1
Don't Min The Street f-atr For the Aid of CrippleJ Childrer Park 4w«M 46th to 50th Streeh \/«y t6th, 17th ani 19th The Grcalcst Sporiing Goods Storc in thc World Madison Avenne and 45th Street New York Nature's Spring Opening Decoration Day sounds the call. Tented r'nes by thc wa- ter's edge are about to Bpring inio being. in u canoe by day. imuer canvas by night. town crampej ideas spread- ing out to the horizon's rim. Or a cross-eountry motor- camping trip, expanding one's lungs and one's thoughts free from the worries of Pullman and hotel. In no other phase of its readiness to supply sports- men does thia storc take greater pride. Tents and Camp Furnishings » t&S&& From our "Marquee" tent, to bd carried on i he running- board, to your choice of the world'e besi canoes. .. m a large family tent, t ull-Summer camp, to t\vr«- ¦¦¦¦ skiff with an >ut-board motor. An entire floor replete with camp conveniences .- tents of every type, cots, bedding, cook kits, packs, axes, lanterna, knives, Etoves, duffle bags, medicine kits. Pishing tackle for every local- ity.guna and pistols.cameras for your camp record. Clothes for Camp and Big Woods For men and women. girls and boys, Abercrombie & Fitch camp, hunting and fishing clothes are the world's standard. Khaki, RufFstuff, Coldstream duck, covey cloth. corduroy, for¬ est ry doth.widest choice of materials. Skirt or breeches suits and *pecial camp dresses for women. Hats, shirts, hosiery, boots. waders and shoes for every fish¬ ing and camp requirement. dbercrombie & Fitch Co- CZRA H. FITCH, Preaident MadUon Avenue and 45th Street New York "Where thc Blazed Trail Crosscs thc Boulevard" Stillman Suit Turned Over to Referee To-day 6,000-Page Record Closed With Wife'a Denial That She Wroto Notes Beauvais U Charged With Selling Canadian BU1 Refused Divorce Fight To Be Taken to Highest Court, Regard- less of Trial's Oulcorae -.- The hard-fought Stillman case eiiters upon its closing phasc to-day with the turning over to Rcferce. Daniel .1. Glea- son of thc 6,000 pages of testimony which are the record of Jatnes A. Still- man's attempt. through a divorce ac¬ tion, to prove his wife guilty of mis- conduct and her babj-, Guy, the son of Fred K. Beauvais, Indian guide. !t has been the longest drawn out and hardest fought divorce suit in tho annals of this country, observers say, with one draniatic turn after another. ln the eariicr stages of the suit, while counsel for Mrs. Anne Urquhart Still- man were baring their evidence of the association of Mr. Stillman and Flor- anca Leeds, the testimony appeared to bc favorable to Mrs. Stillman. Thc smashing blow ainied at her defense with the production at Poughkeepsic the other daj of four letters declared to have been sold to the banker's side by Fred Beauvais, turned the tide somewhat against her in the closing hours of the case. On top of this came the decision of Supreme Court Justice Morschauscr at White Plains yesterday, refusing to grant her $6,960 to cover the expense of taking testimony in Canada. His decision read: "Motion denied, but; without costs." Early in April counsel for Mrs. Sti 11- man made their second application for the appointment of a commission to take testimony in Canada. Justice Morschauser appointed the commission, but said he would take the matter of expenses under advisement. His de-I cision of yesterday Icavcs Mrs. Still- man liable for the heavij expenses in- curred recently in taking the testimony of twenty-four witnesses in Montreai. ¦John F. Brennan, counsel for Mrs. Stillman, refused to comment on this decision yesterday. The defense rested with the testi- mony of Mrs. Stillman and her em- phatic denial that she had ever penned tho letters declared to have been sold for $15,000 by Beauvais. The hearing scheduled for Pough¬ keepsie to-day probably will be noth¬ ing more than a formal banding over of the testimony to the refcree. Coun¬ sel for Mr. Stillman still have the right to examine Ida M. Oliver, Guy's nurse. and Harriet Hibbard, housekeepor at the Stillman estate in Westchester County. who identified the handwriting of Mrs. Stillman at the last hearing. lt 16 expected that they will waivc this right, however. After the referee has gone over the testimony and writton his report it will be handed to Justice Morschauser for final decision. lt is probable that some. time will elapse before this is given and it is expected that whatever the finding the case will go to the higher courts. N'ot only is Guy's legitimacy at stake. but his right to participate in the $6,- 000.000 estate of James A. Stillman's father is threatcned. Should Mrs. Still man