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®, {Ordered to Country to Rest— OL I Ay eT TFET THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, GOMPERS DOESN'T | Women o of Orient Can Teach Occident Gentleness a But Anglo-Saxon Women Have the Tetpess RESPOND 10 CALL BY UUNTERMYER]T Federation “Chief Was to Be Star Witness at Lockwood Inquiry To-Day. SEN. LOCKWOOD IS ILL. Troubles of Bakery Owners Taken Up. ; “Bast _is \East, and Samuel Gompers, President of the] West 1s West—and To: ‘American Federation of Labor, did Day the ‘Twain DO hot appear when called to the stand Meet!” At the hearing of the Lockwood Com- Mittee on Housing to-day ‘Untermyer, counsel to the committee said Mr. Gompers’ appearance would be put off until to-morrow In opening the hearing, Mr. Unter- myer announced that Senator Charies ©. Lockwood, Chairman, is ill and has been ordered away from the cily by his physician. His illness, Mr Untermyer said, was not serious and there was every reason to believe the Chairman would soon be back with the committee. The Lockwood Committee will not go into any investigation of the con troversy in the anthracite coal strike, on counsel's recommendation “The matter of the price o cite coal,’’ Mr. Untermyer within the jurisdiction of the com- mittee; high cost of anthracite has a direct effect on the rent; the landlord Samuel SHEGETS$8 000 A YEAR ALIMONY, COURT REPROOF T0 ae Justice Not Satisfied Mrs. Rogge Has Been Such a Lov- ing Parent to Children. is compelled by law to maintain a cer-| In awarding Mrs. Edna H. Rogse tain temperature in his apartments] alimony of $8,000 a year, pending ‘which compels ‘his use of coal. trial of her separation suit against ‘The subject may seem remote, but] “t : : apart from that the Federal author)-}Charles P. Rogge, an lasurance ties have the subject in hand; the| broker with offices at No. 38 Nassau operators and workers are in confer-| Street, Supreme Court Justice Dele- ence; it would seem that our inter-| panty administered a gentle veproof to position could only add confusion to the situation. Mr. Untermyer said further, ‘In a preliminary study of the coal situa- tion I am convinced that the price of anthracite is unnecessarily high—ex- cessively high. The trade is not well organized. It is not adapted to the ‘best interests of the consumer and re- quires drastic change “The wages are absurdly low and there is good ground for believing the miners are being oppressed.’ Mr. Untermyer reported that the Negotiations between the Building “frades Employers’ Association and the unions were still deadlocke/l. The Building Trades Council is ready to make considerable conces- sions, But for some mysterious rea- son the employers are unwilling to make a contract, and, lacking a con- tract wages are soaring to an extent that forbids building. No contractor dares undertake construction when he cannot tell how high wages may go in the next year Mr. Untermyer questioned wit- messes to “‘get before the committee a@ picture of the extent to which a trade can be hampered by unions which cannot be held responsible for the harm they do to individuals who are not involved, either as employers or workers."" He then questioned Morse M Frankel of No. 966 Hoe’ Avenue, the Bronx, editor of the Mediator, a Jewish baking trade journal; he is also Secretary and Treasurer of the Jewish Employing Bakers Associa- tion. Mr. Franke! told of conditions described in detail by Mr. Untermyer 4D ap address last Monday night. Mr. Frankel said that arb’ ry tactics of the Jewish bakers’ unions enforced by boycott threats had driven | J out of business 400 of the 700 Jewisl bakeries which existed in 1914 When a Jewish employing baker signs a contract he pays the union from $5 to $10. This is not extortion, Mr. Frankel said, but is paid for tie Mrs. Rogg in the care of her two small children. “Tam not satisfied that Mrs, Rogge has been such a tender and loving parent to her children as she should have been,” Justice Delehanty said in awarding alimony. “The fault seems to lie in the fact that Mrs. Rogge cares more for the social amenities of life than for the home life which 18 go necessary for the proper up- bringing of children In determining the question as to the custody of the children, I think tt better that they