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2 ——- ees sin "HARDING NOW AIMS terams from Mre. Giberson to Ga Nun Thede letters written by Mrs. Gibe som Mr. Jayno said, were turned to Bim by Mra. Hele Nan, Ca Nun's wire. On reading the ete the der yesterday she } to New York from upstate, y on @ Vacation with } tified Mr. Jayne and letters, which she trom her hustand’s ago. Adcording to M uble wilt fe over M son soon afier t i dent of construction gar in Ja to stay away fr is sald, lettera ft Jayne s him that to his wife, bat had Giberson New York places. ia Nun ia due to a n ‘To! for knows An iinp nt ' tloned to-« twenty-one-Sea 8 M Y orson by a former m ! former bu Sidney maiden nuine ater her marriage kay. ndin terms years in te object more | Gibers unhappy | The tey that Ublished beyond a doubt found in an pie of rubbish) be longed to Gihergon, and is the one with which he was killed Monday Mrs. ( on, they say, had insiste there we hom them, have ¢ ¢ under a vo pevolvers in ti e turned finding an under some clothes that revealed to whem Gib positively Bot holster hidden they made the the third, A man recently tried to identified it ash dead man Doe doned have he free inwine to a t as he slop that he had $600, a short t he his death and explained he was going to give, in addition to a sed car, for a new ma- chine. Detective Ellis Parker, Burlington County's famous sleuth, who has been engaged to ussist the Ocean County authorities, says that the theory more than one person might have taken part in the killing may be discarded Further investigation by him, he said, i him that everything could e been done by Mrs, Giberson, T railroad men who heard screams and were first to co to her nid said she was bound in such a Way she could have done \t herself, In seeking a plausible motive for the murder the authorities have sev- eral theories under considerntion—the admitted enmity between Giberson and his'stepson; that he was slain for the $600 he was known to have; that riv bootleggers killed him in the guise of burglars; that Mrs. Giberson wanted to wed sume one else, and a new the- ory that business rivalry between him and his wife might have led to his death. , In connection with the last theory, {tis said that Mrs. Giberson ts a re- markable woman, Strong, athletic, masculine in some of her traits and romantic in others, she was a fearless automobile driver and business wo- man. She answered all kinds’ of calls for cars and was not afraid to drive through the loneliest roads at any hour of the night ‘ George McGee, a telegraph operator employed by the Jersey Central Rail- road, appeared last night with testi- mony to support Mrs. Giberson's story. He said that at 12.30 Monday morning, three hours before Giberson was killed, he had seen Giberson standing near the raflrond station, diagonally across Union Street from the Giberson home. HOLDS UP DRIVER TO GET BACK TAXI to empty on ving belonged to th been ta w wh one ch he displayed FARE, FIFTY CENTS Negro Chased Into Areaway Tries to Shoot Policeman but Is Disarmed, A hold-up which bad as its object paid to a the return of a half-dollar TO PREVENT UNIONS DOMINATING TRADE Planning to Ask Laws Ending Power of Labor to Make ver Suffer Nation MENACE, I. REVEAI Concedes Right to Organize ind (uit, but Not to Abuse Privilege By David Lawrence. St Correspondent of The Eve ning World TON, Aug “« WASHING President Ha »py to the ling means the ¢ pave squarely before untry jangers of national domination twsic industries by labor unions trie pective er the meet York of wh n New to-mno} ow between all oxe brother hood chiefs who represent the shop nen brings an end to the rail strike President feels the issues involved present crisia are too big to elved with abrupt termination 1 the strike. Ma sina not mide his han ip nd to ask for specific legisiation at this time, but he feels Congr and the country should know the details of the present controversy as to have thorough consider lie way open fe \tion of the whole problem ‘The Pres Ident’s narrative of what hap pened will