Newspaper Page Text
Merer I rollers
Strive to End
Misrule in Citv
Investigators Aim to Improve
Administration and Pave
Way for Effective Legisla?
tion ?>> Charter Revision
VTanv Obstacles Offered
Brown Says Attitude of
Present Regime Has Been
Opposition ?o Needed Aid
net counsel to the
sf the prese;:; city
,1 brief survey
hieve
,\ ? ?in .:'.?-?? .
:: . :?
ry has hi en
I ?'. ' . \ 11 ? "C -';-'
. . way for
art? r re\: ?
. ? o-opera
?..:: . ? municipal
i ith ??? ? M r. Brown ::?;'. a that t rio
utitr.d? ? /ernment has
ip.-: -. ? [uiry one i
po dtion an Hi added
tat I , f Dart i o
Probe
?artments
electi tin ' ' : ? w i? c n
invi ?gation of those
?
.. xamination of
:hose i ? iched
con
le pai tial or coi
-examinations of the Mayor's office, the
Comptroller's office, Dock Department,
lepar* ??.: I lucation, Markets De
artment, Dej rtn .* of Lici nses, Po
ice Department, Street Cleaning De
artment, the Borough of Queens and
? artmi n( of Publ c Welfare. In
i ;a r^'-. number o cases, according to
;h< :.. cord, en i: revealed
: graft, corruption,
waste, r evil pra ctici s of
Assembly! ? Hoch, Demo
:ratic member of the committee, also
a ??* .-? ment attacking the aims
,nd method: mitt? e. He said
the effect ol : '?" investigation was
'an unwilling and unwitting endorse
menl of Mayor Hylan and his admin
the most honest and most
in thi long history of the
rreater city." He- added that* the ini
I of 5100,000 for' its
?vork was exhausted and that the final
??-.??? : - I ?300,000.
H ? f read-:
g sessions through eighl
? ei - - the legislative committ? ? will
id; ? ' ?: vi :? election The inquiry has
dir? I toward improv
?: administration and paving the way
'or effective legislation by charter re
ror the improvement of gov
nditions in th" i
ough conceded on ail .-ules that
eje was grave necessity for such
tances requiring action too
lention have been dis
? ? attitude of the present city
has been one of opposition
ften i ?' i bstruction, and this at*i
lintained notwithstand
es of co- ip?ration and
? ins from the heads of
?? : artm? ::": of "i-" e xistence of
'.rave fault n ition and in
ter ] ns.
Partiv-nship Ch?rge Denied
7?,e charge of partisanship in th?
r |u ry being cr^-.:.??'.?
n levanl If the pi oofs
' - ' itivi foi their disclosure
ven if partisan, excuse ? r
' ti f i tl ? r con t i nuance. But I
n ' critic:::;: i
. ' .'- n d."
A ? ; ? ;? Bloch'i tatemenl reads
ible accurately to esti
"?? :. ". " tal cost to the ta.-.:pa.ver? of
? ? fishing expedi
initial appropria
and it
total i .pense to
Hirsh field Sends Note
To Meyer on Inquiry
i immTssIoner of
:. letter i ? I yesti ^<iay to
. ? rman "f ''n>
: " vi [nvi gatinj .
: ? : ' o tl.!
mi ttei had
- ?. gating
? ? oi Manl attan
eparl nder his
? - ? ? , | rt tl morning
oar i te? ha 'reci >sc :' uni.'
i. r ? ?-? ? ; ':\ a b ! ;, ,
? ? . failed in your
1 ' -. o r to d i 8
tration, ?? ou '? a ???
top ma_ -
r the Mayoi.
? ? . city '.'?? 11 t ' gret
ng yout Buppo ed ! v
? ve. gatioi ,'Oti il
Borough Preaidei ' < f
? d t he several depa rt
i ? When
?. 11,..--.
eged "io
part ? ? .r
action of M? ;.' ? Hylan ' ?? public b-.i,\
. ? ? -
of the Borough
? ^L^tm^t\\\\\\\^t\\\\\\\\^t?u\\\\
tut - . . ;..'.
