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vet-| PRESID Fy teeloding only Tapan, Amorica ‘Britatn, but are not vxcluding ‘chatice at a broader agreement, persistence of the British an- cements-—the !atest came from Austratian —representative—in- more ‘than clearly that the ? know that it has no hard feelings, |" Dut that it believes a broader align- mt more satisfactory. “America still wants a general ; eae: agtectnent, and the likellhood that such an institution would be ‘the result. Australia, New Zealand “and Canada would look favorably on broader based ngreement ad would & perty to a tripartite arrange- t or to a general Pacific line-up. | ITALIAN GENERAL CRITICISES U. S. PROGRAM ON ARMS ‘Declares in Newspaper Article That Hughes Has Committed Several Ertors, "ROME, Nov. 23.—Criticism of the _Almerican limitation of armaments «programme wi voiced to-day by ‘Gen. Bencivenga of the Italian Army An the newspaper:I) Paese, orran of former Premier. Nitti, which has been ezitica! of the Washington conference. Ba SIGNS REVISED TAX BILL, CONGRESS ADJOURNS WASHINGTOD ov. 23.--The Sen- ate this afternoon adopted the confer- ence report on the Tax Revision Bill a vote of 39 to 29. The President signed the bill late to-day. Senator Broussard, Louisiana, was the only Democrat voting for the re- port. Six Republicans, Senators Borah, Ladd, La Follette, Moses, Nor- beck and Norris, voted against the report. The bill repenle the excess profits and transportation taxes, does away with most of the so-called nuisance and luxury taxes, reduces individua taxes all along the line and increases the corporation income tax from 10 per cent. to 12% per cent. The bill now gocs to the President for his signature The Mouse voted to-day to adjourn to-night, ending the special session of Congress. The Senate passed the reso- lution yesterda. paki $14,000 FOR WHISKEY AND GETS 0} ONLY WATER New Chari > Awainst v ‘Wents, Held as Swindler Here. The police of Paterson added one “Secretary of State Hughes has @omnmtitted several errors,” says Gen. / Fenclvenga. “First, that of consid- / ering naval armament separately trom _ fand armament; second, in believing ‘that naval power resides in big ships; third, in thinking that the problem of diza~mament will be automatically when agreements among the States, England and «Japan ‘are reached.” Flanihare Appointed ax Delegate Conference, WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 (Associated Press).—Appointment by Japan of “Masanao Hanihara, V:ce Foreign ‘Minister, ns a delegate to the Arma- ‘ment Conference was communicated | to-day to the State Department. ‘The appoinment ts immediatel: “Yo the continued illness of Baron hara, the Ambassador, which the delegation with oniy two for delegates, namely Admiral to and Prince Tokugawa. Mr. Banihara will now sit at the official conferences, y —————_— cag QUT IN ELECTION f BUT. won A BRIDE due Alderman homes " Layden and Catherine Inex Donlon were married by fnue, Brooklyn, this afternoon. ‘Mr. Pt be was defeated for ree in iu mocratic landslide Nov, ives 3 No, 176 Gai Place, . The bride, who lives at No. ‘Street, was attended by her Donion, while the 4 aia nae CA La} men, fngioding. gerd Inter 1 Revenue Collector Raf- Were present, Gen. served on leadquarters’ Staff in MRS. FRANK AUDITORE SUING FOR A DIVORCE Also Brings $100,000 Act Alleged Co-renpo: “Bult for absolute divorce from Frank as “the millionaire Strect, weekly, tam- 9 auit names Tespondent, counsel, who in this coun- more charge to-day to those under which the New York City police are holding Emil Wentz of Grand Forks, N. D., who was arrested Nov. 15 for transaction by which John Mc- Laughlin, a former policeman and a saloonkeeper at No. 2068 Park Ave- nue, bought a dozen or more barrels of whiskey for several thousands of dollars, only to find that water nad been delivered instead of whiskey. The Paterson police said thai Ferdinand Ella of No, 219 Bast Six- teenth Street paid Wentz and his as- soclates $14,000 for twenty-six barrels of water on Oct. 27. Wentz took his