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2 he ‘HT ON HARVEY _FORENVOY FAILED TO SWAY HARDING Determined to When So-Called “Drive” Against Nomination Started PROUD OF SELECTION, |" ¢ sf omnes of me meine Defiance in President's Announcing He Would Be *Ambassador to England. WASHINGTON, April 2 (Copyright, 1921),—President Harding is proud of the eelection of Col. George Harvey! ae Ambassador to Great Britain. When he authorized the Washington correspondents to announce that he would send the nomination to the Senate soon there was a note of de- fiance in his voice against all who had presumed to doubt that the dis- tinguished editor of Harvey's Weekly would be finally chosen, The Presi- dent was eager to have it known that the so-called “drive” against the Harvey appointment had failed to move him, and from the decisive man- Der in which he spoke it was evident that having made up his mind to appoint Col. Harvey he was trying to discourage any effort to dissuade him. “There is no doubt about it, the murmurs of opposition as well as the published stories of a “drive” against Col. Harvey have only) gerved to stiffen the determination of President Harding to go through with bis original plan. Those who observed Mr. Harding's eagerness to have whe press record his choice of Col. Harvey thought they detected the | game resentinent against criticism gf personal appoiniees as Woodrow Wil- gon used to exhibit whenever any one made 80 bold as to suggest that pos- sibly the posis held by Albert Sidney | Burleson or George Cree! might have been filled by others, PROHIBITION ATTITUDE NOT PLEASING TO “DRYS.” Just why the selection of Col. Har- yey to go to the Court of St. James's Should be the object of criticism and produce an undercurrent of protest in Republican circles ever since his | Mame was first mentioned for the post may be somewhat of a mystery to the outsider. Indeed, there has been very little question raised about the brilllaney of Col, Harvey's mind and his ready wit. Rather has the opposition centred upon Col Har- vey's alleged attitude toward prohi- bition which is not especially pleas- ing to the “dry” element here. It has been pointed out, however, that Great Britain 4s not a probibi- tion country and that presumably sentiment in London would favor the selection of a man like Col, Harvey instead of one of “Pussy Foot" John- son's disciples. Indeed Government in response to an in- quiry from the United States Govern- ment suid promptly that Col. Harvey Was “persona grata” When Col. Harvey goes abroad as Ambassador to Great Britain he will have achievéd a lifelong ambition, It is not generally known that the Colonel was very anxious to have President Wilson appoint him to the \same Ambassadorship, Long after Mr. Wilson und George Harvey had their sensational cuptroversy in which the then candidate tor the Presidency asked his editorial friend fo cease his support on the ground that it Was more harmful than hei ful the ambition of the Colonel to b come Ambassador to Great Britain | did not wane, When Mr. Wiison hesitated for some weeks before ap- pointing Walter Hines Page the | friends of Col, Harvey beseeched Mr. Wilson to let bygones be bygones and appoint the man who had been g0 ine strumental in bringing the name of Woodrow Wilson into the limelight. COL. HARVEY WAGED INCES- SANT ATTACK ON MR. WILSON. But Woodrow Wilson was obdurate. The same reasons which actuated him in declining Col. Harvey's edi- torial support—namely an apprehen- gion that support by Harvey would be construed out West as the backing of Wall Street interesta—were potent in the subsequent decision against the sending of the Colonel to Great Britain. Ever since that episode, Col. Harvey's pen has been employed in an incessant attack upon Mr. Wilson and his policies, 80 much so that many Republicans believe he owes his selection by Mr. Harding to the remarkable way in which he exposed to satire the ills of the Wilson Ad- ministration, Traditionally he a Republican though after his break with Mr. Wilson he supported the national Republican ticket in 1916 and 1920. ‘The fact that Mr. Wilson was in- clined to select Col. Harvey for the Ambassadorship and was merely afraid of the Colonel's supposed Wal! Btreet connection Ls seised upon as confirmatory, at least, of the editor's ability and capacity for, if fate had brushed aside these circumstances, he might have served in the ame pot under a Democratic intead of a Republican administration. —_—— Sterm Brothers’ Employees to Hold ‘Theatre Party. Members of