The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1922, Page 1

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Calls for Revision of Treaties and Modification of Ger- man Reparations Demands. EGYPT INDEFENDENC Es Proposes Also That India Be Granted Full Self Gov- ernment. LONDON, Oct 26 Press).—* manifesto of Party issued this ev :ing advocates removal of the burden of the natior debt through the creation of a ‘ debt redemption fund by a sp gr-fuated levy on fortunes exceeding £5,000." It further declares for the re of the Peace Treaty and German Reparations, for an international con erence to arrange the freedom of th Straits, for independence in. Egypt and self-government in India The manife says that labor w mot penalize tt ut that It Tequire some restitution from tt profitee: I made in the war. miand values also is advocated The manifesto is signed by mem bers of the ex party dec! tion and says "Labor's the bulwark against a heava! and class wur “A Democrati made effective in t loodshed or violence," the manif, wyS. f the Labor Part ommittee. T! mme | ernment can be 8 country without to bring distribut 2 quitabl of the Nation's wealth t constitutional means. This is neitt Bolshevism nor Communism, but common sense justice.’ The m&nifesto recognizes the urgent need of lifting the dead burden « national debt from the country and industry, ‘LIPTON WILL. TRY. FOR CUP IN 1924 Thinks Mug Should Go Where It Can Be Filled. CHICAGO, Oct. 2 Sir Thomas Lipton intends to challenge for the America’s Cup again tn 1924. Sir Thomas, vis- iting here, said his de trieve the yacht cup as ever. “] think it would be fitting to take the old mug back to where it can be satisfactorily flled,"’ ho said. ' re to re- as str ng To-Night’s Weather—FAIR. WALL STREET E vai dh TION VOL. LXII. NO. 22, HES DENE Che [“ Circulation Books Open | to All,”’ Copyright, (New York World) by treme Publishing Company, 1922. ENGLISH LABOR DECLARES FOR TAX ON FORTUNES OVER $9,000 10 PAY WAR DEBTS. LLOYOWARREN IS KILLED BY FALL our HOTEL WIND in Central Park West ‘BATTLE TO REGAN OFFIGE STARTED BY LLOYD GEORGE y; England Must Pay Debt to U.S Press).—Dav! RE Parliiment this morning, di that in the coming elections the interests cf the y must come first. the Coalition Government which he fterward cond Page.) It was decided that Mr. 13 CHILDREN IN 5 YEARS THIS MOTHER'S RECORD; ° HAD 19 IN TEN YEARS] “edica! © t for Narces. 25.—Five two sets of twins have been born to Mr. and Frank Scott In ten years of The Scotts, parents @ children, to-day train in of thirteen Iv employment for the whole family. . four and a half years old; | w , three and a : Allen, Almon and Allon, two Albert and The father s: to go through the alpha- Alley. SAY SUICIDE. POLICE Whitney, Warren Insists His Brother Accidentally Fell From Window. yd Warren, head f the Institut of Fine Arts, a rich and distinguished : : ron of the arts, an architect, and Outlines] samen be waite Warren, also an hitect of interna’ al ute, was nd dead this morning In the de- ivery alleyway to the west of the sotel in which he had lived at No. 1 Vest 64th Street. His body was discovered clad onl en-| 0 a patr of silk pajamas. The police eported it as a case of suicide, in he belief that Mr. Warren had leaped rom a window of his apartment on ie sixth floor. But Whitnoy Warren eclared his conviction that his rother had fallen from the window uring one of the attacks of diasiness o which he had been subject since ly last summer neMeld Farms usual Cosittion Referring motor accident tn I A driver Dairy wagon, delivering the morning's milk at the hotel, dis- covered the body huddled In the alley- way. He called Fred Williams, jani- tor of the house next door, No. 9 West 64th, and they notified the hotel fter-war y then management. Warren's death had occurred three or four hours\before the body was fou! Dr. Thomas A. Gonzales, Assistant aminer, stated later at the ated the nothing Morgue, that he had investi Five of }cace c to Go there