r,*rvi^i
^^:SS^lFStK^Sm^iSBnmmm^?I^SS'-^^SW^^
THE WKATIfKIt
Rastern New York—Fiilr to¬ il Ight and Wedneflday; warmer Wt-dnesdaiy: dlmlniBhlnK north- weat wfndH. becoming southerly VVedneeday.
THE DAILY REVIEW
THE DAILY lEVIEH:
2c
at yoar Neva 8tMi4 or TMiverr« at Yoar Home
lie Per Week $5 Per Yew
•Of Nassau County
Official Paper, Village of Freeport
FREEPORT, N. Y^ TUESDAY, MARCH 2©, 1921
VoL XXIV, No.30
YAP QUESTION DEUCATE BUT WILL BE DECDED BY DIPLOMACY
"SOLOMON'S CASTLE" BURNED
j I>andniark at Far KiK-kauuy Df-stroyed j l<:«rly Today; I.ons $.->0,0<N)
WINTER MAKES SPRING SHIVER
IMPORTANT CONFERENCE
Kepubih-aliH Will DImusn Lriciidalioa at MerlinK Tinileht
Such It the Opinion of Baron Me- gata. Member of JapaneK<^ Hoose of Lords and Delegate to the League of Nationi, On Way to California
By HARRY U ROGERS
(Br Intrrnatloaal Nrwn Hrrvirr.) WashinBloii, March 29.—The quoH tlon of th'p iBlantl of Yap In moBt <1p11- cnti', but thcrf is fvpry re;i«on to Ix?- llovf- dliilomacy will find ii satiHractory solution "f I ho pioblomH. uocordinK to iJuron McKala, mcmbor (if tht- Jiipanrsc HOUBP of F.,onlH niKl Jaiiiiiicsn dolcKatf to tho Leiigiir" of Nations, who is paw."?- Inif through Washington on his way back 10 Japan from thi> roopnt moetinK of thr League at fJcneva.
Thr Baron, who as a younK man at- tcnifjHl a Rpmlnary at Went Newton, MaHM., will Mive tod'iy for San Fran- cisro, whom ho will romaln for a fi'W diiys Viofnrp sallinK for Tokio.
RolnK toolinically, still on a nils.«!ion whloli InoludoB tho qiieHtlon of mandates over fho Lsland.-i of tho raoKio, the Har on doolinod to enter into a dot.iilod dis cuSHlon of tho Tap situation, tlimiKh ho oxpresHod the bollef that the eontio- VPrBy over the disiiosltion of tho form- or Oerman eablos woulcf bo cleared up sjitlsfactory in the commiinionlions ennferptleo now In session hoTo.
.Tapnn'a positions with regard to Yap. ho intimated, is that the island was awarded to hor under agroomen*.-' ap¬ proved liy iiowors which |)rosumaI)lv h!i(l authority to make such awaids and until that decision in changed. .Japan cannot do otherwise than claim the territory awarded her.
"I am somewhat out of touch with tho situation in Oallfornin on tho coast .In order to get first hand information of conditions thrre."
While tho nar.on does not attempt to deny that many m-rlous mutters re-, main to bp adjustedbotwoon .lapan and the United BtatoB, he is convinced there Is no question so serious as to monucc the good,irolations of the two counlrios. I-t*t,ljf1lPves the two nations arc well on tho way toward a satisfactory set¬ tlement of both the immignition ques¬ tion aitid the question o( land tenure.
"I have not seen the ofUclal report of the c^onvorsatlons conducted hctwi-on Ambassador Morris and Maron Shido- hara," he said, "but I am confident that those interchanges have greutly clarified the situation."
Haron Megata said he undprstood the negotiations thus far h,ive boon entirely satisfactory to the Tokio Government. "It is perfectly natural," lip siiid "that .Iapano.se who have lived In Cali¬ fornia for a Ion;; time, and by their Industry and intelligence, cultivated and improved the land, should fool aomp concern at suggestions that they are to be deprived permanently of the prl%-ilegoM they have enjoyed. 1 am Bure, however, that the .lapunose lioth here and ' In .Tapan arc viewing the situation calmly and will cheerfully abide by .my dpclsion which the two nations may rpach."