the Employees’ Mutual Renefit Association of Stern Brothers Cepartment store, West 424 Strcet, are planning to hold their first theatre party Tuesday evening, April 19, at BF. Keith's Colonial Theatre. A. Cohan is Chairman of the Enter. tainment Committee, The associa. officers emi James KE. A. roeder, Vice Presi- Kory, Treasurer, and J, L. ‘Het, Secretary, Name Him Voice the British | iB not | Kent, | HARDING TO NAME BUFFALO WOMAN Selection of Mrs. D. K. Stuck' Considered Mrs. Harding's Appointment. | WASHINGTON, April 2—Organi- io al Revenue for Western \ aie an old friend of the soon. her selection to a long time intimacy with the President's family. sister, Miss Abigail Harding, and a music pupil of the President's wife. It 4s regarded here as Mrs, Harding's appointment. Western New York politicians had |selected a man ‘for this place, and it was understood Senator Wads- worth was backing the organization selection. However, the Senator, on learnin: that the President desired to make a personal appointment of Mrs, Stucki accompanied her to the White House Friday afternoon and |notified the President that he would interpose no objection to her sélec- tion, Thus far very few women have jOffered themselves us candidates for |positions under the Harding admin- intration, either in Washington or lover the country, and the oft-re- |peated pre-election statement that the women would demand recogni- jtion in the distribution of offices hus not recelved substantiation, The same class of male applicants is seeking the jobs as in the old days, The fact that women are in a de- |clded minority in important places in Government has became the sub- Ject of a lively controversy between feminest leaders here and Mrs, Helen Gardner, woman member of the Civil Service Commission, Miss Elsie Hill of Connecticut, for- merly an officer in the Woman's Party, pointed out in a statement some days ago that, while the vast majority of clerical places here are |held by women, but very few women |hold executive positions, Mrs. Gard- ner retorte’ that this was due, in |part, to the fact that the women did not train themselves for the higher positions, although admitting the ne~ cessity for wiping out by legisiation some of the restrictions imposed upon them in the Government. saeenereeatiibomaanntate MOB MENACES TWO ACCUSED BY GIRL Men in Soldier Uniform Charged With Felling Escort of Lake- wood (N. J.) Child, Two men in soldier uniform who told the police they were Michael Cusack, nineteen, and Albert Golding, twenty, of Company M and Company I, vespes tively, of the First Gas Regiment tioned at the Lakehurst military camp, are in the Toms River jail following a | victous assault by two soldiers upon Charlotte Hoft, thir, years old, daughter of one of the most prominent families of Lakewood, N. J. She is now under the care of a physician. Immediately after the arrest of the two men in Lakewood, an indignant crowd assembled and Goulding was |jured when he wos attacked ax the police were taking him to the leckup, One of the policemen was hurt protect- ing his risoner. TAX COLLECTOR zation politicians are due for # jolt In the appointment of a Collector of In- New ork, Mra, Daniel K. Stuck! of Buf- | Harding | family, 1s slated for this appointment, which will probably be made very Mrs. Stuck! will be the first woman to hold thi» position and she will owe She was a classmate of the President's CHILDREN, AT RISK OF LIVES, RESCUE THEIR PLAYMATES i} One Lad, Michael R Ryan, Killed as He Saves Little Helen Murphy. | | of; Seven-year-old Helen Murphy No. 238 Bast 94th Street, rescued by her seven-year-old pliy-| Michael Ryan, at the cost of his own life in the collapse of a bailding at No. 7 Bast 94th Street yesterday, was reported on the road) to recovery at her home to-day, Six| other children were injured in be collapse and one more is expected to die. ‘The building was an old one-story structure, which was ‘unoocupied. | Half a dozen children were playing who mate, interior and another group was pia, -) ing marbles in front of the building. | The children on the roof felt the; building begin to tremble, and they | made the one-story leap to the street. | They escaped serious injury. As the building crumpled up} Avenue, heard Helen crying for help. | He ran to her and began to drag her out. Just as he had pushed her to a place of comparative safety an iron girder struck him on the head and fractured his skull. He was found dead later under a pile of bricks, cement and rubbish. Robert Blake, of No. 1691 Third Avenue, who