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to Cox have-been talk- this phase of the Cox before the affair got into and that has been one of ) used in the corridor which has #0 much to do with ehh and flow of sentiment in ton time, AK LEADER LINES UP WITH) . ANTI-WILSON FORCES. , But the most harmful thing to the “Cox candidacy comes from an entirely it Girection. Ed Moore, Na- Committee from Ohio, voted to Senator Reed of Missourl. More- in the fight between Senator and Senator Glass for the hip of the platform com- Moore is understood to have ‘Up against Senator Glass—the of President Wilson. ‘This more and more t6 align the Ce forces with the anti-Administra- > tion groups and helps to solidify the Palmer and McAdoo forces. For it is inconceivable that the At- * torney General in the President's Cabinet would not use his influence weours the selection of a Chair- pal of a Platform Committee de- jen’ UMMINGS SOUNDS KEYNOTE: GIVES WILSON flGH PRAISE o QUA BOARDS HANDED 1 FRSO VISORS SAYS IS MABRY (Continued From First Page.) to thre caja poarde, wie by Che wey, are suppiied x al) wadrot. ‘The Tecnmany cercitaens tent wet, merely molt, « gront difference, Lodge's oi copy of the League of Nations was mislaid. De Valera, however, found {t and brought it along, so everything is now all right. The women ure all dry because the haven't asked them to be any- thing @ They confer dally with the waiters and bell boys. As Charles Fearless Murpby must be a Christian Scientist he inisters absent treatment only, But there are many thoughts to cheer us up. The name of the last McAdoo baby tg Faith, Hiram John- Champions League and De- nounces Defeat of Treaty as a Crime Against Civilization. HOTLY SCORES G. O. P. Calls Platform Reactionary and Says Highest Bidders Failed to Win Chicago Prize. SAN FRANCISCO, June 98.—In his keynote speech to-day as Temporary Chairman of the Democratic National Convention Homer Cummings cham- Ploned the covenant of the League of Nation: aid no blacker crime against civilization soiled the pages of history than the defeat of the pence treaty by the Senate, and characterized the Republican plat- form as reactionary and provincial, He Said in part: “We, who assemble in this great convention, counsel together, not mere- ly as members of a party, but as chil- dren of the republic. Love of country and devotion to human service should purge our hearts of all unworthy or misleading motives, Let us fervently pray tor a Divine blessing upon all thatewe do or undertake. Let us Pledge ourselves anew to equality of opportunity, the unity of our coun- try above the interests of groups or classes and the maintenance of the high honor of America in ner dealings with other nations, “The Republican platform, res °- tionary and provincial, is the y apotheosis of political expediency Filled with premeditated slanders and vague promises, it will be searched in vain for one constructive sug- President Samuc! Rea ofthe Penn-|gestion for the reformation of the ‘and W. G. Bessler of the Jer-| Conditions which it criticises and de- ‘Central to nettlegthe ques- | Pl of the fuel situation for public corporations with special refer- ‘to the rénewal of contracts. ‘ W. Lied of the New York Idison informed Deputy Public Ser- Commissioner Barrett that the con! for public utilities had not m: chenged, and that the com- were’ still short, although not fy a0, The B, K. T. ts still fuel of its own and in being by neighboring corporations. tt declared that the Interstate Commission order with refer- the coal carrying Mveah an increase of soft 26 per cent., or 2,500,000 asserted to-day that ‘buytt coal at the om and disposing a. —_— KILLED BY SUBWAY TRAIN. on the In t nd there will be a tion of Wilson men from the 0 forces and Palmer forces to n Senator Glass. would have been shrewd politics the Cox managers to have kept of the fight altogether. They antagonized delegations from they must get votes to win and save put upon their candidate « taint anti- ism which, while pop- with a minority in this conven- , ian’t going to win the