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\ : THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER f, {9%%, Girl, 5, Who Fell Under ‘L’ Train Exhibits Bruises to Playmates MAYORDEFENDS As Only Hurtin Thrilling Escape Danced Near Edge of Platform, Waiting for Papa, Slipped and Two Cars Passed Over Her While Onlookers Screamed. Ida, five, daughter of Luigi Cianctose of No. 4435 Third Avenue, Bronx, to-day has only a few bruises to exhibit as she tells her playmates of her thrilling adventure in falling under a Third Avenue “L” train at the Bast 180th Street Station. Two cars passed over her, too, she@———————————————————————— tells them, truthfully enough, and only an abrasion of the scalp and marks upon her face and hands serve as reminders of the big thrill she got when she slipped and the heavy train thunaered over her body, while scores of onlookers screamed, Ida and her brother, Umba, go to the "L” station to meet their father every night. Last night they had been waiting for some time when a train pulled tn. “I know papa will be on this train,” Ida sang as she danced about the platform in delight. The train was but a few feet from her when she danced too near the edge of the platform. She slipped. The song was frozen in her throat and cries of alarm rose as she vanished Over the edge under the train. Motorman Charles Kirkman of No. 2174 Lexington Avenue saw her and jammed on the brakes hard that passengers were thrown from their eeats, Then he crawled under the third car, expecting to find a mangled corpse. He found a very much alive | henceforth will not be allowed to meet but very frightened girl of five, who|her father at the ‘L’’ station. PROF. TOMPKINS, COHALAN’S LOUDEST BOOSTER, ALSO HIS FAVORITE. APPOINTEE counting on the special administrator, Pas ship when the records were, examin record appears there has either been| but he did draw §8,750 in fees from no report br no feb is shown. he eleven estates in which he made Date. Estate, Fee. | a report, as follows: $1 Jennie 8 Godkin 8 & reporter that Inst week, Se se;-=2) TRANSIT AND PROHBITION DECLARATIONS IN SPEECHES man minutely and asserts he sald — ‘hy don’t you shut up. You will well paid for it. You can make more money lining up against the than you can by helping Mrs. Gibson said she ordered him the place, went to the telephone, ‘@alied up Mr. Mott and told him of “the stranger's proposal. The next @ay, Mr. Mott gave out his statement hat he know the source of the active nda to discredit Mrs. Gibson's testimony. WHY MRS. GIBSON DID NOT TELL ALL AT FIRST. According to Mrs, Gibson, she first »’old Detective Totten of what she had none Sept. 14 on the Phillips farm on lept. 20, but that he did not go to see her or send for her. She repeated the attempt to tel) the story when Clifford ) Hayes was arrested on the false accu ®ation of Clarence Schneider, and was | again {gnored She was not called before Prosecu- er Beekman Oct. 14. She quarrelled with the Prosecutor because he ridt- ——- euled her story of having seen the] Former Gov. Smith apeake to-night] Gov. Miller spaake to-night at “woman in gray" in “the basement of}in the Academy of Music, in|Claremont Rink, Brooklyn, and at $t. John’s.” There is no basement] Brooklyn, Mayor Hylan will preside. | Cooper Union. ‘assembly room in St. John’s, nor have - Tummage sales been held by that con- At the largest meeting ever held in Gov. Miller may be re-elected and { Gresation. bias ae iycelta aged Tammany Hall, former Gov. Alfred} yet Mayor Hylan's head be allowed to rummage sales in the Pitman Meth-] pe smith 5 30 BR dist Church at George and Oliver| sr ls into Gov, Miller last biel where {t ts, on hin two broad Streets !ast January or February. y hen it is said that it was|shoulders. That's what the Governor Because of Mr. Beekman’s hostile | * largest mecting ever held tn Tam- | {ntimated last night, but he didn’t say attitude she did not tell bim the rest} many, it should be explained that|it in tones convincing enough to send of the story of returning to the farm/ Tammany has been just after midnight. ‘This she told to De-lnerore on rare occasions ed tient ball ewe Et A tectives David and Totten when they ese | out on the war path for the scalp of ‘went to see her four hours after she] 8% When Croker led William Jen-| Big Chief Al, or to start John Me- had left Mr. Beekman, nings Bryan into the Wigwam in 190¢,]Cooey and his Brooklyn forces on a That Thursday evening after Mrs.