The Baron Is Inclined to be skepticfcl of suggestionH that universal abolition of arttiament.i is a po-ssibility of the immt^Uute future.
"The situation In Japan i« unlike that in any of the other great nations of the world." he Vxiilnlnetl. "Jaiwn's t)roblem Is complicate*! by unusual con¬ ditions as regards l>oth skilled labor and materials. The time ordinarily re¬ quired for building a twittieship is ap¬ proximately three years. But in Japan it in much longer. X have been away from Japan for tlvp months and there¬ fore T hesitate to speak the minds of loaders there, hut personalJy, 1 am in¬ clined, because of these unusual con¬ ditions, to ^ubt whether Japan would join in n so-culled naval holiday.
"Much has bt>en said about Japan's naval plans," he continued.
"I am In a position definitely to aa- gert that there has been no unusual augmentation of the Japanese naval strength and that none is contemplat¬ ed. Tho program now being carried out was determined upon more than five years ago. It contemplates the oonatructlon of the mtnimum numlJer of wnrahlpfi necessary (or the protection of Japitn. It contains no suggestion of a threat and Is entlr^ljr, foreign to any Idea of aggression.
Asked about Shantung, the- Baron nald: ^
".lapftn formally anil officially made the statement nearly two yfjara ajro that Shantung would b« returned to China just as, soon as) conditions war¬ ranted. There has been no change In that policy. Whenever a stable giov- ernment replaces the B^ctlonal Oov- ernmcnts now funetloning in China, the Japiwiese will withdraw."
WUh r«f/ard to Bachallen. the aitua- tton 1« quite aimtter, the B«ran aaid- DtBorder«d condition* prevail In Ruaata aad SIberlii, making it the part of wis-
IIKRR'.S A nOiJ^AR WORTH MORE THAN 100 {E.NTS
Washington. March 2D.—Six- year-old Winifred Miser is treas¬ uring a brand new dolkir-bill which slu- received from the hands of Prealdent Harding.
Winifred is the daughter of John Hiser, who Is employed in the iMJller room of the Whiti- Ilouw Kxecutlve Offices. She .ic- companiod her father to work yesterday, and was playing about tile White Mouse grounifs when the President al>eared.
Me picked her up, played with her u^moment. gave ,|i»'r n caress, and left her staring, with the dollar-bill Kri|)ped tightly In hor tiny fist.
I Far Uockaway. March 29.—"Solo-
1 mon's Castle." one of the landmarks
i of the Baywater section, was levelled
i by flames early today Sleeping New|
York missed one of its favorite stKhts, I Blowt Breath on Buds and FIoW'
jfor the Are seemed to set the whole ^„ R At It For Many
sky aflame. i -- *^ - - ¦ - '
! The "Castle," also known as "Cas¬ tle Lass," had been built by Louis
I Solomon, who was known among children miles around as "King Sol-
|Oinon." He lived and died a hermit.
: The damage of the tire is estimated
, at $,'.0,000.
INCOME TAX MONEYS MAY AFFEaBUDGET
NOTICE SERe ON RAILROAD SAYS GRIFFITHS
Former Hempstead Village Council Holds Dismissal of Tunnel Pro¬ ceedings Were Unnecessary, Had New Counsel Been Informed Asi to What Had Taken Place
Albany. N. V.. Xfarch 23.—The fate of pending measures of imiwrtanoy before the Senate will be decido<l at a confer¬ ence of Senate Republicans tonight.
I^egislation to be discu.sseil at the majority conference will incluile the re- peai of the direct primaries, creation of a state movie cen.sorship, tho water
power bill, the IJetts unti-tiespa.-<s bill.
Mineola, March 29.—Naftsati Coun-iand the pi-oposal, soon to be submittal.
