The evening world. Newspaper, June 25, 1921, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| TO-NIGHT'S WEATHER: Partly Cloudy. Rasoha nal Che | “Circulation Books Open to All,’ VOL. LXI. NO. 21,776-—DAILY. Copyright, 1921, by The Press Publishing Co.” (The New York World), 192 Post Office, orld, “Circulation Books Open to All. Entered ns Second-Clnas Matter TO-MORROW'S WEATHER Partly Cloudy. PRICE THREE CENTS New York, N. ¥, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 25, ” RUTH GETS HIS 26TH HOME RUN: | RACE RECORD BY JOHN P. GRIER ie OMPERS WINS; HEAD OF A. ATS LEWIS 25,000 BASEBALL HOME TEAMS FIRST GAME. KUNS 9 4 AT PHILADELPHIA: Giants ...O 210240 0 O— Phila..... OO O 3 001 0 O- Batteries—Ryan and Smith; Ring and Bruggy. SECOND GAME. PHILADELPHIA: 090160 8 &—™S 1002018 8 & a Benton and Smith; Meadows and Peters. NEW YORK: 5 01000 00 0— 00012000 1— and Picinic h; Scawkey and Scheng. AT BROOKL Boston.... 0. 0 O 10000 0O- 3rooklyn. O O O 1000 1 Batteries—Watson and O'Neil; Schupp and Miller. “°NATIONAL LEAGUE AT CINCINNATI: Chicago... 3 0 00 OB BG Cincinnati O O OO 1 8 BB @ Batteries: ‘arrell; Luque and Wingo FIRST GAME, iants hila..... Batteries AT )NWash’ton. Yankees... Batterie 4 s—Jhonston 74 (heeves and O AT ST LOUIS Pittsburgh O OO 3 O88 8 St. Lou Oo0oO0OO0OOB EE AMERICAN LEAGUE FIRST GAME. BPS AT BOSTON Phila..... OO 100100 1— Boston.... 1 10000 0 0 Q— Batte s—Naylor and Pe rkins; Pennock and Ruel. SECOND GAME, AT BOSTON Phila..... 1 O O 1 1 00 Boston.... 0 O 20000 Moore and ePrkins; Bush and Walters, Detroit... 3 0 108 B Chiago.. 0 1008 B atteries—Ehmke and Bassler; Faber and Schal AT CLEVELAND: St.Louis... O O 1000 4 fa Cleveland. O O O OO 1 1 | = Batteries—Kolp and Collins; Uhle and Nunamaker. NEW AQUEDUCT MILE RECORD 5 NADE BY JOHN P. GRE | Whitney Entry Runs Distance in Sy 1.36, Clipping Two-Fifths of a Second Off Mark. oo Bateries AT CHICAGO: dizzy from following the hot pace. He held on, straightened for home and then gave it up, dropping back to Anish last. Audacious ran a good race, letting Gladiator follow the Grier pace, while he waited two lengths back in third By Vincent Treanor position. As a result Audacious had AQUEDUCT RACE TRACK, June] something left at the end and al- —John P, Grier, rival of Man O'| though he had no chance of catching War last season, won the Queens | the winner finished good and strong to be second. Yellow Hand came County Handicap this afternoon BY/ trom tar back toa fast closing third. Audacious | The victory was a popular one, Griet three lengths in a gallop. ond and Yellow Hand third, was se having been backed down to a 4 to 5 The time of the race, 1.36 flat, sup- | Choice at post time, planted the track record of 1,36 2-5 The biggest crowd of the season was at the track. The Gr olds went made by Short Grass in 1916. This made the second score of the day for the Whitney Stable, it having pre- viously won the Great American with the two-year-old Broomster at American for two-year- to the Whitney Stable. Broomster won in rather easy fashion and his stable mate, Olympus, was third. There was no fluke or anything Toil split the pair, getting the acetden.il about John P, Grier’s vic-|Place. The race was run in the fast tory. He went to the front when|time of .59 3-5. The favorite, Mu Starter Cussidy sprung the barrier|tard Seed, finished far back, Black and he stayed there to the finish. | Rascal was the early pace maker and Gladiator ran from fifth to second! showed the way around the bend, at- place in the first quarter and was tended by Toil, Broomster and Big 6) 1 | | naa ple S 25.