The evening world. Newspaper, September 21, 1922, Page 2

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fF i 8 bean found, the wed, in tracing to or ' iT : difficulty, ha: that Miis have suffitiend evidenve Mr: i Jand Mrs, pe/on the Phillipe bokh in an antome Hitt i £ Bigt ve have no tnt or- ‘that Mrs. Ifall and Mrs, Mills or were gold to cach tl id » have to-fjay learned that a neighbor fof Mre. Mills made ‘that fie Rev. Mr. Hal is car ih front of tho door ‘Waiting th meet Mrs. wonpa.n anid the minlateg senidal nto the neigh but he hasband sersended her to keep quit.” \ There bas bem some comment in New Brunswick javer the failure of the Masonic: Ledge, to which the Rev. Mr; Half belonged, to send a delega- tien to his funeral or to be present at his burial, A meoting of the lodge ‘was held Monday tn time to arrange for the usuml traterfial tribute, but it could not be Ieaened that any action was taken. The statement. made by the mil- Honaire widow of the murdered rector to-May werved to increase tho donbts now held by some of the prosécutors and their (nvestigators that tie murd ers “are al) cleared up,’ and the per- sons who shet the minister and the choir singen are known, Oniy sixty- ene eents wos found on the ferson of Mr. Hall, whan bis body and that of companion were discovered Satur 4 mornin, Hall's statement was made .public by Miss Sally Peters, a friend ) of many years’ standing and a 7 bridesmaid at her marriage, who, has taken charge of the household since Nee tragedy. Accarding to Miss Peters Mrs, Hall said: “T am confident there was nothing ‘wrong betwoen my fitusband and Mrs. ‘Mills, I feel that this tragedy wad the result of « hold-up. Ob Thursday * evening my husband told me bo was going to the Mills’ liome with a lot of money as he wanted to pay a doctor’, bill contracted by Mrs. Mills as the result of an operation. The money was owed to Dr. R, L. McKiernan of New Brunswick. ‘The money was being paid by the chyrch, to be repaid by Mr. | i i 4 fl fi i Mills through Weekly instalments from his salary. : J*Mr. Hall had thie money in a ‘Wallet in his pocket when he left the house. When the bodies were found , this wallet and a gold watch which my husband always carried were missing. \ “On Thursday evening Mr. Hall went out at 7.80, saying he would be back in a little while. I waited until 2 ofclock the following morning for him, and when “ho did not return I went. to the church with my brother, ‘Willie Stevens, to took for him, They chureh was locked and we returne home and went to bed. [ could ncd sleep. At 7 o'clock in the morning, 1 telephone my, cousin, Edwin Ca r- pender, and asked him to get in tou sh’ with the authorities. “I also telephoned to Mr, Hallfs two sisters, Mrs. Paul Bonver of Ne York and Mrs. Frank Voorhees of Jersey City. They both came to Ni sw ¢ runswick immediately, arriving he pe “On Thursday evening my hrot! jer Willie and I were in the house all evening. Our automobile had pot ‘Deen used since Wednesday even! ng, Mr. Mills was not allowed by hiss six- feen-year-old daughter Charlotte to answer questions as to whether? the money had been given by Mr.. Hi #il to either him or his wife. Tenants | wno mhare the house with the Mills f mily say they saw nothing of the mi pister all evening, though they were o § the front steps from supper until | ste. ) Mrs. Hall's statement came at a time when County Detective Pavid ‘had completed @ twenty-four hours’ * study of jilities that thie rec- tor and Mrs. Mills might have been shot by blackrmajilers, robbers,| hood- peepers, or by, some other Taersons pgs they stumbled) in a ‘~~ clandestine meeting on the sarge spot i and who might have thought) them- selves spied upon or attack Accounts of Detective Davifts re- port to-day indicated he hac yound sane support for this way of ¢ yunt- t ing for the tragedy. fie paid particu- » IarLettention to the foreign-Lorn set- ‘on the outskirts of the town, a raruiting place for botlesgers’ fighting gangs, @ hiding lace tor criminals from other cities und ga opqualid,, unsavory neighborh:; It is ‘understood the detective cagne to no