JOHN BURROUGHS WIDELY KNOP NAUIRAUST, DIES ON 1KAIN
Hours and Everything Before It Cowen
ty awoke to find one of the most re- for creating a new niarkable drops in temperature re- nii.ssion and abQjishin corded for years. Between fouriiaciiiK conimi.ssicnh. o'clock yesterday afternoon and that hour thi.T moriiinn th<' barometer had tumbled fifty-six degrees, from 78 to 22.
The drop came in the wake of a seventy-eight mile gale which late yt.sterday caused one death and injur¬ ies to a score in and around New York City. The wind caused thous¬ ands of dollars worth of property damage. It ended in a half hour's hailstorm.
As the sun made its appearance today the temperature began to show a steady rise but it was the coldest morning here in weeks.
itat
th<
.sports lioxinii;
¦oni-
an<l
GREECO DIES; THREE MEN ARE ARRESTED
M4IXTE CAKI.O TO HAVE A
RIVAL IN SOI'TH AMERICA
New York. March 29.—The gamb- lei-s' Heaven—.Monte Carlo—is to have a .Vow World rival.
Nicghory. adjacent to Rio do Jan¬ eiro, the capltol of IJrazil. i.s to be remade into a (ji.shionablo Kamblini; resort, at a cost of $15,000,000, ac¬ cording to l>edonde Sutton. Now York engineer, who rettirned from Itnizil yosteitlay. al)Oaixl the .-\eolu.s. haviUK signed contracts callin^; loi the above expenditure. "
The ifnmblinif casmo will cost »2,500,000. Sutton sjiid. and will .sur- pa.sK anything' at Monte Carlo. A modern ferry will be provided to roach thi' resort, which will be coni- plelod in \:r^2.
I Hempstead. Maich 2!K—Former Vil jlagc Counsel i-l. Wlllard flrifflths lake.s |l.smie with the statement that the I proper notice had not been served nn the Long Island railroad in the matter I of the pi'oposed underground cr()SHin« """""" ' »ii'"' ^''*" '^"¦¦' "i^'enue fid Kendls plac.-.
Supervisors Estimate $65,000 Will ^ The I'ubllc .service commission dis.
Come From This Source—Any massed the ca.se on the ciaim of the
Change in the Law Would Beiraih.>ad o,,mi)an.v's attorneys that
Reflected in Tax Rate in This i""i^«'>' ""ti'e had n..i hen served, as^
required by law. .\lr. (iriftiths. who. ! as village tcunsel. started the proceed- Ing, claims that the notu'e wjis '.served. ! but that llip new counsel, Felix Uei'- Schneider. ,lr.. was not sufficiently in formed by the new village admlnistra tlon with the facts as they occurroja; otherwise, he says, he 1<^ sure the pro- coedlng would not liave lieeii dismis. Be«l.
.Mr. fJrifllths has written a letter set ting forth the situation to Village and the matter probably will come uii at the repulai meeting of tho Villatrc Hoard ou .\pril
Blizzard in the Berkshires
Plttsfield. Mass., March 29.—Berk¬ shire Hill towns surrounding I'itts- field were buried in snow drifts fif¬ teen inches deep today. The worst
Mystery Surrounds Cause of Crime lyl ^TI I £11 AMn But Dead Man Is Believed to H IVILLEI/ AllU
Have Paid Vendettas' Penalty of a "Squealer" — Identifies One Man on Death Bed
Mineola, March 2!t.—Rocco (Iroeco
blizzard of the winter raged in this dioil in the Nas.sau Hospital nt midni^'ht section late.last night. The tern- f,.„,„ „,.,. „„„p, ,,.„„„^, („„„,, peraturp^ dropped forty-eight degrees in seven hours, to thirty.
