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ie i ‘ . ‘ __THE EVENING WORLD, ‘THURSDAY, JUNE 8, HYLAN'S OWN LIGHTNING ROD EN BACK OF HEARST TALK - BEFORE EDITORS AND MAYORS vee! TQ SELL PART OF RIS PARK T0 NAVY —_——_— Sinking Fund Commission Turns Down Proposition After Hearing. “HE RAPS GOV. MILLER. e Accepts Latter’s Home Rule © Challenge but Says ‘“Spe- » Cial Privilege” Real Issue. ” By Joseph S. Jordan. > © (Staff Correspondent of The Evening : World.) POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., June &. —Mayor John F. Hylan has come and gone and left his lightning red stuck deep into the ground to waylay 4 stray Gubernatorial spark. The © Mayor of New York didn't declare himself as a candidate for Governor, but described himself when he told the Democratic editors the kind of man who should be selected for the office of Chief Executive of the State. Then he told the editors that he was not an aspirant for higher honors, The Sinking Fun Commission, after a public hearing to-day, denied the application of the United States Navy for conveyance to the Govern- ment of ninety-four acres of Jacob Riis Park at Rockaway Beach, which has been used since the beginning of the war as an avintio nstation. The action of the Sinking Fund Commis- sion appears to settle the matter so far as the City of New York is concerned, as the opinion of the members and of that he must serve the term for) the citizens who protested against the * which he was elected. proposed transfer was that the city > Pater on in his address before the] should not give up any of tis park Mayors’ conference he said that men|jands or playgrounds under any cir- of the type of Rodman Wanamaker, | cumstances, William Randolph Hearst, Hiram] Rear Admiral James M. Glennon, Johnson and Nathan Straus should) retired, who originaNy started the be nominated regardless of political! moyement for the acquisition of part affiliations. ‘ of Jacob Riis Park by the Govern- “The label is not of particular !m- and Capt. C. ment, T. Vogelsang, |! Girl, 19, Youth, 24, Met When ee although the announce- 1922. Du Pont Heiress and Poor Student |CaHl| AGREES 10 Romance a Surprise to Friends : CONFERENGE. UPON RICHMOND TUBE Suggests oRoaHeT Table” Talks by Estimate Board and Commission. not The the stru Borough President Matthew J Cahill assured Transit Commissioners McAneny, Harkness and O'Ryan to- day that he will ask the Board of estimate to-morrow, for the appoint- ment of a special Cammittee of the Board to meet the Transit Commis- sion around the same table to discuss the best and quickest means of rapid transit for Staten Island. President Cahill’s assurance of co- operation was provoked by a question propounded by former Borough Presi- dent George Cromwell, who, after lis- tening to Mr. Cahill’s plea for har- mony and peace by and between the Board of Estimate and the Transit Commission, asked Mr. Cahill to use his influence with the Board of Esti- mate to co-operate, You can bet I'll do that,"’ rejoined the Borough President, and Chairman McAneny chimed in Cahill, that is what I call progress." The Borough President's change of attitude was reflected in .a similar change in the entire audience, which was until then, with but a few ex- ceptions, openly hostile to the com- mission's plan. An adjourned hearing to sound the sentiment of Staten Islanders toward the proposed rapid transit tunnel under the Narrows to Staten Island was held to-day by the Transit Com- mission and the attendance was pleas- ingly satisfactory to the commission in comparison to the meagre number who attended the Previous hearing. ‘There were over a hundred present, headed by Borough President Matthew J. Cahill. Others = included the the ger trod the Boat Esti com: A ton, the as 9, sect! ALICGA nt of the engagement. Monday came as a distinct surprise to the friends of both, Neither Miss du Pont nor Glen- denning has been in America since the fall of 1920, when both sailed for Ave' He Was Employed in Wil- mington Plant, eoeeneeensninll the The romance that is to culminate in the marriage of Miss Alicia du