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THE EVE and a half; two gold chains, two Tuby rings, several gold lockets and @ roll of $25 in bills, As a number of fingerprints tad been left behind by the murderer, notably upon a dresser in Mra. Bart- lett’s room, which had been ran- sacked and everything it contained thrown about, Charles Hanson, fin- gerprint expert from Mineola, to-day took a number of photographs of the prints. The autopsy performed upon the ody of Mrs. Bartlett disclosed that she ha been killed by a blow which fractured her skull. In the Bartlett house was found to-day a piece of lead pipe an inch in diameter and six inches long, with blood stains upon it and evidence that an attempt had been made to clean it. In addition to being beaten severely all over the body, Mrs. Bartlett had been stabbed several times on the right side of the face with something like the sharp end of a file oy the point of an icepick, The murderer had also choked her with both hands | A search of the woods was made to-day by Deputy Sheriff Oliver Hew- Jett and Detective Ferdinand Miller. John Buckley, a handy man working in the Hempstead neighborhood, waa found. There were no scratches upon his face, but he was closely ques- tioned by the county officials. When John Buckley was picked up in the wood and questioned he sald that he was working until the middle of yesterday afternoon for the Rev. Charles H. Snedeker, rector of the Episcopal Church in Hempstead. After that he went to Harper Park to meet his nephew, and later to hin sister's home in Hempstead, where he | stayed for supper, He accounted for his presence in the wood to-day by saying that he went to meet his brother, who was going to tell him) where some “hooch” was to be had. BUCKLEY NOT THE MAN TWO! GIRLS SAY. if he had been correctly quoted. The | The two negro girls were positive that Buckley was not the man who had accosted them in the wood, A careful inspection of his clothing and body failed to disclose any blood- stains, Buckley told the police this morning that he had spent the night in a barn back of his sister's home in Henry Street, Hempstead. According to Motorcycle Officer Henry King, Mrs. Ellen Beveridge, caretaker at the rectory of the Rev. Mr, Snedezer, said this morning that Buckley came there about 8 o'clock yesterday morning to work in the gardens, and as far as she knows was not there between 9 o'clock in the morning and 5 o'clock in the af- ternoon, when he returned. Buckley told the police he worked at the rec- tory until the middle of the after- noon, and said nothing of returning later in the day. VICTIM HAD MADE TERRIBLE STRUGGLE. The interior of the house showed not only how desperately Mrs, Bart- Jett had fought, but also that after she was dead her slayer went through the rooms destroying, as if a frenzy, many articles of furniture and orna- ments. While robbery was the mo- tive first suggested, nothing was taken from the house as far as learned, and a large sum of money in an envelope on the telephone stand in her bedroom had not been touched. It is possible, however, the police and District Attorney Weeks say, that the murderer had not reached the money in his search of the house when he was frightened away. It was Mrs. Bartlett's desire to es- cape just such a fate that led direct- ly to her murder, The Bartlett home is No. 2 Hempstead Avenue, Weat Hempstead, a fine old house sitting far back from the road in a ten-acre plot screened from view by a high hedge and a large grove of trees, George W. Bartlett was a meinber of the firm of E. H. Kellogg & Co., oil merchants, No, 45 South Street. The murdered woman was his second wife. He is said to have married her after she had attended him as nurse through a severe illness. She had lived near Hempstead for more than twenty years, and had occupied the house alone since her sister married Robert S. Seabury of Hempstead a few years ago, Mrs. Bartlett was afraid of robters and because of the danger to which she and her relatives thought she was exposed, she was trying to sell the house and build a smaller place nearer the village. TOLD OVER THE PHONE OF HER VISITOR, Shortly after 10.30 o'clock yesterday Mrs, Bartlett had called Mrs, Seabury on the telephone, In an agitated voice she informed her sister that a “shab- by, rough looking man” had appeared at the house and offered to buy it, saying he had $20,000 in cash, “I don't Uke his looks," she