County
.Mineola, .Mai ram R. Smith, visors, is engr proposed acts
b 2!t.—Chairman iHi- r tho Prfiard of .^iiper i.sed just now with f legislature, already
Wilmington, Del., March 29.—The entire Delaware peach and apple crop is believed to^have been ruined by high winds, hail, sleet and frost last night and today. Peacli trees that were in blossom yesterday are today blackened as if by fire. Crops of strawberries and other small fruits also were ruined. 'T%e damage runs into millions.
.Ml
CrilTiths' loiter
li>v.s:
presenteil and ready to Iiecome law,
which affect the disposition ^vf the state income tax moneys.
I'nder the present law the income tax moneys, less that part which i.i paid to the state for stato purposes, are i)aid over to the supervisors from
the different towns and are disbursed ' p^;,^ij^,^j Howard S. lirower as town moneys. When the supervis¬ ors prepare tli^p budgets for then- towns for the ensuing year they take Into consideration the moncy.s that wid be paid from this source and arc alile to cut the amount raised by tax on , proiierty by the amount that comes , Ib.ward from the income tax.
Last year Supervisor Smith and his colleague. Supervisor Doushty, estimat¬ ed that about *100,000 would come into the town trofn the income tax. This year, knowing that income taxes all over the country would he much less, the supervisor allowed about $85,000 as the estimate. Hence If any act of legislature Is passed now that affects the distribution of this tax it will mean that the budget will tall short by .1 onsider.ible tmra.
TInder..ih«!-'VindlicKBJl^'acts of legls lature the income tax moneys would I* divided among the towns, villages and school diStrlcts.
mOJWBHiST MHtAdOUSLY ESCAPES DEATH
March 2Sth, lIU'l. Blower. Rs(|. President Village of Hempstead Hemi)stead. New York.
GLEN COVE MEN RNED j
$250 ON GAMBLING CHARGE
Mineola. March 29.—Christian Kloh.s 1 of Cflon Cove was fined $250 in tho ; County Court this morning by Judgej Lewis Smith. Thg^ charge against him | was book-making as It Is applied to | race track gambling. ,
Judge Smith in spintcncing Klohs who was tho last of several gamblers i arrested .said he Intended to give him a greater sentence but 'oecause he re- , cently sufferpd financial losses he was j making the flne $250.
Klohs maintained he was out of the ' city at the time of the raid on his J place at Olen Cove and was not re¬ sponsible for the book-making. •
WYOMING HAS FIRST
OF WOMEN JUSORS:
tBjr Inlrrntitlaiiiil N'ewn mnvXrr ) I
Laramie. Wye, March 27.—Mrs. N. A. Heath, whose husband recent-' ly died in Ogden, Utah, hae been re-| vealed as the only surviving mem-1 her of the first woman Jury in the f United States. The Jury was drawn 1 In Laramie in 1870 and served; throughout a full term of the court, j
Dear Sir:
1 note with amazement the statement in last Saturday's Re¬ view that proper notice was not given to the Railroa.1 Company in thi' matter of laying out a tunnel lundorthe railroad tracks at Van Cott iivenue. An examination of the impers on file in the office of the Public Service Commission. [Second District, will reveal the original aotico under section 90 of the Railroad Law, a copy'of which w.is ^erved on a proper otllciui of the r.iilroad company and also an affidavit of service of such copy on such official.
Tho error, it .seems to mi", lies in the faildre of the present adminis¬ tration to acquaint its counsel with the facts as they o<-curred prior to his attending the hearing on Friday last. Had he known that the proper notice had been given to lay out a tunnel connect¬ ing .\ff>ore avenue on one side Willi Miller place on the otlier but that on the night of the hearing before the Village Board the lixatlon was changed against the protest of the railroad oomimny who was repre¬ sented at said hearing, he would have beerf aihe to raise this point before the Commission on Friday and I am sure the proceeding would not have been dismissed.
Kven now a, re-urgumcnt may be had on the papers now on file and 1 will gladly lend any assis¬ tance po.ss.ible to sustain the pro¬ ceeding.
