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NY OF 17 ADT SETTING SX FRES TOWATCHFIRENEN Confession Clears Up Mys- tery of Epidemic of Blazes in Brownsville. AVE FIREMEN ORDERS. Deserted One Blaze to See Another—Antics Caused Suspicion. Five early morning Incendiary fires, he a three-alarm blaze that did $50,- 00 damage, were confessed by Morris old, seventeen years old, after an all- examination by Fire Marshal rophy and Detectives Grieco and Mc- Ponough. The confession of Gold, who Waves at No. 307 Livonin Avenue," yeProoklyn, clears up the epidemic of Brownsville fires, The youth first drew the attention of Marshal Brophy at the three-alarm Hire early yesterday morning. As was Ais custom, the pyromaniac turned in ‘the alarm and when the fire apparatus arrived helped the firemen lay the hose and then began to yell instruc- tions. The third alarm brought Brophy, the detectives and police re- serves, and Gold was driven back of he fire lines with the others. Gain- Jng a point of vantage he resumed elling instructions to the firemen. larshal Brophy immediately became uspicious and entered into friendly onversation with Gold, which re- julted in his arrest, According to the story he told rophy- he started out at 1 o'clock sterday morning by setting fire to me rubbish he had placed in tho liway of the two-story fra elling at No. 404 Dumont Avenue. got nv action, because the tenants i extinguished the blaze before the semen arrived. He then went to the six-story brick tory at No, 875 Blake Avenue, limbing up the fire eseape, entering window with a bag of rubbish and en setting fire to it in a third floor llway. Being disappointed by the [aepparently slow progress of the fire vu went to a fifteen-family tenement it No. 618 Stone Avenue. This was it 3.25 A. M., and he set fire to rub- bish in a baby carriage. When he ‘came out he heard the apparatus hurrying to the factory fire and d serted the tenement. Fortunately, "ae also easily extinguished that re. Gold sald that at 3 o'clock the morning of Sept. 18 he made his first attempt to fire the tenement house, but the blaze was extinguished with slight damage. Sunday morning he wet the factory, on fire for the first time. Magistrate Liota, in New Jersey Avenue Court, to-day held Gold with- ont bail for the action of the Grand Jury. The epidemic of fires caused im by the youth was the first since Mar- shal Brophy broke up the notorious ‘Brownsville arson gang eight years o. Gold said that some time ago je fell down and injured his skull.. ee ee ILLIONAIRE MAYOR OF LONG BRANCH HURT m Falls Down Stairs on His Large Estate. Clarence J. Housman, milifonnatre layor of Long Branch, N. J., and ember of the New York Stock Ex- ange, is in the Monmouth Memorial jospital at Long Branch to-day as the ult of falling down a flight of steps n his estate yesterday, He Is suffer. ing from a fractured right leg and body bruises. Mr. Housman, {t was sald, stumbled over @ bush at the head of a flight of stairs leading to a sunken garden in front of his home and fell headlong to the bottom, ee as )} RAILROADS LOSE SUIT INVOLVING $1,533,865 Court Holds Contract With Express Company Was Annulled, A verdict for the defendant was ren- dered In the Supreme Court at Mineola to-day at the direction of Justice Bene- dict in the $1,533,865 suit brought against the Wells-Fargo Company by the Missourl Pacific Railway and the Wabash Railway. ‘The railroads sought to recover losses Meged to have been incurred as the re- ult of violation of a contract by which fhe EXxpress Company was bound to ip over their lines a certain amount expressage. The court decided the ontract had been annulled, PANTOMIME SHE BECOMES BRIDE OF H. V. M’ALEENAN AT THE CATHEDRAL & ates CMM Bacg V._ ME ALEENAN.. Archbishop Hayes Performs Ceremony, Bishop Dunn Celebrates Mass. The marriage of Miss Muriel Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Henry Moore, No. 249 West 10ist Street, to Harold V. McAleenan, son of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph A. McAleenan of No. 20 West 87th Street, took place yester- day