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—— — FINAL EDITION “Circulation Books Open to All.’ VOL. LXIl. NO. 21,906—DAILY. ! BRITISH 1921 (The by The Press Publishing jew York World). * NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, Katered an Second-Class Mattor Post Office, New York, N, Y. TT See ENGLAND RESERVES POWER: OVER TARIFF AND LABOR IN CANADA STATUS FOR IRISh Chancellor Declares NoSpecial Priv- TUNBRIDGE WELLS, England, | could not confidently predict that the } solved. ileges Will Be Taken From Ulster and That Allegiance of Sinn Fein Must Be Assured. Nov. 26 (Associated Press),—Lord Chancellor Birkenhead, speaking at a mass meeting here to-day, said he Trish question would be satisfactorily He said what the British Government had offered Sinn Fein, was that, with one or two reservations, Ireland position as Canada. “Whether the offer will be cepted I cannot say,” said the Lord Chancellor. “It is very easy to say: ‘Why don't you raise an army and coerce Ireland as the only means of obtaining peace” If such a tragic necessity were to arise no British Government ; would shrink from the responsibility. | But, when that had been done, how, much nearer would we be to-the7at- tainment of a contented Ireland,” “Returning to Ulster, Lord Birken- head said there could be no question of taking any of her special privi- leges or powers from her, but he hoped that Ulster, having complete protection against any invasion of! her powers, would in the near future realize that her intests in other mat- ters concerning Ireland as a whole would be bette served by contribut- ing hr experience to a entral author- ity. “The difficulties raised on the other side are manifest,” he sald. He said the Government had made it ; clear that it could not assent to any i arrangement which would produce the secession of Ireland from the British Empire Later in his speech, Lord Birken- head explained that the one or two reservations with réspect to Dominion Home Rule for Ireland concerned the question of tariff and labor facilities. The latter, he said, was a vital and an indispensable matter. Moreover, referring to the question of Irish al- Jegiance to the Crown, he declared the British crown was a symbol as hecessary in Ireland as in Canada and i through the empire. killed in the last few days’ disorders in Belfast at twenty-séven, and the number of wounded at ninety-two. Of the number killed, according to the figures, thirteen were Protest- ants and fourteen Catholics; and of the wounded, sixty-one were Prot- estants and thirty-one Catholics. LONDON, Nov. 2% (Associated Press).—A chorus of vehement pro- tests against renewal of warfare in Yreland in the event the present peace negotiations collapse is raised by the morning newspapers, following the meeting yesterday of Prime Minister Qoyd George and Sir James Craig, Ulster Premier. Further developments are awaited with keenest anxiety, the newspape 8 (Continued on Second Page.) 5 BODIES FOUND IN LAKE LIFEBOAT Four Men and One Woman Be- lieved to Be From Lost Canadian Ship. © WATERTOWN, N. ¥., Nov. 26— Bodies of four men and one woman were found in a lifeboat ten milos southwest of Stony Point, Lake On- tarlo, last night by the trew of the Isabella H., a lake freighter. The vietims are supposed to be from the ac- @ should be placed in exactly the same r RECEWERS NAMED HERE FOR WLS MOTOR CONCERN | Willys-Overland Not Affected —Accessories Company Hit Slump Last Year. Clements O, Mininger and Frank P. Kennison were to-day appointed an- cillary or supplementary receivers by JJudge Knox in the Untied States District Court-here unde- $50,000 bond for the Willys Corporat'on following the application for a receiver for the company by the Ohio S»vings Bank and Trust Company of Toledo, O, The Willys-Overland Company, ac- cording to John Willys, president of the Willys Corporation, in a state- ment to-day is in no way affected by the receivership. Mr, Willys Said the Willys-Overland Company is in an entirely sound financial soadition. “These proteedings‘against the Wil- lys Corporation,” he said, “are not op- posed by the Board of Directors, which feels that a receivership will afford an opportunity for working out a plan of reorganization under the protection of the court which will be fair to everybody. Committees of creditors and stockholders have failed to get together, and there was con- stantly increasing danger of hostile action by individual creditors. “The embarrassment of the Willys Corporation came about when it was overtaken by business depression a year ago with its new automobile plant at Elizabeth, N. J., unfinished, It has resources which, within rea- sonable time, will take care of all creditors. { earnestly urge our stock- holders not to sacrifice thelr invest- ments.” Both receivers are of Toledo, 0. The