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12 IOt CHIEFS FORENRIGHT PLAN OF CO-OPERATION Theré are 250 of Them in New York for a Continent- Wide Conference. | Mor thar police Chiefs of the United Stor ttended the nfer @nee of Chiefs at the Comm ye @erfay and heard addresses from Mayor Hylan, Commissioner of Police Enright, Ch Magistrate McAdoo @nd former lice Commissioner! Douglas I. McKay ’ | Magistrate McAdoo deciarcd the! Distol to be the curse of the United States. “If t had the power I'd put] @ tax of $250 on every pistol manu-! factured in the country he sald. “A's gun, gun, everywhere Begin to play at Children hold-up as soon as they are ablo wo walk “L-also favor close co-operation be- tween the police and stagistrates. | An unsympatietic Mag. le ¢ Bullify to w great extent the work of | the Police Department. T myself can! do so without exposing myself to the, breach of my oath of omce and; to any considerable criticisms from the newspapers e bench and th Dolice shoud work toge i Chief Jonn J. O14 of Kdge-| water, N. J, is among the attend- | ants ue’ conference, Palisades | Park is in bis builiwick and in the gummer he handles more than 200,000 Peopie on Sunuays, The Chief says W5th Street Ferry is the inlet and! Outlet of crimimais to and from Bergen County and he keeps an @agie eye on the crowds that go and ome. He works with the New York Police Department. Some years ago he went to London for the embezaler Ralph Lovett and found him in the Gveil Hotel, The Chief has been on the Minetcen years, ci been Chief, force for nt of which he selure going hus into the departine: a Scouunfitter Capt. ste Tobin, head of the Police in Rockville, Conn, bits lived in that town «ince, he was twelve years old He was born in Kildare, Irelana, fifty-one years ago “Kockvile is a mighty fine town,” @aid Capt. Tobin I've never lived a@hy place clse and don't want to. New York is a wonderful city, with its bright lights, but give ime old Rockville for a home. It's a town of Striking Figures at the Police Chief Conference Concerning Crime and Ways to Balk Criminal CANE m O8Nea AACKENSACK, Noe caer 6Theann od Toei ROCKVILLE Onn fel THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1921. ‘MELLON DELIVERS RUSHING BLOW -ARAINST SALES TAK /Undoubtedly Wrote With the | Sanction and Knowledge of President Harding. (Special Prom 4 Staff Correspondent Feening World) WASHINGTON, D. C., May 3.—See: of the retary of the sury Mellon has de livered a crushing blow to t lvo- cates of a sales tax. His letter to 4s of the Ways and Means and} » Committees drove in a wedge | jthat will ald in the split that already | lexisted as to the desirability of this form of taxation. | The leading of the Congressional adyo- lax are“Senator | Smoot in the Senate and Repre |tive Bacharach of New Jer sales TAPT CA PINNEY Nw LOMBOM, Cons Cre Sonn od O'BRIEN - EDGEWATER Nog i PRED. FR BORHBON PADIS OP, no CAPT, JoAnn, B. BRENNAN = STAMFORD CONN, CAE Gorpon- - MANCHESTER CHE Sonn Ane LT Oomirv. Derev, Conn The YOUNGEST CAPT. IN TRE STATE 'y House. ‘They have been working on | it for months and have sought the] President's approval. Secretary Mel- | lon undoubtedly wrote with the sanes | | ton and knowledge of Mr. Harding. | If so, this is his answer to their ap- | I nt for the tax is said to be| in the nate t hn in the | House, The House has never votea on it, but a caucus of Republicans more than a year ago is a barometer | of opinion in t lower branch of | | Congr At the time, supporters of it said the sales tax would raise $2,- 000,000,000 with which to pay a bonus to soldiers, Opponents argued that it would rat: the cost of living for not only the ex-service men, soon gobbling up what was to be given them, but would |add untold burdens to the great masses of the country. With this contention, the sales tax fight lost and since then'no oné has been able to get favorable consideration in the House. Oharges have been made by Repre- sentative Frear (Rep. Wis.) that powerful banking and jewelry inter- | ests, "headed by Otto Kahn and Meyer Rothschild of New