was playing marbles in front of the building, grabbed his three-year old nephew, John Duffy, and dragged him to safety, Blake himself, however, was struck on the head by a girder and ls near death from a fractured skull. Marion Murphy, nine-year-old sis- ter of Helen, saved the life of their Ate brother Daniel by dragging him across the street, The other children injured were John Philbin, eleven, No. 283, Bust 94th Street, in Reception Hospital with possible fracture of sicull; Vic- | tor McCurdy, eleven, No. 233 Bast O4th Street, possible fracture of | ekull; Charles Schofield, seven, No. | Hospital with fractured sku; James | O'Connor, five, No, 239 Bast 94th Street, internal injuries, and Fred- erick Walsh, No. 236 East 94th Street, in Reception Hospital with fractured | skull. The collapse caused such exon | ment that police reserves had to be culled. The police of the Hast #8th Street Station are investigating to- day to fix the responsibility. Samuel Beckman of No. 1863 Har- rison Avenue, the Bronx, is said to be the owner of the building. ‘The building which collapsed was 4 one-story affair sandwiched in be- tween two tenement houses. It had stood empty so long that hardly any- body in the neighborhood recalled its original purpose. Its door was wide open to the street and, lacking any rear wall, it proved a tempting play- house for the children of the block. ———>__—. SHIPS GRINDING UP, HE SAYS. i Ansecria Capt. Pat Assortions that Shipping Board ves- aels tied up at Prall's Island, between Elizabethport and Perth Amboy, were pounding aground half the time and packed #0 close together they were grinding each other’ to pleces, were made yesterday in @ letter sent by J.) N. Patton, Port Captain of the board | here, to George W. Sterling, District | Director of the board at No, 45 Broad-| way. Copies of the letter were sent to The Hoft girl was walking last night| Admiral Benson, Chairman. of the . "| board. with George Lecompte when two met Own ‘Association, in uniform knocked him down and] — Capt. Patton said Capt, 0. W, Parker, selzed the girl, dragging her to a paten| Marine Superintendent, had stated st vesnels were in i’ condition, | Mr. | of woods. She attempted to acream but Sterling sald that Capt. Patton had justi a hand was placed over her mouth.| been dropped from. the employ vot “th Later the men were arrested at a jocal] bord along with others In a cutting of hotel where, with the girl they wore| {hr force. | There are 253 steamers and attempting to get a lodging for the| of .-m Shipping Bo: | HEN Ae en dened betas Bacorher | ckeraon ry fe a were he aw itnue ball for the LAWYER DIES IN OFFICE. | 5 ———— | wean County ACTRESS. BRIDE SUES FOR DIVORCE Wife of Wealthy Carl Nanna Was One of Johnstone Sisters, (Special to The Bvening World.) CINCINNATI, April 2.—A, C, H. John- stone, wealthy proprietor of the Prince- ton Hotel, to-day recvived word that |his daughter Edith, an actress, has en- tered suit for divorce in Columbus, O., against Carl Nanna, a wealthy resi- wodded life, duty. ‘The widding was ‘Yast wary, after a romance, Nanna, as Edith L, Johnatone, with her| pinter is well known in vaudeville the-| atrical circles of the country, | They j were billed 998 the the L ZonARONe Sisters. VIVIANL Di DAY | AY APRIL 11. City Will Pay Tribute by Honerin: Envoy. April 11 was fixed yesterday as 'Vivi- anil Da, Franc) departs, a few days later, for home American In the evening there will be an. All- American meeting in Carnegie Hall, Bich the envoy will be gu Ser, Mie ler rill preside, neh colors, Frederic, dent of Bucyrus, after two months of Mrs. Nanna alleges gros# neglect of ite to France | In this city in order to honor and the ex-Premier before he Citizens are asked to decorate their homes and pines of business with the at of honpr. the comundtee, Andrew Colvin Was Prom Brooklyn Civic Affat: Andrew Colvin of No, 98 Woodrutt Avenue, Brooklyn, for many years con- nected with the logal department of the New York American and of late a| member of the legal staff of the Title | and Mortgage Company, No. 135 Broa)l- way, became suddenly ill yesterday af- ternoon in. the office of Aaron MH. | Sohwarts, lawyer, of No, 87 Nassad Street, and died before 4 doctor arrived, He Is ‘survived by his wife, He was born in New Raltimore, Greene County, N, ¥., on April He was Prosldent of the Plitbu payers’ Association, « charter member of the Progressive Party, the New York ent in ress Club, Brooklyn ‘Union League Club and many social organizations. ———.