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She “Circulation Books Open-to All” yee ORR eS F Copyright (New ‘ops oS snabing VOL, LXIII. NO, 22307 DAILY. York World) by Press A To Morrow's Weather—FAIR —FAIR AND ‘COLDER. MAJORITY FOR BONAR LAW IN PARLIAMENT ASSURED: HAS 319 SEATS OUT OF G19 o- ew nee MIUISCEINT THROWS | DOWN GAUNTLET 10 ITALIAN DEPUTIES eb g a Tells the Chamber He Is Not There to Ask Favors but Receive Them. 70 Divisions Yet to Report Expected to. Increase It Materially. LABOR VOTE SURPRISE. Lloyd George Ruins a Poor Fourth in Returns Re- ceived Up to 2 P.M. LONDON, Nov. + 16 Press).—The Consérvatives are cer- tain to have a majority over alleiig otWer parties in the new Housé of Commons, At 4.30 o'clock the (Associated ROME —t Nov Mussolini, dress to the Chamber 16 (Associated Press). in his initial ad- ot Deputies to- emier returns showed the Conservatives.io have more than ‘ ; ; 4 the necessary 308 for a majority in he threw down the gavwllet to that the new House, At that hone the| PCy andgindigated in unmistakable feutns that heywas not there to ask figutes were: } : ; . ‘avorg but to receive them. rye ves, S19, ‘eur A Conservatives Da : What I any doing to-dayy"" said the quithian Iaiberals, 55, Faacisti leader, “is a formal act of Labor, 120. courtesy tows whieh I do National Liberals or Georgeites, 38.) not desty xpression of * Ontiers gratitude , Pete For too ymany years ministerial Ph we a total of 545 divisions This mude a total of . D8) cyisis have heen settled b¥ the Cham- accounted for, witli seventy stt¥ toler, by political manoeuvres, but for bo heard from. Chg second time—the first w May, AVinston Churchill, former Secre-{19T—the Talian nation over- tary for the Colonies, was defeatea| thrown the Cabinet and given itself ; : 2 Ministry outside of, above, in spite for re-election freim the Dundee]? Avision . "e the melancholy wor- Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen, Min-} shippers of superconstitntionalism tie| / Ister of Health in the Bonar Law Cab-| dissertations and complaints, but 1 inet, was defeated by his Liberal op- ponent in the Taunton Division of (Gontinued on atl dois Page.) Somerset. Labor continued to furnish the most sensational features of the early re- turns, about half the total of Labor. CUNO HAS ACCEPTED TASK OF ORGANIZING Party ts representing gains as] . NEW GERMAN MINISTRY compared with the lust clections, —— These gains were for the mgst part In} Head @f Hambarg American Line Scotland and in the manifacturpg] Succeeds Wirth, Aecce counties and northern towns of EK UnomMicial Repo: ‘land. In many cases they won witli BERLIN, .Nov. 16 (Asadciated minority of the total poll, this resul ing from the conflicts between the other parties. {The Labor strength in the Press).—Wilhelm Cuno, General Man- ager of the Hamburg-American Inst | Steamship Line, has accepted the Parliament was 67; the returns up to |task of forming a Cabinet to succeed 3 P. M. gave them a gain of 29, whigh|the Wirth Ministry, it was unoffi- ig likely to be added to on iater r3-|Cially announced this afternoon, REFUSHLTOPAY: HARDING'S SP GRAFTBARRED GUS} SUBSIDY BATTLE: MAKER, 15 CHARGE} CRISIS OF CAREER Trackless lpreiey Plans Changed So It Couldn’t Bid, Shearn Says. $10,000 JOB DEM ANDED. Picture of Tammany Mem- ber With Hylan and Murphy Shown. It was openly cuarged to-day by Clarence J. Shearn, special counsel to the Transit Commission, that when William Crompton, a salesman and member of the Society of Tammany, faileg to Induce the Ailas Truck Cor- poration to retain him tuck salesman at® $10,000 a sell trackless trolley of New York, the specific: ” the trackleds troileys were changed in the Department of Plant and Structures to such an extent as to motor as a year to buses to the Ci preclude\ the Atlas Company's pro- duct from competitive bidding. This chacge by Judge Shearn was made when Crompton man McAneny, ‘What amination all about?" Before Commissioner gould + awer, Judke Shearn out: “EN tell you bat this is all about.” and then proceeded to tell Crampton bout fhe alleged -diserimination gainst the Atlas Truck Corporation. Crompton denied the implication latly and asked that he be examined on that score asked - isahis ex4 MeAneny blurted ited he once showed A a director of the company, a photo of the Liberty Day parade of the Tammany Society, which