York, were con- ducting a costly propaganda in the | hope of building up sentiment for the | sales tax. Numerous petitions have | been received by Congressmen on the | subject, coming since April 11, but they have had little result in popu- larizing that form of taxation, Se HYLAN A 3 TO 10 SHOT. Wall Street Does Its Betting, or 10,000 and I bh four regular men Clef JOAN JD PTE - Z " and five specials. ENGLEWOOD, N.S. rae , seo ner ney rmuar Before tne Captain went on the _ Although the municipat election In force he was a constable. He's been|— —_——-- —$____—— is ae ate BED ERED: _| this city is six months off, betting in on the force twenty-two y His Wall Street on the outcome of the May scr hocks cee dod $125,000 SWINDLE HYLAN PUREST MAYOR, LIEUT. RUPP SLAIN, voting on the Mayoralty is lively 5 i} and sizable wagers have already BA cca ale cua aise inain JURY IS LOCKED UP LEACH TELLS MINISTERS. | DECLARES SISTER |peen made that, the present incum: bs «hey pi 2 NE —7-_-_ sibhiinenins os bent will suce himse out of town and that's the end of call + hes y yeste va 3 Ai r h ’ % -._,.| One bet made yesterday was $3,000 them," he iid GT tink it beats Perjury Charged in Attempted Alibi ges aes i ee hate Brother Also Charges Officer's against, $10.00 that Hylan wii be | e big city methods.” ‘ i ack, Comparing Enright, Who é ‘ : he next Mayor. Abou eck ago Rear Admiral A. C. Dillingham, for Alleged Wire Tapper in ts RE Fi Death From Poison Last Feb- Jofters of $5,000 against. $25.000 were qirector of Public Batety In Norfolk, Connolly Case. iterators meee ruary Was Murder. ™MOdda of 31% to 1 are offered that, Va., is seventy-three years old and Pr Ot First Deputy Police Commissioner if nominated, Mayor Hylan will be re: still going strong. He became Peek og gi phaan ey eka |Leach told the Methodist ministers (Spretal to The Evening World.) elected, * Director at seventy-one. He has the} BUFFALO, May 4.—After failing to) iio, siyian is the purest lived of ailj/| NORFOLK, Va., May 4.—Miss Sarah} On the Dempsey-Carpentier fight pep of twenty-five, Admiral Dilling-| reach a verdict after six hours’ de-| tn.” sayora New York has had. and | Rupp of York, nd Hiton tupp of [Some Waxkers were placed yesterday ham had charge of the large naval] liberation, the jury in the case of ‘ : Z Philadetphi BN cmrstion Of lett km mreuRy nm coe on & tS 8 Ken) buse in Hampton Roads during the| Charles Drucker, alleged wire tapper,| ‘Mat he neither drinks nor smokes. The| tieut. D. A. Rupp, U. 8. A.. who died | "° Am° War, He enlisted in the navy at Phil- oaaoulelee he giatong| ministers cheered. ‘They also applauded | from acid polsoning at Langley Field Se SPEDE adelphia at seventeen years and two] Charked with complicity in the $125.000) neartiy when the Rev. Dr. Iglehardt|in February, declared to-day thoy were | WAR ON GOUGING FLORISTS. months—that was in ‘65, just after ne roam per eae Mice! eae compared Commissioner Enright, who | Gonfdent the young office? was mur pececentihs the war. “My receipt for an efficient| Molly, Montreal millionaire contractor, | was present, to Theodore Roosevelt |°""y um sure my brother wa » vio- | Mt. on to WwW. Police force is military disciplinesand| was locked up last night when he was Police issioner Rint Orr enn IncaEaMoRaaT, Shcatred re | sor rensenen complete divorcement from politics Justice Hinkley instructed the jurors when Heeesiirn qe) Peart | Miss Rupp to-day Not Pinks, on Mothers’ Day. Lanta ae that the fact that Connolly knew that} culties of his office and of the largo | gs hen NEO are hene to tes-) sount Vernon has geolared a boycott chester, Cann, G Gordon of Man-| the supposed advance information on) number of poligeme led to enfores| to-day besina an invesiimtion into the {On profiteering florists and a general Bicaiiee hig Wome town ce socot ins | sie stock. market and: racns) wea to be| Eronipition, | oh were made | cause of Lieut. Rupp's death movement has been inaugurated by the Rabitants is still classed as a town-| obtained illegally did not absolve those) {nx'of the Methodist ministers in Mo!n- 4 > Rev. Otho F, Bartholow, pastor of the vhe: y a oRy: charged with e swindle from guilt. ist He quarters, No. 160 Fifth Av tT . . ‘Tine i i Methodist Ch y r abip, when Willamantic and RocRville|" Digtrict Attorney Moore declared ‘the Se Thinsa nestinke are private, eas Suen MaMa fees era: Tonsley) |Zardetions. for carnations fon armen gfe classed as cities and have less] cyevelind witnown cated to entablish| rubatance of the specenes was made | MT Lela M. ‘Tinsley. who reused | Si neat sunday han 11,000. The Chief has been onlan alibi for Drucker, had perjured | public yesterday by Methodist officials, |her own rent in Acollan Hall from| “Some florists have boosted the price the force fifteen years, For three] themselves, and intimated that he| rhe “requirements made. upon the | $2,000 to $1,200 a year, and offered the ations beyond all conception of years he was 4 policeman on a beat.| would apply for perjury warrants, | 11,000 policemen, the C Iasioner sald. | ao nty $100 for this month, has been their Worth and as a result many resi- In his town the appropriation for the Mr. Moore charged that Arthur] were r beyond the capacity of human | *&°" “ ven dents of this city have declared their Fire Departinent is only, $20,000 | Berement-of Montreal, former member | beings to fulfil,” and that on the top [summoned to vucte by May 10 or show imention of wearing dandelions Instead eat, The Fire ‘Department “has of the Canadian Parliament. was a party (ot all came the enforcement of the Pro |cauiae In the Ninth Municipal Court why of enrnations next Sunday,” aid the 105,000 in equipment that's not being weed. “They are a little partial toward @e Fire Department in our town, wish they'd give some of this equip- Ment money—our patrol wagon is not @ thing of beauty,” he said. Chief Martin O, Shea of Hacken- sack, N. J., blames the popularity of Bicycles for his entry into the police business. “Years ago I was in the jewelry business and was doing Pretty good at it,” he said. “Then @long came the bicycl: It became mighty popular, People stopped buy- ing jewelry, if yon remember, and bought bicycles. So there wasn't Much doing in the jewelry business @o 1 became a Hackensack cop, That was twenty-five years ago. Two years ago I was made Chief and now I have twenty-five men under me. Curious how things happen!" Capt. John Brennan of Stamford, Conn., attached to Police Headquar- ters, is the youngest police official in Connecticut. He is thirty-one years @ld and bas been on the force nine years. Chief C. A. Pinney of New London, Conn., prides himself on his close co- operation with New York's police. “We work hand in hand with your men and we've done some good work with them,” he said. “I favor Com missioper Enright’s pln of co-oper-| ation Chief John J. Pye, for six years| Chief of the Englewood police, has! been eighteen years on the force, He has lived in Englewood for thirty-two | years. He was a coachman before he became a policeman. He has had| every office in the department, Chief R. C. Miller of Atlantic City, NW. J., is mighty interested in the co- operative plan, He says it would help the police of his city very much because ofthe mixed and constantly sbifting opulation ‘We have @ tough job keeping track of things fi that town and I'm for anything that'll help us. Chief George M. Beach of Water- bury, Conn., dvesn’t think Prohibition has done much to clear matters up. “There are three things I figure you'll ave a hard time stopping,” he said. “They are gambling, drinking and Weve making, The best we can do is Beep it in proper bounds." Chief Daniel F, Odell of Derby, @onh., has been a policeman for twenty years. “I favor the closest @o-aperation with N York,” he gid, “It’s the only way to’ keep track of criminals in the great met- fopolitan district.” E. R. Carrington of Montreal, for- merly of the Canadian Secret Service, fees the mo» picturesque beard and hair of any man at the conference. It'e of silvery gray. te » the swindle hibition Act, [she shouldn't be put out minister yesterday, A frequent cause of skin disorder i Eruptions