— SWORN IN BY WOMAN. In Columbus tae Sennen | Mra. | Lyne (Mass) Department Heads ‘Take Oath Administered by Clerk. | LYNN. Mass, April 2. heads at Lynn Qity Hall were sworn into offi to-day by a woman clerk, | who also is 4 notary public, The ot-| flainis, each of whom will serve three yoarm, were the City Clerk, ‘Treasurer, j Superintendent of Streets “and | High- ways, Superintendent of Water Supply, Auditor and clerk of committees, Augusta M. Bachellor, employes in the City Clerk's office, admininterod the oaths to. 7 Including the City k, who is ‘t was the Ume a woman haw pert med such inetion in this city, and is believed Department “bmi.” the first in New England, eae | FROM SL coups. | ne HOMO NK Tavlos the “Teadache try curing Cold id ‘Tee genuias 2 NR Ce a NM aL ba Little Hero and His Playmate’ For Whom He Lost His Life THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 1921. ELEN MOR ng tag on {ts roof; others were in the $4,000,000 IN NEW BRONX DWELLINGS | Borough Teems the x exemption law, | fall @ return to a semblance of war-time rent scale was of real estate men in the ing the announcement March plans were filed for dwellings in that borough to cost | $4,000,000, ‘The bulldings will shelter more than 300 families. In one section alone, theae undertakings will c and provide accommoda famliles. Another import programme will b monster building planned 1 Park Avenue to be Court. A portion of this structure fs in use, It will be one of the large: apartment houses In the country, hous- ing 162 familie Another site at Burnsic Avenues will be ment h ing more than $30 | The University section will be well taken cars In the new plans other actions of the Bronx ire. sure | goon to see signs of the Millding boom made possible by the © ling T: emption Inw for whi The Evening World fougtit so hard. Patrick J. Ravello, Buildings In the Bronx, operations this year will the total for the period since 1917, 239 East 94th Street, in Reception 15,000 ‘ARE HOMELESS AFTER MANI Blaze in Bod MANILA, Press) rendered homeless by a the most destructive Sere in more than take the risk of loss by playing for a twenty years, which des thousand hi of the city, the San Lazaro District. Two bodies were found ruins, With Activity on Heels of Tax Ex- emption Law’s Passage. Michael, who lived at No. 1675 Third) phat pullding activity, spurred by e more wing to t kno overnd by a big ap: iperintendent of ive Quarter Most De- structive in 20 Years—Two Found. P. 1, April 2 (Associatea OPPOFtunity for @ great deal of play on Building bring by the the prediction Bronx, follow- that during may approximately West Bronx, ‘ost $2,000,000, tions for 130 ant part of the at 163d nas Me te and Walton says building excend by far LA FIRE MRS. AMOR L. SMITH _ OBTAINS DIVORCE Millionaire Wife of New York Banker Freed by Ohio Court. Special to ‘The Brening World, CINCINNATI, Ohio., April “harg- ing that her husband, Amor L. Smith, now a banker of New York, depended upon her to support herself, their ehild | and the husband as well, Mrs. Oharlotte Allen Smith, of 3021 Fatreld Avenue, was granted a divorce here to-day by Judge C. W. Hoffman in Domestic Re- lations Court. Mrs, Smith said that before their marriage Smith sald he owned an ex ceedingly lucrative real estate business but that she discovered Inter that her income of from $20,000 to $25,000 a year was necessary to keep the family going. She testified also that her husband) when away from home wrote to her not to write to him about their baby but| about his friends. Thoy were married in 1917 arated In April 19, |of Amor Smith, city pstate, and sep- Smith is a son former Mayor of this ‘The wife inherited a million dollar pe ANOTHER CHESS GAME IS DRAWN | Sixth Lasker-Capablanca Contest Abandoned After Making Forty- Three Moves, HAVANA, April 2.—The sixth game in the world championsiip chess mateh between Dr. Emanuel Lasker and Jose -Fifteen thousand persons were fire Inst night, stroyed three ases in the northern section a native quarter known as two kings were to-day in the a, DROWNED SELF, SAYS NOTE. Letter in Cabin Tells of Boat Pas- senger's Suicide, FALL RIV: ter found in a stateroom BR, Mass., April 2.—A let~ of the steamer Providence of the Fall River Line after dad docked here yesterday, indicated a man who registered as David Taber, Providence, oon tog from the York to this which was found w city, h pitted suicide boat during the trip from. by jump- The letter, a hat and an| overcoat in the ma tateroom, was address to the plain of the Steamer.” It said “Kindly notify my wife at No, 1800 Broad Street, Providence, Ro 1, and also deliver my will to that address. 