customer to a garage, handed him a bit and brace and invited him to bore a hole anywhere in any one of then. Through @ ruse, it js alleged, Elia syphoned off real whiskey, though the barrel contained water. BROTHERS IMPRISONED FOR 500 AUTO THEFTS Larceny. Hdward Lang was sentenced to ten Sing Sing to-day by Judge Bayes {n County Court, Brooklyn. John A. 1s, his brother, was sentenced te twé years and six months to five years in the same prison, Both were | charged with criminally recetving stolen | utomobiles. Edward lives at No. als Albany Avenue, Brooklyn, and Join at No, 280 West 19th Stroet, Manhattan. ‘The brothers are alleged during the} past ten years to have participate in the theft of about, 600 automobiles. Mra, Margaret Lang, wife or Edward, heard sentence pronounced;*®Ut’ showed no emotion, She also is under indictment. ‘The arrests of the Langs and their alleged accomplices resulted from an appeal mado by Mre. Edward Sweeney to @ court to force her hustand to sup- port thelr children. She sald he was implicated in an automobile theft. Sweeney was arrested and confessed. He lived at No. 229 Franklin Avenue. roscoe arcaetinecalts SMASH WINDOW, STEAL $10,000 IN JEWELRY years In Petice Chase, ut Lease, Four Philadelphia Bandita. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 23.—Four motor bandits to-day smashed the plate glans window of the jewelry store of A. J. Schroder Company and escaped with $10,000 worth of diamond rings, A policeman nearby com- mandeered an gutomobile and gave chase, but the bandit car outdistanced him. ‘The bandits drove up ‘to the curb, ‘be | smashed the window with a heavy in- ee has been offered by Hull jr. of No, 176 Sheri- Brooklyn, to any one who the three duck hunters, Persall Creighton, and who disappeared on oe Aypoars out on Ja- inter vier y without the 3 nts y lover ‘The guns have guns fed as belonging ‘to two. of ing men. Thelf ‘presence hes rplanes ave pecn aston | rd ters, ai the meadows, paisa ee _ RAYNOR TO REFUSE GAS BOOKS TO COMMISSION | Admits Sudpoenn service, but Prob- . mbly Will Decline to Testify. >, William Raynor, secretary of the New & Queens Gas Company, who months ago refused to obey a jp eebpomne issued by the Public Service appeared before that body week, it was learned to-day, and | pémitted service of a second subpoena. Prendergast has sét Thurs- 0 to the books Or answer questions, peaieanerestipieseae nnd Accomplice Are Sen tenced. John Trautwein, « confidential clerk in treet, |current udministrative expenses, strument, and firing three shots through the door to frighten those in- side, drove away at breakneck speed, After the policeman in the com- mandeered car gave up the chasa a motorcycle policeman continued it, but also failed to overtake the rob- bers. —»—— BROTHERS ACCUSED IN AUTOMOBILE THEFT One Hi lor Grand Jury and 0} Arrested im Court, John T. Brénnan, twenty-five, a chauffeur of No, 760 East 182d Street, was held in $1,000 ball for the Grand Jury on a charge of grand larceny be- fore Magistrate MoQuade in West Side Court to-day, William F, Bren- nan, brother of the defendant, was ar- rested as he left the court and will be arraigned to-morrow in connection with the same charge, The automobile of Morris Zaggder of No. 908 Highth Avenue was stolen from in front of No. 1780 Broac vay on Sept. 3 On Nov, 13 Detective McCafferty saw the mactine in front of No, 20 East 88th Street. John T. Brennan olaimed the car and was ar- rested, see Se ll, JERSEY’S PAYROLL DOUBLED SINCE 1917) Increase in Number ‘as Civil Service Employe Nov. 23.