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4 ae — Passaic Man, Laughed At by Brother, Returns to Slay Child In Steep. Because he loved hia fourteen-year- old niece and had been forbidden by her father to marry her, Irving T nett, twenty-nine, a Passaic dealer, entered her home in Passaic early yesterday and killed her with & .88-calibre revolver as she slept. Standing by her bedside he then shot himself, dying an hour later at the Passaic General Hospital The dead girl Sadie Barnett, @aughter of Mr. news- was and Mrs. Herman ee S4D)& Sanne Barnett, No. 129 Parker Avenue, Passaic. Sleeping with her at the time-was her sister Bertha, thirteen. The mother heard the reports and ran to her daughters’ room, Five other families in the building also were awakened and hurried to the scene of the tragedy. Saturday morning Irving told his brother Herman that he was in love with Sadie and wanted to marry her. “Why, she is only a girl,” the father repli “You are only kidding your- 8 “No,” Irving is said to have re- plied. “TI love her and I'll eventually get her. According to the police, Irving exclaimed angrily as he left his brother, “All right, you'll see what is going to happen. You'll be sorry.” Irving Barnett had been attentive to his niece since he was discharged from the army. He served with the 87th Division. He lived only a short distance from his brother's home. Both bodies were buried yesterday afternoon in Lodi Cemetery. Zeal saseeaslcshdhy RUSSIAN NOTE STAYS HAGUE DISSOLUTION Soviet Delegates Call for Conference, Making Con- cessions. THE HAGUE, July 11 (Associate? Press).—A* communication from the Russian delegation to-day held out u prospect that the conference on Rus- sian ‘affairs her wheh had seemel on the verge of final breakdown, might be resumed. Maxim Litvinoff, head of the Soviet delegation, asked for a meeting of the Presidents of the three non-Russian sub commissions with the Rus. sian delegates to study means for re- suming the conference. As the uRssians were leaving the peace palace one of the delegates sald; ‘This probably will reopen the conference."* The Russian answer that accord was ‘possible, provided the powers abandoned their ultimatum for the restitution of confiscated property and indicated what countries would par- ticipate In financial assistance for Russia, with the amount and form of such assistance The Russians insisted that they were disposed to study the form of compensation for confiscated proper ty, but wished to postpone this ques tion until they knew the amount of the claims against them and until the Question of financial assistance was settied. LONDON, July 17.—Prime Minis- ter Lioyd George told the House of Commons this afternoon that unless a solution was found for the dead- Jockgin The Hague Russian confer- ence the Hritish delegation would profably return to England by the endgef the present week ek staal EUGENE ORMONDE DIES ‘AT SARATOGA SPRINGS One Time With 4 SPRINGS. N. Y., —Ormonde Bugene Jenkins, the stage as E July 17. e Ormonde, died last ight at the Saratoga cure after a long},Andro Hajek, a Polish laborer, of No. illness 127 26th Street, Guttenberg, N. Jy was Mr. Jenking was about sixty years] instantly Killed this afternoon by the Ad. He was born in Boston and among | Hetmont stone cording tote aut his first theatrical engagements was With the Augustus Daly Stock Co pany. He supported Blanch Bat Margaret Anglin. mother, who resides at Wailipan,’ Mass. known on ne and He ts survived by his DEBS GALLS UPON Leader of 1894 Rail We Declares Patriotism During War Was Mockery. CHICAGO, Debs, July 17.—Eugene leader of the Great has come for the unite and “strike together, gether and fight together.’* “There has been some slight dis- order and a few burt,” Mr, Debs said. been the extent of the violence, but it has been sufficient to bring to tho strikers what they fought for in the late World War, The Federal Gov- ernment announces through the De- partment of Justice that it will stand ne trifling on the part of the strikers and that if necessary armed force will be employed at once for thelr sup- pression. Governors of seven States have simultaneously announced that they have the National Guard in their re- spective States mobilized and ready to move at command when the exi- gencies of the situation demand ac- tion “You will have no trouble guessing what kind of action is thus meant Ikout v. American Railway Union strike in 1894, to-day issued a statement to striking raflroad men and other unions that the time rank and file to vote to. scabs have been “This has Widow of Hammerstein to Wed Italian Prince, Cousin of King — - THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 17, T9292, _ MORATORIUM ONLY HOPEFOR GERMANY, BOARD CONVINCED Must Have Long Breathing Cc. Ca aE STEN on the part of the Nationul and State Governments which you shouted for, voted for, invested your last dollar for and crossed the Atlantic to fight and be gassed and die for in the war to make the world in general and America