papers state that the corpor- ation has a capital of $30,000,000, with plants at ‘Toledo, O., Syracuse, N. ¥,, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., and Elizabeth, N. J. The creditors ask for a receiv- ership on a note for $150,000 on which loan $213.13 has been due since Jan. 10, 1921. In the complaint the en- tire indebtedness of the company is put at not less than $10,000,000 and not more than $14,000,000. Reach et, 30,000 JEWISH CHILDREN COMING TO AMERICA Firat Shipment ef Young Pogrom Refugees Arrives, . Forty-seven Jewish children from Lith- uania and Poland, ranging in age from three to sixteen years, were among the passengers on the steamship America, charge of Samuel Rabalsky, one of the delegates to the Zionist Conference. The Hebrew Immigration Society wi take charge of them here. For the most part one or both parents died of starvation or progroms. Capt. Rind of the ship said he understood 30,000 were being sent over and this was the first Shipment. Among them were BELFAST, Nov. 26 (Associated 7 Press).—Officia: figures published to- fay placed the number of persons { crew of the City of New York, a Camadian craft, which left Oswego two days ago. seven daughters oJ Rebecca and Moses Feigenbiat, both of whom were killed in & progrom. which arrived this morning from Ger- | man and English ports, They were in! ern, poth of Jersey City, were arrested CROWDS CONTINUE HOSPITAL RUSH 10 CONSULT DRLORENZ ke Hip Operation on Girl Li One Performed on Miss Armour Years Ago. CLINICS AT . BELLEVUE. Noted Surgeon Accepts Invi- tation Extended by City—- | Examined 75 To-Day. ‘The crowd of maimed and distorted | which to-day awaited the ministra- tions of Dr. Adolp!i Lorenz at the; Hospital for Joint Diseases, Madis Avenue and 123d Str: than yesterday. mitting the head of the long lino, | which reached from the doorway 1), 14th Street and was four deep, to enter the building, it was réstrained at the threshold by a policeman who permitted only twenty to enter t's time. apy As there were cases which were in need of prompt at- tention, Dr. Herman Frauenthal of the hospital staff and a. policeman went along the line searching them out. As soon as this intent becarae known Dr. Frauenthal was sur- rounded and it was vith difficulty that he and the patrolman got through with their task. In order to reduce crowding at the | next sessions of Dr. Lorenz at the hospital cards were to-day given to those in line specifying dates and hours at which they were to report for examination. At first there was crowding about the window where the tickets were issued, but a police- man got the line in order after a while. Dr. Lorenz performed only two operations to-day. One was upon Ve- ronica Farrell, six years old, of No. 120 Union Avenue, Jersey City, who was suffering a congenital dislocation of both hips. The operation consistei in manipulating the bones in such a way that they were forced back into their normal sockets. It was an opera- tion similar to this that Dr. Lorenz per- formed a number of years ago upon Lolita Armour. In the operation this morning the physicians watching Dr Lorenz work distinctly heard the bones snap into place. ‘The other operation was upon Ralph Gibbons, twelve years old, a newsboy of No. 12 West 128th Street, the mus- cles of whose legs were contracted by infantile paralysis. It had been Dr. Lorenz's intention to perform an open tendon transplantation, but he decided later to stretch the muscles and place the boy in a plaster cast, Dr. Lorenz was so fatigued by the task yesterday of examining 126 pa- tients that to-day he limited the num- ber to seventy-five. He will do no work to-morrow, but will be at the hospital, Sundays excluded, until Dec, 25. At that time he will go to Chi- cago for a month, and on Jan, 25 start for the Pacific’ Coast. At the invitation of the city he will hold clinics at Bellevue Hospital on ‘Tuesday and Saturday of next week from 3 to 5 o'clock. ———— STRIKERS DEFY POLICE, ATTACK MILK WAGON. cet, was greator Don't Get Far, However—Twe Mem Arrested, Milk strikers to-day assaulted a helper on’a police-guarded truck of the Evans Dairy Company, No, 32 Lexing- ton Avenue, Brooklyn, and as a re- sult Joseph Moran and John McGov- on charges of assault. The helper, Stanley Zlanich, of 99 Prospect treet, Brooklyn, was not badly hurt. ‘The attack occurred at Henderson and Second Streets, Jersey City. Patrolman W. D, Harris was on the wagon at the time and Patrolman Ed- ward Murphy, both of the Jersey City force, was only a few steps away, The driver was in a house delivering milk. The Evans employees are still at work. They refused to strike. ” But ‘nstead of per-|_ } in the line WOMAN SPANKED IN.INITIATION ‘ASKS $20,000 DAMAGES “Slapperitis” Wrongly Used, She Avers, and Blank Cartridge Caused Injury. ATLANTA, Ga. Nov. 26.