lose in the divorce action, she will be denied the $1)0.000 alimony she now gets. There are the two separate is- su"s at stake -Guy's paternity and Mrs, Stillman's alleged misconduct. She has repeatedly said that her fight has been for Guy and that if tho judgment is in favor of her three-ycar-old son she will be content. m See Ban on Child Labor Bills In Supreme Court Decision WASHINGTON, May 16- -Effect of the Supreme Curt decision in which the child labor law was held unconstitu- tional was much discuased 8t the Cap- itol to-day. The opinion was widely held that in- asmuch as the court has turned down two child labor laws it will be difficult, it not impossible. to enact a measure which will stand the test of the courts. Ballot Fraud Charges in Orange Given Grand Jury (knir! Order* Investigation of Voting at Commission Gov¬ ernment Election Charges of fraud, alleged to have been committed in the commission gov¬ ernment election in Orange, N. J., lRst week, wer.j placed before the Emox Ccunty grand jury in Newark ycs'.or- t!ay by .iiidge Frecl Stickel. Thc prosecutor has called to niy attentlon," the court said, "that in the recent election in thc city of Orange there was a rcgiatration of about 0.500 and n challenge list of over 600; that in 3S2 cases no application was made to vote; in 85 cases application was ninde to vote, and upon the applica3it Lcing challenged he chosp not to voto; in 70 caiea of challenge the applicant voted, giving an upparently good ica- son for his namc having bron on the ciiallongc list. In thr remainlng elghty casoi; where the challcnger voted, his right to voto is under investigation by the proaecutor's offlce. "It seems to the prosecutor nnd to the court that this situation is one for thc investigation of your body to dotermine whether the election laws of this county have been violatcd, to ascertnin whether men and women lpgistered who were not entitled to do so, l>y reason of non-residonce or for some other reaBon; to determinc whether men and women voted who were not entitled ro to do, and. if so, why tiiev regiatercd and voted." Deserter Held for Chauffeur's Killing; Bad Liquor Blamed iMinister's Son Said to Con- f'ciss Shooting Drivcr on Joy Ride; Flees Here to Snrrender at Navy Yard Ernest Mayo, a privnte in tho Quar- termnster's Corps staticned at Camp Dix, N. J., was arrested yesterday in the Brooklyn navy yard charged with desertion. He then was taken to Mount Holly, \. J., in connection with the shooting and killing on May 3 of Jonas K. Fox, a chauffcur, of Wrightstown. .Mayo is said to have confessed kill¬ ing Fox. He is. according to his re¬ ported statements, the son of the Rev. Mr. Joseph M. Mayo, a Baptist minister of Camilla, (.a., and the brother of Joseph M. Mayo jr.. a state legislator in Georgia. He is said to have rie- sertcd from the navy in 1910 and tn have enlisted in the army in May, 1920, after he had been releascd from Elmira Reformatory. He is twenty- one years old. On May 3 he had just bren paid, he told the detectivcs. and he and two other soldiers hired Fox'a automobiie and went to Philadelphia, where they drank a great deal of liquor. On the. way back to camp they picked up two other soldiers and bpcame angi'y with Fox for purchasing for them such bad liquor. "I'll get you for this," Mayo is de¬ clared to have said to Fox. And \vhe31 the driver argued with him, he. is said lo have shot him in the back. Fox slumped over the wheel and Mayo is declared to have (ired two more shots into him. It was dark. The soldiers drove tbe automobiie into a side road and flung Fox into a ditch. Mayo said that he drove. the auto¬ mobiie back to Philadelphia and then to N'ew York, where he arrived 011 May 5. He put the machine in tho Lafay¬ ette Garage, at 325 West Forty-ninth Street, and passed the night. in a Bow- ury lodging house, Next day he gave himself up to the navy authorities as "Percy Stewart," under which name he had enlisted. and submittcd to the charge of desertion. In the mean time Fox had beerj found, and he gave a mea;?er descrip- tion of his assailants before he died. The other soldiers were found in Camp Dix and qucstioned. Thc automobiie was located and Mayo was traeed to the navy yard. The' navy authorities turned him over to the army, and Mayo was tnken last night to Mount Hollv." *****. vIL.. The Century dining en route Dinner a ia cartc is served on the Twentieth Century Limited with just such fas- tidious care as the experi- enced traveler expects to find on the world's most famous train. Century.Westbound Lv. New York 2.45 p.m.* Lv. Boston 12.30 p.m.* Ar. Chicago 9.45 a.m.