The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1919, Page 3

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HAMBY 1S NOW ~INDEATH HOUSE; > KEEPSNERVE UP » Reached Sing Sing After Being | Declared Sane—His Total Wealth Is $11. Sentenced to die in chair the week beginning July 28, Gordon Fawcett Hamby, alias Jay B. * Allan, who killed two bank clerks last December In a $13,000 hold-up of the East Brooklyn Wavings Bank, stepped within the walls of Sing Sing Prison at 1.45 o'clock this afternoon, the same nerveless young man he has been since his arrest in Tacoma. Hamby's last words to Sheriff Griffin and his six deputies, who left Grand Central Station with him at 1215 for the hour-and-twenty-minute journey to the prison, were: “Well, I hope we don’t begin life in the next world as we leave it in this.” He shook hands all around, gave a woman reporter his card in a Perd- cian club—' a souvenir,” he ex- plained—and said “Goodby and good luck, everybody.” In prison Hamby became Convict No. 292, and after he had been given @ bath and a prison suit was led toa cell in the death house. ‘The condemned man, central figure in, the speediest murder trial Kings County has known, left the Court House in Brooklyn at @.35 between Deputy Sheriffs Bryan and Shortell and handcuffed to each. Sheriff Grit- fin and two other deputies were in the waiting auto, The Sheriff saw the party to the train, Three more deputies joined the four and escorted Hamby to the smoking car. On the way north Hamby talked about “everything under the sun,” as one of the sheriffs put it. He dis- cussed at length the great expense of dressing the modern woman. He smoked several cigarettes. When the party left the train to walk to the prison they passed an automobile halted along the roadside A man in chauffeur’s uniform stood beside the car. “Curse you! curse you! curse you!” he cried melodramatically, shaking his fist at Hamby, “you killed two of the best men that ever lived!” The man followed the party with his car until] a deputy asked him what his business was and ordered him back. Hamby said he never saw the man before and dismissed tbe tr:- cident as of no importance. At the prison Hamby surrendered whut he edid was his total wealth, $11. Dr. Cecil B. McCoy and Dr, Anna Martin Ralston, alienists design ted by the court, examined Hamby in Brooklyn early to-day and declsred him sane, The proceedings appeared to amuse the young prisoner, who took occasion to say a few words about alienists in general and de- clared that if he had money he could hire two alienists who would calf him insane. While awaiting the report of the alienists, who examined him for more than half an hour Hamby talked aout the reward offered for is capture after the Brooklyn bank ry, He was told it is claimed by a nummber of people » “Rightly,” he said, “the reward ought to go to me. I gave mysett up. However, inasmuch as I have only about a month to live 1 waive my clatm and suggest that the re- ward money be turned over to the Red Cross,” “SAYS ACTRESS EVADED HIM AFTER SHE PAWNED JEWELS Accused Girl Says She Sent New- man the Tickets for Diamond Rings and Watch, Miss Lillian Pinous, whose stage name is Estelle Worth, and who is 19 years the electric! | Couple to Be Married at Wheatley! |place to-morrow at 12.30 -MORROW ZEPPOLA Hills and Sail for Europe August 28, ‘The wedding of Miss Edith Mortimer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Mor- timer, and Count Zeppola, a member of the Italian Aviation Corps, will take ‘clock at the country estate of the Dride’s parents in the Wheatley Hills section near Roslyn, lL. LA breakfast and email reception will follow the ceremony, Count Zeppola arrived here last Sun- day from Italy, coming by way of Hall- fax. The wedding was put over a week n account of his delayed arrival. He! and his bride will sail for Europe on Aug. 28. SWANN RENEWS FIGHT TO EXTRADITE HARRY THAW District Attorney Asks Peansylvania Governor to Give Him Up for Trial Here, Foliowing the announcement to-day that Harry K. Thaw had received a five-day vacation from the Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane to visit his mother in Pittsburg on her birthday, District Attorney Swann issued a re~ duest to Governor Sproule of Pennsyl-| vania for extradition of Thaw to the State of New York.’ When Thaw first obtained a similar leave f@m the in- stition the District Attorney's office in- vestigated the matter and contended that if Thaw had been cured of his mental infirmities he should be brought to trial here for the mistreatment ef Frederick Gump jr., in a local hotel. Swann to-day formerly requested the deliverance of Thaw to stand trial for that assault. He laid all the facts be- fore the Governor and has sent Aasist- ant District Attorney Kilroe to Harria- old, plump and very pretty, was held this morning in $1,000 bail on a charge of grand larceny by Magistrate Ten Byck in the Morrisania Police Court for the grand jury. The complainant was Charles New- man, a clothier of Richmond, Va., who said that he was an old friend of the girl's family and that when he was here on April % he ‘had stopped with Mrs. Dorothy Hauser, the girl's sister, “tat No. 8% Beck Street, the Bronx, and had transferred at dinner time two diamond rings valued at #50 and a wrist watch worth $60 to the person of Lillian, When he wanted the trinkets back the girt actress evaded him and he had to return to Richmond ; without thom. Lillian, he claimed, had pawned the Jewels and sent the pawn tickets to her Sister to send to him, Lillian, in court, maintained that Newman ‘had given her the jewelry as an engage- Ment present although she had told him eady engaged. that she was alr Sue SOLDIER'S BODY IN BAY. Sweetheart Had The body of a soldier partially identi- fled as August Esposito of the Motor Transport Corps, to-day was found in the bay by the Police Boat Patrol, In & pocket was a letter addressed to Miss Rose lzzo, No. 1200 40th Street, Brooklyn. At that address Joseph Izzo told an Evening World reporter that his daugh- ter and Esposito has been sweethearts until last April, when Hspos'to failed to an appointment. Miss Izzo, in dor whether he Mad gone overseas or deliberately remained away, did any inquiries, Pot make burg to press the matter. $65,000 TIN GAN CACHE LAID TO TREASURY CLERK Employee Accused of Theft of Large Sums of Redeemable Notes. WASHIN( June 27,—Secret Service agents of the Treasury De- partment are sald to have unearthed $65,000 in redeemable treasury notes in the backyard of Charles H. Turnbull, 4 trusted employee in the macecrating room of the Treasury Department. The notes were buried in tin cans and obher receptacles. Thousands of dollars in partly mutl- lated notes also were reported by the agents to have been discovered hidden T a0 a¥abi8 \Prince Aage Advises Vacations | To Refresh Love ot Married Folk G@ WORLD, FRIDA Occasional Separations Are Necessary, He Believes, Lest ‘Love's Early Fires Die. SCORNS ROYAL _POMP. Former Successor to Danish Throne Happy to Be Called “Regular Guy.” By Zoe Beckley. Copyright, 1910, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Rvening Work), RINCE AAGE of Denmark has fulfilled the wish of his mother, the late Princess Marie of Or- leans, who desired sible.” He frank- ly prefers to be thought “a prince” in the American sense of being & good fellow, ® “thorough bred and a man of ‘breadth, generos- ity and useful works than to be bowed and catered to, or even pointed out as the hero of one of the prettiegt romances that ever graced old Europe. Without formality, I was waved {nto the presence of this tall, slen- der, sunbrowned, exceedingly good- looking young man in his suite at the Rits, He held out a big, tanned hand and said “Good morning—sit here—do you smoke?” I compromised by asking Prince Aage, nephew to Dowager Queen Alexandra and cousin of the former Czar, if the photograph propped upon the writing desk was that of his wife, the Italian Countess “Meta” Calvi di Bergolo, for love of whom he re- nounced his succession to the throne, “Ah, yes"—— He has a