—The State pay roll—for State, county and municipal oMcos under civil service control—has increased approximately 100 per cent. since 1917, according to the annual 're- port of the Civil Service Commission submitted to-day to Gov. Edwards. The budget contains $62,500.000 for 29, ~ 690,000 of which ts caused by an in- crease of 2,100 employees since 1917. The Increase, the report claims, has been brought about by war conditions, ‘Thé commission adds that there muat {der of Supreme Court Justi LEGS F AWOMAN BUNDLE INPARK DEEPEN MYSTERY sence Wrapped in Paper of Same} Date as Was Torso, Found in Long Island Pond, Capt, Carey of the Homicide Squad | 1 ®t Police Headquarters said to-day ftavon of he and his men were entirely satisfied that the lower halves of the Ings of a woman found on a dump neat a path {n Van Cortlandt Pack, daily by hundreds of golfers. are part of the body of the woman whose oody down to the hips was found in » pond on Jackson Avenue, Long Islund City, Oct. The package in which the legs, on which were black liste thread 22, stockings, was wrapped had not been long where it was found, Refuse is dumped there dally and each day's accumulation is quickly covered by succeeding loads. The way in which the knee joint of one of the legs had been disarticu- lated clearly indicated to the de- tectives the work of a butcher. The other log had been roughly hacked through. ‘The newspaper In which the legs were wrapped had tho date Oct. 20, Tho torso, when found, was wrapped ina paper of the same date. As to clues to the identity of the woman ths new fragments gave no information. The stockings were of poor quality, worn through with many holes, The conclusion that the legs be- longed to the Long Island City body was based on tabulated measure ments which show that In a general way the legs were of proportions , Such as would be in accord with the body of a woman weighing about 135 | Pounds and 5 feet 6 inches In height. Arthur Johnson of No. 137 Staniey | Avenue, Yonkers, was strolling along the edge of Van Cortlandt Park, and had arrived on the border of a marshland through which Tibbit's Creek used to run, when he stumbled across a heavy bundle wrapped in newspaper and tied with string, He kicked it, and to his horror a fvot Was revealed by a Diese in the cov- ering. He called Patrolman Score of the Kingsbridge Station and then Acting District Attorney William Quigiey and Assistant Medical Examiner Sellers ; Kennard otf Bronx were summoned, | with Capt. Carey ftom Headquarte: The Long Island City case sug- gested itself at once. There the cut- ting had been roughly done too. And the date of the newspaper seemed sig- nificant, for it was Oct, 22 that the half: body was found. Another thing that may have had some significance was that this spot was marshy, al- most a pond, while the spot where the woman's body was found in Long Island City was marshy enougd te be actually a pond, MILK STRIKER JAILED FOR HITTING A DRIVER Wite of Another In Charged With Picketing. Joseph Pece!, No. 405 Hast 80th Street, @ striking milk wagon driver, was to- day sentenced to the workhouse for five days by Magistrate Sima in York- ville Court for disorderly conduct. The complaint was by Thomas Parker, No. 236 West 48th Street, a Borden driver, who said Peccl had struck him. “If 1 were to impoxe a fine,” Magistrate Sims, “the union would pay it and the defendant would suffer no PUnishment. A workhouse sentence is therefore necessury.” Mra. Helen Blaaser, No, 714 sete Street, Bruoklyn, wife of a mix striker, was arraigned in the Fifth Ave- Aue Court in Brooklyn to-day for pei: cling the Borden plant nt torn st and Fort, Hamilton Parkway, ne said ahe was “out for fresh alr.” Magistrate Geismar paroled her until Fri examination, said eee FOCH SO LIKED CITY HE MAY VISIT IT AGAIN Lesion Commander Thanks Citisen for Heception Given Gaeat, The American Legion of New York, through Commander William F, Deegan hat issued a@ statement thanking the elty and all cltigens for thelr afd in making the reception to Marshal Foch @ success during his three-day visit here, Marshal Foch, who was in New York as the guest of the Legion, expressed himself gn leaving as being so delighted with his reception, according to Comy mander Deegan, that he wants to visit the clty again upon his return to em- bark for France. ee GottHeb Abroad, Bail Will Go To Pay Alimony. Julius Gottlieb, arrested under an or- MEANRY, dated May 3 last. as he was about to board the steamship Aquitanta and nd- nt ted to ball in $500, was declared to- day py, Mortimer Hiliott, counsel