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t farm formerly owned by William D, Phillips near which the bodies were found, it became known to-day The house, though Phillips moved Gut of it Jast July, is fully furnisted from top to bottom, except sfor oar pets, and shows signs of casual occu pancy. There is not a speck on any of the furniture. Though the ‘deds in the upper story ade ‘up there are mattresses on two of the bedsteads. Tn a 4rinking-wa'r tand in t kitchen was a five-gallon bottle halt filled with fresh, Thing water These facts were held to be of vital importance becaus: org! alements of three persons that Gey hed from time to time recentiy seen an auto- mobile with lights at or near the house in the the lights out. Two of t recognized the car as t! One of them, Louis T. F prosecutors to-day he passed the farm Aug. 27 and sew the Rev. Mr. Hall’s automobile turned off the turn- pike into the shrubbery along De Rus- eey Lane. Returoing later Mr overtook the Rey. Mr out evening with per t of Dr. Hall ck, told the Ruck said he Hall in the STRANI sas ll ° THY EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER’ 90 To73~ artretreset mitment para t=—> earee s area ——————— SSS APNEA OA and small holes, which made it look as if sume one had fired bird shot at it, The dried mud on the handker- chief indicated it had been left where ‘t was found long before the murders; the weather was clear from last Thursday until yesterday. It became known to-day that the discovery of which the detectives SpOMp yesterday as “pertinent to the case in hand’ was a number of let- ters, said to be six, from Mrs. Mills to the Rey, Mr. Hall, which were found yesterday in the pocket of one. of his coats, The information in them showed more of the course of + frleudship between the rector and Mrs. Mille and their movemente and meetings than has been revealed from any other source, The detectives carrying on the In- igation said to-day’ with some show of frankness that they had eliminated all members of the Milts family from complicity: in the mur- ders. They said their strict question® Ing, especially of James Mill terday wa learn if signifi forts had been made to purch: silence or that of his daughter Char- lotte as to anything whieh they knew 4 machine going Into town with a woman beside him. Ruck could not see the woman plainly Another automobile hackman, whose name {s not divulged, told of ng the clergyman’s car, lights o and empty beside the turnptke at tho on- trance to the farm late one evening, “about two weeks agd." The third piece, ‘of corrob-iration came from the present owner of the house, Samuel Levine. The house is now owned by Samuel! Levine, a New Brunswick real estate operator, who said he bought It to pro- mote a real estate development for $32,600, To get his commissigns as a broker, Mr. Levine said, he arranged © have Joseph H. Porter, real estate manager of the Middlesex. Title and Guarantee Company and trustee for William Stevens, the eccentric brother of Mrs. Hall, appear as tho purchaser and then himself took over the tit . Mr. Levine said the telephone was i left in the house at his request be- ' cause he feared his ability to get an- other one put in should he sell the ; ~ house or desire to occupy it. He has paid the telephone bills since July. He explained the presence of the fur- niture in the house by saying it was valuable old ‘mahogany, and he in- sisted onsgetting the furnure as the terms of a good bargain ‘ ‘ “Do you know if anybody has oc cupied the house since Phillips moved out?’’ Mr. Levine’ was asked. “Within ten days,” he replied, “Tr was paving the pls © in’ the’ evening “I saw an automobile with Jights out standing near the house. My first impulse was to go up and in- gate and then I thought better of it. There were no lights in the vhouse. I do mot know whose auto- mobile it was. I am not familiar with Dr. Hall's automobile.” It was understood my friends of the families of both murder victims that they frequently went together to the Parker Home for the Aged near the farm to entertain and console the in-4 and thet Mre. Mills frequently meetings, Inquiry at the home showed that the Rev. Mr. Hull had not visited the institution in Months and that Mre, Mills was not known the: The rendved intimations that there was a clandestine friendship between the rector and his choir lead brought an emphatic repudiation amy such charge from the Hall household. It came from an elderly “woman who said she wan Mrs. Hall’n oldest friend and entirely authorized to speak for her. She said: ‘Nothing which has been learned since last Saturday has changed the opinion of Mre. Hall and the members of her tgmily that Mr. Hall and Mrs, ‘Mills were killed by robbers; his gold Watch Was taken by them. The mem- bers of the family have visited the farm and have looked at tho spot where the bodies were found. They @re firmly of the belief that tae mutv- ders were committed elsewhere aid the bodies dragged there. “The letters found scattered about the bodies were undoubtedly intended for Mrs. Hall. Mrs. Mills frequently Wrote such letters to Mre: Hall, They were all in an exalted romantic liter ery strain. Mrs. Hail/has no reason to believe Mrs. Mills ever wrote a letter to her husband. * “As to the assistance given to Mrs ‘Mills last January b: Hall after her operation—it wi one uf many similar charities of the Hai! family, The chuash had an emergency fund to meet such needs. When th. truth is learned Gir. Hall's name wili be entirely cleared The telephone in the Philiips farm- house is now reported by the company as “temporarily ued." Calls for its number-—*34-1t denied. But when the receiver wa. moved up and down on the hook by visitors who found the place open te day, County Detective David appua Promptly in a swiftiy driven automo bile from New Brunswick to find out who was in the place Besides the activities regarding the farm, detectives, accompanied by automobile experts, went to the rec- tory Yo-day to study the tires on the two Hall automobiles i Prosecutor Stricker caused photo: Srapha and drawings to be made of the tracks of an automobile which Were found in @ sdft spot in the road leading up from De Russey Lane to the Phillips farm house. The machine must have been drven into the road at considerable speed, for it skidded violently after passing the soft spot ‘These prints were noted the morning the bodies were found Pearl Behmer, the girl who, with Pau! Schneider, discovered the bodies while searching for mushrooms was also under questioning to-day to learn if by any possibility che or her com Panion had any idea of what they Were going to find. There are no Mushrooms in that vicinity, A pile of shotgun shells, thirty o: more of them, was found to-day in a recess at the side of the house. From that spot and only from that spot is there from the house a clear view Of the little knoll on which the bodiet of the minister and the wife of the sexten were found. Yesterday’ 4 handkerohie!, wadded and ap, feaked by many rains into the ref soll of the lane | Fusaing past the knoll, wes found. Tt was perforated with meny large which might bring the murderer to justice Because of intercessions by persons financially and politically powerful, it is likely that the further question- ing of members of the Hal! household will be done at the rectory. There is nothing any one of them is known as yet to have done, the Prosecutor feels, that justifies forcing them to walk the gauntlet through the curi- ous crowds on the streets and in the court house corridors. Willie Stevens, the mentally un- gettled brother of Mrs. Hall, fs keyt under moral i¢ not physical restraint at the Hall home by his relatives. There was a big fire in New Brune wick last night. The McAdam grocery at No. 138 Seaman Street was burned to the ground. All the fire apparatus in town was called, including the Phoenix company of which “Wille” Stevens js an hon- orary member. He was seen (¢ ran down the steps of the Hall home and then to return at the command of some one within. For the rest of the evening he paced up and down the porch talking himself somplain- ingly Cut off from going to fires by night and from his favorite diversion, trap shooting, by day, the man seems to be bn the verge of losing ail control of