* 'Standard time V M.WYORk? (j^NTRAl Century.Eastbound Lv.Chicago 12.40 p.m.* Ar.Boston 12 noon" Ar.NewYork 9.40a.m.* * Standard time | For Reservations: Telephone Vandcrbdt 3200 I NEW YORK CENTRAL Aldermen Get Bill for Drastic Firearms Curb Prohihits Pawnbrokers From Lenriinp; Money on Giins or Selling Them Unless Purchaser Has Permit Jersev Officials to Aid Admit Crooka Are Armed Across River and Promise Legislation Against Peril After a conference yesterday in the Mayor's office between the New York nnd New Jersey authorities to discusa means to stop thc indiscriminate sale of lirearms, a drastic ordinance was introduced by the Board of Aldermen here prohibiting pawnbrokers from lending money on small arms that may be concealed upo3i the person. Any auch arms that the pawnbrokers now have in stock may not be sold unless the buyer has a permit, and the pawn- broker must take the name and address of the purchaser nnd send thc record to the Poliee Department. The New Jersey authorities said their situation was more ditficult to deal with, but they promised to work for local oidinances and state laws which would prevent the sale of lire- arms, permit or no permit. Those at the conference from New Jersey were Mayor Frank Hague, of Jersey City; Chief of Police Long, of Newark, nnd Trosccutor Bigelow, of Essex County. Mayor Hylan, Police Commissioner Fn- right, District Attorney Joab H. Ban¬ ton, Chief Magistratc William McAdoo, Assistant Corporation Counsel Nichol- aon, and Dr. Royal S. Copeland, Health, Commissioner, made up the committee from this city. Admita Jersey Supplies Guns Mayor Hague admitted that. 90 per cent of the tirearms purchased and used by crooks in this city came from New Jersey. He aaid he had been try¬ ing for six years to get a state law passed prohibiting the sale of tirearms 'n the state. He declared that/fthile it had passed the Assembly, Senator Clar- ence Case, of Somerset County, had opposed it in the interest of the man- ufacturers and the bill had been killed in the Senate. Mayor Hylan asked if there was not some way the Somerset! Senator might be recalled. "We have no recall in New Jersey," said Mayor Hague. "I have told him repeatedly of murders caused by the defeat of the hill. I told him of the cold-blooded murder of three of our citizens because of protection accorded the firearms interests. He answered that we proposed too stringent a law, and remarked: 'Let New York look after itself." " Mayor Hague said he would take it upon himself to have an ordinance in¬ troduced in the Jersey City Board of Aldermen prohibiting the sale of fire- arms. He admitted, however, that probably he would have trouble getting it through. He thought a state law would be far better. Enright Refers lo Veterans Police Commissioner Enright de- clared the trouble was not with the persons having permits. He said that there were many thousands of plstols that had been brought home by the soldlers as souvenirs. He also men- tioned the fact that odvertisements ap- peared in the Sunday newspnpers from mail order houses offering pistols for sale. The commissioner declared he disapproved of permits to keep a re- volver ln a private dwelling. "Hnving « gun in the house is 110 protection," he said. Magistrate McAdoo said that if the ordiiianre proposerl by Mayor Hague could be passed "it would cut out the biggcst. selling plant of rlrearms to the underworld." Ile said ho would [like to seo the Federal government put !a tax of .5.r>0 on every pistol manufac- tured. District Attorney Banton said he would take up with the publishcrs of newspapers the question of the adver- tisement of weapons, and thought. he could convinco them that the adver- tisements violatcd the spirit of the law. Tho ordinance int.roduced in the Board of Aldermen yesterday wns re- fc,rred to thc committee on general welfare. It probably will be reported out and ncted upon nt. the meeting of the board next Tuesday. II. becomes effect ive immediately upon adoption hy thc board and approval hy the Mayor. Senate Approves Fund For War Fraud Cases $500,000 Bill Put Through Without Opposition and Sent to President WASHINGTON, May 16.