for Gottiieb's wite, Ethel, to be Europe, The bail money will be used to pay Mrs. Gottlieb $15 a week alimony, Two-Con: $3 : louls E, Enright, who achidved prominence a few years ago by his announcement that he was ready to soll kasoting ut two centa a gullon was by County \Sudge'L-” Siaith, sat “Atingole, ie After piendihg not eullty. to che char é that he had appropriated the proc of a check tor $2,000, payable to the fasoline corporation, PP be @ way found to keep not only the |) umber of employees but the payroti to- | 4 bounds, ay Lie and ae re Cala. ae ray 7, the feequented | 1E EVENING wor! TRYING TO GET U.S. TO CALL ECONOMIC CONFERENCE SOON Allied Debt Question Would Be Among the Matters to Be Brought Up, | WASHINGTON, Nov. 28,—Pressurs the American Government to call un international economic conter- ence is being continued, it was sald jto-day in high official circtes, The | Administration, however, at present is | disinclined to take such a step, but it is possible, it was stated, that such A ineeting may be called luter. Many of the delegates to t Armuinent asserted) have eugmested the ad- iswbility of & gathering of represen. tatives of the viurious hutions to dis- | cuss International trade, economic and nancial problems with a view tu ob- Leniog remedy through sw ncerted ac- ft | ‘The Administration in this connec- |Won ts inclined to the view, it was indicated, that the outcome of the pims conference should determine whetlier concerted action and una- nimity among the nations cun be ub- tained before other world problems are taken up by the nations, ‘The Allied debt to this country ana its ultimate disposition would un- doubtedly be brought to the front in any discussions of thu exchange situ- ation und the ‘question of revision of German repuratio! ARBUCKLE DEFENSE BECINS WITH HOTEL NID ON THE STAND (Continued from First Page.) } upon was hostelries, She even gave a demon- stration, dusting up a desk in the court rpom with defense Exhibit A—a cheese-cloth dust rag. Miss Brennan painted Arbuckle as a jolly good fellow. She described hin having called her into his room after the pajama party which is alleged to have resulted in Miss Rappe's death and to have asked her to “straighten up the bed.” ‘He Upped me $2.60 and said, ‘Girlie, this is for you,’” the witness testified, “He went out and camo in again with some ico in a glass, He was fooling with it with a straw, and then he said to me, ‘With that map, can't you have a drink of whiskey? I told him I did not drink.” To-day's programme included a visit to the suite In the Hotel St. Francis where Arbuckle gave his party last Labor Day. It was planned to demon- strate that certain sounds could not be heard in Arbuckle’s bedroom when the door was closed, and that it was im- possible to see nto the bedroom from certain angles of the sitting room. This is an attack on testimony of witnesses who said they heard Miss Rappe in the bedroom cry “Oh, my God, no, no, no!” and Arbuckle reply “Shut up!" and on witnesses who described what they saw in the bedroom from their chairs ta the sitting room, Arbuckle came into court to-day with un unparalleled array of legal ond, expert advisers. In addition, he was flanked by some of the big- gest of the movie millionaires, who watched with close attention overy step in the drama in which they con- sider the morality of their industry is on trial. Immediately behind Arbuckle, Gouv- eneur Morris, author, had his seat To his right sat @ fingerprint and handwriting expert. Nearby was a medical adviser. Half a dozen law- yeors with clerks, secretaries and aids of various kinds jammed the space inside the courtroom rail, Before court convened the room buzzed with conversaticn. It was ilke ® scene at a movie reunion, Many friends thronged around Arbuckle, greetl him most corilally. His wife, "fire. Minta Durfee Arbuckle, ‘was the centre of another gaily chat- tering group, and the movie magnates and actors sitting around the walls were busy shaking hands, slapping backs, and gossiping ubout the in- dustry. High lights on the proceedings in Judge Louderback’s court yesterday when the piwsecution closed wero tes- timony concerning finger prints on a door, declared to have been made in a struggic between Arbuckle and Miss Rapve; an assertion by a hotel maid that she heard @ ‘woman screaming inthe suite, and the ex- clusion of evidence of @ detective who bad declared Miss Rappe had made a statement to him favorable to the defendant. at eebeeaheesates CALDER FOSTERS BILL TO PROBE UV. S. TAXES Inquire Into A of Federal Reve: WASHINGTON, Nov, 23.