— AQUEDUCT, JUN Racing Results, Charts «« Basebal Evening World Racing WEATHER CLEAR, TRACK FAST. FIRST It For two-year olds: clatining: five furlongs; parse $1) Olt at 2a, Start goods Won dt ings: place samen 6 by Ornondale—One Star Oaner, Alles table” Trainer, W. J. Booth ime — 7, Wat, Sth Sie, Fin, Jookesa, — On, § Ot oT $i ‘ 2 Meteo’ 2. & Martin’) 30 i ° ! HH Magners. 4 H 1 focllte es. 11h Wor Nor AR Gareth ao @: Ml Ne pox winner he a by Situs t HN held the race wate all t a fair race. THIRD RACE American post 3.00) whiter, b. ¢ Ea) roll } FOlympiis sunreigh — June Broometer, going spemd and n well ack Rascal qu nh impro veld on the ‘Tine, 1 fi HT Whitney. Trainer, e Indes Starter 1. Wat St %% John P. Grier Asiiacioun ne Hand Aloo 4 race 74.02, OF at 249 Devildog Tookport gomed Amneric good race. the leaders final drive A with Boy Latter was g SIXTH RACE—Conditic Inver, Starlet. oh Ma \ Vis 4 hn 10S Sinter Flo 401 The Belle Galiva Vewsumite Chateau Thierry © ‘of the Moon quit early 8p Vall within the got final furlong Toil, on the rail, was be- pressed closely by Broomster and In the last! Heart. When they ing finally gave way to him, sixteenth Olympu: apparently a slow beginner, rushed out of the bunch be- hind the leaders, to be third, in front of Sunreigh Crest Hill was favorite over Elmer Johnson in the steeplechase and he reversed the verdict over their pre- vious meeting, Crest Hill was hard held in t § the betting indi- cated he wi n had no troubl from New Hilisdal the opening ¢& pli ven , @ supposed good thing in Hapsed within striking distance of the finish. Here Marsdale and Stock Pin swallowed him up and went past the judges in he order named, Hillsdale led all the way followed by Dove's Roost, The lutter quit first, under the whip, and then Hillsdale folded up. TRYING TO SAVE BOY, 2 DROWN, HE LIVES Michael Souek, Avenue, and Paul & 201 treet, both of I drowned to-day ina pond on the grounds of the Downey Shipbuilding Corpora- tion, Staten Island, ‘The men had un- dressed to go swimming in the pond en they heard the cries for help of son, elght years old, No. Avenue, Mariner's Harbor, in together after him. and then the other was at- They tried to aid gach other nk in 8 feet of water, The Ande boy in the meantime swam out safely, The two bodios were recovered, First y went First on tacked nolia | or twa v Handicap: Ot at } Gladiator into s Mow Hand bad no excuse Tile and won @ ect | Riga $8.6 thin and Fin Tv firs’ mn, star Ke Le thir FI | pate { $8 | sev | ond All er Jonson was eanily best of the other. Owner, form, clowel strongly aid Bright i miles, Rirdie rank, $6.10 Time 1141 Bye Cranford Constantine Hines New o-vear-old Won eas gallopin, Mustard made up much ground for three S28) Gad goo Wont enaily: place waite, Ae yy Wulikbroom. d-"Wonder. Ov ii O34, | then drew out and wo beaten off one and five-sisteenth mile Won inving: place ame Owner and trainer, W, © on mi, ck ié F Venman Mooney ut eaine on again and out King Albert ran a dropped back the best of the others. six {urionws Place driving avvford, ‘Train Forks, Keowr! i oe ey io Mavourncen went wide Princess Pandora outrun RACING RESULTS. AT LATONIA. x furlong: 30, first; econd; Portlight. Ruby, Belle of Blizabeth- Hondo and jso ran, COND RACE—Five _ furlongs 1, $4.60 and $3.60, first; Blue Deep, second; The Colonel's Lady, Time, 1.06, Non-starters, Bill Coo, Mocking Bird, Georgette Leaf, Lillian, Mae Band 0, a ery. HIRD RAC Rapid One and one-eighth tride, $8.60 and $4.00, Kingfisher, $4.90, second; Cor- third. ‘Time, 1.59 4-5,’ None ters, Col Lit and Exhorter OURTH RACE—F $36.90 ty Vurlongs.