.1
i, : not d
so,
n
4 'it. IIOM
SOME of the most
simple remembrai ces
and some of the richest
gifts come from Oving
ton's, but for eme ;i-. for
the other, the proportion
of wl . et to whs t
y/ * pay is ?".'. v pi -t
O VI NOT ON'S
'The>Q ft Shop of3th A /a."
at 39th St,
-.-_.
Curran ?o Spettk ai
5 3/eef?H.??aS To-night
Henry I?. Curran, Republican
coalition candidate for Mayor,
will speak ?it the following places
to-night :
8:30 p. m.?-Mass meeting, Har?
lem Casino, 116th Street and Lx?x
ington Avenue.
9 p m.?19th Assembly District
Republican Club, 'SA West 124th
Street.
9:30 p. m.?North Side Repub?
lican Club, 142d Street and Third
Avenue.
10 p. m.?Pioneer Republican
Club, 1324 Franklin Avenue, the
Bronx.
10:o0 p. m.?Park Republican
Club, Fordharn Road and Third
Avenue, the Bronx (women's
meeting).
Mr. Curran will attend the
funeral service for Jacob Bren?
ner, late Republican leader of the
8th Assembly District, Brooklyn,
at the Eighth Avenue Temple,
Garfield Place and PJighth Ave
nue, at 2 p. m.
Abolition of Lessons to
Foreigners Is Protested
Security League Objects to
Elimination From Budget of
Sum for Teaching English
The National Security League yes?
terday entered a vigorous protest
against the action of the budget com?
mittee of the Board of Estimate in cut?
ting from the 1922 educational budget
the appropriation for teaching English
to foreigners. The protest was in the
? form of a letter written to each mem
S her of the board by F. J. Lisman, chair
I man on public schools. The letter read
: in part:
"Your budget committee has cut the
1 amount requested so that not only this
! necessary work cannot be extended bui
the facilities now existing will have tc
be curtailed. What this means can hi
readily seen from the fact that th<
: attendance at these classes last yeai
I totalled 17,000, which was increasec
this year to 118,000.
??\Yi:h all due respect, permit us t<
say that if the recommendation of th<
budget committee of your board is per
mitted to stand, New York City wil
he disgraced by the neglect of ;
bounden duty which it owes, not onl;
tu the men and women who have com.
to us from foreign shores, but also ti
our owr. standard of citizenship.
"It is unbelievable that at a tin.
when all good citizens are of one mini
? the product of the m?lting po
shall bf American, the leading city o
the country should lead in reaction in
stead of constructive Americanism."
Next Comptroller Faces
Big Task, Says Harviei
"The next Comptroller of this city,
said Ernest Harvier at the Lockwoo
headquarters in the Bristol Buildin
last right, "will have more importan
duties than any of his predecessor
He must, among other things, provid
for the repayment to the city t
$13,000,000 arrears of taxes from th
traction companies. He must devis
methods for a budget of more tha
$350,000,000 and must safeguard tl:
city's interests in the financial open
tions of the state.
"As a member of the Legislature fc
many years and a member of the m;
jority party there. Senator Lockwoc
will he well qualified to do this. T'r
Union League Club in adopting tl
report of its committee on politic
reform two weeks ago said: 'It is i
longer sufficient, fori a f'omptrolli
merely to verify or requisition or
Valance book?.'
"The magnitude of the operations
the Comptroller's offic? is understoi
by few. Last year the receipts r. ;
disbursements of the offic were almo
; ? ,000,000,000 $924,852,088."
Breweries "Vit oui?1 Air! Idle
ST. LOUIS, Oct. 18, The City U
employment Commission to-day h;
,: der consideration a resolution callii
upon Congress to amend the Prohibits
act to permit the manufacture of lig
wines and beer that breweries might
opened to aid in relieving the une;
ployment situation.
il vlan $lisrule
ml
Cost; Millions.