momina~ best bet thus far is William MoAdoo, though Gox. Cox 4; means out of the reckon running McAdoo a close race. ——— _ ASK COAL CONTRACT. "RENEWALS SETTLED Mrs. J, Borden Harriman will the campaigns of Pershing and Hoover, Handsome Joo Kerrigan is getting the women’s vote. Tom McCarthy will tell James W. Gerard where to get on, or is it off? Lewis Nixon is the snapplest dresser here—suit, socks and ties. Oh, Mi sleur! Governor “Al.” Smith can still be funny. He has left Caesar and his z00 at hom: F Mrs, George Bass promises to be as active as Marshall when she is made Vice-President. McCovey of Kings is always on- ruffied and looks like a Raphael cherub, Norman Mack ought to have a harem because he knows 80 well how to handle us. There are enough women delegates on hand to carry any election or to put any candidate out of busines: Whiskey is cheaper here than in New York. I wonder why. Possibly during the convention they are quot- ing wholesale prices. By the end of next week we shall have done our worst, there will be a great reduction in the price of lem- ons, and I shall be fishing. Hurray! Hurray! President's Appeal to Vashington in Fuel Situation as / _ Pertaining to Public Utilities. Phe National Coal Commi n was requested to-day by Smith of the New York Cen- lilroad jon at re If the Democratic Party had ac- complished nothing more than the passage of the Federal Reserve Act, it would be entitled to the enduring gratitude of the Nation. This act eup- plied the country with an elastic cur- rency controlled by the American peo- ple. Panica—the recurring phenom- ena of disaster which the Republican Party could neither control nor ex- plain—are now but a memory. PRAISES RECORD OF DEMO- CRATIC PARTY IN WAR. “And then the great war came on, Ultimately, ‘by the logical bteps of necessity, our peace loving Nation was drawn Into the conflict, The necos- sary war legisiation was quickly sup- plied. “These great affairs were carried for- ward under the stimulus of American Patriotism, supported by the courage and the spirit of our people, We have no apologies to make—not one. We are proud of our great navy; we are proud of our @plendid army; we are proud of the power of our country and the manner in which that power has been used; we are proud of the work that America has done in the world; we are proud of the heroism of American men and women, and we are proud of the inspired and in- comparable leadership of Woodrow Wilson. It is this shining record of tr mendous achievement that Repubil- can managers and the Chicago pla form seek to shame and besmirc: “Tho Republican Party became 80 fixed in its incorrigible habit of cén- ducting investigations that it’ finally turned to the fruitful task of investi- gating itself. For the first time since they entered upon this programme, they discovered fraud and graft and gross and inexcusable expenditures. ‘The revelations disclose the fact, long understoood by the initiated, that the meeting at Chicago was not a conven- tion but an auction. The highest bid- der, however, did not get the prize. The Ree which overtook the pro. c3oed frustrated the initial pur- pose. In more senses than one, the recent Chicago convention has left the Democratic Party as the sole cus- todian of the honor of the country. REPUBLICANS CHARGED WITH JEALOUSY OF PRESIDENT. “Republican leaders have been moved by a strange and inexplicable Jealousy of the President. ‘As Ne lay ateeken in the Niniig eorneee. TORN HELD FOR ALLEGED FRAUD. Minuse of Mails Charged Aga Couple in Music Sales, Raymond L. O'Nefl and his wire, Liana Rose O'Netl, were arraigned be- fore eral Judge Hand this morning and held in $3,760 bail each on indict- ments charging use of matls in a scheme to defraud, Assistant U. 8. Attorney Simmons alleges that they were in business. near Broadway and Forty-second Street as “The Associated Music Publishers of New York.” Salesmen employed vy them it is charged, obtained subscrip- tions to a “record Ibrary."