- Tho House hill providing $500,000 additional for the Department of Justice for prosecu¬ tion of fraudulent war contracts was passed to-day by the Senate and now goes to President Harding for approval. There was no opposition and little discussion of the bill, which was urged by the President and Attorney General Daugherty. Upon receipt. from thc House the meaaure promptly was given unanimous approval by the Senate Ap¬ propriations Committee and was put through the Senate by unanimous consent. Reorganization of the Department of Justice to provido a separate bureau for prosecution of war fraud cases is under way. The bureau probably will be establlshed outside of the depart¬ ment, it was said, that its work might be expeditod as much as possible. At the same time Attorney General Daugherty has ordered other adminis- trative changes looking to the speeding up of the departmeiit's work. These inelude segrcgation of the business of tho department under each of the As- sistant Attorney Generals, according to classification, and the creation ot a docket division. French Suede 12 and 16 /) $£*$. Button Tka World i Createit Leather Storei 40* Fifth Av«i., 2Vew Vork, 233 Broadway Boston. 14fi Tremnnt Street London.89 K«gent Street Linoleum Top Steel Desk.60 inches by 34 inches You pay no more for this steel desk VjmTH all their advantages over the modern desk.ease of oper¬ ation .durability.linoleum writing bed . fire resistance . you pay no more for these desks of Art Metal Steel. Made in single and double pedestal flat top and typewriter models. See these desks at the store or send for booklet showing all styles. World's largest makers of steel office equipment 369 Broadway, Phone, Canai 3060 HOME OFFICE AND FACTORIES, JAMESTQWN N. Y. Varotta Boy's Slayer Said to Accuse Twenty RafTaele Reported lo Have ConfesHed Murder and Named All Kidnapers in Effort to Escape Chajr Robert Raffnelc. held in Sing Sing! prison for execution June 1} in connec¬ tion with thc kidnapping and murder of Giuseppc Varotta, five-year-old son of Salvatora Varotta, is reported to have made a conTession or the crime involving more than twenty persons in the plot. District Attorney Banton refused last night either to deny or confirin the atory of Raffaelc's confession, but it was gcnerally credited and substan- tially confirmed ln other fjunrters. As soon as the confession became known ail abrupt halt occurred in the trial of John Melchione, which was being held before Judge Martin in Supreme. Court. The trial was postponed indef- initely. When District Attorney Banton asked the postponement 150 prospec- tivo jurors were assenibled and ex¬ amination of lalesnien had heen be- gun. The confession is said lo have heen received by Mr. Banton in a let¬ ter from RafTaele. It. was said last night that an investigation into de tails of tho confession already had been launched by detectives attached to the State's Attorney's office. Immediately on receipt of the let¬ ter Assistant. District, Attorney Deneen went to Sing Sing and held a long conference with RafTaele. In this mterview the Italian is said to have elaborated his confession, going into every detai! of the plot, which event- ually led to the Varotta boy's death Oiuseppe Varotta lived with his par¬ ents at 354 Fast Thirtcenth Street His body was found in the Hudson Kiver off Pierpont on June 11 1921 On that day RafTaele. Melchione and three others were in the. Tombs. Raf¬ faele was first brought to trial and sentenced to death. On April 18 the Court of Appeals affirmed the convic- tion of Raffaele and his execution waa onginally set for May 5. When Raffaele leai-ne, that the Court of Appeals had i.ecidcri against him he is said to have jotfered to tel! all the facts in return for commutation of his sentence to life impriaonment. RILLO [1 RUB.RINSE.YOURETHRUn? I MAKES OLD ALUMINUM m UTENS1LS NEW 101GDARAOTEE ¦ w GUARANTEE ^v^iSj^ ALSO LARGF.Ro!7.f;.fJC00KiNG UTEN5IL FOR.ANYOWE BRILLO caV; TO cSSl mmmmamvabmummmmmammmnrmmmsmmmsss rz :ua».. pninstant favor? fp w/tli lovers of fine , ;;|i|tS^of fee.' ooo d to tho lasc droo ''..¦:.$& REC. U-S* PAT, )Fpi r filfflsffl L.y/^^jy The Outdoor Sports Season Demands a Light- Weight Corset To correctly interprct today's fashions one must ,,e more than a passmg thought to the essential basis of careful dressing-<x>rrect corsetry. With thc sports costume, perhaps niore so than with anv other costume, thc corset must be perfect fitting, yet so light-weight and lightlv boned as to give the figurc absolute freedom and the desircd uncorseted a-ppearance. An idea! corset.for sports wear is tlie new fccwet --an exact reproduction of a corset made bv one of the fiuest eorsetieres of rans-.which is Exclusive with the John Wanamaker Store Medium low bust, medium high back, which prevents the skirtband and bras- siere from working up over the corset, and medium long skirt are the important fea¬ tures ot this skilfully designed corset, which has "been reproduced at considerably less than the cost of the Paris-made model, $11. Cor.et Salo«., Third floor, Old Bldg. Broadway at Ninth Street, New York.