Savs Curran
(Contlniip;l irom pr!<je one)
: Mr. Hylan took no stops at all in the
matter of garbage disposal fcr tin
! fsrst two years after his election. He
depended entirely on '-cows thai the
; Street Gleaning Department hin i
f--om ront rae'.ois to carry ?' oui to eu
Many of yon. after your garbage can
stocd in front of your home for man;
'day?, filled to overflowing, have indig
! nantly called up the Street Cleanini
Department on the telephone to com
i plain. You probably remember how
you were told that the department was
I doing it;; best, but that it could not get
| BCiwa enough to dispose of the refu ?
j of the city. Those of you who live in
j Brooklyn, near some of the city's
i benches, probably remember how you
| have awakened morning after morning
Inuring the last three unul a half years
I to find that, like chicken.'; coming home
?to roost, this garbage which yon had
; finally shipped out to sea had returned
?ii the waves to plague you. in addi?
tion, due to the fact that there has
boon no head or tail to the whole busi?
ness, the garbage in many localities of
the city gets mixed up with the street
sweepings and rubbish and is carried
by fie Street Cleaning Department to
the city's land dumps, there to reniai:', j
a public nuisance and a dangerous
menace to health.
"This was the plan: It was proposed
to load a garbage disposal plant on a
ship and sail with it around the har?
bor, taking on garbage at the various
dumps and reducing it as the vessel
?steamed from dump to dump. For ex?
ample, the good ship Garbage would
call, say. at the dump at 130th .Street
and the Hudson River. There an odor?
iferous load would be taken on and
the ship would sail majestically down
the Hudson, adding variety to the
fumes wafted from the shores of Jer?
sey. At Seventy-ninth Street and Riv?
erside Drive another load would be
I taken on. The ship would then pro?
ceed, by easy stages, down to the Bat
I tery and up the East River until the
air of the whole island of Manhattan
had been impregnated with its garbage
?odors. Then the Bronx's turn would
come. There were no limits to the
i sailings or' these argonauts of the
jgarbare can. Flushing and Flatbush,
i Bay Ridge and St. George, Tottenvill
i and the Rockaways?all were to get.
| their turn a* the garbage smell. Evcbi
I the Staten Island ferry boats were not
I immune, for the plan provided for
I enough garbage boats to give a convoy
I to every ferry boat that left the Bat
j tery. Staten Island was to be 'stun:,''
I again, only this time the nuisance was
| to come over the water instead of over
I land. The only merit in the plan was
I that it played absolutely no favorites.
I Every borough was ti get its daily
I whiff of garbage. Every citizen was.
! guaranteed a free smell. Gould any
\ thing be more delightful?
"After several months of val iable
; time had been consumed by the Board
\ of Estimate's serious consideration of
this proposition the matter came be
i fore the Finance and Budge! Commit
I tee, after 1 had become a member of
the board. I challenged it at once \n?
! pointed out its utter absurdity. Mr.
? Hylan finally agreed with me, and, even
1 though his Board of Estimate had ap?
propriated $2,500. he decided that he
couid not _o through with it.
Results Inder Frop?r Leadership
"I am going to be fair about this
thing, as I am about everything 1
i shall discuss in this campaign. The
garbage committee may eventually
?.ive the city relief from the present
extravagant haphazard methods o*
getting rid of our waste. There are
good /.ren on that committee They
'were here long before Mr. Hylan be
, came Mayor, and they will be hero
Ions, after he has gone. They are the
. regulars of the city service, and they
get. results when they have proper
leadership. Some day New York wi i
have i" adopt up-to-date methods o
garbage disposal. This must he done
without polluting the air. N'o borougl
i should be asked to di ')r-<^ of another
I borough's garbage. I am dead againsl
'that. But, with thai promise, some?
thing ha- got to be done. Mr. Hyla
has done nothing. He has broken I -
word oner, again, and there we hav?
an end of the whole matter.