* Subscrib- ers pald $45 each and according to the charges in return were to receive a phonograph and the use of an assort- ment of records, which latter were to be exchanged each week. Compilain- ants gay they had to pay an additional fee after the phonograph was detvered and ihave received but six records. a SEEKS HOME BY INJUNCTION. ‘ye Man Wants Brothers to 4: Him to Tenancy. Frank C, Jackson of Rye made another attempt to-day to obtain occupancy for himself and his wife in the cottage at Rye which he sublet for the summer to Bert and Guy Pagano, by seeking an in- Junction from. Supreme Court Justice Seeger requiring the Pagano broth to admit them to tenancy” oe paid the init!n! ince ban tg Me stalment of on the three months’ rental of $1,850 when they moved In, but were unable to pay the balance at the time agreed Jackson alleges He sald he would ac: t $250 as the balance of the rental if they would per- mit him and his wife to share the co! tage for the summer, his, Jackson statos, the Paganos con- sented to do, but when Mrs. Jackson last week attempted to enter the ogt- tage she was forcibly ejected. Jackson tried to get in several hours later and received as STORY S700! fon, he alleges. REVIVAL ENDS IN GUN FIGHT. Fifty Men a Sde—One Killed, Another Badly W: TOLEDO, June 28.—A religious re- vival that ended in a gun battle early eo-day between two parties of fifty men each, in a country church yard at Bernningers Corners, Mich., elghteon miles nortwest of Tooledo, brought death to one man and probable mortal mounds to another, Id The church Was surrounded by men it |who atempted t break up the meeting Those inside went home for weapons, hen thoy returned a Deputy Sheriff ordered the crowd to disperse and he was greeted with » hall of bullets from the church defenders. ‘The attackers threw down their weapons and eur- rendered. * it orators ines for of it @ Samucl Epstein, No. 1098 astern Parkway, Brooklyn, had both less cut and suffered fractures of both arms when @ B. R. T. subway train over him at the Canal Street . ‘The man, who died shortly ‘being taken to Volunteer Hospital, geen by passengers to walk to the of the platform when the train was twenty-five feet away and leaped te the tracks. The man was about five 4 Inches in height, weighed in the other direc- To ters worse a street ‘got ‘ortex of the Jam. an hour a sergeant and several | ‘Word was received here to-day of tho f at Buck Hill Falls, Pa. of Clin- 44 Stanford Harris, for forty years a ‘awyer, with oMfces at No. 165 Broad- way. Mr. Harris was seventy years old, i specialty was real estate cases, _ Mr. Harrie was educated in the Pin- , ul School ef Hlizabeth, N. J, and was 1 4 from the Law Department Columbia in 1877. He associated in with John H. Corwin, a life. friend, but this partnerslilp later firm of Harris Corwin & Frederic H. Gunnison join- 51900, On May 1 last Mr. Harris but his name was retained. ‘Harris was a member Universalist Church, Brooklyn: lyn Municipal Club, the Union lub, the entingion Gold and Club and the Field Marine Club i He survived by John H, Cor- that envy could invent, and they scarcely control the open manifestation of their glee when the Great Man was atricken at ast. “The Congre sion for months while the President lay in the White House stru: joint of death. He yaically wounded Just as surely as were Garfi and MoKinley and Linooln, for is but a difference of degree bi by in fanat bY 0 @ and sympathy, did not find time amid their blokerings to pass one resolution of generous import or extend one Kindly inquiry as to the fate of the President of their own country, HONOR OF NATION BOUND UP IN PEACE TREATY. “There are men who seem to be av- noyed when We suggest that Amer- jean honor is bound up in this con- t Court, after the charge |te8t: and that good faith requires that . fe we ‘should enter the League of Na- geet Suanges, trom petty larceny to} ion The whole Republican case is MeKettrick Held tm $5,000 Bal Daniel H, MoKettrick, former man- ager of boxers Willle Lewis and Frank Moran and more regently a member of the firm of H. Morgan Pollak & Co, brokers and dealers in the stock of the W. P. Williams Ol Corporation of Ir- vine, Ky. was held in $5,000 wail by Judge Learned ¥ States District charged that the firm made large sales of worthless stock a 810, 8. Brines, twenty years old, Mo, 61 East Fourth Street, a ma. and a New York University nt, who was char; wit , was fin to. b: ‘inuel Fleischmann in Jef. ————— Baptiste Call for Rat (Le ee Dased upon the theory that we may, Pia » of Drinks Pin with honor, do as we please about this reaty. Rade Stughater, Em Gren iagleet matter and that we have made no| BUFFALO, N. Y., June %8.