|and Bryan, who had to wear his over-|rush to the polls Nov. 7 with Miller Gibson's report to Mr. mote a re coat in New York four years befora| ballots. Trooper appeared at the Hall home and pete to see a detective who is oe, oe the political frost glowed} The Governor was in fighting armor \ Fetained by Mr, Pfeiffer. The trooper when he saw the crowd. He}at the big meeting in the Bronx, was told the detective had gone to| Spread out his hands ike a minister|where Richard W. Lawrence is the New York. Mr. Pfeiffer was asked] prououncing a benediction, and said: |leader of the Republicans,’ and his * sscninc tiger ed a aaniraee “Great Is Tammany and Croker is its} words aroused the greatest enthus!- eenoon. Prophet.” But at that meeting, where} asm. Gov. Miller swung a broadaxe After the interview with the prose-| they hung onto the rafters for the|into the questions of former Gov. Peerless One, the hall did not turn| Smith and carved out new questions away ten thousand unable to gain|of his own for the former Governor admission or hold two overflow]to answer. cin He said that Mayor Hylan had as gutor’s detective, George Mason, Mr. Pfeiffer said: “1 emphatically and unequivocally deny that I or any one connected with me or any employee of Mrs. Hal) or @members of ah abies sine yond much of a chance of having his head “heen to see Mrs, Gibson, have sen ‘taste Wer any messages or have any inten- cut off by “Al” as by him. Just be- P of doing #0 fore that he sald: To Mr. Mason, Mr. Pfeiffer said: “The people have been systemati- cally decelved. They had been told that IT belonged to the period when they burned witches at the stake, and that if elected I would deprive the people of their innocent pleasures. “Well, you have had two years of “J am sorry to believe you think me #0 stupid as to do such a thing as me and you know now that you were led to two years ago,"* —-—— World’s Charges. Democratic Candidate Tells]|Governor Declares He Is Not Tammany Audience He and Never Has Been Will End the Board. a ‘Dry.” PROMISES HOME RULE.|}HE WON’T FIRE HYLAN. Denies Higher Fare Plan and|Asserts That State Adminis- Pledges City Control tration Has Saved the of Utilities, 5-Cent Fare, was $199,388,167.52. withstanding the large trol."" Commissioners. 1DA CJANCIOSE the aMyor. Continuing, the Mayor said; structed. (Continued. ) And here‘are some of the shrapne) fired by the ex-Governor: “Disappointed by the election re- turns Gov. Miller treated New York like @ wayward child that had to have at all times the whip-hand held over it from Albany,” the budget. 31 Jennie 8, Godkin.. 20 Helen ©. Sutilard - 10 Ernest G. Jacobsen. 31 James D. W. Cutter 12 Wm. J. Boyer . 2 Cheater P. Sterna . 18 Dav 18 Mary Mannion 18 Julia W, Gimbei 25 Annie E. Foster 25 Max Schoenfeld Government. _ try to interfere with witness."* The detective added his denial to that of Mrs. Pfeiffer and suggested that Mrs. Gibson was probably able to * )describe him because of his investiga- ‘tions. He demanded to be brought face to face with her. Mason, how- ~ ever, took no action. ©) When Mr. Mott came over from “Newark to-day he brought with him »Bertilion Expert Schwartz of the ~~ “Newark police, his assistant, Detec- Melve Deriveux, and George Day, the | Besex County official photographer. ‘They went to the scene of the mur- 4 er to make measurements and photo- jphs by which the truth of Mrs, _ Gibson's story may be checked and “were to come back to the court house to examine the clothing—the scarf eloak—sent to Philadelphia by Hall to be dyed black and th which William Stevens sent to a Ween) tailor to be cleaned when he dis- q@arded his fireman's uniform for a Dingwail . Rogers Cannon “It le one thing to talk home rule when you are looking for votes. It is another thing to pay some attention to it when you are dealing with the affairs of a great municipality. 