- Wi yward Lady, Non-starter, d Colored Time Boy AT HAMILTON, RAC Six furlong and 70, first; 0, second; Lively, 5. Non-starters and Martha Luck COND RACK—Or nty yards. Dellhan 5, first; Chief Spon: Salvatelle, third ran IRST Ima loria third Antici + nee, (Racing Entries on Page 2.) A pector Henry Bro. | Dominick Henry, who was restored to duty as a Police Inspector followin the diamissal of an indletment against him, was ned by Commissioner Inright to to take charge of the xth 1 ion District, in the Bronx Acting Inspector John Sweeney was made a full Inspector and assigned to thi yn Eleventh Inspection District, Brook- j| thirty-six hol nd $11.10, first; Red | ~—MICTOR BY —>——_ ° Chicago Player Covers th) Thirty-Six Holes in Play Off | of Tie in 150. GETS AN EARLY LEAD.) ‘Goes Second Round in 33 in| Contest With Wethered, Oxford Amateur. ST. ANDREWS, 2 Press),.—Jock Hutchison | | of Chicago won the Brit'sh open golf Scotland, June (Associated championship here to-day, defeating | Roger Wethered, the Oxford amateur, | won by nine strokes, covering tne | in 150 to Wethe Hutchison, who was three strokes ahead at the close of the first round of eighteen holes, which he made in 74 to Wethered’s 77, | strokes when nine holes of the second led by nine |round had been played. Hutchison made these nine holes in 83, while | the Oxford player teok 39. The cards for the outward play in | the second round were: | Hutchison ... 544 107 Wethered ~4546 a —116 The homeward cafds on the final round were: Hutchison 4 5 6 6—43—150 Wethered 44 47445 4—43—159 Hutchison had a lead of three strokes over Wethered in the first round, the score being, Hutchison, 74; | | Wethered, The first hole was played ia steady Ifoshion, both players getting fours, while at the second Wethered proached short from the rough and Hutehison pitched over the green, both taking fives, Hutchison got a lead of two strokes at the third, where be placed a beautiful approach shot three yards from the pin, and holed out for a three, Wethered drove his second shot right over the green and down a bank, taking a five. Wethered, Ap= however, level at the fourth, where his second shot was nicely on the green and went down for a four, while Hutchison sliced his drew second over onto the new course and put his third in a bunker near the green. He barely got out with his fourth and was down in six. The players were all even at the fifth and sixth holes, Hutchison took | the lead at the seventh, holing a ten-yard putt for a 3 to Wethered’s 4 The Chicagoan gained another| stroke at the nd still an~ other at the ninth, with %8 to Wethered’s 43, and made the turn | three strokes to the good, The cards| for the first nine holes wer¢ Hutchison......45 365643 3 3—36 Wethered......45545444 4—39 Hutchison got another stroke ahead (Continued on Second Page.) ——<— GIANTS WIN; KELLY GETS 10TH HOMER PHILADELPHIA, June 25.—The Giants defeated Philadelpiia in the first game of a double header this afternoon, 9 to 4, Bill Ryan, former Holy Cross pitoher, pitched for the| Visiting team. He wis opposed by | Jimmie Ring, & Brooklyn boy | eorge Kelly, Who at the beginning | of the season ran Ruth a close rac for home tun honors. but who fell | down badly in the x wee t| hia tenth homer of the season in the | fifth inning with one man on. ‘The other, Giant runs were made in the | second, when two men were sent | home; one in the third and in sixth. Philadelphia scored three in the fourth and one tn the seventh, F.OFL; TO 13,000 | 1 | HUTCHISON WINS BRITISH POLICE SEEK TO CONNECT OPEN GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP: NINE STROKES GOMPERS BEAT LEWIS FOR HEAD OFTHE FEDERATION Old Leader Gets 25,000 Votes to Rival’s 13,000—Miners’ Own Delegation Split. —Samuel Gom- DPNVER, June | in the play-off of thelr tle. Hutchison | pers, veteran Americén labor leader, der of Mary Elizabeth Riddell, seventeen years old, of No. 1839 Briggs to: den. was reelected to the Presi- by