—The + dight years old, promises which it is our duty to re-| Northern Baptist Convention to-day from the effects of drinking a|% adopted resolutions urging President FAITH Mc ADCO, rX Denomawece sue uvormwooe Little Miss Ellen Axson McAdoo which is lying her baby sister, Mary Wilson. Their father has repeatedly son 18 here none the worse for Mabe President, but his name will be presented to the San Francisco Conven- tion, despite his protests. OF HOLDERS UME UP. PLAN TD SWING TO MEADO (Continued From First Page.) States, the boomers assert. They look | for some support for McAdoo from Alabama; they claim the Texas dele- gation, some, votes from Missouri, all the votes from Kansas, some votes from Wisconsin and Minnesota, a lim- {ted number from North and South Dakota, some from Nebraska, prob- ably all from Arizona and New Mex- ico, the solid Idaho delegation, a few from California, all from Utah, @ couple of votes from Montana and all the delegates from Washington and Oregon. HOPE TO SEE RHODE ISLAND CLIMB ON BAND WAGON. They make no claims in other States for the start of the balloting, but they say they wouldn't be sur- | prised if Rhode Island would be strong for McAdoo after two or three ballots. Ail they look for early is positive support from twenty-three States, moral support from New York and Vago ce support from Rbode Island, and that is going some in support of a boom that was sup- posed to have been assassinated by its own candidate last week. There is a strong undercurrent of weighty gossip about Ambassador Davis, who is said by various wise politiclans to be President Wilson's real choice, But it ts still a free-for- all, and the gentiemen who are trying to run the convention are as much up in the alr about candidates as they are about everything else. Gov. Cox of Ohio has a boom that makes the biggest outward show with two brass bands and a glee club, the sane glee club that pat Harding over in Chicago, The last of the Ohio del- egation got in this morning and there are now 1,500 boomers tor Cox here from his own Sta’ oo MOVE TO RELIEVE TRAFFIC. a Central 1 Ie Wanted. More than 5,000 members of the Fifth Ayenue Association have requested the association to take up the matter of opening a roadway on the east side of the Grand Central Terminal in order to eliminate the dangerously congested traMc points on 45th Street between Vanderbilt and Lexington Avenues. ‘The exiating roadway on the viaduct across 40th Street and around the west- erly portion of the Grand Central Sta- tion is inadequate for trafMfe which seeks to move between 40th and 45th Streets, The association will take up the matter with the city authorities in an endeavor to obtain relief. ° ps Si aaa SHOOTS WOMAN, KILLS SELF Mrs, Lillian Wood of No, 606 West 424 Street, dancing instructor in a Broadway “academy,” is in Bellevue to-day with four bullet wounds be- cause she refused to marry Peter Epps, thirty-five, and told him she “wouldn't be seen on the street with a man who looked like Charlie Chap- lin.” Epps, known in the new Ten- derloin as “Charite Chaplin" Epps, then killed himself by firing a bullet into his right temple. Mra. Alice Tay wh on Trial. Landlords and tenants crowded the courtroom of Judge Louis D. Gibbs in the Bronx County Court to-day when Mrs, Alice J, Cavanaugh, formerly a member of the Mayor's Committee on Rent Profiteering, was put on trial charged with grand larceny, because of an alleged shortage in amounts she col- lected from tenants pending settlement of rent disputes. Among the tenants complaining were those of No. 970 Pros- t Avenue, No. 656 Southern Boule vard and No. 1024 Avenue St, John. The Alleged shorta; ald to exceed $5,000 ‘Twe Dead, 80 Hurt, In Food Riots. LONDON, June 28.