1) am jumping overboard, Taber was in the tea a ness In Providence, nd coffee busi- ee ROPER TO HEAD, NEW FIRM. ‘and to the American Siaksynip| Was Internal Revenoe Chief Under McAdoo Regime. WASHINGTON, April Roper, Commissioner of enue under the McAdoo 2.—Dan Internal Administration of the Treasury Department, will retire as Presitent of the Marlin-Rockwell Corporation of New York April 5, to becoome head of the Washington firm of Koper, Hurrey & Parks. whlch will continue the business established by C, B. Hurrey and Franklin C. Parks, clalists “in Government — procedur The new concern will, matntaln ‘offle In Now Yprk and Washington. Mr. Roper will? continue as a member” of the tive Corporation, Hoard of Directors and the k Committee of the Marlin-Rockwell ecus setae ARNSTEIN GETS WRIT. Habeas Corpus i Designed te Keep Nicky Out of Jatl, Upon Jules W. carceration which he the expiration (Nicky) Arnste in Ludiow was sentenced of his parole, R, Capablanca ended in a draw after fortythree moves. There was still an both aides, but the situation fiad been| so simplified either player could dem- | onstrate a draw, and neither cared tol win, East rooks rem had three pawns and two ining on the board, and the taking @ lively part in the buttle. | As the match now stands, Capa- blanca has one victory to his credit and there have been five draws. Tue sey- enth game will be started to-night. Following is the compiete score of the sixth: RUY LOPEZ, | Capablanca) Lasker Bisck | Wutte KUABS ye Ki Wea | i hii) sp Rok | 2 Kio Re Bhd | 8 Kar PK AUTO RUNS THROUGH A BRIDGE RAIL Driver Taken Unconscious From Wreckage of Car After | 35 Foot Plunge. | A touring car headea | Madison Avenue Bridge Street shortly after 10 night hit the curb us it neared the Bronx side, An instant later it east over at 188th o'clock last jbe for Dead Naturalist— Burial To-Morrow. roughs, wished, the naturalist, while livin day by three score countrysid mer home, ing woods at daybreak. roughe's body, as simple and plain heart, stood in The Nest, at wooded estate, Thither Riverby, his near along the same him, Just before this they went t wit spring garlands. The burial of the sclentist will not be boulder on a hilltop, the spot lie, Here, to rest in the evening after his da: of work and play. . To-day was giv up to funeral service wiended by scores 0 Nis oldest and truest friends. only recently recovered from a seri ous illness; Virestone, a trio who joined Mr. Bur. roughs every year for an of camp life in the woods and moun tains, The services to-day were c: by the Rey induct Dutchess County, Was a great grief. with music, then a prayer and read than these lines.” Mr. Garland read were these: T wae not: I became; and when the me Hath ripened, T shall but return again Into that Nothingness which is the AIL About me Is the earth, beloved, mizie, ‘The parent, the companion and the friend ; The forest mods fn fellowship; the + winds My playmates arc; the waters lisp the sign Of brotherhood; and in the ders vohw I hear a tongue which Is not wholly stran thun- Tho stars are kindly counciliers to me; 1 claim’a kinghip with the worn that crawls, And with the clay where the simple ta Of its dim life is written When, sometimes The Knowledge of the certainty of death Sits heavily, I do tut pause and weigh ‘That deeper truth—1 do not need to care My pleasure ts the earth's, my pain is her For we ate one, neither me nor change an work us Injury. ami Lines from of Wordsworth, of Emerson were read by line: Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach, and sunsets show? Verdict which accumulates From lengthening scroll of human fates, Voice of parth to earth returned, Prayers of saints that inly burned, Saying, What is excetlent, As God lives, is penmanent; Hearts are dust, hearts’ Jumped the sidewalk, crashed through the bridge railing, carrying away about thirty fect of\ it, and disap- peared over the edge of the bridge, Witnesacs hurrying to the spot found the wreckage of the ear piled on a dock of the Harlem River with @ man unconscious beneath it, He was taken to Lincoln Hospital. He recovered consciousness long enough to give his name as Gearge A. Fader In, to avold Ine reet Jall, to for contempt of court in refusing to answer questions | in bankruptey pr obtained a writ 0 Federal Judge Mayes Saul Myers, attorn bankruptcy, opposed retria) f y, thi ‘of, Arnst Th the District of Columbia in connection |, deal In stolen bonds, with April 5. (ere ee HAYES HEADS FIR De in charge in the. Bronx for the last threo uty Fire Tho years, was placed tempo of the Bureau of Fire day, Dr, William F. bureau: Deputy Thomas Lantry, « clerk, od from duty yesterday, indictment Lane as a result fire eins cs veaterday orp from urnable May 2 or the Ura in | ru ne indicted tn is set for|* RE BUREAU. mas J. Hayes, arily in chi Prevention to- Doyle, chiof of the Met Swarthout and were vd following thet of « Maiden Aptil. 