quick, elec- tric way of speaking and moving, and a Dlessedly democratic manner that helps to reconcile you to the existence of princes, another picture. “I like this one even better, don’t you? It shows how— how chic she is, I do like chic women! FINDS AMERICAN WOMEN VERY CHIC. “I find American women tremend- ously chic,” he went on, prodded by a question or two. “They do wear their hair so well. And they are intelli- gent. Englishwomen perhaps pay more attention to politics, and some of the Frenchwomen are awfully well read and that. But your girls, even the ones I see coming from shops and offices, have an understanding that Spells the best sort of education—the kind that comes by itself, from know- ing life and work and people.” “And have these American women made you understand how much we admire a prince who snaps bis fingers at pomps and vanities and marries an unpretentious count’s daughter?” “Ah—indeed, yes! And committed an elopement"— he laughed, —“and all that sort of thing! Yes, yes, you Americans are the most romance-lov- ing Nation in the world. Of the one hand you are so busy, so wrapped up in the dry affairs of commerce, that your souls turn for relief to tales of high romance. You love the ideal life, in fiction, in drama, I can see in the walls, under carpets, and in every concelvablo manner, waiting to be rendered negotiable again by a process of piecing together. Turnbull was charged in an indict- ment with embezzlement of the notes. When he was taken into custody last night the police said they found on his person several thousand dollars in notes freshly appropriated. scmueenlaneuoniers KING HONORS NEW YORKER. Charles mmander of KE Edward H. Hawkes jr., sistant Corporation Counsel former As- of this clty, has just received word that his son-in-law, Lieut. Col. Charles H. Hill, of the British Army, has been made a Commander of the British Empire by King George. Col. Hill commanded the famous “Camerons” during the Gal- lipoli campaign, where he was wounded four times, He left America the year war was declared. At that time he was a lieutenant in the Reserve Force. He was advanced to captain and then to major for gallantry in action. In civil life he is a real estate agent for Worthing Whitehouse, at No, 9 East 46th Street, A great reception 1s @lan- ned for him upon his return to this country Workers May on ‘Transports. BRDST, June 27.—The order pro- hibiting the sailing of women weifare workers on board army transports was virtually revoked to-day. Accommoda- tions have been provided for 250 such workers on vessels leaving Brest be- tween now and July 5. 4 Red Flag, Minn, June 27,—James E. Gillespie, a banker from Stillwater, Minn,, testifying to-day at the trial of A. C, Townley ond Joseph Gilbert, Non- Partisan League leaders, charged with seditious conspiracy, ‘declared that Townley in a political speech at Still- water on February 19 of this year, de- fended the red flag and declared ‘that it was the emblem of the oppressed. <> Brasil Accep First Freuch PARIS, Ju Government has Brazitian Forvign it reflected in your literature, your amusements and—yes, in your attl- tude toward me, PRINCE ALMOST KILLED WITH KINDNESS. “I'm frankly glad to be liked by Americans. You are genuine and winningly openhearted. The Briton’s ideal is to conceal his feclings. The American's to express them, I am very fond of the English, But I am fond of the Americans too, They have almost killed me with kindness. To illustrate how “damn nice,’ he once put it, Americans have been to him, Prince Aage told an incident of his first day in New York, He was ‘all alone, Knew no one, Met an officer in the hotel lobby whom he had known abroad. Officer was to attend dinner that evening given by Chamber of Commerce or something. Asked them to ask the lonesome Prince, “Ob, Lord, no!" said they, in ef- fect. “Don't let's have any princes. We can't say anything or do any- thing. We'll have to bow and scrape, It'll ruin the whole thing.” “You don’t know this prince,” urged the officer, “Take a chance, on my