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prehension of some unexpected act by the President is removed. In commenting on the Harvey utter- THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 21, ‘GIRL OF 19 KILLED ances Senator Johnson of California, | O86 of the bitter-end leaders, sald: “Of course Mr, Harvey in entirely night tm saying that it would have ‘been a betrayal of the American peo ple to ap into the League of Nations | either tly or Indirectly, openly or) furtively, While this is obvious nevertheless it is refreshing to have official confirmation of it. The lan- guage is so plain and unmistakable that no uction of this country can now be taken which will take us into the League of Nations or connect us with It, either directly or Indirectly, | openly or furtively.” Senator Lodge, the Republican leader, refused to comment on the remarks, BY JEALOUS SUITOR |Streams of Women on Way | To Work Flee Wildly as Mexican Opens Fir LHe ENDS HIS | OWN LIFE DIES SAVING LIVES OF WIFE, MOTHER JUST OFF STH AVE. IN STHAVE.CRUSH Adolph Heller Run Down on Eve of a Vacation Trip to Paris HAD BEEN TO THE ATRE, “It must have been very interesting, Had Threatened Victim With Caught in Auto Jam Husband to his English audience,” said Son-, ator Moses, (Rep, N. H1.). Senator Borah (Rep., @ fine speech. HARDING MAY LIMIT FOREIGN LOAN HERE wi President Belleves Such Borrowing’ hand in a pencil factory when he did #s an Should Be Barred Unless of Distinct Benefit to U. S. WASHINGTON, May 2).—Witi- out any statement of policy, the Ad- ministration has let it be known that | it looks with displeasure on private Subscription to loans by other Cov. | ernments in cases where the use of ‘the money is not to be of distinc: ad. | vantage to this Nation. ‘This was taken to mean that the Administration contemplates the erec- tion of a bar against the use of Amer- jean money by foreign nations outside the United State: —— ULSTER IS ARMED FOR ITS ELECTION) Unionists Confident They Will’ Win a Majority of the | Seat: BELFAST, May 21 (Associated Press).—Ulster on the eve of the eiev- tions is like a region at war. Armored are everywhere, lorry loads of | ‘police and military with rifles come (and go, and the military ts guarding the headquarters of all royalist ac- huvities, Up to the present there (have been no more than the usual clashes ‘between rival factions which | have occurred in Ulster elections for | @ generation, and nothing beyond | this is anticipated. } The Unionists are very confident, claiming they will win thirty-four out of the fifty-two seats. Thomas | Moles, member of the British Parlia- | ment for Belfast, who gives this fore- | cam, dots not believe the women's, vote will make any difference in the result, Si oe FACULTY MEMBER un KILLED HERSELF , Death of Assistant Professor at} Smith Result of Slow Poison |at his feet and then walked out :o! Self-Administered. NORTHAMPTON, Muss., May 21.~"The} certificate of death of Mixs Mary M.| Hopkins, associate professor of astron-| omy at Smith College, which was Bed with the City Clerk to-day by Medical Examiner Edward W. Brown, rae that Miss Hopkins'’s death was due to m taken with suicidal intent. Miss pine died last Wednesday in a hos- pital here | at, removed to the hospital two ago suffering, it was said at the time, from a nervous breakdown, It| now develops that she had taken poison, Which, slow to act, didnot cause deat until two weeks later. ——>__. FOUR CLEARED OF HOLD-UP. | harges Againet ‘The Kings County Grand Jury to-day| + dismissed charges of attempted assault and attempted robbery against Mortimer Fried, head of the Commonwealth De- tective Agency of Manhattan; Michael Voeleke, diamond broker of Manhattan, John Baumeister and Robert Caster, ‘The four were arrested on complaint of Mre, Jennie Nunziato of No, 698 Driggs Avenue, Brooklyn. It was tes- tiled they went to her place to get $3,100 for goods alleged to have been Dought by