at noon in St. Patrick's Cathedral, ‘he ceremony, which was performed by Archbishop Hayes, was followed by a nuptial mass, celebrated by Bishop Dunn. Miss Eleanor Moore, a sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and the other attendants included Mrs. Perel- val Money; Miss Mary McAleenan, sister of the bridegroom; Miss Corinne J. ‘Chase; Miss Elizabeth Mulhall and Miss Margaret August, Austen McAleenan was his brother’s best man. Mr. and Mrs. McAleenan will live at Rockledge Hall,-Riverside Driv and 102d Street, after their honey- ‘moon. —— GROOMES ADOPT TWO-YEAR-OLD BOY jel- phia Soctety. Daingerfield M. Groome and his wife, Edna 8, I. Groome, of Dain-Ed Lodge, Cynwyd, Montgomery County, Philadelphia, to-day adopted two-year- old Kenneth George Heffernan through the Spence Alumnae Society. The adoption papers were filed to-day and approved by Surrogate Foley. ‘The Groomes are prominent in Phila- delphia society and the rendered to them by said in giving her consent that she destitute and had been deserted by the boy's father. The names of the lad’s parents are held in confidence by the Spence Society. Mary P. Wells of No. 115 Hast 824 Street, President of the Spence So- ciety, refused to discuss the adoption and expressed regret that {t had become known and would be published. ‘ Se a LIQUOR SALE CHARGED AT COLLEGE POINT neens Grand Jury. The Rev. John Drew Egbert, pastor ot the First Congregational Church of Flushing, appeared before the Queens County Grand Jury to-day to give evi-} 1 dence on the alleged sale of liquor in Flushing and about alleged gambling at a recent carnival of the Fellow. Craft Club at College Point. The pastor's wife also was a witness. Mr. Egbert said his suspicions were aroused when the club got an injunction barring the police from thé carnival grounds, ———. LILLIAN DIX, ACTRESS, DIES FROM POISON. veronol was due to accident. d Wife Testify Before Lillian Dix, forty-four, an actress, died to-day in Bellevue Hospital from veronal poisoning. She was taken to the hospital yesterday from No. 340 West 42d Street. The police were un- able to learn whether the taking of the} open every day this week up to and in- ‘ THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1522, ~ FEWER REGISTER [First Woman to Fly From Coast u “aie VIRTUE” INNEW YORK CITY | sae ae special Delivery” PLEASES OWNER : WHO PA FORI pale Ue Exiled Daughter Comes From South Dakota to Admire Tomb of Sorrow. Lillian Gatlin, California Girl, Urging National Aerial Memorial Day. MADE A NEW RECORD. Total for Five Boroughs Is 139,104, or 23,279 Less Than Last Year. Flies 2,680 Miles and Was 27 Hours, 11 Minutes in Air, The first day’s registration in New York City for the coming election showed a considerable decrease from the unusually large first day’s regis- tration for the ctty election last year Seger Le and a smaller, decrease from the first|By Marguerite Mooers Marshall day's registration in the city for the} Lillian Gatlin, F. T. F. A. A! Presidential election in 1920. The to- “ Wis tal number of registrants yesterday First to Fly Across America’ was 189,104, that’s how she can write her name This was 23,279 fewer than the first registration last year and 10,421| ‘fom now on. For Miss Gatlin is the fewer than in 1920. It was’ 39,686] brave, blue-eyed California girl who more than the first day's regestration in 1918, also a Gubernatorial election | &# Just alighted in New York after gnd the first election in this State in| taking flight in San Francisco five which women voted. There was a decreased registration | 4@Y8 ago with the United States Air in all the boroughs. Manhattan Ied| Mall, She was a “special delivery with 64, 178 registrants, with 49,572 " ° in Brooklyn, 19,719 in the Bronx, 12,- | Package—surely the most “special 586 In Queens and 3,049 in Richmond. }yone ever carried by Uncle Sam's fly- REGISTRATION BY BOROUGHS, Boroughs. 