also serve useful pur pose a8 @ basis for any action that have to be taken if the present emergency should grow so serious as to require instant seizure of railroads without waiting for Congressional au- thority Some of the President's friends have told him he owes the American people a frank explanation of what he has tried to do and that the public should Know just where to place the responsibility On top of this ave considerations of justice to the President himself, the criticism of his course haying grown mem may to such proportions as to make bers of Congress fearful (hat it veflect unfavorably on the Republi can Party at the polls next Novem ber ‘This phase is merely incidental, as Mr. Harding has proceeded along. lines that seemed to him expedient from day to day without regard to whether it was politically wise or un- wise, ‘Nevertheless, Mr. Harding would be the last to deny that im- pressions formed by the electorate during the strike period are not un likely to be developed on the basis of such few facts and statements as have been authoritatively issued thus far. ‘The President alone knows the whole story, not only of the negotia- tions but also of the issues which may be said to have aggravated the labor situation and brought it to a climax {n the shopmen’s strike, Mr. Harding could tel] an interest- ing story if he chose of the various moves made by the railroads to re- duce the power and prestige of tho United States Labor Board and of the corresponding effect which such tac- tics made upon the strikers, who saw no more reason for obeying the Labor Board than did the railroads. But apart from all this is the great- est fundamental fact of all which has impressed Mr, Harding, as he has seen the crisik grow more acute from day to day, It is the power of the national labor leaders to subject the country to hardships and the corre- sponding power of the railroad man- agements to conduct themselves in a way that gonds the workers to take desperate measures, Shall national union domination be permitted in such absolute essentials as transportation and fuel? = Mr, Harding thinks not. While the right to organize and the right to quit work are conceded, the right to abuse those privileges 4s not conceded. In the coal industry, @ national board or commission analagous to the taxicab driver landed a Negro, Whol united States Railroad Labor Board said he was Jerome Williams, twenty-|would be recommended. The powers peven, of No, 225 West 61st Street./of Congress to regulate interstate in the West 6Sth Street Police Sta-lcommerce as provided by the Federal tion to-di Constitution have gradually been clar- He Js charged with attempted rob-}ifled by decisions of the Supreme bery and carrying a revolver in vlo-|Court of the United States. Corpora- Jation of the Sullivan Law. Police|tions engaged in Interstate commerce suspect him of other hold-ups can no longer legally monopolize pro- The Negro climbed into the taxt-|duction and gouge the public. Bo, too, cab driven by John Kahn of No 61/Mr. Harding belleves labor unions or West Mith Street at 54th Street and|ratiroad managements can be made Ninth Avenue about noon, first pay-|amenable to the public interest ing 50 cents which Kahn asked as fare to Broadway and 61st Street Kahn says that when their destina- tion was reached, his passenger| labor and capita) in the basic com- pressed u revolver in his back and|modities which are necessary to lite, sald: and the President 1s seriously consid- ow give me back that fiftylering @ request that such power be cents. specifically written into ‘he regula- Kahn did told, but after tho|tory statutes, : negro, cove yin with the gur a recioeemees backed up the street and turned and Pan he yalled whic Lenten ned 200) U. 8, SOLDIERS INITIATED INTO @ crowd but [at ler. The negro was «ha Avenue by Butler and the crowd He hid in an areaway and when Butler found him drew his revolver and at tempted to shoot. The officer dis armed him and took him to tho sta tion house ——— PROF, ROLIN Db. SALISHURY DEAD. CHICAGO, Aug Salisbury of the Uni 4n international authorit; 16 Prof, night from a blood clot on the bra He wes regarded as an authority on selemic disturbances. 