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§ > NEW LIQUOR LAW IN CANADA a RRR rr cn ree a SOLVES PROBLEM OF DRINK, PEOPLE AND CRURCHMEN SAY +: Saloon and Its Evils Eliminated by} Government Taking Over the) THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1921, a eee BRONX MAN SHOT IN ATLANTIC CITY sinless shooting of Joel Cohen Said to Have Followed Row In Auto Over a Woman. (Special wo The rening World ATLANTIC CITY, June 11,—Joel Cohen, twenty-eight, of No. 1827 Southern Boulevard, New York City, | Business—Drunkenness Reduced| 75 Per Cent.. It Is Estimated. By George Buchanan Fife. (Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) MONTREAL, June 11.—There is in efféct in the Province of Quebec! & new law in reference to the possession and sale of alcoholic beverages which the officials and the people of the province believe to be a solution of the liquor question. ‘The law has received the endorsement of high churchmen of the two principal denominations represented in the province and is regarded by them as a temperance measure. Those who administer It call it “a law of temperance and liberty.” It is far from Prohibition. It permits the reasonable purchase of liquors, wines, beers and ales, and also permits their resale under certain conditions, but it requires that all original purchases must be made from @ comnifssion established by the Provincial Government. To this end the Province of Quebec ‘has gone into the wholesale and retal! Naucr business and set up shops for BRONX SCHOOLBOYS | | seshohme meee mere) PARRY QFE HONORS preserving and protecting individual brands and labels, the commission for each bottle, affixed its cwn labeu| ] —_ the cash sale of liquors, wines and cordiais. It has fixed a scale of prices at which these shall be sold, and pre- @ygd sealed the cork with a Govern- ment stamp. WHAT THE NEW LAW HAS AC. | — (Continued From First Page.) COMPLISHED. Manhattan, third, and No. 10, Bronx, What the new law has accomplished | fourth, fa this: Abolished the saloon. Taken the enforcement of the law out of the han of the mnuicipal police. Practically killed the business of “bootlegging.” Forbidden the sale of spirits to those who drink to excess, to mental defectives, to those who, The 440-yard 115-pound lini relay was won by No. 40, Manhattan, with No. 184, Manhattan, second, No. 138 Brooklyn, third, and No, 10, Manhat- tan, fourth. Gen. George W, Wingate, President of the P, SA. La, wes in generat charge of the meet. Dr. A. K. Aldringer acted as director; Charles Vernon, St. Anthony A. C., as referee; by extravagance, are ruining their families, to persons below Se Greens; Sean atl ly. Samuel paren years of age. and John Benedict of the P. ont luced drunkenness about 75 |as judges and Charles Dieges, N.Y. per cent. A. ©.; Charles Clare, St. George A. C Placed beer within reach of those who want it by the gl: Elliott Bigiow, Y. M. C. A,, and August Maler, Commercial High A, c Me timers. The chief field judge was Submitted to chemical analysis | irowia od A. Pat all spirituous liquors eo that their |Athietica, © /atter#em Inspector of purity might be guaranteed to the Wag al He pound purchaser. Pom Ft, Manhattan, fists We Munn fee: Provided severe penaltion for | iit sey: Pirwar. "i, ¥SIRE" staunaira violations of the law. fag? > re it, @ a Prohibited the sale of Pe det Nae i Mg ee Manhattan, send: tice SS a third; A MeAntie. PS)" 100, Brooklyn. fe Time: 0.455 arco, Sen da 1Go-noand By S03, Manbattan uous or malt bever tween the hours of 9 A. M. and 10 P. M. and m Sunday and eertain holidays and feast days bone dry periods. Created its own police depart- ment to enforce the law. » This new law Is only six weeks old, but from the reports which have come to the commission, that body has Many reasons to believe that the law te a success. In addition to these accomplish- ments, the new law is permitting the Province to earn a profit on the sale|"./ of lquors and spirituous beverages| Pie” Water heen ee which, with the fees charged for sale] {ii "yA. Coralla, ©. Siowomali, i" Nao permits, is expected to yield an an-| "nl. lewis = ay ae ar nual revenue of about $1,000,000. ‘This @ym is to be expended for educational uses and for the purpose of paying the interest on bonds issued for high- ‘way improvement. clam. finals—J. first; 3. ‘Turer, fa eeond: J Medvery. Pa, Smilowits. P'S. Man: ‘Titme, 8 3:5 wécond: unlimited weight clam, finale — SZ, Manhattan, fimt; 'B. Liver man, 1.3. 