—Creation of a tax Investigation commission to make a sweeping inquiry Into the sources of Federal revenue is provided for in A bill introduced in the Senate to- day by Senator Calder of New York. "Phe cominlanion would bo composed of three Senators, three Representatives and three representatives of the public t> be appointed by the tent, Would ‘The Rodman Wanamaker Trophy will be competed for this evening at the Twenty-second Regiment Armory, 168th Btroet and Broadway, where the Fit. teenth Re, Ray fonal Gi id [WOULD NOT WORK, ATTACKED HIS WIFE. $0 SHE SHOT HIM | Mrs. Kinket Kept F Family Goe- ing, Got Job for Husband, but He Shirked. Samuel Kinkel, thirty-three, an un- employed bricklayer, is In a sorious condition in Richmond Memorial Hos- pital, Staten Island, with a bullet lodged against his bra:u, which was fired, the police charge, by his wife, Mary, thirty, after the steudily refused to help her! support | their four children. The wife, who has, according to the ftory she told the police, suppurtea both her husband and the young children for more than a year by tak ing In washing, could stand+i no more wher her plea that hei husbana accept a job that was waiting him was met with blows. The woman, being held to awalt the outcome of her husband's injuries, ad: mitted having fired the bullet. “I have been supporting my hus- band and our four children for o year,” she said. “I begged him to go to work. He laughed at me. 1 be- came desperate to-day when he at- tacked me after I told him where he could get work. I ran to the attic and got a rifle. When he attacked me again I pulled the trigger; Then I waited for the police to come,” The woman is in jail and neighbors are caring for the children over Thanksgiving. MRS. RAGONE’S TRIAL FOR MURDER BEGINS Her Three Pretty Children Play in Corridors While Jury Is Completed. Despite the prejudice against sitting on @ jury where a woman is on trial for murder in the first degree, the twelfth juror was obtained to-day and the trial of Mra. Josephine Ragone, twenty-one, for the killing of Frank Iucolone in October, 1920, was hegun before Judge Crain in the Court of Gen- eral Sessions. Her three pretty children played in the corridors, waiting to join their mother at recess. As pefort, several &t'the-women’ of prominence who hawe taken a deep interest in the beautiful young Italian woman were in court when Assistant the case, ‘The jury was told how the State ex- peets to prove the defendant left her husband and went to live with the inan she efterward killed because he would not marry her. The prosecutor told of her flight and her arrest ip Bultimore, where she had gone to live with her husband. Tho defense will be that Zucolone attacked her after she left him and that he was killed in the struggle. hia Ncsete a oe thera LAURA REINSTATED BY NEW D. S. C. HEAD Depsty Comm Deputy Street Cleaning Commissioner Michael Laura returned to his dutfes in Brooklyn to-day after forty days of suspension imposed by the then Com- missioner John P. Leo, who has since resigned. Acting Commissioner Alfred Taylor lifted the suspension yesterday with the approval of Mayor Hylan. Laura was supended because of his alleged activities in behalf of a mem- ber of the Street Cleaning Department, who had been arrested on Commission: Leo's complaint. Laura was at that time Democratic candidate for Sheriff of Kings County. He was beaten in the election by Peter Seery and his friends say the suspension was the cause. ee SAY ACTRESS DROVE AUTO WHILE DRUNK Former Wintex Garden