1 up Columbus Rolin D. ereity of Chicago, on geologic and geographic subjects, died here last through regulation. The people have the power, through Congress, to limit the rights of both KLU KLUX KLAN. BALTIMORE, Aug. 16.—Several wv soldiers at Camp Meade were said have been among the candidates initiated into the Klu Klux Klan at spectacular open-air — ceremont at Odenton, Md., last night, in which Klans from Delaware and Virginia partici pated. Wearing civilian clothes, the exact number of soldier candidates could not be learned we /| D'ANNUNZIO REGAINS CONSCIOUS. \iss AND WILL LIVR, ROME, Aug. 16.—Gabrielle D'A: unzlo, poet-alrman, has regained con- sclousness and will probably recover according to word received here to-day 2] D'Anoungio fractured hts gull when he fell from a window of his villa. He Shakes $8,000 Jewels to Beach; ts ern district. Give: Wife Faint lors 6 — Robert H ment ' Herman men’s strike was the opinion of lead- ing railway men in the city to-day that the proceedings will largely di pend on the prop: chiefs have in mind. H. Markham, Illinois Central, and A H. Smith, New York Central. It is planned presidents get together at a luncheon at 1 o'clock, labor chiefs to be held only one hour before the scheduled meeting with labor indicative of railroad presidents as to just what line the conference with labor take. In view of u here, no trouble is expected from the maintenance of way men, telegraphed their National President Grable to might affect 75,000 men in the East- No reply has been re- ved from him, and it was believed to-day he will walt and see what morrow's meeting between the execu- tives and union heads brings forth. issu REPORT ROLLING STOCK RAPIDLY DETERIORATING THE EVENING WORLD, GRIFFITH BURIE "Em toCop! VIITH RELIGIOU svete 7 AND GIG HONORS) Were His Aus j ; WOMAN WHO IS CENTRAL FIGURE WHACK, N. J wm, « cotton plantas | Archbishop Byrnes Celebrates Dh 7 a ig Mass, Lord Mayor in beach and took Cortege. vbw the Re DUBLIN, Aug 16 CAssoviated f and and then dis ! ) Ireland fed anatt of he th wy Shaan ag [distinguished sons to-day. Arthur th of jewels. He pune. [Grimth was laid to reat in historte 1 er he police |Glasnevin Cometery, where so many cay mentoneg | ftNOUs Hatriots He, after services of ; Vite posmapas{uanr emnity in the heautit y were he ~]Catheded of the Immaculate Concep-| J given her year tion on aie Hen the memory of this truly tic paid by crowd epresentative of athedral, alon RS. BYFIELD SUES and at the cemetery they gathered to Many attended the solemn requiem high mas the repose of the soul! 1 With all the rites and ceremony of the a Roman Catholic Chureh, ‘Thousands unable to gain admission stood in the } (Continued from Pirst: age.) reets wing 4S nearly as pos fs =e > sinking crafts andthe ofteers of otter |e if , Want EASIFONG Uitond to) Bevan he aonNd The body reposed on a eatatalauo| Follows Suit) for Blackmail We micht need them for confer- [before the main altar, directly under harsit i rainst’ Husband - en to any moment the Me.} the dome with ite painting of Chris gainst, Husband in AI Stone saul, cand we want ty bavelagcending to Heaven, Barther back leged Attack. an Ne a s in the nave could be seen the pain . tons with the managemonts are i SPUANTA. “Ati: IRC DAnaeee OF Chine ings of the church's patron saints, |, \'0NTN. Aue a : oped, Shepard, Chiet of the Order/st. Uriaget and St. Laurence, and 1] endier, local banker and sportsman (Cor Ors, ‘itd thie retherhood |th.e teit the #1 tly moulded marble foy Mey Surah Gillespie Byfield, In a wikiont ancl AG : meetin Tstatue of the eminent Cardinal Cull nt to-day in DeKalb Superior propured tik le the mutters that {celebrated in Ireland's earlier church | Court at aca Fesult cof night come up in a conciliatory | history i Enon nenby Sie Grog AM Sh : i , \ tateroom inboard the the seven striking crafts declared, or i ' ; Bamana re eeye On pesne ne by one, that ¢ men could ne sented bys