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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1922, AWeepine slashes of a keen edged rumen t. ' The origina: Lo r tot Mix. M 4, Oe In the forwhead and one 1 sabmple. The seed aailopsy A third, in the cheek OIANly It ts suid considers! SOrFoboration will have to be fle od Q6t On Mra. Gioson’a “eyewitness” .fowever, Mr. Mott is known #o be delibernte and thoruogh, and SH may turn out ‘he present ce is only to enable him to make abso. Tutely sure on every point Mr. Mott worked on the care in Nowark to-day, sending Lieut. Mason here, Both will continue the exami Mation of witnesses here Monday in Preparation for the Grand Jury hear- jng a week later. ihiasamaentinaliiencmaneansom PASSAGE OF BONUS IN NEW CONGRESS REGARDED AS SURE (Continued) a Erobably will be called into special | session shortly after March 4, 1922. The measure also will be Introduced | again in the present Congress, but it is extremely doubtful if it can be enacted during the few remuining With City. Goy.-elect Smith on leaving elty to-day for a rest over the week end refused to comment on published reports that he will in his first mea- saxo to the Legislature recommend the abolition of the Transit Commis- sion. He sald he would follow Democratic platform, There plank tn the platform which justify him in asking that the Transit Commission be wiped out and powers be transferred to the Board of Estimate. Monthe of the current session. ‘ The Americin Legion, greatly en- couraged by the increased majorities for the measure in both Houses and the favorite votes for the State bonus In Mlinois, Iowa, Kansas, Mon- tana and profably Otilahoma, is pre- paring to Jaunch a new drive for the Vederal bill. Success of the bill when It comes up in the now Congress will depond entirely upon the Senate, The Houre voted overwhelmingly for the bonus and will continue to do #0. Of the eighteen new members elected to the Senate fifteen are for the bill the attitude of two is unknown and only one is against it. American Legion headquarters here wil fasue.n statement shortly pre- dicting that the passage of the bonus in the new Congress is certain regardless of what position President Marding may take. ‘The poll, taken from the Congres- gional Record and the campaign | pledges of the Senators-elect is as } follows: Old Senators for the bonus: Ashurst, Brandegee, Broussard, Bur- } sum, Cameron, Caraway, Colt, Cum- Gooding, Hale, Harreld, Harris, Hai rison, Heflin, Johnson, Jones (N. M.), Jones (Wash.), Kendrick, Ladd, La Follette, Lenroot, Lodge, McCormick, McKellar, McLean, McNary, Nichol- fon, Norbeck, Oddie, Norris, Over- man, Pittman, Ransdel!, Reed (Mis- souri), Robihson, Sheppard, Short- ridge, Simmons, Smith (South Caro- lina), Spencer, Stanfield, Tramme}i, Walsh (Mass.), ; (Mont), Willis, Capper, Watson ) ind.). Total, fifty-two, New members for tha bonus-- Copeland, Dill, Edwards, Howell, Ralston, Fess, Brookhart, Ve Ferris, Stephens, Frazier, Shipstead, Mayfield, Wheeler and Bruce (pledged according to the American Legion). Total, 15. Total for bonus, 67. Old members inst the bonus— Borah, Reed (Pennsylvania), \ dge, Ernst, F es, King, Newberry, Owen, Phipps, ‘Shields, Smoot, Sterling, Swanson, Underwood, Wadsworth, Warren, Weller, McKinley (paired in favor of sustaining President Hard- ing’s veto). Total, 26. New member against the bonus— Greene (Vermont), who voted to sus. tain Harding's veto in the House, ‘Total against the bonus, 27 Position unknown—Bayard (Dela- ware) and George (Georgia), new Senators. WOMAN'S, SCREAM IN WALDORE TRPS “THE HUMAN FLY” vw (Continued) self up. The police say they could net prove anything on him and he Was discharged. Mrs. Stetson, a strikingly hand- some brunette, tall and athletic, told an Evening W reporter of her ex- perien: “I was awakened by a noise in{the room," she said, “and first thought it was caused by the wind rustling the curtains. ‘Then as it continued I Thought there was a rat or a cat in the room. 1 switched on the Nght wiing on bis ng room into @nd saw o man cr Stomach from the draw ours. “1 screamed for help and my hus- band, who was sleeping in a twin Miong side of me, tiniped to the fh as he awoke, The man spr 4 wnd ran to t arlor with Mr gon after him. the tire-escape which leads down | Astor Court,” said Mr. Stetson didn’t attempt