1921. in| ee came herself and yesterday saw it for 54,178 : the first time. She thinks if it pleases m1 18.719] She flew 2,680 miles and ts the first her it ought to please everybody, as UEETS| wot: uote be iene: tale: CE she has had to suffer for it all her life. je 12,686) tinental trip. Her flying time was 27 And Mrs. Simmons thinks the statue 060 | consa ti Auvutie, he toa tee ls a wonderful piece of work, and calls pol age Save: prekieiorl x it “my statue.” In fact, tt was sho Manor Mae Tuk Sane Ge. On: who suggested something of the kind “Civile Virtue,’ the MacMonnies statue in City Hall Park that hos aroused so much criticism and mirth in New York, pleases Mrs, Edith Haw- thorne Simmons, who in a way pald for it, She has just had her first view of the “Rough Guy” as Clvic Virtue sometimes is called. Mrs, Simmons lives in Sioux Falls, 8. D., and is the only child of Mra. Angela Crane, who died in’ 1894 in hor home in Fifth Avenue and left the fund of $125,000 from which the statue finally came. To her daughter sho left $1, so it can safely be said that Mrs. Simmons paid for Civic Virtue. Mrs. Simmons thought it strange that when the flood of ridicule was turned loose against the statue, nobody thought to ask her what she thought about it, or invite her to see it, so she Total .. waniinaeezge ato IANHATTAN, Rock Spri Wyo.: to her mother years ago when they A 1921. | aw Nortiy Platter sean, lived in Fifth Avenue, Later when 1 2,408 te Fae ‘ee Te: pers A ’ & the daught riage displeased the 2 1,798 No Owe vy» Ia. hiCagO ati S|mother, she was cut off with $1, and 3 2,992 eaae Sse of oe ira ee the estate went for the statue. | The 4 1,912 uate on & mine oO SW AOS TO mrss LILLIAN Gating /as tried to break the will, but 5 3,046 markable Journey. VRDERWOOS AND UNDERWOOD . ‘Then she moved away from 6 2,112 'Whet was it like, and why did you New York, and came back only to see 7 3,182 '799{do 1t?* I asked her late yesterday the statue. 4 1.706 "570| afternoon when I found her at the|1916, to show his mother that he had : , r 31396 Hotel or in the suite of Mrs.|not been forgotten, I began flying 21807 "332 | Blanche Upright, a fellow Californian] ver San Francisco on the anniver- 3,248 * and the author of ‘The Valley of/Sary of his death, sprinkling pink 3,446 Content." roses, symbolic of the beauty and 2767 fragrance of his life and character, 2,616 “It was perfect and glorious in| ‘Then I realized that Lincoln was 8,316 2 every detail,” said Miss Gatlin simply.] too generous a soul to want any cere- 8,289 And she should be a judge of flights, mony devoted to himself alone. And 2,563 for in the Far West they call her]I asked others to help me in cele- 2,608 “Aviation’s Bluebird.’ She is one of|brating Aerial Memorial Day for all 2,515 the women pioneers in the air and|the flyers who had gone to their 1,748 has been flying since 1911. death, in war or peace, for aviation 2,341 ‘There were no accidents on the |and its future. The day also is in- trip and no tended to show the mothers of these continued. “Ip; 1 didn’t do any fly- ing; I was tha’guest and I let my hosts attend to every detail, although to-morrow I shall fly into Detroit leading eleven planes. “The ceremony has been made more “We made Chicago from San Fran-land more beautiful and impressive, and cisco in 19 hours and 2 minutes, which |finally I came to feel that {t should be that the Nation honors them No wonder the name of the organi- zation—"The Jolly Fifteen"'—ceased to be a truthful iadication of the tength of tb Tuey ati coil ts a record. We went over the moun-|Nution-wide. President Harding sent} |} cnisevos "'Thw dolls ik Oe at 17,500 feet. me a letter commending it three days Se Toda RATeADIER He) I felt as if I had the world at my|ufter his inauguration, and I have the feet—as quite Iterally I did, so far as] Navy, the postal service and many the American half of it is concerned. important organizations backing the Every part of the trip was beautiful] movement. In San Francisco we cele- and the peace of it—I never in my|brate on the second Sunday im March, life had a rest cure, but I know this|the Sunday nearest the day when Lin- trip was Itke it. In my opinion, fly-|coln Beachey fell, but I want the Na- ing is the perfect method of trayel-|tional Aerial Memorial. Day: to be a ling, for both men and women. day when it is good weather through- E out the country, and to be a Sunday so that the workers can honor it, number more than a hundred--ang even though none of them is at pres- ent Jolly, ’ _ It was a great scheme while it lasted. The idea was that home brew, while delectable, is a nuisance in the preparatory stages. House- wives don't like to have men messing around the kitehen and celjar with smelly stuff. So the men de¢ided to establish a + 28,494 BROOKLYN. 