ishop Byrnes of Duby | July/16 last, enroute to France cept any settlement whieh did not lin, who, in his robes sat on red} The suit foll asad Eilon prevent by turn m to work ith the seniority yrocaded D o ne le ol we Candler against her hushany Cisae turn them to work with the sentority’|brocuded throne to the teft of the] Rsneld, prominent alitomobil statue they held on leaving seevicelattar, On either side was a canon. | man, charging blackmail brotherhood ineeitinn ecuia ah c ge assisted by n deacon, subdeacon and] strs, Hyfleld alleges that as a result dueted in the light of this fact SAD Ren GIGS Ee RA IEs, of the attack she has been forced to en America was represented at the} keep to her bed much of the time funeral servicer hy Michael Francis since. Her condition. finally necessi- ROADS SEE PEACE Doyle of Philadelphia, who was the |tating an operation, which was per- IN American counsel for Sir Roger Case- | formed here Mondas CONFERENCES $3 [inent at tis trial in London, His] Describing the incidents folipwing HERE TO-MORROW | “tt bere the inseription: “awit fa “champa suppe 1 the ep sympathy and loving affection, | herenguria the night of giiy 16 . Sua from American friend the petition suid: xecutives Be Wavy] The venerable Cardinal Logue, Pri “Vinally petitioner (Mrs. Bytieid) Will Be Found to Kind | [mate ef Ireland, was prevented by ta-fand her husiand left the party and % A firmities from attending the ecere- [went to petitioner's stateroom to re Shop Strike. mony, but sent a message of sym-|tire for the nizht After getting there pathy. etitioner's hushand suggested that QT he conference to be held to- [es Vinal : xd hat-the confer to be held t The procession to the cemetery was|they had left the party someaviat morrow at the offices of the Associa-}ieaded by a cavalry guard followed }abruptly and, they might think tion of Railway Executives, No, 61] PY a detachment of infantry with alyudely; so he stated he would ec Broadway, between railroad presi-|2"4. ‘Then came the crergy and the [pack and stay with the party awhile dents and representatives of the 'ma {hearse with a guard of honor. The! “When petitioner's husband had left Four” brotherhouta Ia ikely: to lean} *tdow and children rode behind in|nor the stateroom door was closed, to a definite . onthe tai the light was turned down and she settlement of the shop- 1" Next came Michael Collins, Grit- was prepared to sleep. fith's main support in the fight to set} +4 ehort time after petitioner's hus- up ordered government in Ireland and The conference was requested by band had left her, said Candler opened the leaders of the Rrntherhoede anaicon™ nder of the army oni we neh thelthe door and grabbed her, Petitioner railroad men expressed the opinion Fr tate advocates vest their hopes. | screamed and continued to scream un- Next in line were the Lord Mayor of Dublin and representatives of various public bodies. room fle Ul her husband rushed into thi and immediately engaged in a t fight with said Candler.” Is the brotherhood Alla All activities In Dublin were sus-] Following the scene, Mrs. Byfteld Chalrinan’ of the Aseoulatt tyler.) No untoward incident occurred to} mained ill from that day until the airman of the Association of Rail-| disturb the solemnity of the occasion. |present,’* the suit alleged. way Executives; Howard Elliott.| On every hand there was the sign of] “If Mrs. Ryfield suffered any in Northern Pacific; Hale Holden, Chi-lintense national grief. The closing of | juries on the ship it was from the cage, Burlington and Quincy; Julius} ine Government offices and the husi- terrible beating her husband gave her, Kratsehnitt, Southern Pacific; W. Ll! nog establishments continued untit|which bloodied her face and caused Mapother, “Loulsville and wvilte: | inte this attarnoon. arate Wlaptred her fee Tend eulied W. W. Atterbury, Pennsylvania; C.) "the crowds which congregated | practically all the next day,"" Candler along the route of the procession had accumulated since daybreak, Thou- sands had travelled from distant parts of Iretand to