The evening world. Newspaper, October 14, 1922, Page 2

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~— — THE EVENING WORLD, SAT URDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1922, not erg em enee FIRST PICTURES SHOWING STATE OF RAVAGED SMYRNA® ENTRY TVORSISstH TROOFSs A French movie camera man, Frederick Fesneau, flanked with War Office credentials, was landed from a French cruiser at the waterfront of Smyrna while the city was still in flames and the wretched panic- stricken Greek and Armenian population was struggling to flee aboard the vessels in the harbor, wholly i orely-tried mind.camnot move swiftly enough, Mr. Stricker of Middlesex is in muoh the same frimo of mind. A few days ago he had to resign his post as campatgn manager for Judge Silzer, Democratic candidate for Gov ernor, because of crittclam of his po- liteal activities at a time when the Hfall-Mills case seemed to demand all )is time, Only yesterday he showed Nis sense that his activities in the murder case in an adjoining county ure an imposition, A South River woman wrote to him an angry letter that no action had beon taken by him against a neighbor who had stolen two ducks which were fattening for Thanksgiving in the backyard, Good heavens!" shouted Mf. Stricker, after reading the letter aloud to visitors im his office, “hasn't the news of the murders got to South River yet. What do they think we can do about ducks when we have thi¢ case on our hands. EDWARDS EXPECTED TO ACT IN INQUIRY. It 1# therefore apparent that,Gov Edwards will have not only public but official support in any measures which he may :takete end the, ced. herring fest which has made futile every effort by earnest and experi- enced students of orime to find out who killed the clergyman and Mrs. Mills. In spite of the opposition of Clit- ford Hayes and his family, plans for having a “Justice for Hayes Tag Day” are being carried out. Yoting Hayes refused to attend the mass meeting at the Landing Athletic Club to express its indignation over the acceptance of the authorities of the silly false accusafion made against him by Raymond Schneider. He sent his brother to James M, Houghton, the Chairman, to,ask that the meet- ing be cailed off and the tag day pro- gramme dropped, saying he would undertaks to pay, some time, any ex- penses which, bad been incurred, “It was a big thing for my friends nd the public to do,” sald the young man, “to come to the ald of a poor family in distress by injustice. While 1 was in jail and in peril of a false snurder charge it was all right. But 1 am out now. I havea job. Justice jas been done, as far as I am con- cerned. I don't relish the position of veiling made the subject for city-wide charity. Neither does my family. HAYES SAYS HE WILL NOT AC- CEPT MONEY. "If the committee is determined to so through with it T want it under. stood that the proceeds are going to ome public charity worthy of sup- pert and are not coming into my pocket or into that of any member of the Hayes family. We aren't any too well off, but we are abie to earn our livings. Detectives of the two counties are not altogether in sympathy with the desire of the Prosecutors to have somebody else take over the case. Mr, Beekman's investigator, Totten, said: “Pfeiffer can write forty letters for forty days in succession, They are not going to throw me off this case, I know where we are going and we are not going to be turned back by lette to the Governor."’ Detective Ferd David said: ‘It |s true that this case has been bungl-d But tho fault ts not in Middlerex County. The case did pot come into this office until noon of Monday, Sept, 18, forty-eight hours after the crime had been discovered, the Phillips farm jnad becn made a showground and the bodies carried off to Somerville. Nev- ertheless, we have gathered a lot of evidence that no amount of counter- attack can upset. We are not stumped. We are nearer to the truth every day than we have been the day before."’ EDWARDS PLANS APPOINTMENT OF REPUBLICAN, It is generally understood that Goy. Edwards has consulted with his friends in the effort to select a promt- nent Republican for the duty of Special Attorney General on the mur- der case, The Governor is sald to feel that such an appointment would take politics out of the matter, He had already been discussing this phase of the situation when he was told of Mr. Pfeiffer's letter before It had reached him through the mails. ‘The letter was as follows: “The vourse-of action pure ied vy tag Prosecutors of Midflesex and inadequate in numbers. Somerset Counties In the investigation of the murder of the Rev, Edward W. Hall and Mrs. anor R. Mills, ond particularly their course of action during the past week, compels me as the representative of Mrs. Hall