her. Fried indimated he would have her arrested if she did not pay, He and the three others started for the station house, bul Mrs. Nunziato arrived first. She told the police, it iv) said, that Fried and the others had tried! to hold her up. | The men were arrested and held for the Grand Jury. en HELD IN $20,000 SHORTAGE. Joseph B. Gavey of Hollis, L. 1 formerly cashier of the local offi of the Commercial Casualty Insurance Company, No. 128 William Street, was held in $10,000 ball by Magistrate Sweetser in’ Tombs Court yester: on a charge of having stoien from the company. A’ representative of the concern said $20,000 Is involved in the alleged thefts. W {Officer Devine, who arrest- ey Thursday night. sald Gavey's au only $60 @ week, but that an $11,000 home at Hollis An expensive automobile kins, manager of the New Yote dranch of the company, said Gavey drew a check March 31, 1920, for $2,500, payable to himself, in net: Hament of @, claim waid to have been tled Oct. 20. 1919, for $500. Gavey pleaded not gulity. ————— Three K Port-Elee: ‘Tuscany. ROME, May 21.—Three persons ure dead, two are dying and many are suf- fering from wounds as a result of a piiched battle between Communists und Extreme Nationalists at Chiusi, Tus- cany, where post-election disorders cos- of Linue. Signor Platanla, leade Tdaho)—tt [about the West géth Street loft built lon the steps of thé building, Martinez “lover Cunningham's he ldreds of women woxkers streagnjns | Vengeance on Account of Attention to Another. The tawdry troub'es of nineteen- ‘eur-old Lora Domingues Lutz a@ hat frame worker, and Ambrose Mur- tvez, Mexican ne'er-do-well and a Jearn his own living, ended in a tur- of early tangled tra Mc and revolver shots in West 26th Street, off Fifth Avenue, at 8 o'clock to-d. Lora Lutz was | moil workers’ creamy, shot to death and Ambrose Martinez died a little later) in Bellevue Hospital firing a bullet into his own head while stand-! body. lora was married to Rudolph Lutz. one of whom died. Lutz} the army and is still a soldier, Martinea came into her life yut two yenrs ago and since she} went to work for Goldstein Hrothers: at No. 29 West 36th Street about a year ago has frequently appeured there on pay days, demanding her wares and sometimes taking the money from her by force. Monday she had him arrested for threatening to kill her because of her | friendship with another man, She told the magistrate he had threatened | to kill her husband before they sep- ayated. Martines was sent to jail for one with a warning. He hung after ing over her four years ago They had two | children, went Into day ing after his release for two days and to-day intercepted the girl as she en- tered to go to work. They quarrelled and according to J. J. Cunningham, janitor at No. 40 West 36th Street, who was sitting struck her twice in the face. The girl ran through the busy traffic to No. 4f, Martinez following, firing three shots ut her with a revolver, One of the bullets struck her. ‘The | others broke windows In the building | The hun: to their stops took to doorways ot: | dodged behind tracks, Mrs. Lutz ran to the ‘up of tae beteps at No. 40, fell, and. rolled dean} to the sidewalk. Martines fired a fourth shot into her head as she lay the curb and shot himself through tho | left temple. When the home at No. found her father, 4 understood so little English that w | they told him what had happened could only make them understand that he did not know where his daugn- ter was and could not tell them. 3%e| was always having trouble with Mar. tinez, he said, seer LANDLORD SUICIDE AFTER RAISING RENT 2d Street shay | Dominguez, | Worried ants, Over Lawsuits by Ten- He Goes Into Kitchen and Turns on Gas. CHICAGO, May 2 John Clark, land lord, killed himself here to-day as the result of worry over quarrels with his tenants. He recently ralsed the rent in one apartment building from $40 to $65 &® month, Suit in court wus resorted to by the