should remain with the mother only so long as she and they live with the children’s maternal grandparents. With their grand- mother, against whom nothing derog- atory has been said, these infants of tender years will, even if the plaintiff continues to neglect them, have a custodian who will safeguard their proper nurture and training. Mr. Rogge is said to have an income of more than $100,090 a year, Jus- tice Delehanty said he had given due col eration to the earning capacity of Mr. Rogge in making his alimony award, which is to be paid in monthly instalments of $666.66. | A counsel fee of $2,000 also is awarded Neither the summons nor complaint in Mrs. Rogge’s suit have been filed in the County Clerk's office and the nature of Mrs. Rogge’s charges could not be learned from counsel. Mrs. Rogge is said to live at No. 280 West 76th Street. and her motherly instinct 750,000 LOCKED OUT IN ENGLISH SHOPS imployers Refuse to Take Men Back Pending Out- come of Court Inquiry. LONDON, May 3 (Associated bakery's first. box of 1,000 union] Press).—Three-quarters of a million labels. After that the price of Inbels} workers in England's engineering in- is 15 cents a thousand dustry are now locked out, some 600,- The contract makes a di work 000 being affected by to-day’s lockout, caused by the dispute largely on the question of the rights of management for most bakers from 4 to 7 hours a day at $60 to $90 a week for fifty-one ‘weeks a year, and free bread. The are seven “holidays” in the year on which the workers get double pay, In vome instances the hours are so short that a worker can draw full wag from two employers. The unions force ‘substitutes’ into work for two days a week at $13 a day, “Some substitutes are so incompe in workshops. In accordance with a recent nouncement, the employers opened their shops for the employment of men wishing to resume work on the an- employers’ terms, but reports to-day tent” said Mr. Frankel, “that the boss | showed few had availed themselves of pays them to go a and does the] this opportunity. Da ee: Sat in thi The official inquiry into the trouble you see any clause in this con- i a tract where the employer gets any-| WS opened to-day by Sir William thing?” asked Mr. Untermyer. Mackenzie, President of the Indus- Everything—the employer gets it} trial Court. ‘The unions appealed to cin the neck,” said Mr, Frankel. |the employers assembled there to lift , Mr. Frankel told the story of y|the lock-out pending the outcome of “Morgenbesser,"" a Jewish baker of} the inquiry, but Sir Allan Smith, Brownsville. That's not his right|Chatrman of the Management Com- name, but for years he has made al mittee of the Engineering Emplay- living by being sent to bakeries as anfers’ Wederation, replied that the enforced substitute deliberately spoil-| court had ing the bread so the employer has to Pay him to get out of the shop., As Me goes out he always says cheer- fully to the angry boss: “Oi! Oi! Morgen, besser,"’ meaning “Ah, me! But I will do better to-morrow. aeons no jurisdiction, a FLAPPER TELLS JUDGE FATHER IS POLICE CHIEF Sadie MacDonald, Kighteen, of Piainfield, Held as Vagrant. Sadie MacDonald, eighteen, ANOTHER INDICTMENT AGAINST MAJ. SUTTON | Magistrate O'Neil ip Bridge Plaza Brooklyn, to-day that she was a '* Acoused of| daughter of Chief of Police MacDonald oe Stateme of Plainfield, N. J., was held on a Major Redondo Sutton, who lives at|charge of vagraney ‘the Ritz Carlton, and who was President She was brought to the Greenpoint of the Pacific Minerals and Chemicals| Police Station by the matron of the who told Court, Company was indicted again to-day:.]Greenpoint Y. W. C. A. who declared Burt R. Parrot, the Vi resident, is}she had been trying to help the girl, included in the indictment which|but the latter had proved incorrigible. ls for knowingly publishing a false|She was dressed in most approved tement with Intent to deceive as to] "Mapper" Style, somewhat the worse for the facts effecting the value of the stock inuous wear, and said she left home @ corporation. because of & quarrel with her mother, Sutton was Indicted originally with} but now wanted to return, Alfred B. Lindsay, who it is alleged to Rave fleeced women out of $1,000,000 in] PI Steek schemes. ¢ trick 'S. Kiely is Chief of Police of nfield, There !s no man named MacDonald on the force, “Americ: Japan, ‘You must come out into the world with the rest of us.’” first told Japan.” Japan obeyed. That be is why certain elements in America ought not to stir up hostility against ees ccesens st_and West, in 1914, met as Allies in the World War.” nee > = bS OS SeSes “In 1921, at Washing. ton, did they not meet as Allies in the cause of World Peace?” Occident OF learn from each other,” the Oriental and the 1922, sssess - Seas 1 woman may devotion are things the ind Courtesy, Beauty and the Independence GOVERNORSHIP IF MILLEROUSTSHM xx xX SSS “There are mental and “Courtesy, respect, “The American can moral habits which both gentleness, motherly give lessons in self-re- spect, freedom, am- bition and education,” -|Onoto Watanna Decries “Yellow Peril’’ in Women of East and West Noted Author and Daughter of a British Father and Japanese Mother, But Who Declares Herself American, Pleads for the Inter- change of the Graces and Virtues Predom- inant in Both Types, for Civilization’ s Good. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ast and West is West—and To-Day the Twain DO AST ‘ ‘F; Meet! That is the revision of Kipling’s famous line which Onoto Watanna thinks Life itself has made. And surely Onoto Watanna, of all persons, has the right to say so, for in her own life and person East and West have met persistenfly. As all except the youngest readers will remember, Onoto Watanna is the attractive and talented daughter of a British father and a Japanese mother, who wrote “A Japanese Nightingale,” “The Wooing of Wistarii stories of Nippon. Her other name is Winnifred Reeve; she lived many years In York, and her husband, Francis F. Reeve, playfully describes him- self as “sprung from Long Is! and cave-dwellers,” although he and his wife now live on a 10,000- acre ranch in Alberta, Canada, Now, after a silence of seven years, Onoto Watanna has “come back” with “Sunny-San,” a new novel in her ola popular vein, which also will be dramatized in New York next autumn. And after an absence of five years, Mrs. Reeve—to give her the name she signs to hotel registers—has come back to New York for a brief visit. I found her at the Gregorian—a arming woman, with the rosy cheeks of her ‘fath- er's people and the dark, almond- shaped eyes of her mother's. So it seemed only natural to ask her to discuss one of the modern world's most delicate problems— the future relationship between East and West, Orient and Occl- dent. “First of all,’ Onoto Watanna told me earnestly, “I am Ameri- can before anything else. T love America. But I cannot forget that it was America who first set my mother's people on the road they are now travelling. Commodore Perry opened the door. America told Japan, ‘You cannot stay by yourself—you must come into the world with all the rest of us.’ Japan responded to America’s summons, That !s why it seems to me a pity for certain elements in America to stir up hostility against Japan nee 1914, who can say that the East and West shall never meet? They me Allies in the And since last No- Washington, have as Allies in the World War. vember, at they not met cause of World Pea “Don't you think,” T suggested, while Onoto Watanna attacked her neglected chicken patty—I found her at the luncheon tabl “that both Fast and West have things to teach each other? It is an idea which the more arrogant West- ern will not But, in reading ‘Sunny-San’,_ it that your little could give the We me Japanese heroine tern women in the story lessons in urtesy, gen- tleness, patience and some other desirable qualities, Don't you think the Nipponese woman has something to teach the American woman, as well as the other way around?" A decidedly Occidental sparkle came into Onoto Watana’s Orien~ tal eyes—one can't got used to seeing a smart navy-blue toque above them, instead of a pile of shining black hair stuck with mahy fantastic pins. “tndeod, there are mental and moral habits which cach woman may learn from the other,” she assented warmly. And between us, we proceeded to sum up the special good qualities of cach type. “Courtesy seems to me one of aluable lessons the Jap- id the most anese woman has to teacl) Onoto Watanna. ‘Ile anner to whatever class she belongs, a unforgettably charming. Then there is respect for others; re- ~ and many other dainty love spect for parents and for old peo- ple generally. That is a beauti- ful trait strongly developed in the woman of the East.'