in particular safe for demo- eracy and liberty, “If in the light of this situation you do not realize the crying need for unity, for solidarity on every front, re- gardiess of creed or color, you are in- deed in @ pathetic plight and your case is all but hopeless. Your week craft unions have got to be converted into a powerful industrial union, and you have got to cut loose once and for all from the rotten political partles of your masters. STEELLADEN CAR GRAHESINTODECK OF ITY FERRYBOA Tug Runs ‘Into Powerful Cur- rent and Hits Pier Occupied by Fire Company. The Central Railroad of New Jer- sey tug, Jersey Central, Capt. Georgo W. Baker, towing two floats car: ing loaded freight cars and moving northward in the East River close to the Manhattan pier line on a strong flood tide, shortly before noon to-day, ran into powerful currents and eddies just below the Grand Street ferry. The tug was lashed between the two floats and was unable to kep them headed upstream, The rear end of the tow swung shoreward and crashed into a pier oc- cupied by No, 66 Engine of the New York Fire Department. The shock parted the lines binding the floats to the tug and the outside float was caught by a sweep that ran it into the ferry slip at the foot of Grand Street where the municipal ferryboat Wyoming had just discharged the last of a big cargo of trucks from Broad- way Williamsburg. Capt. Baker and his crew managed to get hold of and control the float that had struck the Fire Department pier, The other struck the Wyoming astern with a jar that released the blocks under the wheels of the cars. A flat car loaded with steel ran half way onto the lower deck of the Wy oming and remained suspended be- tween the ferryboat and the float Four freight cars oladed with cement ran off the float and sank to the bot- tom of the ferry slip. While no one was hurt the wreck was a bad one. Commissioner of Plant and Structures Grover Whalen estimated that cars and permit the slip to b In the meantime the Grand ferry service will be crippled, i bd s WIFE DESERTED HIM, used. Dr. Him at Omce. Filing #n onawer in Supreme Dr Madison Avenu: tions and charges stone abandoi moved all the f and went to the Hotel realde, Prior to her that Mrs. d him on Feb. m4, departure, patients, causing He also says he home for thre tody of the “great mortification, days. seeks the cus Eisetite PICKED His WAY To DRATH ton, @ section of North Bergen, He had been working among some rock: with a pick, when, it ia be struck the piece dynamite hurled more than fifteen feet, leved, He it will take four or five days to raise the sunken freight Street REPLIES DOCTOR, SUED Marblestene Says She Strack Court to-day to his wife's suit for separation, Joseph 8. Marblestone, of No. 1356 denies al her alloga- Marble~ re- niture from their home Netherland to he sald, his wife struck him in the prescence of his was barred from his e-erushing works at Gran- N. J. he was |Next year and compete fo Mrs, Pe SEB R aide See te Sie bla Widow of the late impresario, Oscar Hammerstein, has announced that in a year she will wed Prince Oleg V. Radomar, a cousin of the King of Italy. Mrg. Hammerstein is not wor- ried over the marriage of Sep- tember to June. The Prinée is in his early twenties, many years her junior. Mrs, Hammerstein, who was z QEGK born on a farm near Syracuse, RapoMAR, N. Y., already has made two matrimonial ventures. The young man,” says Mrs. Hammer- Prince, who is not at all stein, “exceptionally well edu- wealthy, is now in Smyrna on cated, and speaks seven lan- business for the Standard O11 guages fluently.” Company. “He is a serious minded GOLF TITLE CUP REVEALS IDENTITY OF GENE SARAZEN, NEW CHAMP last month by the American, Walter Hagen. FIRST CHAMPION WHOSE GOLF STYLE CAN'T BE DESCRIBED Sarazen’s Play Not Observed by Critical Writers—Had to Watch Others. CHICAGO, July 17.—In addition to the distinction of being the first per- son of the Latin races to win the na, tional open golf championship, Gens Sarazen of Pittsburgh, the twenty- one-year old professional who per- formed that feat at Skokie Saturday, is the first player to win a national golf title and yet be so little known to golf experts that none can describe the style of his play. ‘The genial youngster, who snatched the premier golf honors from a neld of 329 doughty Scots and American adopters of their native game, was not observed by eager galleries or by criti- cal golf writers. He ploughed his way around the Skokie course twice tn the qualifying rounds and four times in the champlonship, yet no one paid any attention to him until he turned Into the last nine. Then, when word spread that he had scored 38 for the penultimate nine, the golf writers alone realized that he had a goodly chance to down the better known players, But the frisky stripling was already well on his way to the tenth green and there were the mighty Hagen, the sturdy John Black, with his Scotch brogue and black pipe, and the bril- Mant Bobby Jones to watch, for they had reputations and would likely win if any one could be better than another by a stroke or so in such a galaxy. So the boy of Itallan ancestry tripped home in 85 for a record 68 in any champlonship fourth round be- fore the news really spread that he might be the winner over all. the canniness of Scotia, the imperturba- bility of Britain and the wonderful energy of native America, But it was too late to watch the prodigy. —_>——_ SECTION OF TARIFF WRITTEN BY MAKER OF COTTON GOODS WASHINGTON, July 17.