to follow him 4he alarm to the office. the guickest piece of detective work ordered in the United States by the iM Rovernment, Ultimately this @. nccoming 10 theomplot a link in the pro; North and “He went through the window to| Heights, ence by the State in local matters, howeve ‘GOVERNOR-ELECT + SILENT ON CUTTING OFF TRANSIT BODY To Follow Democratic Plat- form, Only Comment Smith W ill M ke. HOME RULE FIRST PLAN Believes State Interference Causes Bulk of Friction It ‘s known that the Governor- ject believes that the bulk of the friction between the city and State is generated by the interfer- transit much such interfer- t,| Shot Parrot ence may be legally sustified; also known that he belleves that if the Board of Estimate is given au- Th t B ke U, thority tm transit matters It will have a ro (Pp abandon its policy of passing the buck and get down and do something lo rolleve congested conditions. One of his fret acte will be to fill two places on the Port Authority, which has been under the constant tire of the Hylan Administration be- cause the city Is nut represented on + It is assumed Mayor Hylan will get one of the appointments, with other going elther to Comptroller] pr: 5 Craig or Aldermanic President ert. ‘hus Smith, wno must resign i a inven bee of the Port Authority to] Wil have to be settled in the near become Governor, and former Borough] future by the Hoboken District Court, Repub- lican, whose term expires next year, will be succeeded by two representa- President Lewis H. Pounds, tives of the local Government, the Assembly and prevept thi the Hylan Administration. ties. This is written ‘Treaty with New Jersey. on the commission. ARD. themselve Also he will try to force through a constitutional amendment that pave the way for an equitable Senate and Assembly reapportionment in the State. He would cut the State Into fifty-one Senate Districts and 160 As- sembly Districts conforming one to another In citizen population. the district lines been so drawn on F: have tremendous Democratle representa- tion behind him in both the Senate]G. Gates died. In November, 1918, tion Day, Smith would and Assembly, LEGISLATURE. the Smith promises. Downing of head the 4 In the ¢ Salva A. Cotillo of head Judiciary; Nathan Straus jr will receive the real a- | found an automatic pinto, the upper weet side, Agriculture or |tO® Of her share of the estate since {dead man’s pockets firty Public Health; John J, Dunni, bs a Mrs, Gates's death, At thirty-one | wrapped in a handkerchiot. the Bronx. Housings Bentamiae ante, [She Pecelves a quarter, at thirty-tive{ Arter the excitement was over the ioe « quarter and at forty years the re- ve estimated tha G af the’ B Labor and thduetrierr [e908 > ho re ioe catimated that at least 100 po- Michael Reiburn of W Public Service, a Byrne of Albany, men were el their places ted return Demi EJ White, Di turns on Tuesday's election four divisions of the ‘Territory. the Republicans retain their hold on Smith will huve circumvented them by put- ting the Authority into the hands of It ts admitted the Port Authovity haa reached an Impasse with the city, It cannot take any property in the city without consent of the local authori- into the Port Conse- quently, it is argued, If the develop- ment !s to proceed the Hylan Admini- stration must have a dominant voice AIMS TO WIPE OUT TRANSIT BO. Smith's first message to the Leg islature will recommend abolition of Gov, Miller's Trunsit Commission. He probably will suggest thut every auto- cratic power it possesses be ferred to the Board of Estimate, thus bene: enabling the New York authorities to handle trunslt reorganization and ex- tension unhampered by the State, Smith will get support from Repub- ete eee we tania to arp ths spring. Last April sho was reported |Joaded revolver. He sald he was Alex commission of all power to raise car- rates, telephone tolls and rates for gus city and permit local com- munities to negotlate the charges that are to bo made with the companies has MONTHS’ SESSION OF THE] the Gates fortune, died Smith's legislative program proba- bly will keep the next Legislature in] St: Charles, Ml, and her nic session for six months. Democratic Senato Leader James J. Walker, who will become President pro tem of the Upper House, will fatter a good deal of the legislation required to redeem ator Bernard » lower cast side will Committee. ution of other impor- tant Senate Coumttee Chairmanships shington d Witham Internal Affairs. If recounts in half a dozen up districts where Repu Asne nd Smith's party organ- GUATUMALA CITY, Guatemala, N a W.