Girl He! in $500 Bail. Mrs. Helen Neary McCloskey, 21 years old, of No. 152 West 724 Btreet, who said she furmerly was an actress at the Winter Garden, to-day was held in $500 bull by Magistrate House in Trafic Court for Court of Special Sessions on u charge ‘of driving an automobile while intoxicated. Mrs. McCloskey was arrested on Noy. 18 by Putrolman Samuel Weinstein of Motorcycle Squad No. 1 at Riverside Drivo and 82d Street. She is an ex- tremely attractive woman, and when she appeared In court to-day wore an expensive fur coat with a close fitting black turban surmounting a wealth of dark auburn hair, mah + had} § ett District Attorney McDonald outlined |... ‘RESULTS BOWIE WINNERS RACE TRACK, BOWIE ~The following are the bh ‘8 races RST RACE—For agent seven tan YR) (Schwartz), $18.30, $4.81 Fitzgibbon, 100 thang: second, Finnish Maid, 97 (Lowe), $2.40, third, woaae 1.20 3-5, Far Sigt La Bat, Petite Dame and aetna Village alec ram. ‘D> RACE—Americat Remount Associaton Handicap four-yeur-old and upward, twe miles 165 (Lieut McCreery won; Raconteuse, 163 ise E $5.50 $5.70. ‘second: Gold tHeview. «Major Koch) $6.10 third. Hermanna, Jay Bird, Hand Grenade, also. ra THIRD RACE—Clatming; threo-year- ois and upward; six anda half fur i Burgoyne, 11? (Porice), $10.40, 3 Moroni, Loe eer i wi 160 $ aT) $4.40, thira ‘y Linasie Ardite, onneun, Nort, Snore, Left nia, Beckn ana Wila Flower also FOURTH RACE—The Cinderella, for Mes aie al ages; Keven fure 10% (Lang), $12.60, By Jiminy, 104 ischwarta), $3.00, $2.60, second; Arrow 104 (Ponce), $3.30, third. Ima Frank, Ten Buttons. Jyntee, Vague and Mery Head also ran, HLFDH RACK—Clalming: three-year- olas upward; one mile and a six- tady LilMan (Lang), $10.50, YorVist, 319 nsun), $8.90 aud $3.10, second; Tan- at (Coney), $4.90," third. “Time, 1.6) Woorlthrush, Miss Filley and Frank Monroe also ran. BOWIE SCRATCHES. BOWIE RACE TRACK, Md., Nov. 28. reg yes scratches for to-day's racea are as fol FIRST. RACE—Sparka Fayelle, Lady Zeus, Toranado. ‘ind THIRD RACE—Dalryman, Rhine- etane, Zouave, Arrah Go On, Charles J. Craigmille, FIFTH RACE—Major Parke. SIXTH RACE—Bar One. SEVENTH RACE—Smarty, Wodan. i BOWIE ENTRIES. RACE TRACK, BOWIE, Md., Nor, 23.— ‘The entriee for to-morran’s rces are as follows Fruisr RACE Claiming en furlongs. —ai Pe oughnut, iia, = Wemle won; for two-year-olds yas citation 1 1663. bt Bay: 4, standing guard with a gun. on Pas pak “bRtecount, when, atten, ‘Guone, |, Butter,” 104; ‘ec Ki! 0: ison, New Brunswick, N. J. low: 101; “Lady gine BOWIE SELECTIONS. BOWIE RACE TRACK, Nov, 23.— The Evening World selections for to- morrow's races are an folio FIRST Dick Onna Run, ongita PeBCOND RACE. Htephaistos, E. F. Yashmal entry, Saga- rine, neta BS "Sb nace —anome, Sunnyland ener “RACH Halu, Irish Kiss, OST RACE—Sibola, ‘Titanfum, Star Court. SBVENTH RACE—Pibroch, Dolly C., Santa. SSS ee JUMPS FROM “L” STATION UNDER 3D AVE. EXPRESS Wore Clot! A-man about fifty-five years old, gray and slightly bald, yumped to the track in front of a south bound Third Avenue elevated express train at the north end of the 23d Street station at 10.95 o'clock to-day. Three cars had passed over him before the motorman, Joseph P, McDonald, could stop the train. Death was instantaneous The passengere swarmed out of the cars when the train stopped and hurried to the station below, where they pro- ceeded downtown on a local train, ‘The only mark of {dentification is the name of the tailor who made the sult worn by the suicide—Williams, of No. 2171 Clarendon Road, Brooklyn, The body wi to the’ Morgue. Soviet Russia Buys 600,000 Bushels of Wheat Here. RIGA, Nov., 23—A wireless message revelved here to-day from Moscow saya the Soviet Government has con@uded @n agreement with the Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation, an American con- cern, for the purchase in America of 000,000 poods of wheat (approximately 00 bushajs) In exchange for Rus- sien Bt For 50 Years the Standard of Excellence The Tea of Teas Always Good Alike | "SALADA’ Deliciously Different tothe Ordinary. Preserved and Sold only “in Sealed Metal Packets ai | Ont., -has been sailing with her hus- * | charge of his ship again to-day whie iti | he went to court, olde | President Harding were Matry Harsin, AS CAPTAIN FOUGHT MUTINY ON SHIP Skipper of, Schooner Prefers Charges Against Negro He Shot on High Seas. “BOSTON, Nov. 23.