and her family to bespeak your prompt intervention, “Whatever the situation may be in respect to your legal power to inte INTO SA RNA. wa He said he propriety of his wife's friendship with the out walks at night versation church music, Fesneau secured not only motion pictures of the terror-stricken throngs, but he penetrated far into the interior of the smoldering ruins. He pictured Turks attempting to check the flames with streams ot water, with the pressure barely suficing to drive twenty feet. He met the first ot the advance guard of the Turkish cavalry, riding making on her mother's memory. absolutely believed in the Rev. Mr. Hall, and saw nothing of the way in their taking long presumably their con- with literature and he said. nd scratches on the # dealt Policeman Ordered by Re rms Bruises 1. which Charlotte had exhibited as vene, surely the great office of Gor-|hiving eon made. by him, he #al ernor of New Jersey is invested With} must havo been the result of mis- Recorder Walter of the West Hc the moral power to bring about, through every means available to a treatment by somebody else. His only sovereign State, a thoroughly com-|Phvaical (ise wet easy plocked [Bounced another characteristic sente prehensive, intelligent and coherent] CeMUy, he sild, was wis § youths caught playing poker in the investigation of this hidcous crime,|the door to keep her from going out Such an investigation has not yet|With a man on an automobile rd The two engaged in a cut-throat been made, nor do the methods hith-|* erto employed by the present Prosc- cutors give promise that it ever will or can be made by them. CITES BUNGLING STUPIDITY OF COUNTY OFFICIALS. “The net result of their activities up to the present, so far as a solu- tion of the crime or the development of any cle reasonably locking toward its solution ts concerned, ts absolutely nil, but other results of far-reaching character abound. The atmosphere of New Brunswick ‘1s charged with every sort of rumor that political “ pressute, money, social prestige have been made use of by Mrs. Hall and her family to hindor and delay the administration of justice in this case, “In the mind. of the public Mra, Hall is held resPgusiBle for the pres- ept impossible: t0s@Hon of affairs— in truth it ts due to the bungling stu- Pidity. of the officials of the two counties. _And now the evil evidence 19 unmistakable that the authorities of the one county are at odds with the authorities of the other county, with the efforts of the State Troopers, anding between the two, rendered abortive. “Mrs. Hall and her family can- not longer maintain silence. To do so would be tacitly to admit the false accusations levelled against them and her. her brothers and all are now and have been from the beginning desirous of submitting to every test of their complete in- nocence which a thoroughly com- prehensive, intelligent and coher- ent investigation demands, “But if the investigation is to con- tinue im the hands of officials who cause an arrest for murder upon the accusation of an admittedly irrespon- sible person and then state that they are not Interested in whether the ac- cusation Is or is not true, neither Mrs. Hall nor any one else is free from the menace of official hysteria and tyranny. t "It t@ not pleasant for me to write as I have, for New Jersey is my own Native State and I share with Your Excellency the deepest respect for the traditional integrity of Its iustitutions of government. I cannot without pro- test see their integrity debased. I re- spectfully request, therefore, that, as Governor of the State. you take such action at once as may be necessary to cause the conduct of this tnvestigu- tion to be under the exclusive au thority and jurisdiction of a competent and fearless officer of the Sta’ who will not be subject to county limita. dione, political entanglements or petty disputes between rival detective forces but’ who will be of one mind and de termination to establish the truth and to bring the guilty to speedy jurtice Miss Florence M. North, attor- ney for fifteen-year-old Charlotte Mills, has evolved her own theory of the murder, which is new. She said she had reason to believe Mrs. Hall had known for a long time of her husband's friendship for Mrs. Mille “and never appeared in- censed about the mater until about a week before the murder, when she suddenly changed her atti- tude, Miss North's theory is that Mrs Mills was kidnapped and locked in the Phillips bam, while her asasilants Went out and got Hull, whom they took to join her in the barn, Accord- ing to Miss North's theory, the couple were then put In an automobile and shot at close range. Later, she thinks, they were taken to the place where they were found, and laid out under the tree, She