169, Manhattan, second; A." Gorgoriah, Mathatentnecne, Meds 3: Reyoalda,’ Ps. 100, fat, four O11 4.5 eecond 220-yard ‘relay, TO-pennd class, i Wendel, Naitan, fourtt 100-jard dash, H. Farago, PS, veri, J” Dedlato, hatan, ‘third; Reuter POS 10, Manhattan, fourth ‘Irelon, eM: The chief city In which the new law Tot Tite. 8. sccomta, ts being tried out 1s Montreal—Quebec | asi, nina: g Whee, Glam. Poa —6 4a stil under a previously passed Fed. | ean, Pg, toll oka iets Rien jbl 1,5 ttn tM aha (Continued on Sixth Page.) Ney 10, ‘Matiintian “foarta ” Sieianeiipeeemnse as, unonnd weisitclam, fale ci. Matcha Hace at Yel PRESIDENT JOINS —_ [iis "3 mari, SR, el KNIGHTS TEMPLAR | {ithe acters, Giga, “bole High jump, -pound clam, finale— Brecher, S10, Mautatian, 4. BY in, fmt: J Ampell, Inducted Into Honorary Member-| 4,5, 2%! Hrwabio, 4c 4 in? Wand, . S80, Hed for second); W. Bpin A ‘, Sy ship, as Is His Secretary and ? Seta a A A Gen, Sawyer. ay, P's 10, ‘Bron, Mea Seats Ce lnet WASHINGTON, June 11.—President Hides, be ise aad fe As third Harding was the guest last night of] iy ay A a) Columbia Commandery No. 2, Knights| 0.993) Mannattan Stata fly okra, ‘Templar, by whom he was inducted into} 9% Uni for tira with 41 0) in; A. Cambell, PB. Brong, att 7 ins, thins A Raw > 8.6, Queens, 4 ft. 4 in. fourth, tae geld honorery membership. Similar honor ‘was paid by the local commandery to Reed, Sump, 100.10 nd clans, finale H. Mat. George Christian, the President's sec-| loan’ 1 5s, ae amy, MAM, in fies retary, and to Gen. Sawyer, his personal | Tables’ PS "184° Manhattan hf oP geen physician, x & aoe fl 1M in, fourth’ ‘A delegation of Knights Templar a” OF riemomyrh a deat, 54M flog from Marion. O., the President's home, Hs Tas: Tankian! ght: Lampard 8 40, Manhattan. 32 feet were present and participated in the think: Votemon. 1. 8, 64 Brooklyn, remonie 144. ichew "fore hi er TiS peed clams. final —Rubio, : Ee — Manhattan 10 feet ® Inchon fit! PS. Bronk. 16 fot. 6 inchan, A. Homer 1 8G! Broohiyn. 18" test MOST EVERYTHING Me adictace, Ry ise Eight-pound abot anlumit, IN KANSAS TOWN A stoueman, I 44 MoVarland, TY) 8. 4 EXCEPT A WATCH Jy): yin. third ik eee eae 6 in, fount Ruining high jume, unlimited wright in Por. If Seid: Mauattan 3 Tats te tate eaacenn, 8. uaphatien. 6 ft. 8 in, sen onl: G, Brandreth. V , Mantattan, atid 5 ft. 2 in Timepieces Are Taxed in Rush- ton, So They Don't Have 'Em, LYONS, Kan., June 11.—Rush- fn has 0 population, many high price motor cars, excellent schools, two fine churches, big flour mill, two prosperous banks, in Propose Monument to Jaceb Schiff, A movement to erect a statue to the late Jacob Schiff at the Manhattan en- trance to the Williamsburg Bridze has been launched by a committee of bank- | nue was shot early to-day while seated | in his automobile in front of a cot- tage on South New Hampshire Ave- The bullet entered his left | {shoulder near the spine, inflicting a | dangerous wound. Before undergoing an operation in the Clty Hospital Cohen told detec- tives that the shot was fired by} Albert Moore, twenty-elght, of No. | 462 West 22d Street, New York, @ pugilist, who is now held in the city Jail without bail, charged with atro- clous assault with attempt to kill. Moore also was identified by Rentrice Butler, colored waitress, as the man who held her up in William Gable’s restaurant Inst night, and he was held on the additional charge of aigh- way robbery. The motive of the shooting |s stil! a mystery. Five witnesses, also ar- rested, subjected to a severe grilling. could not enlighten the police other than to say that the two men seemed to be well acquainted. ‘They had all been on an automobile ride about the resort, ending with a visit to a road house in Margate City. Three women in the party say they were only chance acquaintances and were out for a lark, ‘They only knew Cohen as the owner of the car and that he and his male companions spent money lavishly, The witnesses, who are held in the City Jail pending investigation, are Miss Anna Myers, twenty-two, tele- phone operator, whose home is at No. 621 Seybert Street, Hazleton, Pa.; Miss Annie Johnson of Philadelphia, Miss Alice Derr, twenty, of No. 364 West 110th Street, New York; George Wandling, twenty-five, broker, of No. 429 East 161at Street, New York, and Cornelius Murphy, twenty-four, of No. 114 West 109th Street, New York. Cohen lived with his aunt, Mrs. Lilllan Butler, at the Bronx addre: The first intimation she had of the shooting was from