—Capt. George F. Poppe, skipper of the schooner | Lillian BE, Kerr, came to the Federal | Court to-day with charges of mutiny on’ the high seas against Frank Howell, a negro sailor, and with high praise for the conduct of his wife, Mrs, Eda Poppe, during what he said was his fight for life with Howell. The woman held the wheel of the vesse] while the men fought on the deck, Howell with a knife, her hus- band with a pistol, the latter said. She kept the schooner on its course, j the negro crew meantime grouped ‘on another part of the deck, offering no help. . Howell was shot in the back, He was at the ¢ Hospital to-day under police gu... Physicians said | that, while his condition Was serious, he probably would recover. ‘Capt. Poppe said that after found Howell, who was shipped at | Jacksonville, asleep across the wheel ‘on Nov. 13, Howell attacked him with ;a knife. Mra. Poppe gave her hus-| band his gun and the skipper sald he shot Howell when he was attacked a second time. The seaman sald Cupt. | Poppe fired first, After Howell was subdued Mrs. ; Poppe was relieved at the wheel. Last |Sunday night, off this port, captain and mate left the vessel to obtain supplies. The skipper’s wife was left Heavy | seas prevented the officers’ return and | she was 1y command all night. | “I haa no misgiving,” Capt. Poppe aid. “I was fully satisfiea that iy wife could cope with any situauun | that might arise. She is an eapert, shot and fearless.” | Mrs. Poppe, a native of Windsor, he band for four years. She was in —_.—__ New Jersey Postm WASHINGTON, the postmasters nominated Nov. to-d Asbury Park, N. J., and James A Mor- You get a LARGE tube for 25c. Why pay more? You're Safe Your own dentist will approve its twice-a-day use. ‘Erase Mark, v Advt. on Pa e 5 WASHINGTON or BALTIMORE SPECIAL EXCURSIONS sm ane Noy. 27, Dec. 11 .63 pe ies ac, are ar 'Tax, Ave Ticks guod only on apecial train date! NEW JERSEY CENTRAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS. MS "anti Ve Wannington Boat, Raitt Yellow Taxicabs #6 Symon oF Sariecy Cnt, YELLOW TAXICABS ‘this monogram cantnte E YELLOW TAXICABS - enema yellow TAXICABS use chains on slippery streets GENUINE W TAXICABS ‘are clean and sanitary YELLOW TAXICAB drivers are escores ag al TAXICABS LOWEST RATE OF FARE IN GREATER NEW YORK 20¢ POR THE FIRST THIRD MILE 30¢ PER MILE THEREAFTER + 1 to 5 Passengers Be sure GENUINE YELLOW TAXICAB Lenox 2300 Pick One Up dure Consider the Organication Back of the Cab RIPE wheat’s russet coat is the best part of the grain .,. Discard it if you must have a white cereal— but then you will discard most of the nourishment. Ralston retains all wheat’s richness, and satisfies! “Save the Pieces’ Take them to our ‘neares store and get a new lens in a few hours. Accuracy assured Any Lens Duplicated from the broken pieces. Lenses, £1.00, $1.25, $1.50, etc. 9¢hrbich&Sons Established 59 Years New York: 184 B'way, at John St. 2¢3 Sixth Av., 15th SI $50 Sixth Av., 2¢d St. 101 Nassau, at Ann St, West 42d _ Street B’klyn. 517 Fulton St.. opp. Namm's Chas. Lang & Co. Formerly located at 662 Sixth Avenue HAVE REMOVED To 1651 Broadway Comer 51st Street Notice to Advertisers Display advertising tsve copy and release 0 her ‘week 104 s Werla of ss Copy containing eng poring bo r tf reviags “te made oy The Word must be fecelved byt Pe Me Diolay advertomp. type cony fr pli ment Sunday World m fieieed by tb Mt ‘Tmuraday” preceding pablion” Mon aod release must received by P.M. Friday. Copr ata talage engravings to mate by The wid must be received by Thureday cou, {ype cope which az M. Friday, and en: itt ‘ tro, rigidly in Tarest “Tecelpt and positive. release Display : ciuers provided’ i Warn omitted contract or eorn discounts of any character, THE WORLD