tenants, Mrs. Clurkt found her husband in the Kitchen with the gas turned on, He was dead ——— SUBWAY TRAIN KILLS HERO. Manning's Body Found Against Third Rail, Wedaed Thomas Cassidy, motorinan of « local train in the Fou Avenue smbway, Brooklyn, saw an object wedged againat the third rail os approached the 40th Street station at noon to-day, He stopped the train and found (he object to be the body of a man whieh was later identified ax that of Thomas Man ning, thirty-two, No. 434 Sixth Street Brooklyn. The point at which the body found ir about 450 fee. south platform of the station Non: platform employees can reoall Manning enter the station of | “ train. He had been dead but u few minutes when the body wos discovered. Manning served with the 27th Division in France and his heaith Was impaired by poison gas. Revently he had ‘been employed” by the Bankers’ Trust Compuny, Manhattan i Bored ste Galvanixes Ane 1 Stan, of No, 7 Woodhaven, LL, a No. 34 Pin soctates Anna Noll, twenty years old, Roosevelt Place, stenographer, Street employed at Manhattan, started a long and suppose heathly yawn yesterday afternoon, When it came to bringing the yawn to the healthy close, how: ever, somethin went wrong, Office us- soclates, percelving she nerded ald, sum: moned an ambulance surgeon, and Extreme Nationalists at Rimni, was whot and killed last night, bis ein, ecaing. took her to Volunteer Hospital, suffer | it until auch time as th ja traffic [rupt Pushes Relatives to Safety. ving his wife and her ht while crossing Fifth Avenu+ at own life, He pushed them to safety | ; , | Kelly took the necklace to the Ap- automobile bore down Upon, “Not tong atterward, white | Kelly & Sista CHUA DKN pearlé them. He went down before the cor.’ working In the hole again, a man | 6 i | ar to be genuine. ‘Iwo platinum His skull! was fractured and he died called down to him that aifother in Bellevue Hospital soon ufter he wus had wished to make @ trip to Paris i with him, but os these were usually | flying trips she did not go, postponing might have a few weeks to spend there. The opportunity came this year and the couple had booked passage for June 4. Mrs. Anna M, Myers, the | mother of Mrs. Heliey, had come for the journey and bid her goodby. Last night they were returning from a theatre when they were caught in jam and an automobile owned and operated by Max Bartel! of No, 453 Eust Houston Street came jMpon them Mrs. Meller was knocked down by her and Mrs. Meyers In front of him, She was uninjured. Bartell was taken to the East 36th Street Station | ark was Made against him. PRESBYTERIANS FIGHT DIVORCE AND Declare Dry Law Violations And “Corrupt” Movies Also Menace Nation. WINONA LAKE, Ind, May The Presbyterian General Assembly met here to-day to organize the chureh's nation-wide fight on ‘cor- movies, easy divorce, Prohibl- ton law violations and ‘wide-open’ sndays.” Orators declared these jfour evils are threatening the life of America, Jan J. Davis, Secretary of Labor, asked the ehureh to help solve the Industrial and l2bor problems of the nation. He advocated the ap- plication of the Golden Rule to daily life, and declared that “ours must not be a church of pacifists, but a chureh of fighters, fearlessly stand- ing for the right.” Dr. H. L. Bowlby, general secretary of the Committes on Sabbath Observ- ance, dechired that “powerful amuse- ment and sporting organizations” are in a nation-wide drive to frustrate the eburch’s efforts for a so-ceiled Blue Bunday, and are receiving the “gea- erdus support of the press to fool the people.” He declared that if baseball parks and movios are closed on Sun- days more people will go to church, gue Key, Hugh B, MacCauley, D. D) of Paterson, N. J., pleades tor the unity of all churches in trying to tighten divorce laws. He eald the sanctity of the home, which is the foundauion on which the nation reate, ‘Two Men Had Charge of Fireworks Dinplay That Led to It. ‘Tony Trento of No. 524 