a reporter of The Evening World. Mrs. Butler said Cohen was employed as a salesman by the Central Union Gas Company in the Bronx, A week ago he told her he had a leave of absence and was going away for a short vacation. This morning she received a postal from him, dated Atlantic City,saying he was having a fine time and to have a good supper ready for him Monday night. Mrs. Butler declared she never bad heard of Moore and knew noth- ing about her nephew's friends or associates, men or women. His father, she asserted, was a manufac- turer and lived in the Bronx, Cohen had lived with his aunt since the death of his mother some years ago. At the address given for Moore it was said no one knew him @nd he did not live there. pili ES BELMONT PARK ENTRTES. ers and newspaper men who plan to wo garages, four extensive gen- | tar the task after the dedication of @ra! stores, and several other | schitt Parkway. June 14. The e Dusiness enterprises, But there | tee, headed by Sam W. Bareasts Prost. fen't a watch in the town, The | dent of the People’s Commercial Bank, County Assessors couldn't find | includes Morris Rarasck, H. B, Silabe, ene. Joseph Marcus, A. TMitger, B. a Watches are taxed. 4 Charles Rose and H. Weinberg, WHILE ON VACATION CAMP FRE GIRLS MODES OFC Give Bouquets to Sufferers of Infantile Paralysis—Greet- ings From Mrs. Harding. A score of pretty Camp Fire girls, dressed in tribal costume and carry- ing armfuls of flowers, to-day visited four Manhattan hospitals and distrib- uted bouquets to the imfortunate kid- the largest council fire ever built tn Greater New York. More than 600 girls, members of nine camps, gathered wood and kept the blaze going, Fircs were lighted simultaneously in Chicago, Los An- geles, Seattle, Kansas City, Lincoln, Baltimore, Boston and other cities. A letter from Mrs Harding was received to-day by Mrs Oliver Har- riman, National President of the or- ganization, It read: “My dear Mrs, Harriman; it would have given me a great pleasure to have been the guest of the Camp Fire Girls in New York, but since that is not pos- sible I want to take this oppor- womanhood, which is the aim of all her training. One of the features of the day was 4 pantomime, consisting of calisthen- jes, cleaning teeth, drinking water, turning around, throwing up windows and braiding hair, The Camps participating in the programme were Beyeonanbu, Wihea, Najack, Oskawanna, Meetickomish, Orlova, Westinsunshu, Kesikone Wo- nelo and Amadahi, Addresses were made by Mrs. Oliver Harriman, Lester F. Scott, National Executive; Miss Marguerite L. Smith, New York Assemblywoman and a former Camp Fyre girl, and John H. Harmon, Brooklyn Park Commissioner, Thousands of dollars’ worth of flowers were contributed by J, P. Morgan, Mrs. Willard Straight. Mrs. Albert Shaw, Mrs. Shepherd K. de- Forest, National Plant, Fruit and Flower Guild, Adolph Lewisohn and others. YANKS AND TIGERS PAY CLOSE GAVE (Continued From First Page.) ton to Blu: Hoyt out, Bush to Blue. Roth out, Jones to Blue. NO RUNS THIRD INNING, DETROIT—Bush filed Cobb doubled to right. Veach singled, scoring Cobb. Roin made a wonderful one-hand catch of Heil- man's fly to right. Jones out, Baker to Ward. SIEGE I$ KEPT UP CHEER CRIPPLED | AT HOME OF AUNT” (MRS. LEEDS No One Enters or Leaves Mrs. | Glidden’s Apartment— Dumbwaiter Sealed. ‘The wiege of subpoena servers fro: the lawyers for Mrs. Anne U. Potter! Stillman at the apartmert house in| which Mrs. Fannie M, Ghdden lives. No. 107 West 84th Street, continued | dies who were stricken during the unbroken to-day epidemic of Infantiie paralysis. THIS ane guy . | was the beginning of Camp Fire Girls’ Subpoena servers had stood Day in New York, In Brooklyn, at Svard all night. Every shade in the Prospect Park, hundreds of girls in windows of Mrs, Glidden's apartment middies le rompers Rave a Pro” was drawn but one at the back of the gramme of games and Camp Fir at Pt a curtained a “atunte.” Lookout Hill rang out with DOUs® and that was curtained. No; bugie calls and the smoke of a mon- Person entered during the vigil and ster council Gre, kindled by the girls, none left. It was reported by some one who seemed to have been inter- ested in finding out that the door of the apartment in the dumbwaiter shaft had been sealed . According to neighbors in the house Mrs. Glidden was formerly a close friend of Mra. Florence H. Leeds, acting as housekeeper in the young woman's Long Island home, and was! #0 highly regarded that Mrs, Leeds ,catled ber “auntie” and left little Jay | | Leeds, her baby, at the home of Mrs. |Glidden for a week or more at a time when she was away on trips. According to these neighbor George Pasco, a son of Mrs, Glid- |den's first marriage, who has been |away until the last few days on a tunity to send to every Camp | vacation, was not seen about the Fire Girl, wherever she may be, | house to-day or yesterday by the my greetings and wish that each | Subpoena servers. succeeding year may bring her All the subpoenas served by the nearer the goal of splendid |defense are returnable June 15, so that Mrs. Stillman’s witnesses will be at hand the moment Mr. Stillman's counsel have completed their case. ,The amended answer which Mr. | Brennan has permission to file, nam-| ing other persone than Mrs, Leeds,| has not yet been formally served. | ‘Reports which have come to Mrs.| Stillman within the last few days re- garding the alleged friendship of Mr.| Stillman In 1917 and 1918 with a) woman active in New York and Went- ‘chester society are being investigated, and if they are verified a thind name| may be added to those of Mrs. Leeds and “Clara.” | ‘There are varying reports as to the | | whereabouts of Mrs. Leeds. Despite | a circumstantial story that she re- | turned to New York from a trip to | Boston on the Fall River line within a day or two, disguising her auburn hair with a black wig, as told by John F. Brennan, counsel for Mrs. Stillman, persons who know the | young woman are sure she has been jon a yachting trip along the New | England coast, travelling in much more comfort and privacy than any public transportation Iine affords. PEACOCK LEADING WATE IN MET GOLF TLE FINALS | 892.85, aside from $28,568.59 repre- eels senting her income. John W. Gates, according to the LATONIA ENTRIES. papers, named Miss Angell bene- The Latonia entree for Monday's mem are as ficiary of two trust funds each “FTE BACK Pune, $1400, claiming: for valued at $100,000. Each now, by Fly at wos tk ant mares sik tyr $203,000 in Two Years Spent un Gates Heiress, Who Is Soon to Marry o— DEATH BEFORESHE WL STAND TRL, SAYS MRS. KABER Constant Watch to Be Kept on Woman Accused of Murdering Her Husband. Expenses of Miss Dellora Angell Revealed in Report of Referee. SELLS PROPERTY HERE.| Two Trust Funds of $100,000] Increased by Investments to $185,000 Each, By the confirmation of a referee's | report by Justte . upon the appli- | cation of Theodore M. Gibbons, No 4 Wes: 103d Street, who was appointed guardian of Miss Deliora F, Angel! of| CLEVELAND, June 1—With the Lake Forest, til. in order to se a|Sftival from New York of Mre. Eva Catherine Kaber, widow of Daniel B. tion of the vast estate that she in.|Kaber, wealthy Lakewood citizen, herited from her aunt, Mra. John w,/ 8nd ber daughter, Miss Maran Me- Gates, was made public in the papers Ardie, under indictment for toe first filed to-day, degree murder of Kaber, a woman Misa Angell is betrothed to C, Wil. |@rrested several days ago was iden- son Campbell, Los Anceles oj) prome- ter, The papers relate that Mies An- gell, who on Dec. 28 will be nineteen years old, is of legal age in her home State, where she lives with her father, Robert F. but ts a minor under the | laWs of New York, where the greater yeadee of her inheritance from Mr. and Mrs. Gates is located { ; hin tte oe | Mrs. Kaber and her daughter he young heiress) jeaded not guilty asked the Supreme Court to a | in the Commor 3 Ppoint| none Gc, es 3 & guardian for the young woman in| /itt® Court to-day and (rial wag ser order to facilitate the sale of a parcel | m, EUS - of real estate Inherited from the| op ve worn and weary Gath estate. Whe apealteens, cel sep and from more than ten ie) Gibbons followed questioning in New York, , Kaber was submitted to an- The property in question is at No | No | other severe grilling upon her 103 West 52d Street and was used by tive} hich i John W. Gates as his stables. The early Lag ele SE Sees value of the property ; Tal d60 cea Has pee : Placed at! After Bertillon pictures and finger- tet s a yearly rental of prints had been taken the two prisy $3,600. The lessee, James Martin. ners were nd bY dealer in automobile accessories, the |(nerney ein ome Py the woman, piece of real estate In this city, a por- tified early to-day as being connec- ted with the murder piot, according to the police. On the journey from the East Mrs |ikaber told the party that she would commit suicide before she would stand trial. I