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{ unemployed in Cologne. To-Night’s Weather—CLEARING; COOLER, WORLD i = BY) TION MRS. GIBSON’S MURDER STORY BOLSTERED BY CHECK-UP OTS IN GERMAN CITIES; 8 REPORTED DEAD be J “Circulation Books Open to All. *yoL. Lx, NO. 22,206—DATLW. Coprrtent, (New York World) by Press Publising Company, 1922, To-Morrow’s Weather—FAIR AND COOLER. FINAL ¥j EDITION Wt Entered as Second-Ciase Matter NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMEES 15, oh dal Poot Office, New York, N. ¥. PRICE TREES CENTS IN SEVERAL GERMAN CITIES: WIRTH CABINET FORCED OUT se Most Serious Trouble in Co- BRITISH ELECTIONS logne When Communist Meeting Was Raided. ON 10 DAY COALITION REJECTED “UAT, MANY in Socialists Decline to Unite CHILDREN VOTING With People’s Party Gi i Ministry. = Amusing Incidents as Wo- men Exercise ‘Franchise— Lady Astor Seems Winner. BERLIN, Nov. 15 (Un Eight persons were killed jously injured inn food riots wh Broke out in various parts of the : gountry yester In Colo) LONDON, Nov. 16.—The spectacto Where four were killed, the Were called upon to break up an al-[ tion was witnessed in several feged Communist demonstration In) ps) the marketplace. Besides the four @ead, four were injured During the raid the police se hundreds of pamphlets calling for a @eneral strike. British troops have been called upon to assist tho police Tt ts estimated that there aro 50,000 of children casting ballots at an elec- sin and to-day nis was possible under the law, which provides that if 1] Bame is placed on the register of e¢ voters, even mistakenly, it must s and unless challenged before election day. Therefore. in the Haywood and Radcliffe 1-half-year-old boy, uccompahied by ision to-day, a five-and- his mother, cast his vote t Hull Four persons were killed and man hi At Hu wounded in riots in I ldorf, Ot clashes were reported in Munchen, Gladbych and ttered points 1 lad of twelve years voted. He was eman as he entered ng station, but on convine- in officials that his name ‘wa y, fon the register he was allowed to British troc t rloters in the| vote: In another caso the mother of squares of Color to-day, hen old infunt had been mistakenly small German Police Department was { overpowered by a mob armed with { cobblestones, clubs and bottles. Six ed, showed her intentions of the baby to the polls to cust policemen were wounded and a num-{ ON NO ss ine past, numerous ber of rioters killed, They were car- | i as ted off by their comrad Americ siding in England found 4] thet ont register and oR Nov, 15 (Assoc est Yr Wir h ha lien. The } Whethe they took advantage of the inisterial “filed last [Sttuation was ‘entirely a matter of nisteria the de personal choice contrasted with the children voting, was the recorder vote of Mrs Mary ley of Lincoln, who cele- brated her 100th birthday last May She was early at the polls and went through the voting process briskly ohare). kauiied tol baa erent dittor: ence in the ext 0 which the wom ight, were 1 dision of the United E participate in a coalitiin Ministry which included members of the ¢ man People's Party But the friends of Chancellor Wirth were not oblivious of the feeling that he had outlived his usefulness ani now has become a victim of a polic s not to of indecision and inactivity which }en voters in the east end of Londor found its culmination in the Govern-| were #equainted with the big election ment’s failure to make a practical ar-[Personalities. One canvasser declared rangement with the Ailied Repara-|that the name of -jonar Law was a tions Commission during the course of Junfamiliar to the women there as the tts recent visit to Berlin. names of the Pharaos. The Labor Ever since the assassination of |leade Henderson and Clynes, —-- seemed equally unknown, but Lloyd (Continued on Second Page.) George was famous, not as ‘the man — who won the war’? but as “the dear FUEL ADMINISTRATOR thing which got us a pension," Among the humorous occurrence SEIZES GOELET FUEL] was the appearance at the We Three Carloads Piled in Yard Dis- (Continued on Second Page.) tributed in One-Ton L sbladlihg ed! NEWBURGH, N. Y.. Nov. Mths section