--Two persons are jeem. "The trouble with the treaty of e is that it was negotiated by a cratic President. It is not dim- ity for ite of brandy he found in a closet in ia home at No. 360 Sixth Street, Jerse; Wilson and Treaty of the Senate to rai fy the Versailles, “with suitabie at the west dead and eighty wounded as a r Two Little McAdoos Who Already Hawe Access to the White House of Mr, and Mrs. William G. McAdoo and granddaughters of President Aiea ‘ eee THE EVENING WORLD ONDAY, JUNE 28, 1920 ; SAN FRANCISCO WILL BE ‘A HARMLESS ONE ‘ CONFLICT HALTS SEPARATION SUIT pubermtar tes 2001 Justice Says He Will Send for Dis- trict Attorney After He ‘Hears Mrs. Doyle. | ‘Triad of the separation suit of Mrs. |Alice Doyle, of No. 82 Amity Street, |Brooklyn, against William H. Doyle, |was begun before Justice Lazansky in Brooklyn Supreme Court to-day. Doyle jie employed in the Quartermaster De- partment on Governor's Island. Mrs. Doyle charges cruel and inhu- |man treatment. She was not in court jon account of filness. Doyle testified she was too attentive to Amgust Angel, |of No. 219 Court street, Brooklyn, also employed on Governor's Island. Jacob Hamburger, private detective, testified he followed Angel and Mrs, Doyle and her small aon to the Prospect Theatre, Brooklyn, where a motion plc- ture was being shown, He sat behind them, he said. A caption flashed on the screen was: “There are ones who would love us if they could, and ones we'd love if we dared.” Hamburger testified Mrs. Doyle tourned toAngel and said “Do you dare?” Angel took the atand and dented he had ever taken Mrs. Doyle to a theatre. Hamburger was recalled and repeated Angel was the man. “I will adjourn the case to to-mor- row morning,” said Justice Lazansky. “I want Mrs, Doyle here. When I have heard her, I am going to send for the €L.LEN 4450N Mc AD00, is standihg behind the bassinet in Faith McAdoo. They*are daughters declared he is not a candidate for McADOO WILL RUN ‘IF NOMINATED HIS FRIENDS DECLARE Assurance Given by Texas Com- mitteeman Love, His Former Assistant. SAN FRANCISCO, June 28.—Friend of William G. McAdoo have received what they characterize as assurance that !f nominated Mr, McAdoo will accept. (Efforts were made to reach Mr. McAdoo last night for any comment he might care to make on the above despatch, but he had retired and could not be disturbed.) The definite statement that Mr. Mc- Adoo would accept was made by Thomas B, Love, National Commit- teeman from Texas. While Mr. Love declined to elaborate, McAdoo sup- FOUR DROWNED ON SUNDAY OUTINGS Woman Bather’s Shoulder Dislo- cated by Wave at Coney | Island, Milton B, Miller, eight, of No. 29 West 113th Street, Manhattan, was bathing at the ocean front at 84th Street, Rockaway, yesterday, when he went beyond his depth and sank. He was brought in by an unknown man and attended by Dr. Levine of the Rockaway Beach Hospital. Al- though still breathing, artificial res- piration failed to revive Kim. The boy's mother and father saw him drown, and when the doctor pro- nounced him head the mother became hysterical. porters were unanimous in declaring The body of Arnegle Garbel,| that it might be taken as authentic. twenty-three, of 64th Street and| Mr. Love Js one of Mr. McAdoo's close Ocean Front, Edgemere, L. I., was] personal friends, was an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under him, and during the last year has been very active in creating McAdoo sen- timent, Mr, Love's statement follows: “The question is frequently asked whether in view of Mr. McAdoo's sincere desire that his name not be presented to the convention he would accept the nomination if made. | urance that if nominated found at Arverne by Joseph Cash- man, seventeen, of 118th Street, Man- hattan, about 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Garbel was French and was at Edgemere for the summer. His relatives are in France. John