"I want to take up one move pled~o
? made by Candidate Hyiai ano de:
with it briefly before I close to-night.
; In the same paper four years ago b?
i said: 'My fight is to construct publi<
ly-owned wholesale terminal markets,
storehouses and refrigerating plants,
to help reduce the eos* of living.'
"After Mr. Hylan became Mayor his
Commissioner of Markets, Dr. Day, in
THE STORY OF REVILLON FURS
Abandoned
Igloos
Spring in the North comes suddenly and
the first few days o? pleasant sunshine
will make the best built igloo uninhabit?
able. The roof falls in and the interior Li
flooded with melting snow. The Eskimo
arid his family simply resume their sum?
mer method of living in tents made of
caribou skiiia or canvas bought from the
trader.
No 74?Itloo LiCe
vMrillon fr?res
tir*ev*hv? >i?
Fifth Avonxsc at 53rd Street
t. rested himself for a while trying to]
draw un some plans for terminal mar
1; t He was ousted by Hylan in 1919
bi fore anything was done, and Mr.
O'Malley took his place. Nothing fur?
ther happened until people of the Bor?
ough of the Bronx derided that a Mayor
should at least try to live up to his
campaign pledges. Accordingly they
compelled the Borough President of the
Bronx to prepare and submit ?ome
market plan.-. This forced Mr. Hylan
to act, r::id the matter was turned over
tw Market Commissioner O'Malley.
"Mr. O'Mnlley drew up no plans, but
he didn't visto a minute in proposing
that the city pay an architect $55,000
for drawing up preliminary specifica?
tions for a market in the Bronx and
$100,000 to another architect for a simi?
lar plant in Brooklyn. Furthermore,
each architect was to receive 5 per
cent of the cost of construction, bring?
ing the tota] of architects' fees that
the city would have to pay up to more
than $1,000,000. I objected strenuously,
pointing out that the city could em?
ploy < ngineers to do the work and pay
them a salary, thus saving hundreds of
thousands of dollars of the taxpayers'
money. A little knowledge of loading,
unloading and cold storage was the
first requisite.
"When the Board of Estimate found
1 was prepared to light this piece of
extravagance to the last ditch the
whole thing was turned ever to the
Department of Plant and Structures,
with instructions to prepare nlans.
Whatever that department lias accom?
plished, over four years have elapsed
since Candidate Hylan gave us his
word, and, as yet, we have no terminal
markets.
"Let me ask this: How many times
must a. man break his word before you
refuse to trust, him to be Mayor of
New York'.' Last night 1 gave you
four cases where Mr. Hylan, as Mayor,
broke a promise he made to you when
he was a candidate for Mayor. To?
night 1 have given you two more. That
makes six, and I am not. through yet
liow many more must we have? Where
shall we draw the line?"
; Business Men Told
The Barge Canal Is
| Key to Middle West
1 Citizens Greet Touring Par
ty Along Route; Devel
opme.nt of N. Y. Projee
Preferred to St. Lawrenc?
From n Staff Corrtrtpondent
j UTICA, N. Y., Oct. L8. Forty mem
: hers of the House of Representative
: und eighty business men and shipper
j of the Middle West, forming the part
of the New York .State Waterway.- Con
ference, to-day witnessed their firs
practical demonstration of the facili
' fies of the New York Barge (.'ana
They traversed forty-five miles of cano
water from Albany to Amsterdan
j They were lifted through eleven lock;
To-night the visitors were guests o
, th Utica Chamber of Commerce. A
noon they were entertained by th
Schenectady Chamber of Commerce h
Uni? n College.
The party was greeted by seven com
munitie3 along the canal, thousands c
citizens turning out to herald its con?
ing as the first step in a wide campaig
to advertise and develop the waterway
of the state and to demonstrate thi
tii" proposed investment of Unite
-t, ? 's money in the St. Lawrence shi
canal would enrich Canada at the e:
; - n e of the Empire State.