Sincerely yours
H Wlllard Oriffiths
4
HuHed Through Windshield When Steering Rod Breaks; Sees His Machine Carried 100 Feet By Impact With Onrushing Trolley Car—SuCFers Only Cuts and Bruises
.Mineola. .March 2!*.—Nicholas Wll-
! liams, wf Mineola, is today one of few fortunate automobile accident vicfim.s, sin<e his life was doulillessly save 1
I when he was hurled through the wind.
i shield of the <'nr he drove.
Williams was driving along Franklin
( avenue Sunday afternoon when some¬ where near Twelfth street, Carden
! City, a steering rod under the car
; broke, the front wheels swung to the
j right and orie of them <'ollapse<J., The
I sudden halt of the ear threw Williams i shot.- Then all ran. Four or five shot
j from his seat straight through the j at him, ho said. He managed to walk
I windshield, to the hard roadbed. ; to his Warding hou.se. three blocks
I The car, .yWith the engine stiil run-! away. There he i'ollap.sed.
! ning and the clutch in, swung around,^ The shooting took place Sunilay
j airoBS the road, the wlioels which col-I night. A curious part of the wliolo situ lapsed serving as the pivotal point, .ition concerning the crime is that Chief
1 in an Italian vendetta in Cilon Cove. Justice of the Peace Harold of Clon Cove has hold three Italians, all of whim tho vic¬ tim .says .shot him in a tight in th'^ .street, ,following; an aii;nniont wiih Tony An'gelo.
Theif is an olonicnl of mysloiy about Ihe^ c.-ui.se of the tl«lit. liK-ccos i-i'ini- latioii :is a |>eacoful citi'/.en w.a.s none too good. It is a.s.sumed thiifl' (irooco was accused of being a ".si|Uoalei." Ho is said to have slvcn the authorities information against other member.s of the Italian colony, or what i.s known as the Orchard of Clou Cove.
Tile arrested men are Joseph I'anlo. a butcher, whom tho dead man identi¬ fied as one of his a.<isailants; Tony An- gelo and Salvatoro De'Legor. Domon- ick Lecaido i.s al.so held a.s a jpaterial witness.
The tlrst three ^re held for manslaugh tor. Slierifi: CbSilej* .Smith yesterday aft<'rnoon, after tJreeco had been oi>er- ;ited on in the Na.s.sau Ho.spital, took Pardo before him and asked, "Is this the man who shot you," and Croecoj replied. "That is the man. ' |
He was .shot five liuios, the fatal : shot lodging in his inteslinos. Tlie physicians removed llw- bullet, but he | did not survive.
The victim, while he w;is in his bed in tho li»spital, asked to get Donioiiick I Lecardo, becau.se he knew all the men | whji wore in tho shooting. \
(Irooco «iid ho was walking along | the strevt. .Vngelo called him to a point j in front' of .\ngelo's .saloon. They had words, and -Angelo hit him in the face. ! He fought Imck. DiuiiiK the Konerai I melee the others joined. ,
Pardo is .siiid to have fired the fir.st |
46 WOUNDED IN FIGHT WITH REDS
j It managed to get onto the trollev ! tracks just as a trolley car came along.
.The trolley car, moving rapidly, struck , ^ntji yesterday morning. That arrest
; the automoMio "luil and carried it for I Upwards of a hundred feet before the i speed could be okegked. The auto- ! motitle wjis demolished; Williams | I would surely have been killed had he ; ilieen in it \\ hen the trolley car struck j : • Williams went to the .N'a.ssau Coun- jty Hospital and where it was found he j I suffered only from cuts and bruises, and I he returned to his home.
; FAMOluS ItOXI.Mi (1.1 B HI RNEI)
Philadelphia. Pa.. .March 29.—The jOlympia .-\thletic Club, scene of many ! famous boxing bouts, wa.s completely, I destroyed early today by a spectacular J fire of unknown origin, which also; i licked up eight adjoining resldenc«.s, i I driving to the streets a dozen negro | ; families. Fopr alanns were sounded.'