* “And considerably underdevel- oped in the woman of the West,"’ I observed. ‘‘Also, isn’t it true that the Japanese are wonderful mothers?” “Splendid mothers,’ assented Onoto Watanna. ‘Every Japa- nese woman considers her babies more {important than anything else in the world. She devotes her life to them, and no matter how rich her husband may be she would never think of leaving them to the care of servants, “She has a great fund of gen- tleness, and an even greater fund of patience. Some women of the West could utilize more of each of these qualities. And the East- ern woman has a wonderful deco- rative sense. Half the Japanese are poets, you know, and there are many painters among them. They understand the art of deco- ration in arranging flowers, in making their homes lovely, no matter how mple, in the matter of dress. They take time to live.” So much for what the Oriental woman can teach the Occidental woman, But Onoto Watanna was quite as generous in telling the other side of the story, “First,"" she said, ‘American women can give Japanese women their fine sense of independence— their self-respect. In Japan the woman is too likely to sacrifice everything for the man, “Then the Western woman should try to inculcate the Hast- ern womun with her social assur- ance. The Eustern woman is brave, when it is a question of Physical courage, but she needs to develop savoir faire. She needs more freedom, too—educational, economic, political freedom—and the Western woman can help her to attain it. The Western woman can teach her personal ambition, too, as soon as society offers her the slightest chance of satisfying it. Too often, even at present, if a Japanese woman has ambition the only thing she can do with it 1s to squelch it! ‘ducation in books is a gift which many fine American wo- men are now conveying to all the Chinese and Japanese girls they can reaoh. And finally, I think the Occidental woman can show to the Oriental woman the for- mer's own broader viewpoint—ner interest in other children be- sides her own, in the welfare of others besides those immediately near and dear to he: Onoto Watanna smiled—and sighed. “One thing Western women have," she said, “which they can never teach the East. It is beauty personal beauty. The Oriental woman is charming. But the Oc- cidental woman—pre-eminently patte Anglo-Saxon type—is beauti- ul, “The thing for us all to do,” she concluded, earnestly, her finger tracing little patterns on the table-cloth, “is just to remem- ber that we belong to the same human family, and that, as good brothers and sisters, we ought to help each other whenever and wherever we can-—\nstead of talk- ing about Yellow Perila!” Talk on DETECTIVE DIVES THROUGH WINDOW AND GETS HIS MAN Although ‘Whee Sleuth Brings in Prisoner Beliéved to Be Fugitive. John Cuniff, a detective attached to the District Attorney's staff, is limping about in bandage to-day as the result of injuries received in cap- turing a prisoner for whom he had a warrant. While in Brooklyn yester- day, Cuniff saw at the window of No. 144 Wyckoff Street, a man he believed to be David Pelutsky, for whom he had a warrant. “Are you Mr. Pelutsky?’’ asked the detective. “'No,"" was the answer and the man closed the window. His action con- vinced Cuniff of his identity. Unable to get in the door Cuniff, went in through the window to find his man had left by a rear way. To overtake him Cuniff dived through a closed window, carrying the sash with him, and landed on a-picket fence. His man had reached the street and was away in a taxicab, but Cunift commandeered another motor car and after a chase caught Pelutsky. The worst injury Cuniff received ws a cut artery in his wrist from going through the glass. His back and legs are sprained. Pelutsky, charged with stealing $165, Is held at the Tombs in default of $1,000 bail. ———_>__- GOV. RUSSELL MAY BECOME AN EXILE Mississippi Executive Shuns IIome to Avoid Suit by Stenographer. JACKSON, Miss., May 3,—Gov. Lee M. Russell of Mississippi! may be an exile from his own home town, in the Northern Judicial District If the Governor's former rapher, Miss Frances. C. persists