view the procession and informed of the suit "he added. my petition, declared, when “T never touched her, “| have already, in stated the fact that nothing whatever to have the railroad beige conoid toes do homage to the lost leader. PET eauimproner wind had’ happened , " “t that the Arecnii between Mrs. Byfield and myself. o'clock. The fact that the luncheon is] aie REELS ATTACK SuORB|Her suit 1s without ‘any foundation RESORT. LONDON, Aug. 16 (Associated Press). Two hundred Irish trregulars made an attack on Dundoran, @ popular water- ing place on Donegal Bay, says a de- spateh to-day from Londonderry, Visi- tors fled In terror. Reinforcements have been sent to the National Army garrison there. t] DUBLIN, Aug. 16.—A series of en- gagementa occurred last night five miles from Navan, County Meath, between @ large party of Irish trregulars and de- tachments of National troops. Sixty-six Republicans were reported captured, TROOPS SENT TO QUELL NOVA SCOTIA COAL RIOTS Strikers Attack Hellef Force and in fact, and is in line with Byfleld's attempt to get money out of me.’ —EE— INOIS MINF: s ING CONFERENCE. CHICAGO, Aug. 16.—Illinois mines remained closed to-day. Preparations to .reopen were halted temporarily, pending a meeting here Friday between operators and union officials. Predictions were made that the Cleve- land agreement will be ratified by min- ers and operators, with some oppost tion from the latter. Many mines ure ready to start operation within 24 hours after an agreement Is reached. leaders the uncertainty of m AWAIT- men will o-iorro 's conference who have 6 a strike order th HARD COAL MEN MEET TO-MORROW PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 16.— eer Wa dust Beat Them Off, The conference of anthracite Commerce Commission Calls It to BROCKVILE, Ont., Aug 16.—The coal operators and rep senta- President's Attention, Minister of Militia and Dafensa to-day tives of the mine workers sat WASHINGTO! ts necessary to down of the roads, it was made known {mn @ report on by the Interstate Commeres Commiasion | g This was said per cent. of the 70,000 locomotives in for to-day has been postponed until 3 P, M,, to-morrow, at the request of John L. Lewis, President of the United Mino Workers. In a telegram to Samuel D. Warriner, head of the Opera- IN, Aug. 16. Swift action head off « serious break ordered several hundred troops sent in- to the Glace Bay, N. &,, coal mining district, to quell disturbances resulting ‘om the strike of United Mine We Aefoctive rolling stock, |() Amarica SRN Werner DNEY, N.S. Aug. 16,—In a claeh between pickets and non-union inen at the entrance to the power house at New to show that about 60 the United States are in need of repairs | Aberdeen, Glace Bay, to-day, ono mat tors’ Negotiating Committee, A letter to the President from Chairman] wag injured severely and ny wae Mr. Lewis said the presence of McChord of the commission stated that} truck by flying coal and stonen the union officials was re- since the strik observed with @ ‘the co concern nmission has the progressive quired in Cleveland In conneo- tion with the soft coal sett! The trouble be volunteers attems gan when a party of ed to retlave on deterioration of motive power,’ unteors | mpany Te Trading. repiled that the law re-{ ffielaia who hud been operating ens ment. quiring railroads to withdraw bad order | =ine# ,8N4 Purnpa since the minera Mr. Warriner said the post- equipment from service must be en-|Welked out. thirty-six hours ago, ponement was agreeable to forced oS the operators and he would With motive Ing ment deterforating, the burden of moy-| JEFFERSON CITY, Mo, Aug, 18 the Increased amount of coal that] (Associated Press),—Senator James wil be mined, now that somo of the! 4. Reed,’won the Democratic nomina- operators and miners have agreed to end power and other equip-| REED WON BY 5042 vores, g0 advise the miners’ chief WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, IN BLACKMAIL SUIT 1923. ‘ MINERS IN 7 STATES CHEATED IN MAIL GO BACK 10 WORK | LOOT, TELLS STORY AFTER LONG STRIKE bonds for a