Hand Grenade, Coiicealed in Flow¬ ers, Hurled in Midst of Police at Essen, Germany, Starts Battle —Government Building Under Heavy Guard—500 Bandits in Russian Uniforms, Captured
' (By IntrrnHllontil %.•«» Mrrvlcp.)
lioilin, .Manh I'll. -I'^ouiteen persons
i were killed and forty-si.\ wminded in a
violent collision bolweon the .Sec:urity
Police and Communists at Ksson. in
the Ituhr District, today. Three ot
the lU-ad were Security polittuatu. - .
Kn.s<ii is the .seat of tho gn-at Krupp
works and other lion and .steel iiiilns
, tries.
.\n officer of I he Seciiiit.\ Police at K.sson had ordered ii Cominiinist mob : fo (ILsperse. While the offlcer was en- I wi;re<l in convor.sjition with the ring- ' loaders of the Reds some unknown per- ' .sons threw a huge boquet of fiowers ; froin a window into the miil.st of tho i policemen. The flowers coveroil ii hand I greiiade which exploded iindri iieilf h an 1 uiHoinobile.
I The policonun find Ihicc volloy.s ln- ¦ to the air Id fiighteii the Iteds.
The Cointniiiiisls, wlio wore heavily I armed, ot>encd fin- with k-voIvois .iiid blind grenados. Tin |>oiicciik-ii n.luined this tire.
Tho Cabinet li.ld :i siiirial iiioolinK I lute .Monday and decided iijion more i-n- [ergetic iiioasiiios tit;aliisl the ('oinniii- jnlsts.
I l«irge iiiiiiilieis of Coninuinlsts from
I .Middle C.i-iinany whore the trouble be
jgan, are llockiiiR into I'.orlin with tlw
j announceil intention of a.ssisting the
i Hods in a revolution. H^ri AVoisniaiin.
I I)iri-<tor of Public Safety, admitted that
' the situation has become more serious.
i This was regarded by tho govern
i nicnt as the critii-al day In the Commit
j nisi ri.sing, but th<f"1iidicati<ms at noon
Were that tho movement for ;i general
:.l'ike wa.s a failure. I-loWevor," Red.s
I eotitinue flocking into the lity. Police
cordons were thrown tibout the lail
way -stations and many of the in<oiii
: in;;- Communists were aricKteil.
.Vrmei! Communists at 'Leipzig dis- aMiiotl the Security Police guarding fllhe Leipzig Voelkersclilact monument and stole a ijolii-e automobile. A coiii- paiiy.of policemen pursued the Reds I into a suburb of Leipzig and gave hut tie to them. The Keds took lefuge In a schmd house. Five t-asualties result .•<l from the llgliting.
.Vaother battle between Security Po- liii and Reds occurred at Markanstadt when the policemen inter(»pted a de- taihinent of Communi.sts that was go¬ ing froni Ix-iiizig to Leuna. ,, "~.in L-. i..i„-t Drder.s were is.suod to the "Oreen" New ^ork, March "» "^'^'*;.:^ ; policemen to shoot to kill If the Com- allexed to have been written by !• red ; ' " Beauvalis, half breed Indian guid^
Speeding from California to His Home at West Park, N. Y., End Comes as "Flyer" Is Pass¬ ing Through Ohio — Would Have Been 84 Years Old Next Sunday
BiWiilo. N. v., .March 29.--John Burroughs, world famous naturalist, died on a train trxlav while enrotite from California to his home al West Park, .\'. Y.
Death occurriHl In a pullman ciirapart- menl at two a, m., when the .S'cw York Central train, known as the New York —New Knglnnd exiiross, was passing through Kingsville. Ohio.
liiirroughs. who had spent the winter in Californi.-i, has been in f.-eble health for some tim.-. Ibid lie liveil until .Xpril :l. he would h.iv- been SI y.-.-irs old.
lie was 111.' most riinioiiM iiiitiiralist t vcr proihi.-.-d by .Vnicii.a, and his naiure studies alont m.iny lines haxe been .-iccopicd as m ill horltaliv c.