responsibility.” They took the chance, Prince Aage made @ tremendous hit with every- body, and from that moment they began pounding him on the back and calling him “old man,” and the keys of America were handed over. It occurred to me that the lovely Princess might also have enjoyed America’s warmbeartedness so I asked the soldierly, athletic young man why he had not brought over the girl of his high romance. SON IS TO BE “A REGULAR Guy.” “She's gone to Italy, my wife," he said, "to spend the summer with her people. The baby is with her—our son, Vladimir, named for my father. ‘The boy is four years old. Yes, he's formed that Bragi) . Conte rence £2 wilh ac- @s tho first Brasil Minister Pichon cept Alexand Ambavsad @ good little chap, sturdy right, we think. We're trying to bim He sprang up and found| up to be what you Americans call ‘a regular guy.’ The Prince was interrupted for the second time by the telephone. This time Prince Aage spoke in French; the first wire chat had been in Ita- an, The next would probably be in Fnglish. He seems to speak every- thing. “Photographer!” he said laconical- ly, ‘setting the instrument down with & muscular thump. “That's how it is from seven jn the morning till all hours at night. Why don't I have it stopped off? Oh, well, one doesn’t like to be disagreeable, Besides, if it weren't for this telephone, one couldn't live a whole week in one day, a8 one does in this country. —what were we talking about?” | “Vacations for husbands and) I suggested. “You believe in “Certainly. They are most desira- ble. I should even say necessary if @ man and woman would keep their association fresh and interesting. We are great friends, my wife and I. We shall not be less so for this four months’ separation, We shall have a | lot to talk about when we meet again.” OVERCAME MANY OBSTACLES) TO MARRY. | Prince Aage declares that he leads both a simple and a busy life at home. He follows the profession of | soldiering, being “away from the house like any business man from 9 o'clock to about 5 each day” at~ tending to the military affairs of the Royal Guards of Denmark. His wife, he says, “has a big house to attend to, and sho, loves gardening—has awfully good luck at it, too,” Theirs was a romance, if ever there was one, of the good old-fashioned sort, The Prince, called “the hand- somest royalty in Europe," met the Countess Calvi at a dance given at the American Legation by the Minis- ter, Dr. Egan, eight or nine years ago, It was virtually love at sight. But all the traditional obstacles at once cropped up and the lovers were parted by the recall of Count di Ber- golo to Italy and the shipment of the young prince on a journey to China, Japan and Siam. The plot at once thickened, Count di Bergolo took um- brage at his removal, relinquished his diplomatic career and settied down upon his estate near Turin, The lovers proved truer than the blue Italian skies, After years of waiting, despite frantic royal rel: tives and martinet military officers, they kept a secret tryst and were privately married at Turin on Jan. 18, 1914, to the accompaniment of a silent fanfare from all good fairies and gods of romance. HAVE ENOUGH TO KEEP POT BOILING, An actual good fairy did appear In their story, She was the Marchesa Paola della Valle di Pomaro, an aunt of the bride, who is said to have given the young couple an tn- comed estate “to keep the pot doll- ing.” This may or may hot be so, but the Countess “Meta* was her |favorite and her godchild, and the story insists that she was in truth @ sort of magic godmother. Anyhow, they have all lived happily thus far “after.” The Prince Y¥, JUNE: 27, 1919. 