for coal supplies in exce @f the quantity prescribed by William R Perkins, the Fuel Administretor yester- Gay seized three carloads of chestnut ebal on the prope of Mrs. Ro! Goelet, near Chester Investigators found fi piled near the t erty, It having been in all of the delivery. Mr local dealer {o distribute it in or jots to residents of Ch and Floridu nearby hamlets, which had no anthra- eite. ns of Uh Real Estate Ads. — FOR THE — Violet wave wept over the litth The World Office |} }pecame so desperate that they sounded the launch's whistle and fired severa! FRIDAY shel from revolvers. The larm was heard by a Ca Before 6 P. M. Guard patrol at Jones's Inlet. H called for help and a small boat went To Insure Proper Classification | out in The launch wa SENATOR WHO IS TOLD HE MUST RELINQUISH PARTY LEADERSHIP }GHT KILLED IN FOOD RIOTS |EOWIW coup’ SSENTTO JA AS AUTO SPEEDER Locked Up for Day on Tier With Motley Rifraff of Afoul of Cop Magistrate Cobb. trip to the Tombs to-day with twelve other prisoners , drunks and ee ENRY’ CABOT LOOG! @vnocawoon 4 UNoERWOOD WILL OUST LODGE. FROM LEADERSHIP UNLESS HE QUITS McCormick Hint in Letter to Senator Serious Progressives. speedine: took the sentence as a trate Bruce Cobb. Gould gave his a Ardsley-on-the-Hudson. He stated ie was twenty-three At the Tombs the van with the of the millionaire was unloaded in the 1 and the prisoners were * written on it the young man a had decided it was being locked up By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON according to Doyle, » of the disturbance however, bears a relationship to 1924 and would have come the way elections turned and corroborated what the etter to Senator chairmanships, a detiance of 2 meant it eo 1 symptom of revolt Awaiting the seeming to r s gently to the senior Senator Massachusetts Awaiting the van & herded in with the were to help Lodge's leader er in the Senate. chairmanships to election by line nce of woty mee“ GEE Arrested or Drowned, Plight Of Hooch Boat on Bar in High Sea Inlet Made leadership of the ate, includir tons of coal] Crew of Seotch-Laden Launch at to h Quick Choice—the $8. 0. 5S. Two men in the 50-foot motor boat, ment when their craft ran onto a sandbar at J I, in the fog and heavy sea this morning === | without assistance and if they summoned assistance, would discover that the motor boat was loaded with whiskey worth $30,000, and {f they didn't summon assistance of their being drowned were more than favorable Inlet off Freeport cans and the They couldn't get the boat off pates revolt said assistance 300 cases of S (Continued ong KIPLING IN HOSPITAL, MAY BE OPERATED ON t serious operation. BRESLIN'S GUESTS |1922 SANTASLAUS IDETECTIVES VISIT SCENE SMOKED OWT BY |WILL BE AMERICAN: FACTORY BLAZE) GERMAN IS ROUTED poner ene Invalid Carried to Street}/Importation of Toys, Re- From Top Floor of vised Last Year, Killed Annex, by New Tariff. a SPARKS BRING C sROW DS}$7,000,000 TRADE GONE. Red Cross Meeting Forced Factories on Part Time by Dense Smoke to Abroad buf Booming Here, Adjourn. Report Shows. Smoke from a fire In a loft building] WASHINGTON, Nov, 15.—The next door drove guests from the Hotel lg 999,000 German toy importation Breslin Annex, No. 14 West 29th Street, just before last midnight. One of the guests, Mrs. O. D. Dreyfuss of Tennessee, an invalid, was carried to the street from her apartment on the top floor of the Annex When Melville Hill, assistant man- ager of the hotel, reached the Annex, with other employees, tle rooms and halls were filled with smoke. Twenty- four of the guests were taken quickly to the street. With Mrs. Dreyfuss was a nurse and companion, Miss EK. J. Rudolph, who remained with her until Hill and the other employees had carried Mrs. Dreyfuss to the Hotel Breslin and|Products—an undreamed of reality in The Annex|the days before the war business of pre-war days has com pletely collapsed and in its place American mapufacturers have builded a hugh new industry. This was re- vealed in figures of pre-Christmas toy business furnished by the Department of Commerce here to-day which con- statements from Germany that the toy business is booming. The