.lolin Iturnnigbs was born at Rox- l.iiiy. N. v.. April ;i 1S.1T. received an ;i(adeini( odiication. and after te.-ichlng sih.iol for eiylil yi-ais and serving as .1 iie.isiiry rlcrk oiiil .N:itioiial li.inl; Kvaniiiiii for I he ten years following, turned to his natural lieiil, tho study of horlliiiltiire, birds, Ibiwcrs and tin-
i'omm(iii tie zone.
He is ki )r nio/e
lild ,iiuiiials ot lb" tiini
own as I 111' aiillinr i
latiiro .siudy hooks,
1)1 ihildreii.
a gn-iil frii'iid^ot'
Jioo.s/'Veli and oin
the
of Police Donaghy has eight men under him, but there were no aiiests made
was rtiade at tho instigation of Sheriff Smith, wbom District Attorno.\ Wo«k.s had insisted go to the .scene of the crime.
Just why Chief Donaghy made no ar¬ rests in his own city limits in a criihe of this .sort is not <lear to the District Attorney's men. according to the stafe- lUents they made today.
STILL GATHERING EVIDENME IN STILLMAN DIVORCE
0. UNDERWOOD NEW HEAD OF NASSAU FARM BUREAU
Mineola, March 29—F. O. Under ! *ood of Ithaca has been secureil by the
80 close to her | Na-ssau County Farm Burea to take j the place made vacant by the realg.
is an effectlvei nation of H. J. Evans who/ will shortly
conditions in territory own dominions.
"As soon as there native administration in Saghnlien. j.relinquish his iiost.
Japan will evacuate her troops." he Mrs. Underwood has b«>en instructor said. in the' departm-^nt of vegetables at
The Baron deprecated any notion of: Ithaca and K. V. Titns head of the a really serious clash of interest* be-i farm bureau says Mr. Underwood Is a tw«<en the United States and Japan. i fully qualified and capable man. He
'.'/apan's field of development," he i expects him to keep the farm b\>re«u: ijaid, "is not toward the United.StutuM. { up to the hich'standard that Mr. Bvana but away from it, and trouble with; brousht it. America is the last thing Japan is seek-[ Mr. Un'lerwood will lake chanre ;
for Japiin to keep an eye upon ing.'
,Vprll 15.
KIM» STILL IN KILL
BI>.\ST IN DELAWARE
PRISON KITCHEN
, AVllmington. Del. Mttrch 29.--.V mysteriouii aroma coming from the culinary department of the workhouse tiiday aroused the suspicions of Warden Plummer. who discovered two gallons of corn mu.sh boinu; distilled by prison workers.
The KtUI was confiscated and four prisoners were removed to their rells.
A<( honor committee of pi-is- onera wilt punish the bootl««c«rs.
niiini:<tji attempt to pre<ipitntp a Rattle. .\ll insurgents captured here and else¬ where fro(n this time on will be treat¬ ed a.s se^l-mllitary prifconers. They will be arraignoil before "civil court martials."
Moie than one hundred "green" .po¬ licemen were in WilhelmstrttsHe,Ktt»''d- ing the government buildings. They w<ro equipped with loaded rifles and supiK>rted by machine gun.s.
Mrs. "Flfl' Potter Stillman, arc indud- ' ed in tlie "documentary evidence" her i husband, James A. Stillman. president
of the National City Bank, firoposes to ' use in his divorce action, it was learn-
etl today. •»
A woman detective whose identity is
shrouded in mystery, ts said to have
intercepted'three of these lelteis. The
woman sleuth. It was rei>orted. was
engaged by .Mrs. Stillnuin and poaed as ,,nd anxious to make dl«;loilurew un- ; a servant at the Stillman's Camp IXKlge favorable to the banker.