said. “He says he is Nicholas Steffin, a pro- prietor of a radiator repair shop on Hilton Avenue, in Garden City. But I don’t believe he is. I'd be fright- ened. if I didn’t think !t was silly.” Mrs. Bartlett then told her sister she had received a telephone call shortly after 8 o'clock yesterday morning from a mysterious woman. This woman told her she was send- ing to the Bartlett home a Mr. Quinn who desired to purchase the place, which is said to be worth nearly $50,000. When Mrs. Bartlett asked her name she refused to give it, cut- ting off the connection suddenly, All these things had apparently @roused Mrs, Bartlett's suspicions and made her wary, but she shook them off as nervous fright. Her tele- phone call was made from her bed- the only room where there is @o instrument, Apparently she left the tall mur- derer below while she ran upstairs t telephone to her sister. And the moment she reached the bottom of ‘the stairs again he attacked her, cs [hush up the affair or to have him ADMIRAL SIMS —>—- Asked to Set Down Just What the Garbling Was He Re- j ferred to by Cable. | Secretary Will Treat the Ad-| miral With the Same Justice He Would a Sailor. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON, June 23 (Copyright, 1921).—Admiral Sims will be rebuked The attitude of the Secretary of the Navy in his first conference with tho Admiral after the latter's return from England makes this conclusion in. escapable, The Secretary is undis- turbed by the propaganda for and against the Admiral seeking either to punished. Myr, Denby looks at the episode a8 a naval matter and not a political question, The Secretary asked Admiral Bims Admiral said he had not been. If} Mr. Denby were disposed to let the matter rest, that would have been a, convenient stopping place. But he: didn't, He inquired wherein Admiral | Sims had been incorrectly quoted, and | insisted also that the Admiral recall in writing as well as he could what he did say. In front of the Secre-| tary of the Navy were newspaper clippings showing that practically all the London newspapers quoted Ad-| miral Sims as saying about the same} thing. There was very little varia- | tion In phraseology and none in| meaning. | So Admiral Sims wrote his report and has turned it in, perhaps In softer terms and phrases; but in any event the question of what shall be done about the incident does not depend upon the exact tone used by Admiral eyeglasses: were found by the police At this point The hand to hand battle began in the hallway, Though the din- ing room the couple fought and Into the drawing room, darkened by closed | blinds. GISTER CALLS AS RESULT OF MESSAGE, | Hastily covering his victim with rugs, her assailant ran upstairs and ransacked bureau and desk drawers for jewelry and money she was re- puted to have. While he was thus engaged, it is believed, Mrs. Seabury, | the sister, came to the house as a re-| sult of a telephone call from Mra, Bartlett a few hours before which had aroused her fears. | “I heard some one coming down the stairs,” Mra. Seabury sald, “but I peered sprougs the window and could | see noone, My cries and hammering on the door brought no response.” By this time fully convinced some- thing was wrong, Mrs. Seabury ran to the telephone of a neighbor and called her cousin, Fred C, Seabury, to come out to the house. When he ar- rived a few minutes later the mur- derer had disappeared. It is believed he climbed out of a rear window while Mrs. Seabury was seeking aid. Mr. Seabury, still ignorant of the tragedy, gained entrance through the kitchen window, Stumbling in the dark of the blind-closed house, he fe!l over a heap of rugs in the dining room. Lifting one, he saw the fare of his dead cousin staring up at him, After the murder the slayer must have spent two hours at least in ran- sack drawers in his search for valuabl It was apparent he did not expect to be disturbed, and it Is believed he must have hi an ioti- mate knowledge of the neighborhood. After the discovery of the body Mr, Seabury ran to a nearby hotel and got the proprietor, Henry Gilmore, to aid him, Together they returned to the house. They removed the rugs and laid the body out on a couch. By telephone they informed Police Head- quarters at Hempstead of the mur- trolman Ricker and Har- motorcycle policeman, went to the house, Soon afterward Chief of Police Phineas A, Seaman arrived and took charge of the case, The police believe they have an ac- curate description of the murderer. Mrs. Patrick McCarthy, wife of a Pennsylvania Railroad employee, liv- ing in a small house opposite the Bartlett home, sald she had noticed 4 tall, stoop-shouldered man, shabbily dressed, walking up and down Hemp- stead Avenue, on which the Bartlett house faces. “He t looking at the Bartlett home,” she told the police, "When I came out to dump some water a half an hour later, there he was, still walking up and down and eying the house. I thought he wanted to buy it. It's for sale." This man was about six feet two inches tall, of dark complexion, prob- ably Italtan, with a short, black, stubby mustache. He wore a brown ft hat, a faded dark coat, and heavy shoes, according to Mrs. McCarthy's description. Mrs, Bartlett, who had been active in church and charity circles in Hempstead, was a member of St. George's Episcopal Church there, She was well known and highly respected, The family of her husband ts one of the oldest on Long Island, and she came from wealthy parents in Call- fornia, Her maiden name was Sprick The wealth of the Bartlett family is one of the traditions of Hempstead The establishment of E. H. Kellogg. & Company, No, 245 South Street, oll merchants, was closed to-day for the funeral of George W. Bartlett, its manager, who died of pneumonia on HE WILL BE PUNISHED. SEES DENBY: “TURNS IN WRITTEN REPORT ~INFULL ON “JACKASS SPEECH |Sims, but in the fact that hd dis- | cussed at al} a question so contre versial as the Irish question an | made reference in any way to the | American voters and their relation- ship to the question, Mr. Denby has been bitterly crit- icised for ordering Admiral Sims home and for taking cognizance of the speech. He has been, on the other hand, as severely counselled to take summary action and dismiss the Ad- miral from the navy. The extremists on either aide will not have the r way. Admiral Sims has too fine a war record to be stripped of his rank or ordered out of the navy. A man's war record has always stood him in good stend in the navy, and there is every reason to believe it will help Admiral Sims in the consideration of his case, There are, however, plenty of naval regulations covering the Sims inci- dent. The punishment for such an offense as an injudictous sprech ranges all the way from mild warn Ing and public reprimand to court martial and dismissal. Discretion is vested in the Secretary of the Navy. Mr. Denby could convoke a court of naval inquiry or a court martial and review their findings, but he is loath to run away from responsibility. He feels it his duty to the navy to handle the thing himself and to mete out proper discipline so that it shall not be said that an Ensign or enlisted man is severely punished while an Admiral who breaks naval regula- tions goes scot free. ‘There isn't anything personal in it. Mr. Denby and Admiral Sims had a pleasant conversation, disposnd of their business in a few minutes, and the Secretary let it be known that he wouldn't render a decision until the Admiral had had an oppor- tunity to answer the query as to whether he had been correctly quoted The Secretary of the Navy insists that he is handling the matter inde- pendently of the White House. He hasn't anything to do with the ind s- cretions of Ambassador Harvey, wh) comes under the State Departinent. So many people in their messages have told Secretary Denby that he ought to let Sims alone ‘because Hur- vey wasn't punished for his speech in London which offended so many members of the American Legion. But the Secretary of the Navy feels that he isn’t dealing with Ambassador Harvey and that his only ovligation Is to deal with Admiral Sims trre- spective of what any other diplomat of the Government might do. Some people seem to think Ambassador Harvey was indirectly rebuked by Secretary Hughes when the latter in speech at Brown University a week ago expressed a view in abso lute contradiction of Mr. Harvey's original speech, The rebuke for Admiral Sims, how- ever, will not be indirect. It will be published on board every ship in the navy and at every naval station, which, of course, is the prac- tice when a reprimand |; ordered Admiral Sims will be punished for hin indiscretion, He has been repri- manded before, however, and the ex- perience doesn’t seem to have shaken the aplomb of the veteran seadog, who strode the corridors of the new Navy Building to-day with the same serenity and confidence as if he we pacing the quarter-deck. emeitneedieerrsaces SIMS COMPLIES WITH DENBY ORDER; HANDS IN REPORT Text Is WithheKd by Secretary, Who Will Consider Decision in Case, WASHINGTON, June 23.—Secre- tary of the Navy Denby to-day or- dered Rear Admiral Sims to give him &@ complete report on his London “jackass” speech. The Admiral turned in the report in a few hours. “Admiral Sims denied the accuracy of the statements attributed to him in despatches reporting his London speech,” Mr, Denby said, “I gave him a written memorandum, which amounts to an official order, instruct- ing the Admiral to inform me in writing wherein he was misquoted and, if he could, to state just what he only a moment. Mr. Denby handed him the written order and the Admiral left almost immediately, going to call on Admiral Coontz, Chief of Naval Operations, and refusing to comment on hig conference with Denby, When the report was handed in no statemeat was made. —————E ARMY FLYER ARRESTED. Lieut, Roallot Accaned of Unin: S. Property in Auto Business, Lieut. John P. Roullot of the Army Aviation Corps, stationed at Mitchel Field, L, 1, sald to te a member of @ wealthy California family, was are rested last night on a charge of ap- propriating Government property, It i@ said that while not on duty he bought used automobtles, had them re- paired and sold them at a profit. He i alleged to have used some auto- mobile parts belonging to the Govern- ment and to have forced soldiers to do work on the cars, Monday. He was a nephew of George W. Bartlett, whose widow was mur- Her! dered at West Hempstead yesterday. sioner McCabe in Brooklyn, Roullot denied the charge. He was held in $1,500 bail by U. did say in that speech, “I want an early reply to this order.” ; The Admiral was with the Secretary | :) Commis- NING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1921. DAWES TO RAFT BUSINESS NEN FOR BUDGET WORK Man a Toothpick to Tunnel Pike’s Peak.” FACES STUBBORN FIGHT. Many Bureau Chiefs and Con- gressmen Expected to Balk at Economy. WASHINGTON; June 28.--A large foree of the nation's leading business men, 100, eripted” about Aug. possibly will be “con- 1 to serve with- oul pay in putting the Government on + business basis, Charies G, Dawes announe Jon his arrival here to-day conference with President Harding. Gen. Dawes arrived to-day to take up his task as director of the budget Mr. Dawes declared jn a statement that if the budget system was to be # success reliance must be placed on “something else than the pitiful ma- chinery provided by law." “One might well be handed a toothpick," added the statement, “with which to tunnel Pike's Peak Mr. Dawes said he would ask that two army officers who distinguished themselves for organization work in the American Expeditionary Force be detailed to the bureau, and had asked his business associate in Chi- cago, William T. Abbott, to serve temporarily as acting assistant di- rector. The army officers wanted as «ssist- ants by Mr. Dawes are Gen, George Van Horn Moseley, Assistant Chief of H. Q., A. E. F., and Col. Assistant Chief of after a as Gen, Dawes's life here, according to all forecasts, is certain to be one long fight with bureau chiefs who want large appropriations and Congress- men who want to keep their friends in easy Government jobs. He has received full authority by President Harding to wield the knife meret- lessly in the hope of putting affairs here on an economy basis. Already a considerable group of big business men have been persuaded by President Harding to come to Washington at great monetary sacri- fice to assist in putting more busi- ness 1n Government. Among them are: A, L. Lasker, Chairman of the Shipping Board; Charles E, Hughes, Secretary of State, Andrew W. Mel- lon, Secretary of the Treasury; Her- bert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce; John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, and Col, Charles R. Forbes, Director of the War Risk Insurance Bureau, Mr. Dawes's job consists in a com- plete reorganization of the Govern- ment financial machinery, elimina- tion of overlapping and duplicating expenditures and the drawing up of a new system of estimating for ex- penditures. He must also make recommendations to the President and Congress for Government reor- ganization Mr. Dawes said he expects to work out a new budget by Dec. 1 and then retire to private life again, The busi- ness men whom he expects to call to Washington will be planted in varj- ous departments so that the work can be delegated to them, The first bud- get report must be ready for Con- gress Dee, 1. ie Seen SEES HIGH CROP PRICES. Head of Jersey Board Saya Drought Has Damaged Products, TRENTON, N. J., June 23.—Prices of vegetables and staple crops probably will be high this autumn because of the long drought, Alva Agee, Secretary of the State Board of Agriculture, said to-day, Pastures are drying up and the general crop situation ts gravely discouraging, he asserted, Potatoes have been hit the hardest. Even with a rainfall within a few days, Mr. Agee said, the early potato crop would not benefit to any material extent. He considered the carly potato crop ruined. SB Fas HAMILTON ENTRIES. ‘Me. Hamilton ce for to-morrow's races are two-year-olds; af Ver Max Meaiowa, 4 10; Cynoaire, mile and a ix: Lan, 8; Orv 104; ‘eeanme, 108! Yowell, D; Saligtmary, Hunditons: 1 lone Come ‘ We 1m Ming, doomed, 108 Her: o@hey, 100: Mook Ofange, 100) Ulin Gold, 7 Mote: Ono, 1b) Carmandade, 110: Moody, 168; Taytoe, 108; Brathane Jester, 100 8 Hone ent ry FIRTH RACE thie yeurohls, 0 hitter, is Hamilton caw Cysmlesdonr Bae. 1a WO! Te ty Laeury 110." Prosneetor 10, Also’ oligible—-HL 0, ENeil 100: Conta 90. : threyearalds and) $5,009 addon: 14] SHINES BANKS HAVE BIG HOLDWGS N BUILDING BOND “Present Law Like Handing Housing Loans Average 48.94 of Their Total Deposits. , Per Cent. The the reports of accountants to-day re- garding the investments of banks and (rust companies building mortgages, One hundred and forty-one savings banks, Oct. 1, 1920, had 48.94 per cent. of their resources invested in real estate and building mortgage loans. Sample New York City banke and their percentage of such Investments were: Bank for Savings, 43.02; Bow- ery Savings Bank, 52; Immigrants’ Savings Bank, 42.73; Williamsburg Savings Bank, 46; Brooklyn Savings Bank, 50; Dime Savings Bank, 52. The Savings Bank of Sag Harbor had the highest percentage, 62 per cent. The Catskill Savings Bank was the lowest with 22 per cent. No New York City bank except some on Staten Islamd ran under 30 per cent. The object of this testimony was to show that savings banks had found bond and mortgage investments de- sirable when fire insurance com- panies were losing money “investing” in speculative securities. Mr. Untermyer then went into the increases of rents in the Equitable Building, over which he had a squob- ble with the management two weeks ago. Numerous instances of increases be- | tween 1920 and 1921, such as of from ‘$1,050 to $3,600 and $2,600 to $7,500, were put on the record. Operating expenses have increased from $2,716,000 in 1916 to $3,254,000 in Lockwood committee received in i921. \ The mortgage investments of the Mutual Life Insurance Company amounted, in 1911, to $140,618,000, °F per cent. of its assets. In 1920, these investments had dropped to $104,754,000 or 15.21 per cent. The as- sets of the company in the mean time increased about 100 millions, In 1920 the Mutual bought $16,000,000 worth of Liberty Bonds for $15,121,339. Expert Meades then compared the| record of the Mutual in encouraging building with that of the Metropolitan. The Metropolitan from 1905 to 1920, ‘included, increased its investment in mortgages from $38,062,000 to $357,- 703,000. In the same time the Mutual | reduced from $109,771,000 to $100,754,- ! 000. | President C. A, Peabody, of the} {Mutual, was invited by Mr. Unter- “git up front and listen to UNTERMYER’S WORK LEADS U. S. TO SUE One Association Exposed at Lock- wood Hearing to Be Attacked. WASHINGTON, June 23.—Attorney General Daugherty announced to-day |that the Government's suit against ‘one of the open prige association’ in- ‘volved in the Lockwood building | trades investigation would be filed in New York Tuesday or Wednesday. It may be necessary to bring suit against the same association in two or three other cities. Mr. Daugherty withheld the name of the association, pending the Goy- action, but he declared that it was “a pattern organization” of its group as far as there could be a model for these “intricate” associations, Plans for the co-ordination of the work of the Federal Government with State authorities in the open price investigation, Mr. Daugherty said, were worked out at the confer- ence in New York between Col. Guy D, Goff, the assistant to the Attorney General, United States District Attor- ney Hayward, and Samuel Unter- myer, counsel for the Lockwood com- mittee, od 6TH MAN ARRESTED Vincenza Troia Seized While Visit- ing Brother Held in Tombs as Kidnapper. Vincenza Trola of No. 615 East 14th Ti RMR: |Street, who has been missing from 113, Wj |his home since May 8, when five- ‘nln,’ 14s | year-old Giuseppe Varotta was kid- 12.) Aled We" 1" |napped from the home of his parents tour veatokie and up: mgs |at No. 864 Kast 18th Street, called at Tits Senpivield, TM Sea’ ipale, the Tombs to-day to see his brother | Salvatore, one of the five men under Jarrest on suspicion of having been implicated in the kidnapping. Detec- tives Piaschetti and Trezza, who had ".|been watching for the visit, arrested to Police |'j Vincenzo and took him Headquarters, Salvatore Varotta, the father of the in the Hudson on June 8, was brought to Headquarters this afternoon and aided the detectives in questioning Troia, who stubbornly maintained that he knew nothing about the kid- “napping. Wom WASHINGTON, 25.—President Harding's first nomination of a woman to be Collector of Customs was sent to the Senate late yesterday when he named Jonnie P, Musser to be Col- lector for District No. 48, with head- quarters at Salt Lake City, Utah, June A IN VAROTTA MURDER) = | kidnapped boy whose body was founda | TRANSFER ILL MAN TO LINER IN MIDSEA TO SAVE HIS LIFE Robert Deans Taken From Freighter That Lacked Facilities to Treat Appendiciti A wireless message received to- day by the Royal Mail Steam Packet Line from Capt. J. BE. P. Matthews of the liner Orbita, en route to New York from Ham- | burg, states that on June 18, in i} response to a wireless call, Rob- ert Deans, supercargo of the Shipping Board freighter Indiana | Bridge, was transferred by small boat from that vessel to the Or- bita in mid-ocean. Deans was suffering from an acute attack of appendicitis and there were no facilities on the freighter for his proper care Dr. Carden Brodie, surgeon on the Orbita, delayed performing an operation in the hope that the | progress of the disease can be stayed until Deans reaches this port to-morrow morning, He is | a Yale man, living with his mother at No, 1000 Park Avenue, Manhattan, Mrs, Deans has arranged to be at the pier with an ambulance when the Orbita arrives and rush her son to a hospital for an op- | eration in case Dr. Brodie does | not find it necessary to operate on board, HOTTER AT NOON THAN YESTERDAY BY ONE DEGREE Local Thunder Showers May Bring Relief To-Night—One Dead, Three Prostrated. ——« | It was hotter at noon to-day by 1 degree than yesterday, The highest mark of 93 degrees was reached late yesterday afternoon, the hottest June 22 in the history of the local Weather Bureau. To-day at noon it was 81 and indications were that before | night yesterday's figures might be beaten. ; In addition to one more degree of heat, old General Humidity was bat- ting 73 to-day, whereas yesterday all he was able to do was 58. This in- crease in his batting average was re- sponsible for a great degree of un- comfortableness. There was one point in favor of to-day and that was a fourteen-mile breeze. Yesterday the best that could be measured came in little fitful puffs and registered eight | miles only, Then again there is a promise held out for probable local thunder showers to-night. The weather man holds out little} hope for immediate relief, for he | says the city will continue to cook. for at least one day more before it is) thoroughly tender, Storm warnings from the Gulf of Mexico announcing a hurricane are a false hope as far as) New York is concerned, because the storm will not arrive for a week. There were four prostrations, one fatal. Annie Drozioza, one year old, was found dead last night in her crib at No, 102 Oliver Street by her mother, Dr. Schelb of Volunteer Hospital said the baby died apparently from the intense heat. Samuel Whitman, thirty, a clerk, living at No, 636 Sixth Street, was removed to St. Vincent's Hos- pital after collapsing in front of No. 641 Washington Street; William Brown, forty-seven, a laborer, of No. 232 West 124th Street, and John Wrinkler, thirty-etght, of No. 132 Bowery, were treated by ambulance surgeons and sent to their homes. AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. RACH TRACK, AQUEDUCT, N. ¥., June 41he entries ‘for tomorrow's races are Toltown: FIRST RACE—Oonditions; for two-year-olds; furlongs. SROOND. Ly four-year-olds and upward; about two miles, Index Home, t.\Index Home * Sen We Y ne *Shwet K: eck Leviathad ant Hookvile 14: Ben Hampson, Ls) THIRD RAQKESeling for FOURTH RACE—The Alabama Handicao: tor throe-ywarvide aod upwani; one mile and a fur- i 12} 0 0 FIRTH WACK-Claiming: for ire vear-aids wax, one mile Rex Home °° Index Horse we i 110[ "St? Queen Blonde, 10 Noomy Gap |. 110) 22k Salute cree tees Peatne Greatlio) 223 Hom sees 1 reatli0} 233 Hom... 0/112 Machine S117 | 288 Dora's it toa 5) B21 Poewindine 1 (7 1) Regal Laxlgs. 1120 Devastation | 10 Pirate Metiev.100 Thy DE—For maiden three-yearokie and SIXTH RACE For, | Englewood Player | holes, and although Miss Bis ng | loaded revolver. pirlnngs We [Index Horwe 110) Guelph ..., 06) ert ore we ho 40 To NO 110 10 i6 Anwine oscil 2 ; : Kiliels 108 Mastic’ Heather, 106 18 10 i pprentice allowance claianed. Weather clondy: track fest, ‘ , j NIRS. GAVIN TOPLAY GRAND JURY ASKE MISS BISHOP IN MET’ GOLF FINALS Deteats Mrs, Alexandre—Miss Con- roy Loses in Semi-Finals. Sievial to The GLBPN COVE, L Georgiana Played the best golf of the week in the Metropolitan Women's champion- ening Worl) 1, June 23.—Miss Bishop of Englewood ship to-day when she defeated Mrs. J. H. Alexandre of Piping Rock by 4 and 3. Playing out the bye holes she registered a 78 for the round. siv will play against Mrs. W. A. Gavin of Belleclaire to-morrow in the finals, Mrs, Gavin in her semi-final match put out Miss Moliy Conroy of Fox Hills who was yesterday's sensation. This was a fine battie and took the big gallery despite the fact that Miss Bishop and her opponent were play- ing the best golf. At the ninth hole Mrs. Gavin was one up. She was out in 41 to 42 for Miss Conroy, The lat- ter began the second nine miserably land became two down, and from (his point on seemed to loss confidence, Mrs. Gavin laid a 150-yard iron shot from a sand trap to the middle of the green at the twelfth and got a half. On the short thirteenth she sank a ten-footer for a three and won this hvle when Miss Conroy failed to chip to the pih. The match ended on the short fifteenth. Mrs, Gavin made 4 beautiful mashie to within twelve feet of the cup and Miss Conroy failed to get on. The match ended here. The card 6365 6 3 4-4 ree 5404 Mrs, Gavin— Out... 4 6 mn In...... & 5 Mrs. Alexandre held on tightly to her opponent throughout the first ten op was was only performing brilliantly, she one down. She lost the eleventh and twelfth, but regained a hole at the thirteenth, Then followed a brilliant birdie three by the Englewood star at the fourteenth, and this seemed to settle the argument, as Mrs. Alex- andre could not get a three at the short fifteenth and keep the game alive. The card: Miss Bishop— Out. 4 4 5 3 6 4 1-40 In ..5 544 5 § 4—G8—78 Mrs. Alexander— Out. 445 46 5 6 4 2-1 In..5 65 3445 5 42-83 ———— HGHT TICKET PLOT IS REVEALED BY 3 COUNTERFEITERS, (Continued From First Page.) — | lith Street; Louis Cohen, chauffeur, of No. 1204 Washington Street, Ho- boken; Abraham Last, hatter, of No 92 Willett Street ; Abraham Helt, chauffeur, of No. 176 East 79th Street: Arthur Foster, chauffeur, of No. 190 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn; Carmine Luongo, real estate dealer, of No. 167 Hester Street; Sebastian Fagela, jew- eller, No. 125 Mott Street. and James Pichio, furniture collector, of No. 115 Mott Street, So perfect were the particular | specimens obtained by investigators | that Willlam Ridgway, Treasurer for | Tex Rickard, told detectives last | night he could not , distinguish be- ween them and the official past: boards. | Uncovering of the venture came | after weeks of investigation by De-| tectives Meyer, Brown and Kane of Police Headquarters, | The detectives met Dematto and_ Cohen, After preliminary negotia- | tions the two agreed, it is charged, | to bring $1,000 worth of tickets to Eighth Street and Third Avenue. With Demattio, in an automobile, | were four other men, Meyer offered to pay $1,000 for the bundle of tickets. 15|Demattio hedged, and asked him to! OS! step in the automobile. The transfer was effected. Demattio started the) car, Meyer covered him, but Demat-| tio continued, Then Meyer fired two shots into the air, Four police automobiles with detec- 37 tives stationed in the neighborhood | drew up and closed in on the car, All five men were arrested, They were! Cohen, Last, Helt and Foster, | Charges of forgery, grand larceny | “wins | and counterfelting were marked down i against all. Acting, they say, on information obtained from the five men, detectives 10>) early this morning took into custody *! Luongo, Fagela and Pichio, Luongo was arrested at his home, | where, the police say, they found a Accotding to the de- tectives, the man had ten fight tick- ets, only one of which is genuine, Fagela is said to have had in his possession one counterfeit fight ticket in addition to the bills for quantities of type, ink and paper used for print- ing, 100 sheets of which, it is said, was purchased only yesterday. Some of the bills showed ink had been bought in England i Tried to Board Moving Express and Was Killed, ® Rudolph A. Dell, a clerk, was killed to-day when he tried to board the Long | Reach Express of the Long Island Rail- road at the Higbie Avenue Station, Springfield, L. 1, while the train was in motion,” His hold was loosened and ho was thrown under the wheels. His home was on Ilills Avenue, Spring- feld. | | courts eaten TOSTOP UNLAWFUL RADS ON HOME Judge McMahon Says Booz Hunters Deny Constitutional Rights to Citizens, County Judge J. G. MacMahon ing trand Jury ta structed the Brooklyn investigate the actions of the police in sometimes entering private resi- dences without search wartants whit looking for violations of the Mullan- Gage Prohibition Law Judge MacMahon said: “It is within your power to investigate the acts of any officials of this county. W. now have a law which, except under vers tain circumstances, prohibits the possession, sale and transportation of liquor. That law must he upheld, but must be upheld legally. In the enfore ing of this law there has grown up i practice that is dangerous to the peace of the community and a direct de to of their rights, An inalienable this country ched from the proper officials citizens Constitutions right yf every man his hor agil without authority Without th authority of a search warrant, erly issued, no official has the reh the private premises of nd no official has the authority t the search of private dwell- not be sed man to dire ings without “Lask you to investigate this pra a search warrant, Ace lice and to do all in your power to end it.” At the Rrookiyn Prohibition “Ha- forcement office, which been vi tually closed for six weeks, John Davis, formerly assistant in reel the announced that of twenty-five agents allotted to Greates New York ten will report to him morrow to Work in the Brooklyn die issumed office to-day temporary direction. of und trict. ‘This includes Queens und 4 Long Island and Staten Island. —— a SURROGATES FIGHT CHANGE Oppose Plan to lish) ‘Thei Courts in New York City, The 1 to abolish the Manhattan, Bronx, by su by prop Courts in nA the them with pposed to-day Surrogates’ Surro- Kings, consi me representatives of the the Cou Association State, at a hear nthe Bar Associa- tion, Judge Cutherbert W, Pound, | representing Court of Appeals in the 1921 Juc Constitutional Con vention, Ham D. Guthrie, Chairm itive Committee, presided Jointly Surrogate Selden S. Brown of Mo! roe County urged the enlarg t the Surrogates’ powers Wingate of Brooklyn said th gates did not propose to have » by the Supr ne Court. Japanese in {alifornin Increase 00 in ‘Ten Years, ‘, June 23.—Californ, in 1920 was 71,9 10, made public State also contained 38, 17,260 Indians, 25,812 Chines other races in that year in its $264,711 whit ——— oo "THE MONUMENTS According to Herodotus, the Greek historian, the builder: of the Pyramids were mostl vegetarians, And the cost of the vege- tables consumed by them was more than a million dollars. If this be so, the Pyramids are monuments to the efficacy of a vegetable diet— aceordiy to-day, T. A very agreeable diet, too, if — the vegetables were as delie © cious as those served at CHILDS, { Seasonal vy: tables, cocked |i is wi lops thew iSalvideal favors Notice to Advertisers Display advertising typ0 copy and. release on 2 the "work day, Mlurning World’ on te cid, Ur received after fe git, ane Bublication, tan "be" inverted” only elt at The rings tobe M contain made by The World must be tye by Pe Display advertising type copy for tho Su ment Seetlons of ‘The Sunday World. mu: received by 1 hursday preaeding publi Hon and rele be received by 2 P. Friday. Copy vInKs tobe by Tho World by ‘Thursday noi Sunday Main. Sheet type 6 not sbeen mewited by ak MEP portyy, men Mae faring copy witch bas not Mien reoelved In the e by 1 PM. Friday, and postive YOM. Friday, require, rigidly in ‘and’ positive release THE WORLD