Delgaudia, eighteen, of No. 76 Carlton Avenue, Brooklyn, was drowned in Coney Island Creek, near Brighton Beach meadows, at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon. John Mulroy, twelve, of No. 88 Carlton Avenue, Brooklyn, ‘as with him and made an unsuccessful attempt to save him, Miss Bessie White, twenty-one, of No. 195 Roebling Street, Brooklyn, was the victim of a peculiar accident at Coney Island yesterday afternoon when a large wave struck her and dislocated her left sh: ulder, ‘While playing on a raft in the East River at the foot of Sanford Street, Astoria, yesterday, Shappaco Dallari, eight years old, of No. 610 Hamilton Street, Long Island City, fell over- board and drowned. Tite body was not recovered. HOLD-UP MEN SENTENCED. Get Long Terms; None ot Jewelry Store Loot Found. Three men were sentenced to Sing ‘Sing Prison for from four to ten years ‘by County Judge Dike In Brooklyn to- day and a fourth man for from five to ten years, The three were: Murray Schwartz, No. 1699 Washington Ave- nue, the Bronx; Vincent Ring, No. 851 Hooper Street, Brooklyn, and Alexander Simons, No. 270 South First Street. The fourth man wes Edward Ryan, No. 412 East Eighth Street, Manhattan, All were arrested May 22 after they had held up and robbed Morris Balufox, proprietor of a jewelry store at No. 174 Sumner Avenue, Brooklyn. He was beaten on the head with @ revolver and $6,000 in_ jewelry and $50 in cash were stalen. None of the loot has been re- covered, PERSHING ORDERLY TO WED. Miss Kelley, Yeomanette, to Be Bride of Sergt. Walters. At 10 o'clock Wednesday morning there will be an army-navy wedding in the Church of St. Benedict Joseph at 118th Street and Atlantic Avenue, Rich- mond Hill, L. I., when Sergt. Fred J. Walters of the Quartermaster’s Depart: ment, Fort Hamilton, will marry Misi Florence Kelley, former first class yeo- manette of No. 917 118th Street, Rich- mond Hill. Sergt. Walters was Gen. Pershing's orderly on the Mexican border. He was born in New York and entered the army at sixteen years, serving in the Philip- pines, in Hawaii, on the Mexican border, in France and in the Army of Occupa- tion in Germany. Miss Kelley is the daughter of the late Artie Kelley, ‘comedian, and she served in the navy as a first class yeo- man (F) during the late war. Sergt. Walters rescued her in a train wreck in ‘Texas in 1915. SUICIDE AT FOREST HILLS. Medical Examiner Says New Guest Sinshed Self with Knife. Dr. Howard W. Neail, Deputy Medical Examiner of Queens, stated to-day that the death Saturday in the select Forest Hills-Inn at Forest Hills Gardens of Clarence Elder was a plain case of wulcide, Dr. Neall said that he had found Blder’s body in a bathroom with his throat slashed by a penknife, Mystery was injected into the case by the assertion of the manager of the inn, and adhered to yesterday by a friend of the family, that he had died of apoplexy and that the doctor had so csc a Eee SAYS HE STOLE WIFE’S LOVE. Arif Sues Japanese Photographer For $20,000, SWANN ABSOLVES PENDLETON FROM ELWELL SUSPICION — (Continued From First Page.) statement {9 the basis of these in- sinuations.” SWANN TELLS OF SLIPS FROM GARAGE OWNER. District Attorney Swann, when questioned by newspaper men on this statement by Mf. Olcott, said that the office had a slip from the Atlas Gar- age at No. 9 Bast 62d Street that on the 8th Mr. Pendleton’s car got oll and gas there, “We have another slip,” he added, “showing that at 2:30 o’clook on the morning of the 77th a car of the same make and. color was supplied with gas and oil.” “And were the insinuations against Mr, Pendleton issued by your assis tant on the strength of these state- ments or slips?” Mr. Swann was asked. “There have been no insinuations | against Mr. (Pendleton,” returned the | District Attorney, “given out by any- one in my office authorized to speak for the office. Only two men can speak for the office, Mr, Talley and myself.” Mr. Swann also denied that he had interviewed a man who had spoken to Elwell at 2.80 o'clock on the morn- ing of the latter's murder. This state- ment