while, as it was not & good time to sell them, But f tur over part of my share, about $1 worth, to Anderson and Chapman to dispose of for me, ‘They cheated m« sald they had lost them But T saw by the newspapers that a lot of the stolen bonds were turning up tn varl- ous parts of the country. That is why Lam turning State's evidence." * Loerber said he did bury part of his bonds In the barn. Those were pro- > duced, identified and placed in evi- a dence. . z ,.]' Counsel for the defanse made vig- Seitlement Affects 20 Per}Loerber, Who Turned State’s]orous but futile eforts*its morning to gain time to recast thetr jlans view of the action of Loerbar At the opening of court it was an- nounced that former Judge Groeht in Evidence, Reveals How Hold-Up Was Planned. Cent. of Mines, With 60,- 000,000 Tons Output. had been recruited to the forces of CLEVELAND 1%—A great story of the great Leonard} the defensa, and an adjournment un- irmy of miners scattered through|Street mail robbery of last October] ti! Monday wax asked in order that even coal producing Sta tarted| was told in datall on the witness ay miliay iz ie th back to tho mines to-day. Actual}stand in the Federal ‘Court this momn-| Judge Holmes denied the request production of bituminous coal t by Charles Loorber, one of the in nan adjournment unt!! to-mor- after tar e war that exten dicted men, who explained that he] row was asked and denied. Finally u bitter walk : over 187 days. was turning state's evidence because, yee Holmes’ refised to-srant even ne gaPatiown’ signed] “When Tam cheated 1 cheat bu "Go on with ghe case,” he com- here late yesterday by operators ‘and] Loerber, according to his confession | manded minecs gave the stena) ior resump-| 88 the driver of the automobile used] Assistant United States District i . Thy the robbers who hetd up the mail{torney David V. Cahill then calle tlon of mining by nearly 20 per cen : n of mining : U truck and obtained loot said to ha Loerber to the stand as the Govern of all miners on strike, The seven|ieon worth $4,000,000 He had] ment’s first witness States where actual preparations for|changed his plea yesterday from not] The prosecution then asked that it mining started were: Ohio, Venn-}guilty (o guilty, and he was the first] Witnesses excepting Loerber be ex- evivania, Indiana, Washington, Ok-|] witness called by Assistant United cluded from the room during his lahoma, West Virginia and Michigan,|{States District. Attorney Cahtil to-{ testimony ‘This was ordered and Sixty million tons of coal annually |day in the trial of George Anderson,| More than 59 men and women, in- are produced by mw whose oWnersfalias Hetnes, and ald Chapman, [cluding a few Negroes, were escorted have accepted the agreement. Whilefalias Bryer to a fury room to wait this is but a drop in the bucket tof “I first met Anderson and Chapman —— the country nnual proditetion, nowfin Auburn Prison," Loerber sald. This 5 heeded in full after tho strike which| testimony wis ordered stricken by) GERMANY DEFAULTS has Brought supplies ton herllously| Judge Holmes, but the rest of Loer- ON PRE-WAR DEBT low ebb, the nent will be} ber's story remained in the record. TS ivrled around to other operators, WhO} “Afterward? the witness seid, “TPP yench Oph; Le Dat re expected to come tn met them several times in Now York| E'rench Cabinet Backs Poin- ucts pening to Peace baslcity and last August they made 6 care’s Stand, seen driven c s. jubilant] proposition to me to take ‘ . Sree day en uaa an wuilaBt) proposition to me to take part in the! RERTIN, Aug. 16—Germany to- A at flese,|tmul robbery. They said they bad in-l a. notited the Allies that $00,000 He one eaee tartey at {848 taformation about a truck which} ‘ : ue yea Rea lt abate : “') regularly departed from the old Post] £0ld marks had been transferred to ee 2 on alee azreement | Ollice with registered mail which was} the Bank of England on the account dned a national convention, to whieh | USEMLY worth a million dollars or] of pre-war commercial debts, ‘This more (i bituminous producers ure to be in