Ref Over Suit Jury Bill Get Curb Said RILLO Murder Have ...Clothes for Camp and Big Woods For men and women. girls and boys, Abercrombie & Fitch camp, hunting and fishingclothesaretheworld's

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Page 1: Ref Over Suit Jury Bill Get Curb Said RILLO Murder Have ...Clothes for Camp and Big Woods For men and women. girls and boys, Abercrombie & Fitch camp, hunting and fishingclothesaretheworld's

Don't MinThe Street f-atr

For the Aid of CrippleJ ChildrerPark 4w«M 46th to 50th Streeh

\/«y t6th, 17th ani 19th

The Grcalcst Sporiing GoodsStorc in thc World

Madison Avenne and 45th StreetNew York

Nature'sSpringOpening

Decoration Day sounds thecall.

Tented r'nes by thc wa-ter's edge are about to Bpringinio being.

in u canoe by day.imuer canvas by night.town crampej ideas spread-ing out to the horizon's rim.Or a cross-eountry motor-

camping trip, expandingone's lungs and one'sthoughts free from theworries of Pullman and hotel.

In no other phase of itsreadiness to supply sports-men does thia storc takegreater pride.Tents and Camp

Furnishings

»

t&S&&From our "Marquee" tent,

to bd carried on i he running-board, to your choice of theworld'e besi canoes.

.. m a large family tent,t ull-Summer camp, to

t\vr«- ¦¦¦¦ skiff with an>ut-board motor.An entire floor replete with

camp conveniences .- tents ofevery type, cots, bedding, cookkits, packs, axes, lanterna, knives,Etoves, duffle bags, medicine kits.

Pishing tackle for every local-ity.guna and pistols.camerasfor your camp record.

Clothes for Campand Big Woods

For men and women.girls and boys, Abercrombie& Fitch camp, hunting andfishing clothes are the world'sstandard.

Khaki, RufFstuff, Coldstreamduck, covey cloth. corduroy, for¬est ry doth.widest choice ofmaterials.

Skirt or breeches suits and*pecial camp dresses for women.

Hats, shirts, hosiery, boots.waders and shoes for every fish¬ing and camp requirement.

dbercrombie& Fitch Co-

CZRA H. FITCH, PreaidentMadUon Avenue and 45th Street

New York"Where thc Blazed TrailCrosscs thc Boulevard"

Stillman SuitTurned Over toReferee To-day

6,000-Page Record ClosedWith Wife'a Denial ThatShe Wroto Notes BeauvaisU Charged With Selling

Canadian BU1 RefusedDivorce Fight To Be Taken

to Highest Court, Regard-less of Trial's Oulcorae-.-

The hard-fought Stillman case eiitersupon its closing phasc to-day with theturning over to Rcferce. Daniel .1. Glea-son of thc 6,000 pages of testimonywhich are the record of Jatnes A. Still-man's attempt. through a divorce ac¬

tion, to prove his wife guilty of mis-conduct and her babj-, Guy, the son ofFred K. Beauvais, Indian guide.