himself, neighbors have observed. The importance as a clue of the au- tomatic 82-callbre found yesterday by Detective David is not yet estab It is not the revolver owned by lie’ Stevens and kept at the rectory, which is of 38-calibre. Detectives are reported to have found another witness living near the farm who heard shots last Thursday night. This makes five who say the. heard screams or shots. Apparently the investigators have been unsuccessful in tracing the tele- phone calis received by Mra. Mills and an early on the night of the murder, It is known thet Mre. Mills was called to answer the phone in ® neighboring house, and that Mr Hall received two calls., There has been no evidence that either called any one up on that evening, but it is now believed the second call for Mr Hall was {rom Mrs. Mills. His words are reported to have been: “Hello, Yes. I intended to go to the church, anyway. “How about later?" the clergyman is said to have been asked “L think I can arrange it,’ plied, Information gained by detectives strengthen the stories of James Mills, sexton of the church and husband of the murdered woman, and of the widow of the slain rector, that they did not understund the failure of the murder victims to return to their 1e- spective homes, Mills, in a new statement, thinks it was ubout 1 o'clock in the morning that he went to the church, thinking perhaps his wife had become ill had previously sald 2, which ts time Mrs. Hall sald she wont there with, her brother. thinking @er hus- Band may have fallen asleep in his study, Neighbors have come forward with the inf@rmation that they saw Mills going from pew to pewsin the chureh, turning a fleshlight into dark corners as if searching for something, Also statements were made that he re- Mre. Hall and her brother were seen In the Hall home about 11 o'clock Thursday night and>that Mrs. Hall Was pacing the floor Servants who heard the voices of Mrs. Hall end her brother uring the the woman sgemed deeply at breakfast and said been away ail night. 1 is dead or he never would this way raed that when Mrs. wv aay it has ome cary lost Thurs- evening she took” a trolley to Buceleaugh Park, arriving there, at the end of the trol line on the outskirts of New Brupswick, at $ P.M. She was alone, After leaving the trolley car she walked into the unlighted park. Mr Hall was said to have been seen walking toward the park a few minutes before It is » lonesome trai to wh the bodies were found. It leads 800 verds through the park, on to a paved ad, through a dirt lane, on te an- other paved road and anuther lane. Hor two persons on foot could have made thelr way there in the darkness is dificult to understend, “ TOP THE WAR!” CRY OF 6,000,000 LONDON. Stop the wart" Sept. 20 wae the slogan representatives of ° 6,000,000 British laborers es the General Counell of the Trades Union Con- grees met here to-day, Leaders of the Congress stated h tuents were decidedly opposes §=to =o military t action epainst the Komalists in the Near Eart, Action in to bo taken on the resolution of Arthur Hender. fon, which calls fer organization ot war protest meetings all over the United Kingdom The Nationa! Joint Gounell, representing the entire erganiged lebory movement and Laborjis Members of Pariament, k to eneet to-night ‘ Fal TREASURY DEFICIT IMPERILS U5. APPROPRIATION BILLS; | BEPUTONHARD) « BRAKES MUST Little’ Chdnce of Cutting Down-$650,000,000; Half May Be Ralsed. a FOR DOMESTIC USE MEASURES FACE VETO. Congress Cannot Afford Now to Authorize Any More Expenditures. (Continued from First Page.) By David La ce. charge will be made for labor. (Special, Correspondent ef The Eve- a World.) WASHINGTON, Sept. right)—Emtirely apart from the fact that President Harding vetoed the Bonus Bill, a profound impression has been made by the oMclal dis- closure that a deficit of $650,000,000 faces the country for the fiscal year which began last July and ends June 30 next. Government experts went dyer the estimated expenditures carefully and the figures submitted in detail to the President before he wrote his mes- sage, but were unable to promise any better showing of Goveetnment finances. This