—Henator Lenroot, Republican, Wisconsin, charged to-day in the Senate and Senator Smoot of Utah, ranking Re- publican on the Finance Committee, (Continued From First Page.) there until I was almost fifteen years old when Sparling gave me a job as addle on the Brooklawn links and a sort of assistant to him, I would rather play golf than eat, and T made a hit with Sparling by always being willing to do anything he wanted me to do, and when he was engaged at other things and.I had no Job to look after I would take my clubs and a ball and go out and work on im- proving my weak points. “It was not until I was seventeen years old that Sparling told me what he really thought of me. He said he thought it would take me about four years to get into shape to hold my own with the best golfers in the coun- try. You bet I was pleased at that but doubtful, thinking maybe he was kidding me along because he liked me. I guess he saw what was in my mind because he sald: “‘When you are twenty-one years old you will have your big day in golf.’ “Sparling was some prophet, On Feb. 18 | my twenty-first birth- day, I won the Southern open cham- pionship in New Orleans. On that occasion It was something like out at Skokie, Nobody knew I had won until all the cards were in and mine was found to be the lowest. Nobody had paid much attention to me. “At Skokie I went into the com- petition with a great deal of con- fidence, but some of that had evapo- rated after Imadea score of 74 on the first round, I thought that would be very high—that a dozen of the oldes players would be ahead of me, “But that evening when I compared my score with the others I saw I hadn't done so badly. And I had been off my best form. So I figured that if I could run up so well with the stars when I knew I wasn't playing my best game I had a chance to win out at the finish. After the second round I felt sure I would win and it was a good thing for me that the crowds overlooked me. 1 had noth- ing to b.ther me and nothing to do but play the best golf I knew how." While renewing his acquaintance with home cooking at the home of his parents at Rye, the champion will keep in practice on the links in that vicinity. He has accepted an tnvita- tlon to use the links of the West- chester-Biltmore Country Club and will visit the links he played over as a boy and on July 80 at 2 P.M, will play Tommy Armour, British ama- teur, 18 holes, He js entered in the Canadian open championship at the Mount Bruno Club, Montreal, This competition be-| admitted, that the section of the gins on July 98 He told nis|Tariff Bill imposing an additional friends in Pittsburgh as he was pass-| duty of 12 per cent, ad, valorem on ing through on his way to New York| fancy cotton cloths yesterday that ho will go to England ne British [oven championship, which was won word” as proposed by ator Henry F. manufacturer of Providence, R. L former Ben- was “word for] washington and Philadetnhin * cotton goods Spell in Reparations, Allied Experts Find, PARIS, July 17 (Associated Press.) —Members of the Allied Committee on Guarantees returned to Paris to-day from a month's inquiry in Berlin with the majority of its mem- bers convinced that a moratorium of two years or more on cash indemnity payments is the only solution of the present financial crisis in Germany, ‘The report of the committee to the reparation commission probably will be made Thursday or Friday. While it will not contain, it appears, @ def- inite recommendation for a morato- rium the members of the committee are expected to inform their respeo- tive delegations that a long breathing spell must be accorded Germany. It was learned from a reliable source that the French member of the com- mittee is the only one who does not favor @ moratorium, Despite this, he is expected to sign the report of the committee, which will be strictly tech- nical in character, The committee's inquiry has led a majority of the members to believe, it seems, that Germany has been making an honest effort to carry out the budgetary reforms laid down by the Reparation Commission, but that the country is suffering from the mis- takes made before these reforms were instituted, The committee unanimously agrees that the fundamental fault lies with Germany, because of her long delay in bringing about the financial /re- f us which would probably have pre- vented the fall of the mark. The Reparation Commission was officially notified to-day that Germany had deposited 32,000,000 gold marks in banks to meet her July 15 erparation payment. wo a BAIL IN