in suing him in Iederal Court for breach of promise Russell may elect to stay out of the district to avoid service. Following action of Mederal Judge . Hoimes at Jackson yester- day in dismissing the $100,000 damage stenog- Rirkhead, suit brought by Miss Birkhead against Russell, Thomas I. loster, leading counsel for the girl, an- nounced he would refile the suit at Oxford, Miss., the Governor's home. An intimation that Miss Rirkhekd may again be denied the privilege of suing the Governor in Federal Court was hinted when J. W. Cassidy, chief ttorney for the Governor, sald that the Northern District Court would be unable to secure service, egies TILL RENTED FOR DANCE A HOME IS A HOUSE Negro Held Becaune, He Vermitted Family Dance Without Licenne. A home is a home as long as it ts not rented as a danco hall; then it be- omes @ dance hall and must be i- censed, Magistrate Wilperin ruled In Flatbush Court, to-day, He held Wal- ter Jones, Negro manager of the Buck- neham Chateau, No. 1608 Chureh Av ue, in $100 ball for ape ons, for conducting a dance without a - ‘ense when he had rented the dance hall to the Stambler family for a family reunion dance, to which no admission was charged, The Magistrate's ruling on dancing in homes came in reply to hypothetical question put by the at- ¥ for Jones, ———_—<+- VENUE CHANGE DENIED IN NASSAU LAND CASE Oyster Bay Wit Tried tn ustice Frank 8. Gannon jr., lyn Supreme Court to-day, motion of Emil J. Stehli, weaithy she aent of Bayville, L. T., for a change of nue from Nassau County to New York County or Kings County in his action against the Town of Oyster Bay for . ssion of a strip of beach front. land 9 about 15 acres in extent Munt be me Coun In Brook- denied the an(l 1s said to be worth about $19,000 an acre. Stehl claimed citizens of Nassau County would be prejudi nat hin t In the event of hix victory, the public would be barred from # ¢ erable stretch of the bay, Mayor Means Nothing to Guard Who Halts Staten Island Tour Veteran Watchman Forces His Honor to Take Long Distance Survey at Lighthouse. ‘There's one man in New York who directs traffic who won't pay any at- tention to Mayor Hylan and one place the Mayor can’t go, the city's Chief Executive learned to-day. When the Mayor attempted to pass through the iron gate guarding the U. S. Light- house property on Staten Island, the old Irish guard who has been keeping off tre’ sers for thirty years asked: “Where ye going? What d'ye wan' “Oh, I'm thinking of cutting a street through this property,” the Mayor replied jovially. “Well, if ye want to do that ye'll have to go to the office,"" came the reply. “But I'm not thinking of doing it right away,’’ answered the Mayor. The result of this colloquy was that the Mayor, Borough President Cahill and one or two others in the party got just inside the gate, from which point they were compelled to make long-distance observations of the place where they hope to construct & marginal street for the piers, if the Government will relinquish the prop- erty and move to another site, Mayor Hy!an and the other mem- bers of the Board of Estimate went to inspect the Richmond terminus of the Proposed transit tunnel under the Narrows, for which $4,080,000 has al- ready been appropriated. They thon saw the site recommended by Plant and Structures Commissioner Whalen for the proposed municipal electric light and power house and shipyard. The Board at first looked over the improvements at the St. George Mu- nicipal ferry terminal and the plans of President Hulbert and Commissioner Whalen for the acquirement by the city of the United States lighthouse property. The Board intends to visit Whitehail terminal, St. George term- inal, municipal piers at Stapleton, the possible site for a municipal power plant at Rosebank, the municipal trol- ley car barn and offices at Concord and the routes of trackless troliey lines. Hooch Destroyer Lays In 5 Hens, Rooster, Guns and Ammunition Hahn, of Dry Navy, Starts First Bootlegger Hunt To-Day, Sailing Under Sealed Orders. Two hundred rounds of ammuni- tion, fourteen 38-salibre revolvers and five live hens and a rooster were taken aboard the new ‘thooch de- stroyer’ Hahn of the Prohibition navy," lying off the barge office to- day. Capt. George Tawes, Comman- der of the vessel, will