—-Within a short thee It will be pos | REPUBLICAN saves ALASICA CONGRESS HACK travel by rail f oa ‘ Pine ee eC gant) aun Mnekk eo chiate cr to lnk | Sutheriand, tepublicnn, delegate ala and Mexico by ratt has been | Alaske in Congo ading by the the fs a would ———————— up- SO SEN ESR ore the ~ it will Had a] ‘Then Mr. Gates died, after founding iy of HELPS CAPTURE Two AFTER WILD BATTLE WITH RUM ROBBERS Pursuit. east in the kidnapping plot. Pole, as is the man unde Pinochle Game Law Suit Over Bird That Dropped Soggy Cracker on Player's Head. Jamin Faust of No. stored. value of a porrot’s services, either as companion or éntertainer, are estimated to be worth $500, That] Blizabeth Streets. Smith hopes to put through a Dill] Charles W. Wyckoff, who killed the]eathered from “his report that there requiring thut hereafter the city shall] pirg with a shotgun. huve two places on the Authority. the} ‘The parrot, so tame that it was third to be an appointee representing the other communities ‘fn the metro- permitted to fly about the house and Young Woman in Taxicab Follows. Fleeing Gunman and Causes Arrest. An attempt by three Jersey City bootleggers to steal $400 worth of al- cohol by the expedient of kidnapping the man they bought it from with the idea of throwing him from an auto- mobile at some remote point, led to a thrilling automobile chase through ide streets last night, a revolver battie in which scores of shots were its fired, the killing of one of the boot- leggers by a policeman, the arrest of another and the Issuance of a general alarm for one Mike Burke, better known as ‘Mike the Bum," the leader The man who was killed was called Andrew Michael by the bootlegger who was arrested. Michael was a Y arrest, and the fugitive "Mike the Bum." The Jersey City bootleggers came over in a car last night 'c buy sixteen five-getion cans of alcohol from Ben- Chrystie Street. Faust and two other men were wait- ing for them in a garage at No. 90 Bayard Street, where the alcohol wus When the liquor had been loadec into the bootleggers’ car, manded payment. ‘The three visitors drew revolvers und compelled Faust and his two companions to get into tha car, The curtuins were drawn and fastened and tho driver ran the The serviczs of one particular bird}car out of the garage (o Canal and Faust de- had been a hold-up and the thieves were escaping in the ear which wus headed toward Lafayette Street. yard of Tarantino, broke up a pinochle} O’Connor bearded the first pass- politan district over whose riparian game Wyckoff and some friends were ing machine, firing at the tires of the ryhts the body exercises control. RUM KIDNAPPER SLAIN IN CHASE: TWO MEN SEIZED Hundred Police Take Part in Pistol Battle in Mile GIRL AIDS CAPTURE. is tho sun of damages clalmed to-| Here one of the captives made m y by Carmine Taranino of No. sh, broke through the curtains and PLANS TO GIVE TWO PLACES] nuiciy Avenue, West Hoboken, in a|/anded in the street. Patrolman Eu- TO CITY. suit agcinst hs next-door meighbor,|xene O'Connor ran up to him and having last September in the Wyckoft| sitive car as it turned around and back yard. Polly flew into a tree over the card players and dropped a soggy cracker on Wyckoff's head. It happened at such a critical point in the pinochle game that Wyckoff, enraged, ran to a shed nearby, got the gun and blew the parrot into a to Fourth Avenue, to car was shooting back. trans- ee ee conspicuous mark. He Chinese laundry and was make the Chinese propretor take off ee his cout when captured. dashed up Lafayette Street, ‘The filght continued for more than a mile until the fugitive car wrenched itself against un electric light pole in East 10th Street. O'Conner had used all his shots except one when he heard | () FD the crash. As he aj proached one of the kidnappers jumped off and ran along Third Avenue, To facilitate his flight he threw off his overcoat, then SON OF UNDERTAKER} "see take for, in his shirt sleeves he was a trying to thenco it Tenth Street and east to Third Avenue, Dozens of other wutomobtles joined the chuse, tncluding one or two police flivvers, ‘and revolvers popped all along the line of Third Avenue, south to 10th Street, und ugain as It headed bunch of feath west. At least one of the men in the Into a ris is the son of an undertaker and Traffic Policeman McNamara. on furniture dealer. He is twenty-one.