2.-—Kire uli and nch of the ne rican Tobacco Vormpany, The loas is 35,000 shrubs and vin “©* | eatimated at §1,000,00u, eS TTI en Nat sae of No, 118 West Bodine Street, New Brighton, S. 1 He has fractured shoulder, broken ribs on both sides and prob. ably internal injuries, [t is about thirty-flye feet from the bridge road. | way to the dock on which the auto- mobile struck PRIEST IS | ASSASSINATED. Called to Door and Shot, Assatinnt Fleeing in Aute, DETROIT, April 2.—The Rev, Leo Jarezki, pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Chured, at Wyandotte, a sub- urb, was shot d killed when called to ‘the doorway of his rectory last night. The priest's assailant escaped in an automodil ‘The Sheriff's oMco, it was sald, had uncovered no clue fo the identity of the person who fired the shot, or to a motive for the a ec euipaemree To Beautify Upper Broadway, Park Commissioner Gallatin nounces he has imported enough trees |from Japan and Korea to beautify the park Btrip in the middle of Broadway from 60th Street north, and they will be planted at once, Hé also will plant in Riverside an: ‘Park, mains WHS PARK, April 2.—John Bur- could have! no greater tri- bute than that paid his memory to children from the in which he had his sum who strewed his casket! with spring flowers which they them- selves had gathered in the neighbor- ‘The casket containing John Bur- covering as that which held his great his cherished home, rolling, the Hudson. the youngsters went wit) their arms full of blossoms, gathered woodland paths he once had trod, and draped them over the little schoolhouse nearby and fex-| |tooned John Burroughs's pictu distinguished accomplished until to-morrow, when his body will placed in a graye beside a great in which he ahd often said he wished to under the shade of an ironwood tree, he had come as 4 boy | a long Among t$hese were Thomas A. Edison, who Henry Ford and Harvey | interval | Franklin Imer, pastor of | the Colgate Collegiate Church of | bigamy proceedings were taken before | Heras xe Gathe d ubout him| Magistrate Mancuso there was no nd ie HoWered-draped casket were . | e: the children of the neighborhood, | Uirect evidence in the possession of | whom Mr, Burroughs loved, and|Mr. Kilroe to show that there had | among them a company of Boy|been a marriage of Bourasse in Scouts, picked from every troop in| Canada except Bourasse's own state- Behind them stood the elder men and women to whom ulso the passing of John Burroughs The funeral services began at 2.30) ings from the Bible by Mr. bimer. At their close, Hamlin Garland read could be read to the gathered friends | Among the lines + “The Poet's Epitaph" and “The Threnody” Frank Tal- bot, the latter poem being a favorite of Mr. Burroughs, particularly these Assistant District Attorney With Plea for Mercy. | With a strong recommendation for mercy, the Jury at 2.02 A. M. to-day found Assistant District Attorney | Edwin P. Kilroe and Bouis E. Swarts, a lawyer, guilty of conspiracy to Im- pede and defeat in failing to prosecute Napoleon Ar- thur Bourasse for alleged bigamy. Bouranse, accused with them, missing. ‘The penalty is not more than three years’ imprisonment or not more than $1,000 fine, or both. Supreme Court Justice Weeks con- y| tinued the two defendan's on ball until next Thursday, when they will it the ends of justice is, be called for sentence. the con- CILOREN DRAPE ILROE IS GUILTY BURGLARS IGNORE URROUGHS' BODY OF CONSPIRACY IN ‘SAFE EMPTY" NOTE; -—INWILD FLOWERS BIGAMY'S SCANDAL SMASHIT ANYWAY jE -dison and Ford | Pont Ales at Serv- | Jury stutuity rns Verdict Against] Owner Even Lef Combination —Only $60 Plunder in Three Robberies. Three safes were @mashod last ight |n the huilding at No. 38 Mur- ray Street by burglars who got only | $60 for ir trouble. ‘They wan tonly destroyed two typewriters In addition A year ago the safe in the plant of F, Whiting, maker of envelopes at the Murray Street address, was broken and robbed. Whiting there- upon decided that he would no longer keep money in the safe He put a note on the door of the safe and addressed it to burglars tn general, saying