whatever to warrant the that death was due to sulci “The window from which Mr. War ren fell,’ said Dr. Gonzales, ‘is one that I almost fell from myself in mak- s the investigation. The sill is only ont i 18 inches from the floor and in ¢ of it is a low window seat. I { t Mr. Warren may have ope window for air or leaned out, bu am confident the fall was acel- J, Word was at once at Street, and at Ob which the t “T am sure my window," Mr. provide t to Whitne er and had been carried. brother fel! from his arren suid summer, lon Abel Tunder re h over some rough stones and and the ng violently the roof of the cut an eight-inch gash in d caused him afterward children's n periodic spells of dizzl “A. ine Although the wound occurred ast summer, it had not yet completely healed. 1 am sure my » would not British Government Tae British Parliament {5 to take Dec. 6. The ne Constitution came up to treaty was the grandest thing which battie of Kinsale Dail Eireann Passes Bill For Irish Constitution): 8 Free State Agreement, According to Its Terms, Must] « Be Acted Upon by British Parliament, On Dec. 6. es DUBLIN, Oct. 25.—The Dail Eireann to-day passed the Irish Constitu-| ¥*Y tion Bill, which {s the ratification of the Irish Free State Treaty with the action on the Free State lay for its third reading. John Milroy, one of the Deputies, declared that the adoption of the had happened in have killed himsel tely. He r-plenty 0 money which omnambulista and 1 know up in bed talk 8 sleep of the motor accident n Italy, It is possible he may have ed to the window In his sleep. 1 {3 only knee high and It may he walked to his death in that ing tn b My brother entert evera friends st dinner ! night in nis i and intended to have Treaty on since the O. E. CROMWELL SUES FOR DIVORCE Former IN PARIS COURTS Miss Beale and Husband Separated Last September. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 25.—Oliver Eaton Cromwell eldest son of Mrs. EB. <. action formerly was Stotesbury, as started a Mivorce in Paris against his wife, who Miss Hope Truxton Beale of Strafford. James the H. R. Cromwell, a brother of has confirmed the report of it. The couple have been living apart since last September, und the court's decision In Paris ts expected this month. It ts action reflect either stated the allegations in the contain ‘‘nothing that would on the moral character of party." The couple are sald te have decided last Junuary they must part and {t was rt first under. stood Mrs. Cromwell would start tho Cromwell self. The five years MISS failed to do so and Mr, coup 4 sca, Eaton jr., —<o____ MELLON TO WED FATHER’S AID, REPORT {s Only Daughter of Secretary of WASHINGTON, Oct were current In 80 day that announc soon of th President Harding's ‘ Miss the her fathei Treasury. ~ Reports es here to- i be made ance within binet Family,"" Alisa Mellon, only daughter of retary of the Treasury, !s to wed tant, S. Parker Gilbert, Una cretary of the Treas according to the reports. The offices of both Mellon and Gilbert to-day de clined to say regarding the reports. be at the Mellon ¢ ummer home in Massachu Mellon, helr to one of the country, Is twenty t He !s Admin ned by Me ge of Treasury of Harvard, [Real Estate Ads. — FOR THE — Sunday World To MUST be in The World Office FRIDAY Before 6 P. M. Insure Proper Classification EYE-WITNESS KNEW MAN SHOT WAS HAL AND IDENTITY OF WOMAN WITH SLAYE Inte Voxt Of Wad. gRLS i iF ACCUSED SEERYLAN, HEAR IN BERGEN MURDER ABOUT VERMOUTH) RESTS WITH JURY Budget Hearing Sounds Like Bartenders’ Convention to High School Pupi CAME TO STUDY CIVICS Stewart Browne Charges Budget Is $31,000,000, Not $11,000,000 Bigger. Fifty Wadlelgh High Sch all serious students of civics and proud of their city, uttended a Bourd ot Es.imate meeting tn City Hall to day. They wanted to look upon the face of the Mayor and learn how he and his Board of Estimate managed to mate up the tremendous budget of $361,000,000. It was a great mo- ment in their young lives as they grouped