means,"in a nutshell, that Congress cannot afford to au- thorize the expenditure of any more money, and even the. pension bills and river and harbor proposals which are pending are likely to bg vetoed if they are put up to Mr. Harding. In other words, the brakes must be put on to keep the deficit from grow- ing and the departments will be re- quired to economize still further in any effort to put down the deficit itself. * Most \incomfortable too is the ne- cescity of acknowledging a deficit of $650,000,000 ut a time when the cam- Paign orators would have found it.so effective to refer to the splendid work done in balancing the budget for the fiscal year, which ended in June, 1922 As a matter of fact, the Government did finance itself well and balanced the budget when it had appeared that there would be a deficit of from $25, 000,000 to $100,000,000 No such promises of reduction of the deficit can be made thie time, un- lese. revenues are derived from unex- pected sources. The most that can be hoped for {s a reduction pf the deficit from about $650,000,000 to about halt that sum, and even this is by no means certain, charge will be 25 cents a ton. 20 (Copy- will be made for ‘'storing.’’ both necessary will trimming” be and storing’’ 76 cents a and the Bronx During March, to the coal strike, charges prevailing, it wa office of the Fuel Administ. the mines had been idle for months. four colleries of dissatisfaction resulting from recent settlement. trict administrators, by Mr. the extra charges: Manhattan and $18.00; egg, $18.25; chestnut, 813.25; pea, wheat, $820; rice, $7.2 stove, $10 Astoria yard: Broken, stove, nut, $13.60 $11.25; No, 1 buckwheat, ton without labor; No. $6.30. from oe 441 MORE CARS OF COAL The Lehigh Valley Railroad nounced to-day that anthracite coal w York tide water y HARD COAL PRICE =” FINED AT $13.25 TON Where the chute doés not go direct into the bin and ‘trimming’: is necessary, the Houses having no chute, where the coal will have to be carried into the cellar by the bagful, a charge of 60 cents a ton The maximum labor charge, where ton, which places a maximum retail price delivered of $14 a ton in Manhattan 1922, just previous coal for house- hold purposes retailed {n New Yori for $18.10 a ton with the same labor said at the tor today ‘The 16 cent increase over last March was said by operators to be fair after five Tt was learned to-day that three or located on the Dela- ware and Hudson Railroad were idle yesterday, the miners being called out on strike by their local unions because the Mr. Woodin will meet the eight dis who come from all parts of the State, to-day and a State organization will be perfected. Burns Brothers’ prices as given out Woodin, are as follows, plus Bronx—Broken, $18.25; 3 buek- barley, $6.20. Brooklyn and Long Island City, egg, Gelivered; pea, $8.80 per .80; No. 3, ARRIVE AT NEW YORK Funeral of Choir Phen Ses fr : ; SCENE at FUNERAL \ of MRS: MILLS_ USTICE MARCUS DENES MAD’ CHARGES OF OGY Says Weber’s Dinners Were No Different From Those He Would Serve. Supreme Court Justice Louis W. Marcus of Buffalo made g special trip to New York to-day to testify before Justice Burr in Supreme Court and deny allegations by a Negro maid, Annie Cannon, that he had enter- tained women in the apartment here of L. Lawrence Weber, well-known an-|theatrical producer, 441 carloads of received at New day. Perth Am- Judge Marous said he had been on the Supreme Court Bench seventeen rs and had been a widower nearly He said he had known years and “Did you ever see any guest at the ‘Weber apartment go into a bedroom with a woman?'’ asked former Sena- counsel for Weber in the habeas corpus proceed- The deficit arises largely trom the] pos elyed 370 cars for New York fact that Congress reduced the re-4 deilv Brooklyn one, Lang Island} six years ceipts from taxation thre the] seven, Newark twenty-nine, Jersey ity as new reveuue law and there was aa| teeuly-even and local Bestern.peinte| Weber intimately twel seven. A full train of fifty care will} when he came to New York made his unlooked-for shrinkage im tax re-] Srive today for New York City and|home with Weber. celpts due to the business depression. | iinity. Congress can hardly increase taxes ee ee now, so the alternative is reduction of expenditure. But even this is]MISSING PLANE BLUEBIRD | "'' Edger T. Brackett easicr said than done, for on the ; Veterans’ Bureau alone $530,000,000 SAFE AT DESTINATION will be spent this year, or more than half what used to be expended ingore: |Wenrhe® Florida, station war days for Uncle Sam's entire is a budget. There is no telling how’ MIAMI, Fla, Sept. 20.