SAFE; I DANHANNA'S HUNTERS GETHIS

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Transcript of SAFE; I DANHANNA'S HUNTERS GETHIS

to FISHERMEN SAFE;3 HUNTERS MBSINC

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,45 Foot Craft Towed InAfter Drifting a Night

in Heavy Weather.

FEAR FOR THE OTHERS1

12 Foot Eowboat in WhichDuck Shooters Went Out

Found Bottom Up.

WUJKJfci l»Ui ItUmiEiK BUUIS

One of the Men Said to Have!Had a Non-Sinkablc

Suit.

jThe forty-five foot fishing boat

Elsie K. was towed into Canarsie lateyesterday afternoon by the openlaunch Matilda after she had driftedall Sunday night near the AmbroseChannel lightship, with seven membersof the Fairview Fishing Club of!,Ridgewood on board besides the threemembers of her own crew. No trace j,has been found, however, of the threebrothers-in-law whj) left tho dock atBayside Place, Hammels, Queens, to j'go gunning, for ducks in an open row-

boat twelve feet long with a "kicker"tfir o IIVI llo « «, nnn,.. l,AotI

* found Sunday afternoon upside downin Jamaica Bay, and it is believed thatthe three men have been drowned.They are August Hill, Jr., of 711 Bush- !'

wick avenue; Pearsall Creigliton of175 Sheridan avenue, both-of Brooklyn,and Walter Drews of Springfield,jQueens. '

Aa soon as the passengers and thecrew of the Elsie K. had been landedthey declared, particularly William lies-semcr of 114 Ainslie street, Brooklyn,th8t several liners and a Governmentboat had passed them and had paid no

attention to their signals of distress, al-though they flew their flag at half mast,kept their fog horn going constantly andwaved torches and hallooed throughoutthe night"The crevfs of the Ambrose Bight-

ship and the Scotland Lightship,toward which we drifted eventually,"said Hessemeri "paid no attention tous either. They must have been ableto see us. They could have wirelessedour position to New York andsome one could have come for us

sooner."The Elsie K. which is owned by Adam

Bessemer and commanded by Capt. JohnBcvls, left Stalije's Diamond I'ier atCanarslo about 7 o'clock Sunday morning,carrying the seven members of theFatrvtew club. They began fishing inthe Ambrose Channel near the Lieht-ship. and hud such good luck that theysoon filled their boat with cod, whiting,ling and hake. Toward nightfall severalother fishing boats signalled that theywero going In. but the Elsie K remainedfor an hour or so after therji.

Engine Hopelessly .Stalled.Hut when Capt. Bcvis finally deeMed

to take his boat back to Canarsie, hefound that the engine, a two cylinderIB horsepower tpachlne, would not work,an exhaust valve having broken on oneof the cylinders. The crew and thefishermen worked on the motor for sometime, and when they realized that Itcould not be made to run they began.),signalling for' hOTp. The.v got out theirflag and hoisted it at haffuaast. Insteadof flying It upside down.

William Bessemer said that an Eagleboat, apparently watching for whiskeyrunners, was lying-some distance awayat this time, but so close that he couldree the fishing poles that the men on herdeck were using. This craft. Bessemersaid, paid no attention to the halfmastcdflag, and also paid no attention whenthe Elsie K began blowing her foghorn.When dusk fell, Bessemer and hisbrother rigged up a" torch of cottonirmsto and waved It to and fro, but theGovernment boat paid no attention tothat either.Bessemer said that shortly after dusk

* a large liner came along and passed themwithout heeding their signals. The Clnv-ernment boat fell In behind, the liner andproceeded with her toward New York.The Eisle K, continued to drift In thedirection of the lightship, and nilthrough the night her crew and the fishermenkept up blowing of the fofchortiand the waving of the torch, but with noresponse. The men on the boat were <not uncomfortable, as they got into theKlsle> cabin and made coffee and hail i

plenty of food. The ocean was rough, <but not sufficiently «o to bother them.

