The evening world. Newspaper, September 6, 1922, Page 2

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Avenue Station. ‘was close to Mrs, Martin’s home when _ Staggered up, half blind. eenan said he could not get in and Keenan climbed through a window and admitted Neary, who found Mrs. ‘Martin dead. A partly filled bottle of : ‘whiskey was nearby. Keenan, Neary Ai @aid, told him he bought the liquor at Mrs, Vatala’s store. When Cafiero gold Keenan « half pint of liquor Neary arrested him and then sent for more police, Search, it was said, re- vealed two bottles of whiskey under the counter. Neary then went to Mrs. Vatala’ apartments upstairs and arvested her. Hidden tn the rooms, the police Bay, were seven five-gallon tins, three demijokas, eleven quart bottles and a box of spurious labels. At the bicycle repair shop of Ciro Laura's, No. 118 Sullivan Street, police say, they found four quart bottles of whiskey. The second woman arrested was Mrs. Adelaide Reale, forty, of No. 113 Sullivan Street, who, according to the police, ts alleged by Edwin Mattson of No. 247 49th Street, to have sold a pint of gin to Edward Burke of No. 143 Pioneer Street, Brooklyn, who died of wood alcohol poisoning Sunday night. Detectives of Inspector McDonald's staff made three arrests in the Red Hook section, charging liquor viola- tions. “ne defendants, arraigned in Fifth Avenue Court, were held in $500 a, and Patrolman Neary of the Neary MAYOR SETS DATES FOR HEARINGS ON HS TRANSIT PLAN Five Sessions to Be Held, Covering Routes in All the Boroughs. FIRST TO BE ON SEPT. 18 In Preamble He Again Flays the Transit Commission’s Solution. Tho Board of Estimate in special session to-day received Mayor Hylan's $600,000,000 transit plan, lstened to another scolding of the Transit Com- mission by the Mayor and fixed dates for public hearings at which various routes in the Hylan traction pro- gramme will be discussed. ball each until Monday. They are] 1 his latest attack on the Transit Alfred Duhlig, No. 17 Woodhull /Commission the Mayor says that body Street; Mrs. Helen Ericson, twenty-|does not want the city to construct < nine, No, $1 Summit Street, and Thos. | new subways to hook up with recap- Sioeme WO: 48 Cole treet, Bottles tured subway lines, ‘because they Uqu i hay been obey ta ghaces eet js the defen. | Want to keep the city and the travel- ling public continually at the mercy dants, Olsen In addition was charged with}of the private operating companies.” * disorderly conduct, as it was sald) Continuing his attack, the Mayor several] women were found in the ‘eas jace conducting themselves in a dis- per chanuen, He was immediate-| “They want to spend between three Jy sentenced to thirty days in jail byYThundred and four hundred million dol- (GENERAL PERSHING STATE OF “Magistrate Geismar. THREE FAKE COPS BIND 2 WATCHMEN; ° ‘(Continued trom First Page.) the watchmen agree is that when went to the first floor to in- a'noise they were confront- by several men who bound and gagged them. They differed when the number of men in the Party and also as to “the ‘tlds doors were open reached also rt in the side runway to take way the liquor, Threv: doorw from the warehouse 1s @ garage where men work all night. The. police were unable to find there y one who had heard any disturb- ance about the warehouse last night or seen any persons or automobilés about the place. 4 —_——SE—eE—_—— LEAGUE ELECTS . VICE PRESIDENTS Earl of Balfour Among the * Six Chosen. GENEVA, Sept. 6 (Associated Pyeas).—The League of Nations As- sembly torday elected as its six Vico .Pregidents the Earl of Balfour, Eng- jana; Gabriel Hanotaux, France; Henhor Gomez, Portugal; Hjalmar tanting, Sweien; Amalio Gimeno y Cabanas, Spain, and Dr, Montobtlo- ninchitch, Jugo-Slavia. Chancellor Seipel of Austria, speak- ing on his country’s condition, de- dared that Austria was ready to ac- cept.allied or creditors’ control pro« her sovereignty was unaffected at that ample credits were assured er, —-S TWENTY-FIVE BODIES TAKEN FROM MINE Five Still Held in English . Pit-".9 WHITEHAVEN, Eng., Sept. ¢ (Agso- elated Press).—Twenty-five bodies had been recovered this morning from the coal pit in which forty men were en- tombed by en explosion yesterday. Meayy falls of rock and the presence of much are hampering the rescue equads, and it is feared the pit will have to be sealed, as was the case when 126 Workers were lost in a neighboring mine in 1910. scenes aro being enacted at the pithead, where the women relatives of woe THREE DIE IN FEUD BATTLE IN MAIN ST, One Shot, Another Stabbed as Two Families Fight. HOUSTON, Texas, Sept. 6.