Interborough Rapid Transit Danies, so far as the operator of the new Staten Island Aube gocs Cahill said he never heard tha ‘Was not #0 sure, howev hot “the city would ever again be willing to tie up With the Brooklyn Rapid Transit, which now has the city by the throat.” “Whether two tubes or four tubes fs not the question at this time, President Cahitl hope You will take some steps to get together, one way or the othe: tory and therefore must be buiit by revenue it needs to pay for the con- assured of this now by at least one rallroad which will lease and operate MUST HAVE 5-CENT FARE. President Cahill was questioned at length by Chairman McAneny as to favor tieing up any further with the Present traction @aid, the five-cent fare from Staten Island to Manhattan should be as- sured. Chairman McAneny sald any plan the Transit Commission would favor must be on a basis of a five- cent fare. Senator C, Ernest Smith, who in- people of Staten easier sledding before the Board of finances for the cost of construction. Senator Smith was assured by the tunnel project was firs mission's list of major rapid transit improvements. j peared to favor either the freight or from Ft. Hamilton spoke in support of Mr, Flanagan's efforts to get the Staten Island extension of the Fourth Ridge to 96th Street, where they want Former Frerichs and Frederick for an extension of the I subway to 96th Street, Com- 2: FEMALE LANDAU” GOES ON TRIAL FOR HUSBAND'S MURDER French Poetess ot Gd Daughter Charged With Placing Body in Trunk. whether or said. “We only and stay in {he middie of the road. freight tunnel, which is man- city, will guarantee the city the ction of it. The city has been PARIS, June 8. Marle Bessarabo, -Trial gf Madame poetess and play- wright, known as the “female Lan- dru,” and her attractive daughter for the murder of the former's husband, seorges, opened to-day. The body was concealed in a trunk and shipped by rail to Nancy, addressed to the dead man, It unnoticed for several days. Madaitfe Bessarabo, it was disclosed, was previously accused of the mur- der of her firat husband, Paul Jacques, by whose death. she ob- tained a fortune of more than 1,000,- 000 franes. At the opening ofthe trial the poetess broke down, tearfully denied she had murdered Jacques, admitted Killing Bessarabo, whose body she put in a trunk, but claimed self-defense, She is defended by the same lawyer who defended “Bluebeard” Landru. The police theory, df which they claim to have proof, is that Madame Bessarabo struck her husband on the head and stunned him while sleeping, then shot him in the temple. With the help of her daughter, the body was tied and crammed into the trunk. The women worked several hours Torging a letter imitating Bessarabo's handwriting, announcing his sudden departure to Nancy on business. They mailed the lettér addressed to them- selves and went boating on the Lake of Enghien with a gay party of friends That tubes."" Probable operator of the passen- tunnel, Cahill said he would not companies, but, he luced the bill which provides for so-called city tunnel, said the nd believe the rd of Estimate’s plan would have mate when it came to obtaining mission that the Staten Island in the com- large delegation from Ft, Hamil- led by Thomas B. Flanagan, ap- passenger routes or both, so long they included the Ft. Hamilton ion of Brooklyn. Several speakers nue subway extended down in Bay tube to cross to Richmond. Assemblymen Ernest V. . Burr asked urth Avenue . Hamilton, evening the women returne partment and slept tranquilly bed where Bessarabo had been d and in the same room with the 5 Max| whether the Staten Island tunnel is] body in the trunk. The trunk was not portance,” he said. ‘The question of] \ommandant of the Third Naval Dis. | P9t helress of one of America’s] Europe on the Aquitanta—she to take|Thaten, Chairman of the Staten] puilt or not, although both of them|shipped until the next day. To dis- {s, W! the greatest fortunes, to Harold Sanford|up voice culture and he his studies| Island Civic Tunnel Committee; A. R. | expressed complete satisfaction with}arm