declined to say whether she had any information on which to bas this theory James Mills, busband of — the choir singer, got very much ex cited to-day when he was told that hib sixteen-year-old daughter was making public complatnt that he was beating her and quarreling with her because of her rebellion over ‘are he 3 co e where she can no longer live in the sume home ports that he went to Mr. Stricker’s office to get an offictnl statement of the prosecutor's faith in the affection of Mills for the menrory of his dead wife. same for pennies were James Dohan of No, 325 Paterson Avenue and Nicholas Ferranti of No. 417 Lake Street, both West Hoboken. “IT don't want to put you two in Jail," the Recorder said, ‘‘because I've a better idea of dealing with you I sentence you both to go to night school every night for the remainder of the winter." This was obviously not to the liking of the prisoners and their attitude led Recorder Walter to believe they might try to evade service. He thought a moment and then added: “I think I'll send a policeman with you to make sure you're enrolled.”” So he called a policeman and in- structed him to take Dohan and Fer- at 10 o'clock at night. Charlotte, on the other hand, de- ea that she has reached the point with him. Mills was #0 exercised by the re- a BARROW DENIES $10,000 RUTH FINE Ed, Barrow, Business Manager of the New York. American League Club, when questioned concerning a story published to-day to the effect that Babe Ruth was fined $10,000 for breaking training rules during the sea- son just closed, said there was no truth in the yarn. “Ruth,” sald Mr. Barrow,‘*whether he failed to deliver up to expectations or cannot be accused of giving not, other than his best efforts to his club at all times this season, In fact, the real trouble with Ruth was that he corporation, this congregation, wh West Hoboken Youths for Winter. the unique sentences he imposes upon culprits brought before him, MRS. WILSON WOODROW'S NEW THEORY PUTS THIRD WOMAN IN HALL MYSTERY NA AFTER ERE. mostly on mules, which poured into the city in vast numbers a few hours after its capture, sacking and burning by the Turkish infantry. The Evening World's photographs of these scenes, made by this intrepid photographer, shown here, are the first actually made in _the city Itsolt i its ROUTE) OtRCEE of horror and bloodshed, and he was often ez under fire. Fesneau made this daring expedition on behalf of the Fox Film Corporation of New York, and by arrangement the pictures appear ex- clusively in The Evening World before release to the news motion pictures. Misc eel nS USEF corder to Enroll Reluctant IS LLOYD GEORGE WORD 10 BRITISH pro- :pon two nineteen-yearold Mar Declares His Policy Brought the Emerson High Schoo} Peace in Near East When »boken Police Court, who is known for ence to-day street. rantl to and place them in the hands of Jar Th jool Superintendent Albert 0, War Threatened. Smith. The boys went out with re- Oo luctant feet, but they'll be at school on Monday night. MANCHESTER, Oct. ated Press),—In Prime Minister Lloyd GIBBONS’S FATHER George's speech to the Liberals of the Manchester Reform Club this noon, the Premier devoted near! hour to a defense of his Near E policy and to ridicule of his critics. d} In a brilliant peroration, 14 (Assocl- after- DIES IN ST. PAUL ST. PAUL, Minn., Oct. 14.—Thomas Gibbons sr., father of Mike and ‘Tommy Gibbons, St. Paul's famous boxers, d at his home here yesterday after a long illness. He was seventy-two years old. News of Mr. Gibbons’s death was with- held until after Billy Miske-Tom Gibbons boxing New York | lust night. an stern recalling his services to the nation, he said: cast myself on the peopl ause T never have betrayed them." “We have not been war but peace makers,"’ he said. “The war of 1914 practically began in the Balkans. We had to promptly, resolutely and firmly. 1914 the Turks, according to official testimony, have slaughtered 00,000 the match bes at mongers act Since in cold blood 1, Armenians and 500,- (Continued.) ich stands, the public 8 to recust our policy. We have made murmurs * ie the murder tried to make up the handicap of the thirty-eight-day. suspension imposed upon him by K, M. Landis, Commis- sioner of Baseball, In spite of this handicap the leading batters of both major ing th honors. GINGER ALE, 50.000 CASES OF IT. REAL THING; HO WHE (Continued) concerned, with finger on lip and is so much as mentioned. really go on with the story unless I talked about in the church on the they met the next day. I should begin my story with man to take charge of a wealthy rumor, fallen in love with a girl heiress smiled on him, and ambitlo! xehool teacher was broken; have been aware of his power to a proof of it, and ther Women of