tradicts figures showed: Importation of German toys this r will be py tically negligible The high cost of manufacturing in Germany will permit American toy manufacturers to export kome of their made her comfort c some time, fhe situation will result in an ex Toss Org’ was uninhabitable f A meeting of F a was in session on the first floor Annex when the fire started. change in toy styles, American ders offering radio outfits, con struction sets nd educational to in quickly caused its adjournment. The fire was in the five-story lofi] the place of the old tin soldier and building at No. 12 West 29th Str rag doll and was the latest of four during th evening between 2ist and 29th Streets and Fifth and Seventh Avenues It | tually eliminated by the war, but the started in the boiler room and made {79 per cent. ad valorem tax fixed by wift headway. he McCumber tariff bill and the fore the blaze next door to the of the engines and The German toy imports were vir- carelty of raw materials in Germany trucks had been concentrat Nos.| have added the finishing blow 6 Ft} Commerce reports showed Ame $100,000 fire ory loft 3 ¥ in orders in Germany have recently building. Sp drifted 1s far north as 34th Street and at-]heen cancelled in enormous lots, and tracted thousands from the hotel and] Germany has lost the advantage that theatre districts, t held in 1921—when $4,861,000 Just after this fire started an alarm from No. 9 West Street called headed by Chief Martin. 'The#firemen| The German doll centre at ‘Thurin 1 blaze in a four-story buildin: worth of Christmas toys were im the Santa Claus shop for me ipied by manufacturing concert : ae The flames were extinguished without | Chtnteal and metal toys in Bavaria h ke and the wooden and paper mach wlier in the evening slight damage| mecca in was done by fire at No, 47 West 27th Street in a building occupied by the Premier Garment nt Company. of these centres formerly w ed, but the manufacturers can no TEACHER DIES | IN FALL onger meet American prices jaxony have suffered s¢ verely. More than half the production export American manufacturers who saw ON HOT CURLING IRON) ,..ciiitities of the war and were en couraged when German prices wer Killed When Her Head Strtkes tli noted 00 to 600 nt he In Diney [itan taik apsings fen capable on a hot curling ivor vy | supply the new demand and we ed the death’ of Mina: M ie ome the transformation trom a Ge | [man to an American Santa Claus, th h, twenty-six, a teacher at Pul iagastment ana No. 3, Elizabeth, N. J, 0 was preparing to go to cla «atts ee Soe |CopWho Found Her Sent to Death |:::: After breakfast she went 1 grace to the courts of,this county. It should have been tried long ago. I have made up my mind what to do about it, ay a case which has at tained such unfavorable notoriety as has never been equalled in this grant a motion to dismiss the threc against him since March 80, 1920."" stein argued the motion to discharge OF MURDER: ARE CONFIDENT MULE WOMAN TELLS TRUTH Moolight Test Convinces Them She Could Have Seen Woman Bending Over Body Be- neath Tree—Tally Other Vivid Assertions of Star Hall-Mills Murder Witness. ay (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Nov. 15.—The moon was practically in tho same quarter last night and the night before as that in which it was the night of Sept. 14 wuen the Rev, Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills wer> done to death in their lovers’ hiding place under the crabapple tree on the Phillips farm, * Night Before last detectives under . the direction of Special Prosecutor Mott and Prosecutor Azariah Beek- man spent the whole night at the Ls *hillips farm, with the sworn state- ment of Mrs. Jane Gibson—which has DELAY h f) not been published—as the guide of 8, y| thelt movements. They returned yes- terday and reported their opinion‘ot Mrs. Gibson's story of having seen Mrs. Hall mourning over her hus- tand's body at half past 12 o'clock in pases en n2 the morning, two hours after Mrs. ae ae ; +. |Gibson had heard the shots which McIntyre Threatens to Dis-}iica nim and Mrs. Mills. miss Indictments Unless | ‘he detectives reported thelr cers Tried in 60 Days. tainty that Mrs, Gibson's weird story Was nothing more or less than the ex- act truth, It was easier to beilevs lous figure in the investigation of the eae ene baie melds WA SOuee $5,000,000 robberies committed by} aii, Water, Guan hae oe Wall Street messenger boys In 1919 yi oats or tie cto pis aches was discharged from his $25,000 ball] Oo Aeailtee |, hg chars ak tin OR annily as it does with almont : trivial details as to the lay of tre Nicky Arnstein, the most conspic- nizance by Judge McIntyre in Gen land, the conditions of the paths and the state of the shrubbery eral Sessions “The handling of this case id the stars were over- Judge MeIntyre, “stands as a dis ar e cast night before last by 1 ht clouds ~the sky was perfectly celar, accord- ing to the State Agricultural Station here, Sept. 14, and shooting stars were seen by some of the persons in the Phillips farm nelghborhood—and visibility was lower than on the murder night. But the detectives, sixty days 1 ll | standing where Mrs. Gibson said she found they would have had ne difficulty in recognizing a woman bending over « body lying beside the crabapple tree. EVENING WORLD REPORTER GOES OVER SCENE. Last night an Evening World re- Ho reminded the court that after|porter, hearing of the official tests enger boys hod testi-{went over the ground for his own action, He started where Mra. unty “If this defendant is not brought o trial wit indictments which have been standin Eugene McGee of counsel for Arn the bail and dismiss the indictments: some of the me: fied before the ¢ nd Jury that they | Sat! Gibson said she startec 1er Je had turned over stolen securities to ae yon hae saeey mule on her second trip to the mur- Arnstein, the indictments were found. |der scene—not along Hamilton Road There was a farctcal scarch for]and De Russey Lane, but across lots to De Rt Lane across the Fraley (Continued on Second Page.) farm. Crossing De Russey Lane above the upper road leading from the lang to the farmhouse, he found himself d from the lower part of the farm by the twenty-foot high om to arr ' shrubbe ty pda grows al uy both coreg ee peal feb Of Little Foundling No. 26,347)". (oo ose i stick the hot. iron and te. |'Three Year Old rl, Abandoned { in Hallway When Few paral o te a bi entrance, road tw fatal injury from CLOUDY AND FAST entry that will show “Thlema, No — THE WORLD THAVEL AUTMAD. Check room wid bastas checks tor sale-Advt DODGE TOURING CAR, GIVEN AWAY FR KE I T RACE-—Five fur | |slab that w ark as grave i Ne ooastGeey Ga | hat will mark a small g first re buried, it will close the life histo hallway « r ; In anket b i t 4-5. All | ' f » RACE—I | Jays old. There was ar jto the bundle which read (elles), $ 1 of my baby, He Os 12), % man carried the infant 1 n, where the lieutanant gav 1 ey, $ | n the usual lau that ¢ 4 } eman who fi f _ Days Old, Killed Under Piano, six fect high MARLBORO RESULTS On the books of the New York around to it some time today or tom The reporter measured off 175 feet Foundling Aslylum, when he gets}and found the cedar bush within sia row, a busy clerk will make an| feet of him: Here, according to Mrs. Gibson, sh¢ 6317," ts dead. Except for a wooden | aismounted from Jenny and threw thé cemetery Where foundiing chil sover the cedar bush. Afrald that a pretty girl, three years old because of the dry weather the roore ot aieealen = sate the bush might be loose and Jenny ——— t pull away from the hiteh, Mra matron d Gil nid tested the strength ai ed ome milk Q the re and found them firm. Step. the ifant boarded 1 1] ping back from this pull, sh id she Avenue car for Belley A crowd | trippe ckward on a small stumt late travalletanloaned’ Kins « ind ]and fell, She was frightened, she said Neco anctharvinicn for fear that {f there were anybody ai \t the hospital there had been |the scene of the carller shooting, they hud been many foundlings that | Would hear her fall; so she lay still fog atone Idina a tine caihan ante a moment listening but heard nothing - The stump was there. (Continued on Second Page.) It is less than a foot in height ang SPECIAL PRIZE FOR THIS WEEK | ~ See Page 19 “WHAT DID YOU SEE TO.- DAY?”