any suspicions of neighbors, ; Prime consideration ts, What does the / trict, represented the navy before 8 pep ronson. Cory: t pnchapegta » Fe Glendenning, a Rhodes scholar of|at Oxford. Misa du Pont has been| Smith, Chairman of the Staten Istand | the proposal to construct a tube to]Madame Bessarabo even sat at the 4 eandidate the commission. They did not pre-] 144, tr ‘s tk, Ci in Italy most of the time since, al- Chamber of Commerce Tunnel Com- | staten Island. window as usual in the evening, os- Mayor Hylan was driven to the sent an-oral argument, saying thot lest means from Norwalk, Conn., J mittee; George E. Blackburne, Secre. tensibly awaiting the return of her Nelson House, accompanied by an e8-/ the members of the commission were where his father was a rural mail though she has been for the last tary of the Staten Island Citizen's the The chairman's announcement that Commission was not opposed to a| husband. cort of Poughkeepsie citizens. With| familiar with the navy's position. omtrier until his death seven years teeter pga ani Heer Committee: former Senator and Bor-[freight tube, as such, turned what) Madame Hexsaruo claims that her ‘chim were Corporation Counsel John| Gen. George A. Wingate and rep-]@g0, has been budding eighteen! inigntsbridge. Cee clan ch toni ee had been a hostile atidience into a] husband, HG vine * Pisco Ge mat P. O'Brien and Grover Whalen. Some|resentatives of many civic organiza-| months, Mise da Ponta ‘a . E » Hugo | friendly one. ness man with interests in Mexico, tions protested against the proposed transfer, They also protested against the suggestion that, the city~sell the park to the Government and buy lands for park purposes somewhere else. “To ask the city to give up this park tract, simply because Congress will noa appropriate money to buy another site for a naval air station, is an exhibition of sublime cheek,” de- clared’Gen, Wingate. essepeesiian JAPAN'S NATIONAL DEBT YEN 3,543,867,961 Yen 1,859,015,000 Represents For- e Loans, Is Announcement, TOKIO, May 13, (Assoeta Japan's total national debt the end of March to yen 3, which yen —1,259,015,000 ane told the band to play *‘Hail to *he ef," but the band miscued and ©) pivot ‘Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here.” Former Senator Michael Col- ,),Mms, an editor of Troy, was one of the first to greet him. Mr, Collins ‘was one of the committee of editors who had invited the Mayor to dine with them and address them. PREFER HYLAN TO HEARST, A “WORK FOR NEITHER. ~ phe editors represented the news- » papers of the Hudson Valley, which takes them all in from Poughkeepsie to Scroon River. A canvass of the up- State moulders of public opinion . howed that in the Hudson Valley » Hylan is a two to one favorite over ‘ i But then it also developed , that every locality has its own favor-- ite son for the Gubernatorial nomina- tion. Former Mayor Burns of Troy, . for instance, is the candidate of Editor Collins. , With regard to Mr. Hearst's can- didacy, it was sald that there is very , little Hearst sentiment up-State. And it. was sald by one of these shrewd editors that perhaps the selecting of favorite sons in the various logalities was a smokescreen to keep Hearst ‘out. The up-State editors are all politicians not only with their pens, ‘but with the personal touch they maintain with tne party leaders and with the rank and file of voters. They don’t have to throw up straw to find out which way the political wind 1s Blowing, because they know how sen- timent stands, for they help to make the sentiment. But Mr. Hylan went after Gov Miller for his veiled attacks on him the night before, He mentioned the Governor by name to the editors on one occasion and thereafter alluded to him as a speaker before the Mayors’ Conference, Thut the Mayor had in mind himself as the candidate to op- t f lished by the eDpartment of Fi As compared with February the March total shows an tn yen 22,886,000 in the dom fe loans and & decrease of yen 8,356,000 in foreign Habilities. the State of New York to the Water Power Trust and has removed hopes for years ') come