and boils often traced to lack of vitamine in food KIN specialists say that we often get “dan- ger signals from the skin” that something is wrong with our health which we may not yet be aware of. To assure a proper amount one can get it. Eruptions and blackheads (acne) and boils are often the signals of a falling off in health. “A bad acne may indicate profound debility,” writes a physician connected with a number of leading New York hospitals, and ‘‘the repeated occurrence of boils should always be looked upon as an in- dication of lowered vitality.” People ask to three cakes a day. dissolve it in boiling water. It has been found from actual clinical tests that “surprisingly satisfactory results” are obtained in D i fruit-juices, milk, or water; or treating these complaints with yeast. Today yeast is everywhere recognized as a valuable “‘conditioner.” It supplies the newly- discovered vitamine which is known to be lacking in many of our foods and thus corrects lowered vitality which is so often the underlying cause of these minor ailments. York, N. Y. To clear the skin of eruptions and boils In 17 cases of acne (eruptions and blackheads) treated in leading hospitals Fleischmann'’s Yeast proved to have Properties of great value. Every case showed improve~ ment or cure, taking from one week to two months. “In many of the cases, yeast caused an improvement the general physical condition, quite unassociated with the improvement of the symptoms in question,” eay the doctors who tested the yeast. To clear up pimples and boils eat one to three cakes of yeast daily. In acute cases of pimples and all cases of boils be sure to consult your doctor. effect it has in raising bread?” digestible and is assimilated just like any other | food. Eat it before or between meals, from one Those who are troubled with gas should first of this health-pro- tecting vitamine in their meals many are making Fleischmann’s Yeast a part of their regular diet. Have it on the table at mealtimes where every- “Won't yeast when taken have the No. It is highly ‘ell Others will like it spread on toast, bread or crackers; dissolved in just plain, Place a standing order with your grocer for Fleischmann’s Yeast, and get it fresh daily. To get the valuable free booklet telling more about what yeast has done for others and can do for you, address THE FLEISCHMANN COM- PANY, Dept. 41-F, 701 Washington St., New MISS MTLAUCHLIN GETS AR PLOT UENSE IW WEST New York Girl in Los Angeles} Obtains Certiticate After Vig- orous Training Course. Spredal t LOS ANGI ‘The Frening World.) 4S, Calif, May 4 MoLaughlin of lise Corneil York, who with her mother has been here some tim: ceived her cor- | - qualified air pilot. woman thus distin Suished in California, The award of! the certtficate followed a training| course at Mercury Field here. The} course was none the less rigorous be-| cause the candidate was a woman. | Miss MoLaughlin performed brill-| jantly all the “stunts” required of male candidates and her first solo] flight was followed by a shower of! congratulations from society folk. | Miss McLaughlin's next move is (0 own her own plane. She is leaving here on Sunday next for Colorado Springs and from there will return home. While here she has been the! guest of her venerable grandfather, former United States Senator Cole, a Washington contemporary of Lin- coln, Mrs. William Miller Graham of Montecito and daughter, Miss Geral- tifleate as ¢ She is the n dine, are bere preparatory to their departure in a few days for Now York. From there they will sail for Europe on May 14. | Senator James A. Walker of New | York is due here to-day to with prominent Southern California motion-picture men relative to relief from the taxation burdens of the in- dustry. Samuel L Berman of New York also is here on the same mis- sion Ernie Shore, pitcher turned baak to t Yankees by the Vernon Club of the Coast League, is waiting here to hear from Miller Huggins. He complains that a | year on the Yankees’ bench robbed him of effectiveness | 1. J. MoManus of the General Pice- | tric Company the guest