—Three Persons were killed, one shot and an for operation, of $600,000,000."" lars to buy old surface and elevated lines, and $818,000,000, according to their own estiffinte, for the cénstrue- tion and equipment of thirty-two and a half miles of an underground sys- tem, The Boat’ of Estimate would be grossly and even criminally derelict if it acted in accordance with the pro- posal of the State Transit Commission for the purchase of worn-out and out- of-date transit lines. “The plan which I herewith present provides for the construction of 126 route miles of new subways and tun- nels or 379 single track miles, at a to- tal cost, including complete equipment Says Robinson of Arkansas, Leading Attack. There will be five public hearings in City Hall on the Hytan transit pians. ¥ Pa The first of these will take place on} WASHINGTON, Sept. ‘6.—Bitter Friday, Sept. 18, at 2.16 P. M., and/oppdsition to the Government's in- will be devoted to the Harlem,.Wash>} junction’ against the striking shop- ington Heights and the Bronx routes. meri. brotte m the Senate to-day: ‘ Sehetor Robinseny Demoerat, Ark- ansas, heading the attack, declared the restraining order was “oppres- sive, unjust and unconstitutional.” “@bo President und the Attorney General have placed betweon the rail- way executives and the strikers the power of the Government and an army of United States Marshals and hold in readiness to move the military and naval forces,” he said. “No quicker way of discrediting and undermining the Government can be pursted than to make court process independent of Constitutional limita- tions and statutory restrictions and responsive to mere public convenience and opinion,’ “I protest the temporary injunction issued In the shopmen’s strike as ex- ceeding the ‘powers of the court, as violating of expressed law, and of the constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech, freedom of the press and the right peacably to assemble, “The Attorney General has sought to employ in the controversy the power, prestige and influence of the Government with all its agents and instrumentalilies for the carries who have themselves openly and repeatedly violated decision by the Labor Board In behalf of the workers, and who peremptorily declined the President's first proposal submitted for the set- tlement of the strile “This injunction wil have the effect pf coereing the laborers into accep- tance of the Labor Board's decisions when adverse to them, and of leaving the raflroads apparently at liberty to disregard the rulings of the Board at will." Legal experts of laber preparing to oppose the Atforney General in the Federal Court in Chicago next Mon- day believe they have an excellent chance of having the permanent in- Junction |refused unless the Govern- ment modifies it. Samuel Gompers also belleves labor will succeed in beating the injunction. This belief is predicated in part upon utterances from the White House any, 2 . |Daugherty. Within the last few hourr Sek eee ee Taretrcte: Baste Loh have adadt cleat that the py: Tenth Avenue, Fort Hamilton {ernment docs nat intend to apply al Avenue and Red Hook route to |the restrictive clauses of the injunc Borough Hall and by tunnel from | tlon, Ii fact, It has been todicated no Atlantle Avenue to connect with [Use wil be made of the prohibitiop new west side (Manhattan) linc, |@8@lnst meetings, interviews and Extension of 14th Street, Hast- |*tatements, unless they aro defiant ern District jine through Ridge- |Yielations not alone of the injunction wood to Jamalca. but also of the law. West side subway through Broadway and Amsterdam Ave- nues, (Escalators to Fort Wash- ington Avenue. East side and Bronx subway through Webster Avenue and Bos- ton Road, Bronx, and First Ave. nue, Manhattan, Crosstown, 125th Street subway from Fort Lee Ferry to and over Tri-Borough Bridge into Queens. Tri-Borough Bridge from Har- lem and Bronx to Astoria; sub- way through St, Ann's Avenue to AGist Street and Third Avenue, Subway from West Farms to Classon Point to connect with tunnel td College Point, L, I. Tuesday, Sept. 20, at 2.15 P. M., affecting Manhattan Island below 125th Street: West side route, including ox- tension from Seventh Avenue and both Street, to Amsterdam.Avenue and 724 Strect, Amsterdam