of cheap light, heat and power for the people of the State, Was that a falr and honest settlement by business men in broad-gauge fashion?" The Mayor told the editors that na- tional und State legislation is being written in terms of spec.al privileges, but that the tide of progressive de- mocracy—democracy in the broader sense—is again running strong. He told how Indiana had repudiated New and voted for Beveridge and for the progressive principles “with which he fanned Into a flame the smouldering tment against reaction.” ke wlso of Pinchot's victory in Pennsyivunia, standing on a platform of better schools, tax reform, justice Dp t! 1 * pose the Governor in the’ fal! seemed] for the veterans and a return to pop- * “obvious to the editors when he re-| ular government, with municipal home leased this paragraph: rule, und wound up with the victory ““—=“'The people of this State are en- titled to have the ssue framed against “Gov. Miller clearly stated and as clearly reflected in the record and S personality of the man named to op- pose him, The statement of the “principles of the people tn the Re- publican and Democratic Parties in opposition to corporate control of the State must have the sanction of a leadership and of candidates to carry out such principles.” HAS BEEN SOUNDING UP-STATE LEADERS. That Mayor Hylan had looked for- of Smith W. isrooke in the Republican primaries of Towa. ——— HYLAN DESIRES ONE DAY SET ASIDE FOR SUBPOENA SERVERS Sa Many After Him That He Feels Like Giving Them a Reception. As Mayor Hylan entered his office this mor rver Ing a process hand- ward to the Mayor's conference in}ed him « copy of an order from the Poughkeepsie as a sounding board/Appellate Division requiring the for his‘aspirations to the Demoeratte |jjourd of Estimate to appropriate nominations for Governor leaked Ut] 1 605 0 to moet payroll hes here yesterday when it was mude] tothe om ie Cocoa oH ~ es of the ‘Trans sho Known that he had been sounding) inti; the end of tne present year Democratic leaders upeditate on vari- Yesterday the Mayo pted against ous issues, filled with~ prescience, Re airy La which must be fought out before the|{ne Shbroveution jn a committer of people in the fall, One of, these 18] isimute, A formal vote on the ape the hydro-electric problem. The peo- «ple up-State are pretty well divided ‘on that proposition, for many of them propriation wil be taken to-morrow at the regular meeting of the board. ‘ It wus said to-day that the Ap- fee in the legislation enacted In the! peiatn Division. of the. Supreme Just session and favored by Gov. Mil-|Gourt would have the right to in- ler cheaper rates for lighting and 'M)}q:vjqually hold in contempt any al! other channels wherein electricity |member of the Board of Estimate 4s employed; a check on the corporate who m t{ vote against th court Ynterests egainst which Mayor Hylan} order, even though there be enough Anveighs. The Mayor didn't proclaim /affirmative votes in the timate Doldly against the proposition before} Roard to-morrow to pass the $1,500,- the editors, He gave the impression What be was still sounding out the Gectrine, and he didn't get much ap- Dlause when he said “What of the water-power legisia- Mon which has turned over the great- er part of the water power rights of 000 claim ‘There are so many process servers haunting City Hall lately," sald the Mayor, ‘that | think tt might he well to hawe a certain day sot aside on which I could sit in the public recep- tion room and await subpoenes. he was employed at the du Pont plant quaintanceship soon ALLIES AT ODDS, —All idea of an international lean to Germany has been given up by the Committee of Bankers. upon the form of their report to this effect, which will be submitted to the Reparations Commission. Ps sion’s reply to their recent note as an official does wot exist, and therefore plans for n lonn cannot be advised. FRENCH LOAN FOR Vive Cabinet epdaughter ot Alfred I, du Pont, She is a daughter of Mr. du Pont's second wife and in- herited a considerable fortune upon her death two years ago, She is eighteen and Glendenning