one-fourth of the Riga IN ATTEN GH) Ror dLine UOlte Jab Che three of us met twice a week : ile ; after that and each time we used an ‘ Oc At this joint convention a Se committes ie to be appointed ‘to for. |Sutomobile and went down to the old| 18 & note Germany pointed out she imitate a method to be followed in the | PoSt-office to study thes ituation. Ar rea AROS negotiation of Wage scales," this com rson and Chapman watehed the of the heavy fall iinet to a joint conference | truck many times as it left, We fr to be held quently fololwed it and studied tt Premic Piet mrrneretieent route, One the wek before the 1 Allied ¥ ita ; rr yey | robbery. we 1 the truck up. ti German finest agreement! reached, the *@lerson and Chapman decided not to }t 1 hacking of the French Cati- = " ze e away Was announced that the committee, whose exr ize to. be Be jointly borne by operators and miners] Och He) nigtt af the y said ‘The principal points viminittes | et: M1 met Anderson and Chap-|ot clive guarante forth shall consider is the making of wage | Mt SLURRED YBa EC SUs ¥ aethens ba on tow y had a car waiting rites that shall be p rly compe : v awh to City Hall, nea tive and afford not only « living wage | Caneel ey the but aun opportunity ¢ ne mulat Es EULESS a eeuue , vo savinis, the lcalauiianmient ohne tional (tt ste followed and (ON Vacation have he nd local machinery for the preven dA rae World follow you. Mailed P dlongside. «*hapman t out wit - 0 of strikes and lockouts nd the Fi Hp cH . : Gah ot settee end lackoutet: nd Gey oun in his hand and jumped uy ie | jevery dag to your summed encourage efficiency of operation not | (ye ne driver and made hin uit) |pddress. | only on the part of the managemen re a Ye pris ppb 4 paly on the part of the management V pei up the driver white Chapman or-| ||WORLD SUMMER RATES| hee pe fUAlT dered him to open the padlock on ti Per Per | hack the ik The driver wa . Week Month On receipt of this report the Janu-|yyon crdcied back to loa seat. An_| {|Morning & Sunday. .35 $1.00) ary conference will finally determine] joccon guarded him while Chapmat Morning World... .25 | the method to be used in making the} jyok our the mail sacks and p Evening World.... .25 85) 1923 wage scale, the machinery tor] «hem inte our closed ¢ Sunday World 10c. per Sunday | hi ose t e to tune it f r rov Heiastingy Pee pcturchen: Bo We had done it. We drove to Lak Subscribe now for any tength of time IRtEr AD oan Ronkonkoma, L. 1, where we put | Address changed as oftes as dealred the car in the barn of a relative 0! | Your newadenter will acrnuge MRS. LORETTA THOMPSON] mine. and we stayed there two day ES conyow oe) Fosse ei este IN COURT AGAIN FOR _ |‘Yiting the Jot 1 got $6,000 in cas’ Cashier, New York World, and about $400,000 in securities, The Park Row, New York City. BLACKJACKING MAN] 'oot was divided in four parts and | a was told the fourth share was for a i —————— Pleads Not Guilty When Arratgned| Post-Office employee who bad given 7 In Coney Inland ‘To-Day. information. (Joseph Bevelltia Post ol1eED. 7 Office employee. is under indictment| MORTON.-APA CAMPBELL FUNERAL Mrs. Loretts) Thompson, @ widow. | c. that charge.) CHURCH, Friday, 11 A.M. Auap! living at No, 2117 East Mth Street, Anderson advised me to bury my| Actors’ Fund WHEELAN,—MARY © CAMPRELL NERAL CHURCY,,Fridas, 109A M Fu: Brooklyn, who has been frequently in Brooklyn Criminal Courts during the past ar, was arraigned in the Coney Island Court to-day on complaint of her brother-in-law, James Hennessy, of No, 2717 West Third Street, Brooklyn, a city fireman, who charg- ed that she had struck him with a black jack, The alleged assault oc- curred according to Hennessy, when culled last evening on his father- in-law, John O'Reilly, at the East lith Street address. Mrs. Thompson, who {s quite stout and apparently very strong and in excellent health, pleaded not guilty and was paroled for examination next Monday. Mrs. Thompson's killed a year ago in an automobile accident, Last December, while she operating her automobile in Ocean Parkway, she ran