!t has been the longest drawn outand hardest fought divorce suit in thoannals of this country, observers say,with one draniatic turn after another.ln the eariicr stages of the suit, whilecounsel for Mrs. Anne Urquhart Still-man were baring their evidence of theassociation of Mr. Stillman and Flor-anca Leeds, the testimony appearedto bc favorable to Mrs. Stillman. Thcsmashing blow ainied at her defensewith the production at Poughkeepsicthe other daj of four letters declaredto have been sold to the banker's sideby Fred Beauvais, turned the tidesomewhat against her in the closinghours of the case.On top of this came the decision

of Supreme Court Justice Morschauscrat White Plains yesterday, refusing togrant her $6,960 to cover the expenseof taking testimony in Canada. Hisdecision read: "Motion denied, but;without costs."Early in April counsel for Mrs. Sti 11-

man made their second application forthe appointment of a commission totake testimony in Canada. JusticeMorschauser appointed the commission,but said he would take the matter ofexpenses under advisement. His de-Icision of yesterday Icavcs Mrs. Still-man liable for the heavij expenses in-curred recently in taking the testimonyof twenty-four witnesses in Montreai.

¦John F. Brennan, counsel for Mrs.Stillman, refused to comment on thisdecision yesterday.The defense rested with the testi-

mony of Mrs. Stillman and her em-

phatic denial that she had ever pennedtho letters declared to have been soldfor $15,000 by Beauvais.The hearing scheduled for Pough¬

keepsie to-day probably will be noth¬ing more than a formal banding overof the testimony to the refcree. Coun¬sel for Mr. Stillman still have the rightto examine Ida M. Oliver, Guy's nurse.and Harriet Hibbard, housekeepor atthe Stillman estate in WestchesterCounty. who identified the handwritingof Mrs. Stillman at the last hearing.lt 16 expected that they will waivc thisright, however.After the referee has gone over the

testimony and writton his report itwill be handed to Justice Morschauserfor final decision. lt is probable thatsome. time will elapse before this isgiven and it is expected that whateverthe finding the case will go to thehigher courts.

N'ot only is Guy's legitimacy at stake.but his right to participate in the $6,-000.000 estate of James A. Stillman'sfather is threatcned. Should Mrs. Stillman lose in the divorce action, she willbe denied the $1)0.000 alimony she nowgets. There are the two separate is-su"s at stake -Guy's paternity and Mrs,Stillman's alleged misconduct. She hasrepeatedly said that her fight has beenfor Guy and that if tho judgment is infavor of her three-ycar-old son she willbe content.

m

See Ban on Child Labor BillsIn Supreme Court Decision

WASHINGTON, May 16- -Effect ofthe Supreme Curt decision in which thechild labor law was held unconstitu-tional was much discuased 8t the Cap-itol to-day.The opinion was widely held that in-

asmuch as the court has turned downtwo child labor laws it will be difficult,it not impossible. to enact a measurewhich will stand the test of the courts.

Ballot Fraud Charges inOrange Given Grand Jury(knir! Order* Investigation ofVoting at Commission Gov¬

ernment ElectionCharges of fraud, alleged to have

been committed in the commission gov¬ernment election in Orange, N. J., lRstweek, wer.j placed before the EmoxCcunty grand jury in Newark ycs'.or-t!ay by .iiidge Frecl Stickel.

Thc prosecutor has called to niyattentlon," the court said, "that in therecent election in thc city of Orangethere was a rcgiatration of about 0.500and n challenge list of over 600; thatin 3S2 cases no application was madeto vote; in 85 cases application wasninde to vote, and upon the applica3itLcing challenged he chosp not to voto;in 70 caiea of challenge the applicantvoted, giving an upparently good ica-son for his namc having bron on theciiallongc list. In thr remainlng elghtycasoi; where the challcnger voted, hisright to voto is under investigation bythe proaecutor's offlce.

"It seems to the prosecutor nnd tothe court that this situation is onefor thc investigation of your body todotermine whether the election lawsof this county have been violatcd, toascertnin whether men and womenlpgistered who were not entitled todo so, l>y reason of non-residonce orfor some other reaBon; to determincwhether men and women voted whowere not entitled ro to do, and. if so,why tiiev regiatercd and voted."