1921 “But I must tell why I made the trip—that is the really important} ‘I flew across America,” summed] ommunity home brewery. ‘They got thing. I am working to nationalize|up Miss Gatlin, “to typify the spirit] piace at No. 2060-A Fulton Street, San Francisco's Aerial Memorial] of aviation borne across the continent, | j,coklyn, and they engaged a brew Day, which I myself started back inJand I flew three times around the] aster who knew his busine 1916 Goddess of Liberty to give her|’" tre did not have to try all the dendly Lincoln Beachey was my dear|aviation's salute. T shall not rest] periments that an amatyur must friend. He gave me all my hope andfuntil the Nation gives its day of] \tvive before he makes anything faith and courage in aviation., His reverent remembrance to the flyers! i'inxable, He made it right in the favorite flower was pink roses. In and the women who mothered them."'| art plac Boy, 12, Youngest in Columbia, bring In a friend. Others did the Plans Four-Year Course in Two same thing. The brewmaster had to increase his production and the hun- lred-odd members mani. to drink Daniel Berman, Latest Prodigy, Also Aspires to Play Football Wken He Adds Enough Weight. 5 fast as he could brew, even if they had to stay up most of the night to do it : The place was not run for prof The $2 a week per member simply paid all the expenses, including raw materials, overhead and underfoot, But they all became too happy Daniel Berman, twelve-year-old ‘freshman in Columbia, is the Jatest| about It, Laglha pene Lhe vie ; a ; addition to the long list of academic heavyweights making their appear- oe b ectives ‘Kelly and Cas- . ance on the owmpus of the Blue and White within a few years. He lives sidy of Inspector Walsh's staff visited esreee 57,406 QUEENS. at No. 10 Morningside Drive. He came to New York City from Galveston,|the place and ruined it by arresting : 7 there, and Ing of college this year. Michael Cullen, -who lives * Tex., at the opening Who is declared to be the brew master. He's oft on bail now, but Acco: tng to Dantel he expects toe seerecteneeeres 14,861 be graduated from Columbia College?) after he is graduated, but thinks the}the brewing is stopped. The cops RICHMOND. 16 two and one-half years. This willl jaw will be his selection say he has been making 2,000 fice 2 s. ely, e yottle euntal ere be a world’s record even for a prodisy.| “1 have attended trials.’? he snia |% Week lately, each bottle cun + 2,192 1745 f ete 2 1635 1/04 | He will attend summer school ev session, At present he is carrying an + 3,827 . 8,049] unusually heavy course, including that ever thé prettiest pereentas: “and believe I would like talking be-] (tied @ law busting throat fore a large gathering." -_-—- He is four fect, two inches tall and] NON-SUPPORT OF CHILD registration places will be|mathematics, a language and COM-| weighs 98 pounds. He started his OURT REBUKE temporary civilization, Edward Roche|dash through the graded schools at BRINGS c former leader of the|five. After attending public schoo! also entered college at|he entered high school at Townsend cluding Friday from 6 P. M. to 10.30 P, M., and on Saturday from 7 A, M. id Sooner Shower A Judge Saya “Many W fections on Dogs, to 10.30 P. M. \ That was two years ago.| Harris Hall, 138th Street and Amste Giving & verdict of $36 this morning "| dam Avenue, where he finished a four “ i] of No. 1046 SS ZI Time has made him an ancient Junlor.