70 per cent. of the cost of Mitchell was Mayor. . Kerup . @ Benjamin Guagenhi 18 Homer Bostwick And 1914 wasn't so bad. fessor got four special guardianships, six refereeships and one temporary administratorship, that being of the estate of Lillian Nordica Young, the! noear prima donna, about which there has been much litigation. As stated] The professor drew down in fees above there has\been no report of [@PProximately $18,900 in 1920 and 22 Charles P. 22 Louls A. Heinshelmer 22 James Renwich . 7 Johannes D. B, peculiarly applicable to the And here's what he said about the ousting of the Mayo: ‘Among other things, it is being said that if elected | will remove the Mayor of your town. In view of the opinion entertained of each other by the Mayor and the Dem- ocratic candidate | do not know why anybody should think that the Mayor w: e lat- ter's hands than in min cial circles, “For every great problem that the Governor has tackled m water powe) development, in transit and in port development, he has given us a quar- rel rather than a practical solution, In all of these great questions people want action. Up to date they have had nothing but talk and the direct responsibility for that rests upon tha shoulders of the Governor himself.” dianships and seven Nordica’s estate. His income from the Surrogate's office in 1914 was $3,617.40. Although he held ten special guar- Touching upon the dry “issue” the|dianships, four referecships and one Governor sald: general appraisership in 1915, the “Nobody needs to year was quite lean, according to the 1 stand on Prohibi have |records. He reported, apparently, on Below is his fee record for those two “When I go \o Albany on the amined: first of January | will, with all answered it by my acts. | de- nly elx of the fifteen estates in thel oe” 10 teen cortech FER|The Mayor concluded by stating that Nk sscietcnans Gay of! the energy that | possess, devote clined to accept the indorsement | aisiement of which he had something 17 Walter Lee Wellington outside ofa few salary increase s to my time to removing from the Public Service Commission Act any and every provision destined to doprive the different cities of their power over the franchises 28 Alexander H, Erickson March 13 Charlotte A. Mount . April 10 Clarence Miiheiser . 24 Jacob Appell . 17 Bimon Stern « 24 Bamuel_Colmal of the Prohibition Party because 1 could not stultify myself by seeking votes on the pretense that {| believed in something which I to do. His income that year from the Surrogate's Court was only $950, but he had a special guardianship in the Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt estate upon ease “CANADA WILL SEND ofthe Board of Estimate. BGCEST BUDGET | REESTABLISHED OF $353, 35,812)THROUCHOUTITAL Blames It All on Mandatory Laws; Silent on Evening Mayor Hyian to-day issued a fense of the proposed 1923 budget of $868,351,812.67, the highest budget In the history of New York or any other city In the world, and over $150,- 000,000 higher than before the present Mayor was elected to succeed John Purroy Mitchel. The 1914 final budget de- “This'’ said the Mayor, speaking of the 1928 budget “Ys only $2,750,000 more than the budget for 1922, not- mandatory burdens imposed by the State, over which the city has absolutely no con- The Mayor again failed to ac- cept the challenge of The Evening World to disprove its charge that several millions have been added to the payrolls of the departments of the Mayor's thirteen favorite These millions were not added by Republican legislators at Albany, but by Tam- many Commissioners appointed by “While there is a slight increase in the budget, the tax rate for 1928 will be about 2.70 or about four points less than this year, This decrease in the tax rate is due mainly to the in- crease in land vaiues in outlying sec- tions, and to the large volume of new building construction; not to any in- crease in the assessed values of build. ings other than those recently con- “The tax rate for 1923 would be at least 10 points less if there were no direct State tax of $12,595,623 im- posed upon the city and included in In addition to this de- rect State tax the people of New York City are compelled to pay about 70 per cent. of the total cost of State Besides this the city Pays out of its own treasury direct, several million dollars a year for|%Y: State activities imposed by law.’ The City of New York had to pay the State government while John Purroy There is noth- 00]ing new about the State burdens and Mayor Hylan's defense making them 1923 budget is not taken seriously in offi- “In the preparation of the 1923 budget there were reductions effected | spatch to the Agence Radio from Chiasso trial. which were offset by the cost of ex- tension of other necessary activities the professor's income from Mme. |1921 from twenty-two special guar-|due to increased population and to the} can Consul in Rome holst the Italian refereeships.| development of outlying districts— From the estates of Mrs, Russell Sage|such activities as police protection,| The report also said the Rascisti and Margaret T. Schley alone, as|street cleaning, increased ferry sery-|bUFed the Chamber of Labor in Rome referee, he accumulated over $8,000./ice, increased hospital facilities, etc. There are several other paragraphs |FIGHTING IS REPORTED years. The 1922 record was unavail-|in the Mayer's statement which are able at the time the records were ex-jthe usual daily atacks on Chairman McAneny of the Transit Commission World War veterans made necessary under the military law, there are no salary increases under direct control Einstein not now and never have be- which no report appears in the rec- PEADEANDORDER FRE SWEEPS SEY MEA Y} FOR FOUR Fiume Makes Plea for Union}Starts With the Mother Country. Near Secauc Volunteer Workers County Institutio ROME, Novy. 1 (Associated Press),| Fire at noon to-day had —The excitement and enthusiasm | distance of four miles over Marking the rise of the Fascist! to] Ws about Secaucus, N. J., power and the inauguration of the| ™e€nacing dwellings In the Mussolini Government gave place to-| Section of that town. Firemi day to earnest work by Premier Mus-|#ndicapped by the intense hi solini to peace and order. The fire started in one of Premier Mussolini worked virtually] ™erous garbage dumps in thi the entire night giving instructions to] ows and spread rapidly. Fire this end, and for the same purpose|'played water on surrounding called together in his office to-day the] ; ‘x leaders of the I together with| ‘© Prevent further spread, the head of the Police Department, | feared the fire might reach the! commanders of the Army Corps and| institutions at Laurel Hill, oke enveloped the sky of the y City and Hoboken, an@ upon houses in Secaucus unteer workers wet down a kh tion of ground about Laurel though at noon it appeared the bla vould apr i to thaty A stiff bre @ fanned the fam >urs ago had be jon of the Fascistl, he Premier, who had by his side General Delbono, the Supreme Chief of the Fascisti troops, Ustened care- fully to the opinions and advice of every one, and then announced his|hampered the work. decisions. All the area thus far covered The Government of the municipal- | flames is vacant lots, most of ity of Fiume sent an enthusiastic tele- | are used as garbage and ash gram of congratulation to Signor] by the various municipalities inj Mussolini to-day, tendering him the} son County. warmest greetings from Fiume, “‘im-| The fire was under control a! movable in its Italian faith,’? and ex-| flames reached a large section pressing the wish for the “unton of] meadows. The firemen contin Finme with the mother country to] pour streams of water on it. O which it looks for safety.’ to county institutions at Lau Vittorio Rojandi Ricci, Italian Am-| 4nd homes in Secaucus was aver sador at Washington, has pre- —— sented his resignation like his col-|HIS “MAID” SWEETH! leagues, Count Sforza, Am sador at WAS WIFE, SHE RE’ Paris, and Senator Frassati, Amba’ sador at Berlin, wishing to leave Pr OAKEAND, Gal NORE Moore said he had «1 mier Mussolini free to cho his own h important posts. | Fran It developed to-day that Premier]¢arrying on a romantic corresp Mussolini had sent a reply to the let- "Miss Grace Vance, ter of resignation from Count Sforz land orphan girl."" But the which was received yesterday, 1m agy me 4 Proaching him for his action and ask-| Gort and tevenled that she re Ing him to remain at his post Mra: J, pilin Moore: ine Minister of Industry Rossi, in] out a few things about her hust agreement with the Minister of the Treasury, has taken steps for the Immediate reopening of the Bourses, | CITY-OWNED TROLL it was semi-oMcially announced to- FIX $5 DAY MINI PAY WITH VAC. Detroit Mantcipal Rail Fixes Eight-Hoor Da Principal Lines. DETROIT, N@ A new working sched: viding a minimum wage o > eight-hour day and a trusted men for su Nearly all the Fascist! who had gathered in Rome and who took part in yesterday's celebration were out of the city by this morning. ORDERS ITALIAN FLAG FLOWN BY U. S. CONSUL Fascisti Insue Orders to Represent with pay, went into effect) tive on Swiss Border. of the principal street PARIS. Nov. 1.