Hudson Street, Wost New York, and John Barlabo of No, 1220 Newark Street, North Rergen, were arrested to-day and paroled for examination on Monday as the result of the death of James Fallon jr, of Tenth and Jackson Streets, West New York, yesterday. ‘The boy found a star bomb which had heen left over from an Italian colebra- tlon of which they are had charge the night before, Me tried it with a mateh and it did not go off. He then picked it up and it exploded. ur other boys, Walter Bi Paul homas de Nero and ‘Victor slightly injured, alleged to have lag Goin & distocaled jaw. ported iv be much improved to-day mother { Street, Adolph Hetler lost his fran Pittsburgh to help her get ready | the mudguard as her husband pushed | ere a technical charge of homicide | WIDE-OPEN SUNDAY See ARRESTED FOR BOY'S DEATH, | > MUCH IMPROVED, WASHINGTON, May 21.—The con- on of Vice President Coolldge, who beon confined to his bed for sev-| ral days with @ severe cold, was re TELLS THE COURT A GOOD STORY AND JUDGE FREES HIM 40,000 IN PEARL “PIGKEDUPONPIER Pal Was Thinking How Mike Refused 910,000 and Accident Gave Latter’s Nante, HEN “Michael O'Toole" . i Sication tn the Bridg: tas Court to-day. and a men’ | Necklace Fotind by Customs ame forward to answer tie call, | 4 : ; Magintrate Daje jooked lord at | Guard Kelly After the Arrival saa de RNC OHNRA of the Aquitania. the Magistrate: Ta? alee “L Know it." veplied the mans |S pearl amd diamond necklace im Patric Curtin So. tt whieh, if genuine, ts worth $40,000 North Bighth Street When 1 ‘a in the Appraiser’s Stores awa! a mant and the claim is awatted was arrested | was thinking of a story of a friend of mine, named SIAN EAT Cetocia, | because of the circumstances “While Make wae Working in tom Guard FB. 1. Kolly found Bile aaroah oan oul ‘Mace on the cement floor of Ske Souuasle nd has (c= Cunard Line pier late last night left you $10,000" Bitke went up, | Aéter all pasgengers who came in on received tho money, apeat. the | Aduitania had departed. It was jin the section of the pitr where bag- Money on jiquor, got drunk, was | ; y i ie | gage had been examined. arrested and fined $10. |clasps, atudded with dia and had left him | siaborate enough to w im,’ said uncle was dead it the be- $10,000. ‘Tie divil take hed taken there, jlef that would not be placed + Mike, Til just stay in this hole . a : Heller, who was forty-nine years ang dig’ jon aietring of Imitation pearis, | ; rae ‘The customs authorities are going, } old, lived with his wife at No. 128 hinking of this story | lover the declarations of the pas. East Yist Strect, He was a buyer for n't help using Mike's name |sengers on the Aquitanta to find it] ake & Co. For years Mrs, Heller ‘That yarn is worth a sus- | anyone declgred a pearl necklace with | pended sentence,” sa'd the Magis- | two aluminum and diamond elasps. If so the lisk of finding the owner jthe property is simple. | But if tt was not declared, the ques- tion arises: Who dropped it? Did | | somebody get It past the customs ine | | BY BRITISH CHAMPION | spectors and clear out on the pier be- | as he gave it. trate, |fore losing it? Or Is it the property jot some wealthy woman who will. be lable to prove that she did not buy tt | abroad? | A $40,000 mystery = — |DRYS DRINK FROM HINKY DINK’S CUPS| (Continued From First Page.) } one-stroke lead which Wethered had Chicago's Famous Beer Emporium at the ninth hole. ‘ A, .* | When the first of the individu: Is Now a Quiet matches began the weather was ex- Restaurant pies aa A Neeson me CHICAGO, May 21.