we conclusions but big previous ‘cegtainty that the murders svere more or Jess 3, family affair {has been shaken. \ * Detectives are known td be look- - jos in pawnshops in Tyenton and 4 nearby cities\for the gold watch, gold ross and other small ‘articles of = readers of THE N. a series of special Beople 4 ~ contests going? / AThat is business and This will be a firs@pfand study of the “until I am allowed to look at that/as the great mass of earth loosened. | Lorriifard Co., $1,000,000 in Amert- itis to see ff it is in the condition in fil ex, natant. ths root bad come Fean Tobacco, $250,000 in American which I saw it in my dreams, which|down upon the men, Fallon was at], s ‘ 5 ts different from what it was when|the heading digging, the others a few} SoU Co. $60,000 in United Cigar Wwe left the house and the books be-|¥ards behind him and nearer the foot] Stores, $225,000 in New York Central hind, I shall ask Mr, Levine, thefof the shaft, and as the fall was|and $105,000 in Interboroygh Rapid {| present owner, to let me into the|mainly at the \heading Fallon fared | Transit house."* the worst. ne Faun Wisitors and investigators vpatitec| souls crombone of! No. 101 etin|,. 78 tachi aT nea te 40 find evidences that the farmhouse, | Street, Corona, was descending the] ederal Government was paid $1,577, - seclutied and off the roud, was visited} shaft stairs when the roof fell, He]00 on the inheritance tax while N¥w - en _ » ANALYZING AMERICA : —o0— -— David Lawrence, the widely known political and economic writer whose daily despatches, from VPashington supply illuminating information to the W YORK EVENING WORLD, will begin next week spatches to be written during a transcontinental trip. His description of gonditions as he finds them will be telegraphed daily to NEW YORK EVENING WORLD. Analyzing America, David Lawrence will cover many questions, such as the f ; } "hhow does the Harding Administration stand with the How are important Senatorial and Congressional What is the Western attitude toward Eastern Republi- /can leqdership and the Agricultural Bloc? - What is the general sentiment on Prohibition? the trained®migd of a Washington correspondent of long experience in political obseryation. Just before the fall election there will be a general summary in a series of three despatches om the Congress outlook and trend of opigion. The daily despatches of > DAVID LA\ NEW YORK EVENING WORLD. value which Mr, Hall -customarily carried and which were nfssing when lis body was found. Ho was also in the habit of carrying sonsiderable sums of money. Lt is not. beliéved he would Have left his howe with as Nttle as 61 vents in his from the amount of Dr bill ‘ The fragments uf letters in a romantic strain from Mrs.'Mils found seattered about the bodiem it is rea- soned, mitgh’, have been tarn up by « robber who waa iooking for something of value and was irritated by finding only fervent protestations of affection. Detective. David Was reported to have said something abont the pres- ence of a green autompbile on the scene of the murder lant Thursday night. Heé refused to discuss thie or any feature of his report until ufter a further consultation to-ds the Prosecutor. The other aspect of the tifat the murders were committe persons spying on the couple who hd ome enraged on comfirming with thetr own eyés gossip which had come to therm—is spoken of by Prosecutor Stricker ag “the mottye, and oppor- tunity phase.” ‘Tn this connection a mew story came peekets, asia 1 McKienan’s 95 FEETINSEWER, | GAVE.N KILLS ONE Twelve-Foot Tunnel Crum- ples Without Warning 4t Winfield, Queens. John Fallon, a workman was killed this morning in a cave-in of the roof of the great twelve-foot Woodside trunk sewer which runs elghty-fve fer beneath the intersection of Fiske, Polk and Woodside Avehues in Win- field, on the outskirts of Long Intand City. About seventy tons of earth fell in him and it required five hours of energetic digging by flremen, The United States Army Air Ser- vice bombing plane Omal, the larg- army, had her final trict Mitchel Field, Mineola, yesterday, est in the on to