themselves in the front row seats and watched the austere look- sn members of the board file tm “What a terrible responsibility those officials must have," exclaimed one girl in a stage whisper. But hush! Mayor Hylan was seated and he was tajking. Was he talking about tne budget to these knowledge-thirsty girls, whose ages averaged about thirteen? No, he wes discus: “J Ktails. He and the whole for every member present took a ralp or two of the conversation. ‘The question has come up here and we might as well settle tt right now," began the Mayor. “It fs this Is Vermouth used for medicinal pur- poses. That Ia, is it used for medicine ajone By this time the high school girls were looking at one another {n blank amazement. “I Juess,” said an onlooker, “those kids think they've stumbled by mis- take ints an ex-bartenders' conven- tion.” “A cocktall without Vermouth is something like a cigar without a natch,” sald Bronx Borough Presi- tent Bruckner, who qualifies as ronnoteseur, depsite the fact that manufactures 50°. wat “But,” persisted “fayc physicians recommend Do they recommend Ver tails?" ewart Browne, re} United Real Estate Own 1 girls, Hylan. “D, Vermout! routh (Continued on Fourth Page.) suisse ee heeet PENN TO PAY 4 PER © PHILADELPHIA, Oct vania Railroad to-day terly dividend of 1 mayable Nov. 1, Since May. paid has been 1 F been reduced from long e per cent. per annum rate May Consider Guilt of De- fendants Individually, Judge Instruc CLINE R *M AINS STOLID. Motion fae Aseatal of Thornton Girl and Scul- lion Denied. (Special F-om a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) HH.‘ CKE.SACK, N. J, Oct. 23.— The case of George F, Cline, Alice Thornton and Charles Scullion, charged with the murder of Jack Ber- gen 0. Aug. 25, was given to the jury of six men and six women, with Miss uean A. Squire, twenty-three-year- stenogkrapher, as foreman, n the Bergen County Court by Jus- tice Parker at 1 o'clock Justice Hart in his instructions told the jury that In arriving at a verdict it might constder the three defendants sollect!vely or indfvidually. Only one witness was introduced by the deferse after court wus convened, Capt. James P. Egan, formerly of the United States Pleld Artillery, testity- ing he had taught Bergen to trcome an expert in the use of a 45 Cu! au- tornatic in 1918, when Bergén was a soldier, Cline, too, testified Hergen had a Colt pistol in the strugie in Cline's home after the two men had gone upstairs to “fight it out lke men,” following Bergen's adm! he had attacked Mrs. Cline In rebutuui, the prosecution intr luced statements signed the day after the shooting by the three defendants As the case rapidly approached {ts conclusion, Cline maintained t stolidity of manner characteristic him throushout the proceedings ex cept When be was op the stand, Mi Thornton sat very quietly, with o hand pres nst chee staring at th bi i} n’s £ wandered over the reom and (Continued on Sevond age CURB MARKET SEAT SOLD FOR $11,000, NEW RECORD Increase of $1,000 Over Previoun High est Sule \ membership In the New York Curb Market to-day sold for $11,000, an iner of $1,000 over the lust Previous sale anc ng a new high record for Cur bership Th seat sold was that of E iL Weiner to G. &, Goodric Offices of Borough Presidents To Cost $12,685,923 Above 1917 Explanations Fail to Account for Swarms of Em- ployees Whose Work Overlaps. The cost of the operations of boroughs for 1923 is $12,685,923 mi total costs were $8,883,351. The proposed budget for 1923 appropriates|™" sped down Wyckoff Struet an "Wher *re to $21.56! 