there was nothing of value in the safe. He also gave the combination so that they might open the safe without damaging it if they wanted to be convinced of its emptt viction stands, they will be automati- | ess. The burglars ignored the note, ©] oay disbarred as practicing attor-|*™ashed the safe and found nothing ,(Reys. Kilroe ag an Assistant District |i" 1 Then they broke a typewrt | Attorney receives $7,500 a year. ‘The jury's verdict did mot mention Bourasse, as he has not been found, It was alleged he was allowed to go free on payment to his third wife of $13,000, ‘The jury had been out eleven and half hours when it returned tis verdict of guilty. y| Justice Weeks responde “Your verdict carries a very severe pen- f\alty, involving as it does disbar- ment. I shal! give your recommenda- tion of mercy every possible consid- | | eration. Justice Weeks stated that the acts of Mr. Kilroe were inconsisten: | -|with the charge that he had con- | i pired to release Bourasse. He fur- | ther advised the jury that when the ment to that effect. and went to the floor below. Here they entered the roor Vidal, exporter. ‘They sma safe, got $60, ruined a typewriter procerded to the rooms of the Turn- bull Electric Company in the same building, where they smashed a safe and got nothing. They tried to enter the rooms of the Alumimum Sales Company but the doors are guarded there by special bars of metal — = JOHN BORKEL DROPS DEAD ON ‘L’ STATION Soon after midnight Justice Weeks they came to an agreement within a short time he would send them to aj hotel for the night. a poem by Karl W. Williams, of | The verdict was a distinct shock which John Burroughs said six years|to the sympathizers of Mr. Kilroe. | Rene tres patente time | who expected at the most a disagree- Karth, nothing more appropriate | ment. Even if he was responsible for | dropping the charges against Bou- rasse, they thought, the jury would view it as an act of friendship for his former law tner and not a part of a conspiracy, Mr, Kilroe and his co-defendant received the yer- dict calmly. Acting District Attorn | Banton refused to-day ub any | mak WOMAN SHOT, SAYS HER HUSBAND DID IT Roomer Wounded; Man Ap- parently Out of Work. A revolver shot and screams at 2 AM who rents rooma at No. 249 West 111th Street, and he ran into a room he had rented a week ago to William Tobin, his wife Margaret and their eighteen months’ old baby William jr. Mrs, Tobin had collapsed in a rocking chair, shot in the left groin. The baby was asleep on the bed and a revolver was on the floor, The woman and baby were taken to Harlem Hospital, where Mrs. Tobin said her husband had shot her during a quarrel, according to the police, Diamond said Tobin apparently had| been out of work, and that he had heard the couple quarrelling frequently, the last time when he came In late last | night. ‘Tobin was gone when Diamond! I stand amid the oternal ways; Heart's love will meet thee again. And what is mine shall know my A number 6f stansan from Robert face Loveman's "The Gates of Silence" w ‘ > , iggedelin , awake, by night or day, That A thee Bis» VenATine” SEED friends I seek are seeking me; One by one, the gods we know No wind can drive my barque astray, Weary of our trust, One by one the prophets wo Dreaming to the dust All the cobweb creeds of men Vanish into air, Leaving nothing, dave a “Wi Nothing, save « ‘Where? What star-ahod paths lead up to (od We may not know, we may not i The highways Cat the dead have trod Are curtained close with mya But if this good! yearth and fair Hetoken of infinite grace, Ah, who can dreans the glories rare In store for man's immortal race After the reading by Freston of u poem by Walt Whitman, William “Durest thou now, O soul" Ormiston Roy briefly addressed the friends, saying “The lines which I will read ar from the earliest and latest writings first, the poem, ‘Waiting,’ the vision of his of Mr. Burrourshs. ‘They are, youth, but breathing the philosoph of his whole life; from his latest book, Universe,’ service and of growth, still saw wit clear eyes the Vision (Beautiful.” Walting, Serene I fold my hands ond wait, Nor care for winds. nor tide, nor xe I rave no more ‘gains: time and fate, For lot My own shall come to me. I Bthy my haste, I make delay Wor what avails this eager pace? Catherine and, second, lines ‘Accepting the vealing the prophet and the seer who, through his long life of or chance the tide of destiny. What matter if T stand alone? 