of honor | last night at a dinner at the Los An. | Beles Athletic Club given by 1 Heintz, Mr. McManus plans to re- turn home to New York from here, | after a national tour that began on | Jan. 10, confer the right-handed ite two offers from New Yorit Can you go to sleep as easily as that? If you can’t, perhaps the traced to the rm ‘tress. Saggy, or if it dev. right kind of sleep. When you sleep on an Ostermoor you'll notice the difference. Its eight layers of won- derful elasticity possess just the right firmness to support the spine in a natural, straight Position, and yet the mattress is soft enough O Jit was his tast ¢ If it is lumpy or 28 uncomfortable hollows, or even if it’s too soft—you can’t get the to return to the spoken stage, I guess 1 won't, after all," says May Allison. Mrs, Stella M. Depauw, sister of Miss Lillian Graham, charged with | shooting W. D. Stokes at the An- sonia Hotel in New York several years ago, is to wed Harry L. Bartlett here. This will made her third matrimoninl venture, One husband was John sin- gleton, discoverer and owner of the famous Yellow Aster Mine, once one of California's grea gold produc ers. SAYS HAYWOOD DID NOT FLEE PRISON His Trip to Russia a Joy Ride Before Death, Declares a Girl Who Talked With Him ‘Big BIN" Haywood, 1. W. W. learter, wont to’ Russia to see the country be- fore ‘he died, and expected to return tn time for the Supreme Court dectston on his case, according to Miss Eleanor Vitygorald, ‘business manager of the | Provincetawn Players. She says he ts ill with diabetes, and, expecting an adverse ruling, realized ance to see Rus But he did not think the court wo act for another sixty days. “Rill told me two days bi he couldn't live more than a year or two in prison,” Miss Fitzgerald said, “so his going was just a joy ride before prison and death. fore he sailed ARTIST’S BODY IN MORGUE. terson, Whe a rT a | Wite tdentities \o-4 street. Stricken with heart disease, Algen Peirson, forty-seven, of No. 143 Hast 22d Street, an artist and ‘art manager of the American Magazine, died#at Park Avenue and 34th Street, Mon day evening, and when a search of his clothing failed to reveal &ny means of identification the body fas sent to the Morgue, where it tay un til Just night, when Identification was made by his wife. ‘son was born in Baltimore, Mr. Pe} the son of ‘Thomas G. and Mary E. Russell Peirson. He was euin it the Maryland Institute, Schs Art and Design, Bal and 1 member of the Charcoal Club of that city and the Art Studumts League of New York a enn Ronmb-Proof Carries pail » The Bank of Coney Island Waa adopted a new device to protect “i depositors’ mone It has put ite operation a fully tested bullet and bomb proof motor car which carte | the bank's cash and securities to and from the es in Manhattan and Brooklyn. “ deposito: We only models, this lot. Silk Tussah, Inuittons: 23 West 38th St., Just West of 5th Ave. BIG DRESS SALE For Stout Women B25 Formerly to $10.95 Here is a chance for the stout woman to get @ wonderful street dress at a ridiculously low price. but there are many others included in The dress pictured (eft smart rest of tucked white Voile; the othe dress is of fine quality sil ished Poplin trimmed with OWER STORE| A BARGAIN BASEMENT picture twe collar and fin smal trouble can be vermin-proof. In our block of Ostermoors Telephone No. 5 Spring Ostermoor Mattresses are also sold by good dealers and department stores stermoor Mattress “ Built—Not Free, 144- page catalog and sam- plee of coverings. to yield gently to the weight of the body, Guaranteed never to mat, pack, get hard or lumpy. It’s non-absorbent, dust-, moth-, and all times a complete range of styles and sizes —just as they come from our workrooms, Why not come in some day this week? You will find an Ostermoor that fills your requirements at the price you want to pay, Come to our big showrooms this week OSTERMOOR & CO., 114 Elizabeth St., New York, (Near Grand St. 3rd Ave. Showrooms extend through the block to 132 Bowery adjoining Bowery Savings Bank -long showrooms we have at L" Station) A ig aor a,