never will be tried on |this charge,” ehe said. She will be jconstantly watched, from lack are until through whom Mrs. Kaber is al- papers relate, was desirous of pur-/ieged to have hired the assassins chasing the premises for $65,000. Jus-'15 stat her husband to death two time Guy, after reading the report of | years ago, and who is alleged to have hoe L. Hoffman, granted! furnished poison which was adimin- e sale. 1 ‘ | istered to Kaber in his food. In the referee's report there is “| Both Mrs. Kaber and Mss M list of Miss Angell’s holdings, a great} ardie identified the woman. ‘his deal of which she inherited from} identification brought from the San- ce and hia wife, included in} qusky woman, police say, the admis- which are a summer home at Toma-/yion that she had supplied “medi- hawk Lake, Wis. valued at $13,800. cine" for Kaber and that it was at another estate at St: Charte's, I.! ner nome in Cleveland, shortly be- worth $5,000, personal property com-| fore the murder, that Mrs. Kaber prising furniture and jewelry be- | iiec a man to whom she promised qacathed Miss Angell by Mrs. Gates,| ¢5 50 for “doing away with her hus estimated to be worth $90,500, and 3/4. . s ‘ cash securities and other personal "VK koe denied every accuas property totalling $110,000. tion agdingt her by the ae as : For the education and maintenance (hin. to threate on hen husband's of Miss Angell until she is twenty- 100% a ov one, one-half of the residuary estate of Mrs. Gates is left, while the entire TRIED TO BURN KABER HOUSE principal goes to Miss Angell when IS CHARGE. | she attains the age of thirty. — It developed in this examination! In two years, ending last Novem- (hat in one of the statements mauve ber, according to report, there Wis by the mother and daughter in New expended on the young woman $179 york to Chief of Police Peter & careful investemnts, is valued at $186,- 000. She will receive these two funds when she reaches her majority. There are no claims outstanding Amanita, 100; 112; “British Mal |the actnal s' Christensen of Lakewood it Is said. that one of the participants in the conspiracy attempted to set fire Kaber's home shortly before murdc: A man held on suspicion that he was connected with hiring the two men who did the stabbing was brought before Mrs, Kauer and her daughter, ut both denied that they had ever seen him. At the conclusion of the exam- ination the Kaber and McArdle wome were placed {n the county jail, There Mrs. Kaber’s wrist, which she had slashed in an attempt to end her life ina New ¥ Jail, was treated by the jail physician who said there is @ possibility of infection Mrs. Kaber was lodged in a ceil once occupied by Mrs. Cassie Chad- wick, swindler of many Ohio banks about twenty yeacs agu. Het daugh- ter occupied a cell on the floor abovo and near one in which was Mrs Mary Brickel, her sixty-nine year old grandmother, also under indictment tor the crime. “The trial of Mre. Kaber.” Prose- cutor Stanton says, “will uncover ull the ramifications of the conspiriecy on Kaber's life. [or that reason | hold it to be essenviaul that she tried at once,” Prosecutor Stanton expects Mrs. Kaber to make further admissione when she realizes the mass of ev dence he has. She has admitted hav- ing arranged for the men who stabbed her husband twenty-fou times, and to having mixed arsenic in his food for several weeks, but she insists the men were only to “beat up" her husband, and that she thought the poison was medicine After Mrs. Kaber hae faced the others to-day the namer of the pris- oness will be vevealed tor the first time, The police here have made much mystery of thelr arrests, but i is known that there were eight per- sons concerned in the murder, includ- ing the three generations—Mrs, Mary w the Brickel, her daughter Mrs, Kaber, and Miss McArdle. So far as known, the only person now sought is the man who aidea the actual slayer. An automobile said to have been given to the fu- gitive for his part in the crime has been seized by the police. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER WIT- NESSES AGAINST MRS. KABER. The strongest witnesses against Mrs Kaber may be her mother and daugh- ter, Her mother, who 8 sixty-nine, swears in her confession that Mrs Kuber said to her; “I am going to have Dan killed. Miss McArdle, while discaiming knowledge of what was ta occur, ad- mitted to the New York police that she understood her mother was to puy $3,000 to the two men for what- ever they Were to do. Mrs, Kaber had told the New York police that she was to pay them, bit said it was $100, Mother and daugh ter were questioned separately, and the widow's statement was contra- dicted in several important points by Miss McArdle, When al) sought re rounded up there will be five women and thr |men, The women are the ‘three generations.” the woman who rec- omended the “woman of arsenic,” and the latter, who furnished the poison The men are the two men who did jabbing and a man who helped procure their services. Several others who figure in the case will be only witnesses, Thy uthorities regard the case as pretty well cleared up by the New York con- in fessions, which came after eighteen hours’ relentless questioning by Capt Carey of the New York Homic Squad and Chief of Police Christe sen of Lakewood, BE I CARUSO WILL SING HERE NEXT SEASON Tenor’s Voice Will Be paired, His Physician Predict. NAPLES, June 11,—Enrico Caruso will sing with the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York next This assertion was made to-day by his physicians. Caruso is visiting here fur a few days. He benefited greatly by his voy from the United States and it promised that by fall his voice will wholly restored. —————_——_—__ TWO U. S. SOLDIERS DROWN. One Thrown Into River at Coblens, Others Tried to Save Them. COBLPNZ, June 11 (Associated Press),—Two American soldiers, Corp: Snmuel Carvey of No. 67 Mode! Avenue Hopewell, N. J., and Private Anton Hol- son, No. 5107 Habn Avenue, Cleveland, ©., were drowned in the Moselle River here to-day while watering horses, Bot! were members of Battery F of the Sixt!) Field Artillery. Holson's horse stepped into a hole and threw him into. the .river, Carvey answered his enll for help and tried to save him but was dragged under by “1 son. Comrades of the men recovered their bodies. Unim- season - Notice to Advertisers Display advertising type copy and release ord@w for elute "the week day Morning World or Bening World, Tr reooveddatter 4 1M. the di Preceding publication, can be inserted” only pace nay permit and in order of receipt at The World office, Copy containing engravings to. fin Bade by The World must be received by 1 P.M, Display advertising type copy for the Supplee ment Sections of the Sunday World must b9 Fecelved by 1-7. M. 'Thursday preceding publica {lon “anc release must be reoetted bys RAG Friday. Copy containing « to. by The World must bo received by ‘Thursday acon, type copy whieh bi Gunday Main Sheet copy. been Tecelted by 4 PM. @raving copy which has not been recelved ip wublication office by 1 P.M i po ncrtion orders not received by 5 BM. Fi will be omitted as conditions require, rlatdiy 1 tie order of Iatem recelpt and. positive release Display scopy or orders released later than o> avided above, ‘whet chaitted will not gerve U9 re GiggOUnLS 0! “Any character, oUtract oF OLMese to Pipp. ONE Ri \ against Miss Angel's possessions, | AhcOND Ric RACK TRACK, BELMONT PARK, Tee 11 YANKEES—Pec . save ordinary running charges. i ra as as Hol ‘he erie for Mondera race are at fom: | euith flied to Banalor’ Pipp mit ince | (Continued From Firet Page.) _ _—— auc i 'Bronp, t aed uowend: aren 1 a double play, Young to Bush to deg 7 . WNerS deter Parbe we Baer Hore A... | Blue, No RUNS. ent on the green in two he conceded VLADIVOSTOK WON Tented Sic Lae Bene et eee a eb 1dat Tae “10g : eligible Jorian, 172; Net Meanie, 112; b.Mon: Wee? Ta OE Sa) fae Tag] ROURTH INNING. the hole BY A PRESS AGENT ; Hinkle, 112¢Sparit Lake, 11 boy Vib ite Lad maa il || DETROIT —Dlue out, to Baker,| Peacock got in trouble on the se Bie 12 aR 1 Melia entry; ‘betontfort 1 Sane Mee erry boy Bassler out to Pipp. Middlet enth, where h twice bunkere a m1 " Nanette nck! 10m) 180 Hthinewtone | y leton out to|enth, where he was twice bunkered, ing THTID RACK Pome $1,300; claiming: for 143 Pritt TG et Gloomy ew’ 113) Roth. NO RUNS. but he won the next two holes be-| Charge Made That Revolution Was ‘nmwsvarayia and swan] one aie aa af i . ow Y <— bigs ; hace pr, MT, ntinio, , becca Bh a eat OB ite, Vyoune Date seareua ee te}cause White couldn't stay on the Disguised by Japan to Ac- dot Kerang Ot: Henan SBA Min Sita. 14% Streomer...101| Baker's hit and Blue made a similar lines. This made Peacock four up quire Fisheries i Prank toe: ee fas: toe: Rete! te fim race having, reodved init 4ee catch, completing the play. | Wiéd. at the turn, OR ot 2 Iepector Mughan tise gi ter OR aaa eae fouled to Bassler, NO RUNS, . REVAL, June 11.—The charge is be- fering, 111, Dark <a ae ; White covered the tenth cleverly, ne, A j Pe. Willedex Beem, wi FIFTH INNING. ing made here that the recent revolu- «PQURTH, MACH lume, $1,000; Wiimey oo IG) oe Magalies. . winning 4 to 6 when Peacock was the Bavoy Hotel; for threes ear-ol too Pub eit! Ditie Carrol DETROIT—Young singled to right! short of the green on his second, | Hon at Vladivostok was largely a press ove mile and a sistent Punsion B free Hal and took second on Roth's fumble. (Poth squared the next two holes.|agent operation on te part of the Hoe Greasy, 1h: War rie 08) 100? Sberigountine 100 Bush fanned. Cobb walked. Veach |‘Phis was the best golf of the round. | Japanese Government and that the apt 112: Jouett, 115 9 SEOOND ACK —Steoplentiane : out to Peckinpaugh. Hellmann out| (he thirteenth was unlucky for| principal Mgure in the affuir was Moto- 1oullew fa thre gr ola, tk home We uoward: aboot two ami ;,.| to Pipp. NO RUNS. Peacock, He began by slicing into tho at one tim he % Quit. 103; Humphrey, Stoto, 100; Ttoyal He Weoite NEW YORK—Schang out to Blue. layi fe; maa Zumoto, who at me was the Tig. iat: Aotheration, 108: Colm TEED atthe 8 Tout, Bush to Blue.” Roth the woumh. sostend. oF playing (Safe (head of the Japanese Bureau of Propa- jim.’ Rams, 108:" lowing Thitblen, Tio; Lowe 1 Telit singled, Peck forced Roth, Young (| hur was surprised when the ball only | anda In New York. Foue, Geanioa, TA Aiko Abbe. TS) <i al Bush, NO RUNS, hopped about ten yards through the| It is suid that the whole movement Hrand, 103: Hewiwwict, 110; Whito Star, 110; THIRD RAC The Queens Handicap; for SIXTH INNING, grass. was planned by Japanese to deceive the 4, geen, He iT a mayen ire jeer-olde and) uowant: oe a = 7 eacock’s next effort struck a tree| American Government, and the end in’ two-vearcuda: five f “He “108 Indes Hote, ete MUITON Ment wy, |, DETROMT—Jones out, Ward | to} Fite eaibounced back to where |view. is the wcauirement -by ‘Tokio of rnc Fanal tteahte, 111: Huey Tacks, VET rady Gertrude. 100/(100) Beach Star...108 | Pipp. THlue singled. sler singled, | and the ewe eneute Ranarita and the . SUdE Whiliam’ Olde, Tae Lior! AFT? Mrected da. 111/109) Thimble ..-. 111] Middleton thit into a double play, Peck | Peacock stood. The youngster de-| im TOMA navigation of the Vex 114; “Misa” Crestwood, 114: Colo! Gi? thie 1. 1ORl NM) Fambette 1131 Ward to Pip. NO. RUNS. cided he had enough club swinging | {{0!..°° xo%matters now stand the pres! HH -RAQK Pome $1,300; claiming: NOURTH, RAGE. "he Harem, Selling; ior| YANKEES—Ruth Walked and stole | Md conceded the hole. This reverse | diction is made that the eastern const tor fou-yearolda, ami upwant: one Gile ands thrmeserpolde and rd: one eile. y second. Pipp out to Veach, Meusel @pparently unsteadied White and he | of Siberia will soon be a yellow man's jxteenit ‘legal, 1: Mating allo! tot Index Home Indes Home wt M ri y again walloped into trouble on the|country. ‘The so-called Russian troops, G7, J03; frgelemie. 107; bord Wrack. 108; nds Orme mer vi gue 2a. [out to Jones, Baker walked. Ward again walloped inte troulle | FOUL ae, Wore TRICE UY Tas os Sat Brine, ORs Reowwle O'Nell, 108; onen, 1h Reba occa ee, arm ccteg | Oun. SER Ie ENE Mo UN “White outdrove Peacock fully twenty | oMcers and their movements disisuised | Oe Coreen tice allowance claimed. 1 Clr oR Mirai SEVENTH INNING. Ruan |Zords on the fifteenth. | Peacock Gy eleven pape were: Wainer evar: ee Weer 800) i, DETROIT—Young walked, Bush! merely banged a monster brassie shot IBN Hey eee GA) HO INT Hane SII sacrificed, Schang to Ward, Cobb clear to the edge of the distant green. |CAPE COD CANAL | MONTREAL ENRIES. FIFTH KACH.-Kor two-year-olda: conditions; | singled, scoring Young. Veach hit a| White played his second short and beeen Pfathit sc a **lhome run, scoring Cobb ahead of him.| this cost him the hole. PRICE IS $11,500,990) jinsr nace crue $1000; maiten three Woden Oe ee OT Atk Tuer Wi | Quinn went in to piteh for New York.! The sixteenth was an even thing ae ‘okie abd upwant: reve furkmps,--War Mawrocoron |" Pianoet @hirt1ot {Hellman out, Baker to Pipp. Jones on the drives. Both landed their sec- : or, ozs poutinn Water, 104: Bat Overtake” 144 Rawration 107 lout. Quinn to Pipp. THREE RUNS, onds to the left of the green, Peacock | Secretary Weeks Recommends 104: Porm Grave, 104; Haina D104; Vall ia = Tat WG] NEW YORK—Schang_ singled. |in a trap and White In the rough be- = s 06; Bhameock Flower, 100: Siva. 108; randlestick 2 Violinit | re h You o| hind a mound, Congress to Accept That Offer, i 108: Torewtor, 100; Billy Ready fan Aleta eaten Tor | HAAR or iied to Cobb, Peck’sing | White's next stroke only went a Coming, 110: Wefircenelia,” 110,” Acros 111 Ban Stefano a th flied to Cobb, Peck sin- Savi ¥9 i 4. Godden Silent, King. es eke : Tah hahea going to necond, Rabe |few feet. He then chipped out close Saving $5,000,000. 10; J. ‘Alfred Clark, “113; Golden Tet, mi BAe Ri = s ree-rear-olle | Pith got his eighteenth home rim of |to the hole and ran down a putt for! wasHINGTON, June 11.—Purchase Whiting entry, b—Ambeome Clark Horne, L |Imdex Home, the season and his 123d since he has - by the Government of the Cape Cod] SECOND RAGE Purse $1,000; three-year. Yad? Laichy Pind TAO? Coure 7 i Peacock recovered a little strong|Y 4 ; nm 1m) eboonts i) Douingo been fy poe MOAR Ven Bey ne In erom the trap and required two putts.|Canal for $11,500,000 has been recom- rar: Caanas oral ere (arene 1h} ae rene Lec Sena nd oe te ao tiveney | White was just about to drive on the|mended to Congress by Secretary i OK; Jack Stein: 1S) Top. Sentai fouled to lve, Habe Mos mien | sixteenth when he discovered the loss| Weeks, ‘This price has been agreed | 01,105 SRM. UC 1.200; Aieaplorhase SAcmrenticg ‘allown Me Ovation: By! ee, of his ball, His caddy had uninten-|upon by the Canal Company and the|,,rHLRD RACK Tune ston; femme Weathers RUN tionally picked up a lost ball on the|department. It is approximately 85,~ | (fuutn" chine, 142: a liaromat, 140; Woottuft EIGHTH INNING, previous hole and White played it by | 090,000 less than the price allowed by Y gta, MG) TA, Monae, 157 FORTY SUITS STOLEN. DETROIT—Shechan pitching for | Mistake 2 dennation proceedings, oe ig, Harriem, Ir, entry —-— New York, Blue out, Ward to Pipp.| On the long seventeenth White)" tf Congress approves the purchase of| FOURTH RACK Dum | 32.000: | Connanght . Stere.| Ba thn reached home in two and ripped off al tne canal the only appropriation. rs | up: handican: three-year-olds and uni Canadian Darglars Get Loot Out of Store,| Hassler tripled, Ainemith ran for H Whed Sine suid ane-anarer mike. Thien 100 Be eee ten, buttine for Middie, |hirdie four to five for his opponent. |quired will be $5,500,000 less any cash |9i my timed tik timat Ret Log” ath hut) Felice Reserer: Ut; pase red Sue to Ruth, chang muted |Peacock's halving putt hit the cup and [ncw In the ‘Treagury: that has accrued | Hell. 138 Relctan, 10! a-Bhaifac, 40; wd ot ° be’: 7 e) y but Shee- | missed only by inches. rom the n of the ¢ gine | Re te Rhurwlans: foeshd. 6 (Gone Of /the! sloth | ene a ae Pe Mane une forces | White drove well aver the lily pond | War Department since Feb. 29% 1920. | Na i nace mine $1,000; | hme yearolte ine: Slore cas HRs any radian pd f ‘ sur. on the eighteenth and easily earned ay wi ane m Carman 12: Golden Chaner, 2A. M. to-day and took forty suits of | Ain! pith te. DAM SHUR. AUG sue Sa erea "| tomy Armatein A Detmyed. | oo." inate debi HRM Rning Bein Las clothes valued at $2,000, which later!” Niw YORK—Oldham pitching and | Peacock missed the green, going to A Washington dispatch announces SETH UAC rm 1.000 claiming: three were found concealed in a noaroy hall-| aintmith catching for Detroit. “Mou | the left, but pitched to within ten feet | another postponement of the hearing on »0r-o% a0 Mai oti" Jack Meron, 108: 1s Way. Policeman James Hickey of the| sel out to Hue. Baker out to Jones, (of the cup and holed a difficult down- | Nicky Arnstein's motion for a new trial ae, 92; Huon. 2) Sentimental, 109/ Cheta mt Bast 5ist Street Station arrested a crip-| Ward out, Jones to Blue, NO RUNS, | hill putt for a half in threc, It was | there because of his continued illness, A The ree 81,000; . claiming: Jed taxicab driver, who aaid he was NINTH INNING nervous finish, % in at his home, No. 1 West 83d ‘wo; one and cne-eigh th miles james Cannon, twenty-one, of No, 218 . Cards he had been confined to his Sper ope, LOO; aa Ca, 110; t 45th Street and James Svenstrup,| DETROIT—Bush fanned. Cobb 43 64e-m bed three weeks with pains about thi Bg Re A Mia oon twenty-one, of No. $16 Bust 43d Street| walked , Veach walked, Heilman hit $328 im heart, but expected to be out ina fow jfyealm U8: on ‘suspicion. into a double play. NO RUNS. $225.04 Sorel dave, j eather dhewerr, Track 004, vt vo SAE D PERERA See eee el, Ae Nae se joss PLES eka = THE WORLD TOTS baad meneame omer Eng ms i