| iors course in two yearn open] TERINee Anstlo otra ee ek EX-EMPRESS ZITA, Daniel said yesterday he was notlig play football when he gets heavy | Franklin Avenue, Bronx, in favor of his SHORT OF MONEY, sure what his profession would) be enough ol rf Kurhfpata i act , hates SELLS HER GEMS «want? Jatin Robltnk Fea’ Siri 678 Finds It Hard to Live in “Come Again Haircut the Rage rt eva he ce not pay ar Spain and Would | As Barbers Seek to Boom Trade}. wus. ee wx oy your kind,” said the Justic ‘While Latest in Tonsoria! Art Brings Customers Back in Week | \v° "ve thousands of couples who crave the blessings of a child, we have others or Ten Days, Convention Is Told. who would sooner shower thelr affec- tions upon @ shagey pup.” BUDAPEST, Oct. 10 (Asso- ciated Press).—Former Em- press Zita is anxious to leave Spain, where poverty compels PRINCESS VLORA, FORMER MRS. GOULD, AGAIN GETS DIVORCE eo a NT “ spin Helen Kelly Dissolves Third Marriage in Paris Courts. PARIS, Oct. 10 (Associated Press). —The divorce wag registered to-day of the Princess Viora, formerly Mrs. Kelly-Gould of New York City, from Prince Houreddin Viora of Albania. The record shows that the divorce was granted at the wife's request and that the Prince did not appear to con- test the suit. Princess Viora's maiden name was Helen Kelly Her first husband was rank J. Gould of New York, from wl..m she was divorced in 1909, Her second husband, Ralph Hill Thomas, whont she married in July, 1910, died in 1914, She married Prince Viora on June 20, 1917 $2 a Week Dues for All the Beer Jolly Fifteen Club Could Drink ce. vm soe ny Sa peda Lure of Expert Brewmastér and 2,000 Bottles Weekly Brought Rush of Members, Police Say. For $2 @ week a menmtber could get all the real beer he cared to that we have not forgotten| drink. For that small fee he had the privilege of spending the day and night in immediate proximity to the stein on the table and the good song ringing as clear as could be expected, ® are Vabrios vertine Book, 41,500 book. It was 4 o'clock when a night wat belonged to Bergdoff Goodman of No. 616 Fifth Avenue. <——~—— WOMAN, 75, FOUND man discovered they were gone. They WANDERING IN STREET Unable to tell her name, her address or anything about her relatives or friends, @ woman about seventy-five years old, with gray hair and brown es, was taken to Bellevue Hospital HAYWARD DECLINES TO ANSWER SCAIFE. ON LIQUOR TRIALS Says Orr, Hart Indictments Will Come Up in Their Regular Course. Col. William Hayward, United States Attorney, declined to-day to answer the telegram of Capt, H. Ie Scaife, attorney for the Women's Clean Government League at Wash- ington, who wired the Colonel last night asking when the indictments against William Orr and others for al- leged violation of the Prohibition laws will be moved for trial, Col. Hayward said to-day that he did not receive Scaife’s telegram until this morning and that he does not propose to dignify it with a reply. The Wright-Martin airplane case, he said, wus never in the United Statea Attorney's ofMflce and that Seaife is grossly in error in his query about that case, The Orr, Hart and ether Indictments for alleged viota- tion of the Volstead act have not been moved for trial, Col. Hayward sald, but will come to trial in thelr regular course, which he thought would be some time In December, “There are only three District | Judges sitting In these courts,” Col. Hayward said, “and we need ten Judges to handle the volume of pend- ing tigations. We are doing the best we can with what we have to work with, I have the utmost confidence in the forty-one assistants in my office. ‘They are overworked and underpaid. Judges from other States have been holding court here all summer, while other courts adjourned, “There are three vacancies now for Judges of the District Court and no appointments have been made. We need them badly. Fraud cases that are three and four years old are being reached on the calendars now. I don’t propose to be annoyed with it and not attack me from the safe distance of 200 miles away by means of @ telegraph wire," ae cs LEAVES HIS ESTATE TO WORKING WOMEN Committee to Choose Four “Most Worthy.” BRICK THROUGH WINDOW,| miTCHELL, S..D., Oct. 10.