4, und th r into Hin er ; oughs have been Manhattan re Tote) ...... . $5.68: 2 B51,569.284 When the various former cit villages were cor now New York ¢ arguments indu @ unified Gove penses. But the Borough G ments are costing much more tha Government costs betore consoli tut and this expense is in addition to t A FORD A DAY GIVEN AWAY the offices of Presidents of the five gyre than in 1917. Ip that year the Borough Pre great increase of expe partments is due to th new activities E sewer programmes. enha fuel, material and oth Bu they do not explain t t payrol ure crowded wit warms of The Evening World Daily Prize Until Nov. Ist For “What Did You See To-Day >” Ticihsiows wi ther-FAIR; COOLER. PRICE THREE CENTS as Second-Clans Matter foe, New York, N. W, AFFIDAVIT OF EYE-WITNESS HINTS IDENTITY OF SLAYER: NAMES WOMAN COMPANION Sworn Statement of Mrs. Gibson Reveals She Knew Rector and Also Protesting Voice— Prosecutor Mott Says He Will Not Wait.on Jury and Arrest May Come at Any Hour. Man in Congregation, and Not Relatives of Rector, Reported to Have Sought Proofs of Affair After Mrs. Mills Rejected Advances- Singer Also Suspected Telephone Tapper. (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Oct. 25.—Mrs. Jane Gibson, in her affidavit ‘made after her examination with other witnesses here a week ago last Monday, said she recognized the woman who cried out by name in remonstrance to the man who shot down the Rev. Mi Hall and Mrs. Mills. She also swore that before the shooting began she recognized the Rev. Mr. Hall Whether she recognized the man who did the shooting before or after a number of other persons whose names have been mentioned were shown to her cannot be certainly established. In her statement, however, if it is accepted as true, 1s a practical identification of the man who actually fired the suots. ~# Special Prosecutor W. A. Mott after Special Investigator Mason had re State troopers who have obtained new information had gone to their com mander, Col. Schwartzkopf, in Tren ton, to request orders to act, said We are likely to make an arrest at any time now. I have more which was done before | wsa calle: into the cas re hage been some discoveries since Escape in Auto Auto After Bullet Goes Through Brooklyn Man's Coat. “Are you going to take the ca fore the Grand Jury? he wa “Certainly I am, But rrest he replied I have the nerve to make an as soon as I believe IT am right with ‘Two men who held-up the jewelry store of Herman Kamen at No. 150 Wyckoff Avenue, near Ridgewood in he outskirts of Brooklyn, shortly b out waiting for the Grand Jury And I shall do so. The attention of the local inquirer to-day has been directed to find o'clock this afternoon, fired one} reasonable explanation for the pres Het and fled when Mrs. Lena Seigel, |ence of part of a bunch of letters troo Avenue, walked |Mrs. Mills to Mr, Hall on their bodies nto the store and surprised them Vestryman Ralph V. M. Gorsline the sauve, imperturbable vestrymar The bullet, apparently directed at|o¢ st. Joun's, who knows m : Mrs. Siegel, missed her but rippedfof the complicated relations of the eater-| Minister and communicants of tt ehureh and tells less about them o this time—than any other robbers obtained no booty ex-[the fist 5 Stank through the sleeve of the coat Kar ir cept a $50 stickpin one of them pick was wearing by Mr, Mott when he returns Somerville to-morrow from a showease. They ran across Both Prosecutors er at the street und leaped into an automo-! yeckman have rep ae ey bile, at the wheel of which a waitins | Mr, Gorsline. They cannot get aw chauffeur sat. A fourth man, act | ‘rom the bellef that he has heard ERPS ore than he has told regar ding what kout, joined them from tt k in front of the ; store and Capt, Dan Ca Williams burg detective ent out a general alarm, with a deseripion of the men a ° ted” ade umber o Kamen was alone whe nthe two jetp Wanted” Ads. in Sestember be ppeare One asked to 1HE WORLD 94,040 acs watch and when Kamen move the Times. 13,862 acs 1 the window the other poked be American 7.419 acd tolat hie and told him:to hola he Herald + 8,317 ad. moment, M he Tribu 311 x his hand At tha Sele aiked through the door to Iu quire about repairs to a hn | | HE WORLD'S majority 67,131 ads had left. Kamen moved fens himself. The gunman fired the September flight « War * Ads. Were See Page, 23 | | |

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