14000 SOLDERS “ARRIVE HERE ON FUR TRANSPORTS, ‘Second American Ace’ Among. Troops on Tiger, Zeppelin, Mobile, Santa Clara. Nearly fourteen thousand American soldiers arrived in New York on transports to-day. ‘The first ship in was the Tiger, which left St, Nazaire June 16 and docked at the Bush Stores, Broukiyn, | ' ‘at 7.30 o'clock this morning, bringing | 2,546 officers and men. The Mobile, from Brest, arrived at 1.20 this after- noon, She brought 5,068 and the Zep- pelin, In addition to the transatlan- tie filers, had 4,288. Perhaps the smartest outfit om the Tiger were the 12 members of the i4ist Aero Squadron, commanded by Capt. F. B, Kindley of Gravette, Ark., known as the “second American with @ record beaten only by of the famous Eddie Ricken- backer. He wears the American D. 8. C., the British D. F. C. and the French War Cross, and he did most of his fighting, like the French Guy- nemer, in @ single seater. | Kindley went over in September, 1917, as @ cadet, and on May 22, 1913, got into action fighting with the British Air Squadron in the battles of Cambrai and Amions, when the backbone of the German air force was definitely broken, In July he transferred to the American air force, joining a pursuit squadron, On, Sept. 28, flying over the Canal du Nord, he found four American fly beset by twenty-five He recruited three more American planes and sailed into the battle. Single-handed he fought three German planes to a standstill and personally accounted for four German planes in seven minutes, When he landed there were forty- seven holes in his machine, hig gog- gles had been torn off @ machine is the Count of Rosenburg and not | gun bullet, his cap and Jacket were Prince Viadimir of Denmark, He in-| perforated, and there was a hole in slats he Js having. “tne time of hie | his oll tank. fe" seeing New York. And West Point, which he says is “the finest| The Tiger brought home the 157th military training school in the | Provisional Battalion commanded by world.” And Washington, whither he| Major H. Elmider of St. Louis; the is now bound “to visit ‘the Danish Legation and have a taste of dip- lomatic life. will “mourn the demise of alcoholic beverages” on June 30th. And then “the great West—to study further the democratic ideals of government and industey.” BLAMES JAPANESE SHIP FOR HITTING SCHOONER Captain of Crippled Vessel Also Says Steamer Ignored Appeals for Help. Capt. D. G. Armstrong of the schooner Friendship, which was in collision last night with the Japanese steamship Tsurga Maru, sixty miles off Sandy Hook, to-day,made a report in which he blamed the Japanese not only for the crash but also for failure to give help. ‘The report was given to the agent of the ‘schooner, W. H. Knox, No. 18 Old Slip “At 9 o'clock dast night,” said Capt. Armstrong, “we were running at eight knots, Our lights were bright and the night was clear. We sighted the steam- ship 300 yards ahead and sent up warn- ing flares, There was no response. The steamship kept on her course and struck our bow, tearing off the bowsprit and headgear. “The steamer backed away, then came alongside and hit us again, tearing off the spanker and additional rigging, The man at the wheel was brushed off into the sea and lost. “When the bow of the steamer was overhanging us we shouted for help. But the steamer pulled away and made no effort to help us.”* The Japanese ship is said to have reported by wireless and kept on her way, bound for Yokohama. GEORGE RECTOR NOW LIVING ON $1,500 YEARLY INCOME Referee Recommends Alimony to Wife Be Cut From $250 to $100 a Month. George W. Rector, once proprietor of a famous Broadway eating emporium, declares he ia living on a yearly income of $1,500, that he has some non-paying | position and held it against counter- property at Long Beach and a small| attacks. Then, at midnight, he col- automobile, which he operates himself. | japsed. Gen, Pershing pinned the The report of Mr, Rector’s financial affairs was made to-day by Joseph D. Kelly, ri appointed by Supreme Court Justice Hendrick to decide what alimony should be paid by Mr. Rector be reduced to $100 monthly MEETS MAN HE “KILLED.” This After Serving 35 Ve: Alleged Slayer, , Saye with the man he was supposed to have killed, was the experience of James Halsted, paroled convict, he declared to-day, Halsted said he met by appointment gives not a farthing for his -e- nounced throne, nor a@ crooked six- pence for the fact that his little son on the streets of Chicago the man the was convicted £, killing in Feat Gant And Chicago, where he to Mrs, Bertha E. tector, who ob- | ters, 1st Battalion Headquarters, Ma- tained an interlocutory decree of|chine Gun and Supply Company, divorce May 6, 1918, Mrs, Rector was| Medical and Ordnance Detachments, awarded alimony of monthly, The| Companies A, B, C, D and E; 310th referee recommends that this amount es A, B, F; " ti A JACKSON, Mich., June 27.