empty Jeagues had a hard time beat- Babe out tor the home-run lives are end women are rarely interested good-looking clergyman and consolation, with nted the Eastman Springs Har- ale they repre Beverage Company hor, manufacturers of Benton have the musical temperament, w of ginger read, no such person us Beaver associated ing eyes. She nerved herself to st needed refinancing, This forged c tract was used in the refinancin Several prominent persons in Lenton Harbor and Cincinnati put up $150,- 000. We were told that the who made the forgery had co: but had not been pr ted," the eyes of a neurotic woman, mania, who believed, with or witho the place in Dr, Hall's heart that had, or imagined she had, philanderings that she knew for a the rector and Mrs, Mills? person weed using original way bills, and mutilation, I would hear some of the gossip that goes on behind closed doors and shuttered windows, when a few ered together and they feel quite secure from intrusion, after he exerte emotions, they yearn to talk of them, not to other women, of cours in thelr breathe them Into the sympathetic, celve spiritual and secular advice and a warm accompanying hand that is color, that Is food for dreams. Was it remarkable that the emotionally-starved Mrs. found the beauty she longed for in the lights, the music, the ritu Ithagine the emotions of the wi standing silent there in the shadow, always a little in the shadow, They said the company had made no} {ooking on. contract for the delivery of ginger ale She did not take the affair serlously at first; to us and declared that the supposed her husband, he would soon tire of contract bore the forged sixnuture of | woman, And then, as the intimacy between the two became mor Earl H. Cummins, their chemist, and] rant, she winced with pain, Her dignity was affronted. purported to have been signed for us part In the various activities of the by one George B, Beaver. There is | cye was on her to see how she bore a woman with a tendency enjoyed those secret meetings, She mingled with others In the and we have succeeded.’ A little further on the Prime Minister sic “It there is to be a there Is no man who would I have had y hard one. If the best of it of the church members are gath- And I couldn't knew what Mrs, Hall and Mr. Mills night of the murder, and also when change, me it more than L a ve a long spell and love freedom, ‘There are a lot of rt was restored. He besought the} apne will of Nathan Blyn, the firm the rector coming as a poor young things I want to say. people to bow to the word of the rae 7 . cuutedturar ctor as a poor yo! “ ee years aga su s to iS and mgke no more demo o! yn, Inc., shoe m e rs, congregation, He had, according to Three years ago I was anxious to] Archbishop and mgke no more demon- go out and begged Mr. Bonar Law to r own living. arning And then B uiteat Qiks subenemanl With the take ne ome. He declined, 1 never) Father Hialdyga managed to get tol tast, was filed for probate ‘»-day by 8 e eve s the motor c re ak he miarried the heiress. Already he must |S°¥8ht the position, I never wished} the motor ca Jonas & Neuberger of No. 115 Broad- to retain it, but I will serve my} ‘The crowd surged toward hjm ttract women, but this was the final : . pane ; country in any capacity.” ne appeared in his doorway and for a| way d it more consciously. rr ormously interested in thelr complex I shall watch many things,’’ he] time it seemed that the police and Mr.| Dated June 12 last, it leaves the eX | added, shall watch to see how|Wazeter would have all their work tol ontents of the residence, No. 280 . i we are to forgive rmany her repa-|do ov in. It was with the great- z 2 sisters soul struggles—but to tages forgive Gormany hen! papan|ing.c West 105th Street, his automobiles and rations more we are we owe country “It nd yet make France love us 1 shall watch to pay the United S her and forgive eve all they owe us be understanding ear of a charming, than ever. how es call y other asp; t is drama, Mills, who 1 of the will an interesting experi- ment,’’ the Premier said, “to sce the chureh, should feel her admiration for the rector merged in desire, t a ; ° eee ae na sath ton the alan? And) the stat evidently eaicnsd the work’ of others. ‘That is one of the| ring Father Biuldyga from the par-}becomes part of the residuary estate, de d y e a Nata 1h BtOrd ish After minor bequests ot relatives | a ion, They danced together, he gave her books, they sang togethe: joys I have in store. . ‘ | Visited by three men who gave the reipenerpalie Re ah ah Gait. Limonene (reat mane: ida “] have many friends among the| Up to three years ago the Rev.]and employes, the residue is divided | numes of H. M. Smith, William P. ne end these conferences led, through the early autumn