Deserter Held forChauffeur's Killing;Bad Liquor BlamediMinister's Son Said to Con-

f'ciss Shooting Drivcr on

Joy Ride; Flees Here toSnrrender at Navy Yard

Ernest Mayo, a privnte in tho Quar-termnster's Corps staticned at CampDix, N. J., was arrested yesterday inthe Brooklyn navy yard charged withdesertion. He then was taken to MountHolly, \. J., in connection with theshooting and killing on May 3 of JonasK. Fox, a chauffcur, of Wrightstown.

.Mayo is said to have confessed kill¬ing Fox. He is. according to his re¬

ported statements, the son of the Rev.Mr. Joseph M. Mayo, a Baptist ministerof Camilla, (.a., and the brother ofJoseph M. Mayo jr.. a state legislatorin Georgia. He is said to have rie-sertcd from the navy in 1910 and tnhave enlisted in the army in May,1920, after he had been releascd fromElmira Reformatory. He is twenty-one years old.On May 3 he had just bren paid, he

told the detectivcs. and he and twoother soldiers hired Fox'a automobiieand went to Philadelphia, where theydrank a great deal of liquor. On the.way back to camp they picked up twoother soldiers and bpcame angi'y withFox for purchasing for them such badliquor.

"I'll get you for this," Mayo is de¬clared to have said to Fox. And \vhe31the driver argued with him, he. is saidlo have shot him in the back.Fox slumped over the wheel and

Mayo is declared to have (ired twomore shots into him. It was dark.The soldiers drove tbe automobiie intoa side road and flung Fox into a ditch.Mayo said that he drove. the auto¬

mobiie back to Philadelphia and thento N'ew York, where he arrived 011 May5. He put the machine in tho Lafay¬ette Garage, at 325 West Forty-ninthStreet, and passed the night. in a Bow-ury lodging house, Next day he gavehimself up to the navy authorities as"Percy Stewart," under which name hehad enlisted. and submittcd to thecharge of desertion.

In the mean time Fox had beerjfound, and he gave a mea;?er descrip-tion of his assailants before he died.The other soldiers were found in CampDix and qucstioned. Thc automobiiewas located and Mayo was traeed tothe navy yard. The' navy authoritiesturned him over to the army, and Mayowas tnken last night to Mount Hollv."

*****. vIL..

The Centurydining en routeDinner a ia cartc is servedon the Twentieth CenturyLimited with just such fas-tidious care as the experi-enced traveler expects tofind on the world's mostfamous train.

Century.WestboundLv.NewYork 2.45 p.m.*Lv. Boston 12.30 p.m.*Ar. Chicago 9.45 a.m.*

'Standard time

V M.WYORk?

(j^NTRAlCentury.EastboundLv.Chicago 12.40 p.m.*Ar.Boston 12 noon"Ar.NewYork 9.40a.m.*

*Standard time

| For Reservations: Telephone Vandcrbdt 3200

I NEW YORK CENTRAL

Aldermen GetBill for DrasticFirearms Curb

Prohihits Pawnbrokers FromLenriinp; Money on Giinsor Selling Them UnlessPurchaser Has Permit

Jersev Officials to Aid

Admit Crooka Are ArmedAcross River and PromiseLegislation Against Peril

After a conference yesterday in theMayor's office between the New Yorknnd New Jersey authorities to discusameans to stop thc indiscriminate saleof lirearms, a drastic ordinance was

introduced by the Board of Aldermenhere prohibiting pawnbrokers fromlending money on small arms that maybe concealed upo3i the person. Anyauch arms that the pawnbrokers now

have in stock may not be sold unlessthe buyer has a permit, and the pawn-broker must take the name and addressof the purchaser nnd send thc recordto the Poliee Department.The New Jersey authorities said

their situation was more ditficult todeal with, but they promised to workfor local oidinances and state lawswhich would prevent the sale of lire-arms, permit or no permit. Those atthe conference from New Jersey were

Mayor Frank Hague, of Jersey City;Chief of Police Long, of Newark, nndTrosccutor Bigelow, of Essex County.Mayor Hylan, Police Commissioner Fn-right, District Attorney Joab H. Ban¬ton, Chief Magistratc William McAdoo,Assistant Corporation Counsel Nichol-aon, and Dr. Royal S. Copeland, Health,Commissioner, made up the committeefrom this city.