— Alleging she wos permanently injured by the explosion of a cartridge when she was struck with o “a {3 at her int tiation into the Queen's De- gree of Atlanta Council No. 786, Modern Order of Prae- tonians, and when bending-for- ward to kiss an altar, Mrs. Mexia Osborn, twenty-five years old, filed suit against the order for $20,000 damages in Fulton Superior Court. Mrs. Osborn sald the “slap- peritis® was a paddie about three feet long and weighing four or five pounds. The wrong side was applied to her, she said, und the blank cartridge wounded her and set her clothing on fire instead of dis- charging harmlessly into space CHILDHOOD BEAU HELPS ARBUCKLE Expected to Tell of Her Odd Behavior, Even as a Girl,» SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 26.—The defense of Roscoe Arbuckle, charged with having taken the life of Vir- ginia Rappe, said the case for Arbuckle might be concluded before night, in which event the case would go to the jury by next Tuesday. ‘The defense was jubilant as court opened and promised to offer testi- mony which would make the proceed- ings sparkle with stories of gay life parties. They were to be woven about one pivotal point—a claim that Virginia Rappe was subject to hys- teria which caused her to Wisrobe or tear her clothing not once but scores of times. Harry B. Barker of Gary, Ind., and San Francisco, an, old friend of the € movie beauty when she was fifteen years old and living in Chicago, was expected to be recalled to-day. He was to continue his account of half a dozen instances where, in his pres- ence, Miss Rappe became hysterical and acted as she was alleged to have done at Arbuckle’s pajama party. ‘The defense contemplated introduc- ing this evidence to Yulld up a claim that when Miss Rappe indulged in only small quantities of liquor and ofttimes when she did not drink at irrational acts as a resuit of physical ailments which started almost in childhood. A closely guarded galaxy of pretty girls and men was in the witness room ready to be called to the stand, ‘They are from the movie studios and knew Miss Rappe. Their evidence, it called, will be a recital of Miss Rappe's habits and character state- ments for Arbuckle. An extra squad of six-foot police, whose business it is to handle the “toughs” of San Francisco’é famed “South of the Market” district, has been called to assist the regular Hal! of Justice police in handling the huge crowds that storm the doors daily. More than half of those who apply for little blue cards which entitle the bearer to see Arbuckle on trial and bear the latest mode! 1921 scandal, are women. : The trial thus far has proved a strange mixture of comedy, tragedy and technical detail. Just as the ac- tion starts and the fireworks are ready to blaze, in walks a bespec- (Continued. on Second Page.) ly ms. ay OF DEAD ACTRESS all, she was likely to engage in moat) aca CHANCELLOR REVEALS IR HARDING SOUNDS | | } POWERS ON PLANS FOR ASSOCIATION League of Nations Not Affi ed in Any Way by Presi- dent’s Proposal. |\MAY INVITE GERMANY. Foreign Delegates to the Arms Conference Take Kindly to the Idea. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, Nov. right, 1921) taken informally the first step toward (Copy- President Harding has | { the perpetuation of the idea of inter- national conference as developed by the meeting o the present Confer- ence on the Limitation of Armaments. Mr. Harding is sounding the pow- ers as to his plan. It is not a League of Nations nor an Association of Na- tions in the sense that thé Versailles ‘Treaty ereated -an international body. No such formal or rigid institution nor such rules and regulations or obligations as the covenant of the League provided are in Mr. Harding's mind, but he does hope to develép a sequel to the first and second Hague conferences of 1899 and 1907 which |muy benefit by the experience of those two Internationa) gatherings and bring about a general get- together meeting of nations at fre- quent intervals, The President has about him meo like Elinu Root who are familiar with ‘The Hague Conference work and its defects and who can advise him how to avold the pitfalls of those meetings. One trouble was that the Initiative i calling Hague Conferences was left to an individual. The Emperor vf Russia called the meeting in 1899, and it was President Roosevelt who was about to bring the second conferenc into session when the Emperor of Russia again took the initiative in 1907. The understanding then was that the conferences would be held every seven years; and a third con- ference was about to be summoned when the European war clouds of 1914 gathered and prevented a meet- ing. Mr. Harding’s first improvement upon the original Hague plan is the setting up of a machinery for the calling of the conferences, Here at Washington that point will be dis- cussed, and it is indeed the vuly thing that need be laid before the powers, for Mr. Harding's idea is that the conference shall make its own rules when it meets, shall frame its own programme and take action as indi- vidual sovereign nations and not as a super-government, The President feels that the Prin- cipal Allied and Associated Powers (Continued on Second Page.) a os URGE LLOYD GEORGE TO HURRY OVER TO \ARMS CONFERENCE ‘pie irerob Many Messages Received Premier, Who Still Hopes to Attend. LONDON, Nov, % (Associated Press).