|duty at 14th Street, caught the figi- The wedding is arranged for next} tive in the laundry. He had a fully engaged to a young Chicago surgeon | gmith, twenty-elght, of Jersey City. with an ambition to maintain a ho’ Meanwhile, O'Connor Wilson Campbell of Los Angeles, “Young Norris and Miss Angell were sweethearts ten years ago," say neighbors in St. Charies, Ml, That was when they attended grade school, away the curtains, emerge, declared: marriage of John W. Gate: plunging in oil and ri limit at the same time crash vended the Glght, the Texas Company. His son Charles “I'm not one of the stick-up men." ‘The only other occupant found in The young miss was then a niece by the car was Michael, who had been who was/ghot in the head, He died in Belle lroads and yye Hospital. Faust sald the other building a great fortune. He had an one of the two who attempted the heir of his own who was betting the hold-up and kidnapping fled when thr Smith, the police say, said the car was driven by a man known to him as Michael Burke, better known reached the pital for the poor, His name has] staid car. As he approached it a never been made public. Another]puilet ploughed through the wind- time she was reputed engaged to C.enield, O'Connor answered with his last bullet and got result Faust, the first to He tore Mrs, Deilora Gates, who controlled | yyixe the Bum," and that the divided her $72,000,000 fortune equally between her brother, E. J. Baker of will go to Miss Angell, Mr, Baker is now an old man, to 1921, for educating and “bringing cut" the helress, total: When she reaches twe feur to follow him. She has a beautitu ‘orest and country nla and the Wis been In the chase, paid Dec, 28, 1921, when her guardian was disc on her attaining her Magistrate Oberwager w Acadia ater leat only 10,000 cuble yards of will be’ cleared away to-d through the Canal has not been affected — liquor schooner Acadia, ney, N.S, has saited un bea of the crew have gi cW raes of smugeling, Her willl pad been stolen In Clevelund u week ago. He sald Burke also stole the Il- cens plate it bears in Massachusett ®, Del: |” policeman O'Connor was praised lora Angell, then sixteen, of the same|for fis courage under fire, place, young woman In a taxicab, driven hy The girl ls a daughter of a deceased | Charles Meinick of No. 1388 Prospect sister of Mrs. Gates, When Mr. ] avenue, the Bronx, that followed one Baker dies his share of the estate }or the ulleged kidnappers In the stolen automobile the police and tn the cartridges men in twenty commandeered taxicabs and private automobiles hud 8 Smith, who real name is Smidskt, Misa Angell has already recelved |was arraigned in Contre Street Polics $300,000 of her inheritance, whieh was|Court this afternoon and held by hout ball on a charge of robbery. Faust was held a into the laundry, also did good work, She was recurning home from a depart- Mins Angel's expenses from 1019] ment store downtown when she saw the man running and told the chaut- ‘Cissie’ Loftus, Once Famed om PONGRESS CALLED Arrested for Possessing Drugs TOMEFT ON NOY. 20 Said to Be HH Pre From Narcotics, She Is Sent to Sani- tarium. . LONDON, Nov. 10.—Cisale Loftus, for more than twenty years a well- known actress on the stages of both Great Britain and the United States, was arraigned to-day in police court and charged wits being an unauthor- ized person in possession of morphine and atropine. She appeared to be tl, Through her counsel she pleaded not guilty. The Magistrate admitted the actress to ball and adjourned the case for ga week. Her lawyer sald she would spend the time in a nursing home, London despatches telling of the arrest of Marie Cecile ("Cisule") Lof- tus for the alleged tllegal possession of drugs, brought to the United States the first news In years of an actress who, in the first decade of the present century, starred in this country and England on both the legitimate and vaudeville stages. Born in England, she showed at an early age an aptitude at mimicry. London audiences hatled her as a child prodigy for the imitations of Sarah Berniardt, Yvette Guilbert and other celebrities of the