Mir. Stricker to-day from Mrs for the races for thi Chars Amadee Dé Russy, whose|Pclicemeh end workmen to reach his peal ay aha did famify built the farin house on the| body. This was found to be not mu at Detroit. The machine has a known PhilMps place nincty-ffve years ago,| tiated and was brought to the sur-{ speed of 110 miles an hour and can and gvho sold it because its depres-| face by the derrick used in the ex-| carry $,000 pounds in bombs oF pa: cavating work sing ‘effect on her nerves nine yedts ago to Phillips. She is a distant rel- ativeyof Mre. Hall. Lemt June she said she was visit- sengers; the wings spread 107 feet; the “ship welghs twelve tons and is driven by three Liberty motors with a Three other workers employed in the tunnel with Fallon were caught by the cave-in and buried almost to the ing the farm with a woman, aw friend| waist by the sudden fall of earth. | combined horsepower of 18,000. of many years refised to name,,| T' were Joseph Drumright, od ribteitikgthe sho hte a whet had frequently visited the farm | twenty-five, No. West 684 Btrent, when it wos owned by the De Russys] Manhatton; whe Ip was badly family. Standing together under the|lacerated and his right arm hurt; erab epple tree on the knoll where} Michuel Schmitt, twenty-five, No. 77 First Avenue, Manhattan, Injured about the chest, and Thomas Canao- van, thirty-four, No. Sixth Avenue, the, body of the rector and Mrs. Mills wefre found, Mrs. De Russy sald, her friten@ remarked: LEFT AN ESTATE OF $10,342.81) ‘Would not this be a perfect spot| Long Island City, whose scalp was foy a murder?” torn and his foot hurt. *What do you mcan?” Mrs, De] Indigation of the@mass of earth {pssy sald she asked, amazed that | which fell when the roof of the tun- 4% person so sane and even tempered | nel collapsed was given in a depres sion four f in diameter surface. This s the Newtown 1 deep and twenty. feet which appeared on the 6 was roped oft by © to protect the sipuld make such a suggestion. “Perhaps you will know some tome," was the reply, and the sub- ject was hot mentioned again and pol ; dirs, De Russy wis remindea of it] crowd which gathered at news of ihe|Accounting to ‘Court Shows 1 Y Y 01 y home | accident Tataan Pees te deg te phe Fevisited shat, Heme EAC tho junction of the threkave-| Large Tobacco, Holdings nues is a shaft equipped with a wind- ing stairway descending to the under- ground workings. The tunnel in which Fallon and the other three were dig- ging bad been carried about twenty feet westward toward the, East River, where the sewer is to ‘empty mto Hell Gute, four miles away, The sides of the tunnel were toarded up as the work progressed, but-it was said there were no roof shores. The cave-in came with no other warning than a thin whispering sound Mrs: DeRussy said that after her last visit she was much depressed and ¢hreamed all night of the old farm and fhe murder. In her dreams she said she saw the murder committed in the west wing of the attic, th which tn her day & hundred or more old books were stored—ponderous relighous trea tises for the most part “I'm not going to tell aifybody what that dream was,"’ she saif to-day when she had been turned back from entering the farm house with her son, and Many Bequests. The accounting and applicatipn for a judicial settlement valued the estate of George’ Agents, who dled in 1918 at his home, No. 88 West 47@h Street, at $10,3 Among security heldings are-$1,500,- 000 In Liberty Bonds, $825,000 in Lig- cit & Myers Tobacco, $460,000 in P. at night by persons of all sorts and conditions. Hair ribbons, sidecorhbs, powder puffs and handkerchiefs, some of them of the cheapest and tawdriest kind and others indicating taste and disregard of cost, have *been found about thé porches, Such articles dropped or displaced by spooning couples would not be recovered at night, whereas in the daytime they would be instantly picked up. “The finding of these articles gives support to the belief of the detectives that it is not impossible that the Rey, knew what had happened even before he heard cries from the men below. He hastened down, and a little way in from the shaft he came upon Drum- right, Schmitt and Canavan, all caught in the mass of fallen earth. Fearful of hurting them if he used a shovel. Trombone dug at the earth about them with his hands and sue: ceeded at last in freeing one. ‘The latter, in spite of his hurts, then aid- ed in the task of digging out the others, w When all were released they scram: York State received $119,000 on the transfer tax. From the sale of” Mr. Artents’s seat in the New York Stog Exchange, $55,000 was realized, To the widow and the son, veorg Arents jr., specific bequests of $200, 000 each were paid, while $100,000 each has been paid to a grandaughte Dorothy Humphreys-Brooks, No, 52 Park Avenue; her n, George Areuts Arents 3d, Mary -in-law No. 64 and Edna Young city is theirs. ized {n these closely United States the camel, ho.matter what his moral character is, must be considered a sacred animal and cannot legally be pinched for walking the streets if ac- companied by his nurse. Which fixes things for Jim. Jim is a camel with a theatrical history. He's forty-nine years old, and he has appeated in ‘The Garden of Allah,’ in the naughty ‘“Aphro- Street, Brenchle: Mr, Hall and Mrs. Mills visiting tho| bled as well as they could up the}? a nicce of Gloucestershire, i place may have stumbled upon an-|stairs and gave the alarm. Pollce, | @ngland, 1 voy that aie Taree he one other couple who fielieved they were| firemen and two ambulancos were| The residue was devided into six] Pay Ut fh bt gd a summoned and’while the three, with| Parts. One part was left outright to] (Subbed’™ for @ bloodhound in an being spied upon or were about to t attacked; or that the rector and tl sexton's wife were the victims of thugs prowling about for an oppor- tunity of robbery, blackmail or worse. James Mills, husband of the woman who was murdered, in a new *tate- “munt says he believes it posible the rector and Mrs. Mills were lured to some lonely spot to be killed, or so the clergyman, supposed to carry large sums of money, could be robbed, He aid: ‘That is my explanation of the telephone calls on Thursday night. We hayo done our utmost to trace these edils, but as no record ts kept of local calls in the New Brunswick Exchanges, and as it was not until Saturday night that wo first tried to trace them, the only hoge lay in the memory of the telephone operators. But none could remember the: calls Wr. William H. Long, ‘ordner's Physi¢ian of Somerset County, who made the autopsies, has is statement, He thinks the clergyman and Mrs. Mills engaged in a’ severe struggle before they were murdered Mrs, Mills’g right arm was scratched and torn from shoulder to wrist as if “Uncle Tom'’ show out in Arkansas, Just now he has a role in ‘'The Ara- bilan Nights.” James Davin, No. 283 Avenue B, is Jim's nurse. This morning James and Jim were strolling down Second Ave- nue near 26ty-Strect, bound from the HIGH SCHOOL GIRL KISSED HUSBAND, SAYS WOMAN, SUING Wants $50,000 for Alien- ation From Heiress of Banker. (Special to ‘The Evening Woyid.) WARSAW, N. Y., Sept. 2 Tigh of the $50,000 alienation suit of Mrs. Marion Howard against Miss Mar- garet Pierce, a wealthy Castile, N. Y., high school student, vegan to-day before Justice Brown with Mrs, How- ardon the stand, She testified her husband, after the the widow and two parts to the son, The income from anotler left to the wiaow, wh from the remaining two par the grandaughter, Dorothy reys- Brooks. ‘Trombone «who injured his leg in res- cue work, were being treated by an ambulance surgeon, the digging for Fallon was immediately begun. It was not until 11 o'clock that his body was found. Fallon was forty years old and lived u No. 387 16th Avenue, Gong Island City, An investigation into the cause of the accident was started by the police, It was said that perhaps it .was brought about by recurring vibration of the surrounding earth twduced by the trains of tho New York Cons goes to Tumph- > CITY COLLEGES JOIN MUSIC RESOURCES Hunter and C, C. N. Y. Em- . . bark Upon Elaborate . Project. Hunter College and the College of the City of New York have united their music departments, it was an- pounced to-day, and have worked out evening coursey of chamber and orchestral musie that are considerably more ambitions than tempted’ in this city. The formé in- stitution offers «a complete study every Thursday evening from Oct? 6 to June 15, next year nectidg Railway which, coming over the Hell Gate Bridge or going toward of it, pass within thirty feet the shaft, torn In the ‘back across the shoulders an If some one had repeatedly grabbed him ang he had’ endeavored to spull away When Prosecutor Stricker was asked about the two automobiles Charles Jones and wife saw speeding away from the Phillips farm afer screams and shots he said: / “Woe aro closer to the two automo- biles than you are. T have heard that any ever at+ by a gerson clawing her. Her neck|the old Phillips farm was used by| Through the generosity of Adolph] death of Miss Pierce's -father, went alec was soured, oe by {3 person's }bootleggers und gainblers and am| Lewisohn, this course has now be-| to the Pierce home frequently to as- ngers or by something being drawn | having tne r thoro yesti- TetPabeLe le. Epa nemutere coat wee | ceca eport thoroughly investi-}come an institution. Organizations] sist her in business matter and helped gated.’ The deserted house was con- sidered a likely place for bootlegg becuuse it is on the border of the two that will assist in the instruction are! the New York Trio, Trio Classique, her prepare her lessons. Mrs. How- ard peeked in the window and saw counties, Sinsheimer Quartette, Kalter i . - The two crosses cut in a tree over-|Quartette and others. The were etl Seay eee o La ae et looking the peene of the murder were|be dono under'the direction of Dr. Teed With her husband over it after! explained to-day as the work-of two] Henry Fleck. which he left her bed and slept alone brothers named Blair, who cut the + ‘ down stairs. crowses after the removal of the Several nights Mrs. Howard swore to hearing = whistle outside “and going down found her husband gone. He returned after one o'clock in the morning. Several notes addressed to ‘'Darl- ing Lover,” and signed ‘Your Darl- ing Devoted Middy,”” which Mrs. Howard found in her husband's pockets were read_in court,” one of them sald, ‘‘I love you ten times more than anyone else.” Miss Pierce in- herited $400,000 from the estate ‘of her foster father, a banker. —_-—— GALES AND RAIN COMING, SAYS STORM WARNING bodies Saturday. TWO ARE BURNED BY GAS EXPLOSION Men Injured When Match Ignites Fumes. Leuls Rosenblum of No. 2851 West 24th Street, Coney Island, and Alfred Smith, No. 127 Lexington Avenue, Man- hattan, employees in the Bt. Regis 'res- rant at Henderson's Walk and Surf Avenue, Coney Island, were painfully bur by @ gas explosion Fos 4A M NEW STATION FOR THE WILLIAMSBURG BRIDGE To Take the Place of One Sow on Marcy Avenue. | rhe Transit Commission tssued an or der to-day authorizing the construction & a saloon et Williamsburg Bridge Plaza on the B. R. T, Broadyay: ele- vated Itne, This station will serve the convenience of thousands of residents of the gastern district of Brooklyn who come tn @s far as the Williamsburg Bridge Plaza on the surface lines, which terminate there, end then take th@ L. across the Williamsburg Bridge. economic outlook? to. a Rosenblum struck # match to light’ a hot water heater and the match went thinkThg heart of the United States by rahe Mer Bg Borate re pee a4 ‘The demand for the station hi Ly - wat ‘When Rosenblum struck’ the “ second match there was an explosion Pegut ated sient y rs, Plans for! ‘The Weather Bureau here to-day re- that sent them reeling backward and|‘t &re partially completed. The station] cetved the following advisory message burned them about the face and head. ‘There was no fire, and no property ¥ sppesreé to have bee explosion of accumulated ‘The men were taken to Coney Island Hospital, and after treatment Rosenbli home, will be commodious enough to handle @| trom Washington: great increase in the present and| “Hoist northeast storm warning, fe eit take the nis oh mn athioan A. M. Atlantic city to Boston. Marey Avenu blocks .| Disturbance over Cape itteras, mov- arty |ing northeastward. Northeast gales off the coast neat het” hours with vain. ‘ , (REN - three which ts inconvenient and inadequate. iy _ It ls estimated that the pew slation will oat about $200,000, ‘ . FOUR ENTOMBED {LARGEST ARMY SOMBER SET FOR PUL et agen boee Cae RS America’s Elongated, Thirstless, Sacrificial Animal Must Not Be Molested by Parched Worshippers. The civil status of camels in tais commupity was established in: York- ville Court to-day when Magistrate Nolan decided that the freedom of the Ever since Prohibition was natural-@—————L____________— ‘ ITZER TROPHY FLIGHT||EWELL CONTING SERET EFFORT NEBOTATEP Strike Leader Remaits in Hope More Railro Will Yield. Bert M. Jewell, President Railway Employees’ Departm the American Federation of national leader of the sho; strike, remained in the city afia continued his efforts to x individual settlement #th the riers, Mr. Jewell at bis headqus the Hotel McAlpin declined out any information us to sett developments. * All the negot! that have been attempted by Jewell and his chief aid, W, H. ston, International ‘President o Machinists, have“been carried secret. This policy, {t ts undet will be adhered to for the pi the ground that too much pul has. wrecked several settlement when they were on the 1CCesS The carriers, before entering negotfations with the strike 1 are said to have insisted that th gotiations be carried on In sect nthe INJUNCTION RULI EXPECTED TO.D Decision to Follow at of Arguments. CHICAGO, Sept. 21.—A few of closing argument lay before in the battle by the Att ul's office ,to obtain its d injugetion against strike Teade: proveedings were resumed to. Judge James H. Wilkerson’s Co Judge Wilkerson had indicat would be ready to rule on the ately after closing argu q@mpleted, The temporar; straining order expires at mid to-day Although Attorney General D erty was not in court, his asst said they expected him before’ for a decision. i agent | B. R. T. SEEKS TO \ CONTINUE INJUNCY cision OPEN SHOP TO DRAG ELEVEN INTO UNION Guns Back Up Threats Until Street Uproar Frightens Auto Gang Away. The Brooklyn Raph? Transit pany to-day applied to Supreme Justice Lewis tn Brooklyn to co the temporary injunction issu Justice Callaghan to rae the of tion of the Inst of the “bus lines Brooklyn, being operated by the hattan Transit Company. The B. R. T. was represented Jackson A. Dykman, who declared in prior actions, the City of New ad been restrained’ from oper buses along the same lines, He these wére the same buses. he case for the defendants was sented by Walter R. Hart, who claf that the Manhattan Transit Comp franchise was a valid one, He deck there wasja real public necessity ration of the b Ben Hur stables, where Jim lives, to the Thomashefsky Theatre In East Houston Street, where he was due for rehearsal. ‘A crowd of children followed, the law which says children must not haye too much fun caused Capt. Al- bert Mason of the East 22d Street Sta- tion, to call Patrolman Gallagher to arrest James for leading Jim thfough a jam without a permit. So Jim was tied up in the alley back of the sta- tion while James was taken to court. About 500 children kept Jim company. Whon the case came up the police- man admitted that a mistake had been made. A permit used to be required, and An appeared automobile in Gr ca ying Street stopped loft building at No. 74, which is between Broome Spring § ets, ten men 11.39 at o'clock to-day curb in front of the and at the and Two of the men ra to the corners of the block and tt remaining eight, fout of whom car- ried drawn re¥olve rushed into the factory of the Manhattan Embossing Company on the ground floor This concern is an open shop em- he said, but not since Prohibition. So op. ses. james and Jim were both turned ploying union and non-union men and] Justice Lewis gave both sid ; , is owned by Daniel Fe! s ag | Monday to file briefs. loose, and Jim was so very late for|'* 9wned by Daniel Feinberg. He was rehearsa! = - absent. In the shop were eleven workmen under the direction of Fore~ man Carl Zimmerman, “Quit work, all of you," the leader of the invading bafd ing a pistol at Zimmerman, got tq come with unio’ Rose Kramer, the bookkeeper, in a little office off the factory, reached for the telephonee. One of the in- vaders saw her, rushed in, grabbed her arm*and hurled her across the room shouted point- You've us and join the HARDING NAMES OCT. 9 AS FIRE PREVENTIONDAY Seven Billions Loss in Forty Years, National Reproach, He Says. * WABHINGTON, Sept. 21. — Presi- dent Harding, in a proglumation ts- sued to-day, called upon the country to set aside Monday; Oct. 9, as Fire Prevention Day, and to observe it in such a manner as to impress upon the people the “importasce of precau- tionary measures for the avoldante of fires,” (‘It has been a reproach to opr country,"’/the President said in the proclamation, “that by reason of poor construction, inudequate facilities for fire prevention, and un all too general carelessness about posstble causes of conflagration, our fire waste reaches figures year after year which are not approached in any other country in et a move on," yelled the leader, s you want us to start shoot- Zimmerman ted the way and the workmen started for the sidewalk while the gunmen kept them covered. Just then Feintferg entered and be- gan to asit qustions, One of the gun- men knocked him down. By that time, the block was in an uproar and the gangsters rushed to thelr automobile, piled in and drove away ‘einberg got™the number of the car, +, As soon as he got his workmen back on the job, he notified the poll and the District Attorney's office, He sald he had not &xperienced any dif- floulty with the unlon, although it is well known in the trade that he con- GOOD! Notice to Advertisers: Display « De copy and release Week day Morving World of; id if recelvad after 4 P.M. thal bes a ductq an open py and pays his ns biteatiot, “andi. ettad onl ys en the ante ale * may rg ih order: of receipt @ wor! men the union World Office. Copy containing engravings The President estimated ™ that America’s fire loss has approximated $7,000,000,000 in the last forty years in a detter read to the national con- vention of fire chiefs at their recent convention in San Francisco and made.public at the White House to- day. pe tet MOVES TO MISMISS SUIT BROUGHT BY NEW YORK Alleged in Test Power Act. WASHINGTON, Sept, 21,—Motion to dismiss the original sult brought by the State of New York to test the constitu- tionality of the Federal Water Power Act was filed to-day in the Supre —o TWO LITTLE GIRLS TRIED AS BURGLARS Caught by Boy, 11, as They Are Looting House. Two girls, Flor Margaret Hech, el before City Judge Edick, in South Nyack, last night on the charge of Juvenile delin- quency xrowing out of the capture of Florence Monday night by Tommy } Uer, eleven, Tommy and his mother, returning home, saw a light in an upstairs room. While Mrs, Nettler went into a nelg' hor’s home to call the police, made by Tai Display World must be received by 4 vertising wpe copy, for the fi euent | Sections of the Sunday” World. a reoctred ty 1 P.M. Thursday, preceding a mist ork, ontalning engravings (0 must be received by Thureday type copy. whi aM Frit by Sheet copy, by ¢ Pp 3 it be omitted conditions requlre, wit we order of latest ‘reoeipt and positive ve, and Display copy or. ot provided” above, enon tei earn discounts of any. chisrad ‘or Court by Solicitor General Beck in be-| boldly entered the house, found Florenc: fi halt of the Federal Government, and Margaret, who gave battle It Harlem Of Dismissal was asked on the ground] ended with Tommy sitting on Florence's ? that the State ,acting for “Itself and| neck and Marguret Now Located at representatively for its citizens in their alley es fast as her soverelenty" failed to bring the proceed: | carry her 2092 7th A ing against “essential “parties” who] Mrs, Netter deci ecute ans should have been made defendants, and | Judg girls go hone on Edlck let the theigfpromise to remain in Nyack, where theytlive. Near 125th St. ROTEL THERESA BULL did not present any concrete question or cause of action,

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