Polite, bat Wouldn't Help.

Early yesterday morning the crew of t

the Elsie K. hoisted a soil to the bout's '

ancient bowsprit and masts. The boat '

was beginning to make headway back to.New York when the Matilda, one of iseveral boats which had put out to look ?for her, came along. Hessemer said ithat after they had hoisted their sail a

large liner passed them. The Elsie's ,men waved and shouted, and their greet- *

ngs were answered by v tiifo'-ned men

1 on the liner, but the bl^ boat did no'stop.

\ The Matilda brought the Elsie K. to iher dock. None of the men aboard herwere any the worse for their experi'enee.Henry Selbert, who found the upturnedboat which Hill, Crelghton and 1

Drews had taken out of Hitmtnels and \lowed It to Meadowmere Park, said thaten Sunday morning there were u heavyrea and a strong wind In Jamaica Bay. '

TTe believes that t he boat may hnve filled». uu ««rl em nmnrr1_ f'lrnwlnir thj»three mm Into the water. All of them '

wore heavy rubber booU«, which probably 1

Impeded their swimming. Th« policehave been Informed that on previous Jhunting trips Ttill wore a "non-slnkableMilt." and If he had this on this time Itmay have kept him afloat for some time.It Is not believed, however, that he could (have kept alive until now.

Kill Is the son of William Hill, a pianomanufacturer of 13$3 Myrtle avenue.Brooklyn, and Is In 'lie muslo businesswith Crelghton. Hill Is 25 yearn old, '

^wkrbton is 27 and Prows is 2n. Drewshas three children.

fH'tJRKSS l«l Ml Ml HUtlRMU. !hritTN-rj TjAkv, X. .1.. X'ov. 14. The i

' body of Henrietta Turner, negrcs?. v.-ns «found south of Vroom avenue, spring t

> Hake, to-day by John Hurley, » hunter.The woman had evidently hem rnur- 1derod. The body e,«s lying face down In ]

f lump of bushes; Her clothing, with \the exception of her undergarments and vsilk "torkings, had been torn off. I

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WM. C. CAMP'S THIRD'

RWIFE WINS A DIVORCE V

Movie Actress Named in SuitAgainst Chicagoan.

Special Despatch to Tun Kmv York Huhald.Chicago, Nov. h..For the third time p

in his stormy matrimonial career WilliamC. Camp, well known in Chicago'®financial and society circled, has beensuccessfully sued for divorce.The last Mrs. Camp to obtain a decree,as Indicated by Judge Joseph K.

Sabath to-day, rfas formerly Mrs. Will- jiam C. Thorne, whose husband was vice- "

president of Montgomery Ward & Co.and who left her $2,50<hft00 at the timeof his death. jMrs. Camp sued with evidence said tohave been procured In a midnight raidon "Billy's" bungalow in Californiaearly in October. Mrs. Mabel Walker,a movie actress, was named as. a corespondent.The principal exhibit in thedivorce hearing to-day, which was uncontested,was a flashlight photogruphobtained by a photographer who set hiscamera outside one of the bungalow ua

windows. on

STEWART ACTRESS sCHARGES PLUCKING *

Wi. ».

Mrs. lloneynian Alleges That rf,

Valuable Stocks Have BeenImproperly Used.

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T. T VrtV 11 V 11 fXfm !l.

eountlng by -Martin Taylor of St. Junies. tif

L. T., and Leander It- La Chance ofof

Chicago, administrators of the $7,000,000estate of John K. Stewart, is sought cc

by Mrs. Robert B. Itoneyman, Jr., of

Chicago, Mr. Stewart's daughter, in

papers flled in the Surrogate's Court' here rn

to-day. in her answer to a summons to Stshow cause why Taylor and La Chanceshould not be appointed administra- 0ftors of the estate of her sister. Miss ur

Jean Stewart, Mrs. Honeyman charges d'

that the two have falsified court records, ^improperly disposed of valuable stocks yand bonds and generally mismanaged y,tiie affairs of her father's estate. d