into Motor- cycle Policeman Dunn, the latter said, when he tried to serve her with a summons for going at thirty miles an hour. The Court of Special Ses- sons held that her action was not de- liberate, however, and she was freed Dunn spent three or four months in the Coney Island Hospital as the re- sult of his injuries from the collision. While out on bail in that case, Mr Thompson ran her automobile onto the sidewalk in Hast 28d Street, Sheepshead Bay, and struck two boys, according to the police, killing one of them, and serious injuring the other, She is now out on $10,000 ball, on a charge of manslaughter in this case, pote ah POUGHKEEPSIE MAYOR CITY FLAG. ‘The city’s flag which floated trom the masthead of the New York ferry boat Poughkeepsie on its trip from New York to Poughkeepste recently waa presented to Mayor George D. Campbell of the latter city at luncheon given by the Rotary Club, in. the Nelson Houso, Foughkeepale, to-day. | Johp H. Delaney, Commissioner of Docks, to whom the request waa made for the emblem, dele- gated W. J. R. Keates, one of the de- Aigners of the new vessel, to represent him. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Call “Columbus 8200 FRANK E. CAMPBELL “Dhe Funeral Church" ine. aaa LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. en TOST—Diue Fox ecatt In yellow taxi, Tues day evening; Iheral reward, Ullman, lod W. Sith, Clreie 1398, '°" LOST—Aug 18, 8.30 A. M., small reddish, male Pekingese; liberal reward wih paid for return to 29 WW. Toth We Don’t Claim to Make All the Good Candy in America but the enormous output of two ‘igan' factories, requiring « large fleet of high power motor trucks to make daily deliveries to our chain of stores, proves that we are getting our share. Advt. on Page 15 Official Voting Coupon. This Coupon Entities the Holder to Cast One Yote for the Most Popular Man in Greater New York, ‘One Vote for the Most Beautiful Woman, Who, om Sept. 11, 1922, at the MARDI GRAS FESTIVAL AT CONEY ISLAND Will Be Crowned KING AND QUEEN 1922 Coney Island Mardi Gras Revue Week of Sept. 11. J vote for...... Contest Closes 12 Noon, Sat., Sept. 2, 1922. husband was was “Lost and Found”. articles ‘tized in The World or reported to “Lost and Found Bureau," Roont 108, World Building. will be Usted for thirty days, These lists cnn be Geen at any of The Worid’s Offices. “Lost and Found” advertisements can be left at any of The Advertising Agencies, or can telephoned directly to The World. Cal! 4000 Heekman, New York, oF Brookiyn Office, 4100 Matin, anrs GDL ASOGW tion for United States Take our word the atrike, will be a heavy one for many tor over railroads. In fact. this may slow up| Breckinridge Long, Third Assistant production of coal Seeretary of State in the Wilson ad- ie ministration, by a plurality of 6,94 ENDS AIS LIFE SEYTRNOH HY] votes in the Missouri primary, accord- d T th HANGING IN TIS Lt ing to the official count. The vote goo ® ry e TRENTON, N. J., Aug. 16.-Mdward| was Reed, 195,95 Long, 190,018 2 Dain pene Oroiwhe wal Carving a EA risk. ere is Ife sentence for munter in the New] ONE OF ADRIATION INJURED DIES Jersey State Prison, hanged himself to] pawand | Aedes ees : y k hie cell Inat night, It was seared £0. | ane TE See A gimmer, trom ever acKage. fay. He Knotted a bed sheet around| thjured In. the waniccin rene Nas his neck and fastened une end to an|at sea Briday, died at ue St Vincente 40 In th electric fature, Hospital, to-day from burns of the body. . SS say Piccadilly Little Cigars are Claro — Colorado Claro—Cotorade Mail Votes to EVENING WORLD MARDI GRAS EDITOR, P. 0, BOX 247, CITY HALL STATION, NEW YORK, NEW’ YORK. be handed tp at The World's various branches: ear Third 4e.; Uptown, 1203 Broadway, for it when we OF votes ma: 10, 140th sta. m today at our Bronx, ner ste; Harlers, 2092 Seventh ove,, near 125th at, Hotel a guarantee in Fea eine winds weeds eH Park Row, N.Y. De % beth King se! (cen o@ this ballot. Vote ¢ 2 only ean esaidater “i iyou use ails! for King ana Queen It ill 2 Be destroyed. y je package (Sea Story on Page Ten.)