—Dan $1,500 SHAWLS STOLEN G. West, eccentric publisher of the West News, who died suddenly a year ago last April, bequeathed the residue laced There te Ad-| of his estate to the “four most worthy working women of Mitcheli,”’ each to By means of @ brick wrapped in| share equally, according to his will paper heaved” through the window of| filed for probate yekterday.”'" Brentano's store, at No. 265 Fifth Avenue, to-day, two shawls valued at ch were stolen. The shawls were lent to thé store to advertise a Mr. West named a committee to ject the ben <—— night from Third Avenue and 69th Street Station found the woman andering almlessly in the rain and vd Dr. of Wlower Hospital. 2 1 yore a black skirt, white ] walat, es and stockings, a black Jucket and a vell, eS ee WIFE OF ECCENTRIC MILLIONAIRE TG SAIL Ta Not Reconet! Socialist Husband. to DEDHAM, Mass,, Oct. 10,—Mrs, Charles Garland, wife of the Socialist and Harvard graduate, will sall for Bu- Heinz Spaghetti tastes good. It is good for you. It is convenient—ready cooked, ready to heat rope Wednesday, Garland ts stilton his} and gerve. It ig eco- little farm at North Carver and will re- “neiution vetween the two. im reoene| MOMcal. Your grocer . but It hus been erroneous, Her mother, slater and two children has a fresh supply of it. MAIL SERVIC TO SMYRNA SUS. Ready cooked in to- Pr DED, ., fable announcement has been recetvea| Mato sauce with cheese, that the general postal service for Greek postal sectors, including Smyrna in Asia Minor, {s suspended, Postmaster Morgan aynounced to-d: Correspond- ence uddressed Minor or Smyrna still hi re will be re turned to plac ‘on also appiles to parcel post pack ge for Smyrna, _ DRE. minerce of the MEET © Chamber of ¢ 1 States for the of the national chamber, OF COMMBRLE TH first time in its ws y will hold its annual convention in the city of New York. The chamber will meet on May 7 to 10, bringing to New York some 6,000 delogates from all ¥ 2 parts of the United States represent- ing upwards of 1,000 commercial and Notice to Advertisers trade organizations which are members| »,Display advertising type copy and release Ready cooked, ready toserca for eliher, the week day Moraing Brening World if received after 4 P.M. the day CHICAGO, Oct. 10..—Men have become better customers than women for scented soap, perfumes and toflet waters, according to speakers to-day at the annual convention of the Barber Supply, Dealers’ Assuciation of The friends Piccadi America. her ‘‘to play the poor relation,"” according to Count Joseph Karolyi, royalist leader, The former Empress has sold all her jewels, according to the \ilea aloo ‘are heaving: their evebromes 2 . and ‘J Count. ‘The income trom her | Lome good customers for tweezers, |UP-STATE JUDGE BARS they sell on their estates in Hungary is insuffi- toilet sets and creams. WOMAN AS A JUROR Among the exhibits were sareral te racks of the old-fashioned individu POUGHKEEPSIF, N. Y., Oct. 10.—~ shaving mugs adorned with the own-|.grs, tendora Davis of Beacon, the art] @V@FY Package. ers’ names, which, it was sald, are} woman ever called for jury duty fn the clent to meet her expenses be- cause of Hungary's depreciated ourrency. She is willing to Nv liy Little Cigars have made—and kept—show that merits—try a package today—a guarantee in with her children in the castle coming back into favor. ‘ s 10 In the pa Of Goedsilo, near Budapest, and | A “some again haircut,” requiring] Dutchess County Court, was not per ce ee will promise not to interfere in | attention after a week or ton days.| in the Jury box ae BAe Saas politics, the royalist leader also was exhibited as one means v!! excuned her an 1 the law atill claims tg J atimulating busines calls for male citizens to ee:ve as Jurgim, yueeeding publication eam be inseited only as way D and tu order of World Office, | Copy coutatning engi tnade by The World must be Display erent Soeti soolved by 1 PM, ters not rectived by 5 be, omitted ‘as conditions require, ws order of atest “Teoulpt and positive oy #4 + { i , 4 i | } i j