near Thre« Rivers. Quebec. The con- Mr,,. S(il|man'M lawyers were s:ild to : tents of the allege<l missive are iH-lnjfi huve .unquestionable information that ,1 c.-irefully guarded, but hints were made fhis woman was enabled by tho bunker
that -they would prove sensational when ycjirs ago to nvike a dazzling career on
revealed. ', Broadwwy. The banker's wife is itaid to
.Meanwhile other reports injectert bo prepared to charge rtwtt this former
still another inygtery womiin into the darling of Broadway prereded Mrs. ; case, a 'Moth ot Broadway," nald to i Florene* I>e#«lii In milbnan's aSec^tlone.
have been once k favorite of the "threat Mrs. fltillman ts said to have person I Wh4t« W»y" an<f (m intimato terms I ally diaeovered and pursued the "trail"
with 8*fllman but now living In poverty leading to th* new myMery woman.
to Mil srho
lie was I'lesid.'lll
P.iirroiiKhs hooks de, anil I'anipiiiK " with erii'.an.
Rurroughs al.so w.is known as osflpher. while his litiiary slyl rr'giirded as that of the tlrst nrd •"rtrrnfllMty aftrf*t1rtrlty wnw admh all , ilti.s.
niin-oiighs llli'iar.\' elToils a studies extended over a pi'i io than sixt.v years.
He was yiveti an honorary IKictor of literaliire by N.il,' 1 degree or
lile
I he
mini 111 \ni
Phil-
nd iiMtiii'i it of nioi'<
In 1910 Human In 1911.
anil .' Letlert
I'.v Colg.'it.
v., .\I
Roxliiiiy the sil.ldeii de.'ilh I naturalist, aboard a tr.iiii today, was re mer lioino here, as all. The first new
an h -Jil,—News of
.lohii Dili-roughs,
.\ew York Central
eiviiil :il his suni-
distilicl shoik in
laine in n iilr-
jdioiu
Soivi.
ft \
I'loin the 1 rilcrMalional .S'l
explained hy tlw I'aretaker
his Vome ihiit liiirroughs reientlv iiiidei Ijone a ' severe operation fo
.ilicc^s on the (hi'st was reared, had ov<
The naturalist h liiii roiiKlis, to suivi
It is expected tl take place hero.
The naturalist w^ and lifelong frlenc
VI'
had for an
ami this onleal, ii stl'.'dned his hem t, - one son, .luli.-iii e hilll. I the liiiriai will
a fanilliiHt tl(;uic- of many in this
vicinity, will
RtUllil-S.
h" tfillowi-il his natiiri;
New York, .March 29 —OfllcLils of the New York Central Railway stated to. day that the biKly of John Mijrroiigh,-< was takt^'i fi-om the train either :il Kingsville or Amboy, Dbio. to awail inonouni'omont of a formal Vfrdli-t of the lanse of death. Following lhi« .Htlon the body will be prepared hy an undertaker and forwarded to .New York State,
.\esv York. .March 29.—After learning of the death of John Burroughs. Thom¬ as .\. KttJMoh today issued tho following statement:
"I am very sorry to hear of tlie death of my frienil John Burroughs. To me he always a|>peared to be one i,r (he liighi'St typos y.-t evolved in llie ndvance of mf n to a higher wtiige, '
EXPLOSION WRECKS HOUSE
Several People Reported Killed in ( hicitKo Tenement ">
Chicago. .Mat oil 29,-^ .*levcral people' are reimrtixj killed and Aiany Injured In an exiilusion that ,wreckett a teno.| ment building at Halsted and Burtx-i stiootj!! hero today^
The explosion is believed to have orlgBiated In n paint store which o<-. lUples the lower floors of the four- story i>ulldlri«r.
Firemen said the blast may have been (¦ijiuH4-d by a bomb, Windows for blocks around were Mltuttcred.-and the buildrirg crumhU'd to bits.
Ail'eleven o'clock < oronor Pf-ter M. Hoffman declared that the death loll would be Ht leant ten and that th»» in¬ jured wfHiJd probfihly "number sl»ty.
Three bodies had 'been reco'-'ered at thtff time