receive scaled orders this afternoon and start out on his Initial bootlegging hunt. The Hahn does more than fifteen knots an hour and is equipped with a “one pounder” gun on the bow of the boat, There are fourteen members of the crew, all of whom hold records as United States gunners made in the Navy. It became known at noon that four agents Prohibition headquarters will be regularly signed to the vessel. A new station of the Prohibition forces was opened to-day jt the end of the pier at the Barge Office, to be known as the Ma- rine Division of the local Prohibition forces. Telephone communication be- tween the Surve oMce in. the Customs House and Prohibition Head- quarters wag made to-day A wireless telephone outfit of one half kilowatt was ordered by Cap! Tawes, Wireless telephone communt- cation will be had with Coast Guard and other stations, he dec — - i HIGH SCHOOL ON SITE OF FREEPORT CEMETERY fon of 840,000 Voted for New Building. from Federal as- or's re Appropr Appropriation of $600,000 for a high school, built oceupled by a cemetery, new to be on land now was voted by citizens of Freeport, L. 1., last night The Board of Education, after repeated failures to get approval for the propo sitoin, got an appropriation of $60,000 last year, with which the cemetery prop erty was purchased Bids will be opened by the May 15 for removing about } It Is expected that the new school will be ready for use in the fall of 1923. ‘The cemetery, generations old, is in the heart of Freeport. > FINDS BODY ON TRACKS OF SUBWAY AT 35TH ST. Signalman Piscovers Unidentified Victim Near Penn Station, William Baldwin, a signalman at the Penney! Railroad Station of the Interboro, Manhattan, found the body of an unidentified man to-day on the at 35th Str platform, n committed sulcl southbound express track, one block from the police believe the mi There were no marks of identifieatio: He was twenty-eight old, 5 feet 7 inches tall, weighed 150 pounds and wore 4 black suit, In his pockets were found a cheap watch, $4.28 in change snd a buneh ys, The body was @ont lo the yworgy LONE THUG STEALS $600 IN GEMS IN FULTON ST. SHOP Youth Escapes with Rings: After Threatening Clerk With Gun William Hanneman, a clerk in the jewelry store of H. Levy & Co., No. 134 Fulton Street, had just handéd two blue-white diamond rings to a young man for inspection at noon to- day, when the young man dropped them into his vest pocket, Hanneman looked up in surprise and found himself gazing at a re- volver. “You be quiet until I here or I'll plop you one young man with a gun, Hanneman closed his mouth even as he wan opening it, but he gazed appealingly toward the rear of the shop, where M Levy and four other clerks were work. The young man backed out into the street. “Hold-up! Thief!’ yelled Hanne- man, and he was followed to the side- walk by the proprietor and the clerk: who in a moment were joined by hun- dreds of the noon-day crowd. But not a trace was found of the young man with the two rings, which were worth $600 ROBBED AS SHE KNELT IN CHURCH TO PRAY Her Pock on Woman Who Is @ Prisoner. Mrs. Mary Pearson, of No. Mist Street, finished praying in the Church of St. Gregory at No. 144 West 0th Street last Saturday and found hor purse containing $5 missing. She told the police, who had received similar complaints from other members of the sume church, and Patrolman Bolger of the Weat 100th Street Station was in a pew near Mrs, Pearson this morning She kneeled to pray. A woman in the pew behind ther reached over and lifted her purse, Bolger arrested Miss Kath- erine Lamb, forty, of No, 216 East 85th Street. Magistrate McAndrews in the Went Side Court was told Mrs. Pear- son's purse, containing $1.10, was found on the prisoner, Miss Lamb was held in $2,000 ‘bail for examination to-mor- row. 152 Weat ——— LODGE ‘PLAN FOR ZION REPORTED TO SENATE WASHINGTON, May §.