is twenty- four. Behrend, President of the Union Transportation Co; Louis L. Tribus, President of the Staten Island Sub- way Committee, and Capt. Harry Gibbs, Chairman of the Citizens’ Com- mitte The audience was divided in its preference between those who favor the proposed city built tunnel of com- bined freight and passenger tubes and those who favor the Transit Com- mission's proposed rapid transit pas- senger tube or the alternate one, but both of which are designed to go from Bay Ridge to Staten Island. , Daniel L. Turner, Consulting Engi- neer of the commission, explained the purposes of the commission's routes. He showed 6n a map how it would be possible to go from Staten Island to Times Square in 89 minutes. George Cromwell, who was the only ‘ker at the previous hearing, mr appeared to-day to urge the construc- tion of the Transit Commission's tun- nel. Glendenning was first introduced ‘o Miss du Pont during the war when vise ice in Wilmington as a chemist. ripened Ac- into and solu’ Pre i BANKERS ABANDON) LAID AT REST WITH and to Reparation Commission | Escort Body of “American The Transit Chairman assured the audience that the engineers have ad- expressed again the hope that the city together and work out some sort of|t CONEY ISLANDERS ASK IMPROVEMENT The hearing on the Brooklyn Rapid Transit t Transit Commission offices be- had borrowed nearly all her fortune of a million francs and lost it in speculation; that they quarrelled fol- lowing her threat to cease furnishing money and he attacked her. In self defense she shot him. She maintains her daughter had nothing to do with the shooting and knew nothing of it until her arrest, The circumstancesof the death of her first husband convince the au- thorities that she murdered him for his fortune. At the time the verdict was suicide. Jacques was found at his desk at home with a bullet through his temple and the rcvolver lying on the desk. There was a letter—which the police now think was likewise forged—announcing his intention to suicide owing to business worries Madam Bessarabo wrote under pen-name of “Hira Mirtel’’ and is quite well known in literary ¢ les in Paris. She is the authoress of nine books and had one play produced in Paris by a dramatic society. One of d that freight and passenger serv. in the same tube won't do, and the Board of Estimate would get tion of the probl N TRANSIT SERVICE operty Owners Are Heard ny Commission at Re- sumed Hearing. regarding service was resumed to-day system, equipment, He explained, as. did Mr. Turner| ‘re Secretary James =: Nike: the| her books of poetry was published to This Effect. Beauty.” and Chairman McAneny, that the|,,™.. Mf Smith. | repre ieee ee of [it Mexico City in 1916 and had a aUty: city plan of a combined freight and| Property | Owners | Amsocistih | O' liurse sale in Fran ~ ae passenger tunnel was not practicable, st ale tr She was also interested deeply in PARIS, June 8 (Associated Press).| PITTSBURGH, June 8.—Thous prov in connections from as it did not provide for rapid tran- sit, but rather for freight and railroad passengers, but not rapid transit passengers, as defined by the Transit Commission. A conference, “around a table,” with the Board of Estimate and the Tran- sit Commissioners attending, was suggested by Mr, Cromwell, who of spectators lined the route of Lillian Russell's funeral here this afternoon paying their last tribute at the cata- falque of “Fair Lillian,’* The procession was led by a detach- ment of the United States Marine Corps, In which she held the rank of railroad that ars must well upst: nect Wes: a sh They are meeting to-day to agree Coney Island to Manhattan. 4piritualism quently held ous a and ultism and fre- “seances” in her luxuri- oetments at which He sald after leaving Norton's Point passengers bound for Manhattan " times acted as “medium.” t walk downstairs to the Still |tertained extensively and held a Avenue terminal and then walk | weexiy “literary salon"? at ber home airs for a long distance to com-}at which numbers of writers and with trains such as Sea Beach, t End and others, He thought hort platform should be built to poets gathered. During the searches following the ss A es crime the police found a number of vork of formulating the re-|Gunnery Sergeant during the war.