—"Here's bow.” 0 rollowes ey and Evans. Tolley | si ; won the first hole, three strokes to| Christeau of the Anti-Saloon League four, getting down a three-yard putt, | td George MoGinnls, district superin- The second hole was halved in four, tendent of the organization, as they jand at the third Tolley ran down a|clinked their tea cuss in what was ‘Your-yard putt for four, being then 2, Hinky Dink's famous beer pal; jup. Evans on the nest, 3 to 4, but/ Clark Street. | | Tolley was again 2 up at the fifth. | mm retorted MeGinuis, who for- merly was a minister. The s sg A h and seventh were halve . - And they drank tea out of the old- aie Tolley won the eighth and! i swash basin” schooners of Hinky’s, ninth, which he turned 4 up, Mie lbipcait URatewhy Tolley was too strong with his ap- | yinky's proach to the pin at the tenth hole. restaurant. wich Evans won in 4 to 6, but after | a@ half in 3 at the eleventh the Amer-/| | REAL MONKEYS \ WILL icantogt the next. bale 4 to 6,through hus opened as a prosaic but got a half at the fifteenth which gave him the mate by 6 up and 3 to| | play. CLEAN SWEEP BY AMERICANS IN FOURSOMES. {Los Angeles Hotel Will Give New York Guests a N Kind of Thrill at Dance, LOS ANGELES, May 21. beet ascent Soe ere meee ud SRE is the up-to-date thing of the contests were won by Ameri- . : ae aan eeiee ne Next week tho Aimbasea- Charles W. (Chick) Evans and) Grove any (e Ce ei Robert T, (Bobby) Jones i : Freee it a chattering {f not a howiing success, Many New Yorkers are guests at that hotel, and of course want the very latest oddity to amuse them, So the duncers will plead with real monkeys to throw them real cocoanuts from rea! cocoanut trees, George O. Simpson and U, kins, 5 up and 3 to pla Francis Ouimet ond Jesse DP, Guil- ford defeated Cyril Tolley and B, w.| E. Holderness, 3 up and 2 to play. Dr, Paul Hunter and Wood Platt defeated R. H. De Montmorency and Rogey Wethered by one hole. | W. C. Fownes jr. and Frederick U. Wright defeated ©. C. Aylmer and T. D. Armour, 4 up and 2 to play. Evans and Jones played sound golf. The Britishers opposing them never looked like holding the Americans, who at the turn stood 6 up. Although | the British pair made a grout effort on the return journey the Americans) won by 5 to 3, ‘The match between Ouimet Guilfowd, American this hole in 3 to 3, obtaining a 5-hole lead, They also won the eighth. From this point the British played better golf. They won the ninth hole, thus making tho Americans & up at the turn, and also took the tenth and eleventh, reducing the British disad- vantage to 3. h, and ey be- ion the and stars, amd Cyril ‘The Americans got the twi the next two being halves, Tolley, the British champion, with come sortie a ie ere aa ae " r ‘ifteenth, giving ce mericans Molderness as his partnur, wus a| match by Sup and 3 to play. much closer affair. Tolley, if not} ‘The Ouimet-Guilford vs, Tolley- always straight in his shots, hit aj Holderness match was won by the long ball, and Holderness was quite| Americans on the homeward journey after even play to the turn. ‘The Britlahers began to fall away at this point, losing the tenth, twelfth and thirteenth holes. They should have won the eleventh, but failed on an steady in his playing. This, with the Americans playing at the top of their form, made it a nip-and-tuck fight from the start, and at the turn the is threatened by existing divorce easy putt. laws, He also asked that the) same was all square, Bwentually,| ‘Tolley had been driving badly and churches use thelr influence in com-|lowever, the Americans won rather|was bunkerc | at several holes. On bating foraign propaganda that ts] casiy. the sixteenth, with the Americans 2 aimed at breaking friendly relations FN 4 ‘ up, Ouimet put his second shot imto between nations and promoting fu-| 1 the third match, Montmoreney | the bunker, but Guilford made a ture wars and Wethered, playing an excellent | nificent recovery to within two game, were 2 up on the Americans,|of the pin and Oulmet got the putt to Hunter and Platt, at the ninth hole,| Wn" the hole in 4 to 5, giving the rics y 3 up and 2 After this, however, the Amoricans pensnoane the match by 3 up and gradually recovered ground and won the match by one up. JONES GETS THE HONORS FOR THE AMERICANS. leading match Jonos had AMERICAN TEAM WINS CONTEST BY ONE HOLE. In the