—An unconfirmed de-| lines here to-day for a If satisfactory, the s will be adopted on all t owned car lines, Platfo have asked some slight in the scale, on the Italian-Swiss frontier sald the Pascisti had demanded that the Ameri- over his consulate. ee ON SERBIAN FRONTIER Clash With Italians Said to be Re- sult of Fasctatt Coup. LONDON, Nov, 1.—Fighting is re- ported to have broken out on the Ser- bian-Itallan frontier as the result of the Fascist! triumph in Italy, according to — | Belgrade despatches published in the » FITZPATRICK TO U. S. * AS MINISTER AT ONCE] 8nd contracts between themacives . and pas, service corporations, w Rees and | shall insist with a great a be ?™| deal of vigor that the Transit Commission be abolished, and that the properly and duly elected 2 Lew 12 Francis 1. Leland 8 Jullus Steinwender . 10 Benjamin H. Field 17 Anthony Dugro 14 John B, Manning; 4 Baran Virginia Mor lieved in, ords. “The Democratic candidate for Gov- | In 1916 the professor picked up In ernor, and his Prohibition associate | addition to four special guardianships for Lieutenant Governor, are seeking| and one refereeship, two temporary | Dec. votes on the promise that somehow] administratorships, one of which . y or other they can give the people] netted him $7,442.89. His record for authorities of this city be charged | wine and beer. 1 ask them how they | the year follows, blank income spaces as they should be with the co propose to do It. indicating no reports of fees pald: struction and regulation of ail “I would not peek the votes of the Prohibition Party on false pretenses and I will not seek the vote of any- body else by holding out the hope that I will disregard my oath of of- Amelia Lavenbora.- April 24 Jane B. Barn: fee. April 24 Adelaide Hamilton 500] $1,590.74; for two-year-olds E Viel 316? Oakwood 03 Pennon 6.00 1100 aWhirlwind Nov. 1 (Copy- + *vight).—Official announcement of the “Appointment of Sir Charles Fitzpat- sick a8 Canadian Minister to the *Wnilted States will be made within a few days. ‘The change in the Government of © Great Britain is responsible for this Mecision, which must have a very ma-|isiation reflected as clearly as any- teria! effect on the relations between | thing could the overwhelming opinion ‘the Dominion and the United States, | of the people of the city against him.” 15 Jacob Appell : Daniel 22 CParrie Meyer 471 Wilkesbarre Rebecca Ladew 1105? aRigel March 25 Setto B French. 15 John H. Wright oaks “Nobody in New York will be fooled Mareh 19 by the Governor's transit talk. The Mayoralty election tmmediately fol- lowing the passage of his transit ieg- 7 Margaret Olivia Sage.... 10} one mit 21.J. Monroe Taylor. : TRS Rebuke 22 Cornelius Tiers Oceante 10 William =H. Hall “The Democratic candidate wants to know where the money is that I claim to have saved to the Btate, ni TOR? Nedda (854) Lucky Hour 1080" Heptatston On Jan. 1, 1916, the professor was appointed an Assistant District Attor- North Wales “ - * sal 500 a year, He BeEeeseree” Seewenees SEVENTH RACE—Purae ‘$2, New York City's share of State| ney at a salary of 47 fer King and his lieutenants, it *Jhela that job until the end of De- PIMLICO ENTRIES. Ruau age J “Nothing could be more ridicu- cember, 1917. About Jan. 1, 1916, it * understood, fear that the new Brit- fous than to have him charge Hylan, Nixon or myself with an attempt to r: body that kno that the five-cont fa: was only saved through the ef- forts of the local officials repre- sented in the Board of Estimate and Apportionment.’ aDark Horse (Continued on Fourth Page.) = *War Vito: would appear from the city directory, the professor opened a law office at No. 27 Cedar Street, where he Js still located. So, in addition to the fees he got from the Surrogate’s Court In 1916 he drew from New York County $7,500 and had a private practice besides, And in 1917 he drew $7,500 as an As- je Colors Next, He Says, sistant sabilpry anarney a6 $7,125 from the estates in ie Surrogate's COLUMBUS, 0. Nove 1. |court, Following 1s his 1917 feo 1011 Painless childbirth {s possible | record jn seven special guardianships} seCOND through administration of nitrous | and one refereeship in all but one of Bisenlechane oxid oxygen, it was announced | Which he was remunerated. here to-day at the convention of | Jan. 20 Edgar P. Loowi MISSOURI TOWN; ons O Matthew C.D. Horden ONE DEAD, 15 HURT the National Anaesthesia Re- July 21 A, Edwa Conover 34, Peter Doelger ..+ search Society. oct, 20 Mary 1 "Agnew Dr. Arthur EB, Guede! of Indi. |Nov- 3 Busan H. Topble «-- anapolis, the discoverer, claims that bables born under this method seldom have to be resuscl- tated. They are pink and ory lustily at birth, Dr. Sylvester Goodman of Grant Hospital declared the new anaos- thetic no safer than chloroform or any other anaesthetic, “Dr, Guedel’s statement that it will make the babies pink at birth is all wrong,” Dr. Goodman said, deh Premier, Bonar Law, in changing ‘the foreign policy that has been in ‘ffect, would more or less ignore the (many pressing diplomatic matters ding between Canada and Wash- * on, such as the modernization of Rush-Bagot treaty, and have be- convinced that establishment of ir own channels of communication an immediate essential. Bir Auckland Geddes, the British jor to the United Siates, ‘Wes been a strong opponent of : “g\n and who is in Ottawa, to- “git be known that he has with- hat opposition and expressed as now favorable to the ap- pointment. He long has enjoyed experience in _ public life and has represented Great tain on several international com- ions a8 counsel or arbitrator. i ing his term as Lord Chief Jus- he visited London once each year “and has been well-nigh @ commuter | fo Washington, where he has many | a INKS IN ONE COURT BROOKLYN INCREASE $1 ; $ for two-year-olds; five and « halt furlongs 1 Pauln Shay . 88 Winner Take All BABIES WILL BE BORN RED, WHITE AND BLUE, DOCTOR FORESEES arily Blue at Birth, New p! Attorney. *Scotland Anniversary ee 175? aJoan of Are sMabel ie Racket Evelyn Bawyer word she 04 Mayor Hou I dad F, Musanteand 8 EM Bon Tag s.0..s, Apprentice allowan Margaret’ Loretia 108 Wenther cleat; track feat. Mount Washingt 000; ‘selling; for fou Newspapers opposed to Mayor > (Continued on Fourth Page.) meee hece TORNADO STRIKES 8,000 ‘500 Brown, Adventuress. 150 2,000 $00 Mohican, The Trout. THIRD RACHE—Athelstar, Good Time. 250 eMo Wi Hngaene 9 TAs iucky | ind ‘The professor drew 16 special guar- Oresth it @lanships and one refereeship in 1918 : and although he cashed in on 12 of 2 aS AY zs them his income from the estates in ae the Surrogate’s Court was only $2,- 675. Following 1s his fee record in that year: March 2 Leopold Conn . . . 6& Willlam H. Royer. il 6 George J. Foster, i As ne Robe H. Hume, no. decree ® as Residence Sec! Dem WEBB CITY, Mo., Nov. 1.—One woman was killed, fifteen other per- sons were injured, several seriously, and about thirty houses were demol- fehed by a tornado which struck this city early to-day. One hundred per- sons were made homeless, Four per- sons were unaccounted for and it was Maryland Relle, Harmontous, som Time. SIXTH RACE—Oceantc, Hour, Hephaistos. Blazed Tratt Huonec, Dark Horse. Brand .. 730.00 part of the city, passed over the busi- ness section and dipped again in the northwest residential section, Dr. Goodman classed nitrous oxid Secundus, Nowata. oxygen with “twilight sleep’ and THIRD RACE—Lou Widrig, in Brooklyn this morning i Han- March 19 Margaret T. Schiey dtcap; 100 a; for three-year-olds; PIMLICO SELECTIONS. FIRST RACE—Lady Inez, Peter SECOND RACE—Le Marsouin,| pregs) Fleer, FOURTH RACE—Two Feathers, FIFTH RACE—Rialto, Rigel, Blos- Lucky ee . SEVENTH RACE—Freesy Sneezy, w 106 —_>—. LATONIA SELECTIONS. tl thought they were killed and buried] ‘Babies are born blu tt April 18 Frances R Greenwood... RACH —Purne $4,300.78 eS 40 OVER LAST OCTOBER under the debri all pati pips woe wee Abril 20 kimi Davy : 00} three-year-olds and upward; selling acer tae Wayward