Strong indorsement of the aim <
the conference to draw attention to tl
fact that New York, through her ui
equaled waterways, should continue 1
hold the key to trie Middle West, wi
voiced by speakers at the two gathe
ings.
The facilities of the canal were e:
plained by Charles L. Cadle, Sta
: Superintendent of Public Works; h
o is stant, Alfred M. O'Neill, and Frar
. M. Williams, state engineer and su
,-oyor, Mr, Cadle declared the threa
cned railroad strike was an argume:
for proper maintenance and fuit h
; improvement of the state's channels.
To the Representatives, Mr. Cad
expressed the opinion that if Congre
; desired further improvement of wate
ways, the money should be spent, with
: the borders of' the United States at
? ; on a foreign project such as tl
? ? p, sed St. Lawrence ?"anal.
Falls to Death
As Tube Train
Door Flies Open
i Elwyn L. Barron. Prominent
Harvard Alumnus,Killed :
Passengers Assert Foot o:
Coat Was Gausht in Exit
Body Stripped of Effects
identification Delayed for
Hours; Victim Member of
IN. Y. Advertising House
Elwyn Lee Barron, of Englewood, N.
,1., a member of the advertising firm
of J. Walter Thompson, of New York,
was killed instantly yesterday morning
when a ?loor of a New York bound
Hudson and Manhattan tube train
opened suddenly, pitching hint out on
the track under the Hudson River. The
train was traveling at high speed be?
tween the Erie station, in Jersey City,
and the Christopher Street station, in
Manhattan.
Although the accident occurred at
I 8:35 o'clock, tying up the traffic for
nearly two hours, the identification
was not. made until midafternoon. This
delay was said to have been due to the
fact that the body was stripped of all
. personal effects before it was turned
over to the police of Jersey City.
Police Captain Beggin, of that city,
said last night that he intended to con?
duct a vigorous investigation to ascer?
tain who was responsible for going
: through the effects of Mr. Barron prior
; to the arrival of a medical examiner.
The story gathered from other pas
? sengers on the train was to the effect
' that when the door of one of the for
. ward cars of the train was closed at
1 the Erie station Mr. Barron's right
I foot was caught and held betwee. the
; sliding door and the jamb. Owing to
' the air pressure forced against the
; door by the patent closing device, ho
; was unable to extricate himself. As
: the train sped toward Manhattan sev
i eral passengers who saw his plight
started to inform the nearest guard.
j When toid what had happened, the
guard is declared to have pressed
; the button which controlled the pre3
; sure on the door. At that moment the
I train was swinging around the curve
at the point where the tubes dip under
the Hudson River. When the door
' opened, Mr. Barron was pitched out.
Other accounts of the accident wire
that it was Mr. Barron's overcoat,
which he was carrying on his arm, that
was caught yi the door, interfering
. with the locking device. As the train
.took the curve the door opened of its
| own accord, according to these versions,
and Mr. Barron toppled over backward.
According to n statement issued from
the cilice of the superintendent of the
road, the cause of the accident has not
been determined. The announcement
states that the door eoul?! not be
opened unless the control button was
pushed, and that officials of the road
have ordered an Investigation of the
occurrence, which is said to be the first
accident of its kind.
Mr. Barren was graduated from Har?
vard with the class of 1913. lie was a
: leader in undergraduate activities
while at Cambridge, captain of the
soccer team and president of "The llar
. vard Lampoon." In 1917 ht? married
Miss Ruth Schermerhorn Monroe.
granddaughter o\' Samuel Bowles, edi?
tor of "The Springfield Republican."
He is survived by his wife and a daugh
ter, Elizabeth Lee Barron.