showed Crompton marching, beside Charles F. Murphy and Mayor Hylan. He denied, however, that he to convey the im- pression that he was “in right" with the City Administration nd could therefore influence the sale of trucks trackless trolley purpogcs. He could give no reason for showing the re to Cos: Compton denied he ever told Cos- grove that his ‘influence’ was great in selling trucks. He said he told Cosgrove his ‘ability’? to sell was great, and not h “influence.” Crompton denied he ever told Cos- grove that he would have an advan- showed the pictur for ove (Continued on Second Page.) sults.) While wing numerous gains in the early returns, Inbor suffered a hard setback in the Widnes Division of Lancashire, when Arthur Hender- son was defeated by the Conservative candidate, Dr, George ‘C. Clayton, after holding the seat since 1919. The vote was: Clayton 14,679, Hen- derson 12,897, The Liberals, or Asquithians, also made substantial gains, while botir thé Conservatives and the National Lib- erals, or Georgeltes, lost heavily. Tho Copservatives gained a seat in Cambridgeshire, where Harold Gray, the Conservative candidate, polled 9,846 votes @eainst A, PB. Stubbs, ‘ = Judgo Charles L. Bartlett. It cures cond Page.) the speed maniacs, he declared, urg- === Jing that every Judge in the country force reckless dgivers to submit to this torment of conscience—and so put a stop to’the mounting automo- bile casualties. Judge Bartlett led the seventy con- victed trafle law violators down the long aisle under police guard. There was a rustling in the beds, a lifting of heads from pillows, a focusing of children’s eyes on the crowd. “Children,” said the Judge, have sentenced these men for speeding and I have brought them here to show the result of Detroit’s thoughtless driving."* Many of the prisoners hung their heads and shuffled nervously. It was noticed that five of the little boys and two girls were so crippled their legs had to be weighted with heavy iron equipment. Several of the men tured their faces away. “You see, gentlemen," Judge Bart- lett said, “most of these children would be walking with perfect limbs (Continued on First in the Number of Business Opportunities —————————— Total nutiber of Business Op- portunities printed in the New ‘York newspapers from January Ast, 1922, to October 81st are as follows: THE WORLD. The Times The American, The Herald. The Tribune. + 106,707 ads, ++ 29,462 ads. ++ 11,078 ads 5,347 ads, 814 ads. THE WORLD'S Lead... 77,248 ads, 70% i ot ‘Mtl the “poeneye orton. Sentences 70 Auto Speeders To Contemplate Their Victims Judge Leads Line of Convicted Offenders Through Hospital Where Crippled Kiddies Lie. DETROIT, Nov. 16.—Seventy automobile speeders to-day paced slowly through the children’s ward of a great hospital here past rows of tiny kiddies maimed for life in traffic accidents. This mental torture wasdecreed by @ to-day but for the carelessness of mo~ torists. It is unpleasant to send any one to jail, but you now realize that it is my duty to protect these chil. dren, “Will any of you drive recklessly again?” There was a general shaking, of heads and a muttering of ‘*No,'"« Then, at a signal from the Judge, they marched out of the ward and to jail to begin their terms, the children staring after them. “No Judge should be allowed to re- main on the bench who is not exert- ing himself to the Iimit to stamp out the growing menace of speeding and reckless driving. It is even worse than murder, because it is an unag- gravated ctime,"’ Judge Bartlett de- clared “I most heartily recommend that every traffic Judge in America follow my plan of imprisoning traffic viola- tors without option of fine, and of at- tacking them through their conscience by taking them through hospitals where children, maimed by reckless. ness spend thelr lives in misery." With Leageribip of Party at Stake He Counts on Democratic Aid, SURE BILL WILL PASS. Action On It Will Show if Republicans Can Act as Unit. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, Noy. 16 “(Copy- right).