—A declara- tion favoring establishment of a na- tional home for Jewish people in Pale: as urged by many prominent lewish organizations, ia ma in a resolution by Senator Lodge, Re- publican, Massachusetts, reported unanimously to-day by the Senate For- elgn Relations Committee. resolution declares for non- interference with persons of other than Jewish faith {n Palestine and also for protection of Christian shrines, HYLAN WILL SEEK If Not, or if Executive Stops His Programme, Hearst Is to Be Candidate. SMITH RUNNING MATE, This Is Though at Cit Tammany View, ot Yet Admitted y Hall. If G Miller removes Mayor Hy~ lan, or attempts to interfere with any of his departments, the Mayor will be @ candidate for Governor on the Dem- ocratic ticket next Fall. If the Governor does not remove the Mayor, William Randolph Hearst will be the Democratic Gubernatorial can- didate, with former v. Alfred E. Smith his running mate on the United States Senatorial ticket—provided Smith is willing. ¥ The foregoing is the campaign plan of Tammanyites who favor Hylan and Hearst. Whether they have received the indorsement of Charles F, Mur- phy, whose dictum can upset any plans his leaders might hatch, is an- other question, Although Mayor Hylan himself is silent on the all-imporfant question, it can be stated without fear of con- tradiction that if Gov. Miller removes the Mayor or even attempts to emas- culate any of the Mayor's departments or vitally important municipal activi- ties, John F. Hylan will announce himself a Gubernatorial candidate and begin a whirlwind campaign of the State. The Mayor is said to feel quite cer- tain that he can easily defeat Nathan L, Miller in almost any county of the State. He does not fear him in the rural districts and he feels that through the aid of the Conference of Mayors of New York State, of which he is the potential head, he can defeat him {n a number of the more im- portant cities. It is admitted by Tammanyites that Hylan would make a more logical running mate with Smith than Wil- lam Randolph Hearst would. There is a breach between Hylan and Smith, but it lacks the proportions of the “grand canyon’ that divides Hearst and Smith. Although admitting that former State Democratic Chairman Conners called upon him at City Hall some time ago, Mayor Hylan denied em- phatically that Connors had discussed Hearst's Gubernatorial boom with him, After making this statement, the Mayor added: “I don't know that Mr. Hearst is a candidate for Governor or any other office, for that matter. I am not a candidate for Governor. The Mayor was asked what he thought of Hearst as Gubernatorial timber. He replied: “If the State wants home rule, and if the people want to govern the State themselves and break the monopoly and control which the pmblic utility and traction rings have on the affairs of the State, a man should be nomi- nated for Governor, regardless of whether he is a Democrat or Republi- can, who stands for the principles of the people, for which Mr. Hearst has stood for many years.”” Saved by Radio! Daylight Saving Jars Honeymoon Michigan Newlyweds, Misled by Watches, Nearly Miss Trip to Bermuda, Daylight saving made a bride weep to-day, but the radio brought back her blushing smiles. This isn't the title of a song. It's the story of how Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Clements, Grand Rapids newly- weds, missed the steamboat Fort Hamilton for Bermuda and then caught it, When the Michigan furniture dealer and his bride stepped off the train at Grand Central his “hunting case,"* her wrist and the. four-faced dials over the information booth all said 10.02 o'clock. The boat didn’t leave until 11 o'clock, so Mr, and Mrs. Clements looked in the shop win- dows ulong 42d Street, They stopped before a jeweller’s window to compare the display there with the bride's w ding gifts and the clock said 11 o'clock. Another clock said 11.20 o'clock and so did a couple more. “Yeh! This burg’s on daylight saving time,’’ some one at Sixth Ave- nue volunteered, Hailing a taxi, Mr. and Mrs. Clem- ents, who had considered themselves correct when they set their clocks ahead an hour at Detroit yesterday to chance from Central to Eastern standard, reached Pier 95 at the foot of West 55th Street in time to see the Bermuda boat point her nose down the Hudson River. Moved by his bride's tears, Mr. Clements got in touch with officials of the Furness-Bermuda Line, who wire- lessed Capt. A. R, Francis to “a: to’ off the Statue of Liberty, In the tug Nichols the newlyweds caught the liner and climbed up the Jacob's lad- dor, amid a shower of rice. The radio had also carried the information that they were the only honest-to-goode ness honeymooners on the list, Peas yl oe