 6,867 Ricca's plurality, 910 QUEENS. First District. Afvert, Rep., | Laininger, Dem., 12,697 | Strohrman, Soc, 723 Second District Specht, Rep, 4.169. Dover, Dem., 12,105 Palm, Soc.,,772. Third District. , 6,336. Loscalzo, Dem., 10589. Straus, Boc., 766. Fourth District. Winslow, Rep., 10,696. Thomas, Dem., 11,028. Fernandoz, Soc., 521. Fifth District Halpern, Rep., 11,016. Brunner, Dem., 12,742 Sixth District Baum, Rep., 8,003. Cosgrove, Dem., 11,629. Rosa, Soc., 875, RICHMOND. First District. » Rep. 5,926. Dem., 10,853 Desring, Soc, 201. Second District Frerichs, Rep., 6,016 Vaughan, De: 684 Janobson, So 16TH SENATORIAL DISTRICT Louhy, J:op., 8.435 Sheridan, Dem., 30,604 Lynn., Soc., 3,671 Sheridan's plurality, 22.10+ No election districts missing in the delicious Burley flavor— LUCKY STRIKE cid NESTE tube for 25c. Why pay more? You’re Safe Your own dentist will approve its twice-a-day use. Notice to Advertisers Dieplay advertising type copy and release orgere ither be Morning World er 1 ine World oo afier 4 PM. ihe a preceding publication can be inserted only Space way permit aad in order of receipt at ‘The World Office. Copy containing engravings to be made oy The World must be recelved by 1 P. M. Display advertinng type copy for the Supvie Sections Bunday World must oe ved by 1. M. Thursday preceding publics: {ion "soa releose. must ber teceied ty "2 Pritay “copy vontaising cravings 10 be iaile by The World must be received by Thursday nova Sunday Mato Sheet copy, {spe cory which & pot been reorirad yi. 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