—The ar- much greater than $530,000,000 they "val at Stuart, Pla., of the hydrgaer- expenses for disabled veterans and{oplane Bluebird, which left Barnegat vocational training will run, but the| Bay, Sept. 7, on a Southern filght, Government's polfey is to spare no money in that direction In order to cut the $650,000,000 own somewhat, it is likely rnment will sell some of the ailroad securities which it took from the railroads during Government op- cration when various sums were ient to them for equipment. Probably $100,000,000 may be realized this way. Approximately $125.000,600 in Inter- est payments from Great Britain have \iready been put in the estimated re- ceipte for this fiscal year, so, if there ig @ default, the deficit would be in- creased. If France or some other Allied countries could pay. interes some progress would be made in cut ting the deficit, but the most optimis- tic prediction to-day Is that with il sorts of economies and restriction of expenditure, the $854,000,000 will only be cut in half. All this is’on the supposition” that Congress wil Inot spend any more money, and that. of eourse, it will not,overturn the President's veto of the” Bonus Bill. Should the Senate follow the policy of the White House in advices from Stuart es DYE EMBARGO KILLED tend It Three Months. WAEHINGTON, bargo leg Sent, approved and refused to report out leg! lation proposing Licensing Act for Tariff Elll becomes law, or the Treasury Depertment, dictions would go by the boards, Trensury official ing of ANALYZING AMERICA P.. oPSS a David Lawrence, the widely <nown political and economic writer whose daily despatches from. Washington supply illuminating {nformation to the readers of THE NEW YORK EVENING WORLD, will begin next week a series of special despatches to be written during a transcontinental trp, His description of conditions as he finds them will be telegraphed daily to NEW YORK EVENING WORLD. Analyzing America, David Lawrence will cover many questions, such as the following: How does the Harding Administration stand with the people? How are the impertant Senatorial and Congressional contests golng? What is the business and economie eutlook? What is the Western attitude toward Bastern Republi- can leadership and the Agrieuitural Bloc? ‘What ts the genera! sentiment on Prohibition? This will be a first-hand study of the thinking heart of the United States by the trained mind of a Washington ¢ pondent of lone experience in political observation, Just before tho fall election thers afi! be genera! summary in a serity of three despaiches on the Congress auiicok and trend of opinion, Ihe daily despaiclies of DAVID LAWRENCE appear erclusively -a NEW YORK EVENING WORL ion Thirteen | year-old son but which disappeared, with the re- sult that the Navy Department in- structed all stations and ships to in- stitute @ search, was reported to-day BY SENATE COMMITTEE Refuses to Report Out Bill to &x- 20.—Dye_em- tion virtually was killed for this sevsion of Congress to-day by the Senate Finance Committee, which dis: extension of the Dyelners were three months after thel ated the t and override the veto, » contingency Not looked for at ell by the President to secure custody of his four- The jurist said he had not. “Did you, yourself, ever go into a bedroom with a woman in the Weber apartment "I did not, emphatically. Asked to tell the character of the dinner part! in tne Weber home, Justice Marcus asserted they were no different from those he would serve in his Buffalo home; that they ble, orderly gather- specting men and . Questioned concerning the Mquor served and ‘ta effect on the guests, the jurist said: “T am not @ drinking man myself, so’! have no appreciation of its ef- feot. J heve sen highbalis, cocktails nd wines served, but never witnessed any evidence of drunenness or rolstr- ing." said the Judge most Othr men named by the Negro maid having been guests ut Weber's din- regarding the entire respectability of the gatherings. Theso included F. Ray Comstock of the firm of Com- stock & Guest, who said he had been all pre-linterested in varion sthentrical enter- prises with Weber for seventeen yeasr, say the overrid-land Frderick H, Perry, uctor and di- ye veto is absolutely ‘“inoon. celvable and would be a calamity,’ —_—— rector, of No, 287 Central Park West “The innuendo has been made, sald Senator Brackett to Mr, Perry, “that you wefe in one of the bed- rooms with a young lady quest,’ “Tt is absolutely false,” the witness declared, He admitted his wife Lad secured a divorce from him a year and o half ago on statutory grounds, but said the evidence was not oh tained in Weber's apartment, but in enother one in b8ih Atreet “Did Mr, Websr tell you that a man had walked Into his office ond fired four shots at him, the man being the brother of a young lady?" Perry wos aaked by Samuel H, Lagusker, counsel for Edith Haller Dillon former aolress wife of Weber, Peri said he never had | of the alleged ceourrence Justies cus expiained the draw ing up of the agreemon in California between Weber amd Mrs. Jution whereby each wae to haye the ous tedy of (he child six months of the yeas, He said, however, (hat Mra Dillon nad seid she nad begun oe a. voree action and was leaving Dillon eke was ormel and did nor , som suppor, net, he paid Ale WAS ausieus ta sei a pew start in life and gol away f; (hose who were ‘dragging her down,’ apl wanted Weber to help her,’ he added Did you ever give lier ustices Marcus was aked 1, 9¢ Singer Slain With Pastor And Two Witnesses. Questioned in Inquiry 2 TL | CRE bs < ye WATHERINE MSCABE. MS CABE.. FAIL TO FILL JURY AT CREASY TRIAL New Panel Called to Select Twelfth Member in Mur- der Cas®. “Yes,"" he pened while we were making the agreement in California. She sald she owed a hotel bill of $900 and w ‘down end out.’ She gave me a re- ceipt for the money, but not a note.” Justice Marens said he would re- gard Weber's home as ideal for th child because of the environment, at- tention and care the infant 1 admitted. ‘That hap eived| Failure to secure the twelfth juro there. He said-there was great affec-| rom the panel of twenty additional tion between the ther and son. When Weber anted adivoreeliAeente Court te-dur teeke tite is from Mrs. Dillon he was given! witiam M. Cressy of Fort Thomas Custody of the-child. He ciaima that| icy fay the alleged, murder ef nig a : . for the ec nis he abrogated the California agree-| iy * cith DAvoy (OF Sree: ment because Mrs. Dillon had re port, L. 1, resulted In the adj turned to live with Jack Dili ee er motion-picture director hussand set eae ee Dillon has been in court throughout " a lai ‘ the proceedings ana@ has been \ory I baal 1 attentive to his wife. BUAee Uae ise SOI a BOOd ab oe said Judge Lewes J ® shot and wcuer at Freeport. in her boar house at ‘o, 155 North Main st Freeport, the night of June because she had broken off her engagement to FIRST GAME him, Creasy told police that the re girl shat If with his revoiver ST. LOUIS (N Sout a Bates, 2v.....0 ¢ 1% § ¢|HE.COULDN'T SAYS “NO”, desith, of 4 1 1.36) BANK IS SHORT $50,000 Hornsby, 2b... 4 0 © 3 3 Ol attesting Cashier Thought to Have Bottgmly, 1b. 3 0 0 8 1 0 Been Tricked Into Loan, Stock, 3b......4 0 0 0 0 Of CHICAGO, sept. 29—Discovery of a Schultz, rt 40) 4.1 0 in the funds of the Torporcer,ss 2 0 0 2 3 1 Aven: Bank and Ainsmith, c 1 0 0 0 0 0 nee of David EB. Carts Clemons, c a 0 OF 1°71 6 zi Haines, p. : al Pt ay ame a North, p 9 0 0 0 1 ofF . fi Barfoot, 2 bg 0 0 0.0 Fo + Aisclosed ‘several ‘dangerous Fournter , 1 0 0 0 0 0 Matsa Be 2h 18 Nevada eve teen (ilekad Inte tendin BROOKLYN (N henk funds on poor securities On Sept. 15 Carlson gave Olson, 2b 4 2 1 38 5 thang on to that, you may Johnston, 4 0 0 1 § 2|Hiraed his babies and drove away his T Gotti. 