Mr. Stewart, who was president 6f the CiStewart Warner Speedometer Corpora- jrlion, died at' Centerport, L, I., June 1,1015, leaving his property uneondition- pcally to .Mrs. Stewart and their two chil- Hdren, Marian, the present complainant, Mand lier sister Jean, Mra Stewart died J<less than a year later and Taylor and IrLaChance were also named as adminis- Otrators of her property. Joan Stewart, Cwho was to years old. died In Chicago KOctober 10 last, leaving her estate of ei

$2,233,586 to. her sister, Mrs. Honeyman. iaTaylor and LaChance now ask to he ianamed as administrators of this prop- Ferty.-

1'apers filed here supplementing MraHoneyman's accusations show that bigsums already, have been spent in settling Sithe affairs of Mr. and Mra Stewart. Forithe support of one little girl entire house-1 v

holds were maintained on lavish scales, ""jit'is alleged, and thousands of dollars!'1'were expended for groceries and other I®provisions. Mrs. Honeyman objects to Jjthe final accounting filed by Taylor and *

LaChance, which fixes the legal account-ing cost at $325,000 and the annual ex-

penscs of herself and her sister Jean at'fiv»r $80,000 a vear. i V

Mrs:. Honeyitmn alleges upon informa- "

tlon und belief. Jhat 7">0 shares In the ,a

Stewart Manufacturing Company wereincluded in her father's assets. Afterhis death she asserts that LaChance ]'made elTorts to induce her to assist him ,

in acquiring' the rtock and an executive ''

position In the company. By virtue ofhis position as administrator and guardianshe says lie had himself made pres- '''

ident. .to the detriment of her interests. tr

He also, Mrs. Honeyman alleges, ob- vv

tatned control of the Stewart-Warner,Speedometer Corporation. P'Various Suffolk county residents, the n<

papers filed here maintain, had lucra- m

tlve appointments as temporary admin- tv

lstrators, special guardians and apprals- thers. She says that tor several years nc

the estate lias been "liberally discussed" atin political circles in" the county. False n<

records are alleged to have been made m

in tlie. Cook County Probate Court at InChicago'Aprii f. -J 32 K j C<

Kobert B. Honeyman, Sr.. of J6 Mont- T,gomery place, Brooklyn. Mrs. Honey- Inman's father-in-law, Is her attorney.The administrators am represented by thMcKinstry, Taylor, Patterson & Ellis, of Ca

6u Wall street, Manhattan. Mr. Taylor ti<Is one of the administrators, and it is an

charged that the firm's offioe rent has jj,been paid out of the estate. In ad- p>,ciltlon to money for the support of the ar

two daughters. LaChance is said to have mtalien $6,000 yearly from the estate for"incidental expenses." j fo

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COMMUNISTS IN EUROPE is

NUMBER 2,800,000Moscow 'Pravdot Says RussiansLead. icj

JiroA, Nov. It..The Moscow Pravila at

contains an article esthnutlng the forces Vjf Communism in Europe. It says tliHt 0

fifty-one Communist parties with a

nernberahip of 2,800,000 have Joined theI'ommunlst Internationale. KiiHsln, withi membership of 300.000, occupies firRt 1(ilace In the ranks, while Germany and^aecho-Mlovakla, each with 360,000, cometext. Then follows France with 130,000.Norway with 07,000 and Italy with jj,o.ooo.' .i,Th" newspaper says the Young Peo- pc

tie's Internationale has a membership of ir(0O.000. The Communist InternationaleIssues 331 periodicals. m,

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SENATOR HALE SELLSPORTLAND NEWSPAPERS «u

pe'

Purchased by G. P. Gannett of Sd

G. O. P. National Committee. fIPortland, Me.. Nov. 14..Tho sale of

:hc Portland Pre**, a morning newsmpor.and the Sunday Prrss, by United<tales Senator Frederick Hale to Guy P.!»annct of Augusta, was nnnounccd t<v (|light. '