was given out by Mr. Dooling, one of his assistants, on Saturday. Similar conflicts of statements and authority in the District Attorney’s office have been tn evidence since the discovery of the murder, A contest now seems probable over the will of Blwell. The will was of- fered to-day for probate in the Sur- rogate’s Court by Andrew Macrery of the firm of Davies, Auerbach & Cor- nell, counsel for Joseph 8, Elwell, father of the deceased. W. Gibbs Whaley was present for Mrs. Elwell and her son Richard, and expressed himself as agreeable to the awarding of one-fourth of the estate for his clients, but wanted the agree- ment put in writing. This Attorney Macrery refused to do, asking that nothing be done until after the will was probated. Mr. Whaley declined to agree. Detective Harry P. Oswald of the Homicide Squad returned this morn- ing after a two weeks’ tour of Louls- ville, Cincinnati, Lexington and La- tonla, whither he had “been sent to look into the ramifications of the Elwell murder case, if there were any. It had been reported that a girl named Annie, a letter from whom to Elwell was found in the murdered man’s home, might throw some light on @ motive for the crime, but infor- mation in that direction proved to be no more accurate than the rest of the clues picked up by the District At- torney. There were other things to be looked into with réyard to the move- ments of Elwell in the Sauthern| cities for several months preceding | the murden Detective Oswald will report to his superiors, Deputy Police Commissioner Lahey and Capt. Ar- thur Carey, and then. with the fatter will have a conference with the Dis- trict Attorney some timo to-day. It is reported that among the scores of anonymous letters received is one that purports to give the en- tire circumstances of Elwell’s mur- der and the name of the person who shot him, ‘The authorities, virtually admitting that such a communication is in their hands, indicated they at- tach no more importance to It than to others, all of which are being inves- tigated, because valuable clues are often obtained in this way. tender ni ACTOR LIGHT’S TRIAL BEGUN. Newspaper Man Testifies He Pald Him $500 for Magazine Interest. A jury and Judge Learned Hand in Federal District Court to-day began trial of Alexander Guidzakian, otherwise known ,as Alexander Light, Armenian actor, producer and adapter of Shake- spearian drama, dramatic coach and formerly editor of ‘The Coming how," a theatrical magazine that died after its initial publication last November. Light was arrested April 16 last an@ indicted April 30 on the charge of using the mails to defraud. It is alleged he induced persons to pay money for dramatic instruction, promising to give them parts In plays he was to produce. The first witness was Lee J. Rasche, formerly of Oakland, Md., a Meutenant in the A. E. F. two’ years, and now a New York newapaper man. “Rasche told the Court he paid Light $500 for a quar: ter interest in the profits of “The C ing Show" and has received no mon am DRAG BAY FOR SWIMMER. Believed to Have Been Drowned Off South Beach, A police launch with grappling hooks dragged the Staten Island margin from Fort Wadsworth to Midland Beach to- day for the body of Bertram Marke, twenty-one-year-old son of Sidney Marks of Manhattan, who has a sum- mer home at No. 78 Windom Place, Arrochar. Young Marks spent yester- day afternoon in the water and on thi sand at South Beach with friends, whe left him at 5 o'clock, When he did not return home, where he had dressed for He wore only a white sweater with the the water, at durk, search was made. embroilered initials “A. A." and blue knit trunks, and it {s not belleved he could have’ gone far from the beaci so dressed. He was an adventurous swimmer, and his family fears he went far out into the bay and was taken with cramps. pas aes ite KILLED BY FALL OF ’PLANE Memp! Business Man Meets Death at Mineola After Long Flight. The body of Lewis M. Layne, vice- president of a large business concern in Memphis, Tenn., who was killed in an aeroplane accident at Mitchel Field last night, will be shipped to Memphis to-day, Layne and William ©. Sulli- van were in a Curtiss oriole plane at @ height of 200 feet, when the plan struck a radio pole on top of a hangar, causing it to make a nose dive into the ground. The men were buried under the debris. Layne was almost shstantly killed, Sullivan was taken to the it hosplial with brulses on the face and yne and Sullivan ‘started from Memphis several days ago and made stops at TY” ‘ucelphia and Buffalo, They left Buffai. yesterday bd <t e E Walter ©. Taylor, Journalist, Dead. BOSTON, June 28.