MURDER CASE FIRST TIME For the first time in the history of the County Court in Brooklyn, a man charged with murder in the first de- gree was to-day released on bail. Assistant District Attorney Voss, ap- pearing before County Judge Reuben L, Haskell, made no objection to the bail when Natale Siclare of No, 1738 80th Street, Brooklyn, indicted on a charge of murdering Clementi Foc- ciolo on June 15 made the application. Focciolo was shot and killed in Washington Street. No witnesses have been found by the prosecution, but according to the police, Focciolo identified Siclare when he was dying in the hospital as the man who shot him. Attorney Edward J. Reilly, appear- ing for Siclare, told the court to-day that the evidence was not sufficient to warrant the indictment and that the defense would be that the identi- fication was made by a man who was in his dying convulsions, When Judge Haskell granted the application for bail, six friends of S clare tendered securities for the amount. a Oe PROMOTERS MAY BRING ACTION FOR $15,000,000 Court Rules Against Kidder, body & Co, and Others. BOSTON, July 17.—The full bench of the Supreme Court ruled to-day that the firm of Willett, Sears & Co., pro- moters, might maintain an action for $15,000,000 against Kidder, Peabody & Co. F. 8. Moseley & Co., the Chase National Bank of New York and Rob- ert F, Herrick, an attorney, alleging conspiracy to injure the business of the plaintiff. It is alleged the defendants entered into a conspiracy to deprive the plain- tiffs of thelr shares in the American Felt Company and the Daniel Green Felt Company, and succeeded in acquir- ing practically all of the plaintiff's stock in these compantes, valued at $10,000,000. It ts alleged that Herrick, employed to organize a syndicate to ob- tain a special loan for the firm in July, 1918, did not act in good faith and joined the conspiracy. As a CREASY MURDER TRIAL PUT OFF TO SEPT. 18 y A. Uterhart to Defeni @ SInyer of Teacher, ‘The trial of William Creasy, the Fort ‘Thomas (Kentucky) youth, who is charged with the murder of Edith La- voy, Freeport school teacher, was ad- Journed to-day until Sept. 18, by County Judge Lewis J. Smith in Mineola, Creasy was in court and sald he felt certain that he would be able to present evidence which would result in bis ac- quittal. The defendant told the court he hoped to secure the services of Henry A. Uter- hart. Upon hearing this, Judge Smith assigned Mr, Uterhart to look after the prisoner's interests. foe CHICAGO FIREMEN’S NINE LEAVES FOR GAMES HERE CHICAGO, July 1%—Tho Chicago Fire Department baseball team left to. day for New York, where the windy City firemen will attempt to recover the honors lost to the team here lest summer, ‘More than one hundred firemen and ctiy officials went along to rect for the home team, Stops wil! be made at and the party will reach New York Woedneadoy Pea- Al- New York won two out of three gumee last year, Father Kept Boy, Nine, Chained RIVAL RISH ARMIES us To Tenement-House Fire Escape Until Neighbors Told Police Little Andrew Karo as He Looked With Chains on His Legs. Hie Father Is Charged With Locking the Boy in Manacles for Four Days. Parent Held in $1,000 Bail by Magistrate—Child There for Four Days REVISE MANDATES TO MEET REQUEST OFS. FOR CHANG Great Britain, France and Belgium Agree as League Council Meets. John Karo, forty-four, a black- smith's helper, was held in $1,000 bail to-day in Essex Market Court on @ charge of endangering the life and health of his nine-year-old son, An- drew, by keeping him chained four days in their home, No. 523 Sixth Street. There are deep gashes on the boy's legs where the chains cut into the flesh. Police were told last night by a man who ran into the Fifth Street Station that a boy was chained to the fire es- cape of the Sixth Street house, Ser- geant William Burns and Policemen Harry Raphael and William Witten- berg were sent to investigate, As Raphael entered the rear yard he saw a boy with chains dangling from his legs crawl from the fire es- cape into a window on the third floor. The other policemen rapped on the door of the Karo apartment and a man's voloe told them they could not come im, They pushed their way into the squalid three-room flat and at first could see only Karo and two small girls, Helen, thirteen, and Julia, eight, in dirty, ragged clothing. Then they saw Andrew in a corner with a chain about a yard long wrapped around his legs and secured with a padlock. He could hobble only & few steps at a time. Helen said her mother is a cook at Asbury Park, and that Andrew, who te in Grade 8A tn the industrial school, Eighth Street and Avenue B, “runs away." Last week his father found him detained in the Oak Street Police Station and the next night caught him making tar balls on the roof of his home and throwing them at per- sons in the street. Karo locked the chains on Andrew Wednesday night, his daughter said, being afraid the boy would fall off a roof or otherwi-s endanger his Ufe. He had not unlocked them since, but two or three times a day, usually at night when nelghbors could not see, Andrew was let out on the fire es- cape for air, she said. “Yes, I've had to sleep in my clothes ever since,’’ Andrew replied to a question. He could not get his trousers off over the chain. Helen said she does the cooking and housework and that her father had not beaten her since she had “lung trouble." The brass sashwreight chain was filed away at the police station, after which the three children were turned ever to the Children’s Society and Karo was locked up. Kare admitted he put on the chains last Wednesday, but sald he took them off every night The doctors who examined Andrew do not think he suffered any per- manent injury. LONDON, July 17 (Ass: Press).