Chicago Foiicc to Use
Radio Phones on Autos
Chief (inicies iMotor Wine Squ?i<{
in Distant Part of < itv
by Wireless
Rj-; V\ ?patch to : hr Tribune
CHICAGO, Oct. IS. Chief Fitzmor
ris of tli?' Chicago police force is sum?
moning the aid of science and all mod?
ern inventions in his winning; battle
with the forces of crime. The latest
move is to keep in constant touch with
MADE
CLOTHES
cALL-lVOOL
In ?Mixtures and Overplaids
$1A50
THE term "all wool" is used in its
literal sense?and the warmth and
durability o? a Best-made mackinaw are
proof enough ? hatvthe fabrics are super ior.
Sizes 7 to 17 years
'BUTTON TO "HECK
-,.<*/_. Jw A
In oAU Wool ?Mixtures and cPlain ^Blucs
$1^50
I.N fabric, weight and color they are
sensible and serviceable. And the Best
&. Co tailoring is an added guarantee of
long wear and satisfaction.
Sizes 5 to 11 years
Boys' Sturdy Shoes dark
brown. Sizes I).i to Sl/%.
$71,50
f?i? ?e?t&CO. ?
his flivver rifle squads by means of
i ad?o m< ;sag ? .
To-day, miles from the City Hall. '
traveling at a high speed through noisy
factory districts, a police automobile
responded instantly to the control of
the Chief, who was stationed on top of
: the City Hall. The car was equipped
i with a new wireless telephone device
! which made it. possible for the Chief to
speak at all times with the driver of
: the car.
The test was so successful that all
Police and Fire Department cars are to
j be equipped with the instruments.
Wealthy Women Enlist
As Watchers at Polls
Two Thousand Dollar? Also
Raised ?il Honest Ballot
Association Luncheon
Many wealthy women volunteered to
serve as watcher.; at the polls on Elec
' tion Day, and $2,000 was raised to pay
. additional watchers, at a luncheon at
the Colony (Tub yesterday, under the
auspices of the Honest Ballot Associa?
tion. Mrs. .lohn T. Pratt, hostess of
the luncheon, with Mrs. Charles L. Tif?
fany, was one of those who volunteered
? to serve at the polls.
Mrs. Seiden Bacon, Charles Evans
: Hughes jr. and Vincent Gilroy, candi?
date for President of the Board of Al
1 dermen, were the speakers. Mrs. Ed?
ward McVickar was cnairman of the
committee in charge of the meeting, and
among those present were:
Mrs. Arthur H. Scribner, Mrs. Francis
MacNeil Bacon. Mrs. DeWitt Clinton
Falls, Mrs. Edward S. Harkness, Miss
Mabel Choate, Mrs. Charles Stewart
| Smith sr., Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee,
Mrs. August Heckscher, Mrs. Richard
L. Beckwith, Mrs. John ft, Rousmaniere,
Mrs. Francis Dana Winslow, Mrs. Percy
. K. Hudson, Mrs. Edward M. House, Mrs.
? W. Bayard Cutting, Mrs. George B. Ag
i new. Mrs. C. Temple Emmet, Mrs. Wil?
liam Alfred Perry, Mrs. William H. Hyde
I and Mrs. .lohn 11. Janeway.
; Named Senator Without
Any Strings, Crow Says
j Pennsylvania!. Denies Agree
; ment to Step Aside Later
for Governor Sproul
ATLANTIC CITY, Oct. 18. William
| E. Crow to-day denied rumors that he
i had accented appointment to the
I United States Senate with the under
I standing that he would step aside in
! order tnat Governor Sproul of Penn
| sylvania might he elected to the office
i Mr. ("row was appointed United States
j Senator from Pennsylvania yesterday
to succeed Philander C. Knox, who died
a few days aro. He is to be sworn it:
Monday.
"1 can state emphatically now tha*
there ar.' no strings on the Senator
ship to which 1 have been appointed,'
said Mr. Crow. "Such a proposition
has not been broached to me in th<
slightest way either by Governoi
Sproul or any one else. As a mattei
' of fact, 1 would not have consid?r?e
j such a proposition."