3 2 2 2g gptemetie Mattes ft 2 2 9 Ol Bovis LEG CRUSHED IN Schmandt, 1b. 4 0 2 14 1 06 AUTO TRUCK SMASH High, 3b 4 0 2 0 1 0 Drivers of Both Vehicles Are 5 Miller, ¢ 300206 moned to Court. Grimes, p 20 0 1 2 «0 wo automobiie trucks driven by Ist der Dorlean of No. & Unton wens, Totals BE 1B eee Re ee AMAA, GOHIOEA at ine -_caeemaat Whitlock Avenue and Tiffany Street LINEMAN KOLLED RY LI Wine] the Rronx, nt noon to-day, Walter Thomas Dooner thirty ght years] Pinkel, seventeen years, oO No. 108 014, of 890 Central Avenue, Newark, nf Prospect Avenun wae Hneman employedeby ihe Publte Sev [ie taped betwoan the tie James's Hospiial hep shoril a aed viet = ep fcrlea noon lode While a ng on 4) ni rorkan 8 were sin) i at Christie and uM e . A police i 4 them to Mos Try Piccadilly Little Cigars. If ou are not among those who now how good they are, get acquainted at our risk. There Is a guarantee in every package. 10 In the package Claro—Colorado Clasp Colorado : "| Breving World SOLDIER BEATEN | FOR RESENTING. DOCTOR'S INSULT Testifies Before U. S, Hospital Investigators He Wa Un- conscious for Hours. Jolin B. Martin, in United No. three montha a patient States Veterans Hospital the Bronx, to: gave before a committee investigat- ing conditions In the institution tes- timony of a beating he declared was given to him in the hospital by four ‘or five orderties, He was on the stand in the office of Martin W. Littleton, No. 149 Broadway, one of the com- mittee. Martin stated that he and a fell: patient named Woods were on lawn in front of the hospital when doctor passed and made a remark ta which he objected to the point of try - ing to strike the doctor. Several patrolmen then took him, he said, to “G" building, where violently insane patients are confined, and there he had a fight With the orderliess fer having struck Bim. Then he w overpowered, he went on, pinced in » straight-jacket and afterward beatey and poked into insensibility. He eai! he learned he wae unconscious for four and a half hours. The hospital records show that Martin was intoxicated on the day in question and resisted the efforts: of six patrolmen to bring him to the hospital. Martin said he obtained liquor in @ bootle® joint near the hog- pital. Martin told of the alleged abusive treatment of another patient at the hospital. This man, whose name he did not know, was a lieutenant in th navy and the recipient of the Nat War Cross for sinking a submarine, Martin said. ‘The fellow is in the insane building, now, Martin said. GOV. TAYLOR, AT 77, AN “OLD FIDDLER” ‘Tennessee Executive Enters Bow Contest. NASHVILLE, Sept 20. Alf A. Taylor, seventy-seven years old, Governor of Tennessee, is entered as a contestant in the annual Old Fiddlers’ Contest of the State here to-night. Goy. Taylor has been renowned 81 for his ability as a fiddler elnce his youth and the talent was sbared by his brother, the late Senator “Bob" Taylor. be, There Is More Than One Way of winning a customer. Ever try making Com- parisons — the Best Candy You Know with the Best Candy We Make, Advt. on Page 15 ° ° i -Notice to Advertisers . | Dleplay advertising type copy and release gl stern, sirvrinas io fone toa tusaee received after 4 P. Me the a o@ inserted only as ead. set pe id tn on fe. Copy containin tade by The World must be received by 1 Pe Me Display advertising type copy for the Suppl done of ng Sunday World. must Be i Nirsday” preceding ‘publtes e be teceleed by 2, M. ining engravings to be mady be received by ‘Thurday moos engtavings to Vriday. Copy cont by Toe World must Sunday Mi mot been era require. rigidly ‘nd pontive selena or orders released later. th tie ofder of latest” rece! ‘order of any character, contract oF THE WORLD DIE, BLASCO.—JOSEPH HERMAND®Z. Camp- bell Funeral Church, U'way, @6th st.,.uolll Saturday, RYAN, FRANK D. Funeral services mitt be held at St, Peter's Church, Riverdale #y. and Ladiow st., Yonkers, N. ¥., at 10 A. M.. Thureday, Eept. 21, 1 FUNERAL DIRECTORS. ‘When Death Occurs «=. Cail “Coliimbus 8200 FRANK E, CAMPBELL “he Funeral Church ine. (CHOM-EBCTARIAN) at 66th St. THE WORLD'S Harlem Office Now Located at 2092 7th Ave, Near 125th St. BOTEL THERESA BUILDING