|urged that differences between the], leo. suggested mol va login Poller at i tated, may take two or| stalwart marines accompanied the cas;|two bodies be forgotten in the inter- Ate ee acne be wanted dupe oeeeueee 4 et wage i aw ose ae port, it is stated, fi ket as pall bearers and as it was laid|ests of rapid transit for Staten Isl- Ss Ser Bncemipletes Done nln Maa hree sittings. The conviction of the committee is in the Moore family vault in Allegheny He and, Cemetery a firing squad of legion vet- Chairman McAneny expressed yedit basis of Germany must be out- ined clearly. The bankers look upon the commis- ready and willing to do whatever was necessary to bring rapid transit to Staten Island. Max Thaten said that Mr. well does not represent the senti- ment of Staten Island, that Mr. Cromwell was ‘not present at the meeting at which the Staten Island Subway Committee passed a resolu- tion endorsing the so-called “Hylan tumnel’’ as the quicker and more ex- pedient remedy for rapid transit for Staten Island. He showed the com- mission a local cartoon in Staten I land depicting the Transit Commis- sion and the Mayor belaboring each other with shovels, Chairman MeAneny sald the Tran- sit Commission has no quarrel with anybody; it is prepared to go ahead and give rapid transit to Staten Island as soon as it can, He said the com: mission wants to build the rapid tran- sit tube alongside the proposed freight and passenger tunnel. Mr. McAneny explained that the freight tube proposed by the city will take @ 2 per cent. grade while the passenger tube will take a 4 per cent, grade upon reaching the mainland President Cahill spoke ‘tas a native Staten Islander” and sa'd the people of Staten Island were anxious for rapid transit, but also were equally as anxious to get the benefits of freight traffic which would enhance Statén Island industr'ally and com. mercially. He congratulated the Transit Commission on its expressed desire to see Staten Island get a freight tunne! as well as a passenger tunnel. Mr, Cahill sa'd the Transit Commission has been badly misrep- resented as being opposed freight tunnel. Mr, Cahill did not agree with Chairman McAner he latter's re mark that the Board of Estimate uld have nothing to do with the sting Brooklyn Rapid Transit and Notables of the stage and persons from all walks of life packed Trinity Church and heard the Rey. Edward 8, Travers, who officiated at the ser- vices, dwell on Miss Russell's eu cesses on the stage and In the wor and the exemplary conduct of her private life. Secretary of Labor James J, Davis was an honorary pall bearer, Othere were Senator Hiram Johnson, Con- gressman Stephen Porter, William A. Magee, Mayor of Pittsburgh, and Howard Chandler Christy, —_ MUNICH-CHICAGO IN 24 HOURS IS GERMAN’S DREAM Only Requires Lifting of Al- lied Ban on ‘Teuton Aircraft. GENEVA, June 8. America will be able to read all the principal Huropean news- papers within three days of their: publication and letters will take six days for transit between Ar- gentina and Europe, instead of twenty-nine, when the Allies ralse their bam on the manufacture of aircraft in Germany. ‘This is the promise attributed to Herr Borr, director of the Zeppelin works at Friedrichshafen, Germany, Broc That Crom- | tran ha declaration unanimity car de: pass with RECONSTRUCTION Billion Franc Issue Will Raise ‘Total to 80,000,000,000, PARIS, June 8 (Associated Press), —Another interior loin of 4,000,000,- 000 to 5,000,000,000 francs will be floated shortly to continue for recon. struction in devastated regions, the was told to-day by Finance Minister De Lasteyrie The Minister said the flotation would! be through the special reconstruction bank of the Credit Nationale. ‘This loan will raise to about 20,- 000,000,000 francs the money borrowed, in this way for reconstruction, in ad- dition to about 60,000,000,000 francs spent for the same purpose, derived from other sources, such as short term national defense bonds, per aid hou Pir D. atte! MAN AND D MAN SHOT we IN A HOTEL ROOM ATLANTIC CITY, June 8.