Mr. ("row said he would support th<
j policies of President Harding.
The time to
put on your gloves
is?when you
put on your hat
American men sometimes
po bare-handed when they
would not go bare-headed.
Until reminded by cold
weather, they forget that
gloves are an essential of
dress...giving the finishing
touch required by courtesy,
good form and clean hands.
Everyday business attire is
no more complete without
the addition of a pair of
smart, sturdy Fowncs
Capes
than a frock or morning
coat without Fownes soft,
flexible mochas, oran out
ing suit without Fowncs
cheerful buckskins.
A well gloved man is a
well dressed man-And
the time to be well cloved
is ail the time...The cost
is but the smallest part of
your clothing expense
Fownes quality is apparent
at a glance... Fownes serv?
ice will be revealed after a
long season's wear.
The genuine, for men,
women or children, are
always marked Fowncs in
the wrist.
//' r a Founer?
that's ail )0U
need to know
bout a
glove
If you have any difficulty
in securing them send us
size and style desired with
the name of your dealer.
Fownes Brothers s? Co. Inc.
1IV W?.t -l.th _t., Ncv York
Poor and Friendless
Once Mvself. Hvlan
Tells 2*000 M idows
*uWho Knows but l'ha? a Son
of Yours May Be Mayor
Some Day." lie Says, and
Hearers Smile and Cheer
Tvvo thousand widowed mothers
laughed and wept and cheered last I
night when Mayer Hylan pictured the
day when one of their sons would be
elected Mayor of New York City.
It was the annual meeting of the
Board of Child Welfare, which has
charge of the distribution of pensions ]
to widowed mothers, at the Washington
Irving High School, and Mayor Hylan
and Sophie Irene Loeb devoted the eve
ring to telling the mothers how much
the city was doing for them.
"No one appreciates what you women
have suffered as much as those who
have been through sufferings of their
own,'' said the Mayor. "Other people
forget your trials. There are wealthy
people in this city who if they could be
here to-night and see your sorrowful
faces would divide up their wealth to
help you. But 1 myself was friendless
and unknown when I first came to this
; city. I remember what suffering is.
"Many and many a week I did not
know wnere the next loaf was coming
from to feed my wife and child, ana
1 many the time I didn't know where the
| rent was coming from.
"I have been accused by the news
: paptr? of not having e_nou?h scientific
culture for the great office which I
: hold, but I want to tell you that 1 al?
ways remembered the advice tf my
mother. 'Be honest,' she told me, 'Be
truthful, and do to others as you would
; they should do by' you.'
"Who knows but some day your chil?
dren will repay you for all the suffer
i ?ng and toil that you are enduring
! now. Some day one of them may be
i ccme Mayor of New York. So 1 say to
\ you, don't lose courage, don't be dis
j couraged. There is a great deal of
I good left in this world, and many men
! and women are anxious to help you."
Hylan and Enright Extol
Each Other to Reserves
With 900 members of the Police
Reserves, their relatives and friends as
his guests, Rodman Wanamaker gave
a dinner last night in the ballroom of
the Waldorf-Astoria.
After the dinner addresses were
made by Mayor Hylan, the principal
guest; Grover A. Whalen, Commis?
sioner of Plant and Structures; Police
Commissioner Er.right and Mr. Wana
maker. Virtually every Democratic
officehold r n \> w ^ or! was present.
In his address Mayor Hylan said the
Police Reservis had good reason I
''? eling ? rou of their connection with
the regular police force. He declared
New York to-day is freer from vice,
gambling and other forms of lawless?
ness than ever before in its history.
He said the contrary statements were
made by an "interest controlled" pres^
and agents and friends of the under?
world, who ''were living to break down
the morale of the Police Department."
Commissioner Enright in his speech
compared Mayor Hylan to George
Washingtor and Abraham Lincoln as
a man who had served without due ap?
preciation of his services while they
were being rendered. The Commis?
sioner went on:
"The press of this city and those in?
terests which opposed Mayor Hylan
in 1917 have never forgiven him for
being elected. Hay in and day ou:,
without shadow of justification, they
have crucified him who said to ihe in?
terests trying to invade City Hall as
Marshal Foch said to the Germans,
'Tiioii shalt n it pass ! ' "
.-_
Glynii Finds T\o Rift
In Assembly Majority
George A. Glynn. chairman of the
Republican State Committee, on his re?
turn yesterday from a visit upstate,
said that there was no likelihood of
any loss of Republican seats in the As?
sembly, which now numbers 110 out of
a total of 150. The remaining forty are
divided among the Democrats and So?
cialists, the latter having five.
Chairman Glynn said that the women
were taking an unusuall; active part
| in tin' camjjaijrn upstate, and a drive
. is being waged by .Mrs. Arthur L. Liv
ermore, chairman of i1"?' women's di
' vision of the Republican State Com
: mittee, to urge upon all women, even
in the rock-ribbed Republican stron<;
; holds, the importance of casting their
, votes.
1\. carry out the campaign among
the women effectively a series of meet?
ings have been arranged in the princi?
pal centers upstate. The first will
take place in Albany on October "4, ti ?
next in Syracuse on October 25, the
following daj in Rochester, Buffalo on
' October 27 and Elmira on October -??.
"The importance oi t'r.f coming elec?
tion must nol be lost sight of by the
Republican women," said Mrs. Liver
more. "They were so loyal in the last
ction thai we want, them to keep up
food work."
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?I
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aqt?
JWlUlllaIV l
? j ft>W*Sar a m , 1?, ?)> ? 1? Wl ?o?O? ' I TI Tf IT Mm
1 * Directors
Winthrop W. Aldrich
Murray, Prentice cv Aldrich
Stephen Baker
Pres't Bank of the
Manhattan Co.
Samuel G. Bayne
Pres't Seaboard National
Bank
Nicholas Biddlc
As tor Estate
Cornelius N. Bliss, jr.
Bliss. Fabyan & Co.
Edwin M. BuJklcy
Spencer, Trask 6c Co.
F. N. B, Close
Vice-President
Thomas Cochran
J. P. Morgan cv Co.
T. DeWitt Cuvler
Chairman of the Hoard.
Commercial Trust Co.,
Philadelphia
Henry P. Davison
J. P. Morgan cv Co.
John ?. Downey
Building Consi ruci ? i
Pierre S. du Pont
Chairman of the Board.
K. 1. du Pout de Neniou s
& Co.
President, General Mol irs
Corporation
.Allen B. Forbes
! larri.-. Forbes & Co.
Walter E. Frew
Pres't Corn Exchange Bank
M. Friedsar.i
B. All man cv Co.
Fred'k T. Haskell
Vice- Prcs't 1 ! lim ?is 1
?v Savings B ink, Chicago
Horace Havemeyer
Pres'l i [a\ emej i rs
& Kldcr, Inc.
Fred ?. Kent
Vice Pre iident
Ranald I!. Macdonald
R'eal Kstate
Edgar L. Marston
Blair & Co., Inc.
H. C. McEldowney
Prcs't Union Trust Co.,
Pittsburgh
Paul Moore
Taylor, Bates & Co. j
Daniel E. Pomeroy
Vice-President
William H. Porter
J. P. Morgan & Co.
Herbert L. Pratt
\ i. ?- Pre;
S n dard ( lil t. o.
Seward Prosser
?Vi sidpnt
Daniel G. Re?d
Charles L. Tiffany
, [any & Co.
Herbert K. Twitchell
< ': airman of the Board.
( In niical \ itional Bank
Owen D. Youn^
*->
Vice Pres't General
ctric ( o.
Bankers Trust
OL
Downtown Office: Fifth Ave. Office:
i6 Wall St. ai 42nd St.
57th St. Office:
at Madison Ave.
Paris Office: 3 ?i 5 Plate Vend?me