Mr. Gannett, who Is a member of the"lepublienti 'National Committee, Is part

'

wner of the Portland Herald, also n

nornlng pnpere' ' "j

i26,000 CHECKS FOUNDA rrrn uaii n/annrnu ceir\r i cn myiib nvoocn/ nh

talZash From Two Letters Only

Lost From Pouch.Boston. Nov. 14..A mall pouch con- Ft

ainlng $2*.WO in chocks, which dlsnp>c3redon October 10 while on route frotnledham to Boston, was fount! by poet of- ^r1Ice Inspectors beside the trncka nearbe Ha-k Bay station of the Now York. Intfew 1-lnven and Hartford Hall road to- th<lay. All the envelopes had been open'd th;intl small amount? of cash In two rcjis- rtcorcd letters li.ad been removed. nitl'ayment on tlve checks, which had tht

»oen mailed by tlio Dedham National thtdank to Boston banks for clearance, neivas ordered stopped when the potich 1»as missed. The larrest check was for wan:,or»o. wi

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THE NE\

3 OF TILE COMBINE IADMIT CONSPIRACY^

lead Guilty to Restraint of.Competition . Five Cases

Are Dropped.

AIL SENTENCES URGED

udge Van Fleet Indicates Desireto Speed Up AllTrials.

Fifty-three of the sixty-four indivldUand corporations who were Indicted

August 31 by a United States Grandiry in connection with limiting of comditionand restraint of trade in thee and mantel trades pleaded guilty toe fourth count of the indictments yesrdaybefore Judge William C. Vancet In the United States District Court,ithdrawlng former pleas of not guilty.The count charged that tho defendantsilndered, impeded and unreasonablystrained and prevented any and allmpetition between and among thomIvosin the sale, shipment and deliverytiles from other States to, into andrough this Jurisdiction." The pra<

esindulged in by persons and cor-rations, known as the "tile and man-I combine" consisted, accoriyng to thedlctments, of "stop notices," "protec-m cards" and "keep off notices."irough these notices other memberstlie combine were warned to refusehandle work for any person or conrnwhich had been bid for or underkenby another member of the comnc.Five cases were nolle prossed on theotion of William Hayward, Unitedates Attorney. They were Mart &iwton. Inc., the United Tile and Mar-e Company, Adolph Grant, Max Goebelthe J. I,. Mott Iron Works, and Sam-

i Tabolsky. The concerns and Invictualswho pleaded guilty arc:Alexander & Reid Company, CharlesBarnum & Son, Inc.: Doty & Orr Co.,Foscate Company, Inc.; Globe Tile

>mpany, Adolph Grant & Co., WilliamGrant, Inc., Howden Tile and Marble

Dinpany, Inc., Edwin A. Jackson & Bro.,ic.William II. Jackson Company. Jackin'sMantel and Grate Works, Inc.; D.McUarry Tile Company, Inc.; Henry

iles & Son, J. L. Mott Iron Works,jhn If. Parry Company, Herman Petri,ic.; Rudolph Schroeder, Inc.; Mofris

Williams & Co., J. P. Zurla. Tileompany, Ctharlee C. Alexander, Charles. Ban.urn, William G. Orr, Lewis Vin

ntPoscato, William A. ShookofT, Will,mJ. Adelson, William D. Grant, WlllmJ. Howden, William Walter Jackson,rerlerick It. Lawrence, Arthur Shilstone.Also Daniel H. McLaury, Arthur T.[art, George Miles, Charles E. Ensign,>hn If. Parry, Herman Petri, Ernst II.trothoff, Morris G. Williams, Edgar P.arrlson, Israel Lieberman, Frank H.obbe, William Erath, I. Frank Fellemn,Vincent De Lazzaro, Solomon Tolas,Clifford S. Barnum, Charles H.i own, vviuerc ocnane, josepn xi. wimis,filliam Ad ahead. Frederick Crane,[ai'lo Ferraris. John Gatty.Col. Hayward said that he would urge

ill sentences for those who had pleadedullty as well as those who may be conIctedupon trial. He said that thelaximum sentence may be $1,000 linend a year in prison.The trial of the Atlantic Terra Cottaompany was set for November 21 bylogo Van Fleet, who denied a motionir a postponement until next yearormer Governor Charles S. Whitman'sea for postponement for the Terra Cottassoclatlon was also denied. Judge Vanleet said he intended to speed up thelala of all defendants in connectionIth building or materials combinations.Co-incident with the disposition andeadlngs of the tile combine, the an>uncementwas made by Samuel Unteryerthat the Investigations of the I.ockoodcommittee would be resumed atle City Hall next Tuesday. It was

>ted in court yesterday that two of thetorncys,Henry L. Stlmson and Ken-tli M. Spence, who had been instrurntnlin aiding Mr. Cntefmyer in hisvestlgations of the Building Tradesmnell and in the conviction of JohnHettrlck, appeared for the defendantsthe til^ combine cases.Col. Hayward announced yesterdayat he would push to early trial theses against thoso indicted in connec>nwith building or material combinesid that he will have as assistantsivld Fodcli, Susan Brandeis. Iceland B.jer, Raymond L#. Wise, former assist-it to Samuel Untermyer; Benjamin S.Irsh and Nathan Probst. Jr.The selection of a Jury to try thirtyurmarble trade employers for oonIracyto violate the Donnelly anti-trust(v was begun yesterday before Justicehn V. McAvoy in the criminal branchthe Supreme Court.The defendants were indicted as a r -

it of the Lockwood housing committeevestigatlon on March 5 last. It is a!-;cd in the indictment tiiat they werejmbors of an association, with offices1S5 Mudlson avenue, organized for

e purpose of fixing prices, destroyingmpetltlon and restraining trade.

UKRAINIAN JEWS SHOT..in lire tin Killed Trilng to trail

llessnraklan Frontier.

Kishineff, Beaaarabla. Nov. 14..mclreds of Jewish families have beenot down while attempting to cross thessarablan frontier to escape an an-

Ipated" clash between Hie forces ofn. rctlurs and the Soviet Govern-nt. according to unconfirmed adviceselved here.The Uunianlan Government Is said tovo Issu <1 orders Instructing its borderards to admit no refugees and susndingthe intended expulsion of thou-r.ds of Ukrainian Jewish refugees.

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)ATTLE KILLERS WALK OUT.i Ichrk I'ncklim House Strike

I nanthorlard.

Chicago. Nov. H.-^Hog and cattle;ling workers at the Western Packingunpany plant walked out to-day. Dentlaii.e, local president of the AmnlgiitedMeat Cutters and Butcher Work-i Union. Mild the strike had not beenlied by union officials.Local presidents of parking hou.seions In all lite principal live stocktires will meet here tills week.prob-1y Thursday.to consider action to bocen under the recent strike vote.

CHURCH SAFES LOOTED.*e MrU nob t h Iongo Killflre of

rrfol ftmuahh to Tim Ntcw VonK Hwmi).t'HicAOO. Nov. 14..Five men stepped'o All Snlnt i' Church «*mly to-day withqueerest u-iortnient of pataphid na Ha

it hod ever entered the church. In-1nil of a hymnal or n Bible tliey darr'rdroglycerlnc and an electric drill. When:> left the church forty minutes later>y had blown the .safe and obtainedi-ly $2,300.L<co Qaplnskl, the night watchman,is boundand gngged before the safes blown1

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*r YORK HERALD, T

VALIDITY OF RECALLELECTION ATTACKED

Non-Partisan Group SeeksFunds for Court Action.