~To npend | ee a S26tb Fiala Battalion, | 35 years in Jackson penitentiary for |S'80#! Corps, complete; 65th Tele- | murder and then come face to face |€4Ph Battalion; 7th Train Headquar- jie story is 1684 Provisional Battalion, colored, commanded by Major R. C. Mac- Rorie; and the 284th Military Police Company. z The transport Regina d'Italia with 1,730 casual soldiers’ aboard reached port to-day after an eighteen day race against probibition and on sev- eral occasions it appeared as though prohibition might win. Marseilles was the port of departure, Tho Regina d'Italia had on board only enough coal to take her to Gibraltar, The Gibraltar coal pass- ers were on strike for an increase in wages amounting to one cent a day and prohibition loomed up in the offing. Officers and privaes took up a col- lection and bribed the coal passers to put on sufficient coal to take the ship to Ponta Delgada, the Azores. At Ponta Delgada the coal passers were taking @ vacation because of the death of one of their number, and they re- fused to work. Another collection was taken up, and forty coal passers agreed to put coal aboard for double pay. They were very slow about it and scores of the soldiers pitched in and helped. The transport had Just about enough coal to take her Pier 97, North River, Elliott Brown, @ private in the 165th Regiment, 39th Division, told of a woman in Paris named Yvonne, who murried nine men of that division and was getting ready to marry another when her activities were discoveved 4nd an investigation was begun. Lieut, Eldon B. Brezon, who fought for etighteen hours after he had been desperately wounded, arrived on the transport Santa Clara to-day and stepped ashore at Pler 6, Bush Ter- minal, Brooklyn. The officer was attached to Com- pany D, 357th Infantry, of the th Division when he was wounded, He went “over the top” at 6 in the morn- ing with orders to advance five kilo- metres) An hour after the start he was shot in the wide The bullet passed out through his back, He re- fused to retire but kept on until he had followed his orders, captured bia to D. 8. C, on him and the French gave him the War Cross. The Mobil®s 6,068 include the 58th Infantry, Field and Staff Headquar- Engineers Headquarters, Medical and Ordnance Detachments, Companies D E and F; 7th Corps Headquarters, Headquarters Troop and Detachment; 602d Engineers Headquarters, Medical and Ordnance Detachments, Compan- ters and Mobile Veterinary Section. | Major Gens, Edward N, Lewis, Thomas Q. Donaldson and William R, Sample are travelling as casuals, The Zeppelin drought 805th Pioneer Infantry, complete; 10th Field Bat- tallon Signal Corps, complete, and the SUDDEN DISAPPEARANCE OF GIL BRINGS SERIOUS ILLNESS TO HER MOTHER Cascade Down Stairway, and Flow Into Gutter. All ye who have tears prepare to shed them now as you peruse the sad story of Frederick Simpson and eight quarts of Scotch \whiskey, Simpson ts a Stapleton, 8. L, ship- builder and he came to Manhattan to-day to take out some siquid in- surance, as It were. At a store in Eighth Avenue he bought eight bot- tes of Beotch for $40. Carrying the bottles in two neat packages he rode to South Ferry on the Ninth Avenue elevated. As he was descending the stairs he slipped and fell ali the way to the bottom. Yes, aif the bottles were broken and eight quarts of Scotch whiskey cascaded down the staircase and spread out on the pavement and the enticing odor thereof brought crowds from afar, All who were present will my that the eneul lodge of sorrow, with Frederick Simpson lead- ing, was heartrending. i Boy Scouts Join Four Brothers of Prominent Sayville Resident Broken Down by Influenza. SAYVILLE, L. 1, June 87.