Ave- mite and 10th Avenue, Hudson Street, Washington Street, and tunnel from Battery to Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn. East side route through First Avenue, Bowery and lower east aide to Municipal Building and tunnel to Fulton Street, Brooklyn. Lexington Avenue from 42d Street, south into east side subway at Ninth Street add Third Ave- nue. Nassau-Broad. Street route to connect Centro Street loop with Montague Street tunnel. Extension of Queens-424 Stroet line from Eighth to 16th Avenue. Extenston of 14th Btreet-East- erp district line from Sixth to 10th Avenues. Tuesday, Sept. 26, at 2.15 P. M.,, affecting Brooklyn Borough: Crosstown route from Long Is!- and City through Greenpoint and Williamsburg, to Manhattan and to Sheepshead Bay and Coney Island through Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues. Lafayette Avenue route through East New York, Cypress Hills, Richmond Hill to Jamaica. Other stabbed last night at Soaty,| Tuesday, Oct. 3, at 2.15 P. M, W, H, Jolnston, Iresident of the Austin County, Texas, as the result] affecting Queens Borough: International «Association of Machin- of political feud between two families, Queens Boulevard route to Ja- | ists, one of the largest of seven rail The feud was fought out on the} maica. ¢ Juntons on strike, took occasion to main street. Extension of Corona. line to |i8appear completely to-day, His as- Flushing, Bayside, College Point, |#0clates and his family professed ix- norance of his whereabouts. chinista’ headquarters, — inquiries brought the reply that he was ‘in Pftsburgh, Baltimore or New York.” iowa LUMBERMAN SHOT DEAD, HIS SON ARRESTED and tunnel to Bronx. at nt Extension of Astoria line through Astoria and Woodhaven Avenues to the Crossbay Road. Tuesday, Oct. 10, et 2.15 P.M . affecting Richmond Borough: Bus rotites covering entire isl and to connect with new tunnel and ferries, as PERU, BOLIVIA GET OUT OF LEAGUE ASSEMBLY mt They Will Not Participate. GENEVA, sept. 6.—Peru has with- drawn her delegates from the League ot Nations Assembly because a Chilla w. Killed in @ © Augustin Edwards, was clected Pres! Comptrotier Craig wanted the dates ° To-Day. dent, Bolivia instructed her delegates | of the hearings advanced two weeks] x aysas Sep. 6.4 to remain away from Geneva for the} so that they could be held with more|.,*>" v ae same reason. comfort in cooler weatt Mayor GAFMOR, Be Ment Hinbermag. here, The Tacna-Arica dispute, belleved Hylan opposed this, cla ‘ was shot and killed in a downtow Seoeoaliy “Gi An end since arbitration | orice the tare tice eee ne loion Building ere shortly betore noon At Washington, was the basis for the) cause of the fact that the Democratic] Woe | s Chilien-Peruvian split. Bolivia's enmity | Convention Is held the latter part of +4) this month any postponements would] sor af the be interpreted as politica, 4 thirty-seven years old » of the victim, was arrested in con aeotion with the shooting, foward Chili aleo had its root in this + Bouth American a ‘THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1929, Pershing’s Tribute to Lafayette ‘At Marne Day Services Held Here LACING AWREATH AFSVETE. BITTER OPPOSITION |CITV AND NATION TO RAIL INJUNCTION HONOR LAFAYETTE BREAKS IN SENATE|AND MARNE HEROES “Oppressive. and Unjust,”|}Gen. Pershing and Augustus Thomas at Services Held in Union Square. Gen. Pershing was the guest of honor to-day and Augustus Thomas the principal speaker during the cere- monies commemorative of Lafayette and Marne Day, held about the La- fayette statue in Union Square, Dr. John H, Finley presided at the patri- otic exercises, and gathered about the statue were many thousands of New Yorkers, who repeatedly cheered in their enthustasm. There was a detachment of the 16th United Siates Infantry from Goy- ernor’s Island as a guard of honor and the regimental band furnished the tncldentv! patriotic music. Chief among the invited guests was the Marquis de Chambrun, great- great-grandson of Lafayette and Charge d’Affaires of the French Em- bassy at Washington. He received cablegrams of greeting in honor of the day from Marshal Joffre, the hero of the Marne, and Marshal Foch, the Allied Commander-in-Chicf. | "These were handed by the Marquis to Gen. Pershing, who read them. The mes- sages were greeted with roar#¥of ap- plause from the crowd. Mr. Thomas spoke at Iength upon the part Lafayette had played tn the American Revolution, speaking® of