a heavy majority. Gompers was given a fo nas the was seventy-one-year- tremendous nnounced labo ova vote hed leader could scarcely control his ¢ tions, was elected dent by practically a up One vote was cast against him. Lewis polled slightly more than 1 000 votes, while Gompers was given approximately 25,000. ring the ames Duncan nimous te. In answ roll coll the first vote for Lewis came with a split in the bar! mpers, for Lewis makers voted 786 for Gompers, for Lewis, The railway carmen gaye all their votes As delegati delegation cist rand old m: en by the dele- allot for n of gates he would win, and they cheered each vote as cast for him Lawis's own de ba split. He got y | while 1,596 cast their ballots for Gomp: ers, When the vote was announced the was a tremendous cheer from the floor and delegates called for Gom- pers. With tears in his eyes he stood up to start his speech He said: “The source of my grati fication is not in the fact that I'de- feated Delegate Lewis. [t comes fron the fact that a newspaper mudsling ing machine cannot control the Amer ican labor movement “My election will bring no comfort to Gary or to Hearst. The voice of labor I will interpret and present as I can, come what may. I will speak in no minor key, whether it be to a Gary, a President or any or newspapers WOODROW WILSON APPEARS IN COUR1 Law Supreme Is Admitted to Practise Berore District of Columbia Bench. WASHINGTON, June Woodrow Wilson appeared in person to-day in the chambers of Chief Justice McCoy of th District of Columbia Supreme Court to te admitted to the practise of law ve fore that court led to admit Mr, Wilson. He was companied by his law partner, Bain wrldge Colby, forme etary of State ind by Joseph P. Tumnulty, tormerly >_>. MAKES BONFIRE OF HERSELF PHILA A 23,--Barr Philadelphia Hospital, committed de to-day by setting fire to waste and then standing in the cen of the burning miss Her screams attracted hospital at tendants, who broke in the door of 100 She was so severely burned, however, that she died within a short time. y of the American Federation of dice } : , ltaven: <aatetihe Jonn v. Lewin Morris, Richmond Hill, two years ago. Also he will question Kubal about | President of the United Mine Work- | the killing of Rine Hoxey, nineteen years old, of West Soth Street, Mat~ Vice | all of the - SLAYER OF MRS. BARTLETT WITH TWO OTHER KILLINGS | | Unsolved Murders of Women Being Traced—Kubal Tells of Widow’s Desperate Struggle for Life—Leads Officials to Clues. The possibility that Lawrence Kubal, the Polish farm laborer of | Hempstead, 1. I, who has confessed to the murder of Mrs. Minnie S. | Bartlett in West Hempstead, may have been concerned in other crimes | which are as yet unsolved, caused Detective Henry J. Senff of the New York Homicide Bureau to go to Mineola Jail to-day to question Kubal. Senft wanted to interrogate Kubal particularly conceming the mur- Avenue, Richmond Hill, who was clubbed to death in a vacant lot at Glen hattan, who was killed in February, 1920, ® Kubal collapsed and became um- jeenscious while at breakfast in |tlempstead this morning following WRITES DE VALERA |! arraignment at Lynbrook ona A PEACE HINT first degree charge of murder. Up to that time he had shown no sign teen of being greatly affected. | |LLOYD GEORGE LONDON, dunes (Associated | after being revived he was taken | Press)-—Premier Lloyd George 443 |to Jamaica to show District Attorney } letter to both Eamon De| Weeks where he had sold the two | the Irish Republican leader, | watches he confessed he had stolen James Craig. the Ulster) from the Bartlett home after the Vremier, declaring the British Gov-| murder. ‘The District. Attorney's ment be deeply anxious that | plan thereafter