Karoo, X. D., Nov. 14..Validity o

the recall election in North Dakota. October 28 will be attacked in court by i

group of taxpayers affiliated with th<Non-Partisan League, it was indicate!to-day, when appeals for funds t"finance the contest action were sent ou

from Bismarclc. These appeals wen

made over tjie signature of George TLaird.Meanwhile in the Cass County Cour

House here a group of stenographer!started copying the list of voters in th<1920 Gubernatorial contest. It has beeicontended by Non-Partlsan League offleers that only persons who voted foGovernor in the 1920 election weneligible to sign the recall petition.The election, according to unofflcia

returns, resulted In the recall of GivFrazler and two other State officialelected with Non-Parisian League Indorsement and the selection to succeeithem of three candidates indorsed by thIndependent faction.

'MUTT AND JEFF' ARE FISHER'!Supreme Court He tune* to Ilea

t\p|»eal on Cartoon*.

Washington*, Nov. it..Proprietar;right to "Mutt and Jeff" as characters ipossessed by Harry C. ("Bud") FIshcand decisions to that effect by the Ne\Yorh State courts are final, the SupremCourt to-day refusing to consider aiappeal presented by the Star Companypublisher of the Hearst newspapers.The courts awarded to Fisher the ex

elusive right to reproduce the two chara etc rs, ordorcd he be protected from unfair competition of others repoduclnthem and rejected the contentions of thStar Compuny that Fisher could onl;copyright particular postures and worddescriptive of their exploits in incidentdrawn by him and that the two characters were public property.

STOVE EXPLODES i EIGHT Oil

N'unda, S. D., Nov. 14..Belief that a

explosion of a stove started a fire 1which Oswald Wallen, hiH wife and sichildren perished at their farm hornseven miles northeast of here was expressed »o-dny by officials.

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!I'JIPWj i,vji! SHfciW'Ell n'i'im J5 M'« is « I fir ftm? Ir- » « " " 11 >b" w\ailjgi|i#SWWliVR

Fifth Avenue Officeat 42nd Street

]Trij;

Downtown Office:16 Wall StreethZ-

UESDAY, NOVEMBER :

,! DAN HANNA'S SONSGET HIS MILLIONS

t\-j Daughters and Wives Were' Provided For by Trust11 Funds, He Explained.

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* INK BLOTS MAR WILL

I Serve to Erase Certain Dispositionsof Part of$10,000,000Estate.r _______

The will of Dan R. Manna of Cleveland,who died November 3 at his eounftry estate In Yorktown, in Westchesterri county, was filed for probate in Whitee Plains yesterday before Surrogate

George A. Slater. It disposes of an

estate unofficially estimated at about^'$10,000,000, the greater part of which

is left In equal shares to his sons, Danielri It. Iianna, Jr.. of Cleveland; Mark A.

iianna of \Vatertown, N. Y., and CarlH. Manna of Watertown. Me left nothing to any of his divorced wives, on

s whom he made cash settlements whenr they obtained their divorces, and nothingv to his daughter*. The following paragraphin the will explains why thee daughters do not Inherit any of theII estate:

"Having heretofore made provision formy daughter, Elizabeth Hanna, by atrust'ereated for here benefit, and havinga'so made provision for my daugthers,Natalie Stuart Hanna. Charlotte Au?gusta Hanna, Ruth Hanna and Mary

" Elizabeth Hanna, by a trust agreement^ executed by me and my former wife,

Mary Stuart Hanna, and by the GuardianSavings and Trust Company ofCleveland, i intentionally omit anyfurther provision for my said daughters

, or any of them In thla my last will."An odd feature of the will are big blots

n of ink which Mr. Hanna seems to haven daubed over paragraphs which he hadx added to the document by writing on thee margins of pages 2 and 3. To make

certain he had thus cancelled these paragraphsMr. Hanna wrote above the blots

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AT two important businesscenters in UptownNew York we havecomplete banking officeswhich offer, as a neighborhoodconvenience, everyservice of the BankersTrust Company.Our fifth Avenue Officeat 4and Street and our

Fifty-Seventh Street Officeat Madison Avenue, are

easily accessible and eachis a complete unit of our

organization.