—President Harding fac the climax “ot his political career. He means to force ship subsidy” Jegisia- tion Congress. The whole f ‘the Aduinistagtién vill There will be through pressure of be put into the fight. no recession Within the last twenty-four the President has outlined the plan o! action to his assistante. He foels that his party must stand back of him hours on this Administration. measure or confess its inability fo cope with aiter-the-war problems But “Mr Harding isnot going to regard the hip Subsidy Bill as a party measure, Ue is making a bid for Démocratic ‘upport. His fang ir that the pres- shipping sitiation was ereated by the war, by a Democratic: Administra- tion ussisted yy Republicans, and that both parties owe it to the country. to straighten out the mess. ent Phe President, is confident the whole country will support the ship subsidy program when it understands tne facts, He charges that enemies of tho measure have misrepresented the case. They are trying to prejudice the Na- tion because of its traditional opposi- tion to subsidies. But w pre-war subsidy and a post- yar subsi@y cre different things in Mr. Harding's opinion. The United States Government is at present sub- sidizing the Shipping Board, Mr. Har- ding wants to reduce that financial burden by another plan which will cost much less, H'* proposal is to salvage the war fleet, the idea being to encourage private owners to take the overnment vessels and build up & shipping trade and pay back to the (Continued on “Second Page.) piaab SCA SLT JAPANESE PRESS MILD IN COMMENT ON U. 5S. Underlying Feeling Against Su- Preme Court Decision Bitter. TOKIO, Nov. 16 (Associated Press).— Continued moderation marks the Japan- ese press comment on the decision of the United States Supreme Court hold- ing Japanese ineligible for natural! tion as American citizens, In some circles here, however, it is believed that the underlying feeling is more bitter. The Yorosu Choho, an independent daily, predicts that the decision will im pair friendly relations between the two countries. The Japan Times, an’ English tar guage paper now owned and edited by Japanese, declared that the time is not far distant when aj! Japanese will bc driven ‘out of America. The Osaka Nichinichi Shimbun, the only morning paper commenting on the decision, says it is not commendable for America to discriminate in the mat- ter of naturalization by reason of color, “However,” concedes the payer, “natu ralization 19 a thing to be granted, not forced.” lars nt Sa MARLBORO RESULTS. CLEAR AND FAST. tee FIRST RACE—Five and one-h furlongs. > Refrain (Jéley), $2.90, $2.70 und $2.40, first, Mid City @terling), $8 and $3.70. second. Evader (Woodstock), Time+-1,12, Expense. third, Bill of $3.70, Non-starter: 9 PARLIAMEN ‘9 SEAT T 5 ‘WON B y Burke Indicted for Laren Accused of Securing $26,300 From Policemen for Influence $e Ex-Saloon Pra It Is Alleged,] WOMAN FOUND GUILTY FIGHTS Has Been Giving Evidence Offered to Secure Their Promotion. $ $25) 000 BAIL. Before Civil Service Board Burke, a nt bet in m in: the their Promotion cemen who didn’t get promoted ouldn’t collect their money com- piained and Commissioner of Accounts inaugurated an investiga- tion which was halted by Burke's de Ireland a few days ago Hirshfield resumed his in- vestigation and interested the District Hirshfield parture for and for Some Timew ; The Grand Jury returned an indict- ment charging grand larceny in the firet degroe to-day against Michael J. years conducted 2121 Lexington Ave- tn He is accused of collecting, $26,800 from eighteen police- to whom he promised to use his certain employees of to fix for who for many at No. later saloon ne and arlem 1921, en, fluence Civil pa was o bratender with Service Commission ors in an examination Mr. Attorney. plANaHOR which adequ te! were heard amd the indictment was Judge Rosalsky issued a bench warrant and Detectiv William Sullivan found Burke at the rooms of the Civil Service Commis- subpoena an’ investigation to determine if he 1 paid any money to any members returned sie in ha, of him before Judge noon. he $2 ous burry he plenty of company over th th ma 15 sc hirke was exami®ed by the Com- yesterday and gave an ex- was sioner te. i Grand Jury to-day, at noon, on, whel he was under the Commission's staff. Sullivan arrested Burke and Rosalsky this after District bail. be Assistant that fixed Neill asked 5,000. Burke became belligerent when he was to bd@ fixed at He said there was @ suspici- trying to send him to the Tombs, in view of the fact that « from freland nearly ard that bail 5,000, about has been I months, If 1 go togail, * he said re. erything I know. “For the