—An agreement has been reached by Great Britain, France and Belgium respecting the points in dis- pute in the various mandates for for- mer German colonies, and those countries will submit to the Council of the League of Nations, at its nes- sion begun here to-day, new draft mandates for Class A and Class B territory. These revised mandates are believed by the Allied Powers to embody all the changes requested by the United States and to meet the objections raised in Secretary Colby's note of February, 1921. Only one point remains unsettled, and that concerns the missionaries in French mandated territory, The French desire more protection against political activities by missionaries, It is said the episode in Syria last spring, in which Charles R. Crane of Chicago was invol has made the French more emphatic on this point. It seems almost certain that the Class B mandates will be ratified. It seems more doubtful whether an understanding can be reached at this session on the Palestine and Syrian mandates. Both the Vatican and the French ‘Government feel that they in Palestine, while there are sharp divergencies among the Zionists, the Catholics and the Arabs. N Vacation have The World follow you, Mailed every day to your summer ddress, WORLD SUMMER RATES Per Per. Weok Month Morning & Sunday. .35 $1.00 Morning World... .25 ay Evening World... 25 Sunday World 10c, per Sunday Your newsdea! it for you, or remit 4! Cashier, New York World, Park Row, New York have special claims on the holy places | § MASSING FOR FIGHT CLOSE 10 LIMERICK De Valea Reported to Be With Rebels at General Fie'd Headquarters. DUBLIN, July 17.—With Free State and insurgent troops missing in the vicinity of Limerick a dxcisive battle which wil! decide the Irish civil war Was believed imminent to-lay.. The isurgents announced that Eamonn De Valera, rebel ‘eader, was ' (@F now at ‘General Field Heacquartera,’”” serving 02 the staff of the Director of Operations, BELFAST, July 17 (Associated Press).—Reports reaching here to- day represent the city of Cork as sut+ fering grievously at the hands of the Republican Insurgent forces, who are sald to be in absolute control of the elty, . The port of Cork has been closed, {t is said. Business’ premises have been seized, thetr contents appro- priated by the Republican troops bil< leted with the civilian inhabitants, There has been an outbreak. of rob- bery and destruction, according to ref ugees arriving here, interviewed by reporters for the Belfast Telegraph. These refugees are quoted as saying the trouble began about the time of the attack on the Four Courts in Dub- lin, and was initiated by crowds of young men from the country districts who started an orgy of looting and wanton destruction, devoting partiou- lar attention to the houses and prop- erty of Protestants. Many persons are eager to leave the city, but up to the present time only a comparatively few have succeeded. Dundalk is in the hands of the Nationalists, more than 300 Re« publicans having been taken prisoner, Saturday Dundalk was held by th Republicans, During the night Free State forces commanded by Gen, Hogan descended upon the town by, road and immediately began an envel+ oping movement. In quick succession they seized the county prison and the county hospital in *he south end of the town, the Bridge Street Barracks in the north and the Post Office and several business houses in the centre, Cardinal Logue, the Primate of Ire- land, preaching yesterday at Carlng~ ford, County Louth, where he is tale ing a holiday, referred to the present disturbed state of Ireland. He stronge ly denounced the murders, lootings, burnings and raldings. He said that in future those partictpating in spoke outrages would do so under pain excommunicatio! ea AIR CR H NEAR STRASBURG, ZABERN, Alsace-Lorraine, July 19 —An airplane attached to the Stras« burg-Paris service fell near here yess terday. The pilot and four passengers were killed. ‘Trade Mark Advt. on page 12 BIRTHS CANNENBAUM.—Mr. and Mra, Max Cane nenbaum wish to announce the birth of their daughter, GLORIA, on July 11, 386 Creston av., Bronx, OIEo. OGBORN—EMLEN ©. CAMPBELL FOw RAL CHUROH, Tuesday, 8 P. M. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. 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