- Revies, who has been apart from her husband, ts belie be dying from @ bullet wound r yday in a room at the Marsiall Hotel on Har nigh plac the Mrs. Lola Gioson don He plans to launch an airship ; lice she was shot by 9 me tals he hag foom with her ang. With @ capacity of 100,000 eubte who afterward shot himself The metres, equipped with engines de. police aay his name Is Benfarli Bilerles veloping 3,000 horaspower and ca- of Kingston, Pa. pable of flying from Munich to He Is tecovering from his wound and hes refused to make & statement, Chicago in twenty-four hours, w was wer gents ma‘ntained during rush hours ines. take more short Essentials of good service on surface First, should be absolutely regular; ign of cars and seats should be such as to secure comfort for every safety; fourth, should be frequent. He added that over loads on surface rs should ‘not exceed 60 per cent. excess of passengers over seats in the usual two-man closed car, exces ATTEMPT TO WRECK derailed and the train was brought to a stop within a short distance hody of a man about sixty years old working hours and two ticket] jessarabo soon had planned to publish During the long imprisonment ; rminal. al mate ‘ that two things are fundamental to a] ¢rans fired three volleys, Sitingueas to pursue Mr, Ciornwallie| nena ghertege Guise of the EUR te loan: Firat, unanimity among the| ,,7"e casket bore @ solitary wreath,| suggestion and said that previous) commission's Transit Rureau, spoke | handsome statuesque woman of for lenders, which were to Include al} the Rift cv lvreadent and Mrs./attempte to confer with the Board) ot the possibility of mak'ng service} seven years. . Her daughter is Countries represented on the Repara- | Harding. Flora tributes from nota-| of Extimate on transit matters were| on surface lines more attractive to} pretty dark-haired gil tions Commission; second, that the} ° ! hrous' he world filled the} futile, but the commission was stilll draw patronage from rapid transit] One of the interesting points of the He said there are sect’ons in sklyn where surface lines could hauls from rapid sit lines than they do at present. trial is whether the prosecution will demand the guillotine as the penalty for a woman, oy an JOHN C. HAVEMEYER, EX-SUGAR MAN, DIES Civie Worker Was Son of Former Mayor William F. Havemeyer. John C, Havemeyer, who twenty years ago abandoned the sugar busi- ness because, he said, he could not see his ‘‘way clear to lead a Christian life while at the same time boosting the price of the sweetening of the coffee o fthe died early thir morning home Lamartine Avenue, ninetieth lines Mr. Roberts described the intervals between cars second, enger; third, cars should operate maximum speed consistent with intervals between cars For open , he said, there should be a seat passenger during rush hours. He for one-man cars the standard ald be a maximum of 2 per cent. 38 of passengers over seats, poor,” his Yonkers, at in in his . meyer, whose father, Wil- vemeyer, was Mayor of in 1848-49, had been ill In later years he devoted NEW HAVEN TRAIN 1d Dead Man After Hit- ae A ne nm himself to preaching and fre- ting ‘Ties Wired to [quently heard in Methodist pulpits : Track. His gutspoken opposition to Sunda. golf—al least one golfer was arrest on Mr. Havemeyer's complaint Yonkers one of its occasional sensi tions. He was one of the organizers of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, charter member of the New York Historical Society and active in the Y. M,C. A. and the Civic League, The funeral will be held at his late residen Lamartine Avenue, at 10:30 ay He is survived two daughters, Mrs. ix, “of Montreal, and Mrs. Thomas L. Moore of Richmond Va., One son, J + iiavemeye Ardsley-on-the-Hudson, and eleven grandchildren, ANIELSON, Conn., June 7.