last month or n almost a daily e Civil Service Commission utter Of the application for who was dismiss: My testimon Civil. Service Nov. 23, 1 0 pages, missioners Iknow the truth,’’ Burke appeared to be re at Joseph A. Ruddy, pa ph: (Ci ansianest9 on ‘Second Page.) WILSON FELICITATES DODGE TOURING CAR GIVEN AWAY FREE GOV. EDWARDS ON HIS RISE TO U. S. SENATE ormer Prest in Warmly Welcomes New Jersey Executive to Washington, Congratulgtions uphis election to the United States Senate have recelyed by Gov. E of New Jersey from former Woodrow Wilson Governor, who wag in Jersey to-day, received a note, which was originally matied to him in Trenton. wards Pres ident copy of the ‘The message, written on Noy, 12 in ington, reads as follows “My Dear Governor: & hoping to have @ chance to take you b ythe hand and congratulate you on the new honors that hay come to you. Now w all afte a while beth be Wasi n nd we can ‘eollague’ on the ntg, old and new, to our heart tent. With warmest appreciation and most cordial greetings, “Faithfully yours “WOODROW WILSON vas not considered The case wag taken up by six witnesses took Attorney at “Tl have Tl tell two I have witness before in the rein- tement of Patrick Ryan. tue former fingerprint exp on tiils Comn- ularly ical ox- miner of the Civil Service Commis- Letter, OF SLAYING HER RIVAL TO HUSBAND'S LOVE a PHILLIPS CLARA PHILLIPS FOUND GUILTY OF HAMMER MURDER Second Degree Verdict Re- turned by Jury Which In- cluded Three Women. LOS ANGELES, A ver- dict of murder in the second degree was retiirned by the jury to-day in the of M Clara Phillips charged with beating Mrs, Alberta dows to death with a hammer Jealousy of her husband's tions to Mrs. Meadows was alleged as the motive, vov, 16 case rs, atton- The “ju by it sverdict, decreed that Mrs. Philips in beating Mrs Meadows’ to death, acted under ex treme provocation, Nine men and three women 1en dered the verdict, which way returned ec and 10.30 after approximately twenty one-half hours of deliberation, A. M. to-day. Ten years to life imprisonment will be the penalty. Sentence will be nounced next Monday Before the verdict received Judge Houser cautioned the crowd i the court room that deputy were scattexed among them an dthat any demonstration would be dealt with severely, Mrs. Phillips heard the without any bbe id of emotion was sheviffa LOSER. BY “SIX VOTE WEINFELD TO CONTEST Official myass Shows ‘Wins Assembly Seat. The official canvass of the votes of the 6th Assembly District by the Board of Canvassers was completed to-ddy at noon, The compilation of the tally sheets shows that Sol Ull- man, the Republican nominee for the Assembly, received a plurality of 6 votes over Morris Weinfoeld, 8 Dem- ccratic opponent. The ioial vote was Uliman, 4, Weinfeid, 4,920. A contest, it is said, will immediate ly be begun by Weinfeld to bavo the boxes opened and the votes recounted O SPECIAL PRIZE FOR THIS WEEK “WHAT DID YOU SEE TO-DAY ?”’ W THUS FAR in ah RAMSHACKLE RIG. FOUND IVES SUPPORP TO TALE TOLD BY “Pla” WOMAN INIEWEL STORE, GET $10,000 EMS Hoboken Shopping District (Gpecipt: fret! a. Sta Corkpamatieaine Stirred by ring Day- 4 of The Evening World.) light Bandit’ Trio. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. Nov. 16.--On Easton Avenue not far from “y De Russey Lane Detective Ferd David, Middlesex County investigator of the murders of the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs, Sleanor Mills, hes found a rattietrap wagon, and from the discovery the narrative of Blast New “Mystery Visit® of Two to Widow's Home Officials Know Men. ~ In the centre of the shopping dtia- of Hoboken a morning three hold-up men trussed up the proprietor and clerk in a jow- elry store at No, 514 Washington Street and looted the place of stock trict at o'clock thls Gibson, the “mule, woman,” ag 16 Fajued at $10,000, consisting of dia<}what w we the night te ‘mond rings, fins and watehes. While bmurders snk we e ty. the robbery was going on men and women were” passing, crowds wave going into a dry goods store on one side of the pewo'ty store, und) cus+ tomers were coming in and gong from a cigar store on the other side of it. Mrs. Gibson has told of being called out of her house by the barking of her dog soon after the Mills¥ille bus Pasved her farm on Hamilton Road—ot hearing a ramshackle wagon turning from Hamilton Road