twilight, aa | Conservatives and Liberals, and I cast|John H. Strezclecki was irremovable| into seven parts,, two of which are be- | Carroll and E. A, Goddard, who said | &"°° > ‘ i es myself on the people whose cause 1] pastor of St. Stanislaus’s Church. But] queathed to Rose Levoinson, two to far as Buecleugh Park. peor ife, who did not dance, who did not |N@Ve never betrayed during thirty-two ho had no books marked forher to |» Hie has not yet recovered r," continued the Prime Minister, ‘“That recovery will be slow and tedious. My course is a clear one, I will support any government that devotes itself to measures which will not inflict permanent injury upon the country, whether those me: are reactionary or revolutionary urs of public Phe world from the w women alwa: this insignificant, admired ordinary little lag- When she took church she was conscfous that every it, pitying eyes, scornful eyes, mock- and it, she would endure everything, sures with us. ignore everything, rather than create e scandal, The Premier had prefaced this vy| “We made an investigation and She had made this man pro: mally, given him money, travel, the | ‘declaring: ‘The future is a perplex- learned that James Pugh was Presi-| power to gratify his tastes, She had cushioned life with down for him |!98 one. I shall claim no personal or dent of the Eastman Company and| and lived to advance his fortunes, and this was her reward, The agony | Party sain.’ owner of a number of springs in| was that she could not show hev despair, She must, at any cost, hide the “T place the national security and Michigan, We learned that a bott wound that was eating like a cancer at her heart. prosperity in front of the Interests concern had been organized But among all those eyes upon Mrs, Hall, and also upon the rector |"¥body, and T mean to abide by my ten into” financial dimeutt and Mrs. Milla, might there not have been a pair, fierce position,” said the Premier in con and desperate, toward erotic ut foundation, that she had once held Mrs, Mills now occupied—wl either those gay fact were now taking place between “If 1am driven into the wil- pall reeall with pride that been able, with the assistance loyal colleagues in the dark hours of this country's history, to render it no mean service.”” ‘ a cluding rT usual way, without giving a sign att tas Hush Te minal it aid} of her burning anger and resentment, brooding over tt until she was |SCOTCH PLAINS CHURCH hut the record showed the consign- sensed of a fanatical passion to destroy the ment 10 have tien sont by the Beste| Resend our her throat, TDG NOH MOA SE SBS BRN TO MARK 175TH YEAR man Company to be held subject. te Might she not have confessed the wrongs, fancied or real, she had 5 its own omer for later delivery to the| suffered at the rector's hands, to some man near to her, who, believing The First Baptist Church of Scotch American Drnggists Syndt in the unwritten law, fired the bullets that killed Dr. Hall and Mrs, | Plains, N, J., will celebrate its 175th Mr. Pugh was quoted in Chicago] Mills? A man, @ good slot, fired those bullets, but it was a woman who |anniversary to-morrow. despatches as saying that rl ot tore Mrs. Mills's arm and cut her throat and then made the man help When the Baptist Church of Scotch Cummins, whose name was forged, her lay out the bodies. It was a woman who placed the eyeglasses Plains was founded In 1747 there was no is nephew of Senator Albert 1 meticulously on {he rector's nose, laid his Land on Mrs, Mills's shoulde: regular Baptist Church in New ‘York Cummins of Towa The Chicago} and put his visiting card beside him City, the Ei pgs Nea lap Pet ee theory was that both Cummins and These actions b only one Interpretation and the mystery will be hte gt Nw(papsien tke Rey, anna Gee Pugs might be victims of a plot to] solved, if at all, in the Nght of that Dterprota tion and im he disclosure |yan, who catne from Scotch Pluins to substitute whiskey for the ginger aie vf the woman who condemn: tog to death and Mrs, Mills to death |New York to administer communion and baptize once every querter, 000 Greeks without any provocation at : all. from clearing the street, which we “I did not improvise the policy. 1] completely blocked that th r car inherited it. The ugreements were! sin, nad come to tuk : entered into before ever 1 became} WMH Bad come to take a Prime Minister. I am not blaming] “ysa to the railway station to begin anybody for anything in which I do] his Journey to his new post at Kings not tuke part myself. We have had] ton, N, SvamUnabIo to) wal anys PARISHIONERS MOB |MITCREL TROPHY POLICE PROTESTING) WON BY STANGE IN PRIEST'S REMOVAL} 300 H.P. AIRPLANE® — = Object to Archbishop’s Ac-| Winner Kept Av Average of 148 tion Taking Him From Miles an Hour—Pulitzer Seventh St. Church. Race Later. aa A crowd of hysterical men, women MOUNT CLEM . Mich., Oct. 14 and children blocked enth Street] —Lieut. Donald F. Stange of Grand between First Avenue and Avenue A] Rapids, Mich., flying a Thomas-Morse this morning, defying half a dozen] MB-3 plane, powered with a 300- policemen to remove them from the] horsepower Wright motor, won the neighborhood of St. Stanislaus's Po-| George 1. Mitchell trophy race Yor? lish Roman Catholic Church, where} machines of the first pursuit group they had gathered in protest against] sationed at Selfridge's 1 to-day. the order of Archbishop Hayes re-| ane cyent was held asa preliminary moving the pastor, the Rev. Ignac: to the classic Pulitzer trophy race, Vialdyga, us when it was found necessary to post~ With all their strength they clung pone the start of the latter contest to the railings about the church, fore- | until the afternoon. ng the police to use extreme measures] Lieut. Stange meintained an average of 148 miles an hour around the course of 200 kilometers. Capt. 0. W. Boberg, also stationed at Selfridge Field, and driving a similar plane, finished second. The trophy was offered Gen. William Mitchell, Chief of the Army Air memory of his brother, killed in France FORFEITS INCOME IF SHE RE-WEDS Mrs. Blynn Would Lose $150,000 of Trust Fund. ¢ o get them away. ind fell to the sidewe Women fainted Ik, others flung themselves down, moaning and erying. Men struggled to prevent the police which was so by Brig. Assistant! Service, in who was motor car Biai her where near the church. For blocked ter, hours the street It was not until Leon W editor of the Ku Polish newspaper, thre three wus yer Narodowy, urrive that and got the ear of the unything like who died at Rockaway Park, tion. ‘Then a way was cleared and Sept. 1 that and drove owd hung t went in t which the pastor gained off. Long about est difficulty his automobile afterward the ¢ chureh and at arranged m: decided to appeal < yes to revoke the income from a trust fund of $200, - Amy Biyn. In case she ),000 of this fund reverts to his residuary estate, but If she does not, on her death the trust the] 00 to lis widow, hastily re-marries $15 Ha his order tr Henry Blyn, No, 112 Cathedrla Park= one each te Eva Currickgs Riverside Drive, Hannah’ 70 Riverside Drive, and h.| Jacob Blyn, brothers and sisters of ured | the decedent. No provision {s made parish-| for an adopted daught er,Clara Blyn Meth, No, 215 West 92d Street.. at that time death rem him and ceeded by lather Bialdyga latter, Who is more than six feet a vigorous churchman, soon in the paris poor end his he w and The tall bee: way, Stoff, and me highly His work among him particularly joners. But the jmemory ticularly popular the among was a small faction church which still clung to the of Father Strezelecki, par- in view of certain comments there in ——————— EE O.6.0. ADAMS—EDWARD NM. CAMPBELL FU- they claimed Father Bialdyga had] NERAL CHURCH, Broadway, 68th st made upon the work of his prede- Notice later cessor. CORTELYOU.—CHARLOTTE, Campbet This small coterie eventually ap-] Funeral Church, b'way, 6th, Bat., 10 AM, pealed to Archbishop Hayes for the ner of haher hy. ————EEE—_"_—_ other side at once made its protest against any such action and tf months the church was in a state ei! turmoil. Then came the orders of the Notice to Advertisers Archbishop and word that Father Display adrerising type copy and release ordete Bialdyga would be succeeded by | tor cline “une’ week day Morning’ World ot “he Father Lesniewski. ig World TH received after 4. Ml. the day As to-day was Father Bialdyga's ert last day, the protesting parishioners gathered at 7 o'clock this and tn order of receipt World ore containing engrerisigs to be Bade by he World must be recelred by 1 Be Me Morning |" Diepiay advertising, tye copy for the supple, And for three hours held their ground. | ment secuons vot “ene Munday World must It was said later to-day that they Retired byt Pe ys Teueday_ precwiing, vabileee intended to boyeott the church to re- | Frida Copy aining emeravings to bo mad fuse to pay thelr church and parochial | 8 THe World must be received by Thursday B00R, school dues and thus financiatly em~| gop ™pday Main Sheet copy. tine copy, which Nag barrass the institution ORY partic a nok, been reoel ———- | pn arders Det geet’ by To-day is your last chance to! the onder of later, “sesinn and bo a register. Polling places open from 7 | *)yr copy or orders released later than ka when omitted will not serve ‘ot "any’ character, ‘coutract oF othebe THE WORLDe i ded abiore discou A.M. until 10,30 P. M. You cannot) on Election Day unless you are | sls ‘ered, vote regi

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