—An mpt to wreck @ northbound train the New York, New Haven and tford Railroad was made late to- ht between Wauregan and this .e, Seven ties which were wired to track were struck by a New Lon- to Worcester train, No cars were hen trainmen examined the place} Robert e the tes had been the mangled found, State and railroad police ¢ called to investigate, HUTCHISON LOSES IN GOLF MATCH ON LINKS ABROAD American Is s Defeated by Eng- lish Player in 1,000 Guineas Contest. GHENEAGLES. Scotland, June 8 (Associated Press)--Jock Hutéhison, only American competitor remaining in the play in the thousand guineas olf tournament here, was eliminated to-day by A. G. Havers of England. He defeated Hutchison by one hole. Hutchison's defeat came In the first round of the tournament. In brilliant weather he and Havers be- gan play in their match before a large gallery. Hutchison laid his second shot to the first green, four yards from the pin, and sank his putt, taking the lead, Havers holed a four yard putt at the third, squaring the match, and took the lead at the fourth. Huteh- ison missed an opportunity at the fifth to draw up even. The hole was halved and he remained one down. Both played the sixth badly, Havers putting his second in the bunker while Hutchison pulled his second 50 yards cross the course. The Amer- ican had a good lie, however, while Havers took two shots in the bunkers and one more on the putting green. The hole was Hutchison's and the match was square. Hutchison won the seventh by get- ting down a long putt, but lost the next hole. Up to the turn Havers had bee content to hold Hutchison off the tee, but in coming home he got bet- ter distance through all the long holes and won the eleventh and the thirteenth, Driving wildly, however, he lost the next two and the matoh went to the eighteenth, On this hole Havers had a big ad- vantage from the tee, his shot land- Ing well onto the green, Hutchison @ made a great effort to save the match by an extremely long putt, but the ball curled around the hole and Havers won by one up. The victor was promptly congratulated by the American. Mayo defeated T. Williamson of Nottingham three up and one to play, and Kirkwood defeated Lochart of Gleneagles four up and three to play. Arnaud Massy of France defeated Tom King of the Royal West Norfolk Club five up and three to play; Ocken- den of Raines Park defeated G. Smith of Lossiemouth two and one; John Henry Taylor of Mid-Surrey defeated Yack Ross of Adington four and three; George Duncan of Hangerhill defeated Robert McInnes of Whits Craigs at the 20th hole; Abe Mitchel! of North Foreland defeated F. C Jewell of North Middlesex two and on Ray Oxhey defeated McNeil of Royal Portrush one up, and Compton - defeated Vardon one up. YY In the second round, J. Anderson Perth defeated Hayers one up, Mitchell defeated Duncan one up, Ock- enden defeated Taylor two and one and G. Gadd of Roehampton defeated Massy three and one. Joe Kirkwood, the Australian open champion, was eliminated in the seo- ond round by Compton, who defeated Vardon in the first round. Compton won from Kirkwood two up and \ to play. “e o1co. BRYAN—On June 7, 1922, at her home, Me, 346A Lafayette av. FRANCES BRYAN, She Mrs. John Cowan and Augusta 0, Bryas, and three sons, Joho J., Edward J. and Charles 8. Funeral on Friday from her home at 0.30 A. M.; thence to Church of the Natiw ity, Classon av, and Médison &t., Breaky lyn, where a mass of requiem will be offered at 10 A. M. Interment Onivary Cemetery. CAREY.—ROBERT B, CAMPBELL FO- NERAL CHUROK, Friday, 2 P, M, HAVEMEYER.—At Yonkers, N. ¥. JOMN CRAIG, son of the late Mayor Wilitam ¥. Havemeyer and Sarah Craig Have meyer, in his 90th year, Funeral service at his late residence, No, 58 Lamartine av, Yonkers, Sat} morning at 10.80 o'clock. Trath lea Grand Central Station, upper level, ati’ 8.50 A. M., Eastern standard time, be met at Yonkers station, Interment private. Brooklyn, AND BLP > WANTED—FEMALE. ‘BALHSGIRLS to demonstrate prevarati tweet department! ato x Mand oP. line of toll special qualttications, you nor beauty. shops sell or Apply Beowren fi M., 180 W. 42d at, Room 046. bead neckia wral rewards no questions ask Ss ___W. Unear. FOR SALE. 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