him as coming here at the age of nineteen, ‘'a red headed boy,” but one who took back to France with him the American ideals of liberty which were one day to be France's. The Marquis de Chambrun spoke in behalf of the family of Lafayette, thanking the American people for the high esteem in which his great ams cestor was held, He dwelt upon the friendship ex- isting between America and France. Myron T. Herrick, Ambassador to France, sent from Cleveland @ letter which was read by Dr. Finley, It éx- pressed his regret at not being pres- ent at the exercises and rehearsed the helpful relationship whieh had bound France and America for many years and was made the more firm by the World War Among the invited guests were the Embassy officials of the several allied nations, Gaston Liebert, Freneh Con- sul General at New York; F. Watson, the British Consul Major. Gen, Harry C. Male, Commander of Paul Gillot, Vice President of the Federation of Wrench War Veterans of America; Drt Charles A. Downer, Melyille ®, Stone Pp. Gumpertz, Ticktan Patriotle and civic societies repre- sented were the Sons of the Revolu- tion, the Sons of the American Revo- lution, the National Security League, the Y. M. + French Veterans of the War and others. The Lafayette Day Committee on Arrangements was composed of C. 8. Thompson, Chairman; Laurence Ab- hott, A. C. Redford, R. Fulton Cut- ting, Victor J. Dowling, Mayor John f Hylan Kuntz, Robert ©. Morris, Mumséy, Robert Olyphant, I. O'Ryan, Mortimer 1 J. G. Phelps Stokes Wreaths in Wt profusion were Placed about the statue of Lufayette, one by Gen, Pershing in the name of dhe United States, took home with Bissell, 8. G. Anna B. Duncan, David Schift and As Lafayette NOPEACE MOVEON, {EIGHT NATIONS PAY {HARDING EXPECTE ROADS SATISFIED, | HONORS TO HUGHES) TO NAME DEMOCRAT Executives Standing as Unit; He Asserts, on Platform Adopted Aug. 23, A statement Issued this afternoon by Thomas De Witt Cuyler Chitr- man of the Association Of Railway Executives, ¢ontainod the following: “Tho statement to the effect that A settlement of the shopmon's strike has been effected {f absolutely with- out foundation. There have*been no conferences, either by this association or by any of the executives, with Mr, Jewell or others representing the shopmeh who left the service ‘of the companies, Tho statement that I had curtailed my holiday is also entirely without foundation. “The roads are standing squarely Guns Boom Salute as War- ship Enters Harbor With American Mission, RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept. 6 (Anso- clated Press).—Guns boomed frdém ‘the warships of olght nations when the U. 8, S. Maryland entered the harbor of Rio de Janeiro yesterday afternoon ‘earrying the American Mission to the Brazilian Centennial, heaged by Charics E. Hughes, Secre- tary of State. The steamship Pan-America, which brought Mr. Hughes from New York, overtook the Maryland and. the Ne- vada in the morning just before arriving at the entrance to the har- bor, whero the Secretary and his party were transferred in ® launch to the Maryland. A few minutes later four Brazilian Senator Shields of Tennessee Prominently Mentioned as Successor to Justice Day. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 (Copy- right).—Retirement of Associate Jus- tice Day from the Supreme Court of the United States, as officially fore- cast by the White House, will prob- ably mean the nomination of a Dem- ocrat in his place. Although there is no statute re- quiring the appointments to the Sn- preme Court to be evenly balanced betweon the political parties, most Presidents have followed that custom. on the platform adopted by them at their meeting Aug. 28. The exeeu- tives area unit as to this and are entirely satisfied with present condi- tions ‘ “On September 1 the ratlroads had approximately 305,090 employees en- gaged in the mffintenance of cars and locomotives as against about 400,000 in June—the best evidence that the collapse of the strike is int sight. “During the last week tbe railroads have been recruiting their forces at the rate of somé 5,000 or 6,000 men There are only two men on tho Su- preme befich now who are not Re- publicans. They are Justice McRey- nolds, who it is said, departed from the Democratic ranks when Mr, Bryan was a candidate for President, and who served in the Republican Ad- ministration as a special counsel, and ustince Brandeis, whose adyent into the Democratic Party really devel- oped in the first Wilson campaign for the Presidency, as Mr. Brandeis had been known as a Progressive Re- destroyers emerged from the harbor, and taking up positions on either side of the two American battleships, es- corted them into the majestic body of water surrounded by towering moun- tains which make Rio famous as a beauty spot. The Maryland came to anetior in the midst of an international fleet, and ex- changed salutes in which the harbor forts Joined. The vessels represented Great Britain, Japan, Italy, Portugal, Argentine, Uruguay, Mexico and Bra- zi. per day. It is estimated at least halt of these are the older and more ex- perienced men among the atrikers. They are voluntarily returning to work on terms which do not violate the obligations of the railroads to either thelr loyal employees or to the new employees. “Since the rights of the loyal men and the new men have been promi- nent in public discussion, it 1s inter- esting to note that there were 155,000 loyal employees and that about 150,000 new employees have been added. “During the two months of the present strike the ratlronds have load- ed with revenue freight over 500,000 more cars than they loaded during the same eight weeks of 1921, when there was no strike.’* TURKISH FORCES PUSH TO WITHIN 30 MILES OF SMYRNA Greeks Flee in Panic but Claim They Inflicted Cas- ualties of 10,000. t t t I LONDON, fept. 6,—Victorious Turkish Nationalist forces’ have pushed to within fifty miles of Smyrna, aceording to despatches from Constantinople to-day. A communique from Athens says tho Greeks have killed and wounded more than 1,000 Kemalists.* Latest advices reaching officlal cir- cles here on the Asia Minor situation declare that all that remains of the Greek Army is 100,000 men, flecing in utter rout before the Turkish Nation- alists, The advices declare it probable that only half that number of Greeks will reach the sea. Friday Copy “rontaining “engravines. tobe ba The Turkish advance, since the of ough. Among the witnesses were} Harding explained at the time that|by The World mutt be tee: ive@ ly Thursday 100: ie raat . inh py ri : me supervisors, aasistant supervisors, {this was not to be construed as al smday Man sheet copy. typeMonr which hr! Cera te a anghed fen days “£° 18) iaborers and in one instance a eity|Precedont but ‘as a peculiar situation | 2% me, toured. by ah ML Wriday. and en setae AS D2 bid ee = ny street cleaner. affecting the post of Chief Justice. It | bicsuon orflen hy IP's. erady " fastent advaneen in all the history cr|.Mz8: Blanche Welzmiller, Deputy] 1s doubtful whether Mr. Harding | Amor orton ‘not Eonaitions, esoutrhs platy 5 ‘ ¥. Commissioner, was again on hand to} Would make another exception in the the order of Tatest “Teoeipt and. posits relent dedi . testify, and said: + Jease of Senator Shields, though Wis] Ny copy or ordere released later than #) “I want it understood that the rec-| Personal inclinations are pirticularly | provided’ abine, “tnoremmyted ey tee than 8, COAL LOADINGS AST WEEK UP 49,616 CARS, According to a statement Issued by tho Associatton of Railway Executive 167,428 cars were loaded with coal du ing the week ended Sept. 2, a guin of 4 t 2, sl 6 over the eding week. ‘Thia was the largest number of cars loaded with coal during any week since the strike began, the basts of cars ded, production week amounted I some American soll for his own grave, so, in similar fashion to-day were soil from Ay, in France, and water from its nearby historic River Marne, sprinkled over the. grave of Licut. Col. Stephen Rochefontaine, memb lof Gen. Washington's staff in the Re olution, who is bified in the chureh- yard of St. Paul's Chapel, Broadway, Fulton and Vesey Streets, The core- mony was carried out by the Sons of the American Revolution. ‘The soil and water, whieh were blessed dur- ing a service in the chapel, were sent to this country last June by the], Mayor of Ay. yet recognized the Mexican Govern- ment the gunboat flying the Mexican flag saluted and turned Secretary of State, who told Admiral Jones that diplomatic should be waived, since both vessels were in a friendly harbor. commanders of the various warships exchanged Brazilian offictals, American Ambassador Morgan, visited comers. and his party boarded a launch, which conveyed them to the arsenal, Americans, Brazilians, and a crack regiment of Brazilian marin drive, was virtually unnoticed by the people. POLIGE