was to have Kubal HT “s appeal for reconcilia-|take bim and other officials to the tion in Ireland shall not have been |feld where he said he had thrown mac in vain. away the chisel with which he he Iciter appeals for a conference | stabbed and hacked Mrs. Bartlett, betwee. representatives of the Gov-| Sherif? smith told of the search ermment and Southern and Northern | which resulted in the finding of the 1 nd, so that the opportunity for | chisel, sleeve and bloodstained loth- for a settloment in dreland shall not | ing be Jost | “We started before daylight," he - a said, "Kubal told us where to drive, 26TH HOME RUN FOR RUTH, | 84 when we got to a spot in West Hempstead not far from the Bardett | home he said: ‘Stop.’ We all got out | there were six or seven of us ia POLO ¢ 5.--Babe | the party, He sald that he had rotied Rut continued his onslaught on| up the sleeve and put it into a tomate American League pitohers this after- | We looked through many toma- noon, when the mighty slugger hit} to cans and finally Deputy Sheriff | his twenty-sixth home run of the| Morse found it. We let it stay im tae season in the fifth inning of the gamej can and showed it to Kuba He with Washington. | didn't seem affected any. We put it Fewster was on base at the time.|in the automobil The hit went into the lower tier of! “When we asked him where the © rightticld grand stand and was chisel was, he pointed to a stump pot made off Walter Johnson. UNTERMYER SAILS far away, He said he was near that when he threw the chisel away. We could not find it in the dark; we stayed around talking and waiting | FOR SUMMER REST fo, gasiigit. Kuda! didn't seem | bothered. Samuel Untermyer, and Mrs Unter “The chisel used to kill Mrs. Bart- myey, sailed Burope this after- | lett was found not far from the place {noon on the Olympic to remain) where the bloody shirtsleeve waa abroad until Sept, 21 |picked up. It was about five inches When informed that Attorney Gen, | long. It was found by Deputy Sheriff Morse, who wrapped it in a piece of paper and event the office of 1 |W. Weeks emotion Daugherty bad announced that crim- prosecutions growing out of the Con fixed policy of the Gov Mr. Untermyer had de- anded, he said there had rently cn a misunderstanding which he was hear, ‘i allly delivered it to strict Attorney Charles Kubal showed n» chisel was found.’ “He talked like a man who hadn't committed any crime.” IDENTIFIED BY BARBER WHO SHAVED HIM, After the trip to Jamaica Kubal was revelations »ckwood mittee would be the ernment, r as when thi cleared. would do every th to the delighted to was now He his power to contribute a said he suc coss of the Government's campaign. | taken to Roosevelt, where a barber and that on the way across the ovean jentified him as the man whose mus. he would lay out a programme for tache he had shaved off ‘Thursday. submission to the Attorney Ge Phen he was taken to the County Jail, und to Col. Hayward. ut Mineola, where he was fingers | It is understood that Mr. Untermyer | printed | will te charge for the Attorney Gen- by ed by Kubal, they went ute eral of New York in the eriminal Juinaica, where they stopped at the ions to be conducted by the full store of Peter Lawrence, Nv. 477 Fulton Street They secured > from Lawrence 4 watch belong d Hebuked | for fdleness, Youth! ing to Mrs, Bartlett’ which hie Limp fs had bought from Kubal for $3. Ans No. 1075 16th Street, Brooklyn, went to| Levy: No. 19 Harriman Avenue, Sac the cellar of his home and fired a bullet |Malea, who had paid $6 to Kubal for into bis lung. His father had re-|it. A weddiag ring, with Mrs, Bart- buked hin jor remaining idle, Jett’s Initials Jpn it, was obtained by — --—

Other pages from this issue: