The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1922, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922. HICH BAIL FIXED [Any One Can Live 200 Years |FYENNEAR peat, PHONE GIRL KEPT ‘other communions began talking open | member her going thereat night. Tdo i boone about her friendship with the | not believe that she went to Phillipa aim the night of the murder, She Mrad. Finhéés Holl fins toid of send-| was dragged there and murdered. ; Mise Frank Voor-| “I never noticed anything between B M L P i ti Tee cute, and are, Pavi| Mr. Hall and my mother except what y r. awson S rescr Pp on AT HER BOARD wes of Jersey City, Bonbér of Newark, When she became | might be expected between a minister jalariied by her husband's fallure to}and one of his flock. My mother did retuFd home ja week ago yesterday|@ great deal for the church, She morifng. Mr. Striéker has now learned | !ooked after the music, the little dec- thats, menange was sont to the of- orations of the church and the things “Mr. Voothees at the Voorhees | Which ordinarily the rector's wife Is supposed to do, Mrs. Hall never \n- Miss Deherman Died Four Hours After Collapsing From Acute Laryngitis. Lillian Deherman, twenty-three, of FOR FIVE SEED NBG DRUG RAD It Is Really Very Simple, Purely a Matter of Proper Rest, Exercise and Nourishment, He Says. Every man and woman should live at loast 200 years if they can solve Rubber Company tn Jersey City Fri- aerate Ae Sematody calles. at the work ok iy te ag my néknnt the correct ratio between nourishment, exercise and rest, This is the beller bite Vang qalaiioke pies Hts ponceing Bot 4 Aaa patwuated supposed that Mrs, Hall's interest tn tics Valued at $80,000 of Alfred W, Lawson, who heretofore has won considerable recognition In| ity. employed in. hs sb Qa , oe Hall iudecie rcotics Valued ai the field of i z the elder Mrs. Hall to leave and she|her was ‘gratitude for ali the work p of aeronautics and now turns his attention to acience and long life.| vanes at No. 210 West a6th Street, In an Interview at the Vanderbilt Hotel Mr. Lawson described what he terms the law of penetrability. Tho law of penetrability, according *— ae Lawson, who built and navi-| point where suction balances pres- ga a twenty-passeager = airliner | sure you can live longer, how much from Milwaukee to New York and re- longer I am not prepared to state, turn, is the key to perpetual move- it C ment. Everything in the ‘universe Hert ee) Rea moves according to that law, says Mr.) «wnen one organ does not synchro- Lawson, no matter whether it is a blood corpuscle or the solar systerm, ae re oa cMaase, Reanaa ver, she had done, “Of course, there may have been that this was for the purpose of say-|scme Jealousy as to her work for tho Ing her the shock of hearing other church by people who wanted the boarders at the Hill discussing {Credit but let her do the work. Mrs Hall tayght me In Sunday school. | th tor overnight or ae anes his home. Tt has sinc: {ever liked her, T could never warn beer hom, |p to her. Mother often admonishes Cee een crore, mother, has been | 3°: od sald t should pay more at y tention to what she said, but than np dd Tate beer at nny HE A mom wasn't there and couldn't ua- Found at Alleged Hub of “Dope” Distribution, Das not been seen there since. Aire Btricher expects to be informed died of acvte laryngitis at 4.20 o'clock this morning in Bellevue Hospital, whither she was taken after she had insisted upon continu- ing her duties at the switchboard until she toppled from her chair, un- conscious, to the floor. Miss Deherman first complained of feeling {11 at 9 o'clock last night, Five men, arrested in a raid on the Hotel Douglas, No. 207 West 40th Street, last night by detectives of the Narcotic Squad, healed by Dr. Carle- ton Simon, and which resulted in one derstand. of the biggest single drug’ seizures jose. One's heart, kidneya, liver, Site bat frees knowing the circum 4n.When my mother dishiked any one.| mage by the police, wero held tn high And that law determines the life off jings and all must work in unison | four hours after she went on duty. stances. she wanted nothing to do with thar s vs - bic yi The authorities have Under Cond ee eee ie i cnow dita | bail to-day by Magistrate Jean Nor-| Mr. Lawson declares any man,| . cr reece unison—orer to bring} She retired to the rest room for two about perfect unlson—exercinc, nour- wshment and rest. The perfect bal- ance between these three |s sucret. “One must learn exactly how mach hours and then resumed work, ex- Pressing belief that something she had eaten had caused the trouble, ‘That gave rise, when she was taken woman or child can check decompos- ing elements and increase the length of life. To accomplish this, no medicine, eration to-day exhuming the bodies o! the Rev. Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills | gon’t think she understood us girls detstinine positively the number ot] “sstother craved the & tinés each was shot, and if more than} qiqnt have, = ris In Jefferson Market Court. Those held were Joseph Fishman, thirty-one, of No. 141 Second Avenue, Samuel Bernstein, thirty, of No. 833 like flappers, and Iam a flapper. 1 al id rest one requires. onercalibre pistol were used. TM Won't understand why Mra, Haii| West. 66th” Street, and. Benjamin| ™onkey glands or fountain of youtn| ‘'<9? 8% to the hospital at 2.30 A. M., that County Physician W. H. Long of) nasn't received the sume treatment us|Dwortette, twenty-nine, Clarence] * Beeded, according to Mr. Lawaon. scene in they HAIG BSR she was suffering from acute food no ag cath eel isi oa sai we have. ‘They called on Mra, Hali|Smart, thirty-four, and Samuel] ft is, UP to each man to Just under-|°¢'on should find how tauun exer-| Poleoning. Dr. Stoughton dingnosed y_one bullet wound was fourd lt | yng questioned her. ‘They sent for| Spireck, twenty-two, all living at the Pla to ve ural Jaw which permits) "ise ig best for him, and when this is| her malady as acute laryngitis, Mrs ‘Mille’s head. ie “unuers us and told us we had to come to the} hotel A move and apply it tu! ‘i Scovered he should keep up this ex- —_—_—.—_——_ himself. he di@ not probe for bullets. Dr. B. | “When we fill our lungs we suck who examined the bodies u Fishman was charged with selling and possessing narcotics and was held Prosecutor's office."* much It is brought out, for the first time ercise, not take much one day and little the next. LESTER W. CLARK, the Morgue at the request of the Halll i, Churiotte's statement, that Mrs,|in $5,000 bail for examination on|!" @ir,”" he sald. “When we exhale , said there were four bullet 1 li do we tt “Nourishment is merely a matter FORMER SUPREME wodsde in her head. Hall called on Mills twice the day fol-] Sept. 27. The other four men were Dress it out. The heart works| bringing into your system that exactly the same way as the lungs. JUSTICE, DEAD Was Elected to Bench as Citizens’ Union Candi- lowing the murder, the second visit| charged with possession and were It-eiso develops now, from a state | The heart which your system requires. Now this . ww to report thet her husband had| held in $10,000 bail each for examina-| 7he rt presses the blood out f ment by the undertaker, that Mrs Joi gown any money from bank andl tion on the same date. through the arteries A Wathen (0 nourishment must balance the exer cise, If one day one takes more ex- sreise, one must take more rest and nourishment to offset it, One must earn to absolutely synchronize these BMille’s ankle was broken. ‘Het important that the bullets be located to determine the angle w! ‘which. they were fired, and the calibre back, very much as a pump, through the veins. “The physiologists talk about the could not have had much with him. As was to have been expected by those who have observed the way in Additional arrests are expected to- da; ys The raiders ransacked sixty rooms, Sf the weapon. This is especially de-{Which James Mills, her father, @¢-| breaking in many doors. They moved circulation of blood. They claim that | hree, date in 1907. now in view of a new theory {cepted the girl's guldanc. when be] furniture, searched beds, tore up car- the blood {s pumped by the heart’s| «No one can tell you how todo this.| Former Supreme Court Justice That dp discussed to-day. This 1s that | ost that of his wife, Mr. Mills became] pets and searched drawers. They say|® action. I claim that the heart| very one must learn to be his own| Lester W, Clark of the Second Ju- ‘the clergyman and Mrs, Mills, as they |loquacious to-day in denouncing the} they found drugs in practically every| "8 two actions—the pump and the| »hysician. You can not learn this ‘ walked ‘along De Russy’s Lane, near favoritism with which, he said, Mrs.| room, and in the cellar got three large} ® tion. jver night. It takes time and study dicial District died to-day at his home, NO. 100 Clinton Avenue, New Brighton, Staten Island. Justice Clark, who was born at Brookline, Mass., nearly sixty-nine years ago, was educated at Boston Latin School and Harvard, He got his law degree from Columbia in 1878. He became counsel for the Baltimore and Ohio and its subsidiary, the Staten Island Railway and Light Company During his early life on Staten Island he wus active in Republican politics He was clected to the Supreme Court bench as a Citizen's Union eandidate in 1907. When he retired at the end of his term he ‘vas ap- pointed a referee for Appellate Divi- sion cases. Mr. Clark was married in 1883 to Miss Irene M. de MaCarthy. survives him, with a son, Mark and a daughter Mrs. Dorothy Garrett, He was a member ot the Jentury Association, the Richmond tounty Country Club the Staten Is- land Club, the Hamilton Club of Brooklyn, the Harvard Club anj the Bar Association of the City of New York. BRIAN MACNEILL, IRISH REBEL, SLAIN Son of Minister of Educa- farm, were surprised by|Hall and her relatives were being Genie snacnien, who were in an auto-|treated. He had much to say of mobile and that the woman in the car jealousy shown nis wife and ascribed made, accusations that Mrs. Mills de-|the willingness of Mrs. Hall to go out "The women may have fought, riding with Mrs. Mills and accept her thub Accounting for the screams that /as a guest as due to pride and a means were heard by several persons. In the]of keeping others from seeing her excitement somebody in the automo-| jealousy .nd commenting on It. bile stood up and fired the shots. Mills war examined at length again GHTER ACCEPT] yesterday but the result was not dis- MILLS A ay hovive closed, except that he again failed to ~~ JEA! : give the name of the woman he says A Set finds James Mills and a first warned him of the alleged friend- ere Bee ITenslt enter ship between his wife and the rector. er o} 5 fised-up with those who adhere to the motive. Charlotte declares fenbellet that her mother ‘‘died fight- Saar te.admits having delivered to her. “et Mrs. isle Barnhardt of Fatergou, a bundlo her mother hat faeked before hor operation months au bo*turnod over to the woman in cave anything bappned. Charlotte denies there, were any letters in the package. /onuroh,"’ a statement they issued read os agian eee a Bee: ee They sent a copy of the resolution ro ‘aod other merabers of the pariah |™"™ Hall. taker at outings, some trinkets and] — ‘@ Breat many letters the choir leader WANTS REAL BEER TO PAY FOR BONUS Yad written to “nobody.” » Also there ‘were many poems of a romantic and Bill to Amend Constitution to Permit 5 Per Cent. trunks containing assorted drugs, and} “We are built up by the suction in the baggagy room three sult cases! Movement. We are torn down by of narcotics, A safe expert was em.1the pressure movement, As long as ployed by Dr. Simon to open a safe] We can keep building up the suction in which, it 1s alleged, was found,’ ovement as fast as the pressure among other things, a book contain-, Movement breaks down, we do not ing many names and addresses, From] 85! these are expected to come other ar- rests here and in other cities. The narcotics seized included 14,000 packages. They cost $80,000, Dr, Simon said, and would have brought $500,000 to the vendors. ‘The owners of tne hotel denied that the hotel was connected with a drug ring. They sald that all the drugs found belonged to guests and the pro- prietors knew nothing about them. CHURCH DORE LAW TIGHTENED AANS VIEHS OF, GRANT (Continued from First Page.) to learn the perfect balance. But we all can learn it, and it is worth learn- ing, for it brings health, happiness ind a long Iife. This synchronizing 8 really nothing but the talance be tween the power of pressire and power of suction. And ‘t is that bal- ance which is called health.” BRITAIN SAYS SHE ACTS ONLY TO KEEP WAR OUT OF EUROPE ————— (Continued from First Page.) If you can keep yourself at that Authorities believe the Identity of this woman, or of any other who may have been jealous of Mrs. Mills, is of the utmost importance. The wardens and vestry of the chufch met last night and expressed their sorrow in the death of Mr. Hall. They also adopted a resolution empha- sizing their continued faith and trust in him.* “Believing him to have been ioyal and true to his God and ‘Le dicated: First, that of securing the freedom of the Straits and second, that of preventing this prairie fire, which devastated Asia, form crossing the anrrow seas and lighting the dry timber in the Balkans. “We do not wish to hold Gallopoli and Chanak in the interests of Great Britain alone. We do not consider that Gerat Britain alone should have the sole responsibility there. We be- leve those important shores should be held under the auspices of the League of Nations in the interests of for the collapse of our most power- ful ally in that quarter of the globe and was also responsible for the de- feat of Roumania. ° “These two disasters had the effect of prolonging the war at least two years and adding enormously to the loss of life and to the devastation and destruction which it will take many years if not a whole generation to re- pair. It is an essential condition of world peace that there shall be an effective guarantee for the freedom of Imaginative naturo. ert es i think niore’ than one persor. hille@ my mother. A woman d'rect- clergy and lay members who believe Iyfednnected with the Immediate fam- the ions" (powaee Tot" Healing! (tc Se flier concerned, I am sure, can sol-e Brew Proposed. Net taeac hy a = tol those seas in the future. If peace . i . the. mystery. Among the murderers pe prepare themselves “by care and) were signed without the achievement PARIS CONFEREES tion Was Leading Troops. isa jealous woman, She wanted m-| WASHINGTON, “Sept. 28.—Flive| prayer and theological and medical}of that object, it would be equivalent CONSIDER TERMS| DUBLIN, Sept. 23.—Brian Mac- trea I do not belleve robbery en-|per cent. beer for a $5,000.000,000| study for their proper and safe/to a defeat in that part of the world. eer yes son of Prof. John MacNeill, tered Into the matter at all, bonus was proposed as an amend-| exercise.” “With that object in view, the Al- | ¢ . inister of Education In the Free - . | Outlook Brighter as Two} s fs one woman in this town ment to the Constitution Im a joint Provision is made that wherever les prepared as the first condition of 8) State Government, was killed yester- Cabinets Meet. PARIS, Sept. 23 (Associated Press). —The prospects of peace in the Near East were distinctly brighter to-day as the French and British Cabinets met to consider the tentative condi- tions of settlement drawn up by the Allied representatives here. ed thls mtnistry (nepeciatined thoes’ whole. ghotnts the spenite of the bart exercise It shall do so only with the/danciles and the Bosphorus and secur- written approval, “after due consid-|ing access to the Black Sea by Allied eration, of thelr Bishop and in sym- [Seen eae Devens ae one pathetic conference with qualified] surg the freedom of those seas as of Christian physicians,” vital British interest and vital Euro- A commission to further consider] pean interests. ; “Therefore, the first thing we had day while leading his Irregular troops against National forces in County Sligo. Although his father was a member of the Provisional Government and both his brothers were officers in the National Army, young MacNeill, then a university student, joined the ip surgents when the split t:. the I, R. 4 came. In a short time he became jelped to murder my mother. i Friday morning, the day after |Tesolution offered in the House yes- the disappearance of my mother, Mrs |terday by Representative Brennan Hall.came to see my father. It was|(Rep., Mich.). Under Its provisions or ts bo ald pide ber [a referendum would be taken to the ofthe bank. He suggested that, if|Publc on the subject. that was 80, perhaps he had been set} ‘Mr. Brennan's resolution provided "pon and robbed. Later in the day |that the amendment need not inter- however, Mrs. Hall told father that} rere with local option in States and Mr; Hall had not drawn out any the matter of healing was named, ‘ communities which desire t e in mind in any steps we have taken commander of irregulars in West Money and could not have had any | rte nated that he pre in the last few days hae been to In-| These conditions provide for the re- | Ireland. with: btm. posal was put in the Constitution} The canon of the Episcopal Church | gure that nothing be done to menace|°Ccupation of Constantinople and) In an ambush near O'Connell Eastern Thrace, including Adrianople, up to the line of the River Maritza, with a neutral zone along the Thracian, Bulgarian and Grecian frontiers; internationalization of thu Dardanelles, maintenance of a per- Bridge in Dublin, a bomb hurled by irregulars at a lorry of national sol- diers, was heard over the whole city. It was lunch hour and thousands were about the bridge. Three bombs of extraordinary explosive power were against marriage after divorce was|the freedom of those seas and the attacked by the Rev, Dr. Percy | world-wide interest of civilization. In doing this I would point out that we Sulekney Grant, rector of the Church | ore taking ‘no separate action. but the Bishop Willlam T. Manning ruled SAYS HER MOTHER WROTE |Congrens then could write a tax ot “ RECTOR'’S SERMONS. 20 cents a gallon on beer and oollect from $00,000,000 to $600,000,00 “irs, Hall says that she called at| car Pew pe pre Thursday night to inquire Mr. Hall but could not get in,” simply out agreed upon by all the Allies in Octo- carrying policy Geclared Charlotte. “That is strangs,| FINDS $2,000 IN BILLS, more than a year ago that no clergy-| ver, 1918. We have not departed one| manent Allied military force at Gal-| thrown. Several soldiers were hit by es door was open and she could THROWS THEM AWAY | nan of the Episcopal Church should | ‘ota from the position we took then poll and strict guarantees for the] spiinters and one died of wounds. ha’ dily entered the house aod aie Bn ting him tc | 284 !m doing so we have not betrayed protection of the mirorities in Turkey.| “Tregulars fired revolvers at the sol- ed us. I was at home. Foreman Thoueht x | Perform the ceremony uniting him tc}tne trust which the British Empire] Should the plan be approved by the] aiers, who replied with rifles, Three ‘ vs. Hall always looked upon Notes Were Worthless. Mrs, Rita de Acosta Lydig, former]|as a whole vested in us. two Cabinets and be accepted by the] civiians, including a girl, were poor people as scum, but my mother! cpringrieLD, Mass, Sept. 23,—|Wife of Major Philip M. Lydig and,| ‘The second ojbect we had in mak- Turkish Nationalist Government as anit by shrapnel. re vasis of negotiation, it is thought the peace conference could be convoked for Oct. 10 to 12. pee, GREEKS AFRAID TURKS WILL MARCH ON ATHENS ATHENS, Sept. 23 (Associuted rress).—Greece, in the grip of a reat national perll, 18 beginning to ear she must ride alone, She counted fn Great Britain's military assistance » prevent the Turks from invading “hrace, but even that hope Is fading apidly. One representative Greek sala to- never felt any difference existed in their station in life. My mother was| Finding he had thrown away unsigned educated. She even wrote some of Mr. | national bank notes amounting to $2,000, Hall's sermons and left them on the | believing them worthless, William B desk of his study for him. It was the | goucia, foreman of s bridge construc: custom of the parishioners who | tion gang, to-day admitted the joke w com! thi Tra ctor to write it and leave It for |" him when he was informed the noter were negotiable. poled om. my mother mention |, The bills were found in a bridge pier ing razed and were part of a |i if the Phillips farm. If she had ever} s19,009 elleved eh bean! tacleo beep Out there I would have known it. |white cn route from Washington te She had a way of always telling about | }anks in Massachusetts, Soucia and the places she had been. | know mon other workmen amused themselves by often went to the Parker home with | throwing them in the street and watch Cunon Wells to sing, but I never re- ing persons scramble for them, before that, wife of W. BE, D, Stokes. |ing any preparations was to prevent Mrs, Lydig obtained a decree of di- | this exceptionally horrible war from vores from Major Lydig in 1918 tn | spreading into Europe. Paris, ber action being based on in- “1 am going to apportion the blame compatibility. She was married to] between the Greeks and Turks. The Stukes when she was nineteen yeare| time has not come for tha: old. It was on other grounds that| not necessary that we do so fi order she divorced him. to explain or defend our policy. 1 The canon upon which Bishop Man-| merely deal with the fact that one ning based his ruling is from a text} of the greatest commercial cities in in the New Testament which, quot | the world has been practically devast- ing the words of Christ, says: “‘Who-|ated and that there have been mass- soever shall put away his wife sav-|acres which in their horroh are al- ing for the cause of fornication,} most without example, even in that causeth her to commit adultery." area, Dr. Grant sald of this that the Bib-| If any army which could not be re- lical Injunction was of doubtful au. {strained by its chiefs from perpetra- thenticity and expressing a Jewish|ting those outrages were permitted racial custom rather than @ universai|to cross into Europe, to occupy Con. truth, stantinople, where you have a popu- Karly this month Bishop Irving |lation of hundreds of thousands of Peake Johnson of Colorado, speaking |Armenians and Greeks and some at Portland, where the Bishops were| thousands of European Natlonals, we meeting, said: "The Rev. Percy Grani | have every reason to fear there would is in the position of a man playing | be a repetition of those horrible inci- golf whose ball is in a hole, He can|dents. If it spread into Thrace, either play the game according to th | where there is so much inflammable rules or get out. It Is up to him," material, rivalries of Turks, Greeks, ‘The engagement of Mrs, Lydig and | Hungarians and Serbians, there is no Dr. Grant was announced early in| knowing what might happen, You ee MEXICANS KIDNAP THREE AMERICANS Holding Them for Ransom of 10,000 Pesos, Is Report. MEXICO CITY, Sept. 28.—Three Americans employed by the Interna. tlonal Petroleum Company ‘were kid- napped by Mexican bandits near Tux- pan and are being held for 10,000 pe- sos ransom, according to a report re- ceived by the Minister of the Interior. The men’s names were given as Sullivan, Dllsworth and Staney. It is believed they are held by an outlaw band under command of Pedro Meza. EVER SHAVE A LION? EVEN THE SEA KIND? HERE’S A CHANCE SAN DIEGO, Sept. 28. Ed. H. Davis, proprietor of a ANALYZING AMCURICA en —o— -— David Lawrence, the widely <nown political and economic writer whose daily 2 despatches from Washington supply illuminating information to the readers of THE NEW YORK EVENING WORLD, will begin next week ‘a series of special despatches to be written during a transcontinental trip 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 is to prevent Mustapha <emla Pasha from marching to thens {itself and signing the peace ere? Could our disorganized and oorly equipped army halt him.’ —_—> GASOLINE PRODUCTION MAKES A NEW RECORD Ontpet in U. S. in July Was 560,- TALAIS Gall 3s Hi following: xe 2 Dr. Grant|might have a conflagrati hi & ‘ gust, 1921, At that ime ig | conflagration w' ich 28 ¢ Ba: a 3 low. ixty-one and Mrs. Lydig forty-|would spread with a fury which could) WASHINCTON, Sept. 28.— All pre-) Mountain Lodge of San Diego an " a pane, te Hontion Administration stand with the aes y ly be extinguished or ar- | vies reco’ for monthly production] an authority on Indian Affaire, of gasoline in the United States wers broken in July, when 569,711,415 gallons has received from the Museum of American Indians at Washington, ———- people How the i Seer ren a Congrernenel BERLIN MOVIE HOUSES “There are many dangerous ele- . contests going? ments in that quarter of the world,|were produced, according to figures = * What is the business and economic outlook? ALL CLOSE IN PROTEST | and tt you nave a serious confict of |compiles by the Bureau of Mines. The| D. C., @ request which he admits % » What is the Western attitude toward Ei antagonistic races, maddened by the} July output represents an increase of | stumps’ him. It is to furnish he ude toward Eastern Republi Proprietors Dectare New Olty Tex] rooted hatred of centuries breaking | 14:000,000 gallons over dune production. | the Museum with one hundred =a can leadership and the Agricultural Bloc? Excessive, out, You would have once more war in| eee eee i eee ee over July of | sea lon whlekers, long ones, if or. What is the gencral sentiment on Prohibition? BERLIN, Sept. 23.—The motion plo-| Hurope, and it must not be forgotten | last year 1s 160,000,000 gallons. possible, the letter saya. He has i This will be a first-hapd study of the thinking heart of the United States by || ture_fans ‘of the German capital are) that the great war of 1914 began in| Domestic congumption of gasoline for) appealed to local authorities of being forced to seek other diverstons.| the Balkans," July was also the largest ever recorded marine mammals for aid. ‘the trained mind of a Washington correspondent of | nd f jong experience in || the proprietors of the cine having] “We, there s in a single month, amounting to 566,- at . wn On arial observation. Just before the fall election there will be a general | | closed their houses LA Pooler. sania 3 asa erat ae iichsdpal 900,000 Cnet hy SIEBERT Tirton as neh ey a Davis ‘ a7 he : easive amusement tax lev! : ce} 990,000 gallons for June and 457,000,0( . summary in a series of three despatches on the Congress outlook and {| jrunicipality, to the interests of European peace,| gations for July of last year, Stocks| to-day, ‘and so far no one has that war in Asia Minor should not] on hand Aug, 1 were 772,908,949 gallons,| suggested a practical method of trend of opinion. The daily despatches of Every picture theatre in Greater Ber- a ‘ t, or failed) spread into Eur ve hav 6.81 cent. less than the figures ef i DAVID LAWRE lin locked its doors last nigh’ ’ pread into Europe, We have there-| or 6.81 per shaving a sea lon, ak 1D WRENCE to open at the usual hour, the owners) tore taken steps to strengthen our| for July 1. Tho sea lion whiskers are + Dappear exclusively in refusing to accept a reduction in the tax Tmporte of gasoline for July amount: . Ratoni ivan fered by. the authorities In an effort} Postion in the Dardanelles and on] .4'1)4/640,098 gallons, exports were 68,-| Wanted to decorate hideous masks W. K EVENING WORLD. ft an. elaventh-hour compromise, All| the Bosphorus, with a view of ach-| ¢39.402 galions and shipments to Insular| Worn In ceremonial dances by the employecs were hes jeving two objecta, which | have in- jonas were 1,866,769 @ Indians of the Northwest. Mayor and Mrs. will celebrate the thirty-third a: Brooklyn. on Mrs. Hylan and [ will have at | thirty-three years more.” men?” was asked. "Yes," replied the Mayor, ‘My vice to them is to get married. a help-mate, and if he's be happy.” “C was asked. Mayor Hylan laughed. leaned back will be one of the speakers. minority races. to the ship news reporters, ‘‘is i blings of politicians. indicates that the politicians are m boats in the Dardanelles than they about the lives of hundreds of th women and children. Litchfield, which was placed at disposal. summer since the armistice, all a is more serious than I found it before. “Immediately after the armistic travelled on the Bagdad Ratiw: have Constantinople to Aleppo. Such a has not been possible since then, There are nearly 600,000 refu Anatolia. “Our warehouses in Constantin Shortly after the man got in and crashed into a telegraph pole. man was thrown out and insta killed. His skull was fractured. Carney was taken to homicide, but later bailed. Four Indians at work on a sca on Floor C, three stories below ground, of construction at Maiden Lane Nassau Street, were seriously inj to-day when a rope supporting scaffold became loosened and they known as Floor E. Brown, No. 2, of the Old Silp Sta were called by fellow employees. of the patrolmen summoned Rumbold of Broad Street who took the injured men there. Street, the Bronx, suffering fro! possible fracture of the spine; brother, Charles Wolfhart, right side, ribs and chest Skye, No, 880 Jay Street, possible fracture of the spine and and Michael Harris, same add compound fracture of the right th The first three said they were A! {ean Indians. Harris said he w Canadian Indian, . pains st a RICHMOND-ELIZABETH Eliz 2eth yesterday by Andrew representing the Board of and Mayor Mravlag and the Clty vided equally between New York and Union County, New Jersuy, “The Near East,"’ said Mr. Vickrey around Smyrna and through Western The injured are John Wolfhart, as sistant foreman, of No. 429 East 168t! nni- versary of thelr wedding to-morrow at their home on Bushwick Avenue, It will be a quiet affair, of those old-fashioned family gatherings. “The thirty-three years of my wedded life have been so happy,” said the Mayor to-day, “that I hope east “Have you any message for young ad- It a young man wins the right kind of the right sort of a fellow the union is sure to n two live as cheaply as one?’ and “When @ couple are mar- Ina terrible mess, due to the selfish fum- The news to- day nore concerned about the safety of cargo are hou- sands of innocent and helpless men, “T have recently cruised more than 2,500 miles in Near Eastern waters, using the United States destroyer my I have travelled there every visiting sible centres, and the situation ever re, I in safety and comparative comfort, from trip “The Smyrna disaster is colossal, ees ople were emptied at the first news of the Begs for Lift to the Ferry: And Is Killed as Auto Skids Stranger Is Hurled From Staten Islander’s Car as It Hits Telegraph Pole. James Carney of No. 91 Boyd Street, Port Richmond, was asked by @ stranger last night for a lift to the Port Rochmond ferry as Carney was driving his automobile toward Bergen Point. © the back seat of the automobile it skidded The tly the West Brighton police station on a charge of The stranger had no marks to iden tify him except a celluloid badge bear- _——— — FOUR INDIANS HURT 2 DIE, CONGRESSMAN AS SCAFFOLD FALLS Working on Federal Reserve Building When Rope Break- ftold the on the new sixteen-story Federal Reserve building in the course and ures thy y fel twenty-five feet, landing on what is Two patrolmen of the same nam Henry J. Brown, No. 1, and Henry J tion On Dr Hospital, mn his brasion: Thomas Brooklyn ribs, rene. igh. mer- as 8 BRIDGE IS POSTPONED Surveys for a bridge to connect Eliza- beth with Holland Hook, near Arling ton, Staten Island, were conaldered at Bhen, Hatimates B neer, Mr, Colling of Illzabeth, The bridge ts to cont $5,000, 000. The surve: City Mayor, Wed Happily for 33 Years, Hopes for 33 Years More of It “Go to It Young Man,” His Advice When Asked if He Believed in Early Marriage. John F, Hylan® ried there is no guarantee that there will always be two or even three or more."