period. American au were similarly delighted with she left vaudeville for all with Sir Henry Irv ley McCarthy, the English dramatist, But her clientele, in y demanded her return to the role] America, some years iater. “Clasico” Loftus always has been aj: Waterman of Chicago and an- followers on both continents when, | stage. schedules, mind. from The present prom she first excelled that of af tm 1909, she was married to Dr. A,| (reduction of the Subsidy Bill tn the House, where it must originate be- cause of its appropriation features. picturesque figure. She startied her] ounced her intention to abandon thelon Nov. House leaders expect to secure a vote by Nov House membership a chance to en- G. 0. P. Majority in Senate 10; | °°" IN SPECIAL SESSION Ship Subsidy Believed to Be Real Cause of Action by, Harding WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. — By Proclamation President Harding has issued his call for an extra session of Congress to meet at noon, Nov. 20, mainly for the purpose of taking up the Ship Subsidy Bill, although no reason for the call was given except taut “public interests require’ it, The extra session, bitterly opposed by a good muny Kepubiicun leaders, was expected and was according w Mr. Harding announced the day before election he Intended to is- sue the call, but might change his It was understood then the ony thing that would change his mind would be the election of a sufficiently strong Republican Congress to give the Subsidy Bill favorable consider- ation. With the Democratio victory #0 complete as to wrest control entirely the old guar President's last hope for the subsidy, long his favorite measure, rests on his ability to jam it through at this extra term before a hostile Congress comes into being. The same consideration applies to of the Administration program. being notably successful as|during a vaudeville engagement tn] Probably the appropriation bills will # n} London, she eloped with Justin Hunt-|be dragged i 1 Were King” and autem 's hands, the in at once, and a deal to get them out of the way first before tackling the sub- England es well as America, invari-|from whom she was divorced, in}giay mM calle for ia- under a epectal rule. 29, In time to give the In House 17, on Latest Returns TWO IN SAME-CELL : in Upper Branch of Congress. North Dakota Seat, Still Uncertain, May Change Total SEND Gl ARD AWAY, WASHINGTON, Noy. 10. On the face of practically complete but unofficial returns from Tuesday's elections the exact line-up by parties in the Sixty-Eighth Congress will be: House—Republicans, 226; Democrats, 206; Socialist, 1; Inde- Prisoners at Headquarters Cut pendent, 1; Farmer-Labor, 1. Down Unconscious—Nooses Senate—Republicans, 53; Democrats, 42; Farmer-Labor, 1 ‘The Republican total in the Senate is predicated upon a victory Made of Shirts. for that party in the Senatorial contest in North Dakota. Should final Ou a subterfuge that they wanted returns show the electicn of F, T. O'Connor, the Democratic candidate, tendant, the Republicans would have 62 and the Democrats 43. In the present years old, water, and tn the absence of the at- Pons Gonzales, twenty-three on actor, of Mills Hotel Senate the Republicans have 60 members and the Democrats 36, a | No. 1, and Abrham Goodbridge, twen- Republican majority of 24. ty-slx years old, a laborer, of the In the House the Republicans, on the basis of the unofficial same address, two prisoners held in one cell at Poilca Headquarters on returns, will have a majority of 17 over the combined strength which charges of extortion, cttempted sut- could be mustered against them by the Democrats and others, and a cide early this morning by hanging plurality of 20 over the D@mocrats as a party unit. In the present | themselves. House the Republicans have a majority of 165 over all, and a plurality When the attendant, James B; rett, returned the men were hanging of 166 over the Democrats. unconscious from the iron-bar ceiling Representative Guy E. Campbell, of the 36th Pennsylvania District, who in the past two campaigns has run as a “Republican-Democrat," but ‘who has been carried on the officia] House roll as a Demoorat, requested the clerk to lst him hereafter as a Republican. every Sunday. hye ever seen. Half an hour ofter|tzes the Lower I Charles D.Joighteenth birthday. In addition, she 1 tay wife woke up they