down De Russey alarm clock. red away a load of it, It was then she saddled her Jetmy mule and followed the rattle of the wagon down the Iine iato the clima®” of the tragedy ¥ In the dogged, . persistent wotlk which has characterized the official in- vestigators since they realized (hej~ Kraemer stepped to the r of the store and raised his hands to Get th clock, One of the men shoved u revolver into his ribs and told him to keep hiv hands up and his mouth shut. He thon marched him into the rear room ond told him to lie down on the floor Another man had covered the clerk wha the latter soon joined bh firat, errors of @versight and unde: plover on the floor: hint 1 esthnation, It Became. bevaeieee Mmulned in the store und while one | Gng that igen und obtuin the eBb = rneaey ei a i" wer roboration of the driver as to Lis hey ing 0 oy ire, Handkerchiefs were used | /n& Passed down De Russoy, Lane ant toward@New Brunswick on Avenue that night The wagon js found. But the driver refuses to admit he was out tn it the night of Sept. “14. A search of liv premises furnishes ample reasons for to gag them and they were then set in ‘iol chairs and-the trio went to work on the showenses After about ten minites he up clerk and proprietor heard russed~ the ouer door close and figured the men] hiy refusal to admit he w had gone, ‘The clerk rolled off the Mirai copie . i oe chair and reached the door between in the two rooms. ‘This was ajar, and he} "phe investigators. also have the managed after a time to work his! wor of neighbors that gis detital bs way through It into the store proper. | lutes A hundred fest away was a afte} “L° “ Special Proseeutor Mott has found policeman, who heard the clerk. The ‘ rb ; boy was unbound and Kraemer, who Nebpdit pe ue teh ime ath gr anes tnd had been unable even to fall off his |)i® Hey. Mr: Tallis stock sxcuas 0 chair, was released from his seat in}®!8 absences from home. Ho always ee vine eee sald his automobile tire had blown A survey af the place showed tiat {Ut The witnesses report that whon about everything worth the taking|° Teported three and four blowouts Sad Kerarwith ther chigven a week for several weeks in succes ce sion his excuses for being out ints LEAGUE STARS DEFEAT were received at home with marked sispicion MEIJI UNIVERSITY, 11-0} ic ix understood that ‘Timothy —~ Tamulty, who had the care of the TOKIO, Nov. 16 (Agpoclated Press.)-- | Hall garage, was questioned by M The -star yess 8 profeasional | Hall about these vlowouts im such a baseball team yesterday defeated Meiji WAY that he blurted out the Informa Univeraity, 11 to 0. tion that the rector ‘had not = blowout in over a wonth; whereuper Mrs. Hall is said to } showt Op BLOOD TRANSFUSION anger and to have statied ta find Att FROM PEDIGREED PUP | Tint! to take bin tot Affecting the sincerity af Mes SAVES BULL TERRIER } j741/'s protest (hat she never suspect. ed he 1 of any undue afte Major Swallowed Spoons, Opera- fo M M “ie tatement bs tion Nearly Killed Him, Apache | A: Nolece, einen Wesnak Gites dee die, ames Mills, not before publishehre OAKLAND, Cal, Nov. ie garding one of his five talks with . Mrs, Hall between the time the recto Blood transfusions from the and Mrs, Milla disuppeoted aad the veins of “Apache French," a pe- | time their bodies were found. Mil digreed pup to those of ‘Major bas told Mr, Mott that he asked Mis 4 Boston bull terrier, has saved {Hall if she had any idea where } the latter's life, *Muojr's"’ illness ene sod bie wife apres caused by swallowing two “T suppose they went to Dr, David ievecream spoons, which a vete son's in Newark to see about h rinarian removed, but the shock | teeth,"’ he says Mrs, Hall cenlied an and loss of blood nearly caused the [that he answered: “No, if they went death of the patient to @ dentist they would have gone t ‘The transfusion operation took | Dr, Hasbrouck in New York.’ a half. Both patient Mills sald Mrs. Hail was igpatient are recovering. with the suggestion, replying, See Page 27 a ae ‘ge. Question * TRUSS \|P 2 EN Man Who Drove It Night — of EPI 4, Louis Kraemer, the proprietor, and|Lane toward Easton Avenue. She had Boderie Folie, a clerk, about eigh-|been troubled by thieveryeot hér corn teen, were in the place when the rob-}and she stispected the wagon was< bers entered One asked to see an]driven by the thief and was carrying Hall-Mills .*