Montmorency-Wethered ver- sus Hunter-Platt mateh the former were two up at the third hale, Weth- ered was playing well, but Montmor- In the the honors for the Americans aud] oncy was weak on the green. The Jenkins for the British, The Aincri-| Americans were two down at the cans scored at the first hole, Hvans| turn, but became dormie at the sev- running down a long putt for the|enteenth atfer some excellent play. The last hole wae halved and the hole in 4, to the opponent The| Americans won by one hole, svcond hole was halved in 4, Simpson} ‘The Wright-Fownes versus Aylmer- haying some ill-fortune when his |Atmour match was u somewhat one- sided affair. Armour played poor golf and the Britishers were five down at the seventh hole. They won the next four holes but lost the twelfth, mak: four-yard putt for @ 3 curled round the hole, The Americans won the thi: to 6 for the British, the Britis: ing the Americans two up again. The playing the hole rather badly. Britishers laid their opponents 4 fourth also went against tho Wrivish |stymie at the thirteenth and Kot & in 2 to 3, and the Americans became | lucky half, but the An@ericans fin- Sup. Bad putting at the finish lost| ished four up and two to play. the British this hole in 4 fo 5, and) The Royal Liverpool links, where the sixth was halved in 4 the contests were pl sented At the seventh Jenkins put bis tex aniinated scene eondi- shot into the dip at the right of the) t 8 dry gicen and missed his putt from a and eaids distaues, The Amesicans won y ja ch j With interest by the custom officials nonds are of being bunkered, He was again) THROW COCOANUTS' bunkered at the thirteenth and lost in 3 to 4, making Tolley Dormie 5 FROM REAL TREES The Englishman tac naxt hole, — 1921 ADOLPH HELLER AND Leet WHOSE HE SAVED WIFE MAY MAKE HOOCH FOR HUBBY, Brooklyn Body Feels Should Have His Accus- tomed Portion. Of eighty-sight cases of sented to the Jury Kings County rday indictments were Tue indictments all ine yolved alleged manufacturers or. dis-; eight cases ltributers of illicit “hooeh.” It the Graud Jury ix to serve as a precedent, one's wite may be permitted to manufa her husband the amount of the action of te for accuctomed to before Prohibis ‘Thus. Mrs. Mary $61 Metropolitan he wi tfon became a law, Wohlschiager of No that her husband, @ been accustomed had explained Russian, had to a regular ration of whiskey all lis life and that she had used a smo} stilt in ler home to manufacture about one quart a week tor his consump- tion. Mrs. arrested at Mermaid Avenue and West 34th Street, Coney Island, for having a gallon of whiskey in a satchel, testi- fied the whiskey was the only thing of value her husband had left when he died, and that she was trying to sell that to meet cxpenses, Her case was dismissed. Anthony Kajartz, found in a saloon at No, 57 Driggs Averue with a pint of grain alcohol, was released when he explained he vsed the alcoho! for body rubs David O'Hanlon, found with a hip pocket consisnment of liquor in a galoon at No, 478 Third Avenue, was dismissed after the officer who made the arrest testified ho had searched every one going in and out of the sa- hon while watching the place. Martin Fickey and Willian Wrage, waiter and bartendcr at Ocetjen Brothers, No, 2210 Church Avenue, were uot held when it was shown the whiskey thoy are alleged to have poured for a customer, had not ac- tually been delivered to the custom: at the time of their arrest, Custom inspectors rai¢ port, and Capt William H. Collins, the steamship Wranklin, tied up at Brie Basin, placed under arrest. It hottles of liquor were The men were held in $500 bail each for a hearing on Friday charged with violating the custom law. On the Eastern Crag, from Dunkirk, foot of Sith Street, Brooklyn eral thousand dollars worth of silks, kimonos, bedspreads, cheeses, liquor, and other goods alleged to have heen from wus said 205 omitted from the manifest were od to-day that the are so full of con- fikeated Nqu re is no om for morg, and will not be until after Us publi sale Tuesday and Wednesday The liquor ja to be tals, druggists ond oth tled to have it lon ¢ $1 a boti been ined by 1 ‘alders oa ships Twe thousand tiles were fobtaimed within tae past fow ange. ~ SAYS GRAND JURY : Avenue was not indicted after she! | Heye Rebecca Hirschman, who was] her ed ships sus-| pected of bringing bootlegs liquor Into| Joseph H. Yorke and| Chief OMeer of Naly, | Brooklyn, wero, Man | {ton Aniericnn Har Absociation, | saris) Academy of Ar violation of the Mullan-Gage law pre- | C Grand) handed down th's morning in only | e | National Institute of Inventors, ' Howard M. Chapin, Rhode Island His- “hooch" | | Witham T. Manning. found on board. | | Willams was also | ARD—Mrs. Ella A. * Miss Julia Arthur, | setts Historical ., TABLETS TO 25 GREAT SIMPLICITY ARE UNVEILED AT — MARKS FUNERAL THE WALL OF FAME OF CHIEF JUST Harriet B. Stowe One of, President Harding and Mat Famous Americans Honored — Officials Attend—Burial at —Her Grandson Present. Oak Hill Cemetery. Impress ve addy memor on WASHING of honors ny TON. endeved 21—W tmpressiy esKes Marked tic doubly tablets -five fae hy ihe s In the York Criver mplic.iy of the ceremonsimy he body of Edward Dougiass Whitey Clilef Justice of the United Sta was ed to-day in Oak Mill io sleap forever within sou the city where his great servi agtinst the sober ca; a of the to the Nation was rendered. 4 collegians. ‘The principal address was! A sual! company had gathered ff Henry Vax Dylw tion Matthew's Chureh when the howl 0" There were shorter ad- vier arrived. ‘The casket wi connec with the un- | banked over with flowers, and emirate tablet | rectly behind it President ant Ma tablet to Harriet] Harding took their places, whi Beecher Stowe, author of cle | Cabinet memby diplomat. cor Tom's Cabin.” and her gvandson, 1 ees of Congress, high departme man Beecher Stowe, was present. ofhcials and others of those yep! ‘The unveiling of the tablet to Roger | senting a Government in mour witnessed by a} we Brovped with a few intimi lineal descendant, Howard Chapin, | ttiends. The uniforms of Ma Following 1s a Ist of the tablets|Gen. Ma Chief of Staff, and with the names of tie persons who |otficers who accompanied him to made the dedication eddrosses: resent the Army and of Admf ARRIET BEECHER STO\WE—!Coontz, Chief of Goerations ot d John Francis Yawger, New York |Navy, and his offices marked hi , National Society New Eng- mous Amor Hail of sity. It was frooks of the « this afterncor Fame of New hurt tu) ght ting | « in veiling of eae! ‘The first was the reh, lights among the gomore black of ns. evil Requiem mass wa. celebrated * Monsignor Lee. At ihe altar w gathered also a group of clergy th included Monsignor Ponzano, Pé Delegate, but taere was no depart from the ordinary service. The Vresident “and Mrs. Harding did not accompany the body to tl America, cemetery. Only the litte company 0 Serpe ae F relatives and close friends and th ALICE FREEMAN PALMER—Dr.! gion ‘surviving members of the StU Caroline Hazard, Weltesiey College} prome Court as honorary pallbearerm | Alumna went to pay the last honors at thet ALEXANDER Krave. bie L. Livermore, Ion 1 Republican Club. ANDREW JACKSON-—Gen.- Sam uel MacRoberts, Southern Societ: PATRICK HENRY—Robert Oly- CE Sone of the Revolution, State! York. | US CHOATE—Charles A. Bos- FRANCES ELIZABETH WILL- Boole, National ‘Temperance Women's Christian CUSHMAN— Stuge Women of nion. CHARLOTTE HAMIL TON--Mrs, Women's Na-| vis, Won in War-Time Re- e¢ here, Charges Abandonment, Special to The ering World.) 0 GTON, Ky., May In a pe- Utfont tiled here to-day, Anna A. Jarvis former New Yortt girl, now of Coving }ton, requested an allowance of $120 & mouth from Harvey Watson Jarvis wi, she states, fs @ navy officer earning $240 |a month.’ He lives in Brooklyn ut ts ‘stationed temporarily at Cincinnat! as Chief Recelving Off ‘ y ent is charged. Mrs, Jare married in Brooklyn after a whirlwind court~ DANIEL BOONE—James SAINT-GAUD Milligan — SToane, and Lei Prof. William BUCHANAN EADS— Webster, American So- il Engineers WILLIAM. THOMAS — GREEN MORTON—Dr, William HM. Welch, American Medica! Association~ LOUIS AGASSIZ—Charles D, Day-| nport, American Association for the | Advancement of Science. JOSEPH HENRY—Prof. Walter I. ——— CHILD CAUGHT I! ! SWEEPE | wairtiog B h Drage Him Se Slichter, American Institute of Elec- Feet—Will Probably Die, trical Engineers. John Dunn, five years old. of No. ELIAS HOWE—Thomus Howard | oi cstnut avenue, Jersey City, hitel & scooter on a street sweeper in fi of his home to-day. The scooter nit rut, throwing the hoy under the wit bristles of the sweeper and he dragged seventy bee oe ae tient MARK HOPKINS—Dr. Harry Au- | Of women neighbors ca the atten! gustus Garfield, Williams College| °% Kale Pomel CHAS of the sweap peer No. 168 Sevonth Strevt, Jersey Cit JAMES FENIMORE COOPER— he boy ‘undenwent an operation @ George G. Heye, American Indian, Hospital for fractured skull “oundation. and internal injuries and will probably JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY—Dr. | die: William Roscoe Thayer, Massachu-| Peseli y ity. charge of SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS | P#roledt —Prof. Willlam Milligan Sloar American Academy of Arts and Lot- Mr. and Mrs. ROGER WILLIAMS torical Association. PHILLIPS BROOKS—Rt. Rev. technical 4 but was arrested on # wt and bate as ———___ Base Hoxpital for Crippled Vete ters, and Robert Grani, National In-} TRENTON, WN. J.. May 21.—The stitute of Arte ahd Lette hospital at Camp Vall, Little Silver, EDGAR ALLAN | POK—William | Monmouth County, wil be ‘used as = White Nes, Bronx Society of Arts for New Jersey's crippled wae PARKMAN-—Dr. Will | Congress nigresemne. NH RERANCIS Ranioe spr, wile pleby of the 3d Congressional Distrief ed. Historival Society pass GEORGE BANCROFT—Dr, Roscoe Thaye WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT— Elihu Root, Century Association. OLIVKER WENDELL HOLMES Mrs. Edwin Markham, Poetry Society of America MEMORIAL NOTICES, FIYTH DIVISION, Hoboken ¥ members, vited. William Memorial » May relatives and friends Minn Habst Sponsor at iannohing. ‘The ateamehip Dixiano. owned by the American Sugar Transit Corporation, a aubsidlary of the Amorican Sugar Re- fining Company, wns successfully launched at 8.30 A. M. at the Mariners’ Harter. plant of the Staten Island Shin- buil Company, — Miss Katharine abst, daughter of President Karl PD. Babst’ of the American Sugar Refining Company, acted as sponsor. The ship is an oli burning combination tanker and dry cargo carrier of 6,300 tons. FUNERAL DIRECTORS, Cell Columbus 8200 & Somplets, Funcral | Service @m etmosp’ ere of refinement “The best costs no more." FRANK E. CAMPBELL “THE FUNERAL CHURCH” Inc. (Non-Sectarian) ' Broadway at 66th St. RELIGIOUS NOTICE: Methodist. RELIGIOUS. NOTICES. Methodist. St. James’ Methodist Episcopal Church Madison Avenue at 126th Street REV. GEORGE L. NUCKOLLS, Ph, D., Pastor SPECIAL MUSIC Evening at eight Sunday, May 22, 1921 The Lord Is My § Horatio W. Parker ih od Oran. Hymn to the Madonna mud .Kremser Soprano Sole, Men'y eh Harp aud Cherubim Hyman No. 7, from the Russian Liturgy» Bornyansky Let the Bright Seraphim, from “Samson’ ‘ Handel Reverie—Duet for Harp and Or ean Brewer » Handel: Cheshire Avia from “Samson and Delilah” —Solo for Harp GUEST ARTISTS Lovis f PRESSE iy nist Composer. The Choir will be augmented to fifty voices selected from the Choirs of St. Bartholomew's, kk Church and St, James’ Episcopal, 1 PLET OMEN StibA. B hy Musto. | | | | } Preacher, Dr, Nuckolls ‘THE PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED. Next Sunday, May 29 MEMORIAL-FAREWELL MUSICAL SERVICE ARTHUR HACKETT, Tevor ME CHESHIRE, Harpiot 4 GEORGE W. WESTERPIELD, Orgs stots. 18 Of ‘sewaty $10 voles from the great a m ora! organizailons © elty | ® ‘