had the bur-| Donohue, present Democratic floor es Pe ved B10RtGD Tele tor ey ie be ©),000 aul ona charge of violation far back in the boom for me to} leader, will be made Speaker. John| her cousin, Charles W. Gates, son of sedate , identity, which I aid." J. O'Connor, Assemblyman from | yonn W. Gate RELEASES BRITISH KOHOONE ————— ‘ammany Leader Murphy's home dis- - - SIZED AS RUM RUNNGR SALVADOR TO V. 8. BY RAIL HHS-| trict, probably Would be named floor noaroue e A xen, | SIBLE SOON. spokesman. ‘ Sane fas @ rum sunne st wasury Department to- #9 Covered the return Maquor ‘has been held ana ‘i. me bonds on ventures are as surprising as hie patients. BUY IT NEXT SUNDAY Dr. Dolittle and two of his convalescent patients Let Dr. Dolittle Prescribe for Your Cat and Your Dog HE Doctor knows their language and can talk to them, just as he {s talking to Polynesia, the parrot; Chee Chee, the monkey, and the rare Pushmi Pullyu, in The New York Tribune THE BEST CHILDREN’S STORY SINCE “ALICE IN WONDERLAND” Hugh Lofting, the author, has created in Dr. Dolittle a character unique in humorous fiction, an irresistible combination of non- mee and sense. No child too young to understand him, no adult too old to be a child, when Dr. Dolittle is around. His weekly ad- With Your Newsdealer in Each Sunday's Magazine Section of New York Tribune | Dolittle May Be Seen by Appointment | of the cell by ropes made of strips torn from thelr shirts and fastened over the bars by belts. Barrett cut the men down and notified Lieut. —i Quinn, who summoned an ambulances from St. Vincent's Hospital, Dr, ‘Toomey removed the men to Bellevue in a critical condition, ‘The men were locked up ht Head quarters about 4 o'clock yesterday at- ternoon after they had been arrested at 122d Street and Broadway by De- tectives Morrison and Glaser of the 100th Street Station on charges uf ex- torting $100 from George Schmidt of No, 601 Weat 21st Street. Accurding to the police, Schmidt says the men extorted the money from him by rep- resenting themselves to be detectives. According to Barrett, the men scted in no way different from usual prison~ ers and he had no reason ta be sus- picious when they asked for a glass of water, The men had not been noticed talking together, he said. CANAL ZONE POLO, |, PANAMA, Noy. 10.—Geveral poi teams are being organized at the army posts in the Canal Zone. A series of games leading up to the departmental championship will begin as s00n as the dry season sets In. Everyone has a pet cheese Some peoplelikeastrong cheese;somepreferwhat they call “zippy” or “snappy” cheese; others like it mild. But every- body, somehow or other, likes the special cheese which is blended so de- liciously with Heinz fa- mous Tomato Sauce in to heat and serve. HEINZ. Spaghetti Ready cooked, ready to serve ModeratePrice at LOFT'S you buy Cand; CERTIFIED. ‘QUALITY. Moe are ‘not taxed for a “fancy aaa bons or a “gilded Notice to Advertisers Display advertizing type copy, andre ordert for sith week ‘Mor World or The B Word it titer 4°P. M. the day preceding publication can be inserted only as, space may permit and in order of receipt at Copy containing engravings to oe mage by | Phe World must be recelved by 2 P. M. | Display agin eas Mond toe the haps plement Sections of The Sunday World must ‘Thuraday preceding must be received by containing engravings ‘orld must be received by Thursday oon, undag Main Sheet oopy. ti naw not been recelved By a'Pe RL. FAday a Seraving copy which Has not a) pen | the publication oftice by 1 P, M. Friday, nf positive Insertion orders not recolved by P.M. Friday, will be omitted as conditions roquire, rigidiy’ in the order of Igteat receipt and positive reloase order, Display copy or orders released tater than gr provided “above, whon omitted, will not werve to carn dines of any character, gaulsact or otherwi tel WORLD ——_—_—_—_—_—!__"" LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. ve rnin BRR TEN ARE nan ma tinum Dar- i i ADOU '§¢ diamonds and Ns ermal stonee: lost In Ne rk Olty on or gbout Oot. 29, 1922. Mavens @ Oo., 48th nt and th av. | Vanderbilt 180. i adys rie r at to ; Beourtment: dor ri fhuraday. Libera! teward it returned to Ht Pollard, 142 1 IRth at D&O. HERMANN. FRANCIS. Campbell Funeral MIGGINS.—JOSEPH F, Campbell Funerat Churen, Broadway, 68th, @undey, 2 My ag y, (0th, Saturday, 11 A, ma, |