Lady, ee The storm struck first in the south| nut. it's ust hack. Abell #7 Davie Henry mile and a sixteenth. yn, SECOND RACE — Antonia, Null Fin- Daily Express to-day. Great excite- ment prevalls in Serbla as the result of the Fascist! coup and newspapers are discussing the possibility of war, the express despatches sald, The fighting was reported near. Sushak, ‘with killed and wounded on both sides, and the fighting 1s spread- ing. The Serbs are sending up rein forcements and It is understood thi are ready to mobolize if necessary, the same despatches sald, ig FIRM ON CONSOLIDATED EXCHANGE INSOLVENT [PENNY A POUND Several Generations Candy Make the finest that the wo e produced, have con| their knowledge and skill crafting of LOFT sweets. crucial test is by making parisons, Advt.on Page Euspension of L. J. Fiteme: & Co, In Announced. President Silkworth of the Consoli- dated Stock Exchange announced this morning that L, J. Fitzgerald & Com- pany, No. 67 Exchange Place, bers of that exchange since Septem- mem- Notice to Advertis Display adve e type copy and ber, 1921, had been suspended on ac-|erders for sither the week gay nt of insolvency, Partners of the e Evening World if the day preceding p can be Inserted only as space may and in order of receipt at The World plains President Silk- | Copy containing eng Seed Md: | The World must be recelved by 1 P. firm are L. J. Fitzgerald and N. A, Evalenko. It w worth that the firm has been conduct-| THs, World must be received by & Fy ing @ legitimate business, but had be-] plement Sections of The Sunday Worl come embarrassed by Inavility to se-| be received by 1 P, M. Thursday pi to be made by The World must be — aa LEAGUE EXPLAINS TALK | nas 'not been received bya loeial Wes aia’ Gh vo | publication and release must be recelf by Thursday noon. Sunday Main Sheet copy, fre cop P.M, Fi OF U. S. PARTICIPATION | (tins, s20y cohen hag, not toes riday, will be omitted as (Associated | require, rigidly’ in the order of lat GENEVA, Nov. 1 Informal negotiations have been going on for some time between evideg Shove, wasn emit the League of Nations and the State | Sontract or otherw! Department in Washington to make possible American participation in the election of Judges to the permanent Court of International Justice, it was sald at the League headquarters here to-day. The statement followed receipt of hington advices stating adjust- ments were in progress looking {toward American Government repre- sentation in the court, which was created under the Treaty of Versailles. vocal int a LLOYD GEORGE CANCELS SPEAKING ENGAGEMENT HELP WANTED—FEM Keneral housework; mond Hill ay., Kew LOST, FOUND AND RE Oe k Ince scarf, Tuesd n 188th and 168th, St Amsterdam aves. Reward, pho - co 6, Kelloy ‘wes counting up the intoxication “sunrise slumber." ‘Next. we'll 1 Ro oes Dane vos cantle, Mysterious Girl, LONDON, | Nov. 1—David Loyd | 2 st Gee, See handled there in October, pn ger emaeegay have @ ‘noonday snooze’ that will tN ei re tn daneak Tac rcarran: aes ACE—Bullion, Make | George, former Premier, has 7 “Males, 103; females, 12,7 he |BDFFOR OF THE FIGARO DEAD! sake babies red, white and blue,” | Lec! _f Matthew 0. iD. fiordén... ho decree een iaie 20! Ce He mae: to abandon. his speaking eng PERSONALS, ie “That makes s total of 116." | osnig ov. 1 (Associated Press Dt, Goosen ais: Se SS Pama n — : te FIFTH RACE—Gcorgte, Billy Star, | st Bristo! Thureday because of is D. NOMBIKE, of f Bhen he looked up the record | ised Capus, editor of the Figaro, Mor 10a Garmeneita a Weer. 5 = The strain placed upon Lloyd George | uce”that ty wit, Siarie’ fe. ton $ one of France's best known writers on] BROMO. QU! ete noon seventeen special guardianships, one Hod Double Cros >restolite. Mgrs bh Moov ine’ han been Fi on females, 7. Total, 75, | political and Mterary subjects, died here | Headache caused trom a” Cold refereeship and one temporary admin- AMS By SHnatny eee SEVENTH RACE—Louanna, Bob- onal Renee te eho. taut few | tot, be responsible for any debts 40. Caen bears the signature of FE. W a teratte, Sis bid ea aia oh Gas 040% Coper Demon, wr ass 118 ble Shea, Mani P by her or In my nam . strat re eo o— ‘Hotel erna | h puree cure. mre you get BROMO), 80c.—Advt, FIFTH RAO! y 4 anys. --