CHARGED presented charges of graft against GRAND JURY RESUMES THE August, which was held over to com- plete misconduct Markets, reconvened this morning in Brooklyn, with nearly a score of wit- nesses on hand to testify to conditions ords of the pusheart markets for 1991 were kept by me and were made for department thad accessto them. ‘They about it, and, under his instructions, pleted this week, and the results may be made known by next Tuesaay or Wednesdading MINERS TO RATIFY, Chiefs Meet To-Day to Pass Anthracite Tri-Distrfet Conyention will Although the United States has not the Nevada re- the salute by ofder of the technicalities After an hour's delay, while the visits, a delegation of accompanied by he Maryland and welcomed the new- After this Secretary Hughes Here were drawn up committees of who cheered the Secre- ary. There was also a crowd of ‘ich saluted while The Star-Spangled he band played sanner."" ‘The Hughes party was then driven hrough the streets to the Guana- sara Palace. ‘There was no military lemonstration in connection with this and the distinguished visitor Bee es BY PEDDLE WT GRAFT AT MARKETS (Continued from First Page.) upervisors, x MARKET INQUIRY. The Kings County Grand Jury for its investigation in the into alleged Department of n the pushcart markets of that bor- he department. Every officér in the hould have been given to’the Grand brought them over." The inquiry probably will be com- r LEWIS DECLARES on Agreement. WILKES-BARRE, Sept. 6.—“The atify the agtcement reached between cerely differed with the Pr Shields was ono of the earliest oppo- nents of the League of Nations and ment of Mr. Shields, howe fact that Justice McReynolds from Tennessec, and it is not likely that States will be-content to see the ap- pointment candidates of their own and making the point that two men ought not be not be as controlling with Harding as another fact, which is that set Judges. tion in the case of Mr. Taft, but Mr publican. The death of Chief Justice White, a Democrat, was followed by the ap- pointment of Chief Justice Taft, Re- publican, The resignation of Justice Clarke of Ohio, Democrat, has been followed by the appointment of former Senator Sutherland of Utah, a Re- publican. That's why it is morally eertain that Mr. Harding will nomt- nate a Democrat to fill at least one of the two places hitherto filled by Democrats. SENATOR SHIELDS MENTIONED FOR THE VACANCY. Phe name of Senator Shiclds, Dem- ocrat, of Tennessee is being promi- nently mentioned for the vacancy caused by the retirement of Justice Day, Mr. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee and is highly esteemed by President Harding. The President de- veloped his admiration for Mr. Shields while in the Senate, He observed that Mr. Shields risked the antagonism of Shields was at one time many constituents by de parting from he Wilson leadership b @ he sin- ident, Mr. most always yoted with the Repub- ican irreconcilables, It would be a curious turn of political tides if Mr. Shields, League ardent foe of the Wilson of Nations, were to be ap- pointed to fill the vacancy caused by he resignation of Justice Clarke, one of whose main reasons for leaving the bench is to be better able to espouse he cause of the League of Nations. One of the obstacles to the uppoint- r, is the hails the Senators from Southern filled without suggesting appointed from a single State. AGE LIMIT EXCEPTION IN CASE OF MR. TAFT. This cireumstance, however, would President Mr. Shields is over sixty years old— the age limit which Mr. Harding hay for the appointinent of new It is trde he mado an excep friendly toward the Tennessee Sena- tor. . The chances are that Mr. Harding will not close upon Senator Shields or anybody else as quickly as he did Jury tusthe first place. As soon as I}.0P former Benator Sutherland, The learned that they had not been 1}!#tlev’s appointment was determined talked to Commissioner O'Malley} ¥P08 @ long time ago and it was ex- pected that Justice Day of Ohio would make the vacancy for Mr, Sutherland. The news about Justice Clarke's de- sire to } expected. eave the bench was totally un- The President will prob- ably delherate a long time. before selecting a successor to Justice Day. COAL FOR THE POOR WILL BE MY PLAN. egion representa- |” operators and offictals of the United Mine Workers in Philadelphia.” This gtatement was made to-dey by John-L. Lewis, Internaflonal President of the Mine Workers, as 400 delegates gath- ered to pass final judgment upon the peace pact. ‘l = optimistic. I am cenfdent. (When the convention hears the report of the Seale Committee bearing on the agreement the vote will be overwhelm- ingly in favor of acceptance,” Lewis sald, The chapel rcises ducted by the Rev. J. P. McComas, the vicar, assisted by the Rey, A Riboung, rector of St. Andrew's Chureh.’ There were a processional, the singing of anthems, prayers for the Presidents of the United States and France, an addyess by the Very Rev. George B. Myers, Dean of ‘Trin- ity Cathedral, Havana, Cuba, and the blessing of the French soil and water After these exercises the grave of Col. Rochefontaine, located in the southwest corner of the churchyard, were con- SAYS W.H. WOODIN State Fuel Administrator Sa the Wealthy Will Be Able to Deal With Cold. Willlam H, Woodin, State Fuel Ad- ministyator, sald to-day at the offices of the American Car and Foundry FAVORS YEAHS © N Hour} "" : was visited, the Chairman of the DAY. ‘8 Company, of which he is President: ceremonies there being Brig.-Gen. Rent, ¢~fhe pro-| “The peor man is the man who ts Oliver B. Bridgman, President of the} posal e-year sus Nn of cot-}eoing to get the coal. The rich man New York Chapter of the Sons of the] ton. planting in the United States J Abie American Revolution means of eliminatin bol! will, have to wait for it. The rich At the grave while hundreds of ® suggested in a S yesterday} man is ima position to buy electrical noon-day visitors to the churchyard] by | Renator mith, Democrats South! and gus heaters and other modern ot fe ear ane ate re | Carolina, 10 predicted 0 wp iF oe “wh > ‘1 loolWed ‘ony. 1 th and water were! snment of cotton farma throughout the| SppHances -which are beyond the poured over an op@ing which had) couth unless governmental action wa been made Jn the sod at one side of|ixken to uid in destruction of the paras reach of the poor man." Mr, Woodin said he had not yet re- the monument, site. celved any offers of coal for sale '( »Brooklya Office, 4100 STATE FUEL BOSss, NAMED BY MILLER, TAKES UP DUTIES WILLIAM H.WOODIN through his agency but he had heard of one firm which was offering coal to its customers at $18 a ton. “This same firm was selling coal for from $14 to $14.50 a ton a year ago,"" he commented, “I can sée no reason why coal should be sold for more this year than {t was last year. It will not be sold for more than it was last year if I have my way. And lam going to have my way if T'have to use all the extraordinary. powers which have been conferred upon me.” Mr. Woodin said he would spend ay looking for offices somewhere downtown, He has not yet appointed Se ee any assistants and said he would not | appoint anybody until he knew just £ what would be required of them, said he would have a tatk at the fices of Chairman Outerbridge’s as- 1 sistants and with representatives of 9 the State Conference of Mayors and of the Coal Committee of the Retail 4 Merchants’ Association. He hoped to. { be able to take over from those bodies + men who have experience in dealing with the coal problem. 4 ‘ wwe There Is More Than One Way of winning a customer. Ever try making Compar,; isons—the best Candy You Know with the Best Candy We Make. Advt.on Page 12 ed j.. po cons ana. * Morntn or id atter the can 0¢ inserted only ve tn order of receipt at oJ) aining epsrarings tot? be received by 1 P.M. copy for the Supple made by The World mu: Display advertising ty went Sections of ‘The World must recelyed by 1 P.M. reday preceding publica ton and releass must be received by 2 P. XC @ra Giscuunts Of any character, contract or oth ot THE WORLD® O1IcD,. } ] HURDUS.—T. E. CAMPBELL FUNERAL CHURCH, Broadway, GUth st., Wednes day, 2 P. SHEALY.—On Tuesday, Sept. 6, the RE TERENCE J. BHEALY, 8. 3. Funeral from the College of St, Franc Xavier, 30 W. 16th et. Divine office auc requigm mass at the Church of Bt. Fran cls Xavier on Thuraday, Sept. 7, at 0.51 A. M. | FUNERAL DIRECTORS. THE WORLD'S, Harlem Offic! Now Located at 2092 7th Ave. Near 125th St.’ HOTEL THERESA BUILDIN * | t Odvertined to “Lost and Found Bureau.” Roont 108. World Building, will be Usted for thirty days. Thes late can een at any of The rid's Offices, “Lest and Found” advertisement ean be left at any of The World's Advertising Agencies, or can be telephoned directly to The World. Call 4000 Beekman, New York, Maing

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