With an account at one

of these offices you need no

introduction at either ofthe others. All bankingand trust services are availableto you, checks maybe cashed and other businesstransacted at whicheveroffice best suits yourconvenience.

3 A -m. /

JAiNJV£,KCstComi

Fifth Avenue Office:ap 42nd Street

'am Office: 3 & 5 Place Vendonu

15, 1921.In regard to paragraph 3 these words:"Oct. 14, 1931. This provision cancelled."This paragraph referred togiving his country est age. all his wardrobe,jewelry, furniture books, pictures,silverware, horses, caty-lages and automobile*to his son, Da*lei it. Hanna. Jr. ,

Another biota out a paragraph on th<margin of page 3, wltlch can be decipheredlike this, dhrrough the blur:"And I give, devise and bequeath Inequal shares to my Wife, should I haveone, and my three sons, as recited Inparagraph 6. It beiftg my intention tomarry June Avis Bvans." The wordsthat Immediately fottow are blotted out,and then this can be read: "Should Idie before such mucrrlage takes place, IInstruct my

* execjutors to provide a f *trust".and then Uhere are heavy blots. ^3The will also laaves $35,000 each to ^

Herbert W. Fostfer of Watertown andLouise Shipman of Manhattan, Mr.Mannas secretaries. It directs the executorsto pay out of the residue all taxe.*so the legatees sKall receive their lega- |"""cles without diminution. The witnessesto the will wer* Walter T. Hawkins, iManton R. Sedgwick and Maurice J. ARoche. The exiecutors are Herbert W. /figFoster and Mr. Hanna's three sons.

6,000 TEABTSTERS ON STRIKE.

Chicago M«en Quit in Protest

Against AV'age Cat.

Chicago, Nov. 14..Six thousandteamsters wqre on strike to-day In protestagainst an announced wage reductionof >3 "weekly. The strikers wereabout evenly divided between the InternationalBrotherhood of Teamsters andChauffeurs and the Chicago TeamstersUnion, an independent organization.Members of the former voted to strike

over the protest of their president. Thepresent wage ranges from 329 to $43 (W.a week. Mfc

MURDER AND SUICIDE OX FARM IIBow, bi H.# Nov. 14..A murder and

ruleldf, in which Raymond Garland, a IBfarmhand, killed himself after sihootin.e:1 jjHfGiles Emerson of Oxford, Mass., oc aBBcurred here late last night. Garland was JBjSj

jcu vi* i tmj ianii wi nurpcr j 11 *"«. hhman uncle of Emerson. The police salt!Jealousy was responsible for the shoot- jBHing. imgunner's mate lost AT SEA. ffUWashington, Nov. 14..Joseph Francis

Davis of Roxbury, Mass., was wash*.!overboard from the battleship Utah in HHEuropean waters on November 10, ar- jSHcording to a despatch received by the JB9Navy Department to-day. UH

ower

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kjl'd^ S- 1allP!l£P

57th Street Officeat Madison Ave.

5 I ;'ANY57th Street Office: ^at Madison Avenue

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Quick and Sureis the finding of letters filed by theGlobe-Wernicke Safeguard Method .comprehensive, efficient, simple, andadapted to any business or profession.

Wernicke ^Safeguard \Filing SystemThis system comprises Primary AlphabeticalGuides with indexed tabs in first, second andthird positions counting from left to right.Auxiliary Alphabetical or Monthly Guideswith indexed tabs in fourth or center position.andIndividual Folders with long tabsin fifth position, at right, indexed with specialnames or subjects.By the proper arrangement of these Guidesand Folders any letter, whether filed byname, date, subject or location can be foundinstantly.Let us show you how easily this system willcare for your correspondence. Call, phone orwrite for descriptive circular illustrating anddescribing this system.

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AUTOMOBILE EDITOR

THE NEW YORK HERALD j: .J.._

la instructive story on the Automobile is a regular Sundayfeature of The New York Herald