* His Honor then became serious and added: “It is not a question of two living as cheaply as one, In fact, the question of marriage is not ong of dollars but of mutual helpfulness and encouragement built upon the solid foundation of pure love, If the young couple are sensible persons they will live within their income, what ever that may be. A man with a good wife and « happy home is always fired with zeal and the strength to climb the ladder to higher things. Early struggles to rise may at times seem difficult, but in reality they are al- ways made easy where true love reigns. “Often we read of marital troubles, It is true, but think of the millions of happy marriages the newspapers never tell us about!'* Near East “In a Terrible Mess ;” Relief Head Blames Politicians General Secretary Vickrey, Home to Report, Says Dis- tress Was Never So Acute as Now. Charles V. Vickrey, General Secretary of the Near East Relief, came home on the Mauretania to-day to report and to take part in a campaign for further relief measures. He said there would be a mass meeting soon in Synod Hall, where James L. Barton, Chairman of the Near Bast Relief, This meeting is expected to enter a strong protest against the inactivity of the Allies and their failure to protect the disaster and supplies were rushed to Smyrna on American boats, The re- lief fund has been augmented by a $50,000 appropriation, but we must have much more from the philans thropie publi “When the treaty is written ending the war between Greece and Turkey, it must not affect only those countries, There are world issues involved, and the freedom of the straits {s only one of these. There must be a provision protecting the minority races—races which, although h in itself ts a minority, together constitute a mas Jor There‘ are two possible solutions for the Near Eastern problem. One is for the Allies to redeem the pledges they made during the war—pledges which they have since treated as scrips of paper, The oteher solution is educational. He said American farm machinery used on land near the oruhanages had doubled the wh yield in some in- uretania, with one propeller out af commission, came Into port # day late. She brought 1,506 passen- gers. ing the number 566 and the name of the Stillman & Delehanty Ferris Come pany, Jersey City. He was about thirty-five years old, about five feet six inches tall, weign- ing over 160 pounds and wearing @ brown mustache. He was bald. The body was taken to the Port Richmond morgue. INJURED IN AUTO CRASH BALTIMORE, Sept. 23.—Two men were killed and two others were ine Jured last night when 2 big touring car occupied by Representative Arthur Mon= roe Free of California and friends crashed into a telephone pole at a bridge Md. vage, The dead G. sman, secretary to Representative William S. Dnnis of Sun Frane isco. The injured: Representative Free, lacerations of scalp; N. A. Dennis, Sam Francisco. at ee ONE KILLED, 27 HURT IN TRAIN WRECK, LOS ANGELES, sept. 28.—One engt- neer was killed, another so badly hurt he Is expected to die, two firemen ser ously crushed und burned, and twenty three passengers injured when a Souths orn Pacific trun, the Shore Line Lime ted, collided with the Santa Paula low cal near Montvalo, five miles south of Ventura t night Oreo, HERNANDEZ.—JOSEPH. Campbell Funeral Church, Bway, 6th at Notice tater MOORE.—CHARLES BE. Campb:i) Muneral Choreh, Bway, Auth at Until Sunday. FUNERAL DIRECTORS, oo :CTORS, RememberY ourDead $17 up, fine wend for eut price Hat u actually worth $4,000, UNITED MOIUTAL BTOKES, 200 Hroadway Corts » ane oat and Found” artiol in The World or renorte and Found Bureau,” Room 108, World Building, will be Meted || for inirey daye, ‘Thewe jiste can been et any of The World's Offices, “Lost and Found" advertisements || can be lett at any of The World's Advertising Agencies, of oan telephoned directly to The Worlds Call 400 Beekman, New York, Of, Brookiyn Office, 4100 Main,

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