—Many messages urging Prime Minister Lloyd George to make eyery effort to attend some of the session:: o: the Washington Conference were received at his officia! residence in Downing Street to-day. Although the Premier is unable it the moment to arrive at @ decision, it is understood he still entertains hops of attending, and inquiries are being made regarding the suilings of steam by tacled physician and lectures to the | ships, in order that no time may b+ jost if he should be able to cross th+ Atlantic before Christmas, ache} HOW TEAMS LINED UP AT ARMY-NAVY GAME | ARMY POSITION NAVY | Storck Le. Parr | Mulligan Le Wiedorn Breidater Us. Carney | Greene ¢ Larsen | Garbiach R.G, Frawley Davidson RT. King Meyers RE. Taylor | Withide QB. Conroy Wood LH. Koehler Smythe R.H chet French Cruise Offitials.—Referee—A. H Sharpe, Yale. Umpire—J. A. Evans, Williams. Linesman—Tom Thorpe, Columbia. Field Judge—W. G. Crowell, Swarth- more. ELBRIDGE 6. SNOW, 80) TAKES WIDOW 45, AS HS BRD President of Home Life Insur- ance Co. Marries Mrs." Fanny Joyce Marsh, Elbridge Gerry Snow, Prcsident of the Home Insurance Company, who will be eighty years old Jan, wag? married to-day to Mrs, Fanny Joyce Marsh of St. Augustine, at next, Wla., the altar of the Ascension, 10th Street and Fifth Ave- nue, by the rector, the Rev.’ Percy Stickney Grant. Elbridge Gerry Snow jr. and about thircy triends of the bride and groom were present. Mr. and Mrs. Snow, Dr. Grant and the rest of the party went uptown for a wedding breakfast. The venerable financier and Mrs, Marsh went to the Marriage Licenso Bureau in the Municipal Building for their license only half an hour before the ceremony, Mrs, Marsh sald she was a widow, forty-five years old. The first wife of Mr. Snow, to whom he was married Sept. 5, 1865, at Waterbury, Conn, died Oct. 20 last the Chureh of year, Mr. Snow bas been noted among his associates for his activity in keeping up with the details of busi- ness long after men of his age usually retire. He has been President of the Home Life since 1903, after serving the institution in various capacities for forty-one years. He is a director of many corporations, including the New York Life, the Manhattan Ratl- way Company and the American Ex- change National Bank, and is an ac- tive member of many civic and char- {table organizations, He !s e Warden of the Church of the Ascension. "NEW YORK SNOW MAGNATE LOOKS FOR BIG WINTER Di Marca, Says Italy’s Champion Palmist Foretold Heavy Fall New Year's Day. Celestino Di Marco of No. 239 Fast 17th Street, who has built up practically a monopoly and made a great fortune in the busi- ness of removing snow from the streets of this city, returned to- day on the Presidente Wilson of the Cosulic Line from a_ visit to Italy with disquieting informa- tion for New Yorkers and encour- aging information for himself. He thinks we are going to have plenty of snow during the winter “Before’ sailing,” said Mr, Di Marco, “I consulted the champion palm reader of Italy. The tines on the palm of my hand show that we shall have a big snow- storm on New Year's Day and frequent snowstorms up -to the middle of April.” ON AM eo ISH TERM ARMY AND NAVY CLASH | UDDY GRIDIRON was played tpis afternoon in a sea in this city. into a football arena, Extra stands the gridiron. ARMORED BANK CAR ROBBED OF $28,444 Armed Bandits Overpower Chauf- | feur and 3 Guards in m Boston Hold-Up. BOSTON, Not. 26.—Four automo- bile bandits held up and robbed @ First National Bank payroll car in Chelsea to-day and escaped with $28,444 in cash after a revolver battle rds, The payroll car, a heav- “ed machine bullt fer carry- , contained the payroll of Walton & Co., shoe manu- In addition to the driver, facturers. there were three guards, The bandits were waiting in a high-powered touring car ahd jumped from the bandit cay and opened fire on the machine. The guards were overpowered, At a given signal the four men backed away from the payroll car, got into the touring car and sped away. The bandit car carried a New York license plate. BEHEAD'LANDRU, LAWYERS DEMAND Speaking for Heirs of “Bluebeard’s” Alleged Victims, They Brand Him as “Assassin.” VERSAILLES, Nov. 26 (Associated Press).—Two attorneys, representing the heirs of two of the elevcn alleged victims of Henri Landru, on trial here for the murder of tea women and a boy, to-day repeatedly de- manded the “Bluebeard’s" conviction in summing up the case before the jury. The epithet “assassin” was hurled at the prisoner oftener during their summary than at any t.me through- out the three weeks of his trial, “There sits the greatest and shrewd- est criminal of all time,” declared one of the attorneys, “Citizeny do your duty, Send him to the guilictine.” he shouted. ————.————- _L DAYLIGHT ROBBERS GET $60,000 GEMS 4 St. Louis Bandits Stage Theft in Heart of Business District. ST. LOUIS, Nov. %.—Four armed bandits entered the office of the St Louis Refining Company, in the heart of the business district, to-day and escaped with diamonds and jewels said by company officials to be valued at $50,000 Eleanor Marsland, seve father, Edward Danaher, No. West 13th Street, has Med suit | een, through 253 the Supreme Court to annul ‘ner marriage to George Marsiand, who, according to. the papers, was at the time of the 1920, was » member Scandals of 1920." marciage, ) of George White's \ 50,000 See the Annual Contest at Polo Grounds—Neither Team Scores in First Period—Vice Pres- ident and Mrs. Coolidge at Game. rn By William Abbott. POLQ GROUNDS, Novy, 26,—The annual Army and Navy football game whistle, heavy showers soaked the gridiron and thousands of spectators huddled together in the vast stretches of open bleachers. The attendance was close to 50,000, Weather conditions continued the special hoodoo that has accompanied the service game ever since 1913, w! The grounds were opened at noon, Atlantic Fleet were the first in and stood up along the Navy side lines quite unmindful of the rain. The Polo Grounds had been completely turned out in centre field emergency stands stretched out almost to the edge of The infield had been entirely covered with turf. ————uumee i — One white goal post stood over the of mud. Long before the starting | ~ hen it ves first held Several hundred Jackies from the covered the left field bleachers, and home plate the other was im centre field. Surrounding the piaying field was. a two-foot wooden barrier to prevent the zealous rooters from in- — vading the battlefield, «american flags decorated the field boxes and open stands, i. At 1 o'clock the spectators began to arrive in small groups and immie- , lately sought protection 'n the eovy- ered grandstand. At this time the rain was pouring. ‘The voiume of early arrivals steadily increased and the open stands began filling, Ume+ brellas, raincoats and ne vspapers were pressed into service but they 4 failed ‘to keep thousands of dollars H worth of fur coats and feminine ~ finery from being ruined Tne stands were about two-thirds filled when a blue-clad regimental band marched in through the centrefield entrance. Behind the band came company after company of midshipmen in * overcoats and white gloves, 4 of the column headed for: right fleld and received a hearty weicume from the army sections, Cire :g the field the Middies took stations in the le! field bleachers while the band plays “The Navy Sailing Down tne Field,” During the parade the West Point eleven trotted out and quickly be; testing the field. As the last com pany of midshipmen moved tato their stations 4 great cheer went up frout all parts of the fleld aas through the centre field entrance vame the West Point band in grey uniforms and white capes. Following the band came the color guard, proudly carrying a huge gray and gold banner. POST OF HONOR TO THE FAITH- FUL MULE. The post of honor went to Bessie, the fwithful mule, who was escorted by ten stalwart Cadets. The Middies: through yellow megaphones boomed a welcome to the soldiers, and also @ warning to hold the mule, Company after compakypi of Cadets paraded around the field to their seats behind first base, The Army mule and Navy goat were formally introduced in the middie of the field. The Navy see- tion roared in delight as their famous gout with two victory stars on his blanket made the West Point mascot retreat down the tleld, At this point the Nayy squad / sprinted on the field and up rose the Annapolis stands to give a regular cheer for the players. Two minutes later the Cadets appeared and re- ceived another thunderous weleome from their side of the field. . ‘The © cheering was so noisy that rival = 7 leaders had to give their instructions through signs. “ni VICE PRESIDENT AND MAS, COOLIDGE AT GAME. fe Vice President Coolidge repjrese+ nted President Harding at the game, - the President being detained at ” Washington by the Arms Limitation® Conference. Mr. and Mrs, FL Wy Stearns of Boston were with Vice |= | President and Mrs. Coolidge. Cupls : Maloney was detailed as their escort.) 4) Ranking officers of both the army}, and navy and many ‘representatiyy of the National Government saw & game “Tickets for the contest never