1 walt with Joy the coming years |My heart shall reap where It lias sown And garner up its fruits of tears | The waters know thelr own, and dra} ‘The brook that springs in yonder heights; 1 | So flows the good with equal law ; | Unto the soul of pire dalights The stars come nightly to the The Udal wave comes to the Nor time, nor space, nor deep, Can keep my own away f ‘The quotation from Mr. Burrougiis' book was in part as follows ‘The energy of the human brain and body cannot be destroyed by th, only ¢ ed If con wlousness Is @ fo then it must persist. ‘Phe laws of life re eath are ae thes @hould tv Jawa of matter nd force are a a they should be; and if death enis my congclousness still is death good, I have had life on those ¥] terms, and somewhere, somiehow, the course of nature is justified i shall not be {mprisoned In that grav Where you are to bury my. body. [ q@hail be diffused in great Natule In the sof in the air, In the # Hh] shine, in the hearts of thase who love me, in ai the living x " ing currents of the world, thouch | may never again in my entirety by embodied In a single Wan belr as} My elements and my ms out 4 which they came, and those sou ane eunial tn this vast, wonder- ful, divine cosn The service was concluded with the elaying of Brabm's ‘Cradle Song.” sent word to the jurymen that unless | + Landlord, Aroused by Report, Finds | to-day aroused John Diamond, | entered the room, he said, | Metal Worker Who Made Doors on Grant's Tomb Succumbs to He: Attack. Joi Rorkel, for years one of the beet known lders and workers in copper and bronze in this part of the country. the maker of the great doors on Grant's Tomb, dropped dead to-day on the Third Avenue “L" station at 126th Stres he was about to board a train. th was due to heart disease, ac- to an ambulance surgeon from Hosp who Was seventy- Yo. 459 West 148th and ever for a long time in business at ast Polic Houston tr adjoining * old eadquarters at No. 300 Mul- - knew more police of ficials and policemen and politicians of heh degre: any man in the efty during the yeara he conducted his cop- |per and bronze-working shop, He re- ‘Ured from business only a short time AKO. a DISORDER IN LONDONDERRY. One Constable Killed—Six Wounded in Other Attacks, RELFAST, April 2 Mee Serious disorders comment upon the conviction of Mr. |occurred in Londonderry last evening Kilroe, other than to say Constable Higgins was shot and killed “Mr. Kilroe at his own request was |¥¥ assailants who escaped, two bombs granted a leave of absence without | ee Adee the electric light station pay on Dec. 28, and is still on leave ride sine: foli¢wine tie niece tee without pay civillans were injured. ‘The station rty was not damared by the ex plosion, An attack was made on the police barracks on Lecky Road and two con stables were wounded before pol fore ta, which ari ear, beat off the attacking party. Rift |fring could be heard during the nigh — and reat excitement pre dit is id Ina despatch received here. pina 0 cia nonin SUES AS ALTMAN LEGATEE. R. White of No. Avenue, Bronx, yesteniay. attorney, Edwin G. Mull the Surrogate’s Court to rein- 1 in an armored | John 1350 Ogden through an, petitioned set aside and reopen the accounts of C Michael | Friedsam, ree Ro Read cad Dr. | Rernard Sachs, settling the accounts of the late B. Altman, who dled in 1917 | Ste. White claims’ a legacy oF $4000 from the Altman estate as an empl for fifteen years of S Altman, to h of whor: his will bequeathed $1,000, In explaining his delay in making | this claim, Mr. White declared that he had \ve eon ured by Col, Priedsam fron time to time that his rights would be | regarded. Surrogate Cohalan {asued citations upon the executors to show cause next {Tuesday why the peltion should not be granted. a CONFIRMS JUDGE M’INTYRE. Election of John I. McIntyre to the bench of ral Sessions in 1916 was upheld yeaterday by unanimous opinion of the Appellate Division of the 8a preme Court which further confirrj the lower court's refusal of a new trial to James A. Delp nty, contestant, | Justice Pay the opinion, te red the sole issue before the jury which supported Judge Meintyro's claim was the Id of the ballots pre. d for h those unity rs Melntyre Melniyre a for by rt Feount Ww BY 826 was accounte leourt upon ball marks cancelled by p concerning which ball roneous ruling Was mad votin sor erasures, Found" Y World oF reported ound Bureau.” Room 103. World Building, will be Hated for thirty a Thene 1 been at any “Lost and Found" adv can bo left at any of The World’ Advertising Agencies, or can be honed directiy to The Work 1 4000 THeekman, New York, or Office, 4100 Main,