—Wiltiam H. Long, @ prominent young resident of Sayville, who for several weeks has been a patient in the Ross Sanitarium at Brentwood, following « nervous breakdown resulting from an attack of influenza jast winter, has been missing since Wednesday. His four brothers are searching the woods around Brent- wood in an attempt to find « trace of the missing man. Three troops of Boy Scouts have joined in the search. A reward of $200 has been offered for news of Long's whereabouts. Long i & graduate of Wesleyan Uni- Antoinette Bogovich Left Home Ten Days Ago and Has Not Been Heard From. Antoinette Bogovich, sixteen, but who looks about twenty, left her home at No, 507 West 47th Street on the morning of June 37 to report for work. Nothing has been heard of her since, She wore a blue serge sult, white madras waist, black hat, Diack lisle stockings and black kid pumps. She ts described as being 5 feet 6 inches tall, weighs about 130 pounds, has a dark birt pte oh ps of the New complexion, brow: and black bay w Sohool, and was employed perth he a by the Title Guarantee and Truat Com- pany in Brooklyn when the breakdown ‘The mother of the girl is serl- | Bame, Last fall Long's engage: ously ill due to her daughter's ent to Mise sudden dlsappoarence and doctors | Biss Young) at Siiyveeant Avenue fear she will not recover unless Antoinette returns home. $10,000 FINE, 18 MONTHS IN PRISON FOR TAX FRAUDS Memters of on Wool Firm Sen- tenced in Conspiracy Case. 1zth Veterinary Hospital, and 53 wives and 4 children. Brig. Gen. Rufus EB. Long and Brig. Gen, Francis J. Parker are aboard as casuals. The Santa Clara, St. Nazaire, had 1,745, including the 1734 Provisional Battalion, 530th Engineers, Compan- jes A, BD; 819th Service Battalion, Quartermaster’s Detachment; Com- panies B, C; 48th Veterinary Hospi- tal, 2ist Veterinary Hospital, 315th Service Battalion, 15th Depot Service Battalion, 1024 Bakery Company. The Santa Paula, St. Nazaire, car- ries 2,003, including 171st Provisional Battalion, 404th Telegraph Battalion, 835th Field Remount Squadron, 97th BOSTON, June 27.—William A. Bng- ish and John H. O'Brien, members of the wool frm of English @ O’Brien, each and sentenced to onths in prison to-day for conspiring to defraud the Govern- ment in connection with income tax returns. Immediately after the decision was announced Assistant United States At- torney Lewis Goldberg stated that the Camp Hospital, 2524, 208th Military |Government would institute @ civil suit Police Gompany; 179th Provisional] {e,fecaver the money of which it was Battalion, 4th Corps Field Artillery |guilty to fraud: ‘involving $1,379,000, ‘ark, 24 Air Park, 227th, 649th Avro Squadron, a SS." DR. PESSOA AT NIAGARA. Party Delayed by Wait adian Represe: NIAGARA FALLS, June 27—Dr, Epitacio Pessoa, President-elect of Brazil, arrived here from ‘New York this morning. For an hour after ¢h special train of the party waited for t arrival of @ representative of the Can- dian Government, whose train was de- layed. Mayor Stephens of Niagara Falls, Ont., welcomed Dr. Pessoa in the absence of & Dominion representative. ‘The party went on a sightseeing tour, crossing to Canada this afternoon. The Brasilians leave to-night for Doronto, returning to the United States next | Sunday ni Six More Reported Kilied in Action, ‘WASHINGTON, June 27.—Six mip, wilh i etl to- War ‘Department maraaley” ist, New York. lone was from for Can- at Vacuum Cleaner 131 Vest 42d St, Tor Iced Tea~Ftleys Particular people insist on Tetley's for iced tea. A frosty, tinkling glass of Tetley’s iced tea is the real summer drink—cooling and refreshing! A blending of 15 or more teas from the world’s finest tea gardens gives Tetley’s Tea its delicious, fragrant flavor, and the careful packing pro- tects its strength. Tetley’s clear, amber-colored Orange Pekoe Tea is delicious when iced. TETLEY'’S TI Eight Quarts of Precious Lituor

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