—Walter Campbell Taylor, journalist and economist, died at this residence in Wellesley Hills yes- terday. He had been editor of the Portsmouth (Ohio) Blade, the © - bus Despatch, the Shoe’ and” leather Gazette of St. Louis, the shoe depart- ment of the Dry Goods Economist of New York and later of the Boot and Shoe Recorder of Boston. NY A POU @a vn, ND PROFIT Our Two Big Daily Specials For Monday, June 28th MOLASSES COCOANUT FONDANT The vcombination: fesponsible for the indescribuble excellence of there sweets Is New 01 fo Molawnes, cl Bias irated Cocoanut and rich Fondant ream, masterly biendes and. ried Into bix toothsome it SPECIAL nae POUND BOX ASSORTED LOFT Y~ POPS—The children’s Verite confection. of hess mounted on stic! cach Loftypop wrap: axed paper. Ay For Tuesday, June 29th CHOCOLATE COVERED NoT i, tooth ‘arainel, ‘cammina jerously, studded wit eras mequiled fragrant vee Sreo L CARAMELS—These are bij some squares of richest made from the cholcest of products and fasts chopped “S are of our L Yety Choco Lp itores: New York, G, Hideshauro Aril, prominent In New | stated. Pe RPP pence ap York's Japanese colony, 1s suing Shigero ub hans ne Ue eee eile tae Katsura, photographer with offices at No. 197 Broadway, for $20,000 for al- leged alienation of the affections of his wife, Grace Winfred O'Connell-Aril, Papers in the sult wore filed in County Clerk's office to-day, Mr. Arii sets forth he married Grace Winfred O'Connell June 4, 1918, and that he and his wife manifested great love and affection toward each other unt Shigero Katsura came into their lives, He alleges Katsura acquired an influence over his wife and won away her love by the promise of valuable gifts and payments of money. oe Gas Hearing Ended, The hearing of the application of the New York and Queens County Gas Company to have. the $1 rate declared confiscatory closed with to-day's ses- sion before Special Master Abraham 8. bout two weeks ago to visit his mother there, “He left behind him in Los An- oles, Cal. a bride of only a few months, ffo“Came ‘here on business for the Sin- clair Oll Company, with which he was connected. ie Admits He Forged Tax Receipt. Henry Heuchel, fifty-two years old, a real estate operator of No. 249 East 16th Street, Brooklyn, to-day pleaded gullty before County Judge McDermott of forging @ tax receipt to obtain an e: tension of time on payment of @ mor gage. Heuchel was remanded dor tence to-n James W. Hawes Left A settlement of the estate of James W.) Hawes, Republican politician and lawyer, was ordered to-day by Surrogate Cohalan on the request of the Lawyers’ 4 and Trust Company., W. C. Smith Gidbert. He instructed counsel to have Tuesday, July 6, hatham, Mass, and Daniel W. titer Witt’ he wik make a preliminary | Hawes, executors. ‘An accounting dis- or Ww! i for . closed that Hawes left $172,603.66, mostly od - mortgages. © Robert M. Mentwomery Dead. HATON RAPIDS, Mich., June 28. Robert M. Montgomery, Presiding Jus- tice of the United States Court of Ous- toms Appeals, died at his home here Sunday, He was born in 1849 and was at one time Chief Justice of the Mich!- gan Bupreme Court, to Meet Im No- vember. GENEVA, Switzerland, June 28—The first official meeting of the League of Boles, ding’ co snéprration. recsived Brooklyn, bok Newark, aternon, For exact location see Telephone ‘The Specified Weight directory. Includes the Container, The Cup Favorite WhuileReose CEYLON TEA SEEMAN BROS., New York Proprietors of White Rose Coffee, Canned Foods, Cocoa, Cereals, etc, ee Ye