Admita Jersey Supplies GunsMayor Hague admitted that. 90 per

cent of the tirearms purchased andused by crooks in this city came fromNew Jersey. He aaid he had been try¬ing for six years to get a state lawpassed prohibiting the sale of tirearms'n the state. He declared that/fthile ithad passed the Assembly, Senator Clar-ence Case, of Somerset County, hadopposed it in the interest of the man-ufacturers and the bill had been killedin the Senate. Mayor Hylan asked ifthere was not some way the Somerset!Senator might be recalled."We have no recall in New Jersey,"

said Mayor Hague. "I have told himrepeatedly of murders caused by thedefeat of the hill. I told him of thecold-blooded murder of three of ourcitizens because of protection accordedthe firearms interests. He answeredthat we proposed too stringent a law,and remarked: 'Let New York lookafter itself." "

Mayor Hague said he would take itupon himself to have an ordinance in¬troduced in the Jersey City Board ofAldermen prohibiting the sale of fire-arms. He admitted, however, thatprobably he would have trouble gettingit through. He thought a state lawwould be far better.

Enright Refers lo VeteransPolice Commissioner Enright de-

clared the trouble was not with the

persons having permits. He said thatthere were many thousands of plstolsthat had been brought home by thesoldlers as souvenirs. He also men-tioned the fact that odvertisements ap-peared in the Sunday newspnpers frommail order houses offering pistols forsale. The commissioner declared hedisapproved of permits to keep a re-

volver ln a private dwelling. "Hnving« gun in the house is 110 protection,"he said.

Magistrate McAdoo said that if theordiiianre proposerl by Mayor Haguecould be passed "it would cut out thebiggcst. selling plant of rlrearms tothe underworld." Ile said ho would

[like to seo the Federal government put!a tax of .5.r>0 on every pistol manufac-tured.

District Attorney Banton said hewould take up with the publishcrs ofnewspapers the question of the adver-tisement of weapons, and thought. hecould convinco them that the adver-tisements violatcd the spirit of thelaw.Tho ordinance int.roduced in the

Board of Aldermen yesterday wns re-

fc,rred to thc committee on generalwelfare. It probably will be reportedout and ncted upon nt. the meeting ofthe board next Tuesday. II. becomeseffect ive immediately upon adoption hythc board and approval hy the Mayor.

Senate Approves FundFor War Fraud Cases

$500,000 Bill Put ThroughWithout Opposition and

Sent to PresidentWASHINGTON, May 16.- Tho House

hill providing $500,000 additional forthe Department of Justice for prosecu¬tion of fraudulent war contracts was

passed to-day by the Senate and now

goes to President Harding for approval.There was no opposition and little

discussion of the bill, which was urgedby the President and Attorney GeneralDaugherty. Upon receipt. from thcHouse the meaaure promptly was givenunanimous approval by the Senate Ap¬propriations Committee and was putthrough the Senate by unanimousconsent.

Reorganization of the Department ofJustice to provido a separate bureaufor prosecution of war fraud cases isunder way. The bureau probably willbe establlshed outside of the depart¬ment, it was said, that its work mightbe expeditod as much as possible.At the same time Attorney General

Daugherty has ordered other adminis-trative changes looking to the speedingup of the departmeiit's work. Theseinelude segrcgation of the business oftho department under each of the As-sistant Attorney Generals, accordingto classification, and the creation ota docket division.

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Varotta Boy'sSlayer Said toAccuse Twenty

RafTaele Reported lo HaveConfesHed Murder andNamed All Kidnapers inEffort to Escape Chajr

Robert Raffnelc. held in Sing Sing!prison for execution June 1} in connec¬

tion with thc kidnapping and murderof Giuseppc Varotta, five-year-old sonof Salvatora Varotta, is reported tohave made a conTession or the crimeinvolving more than twenty personsin the plot.

District Attorney Banton refusedlast night either to deny or confirinthe atory of Raffaelc's confession, butit was gcnerally credited and substan-tially confirmed ln other fjunrters. Assoon as the confession became knownail abrupt halt occurred in the trialof John Melchione, which was beingheld before Judge Martin in Supreme.Court. The trial was postponed indef-initely.When District Attorney Banton

asked the postponement 150 prospec-tivo jurors were assenibled and ex¬amination of lalesnien had heen be-gun. The confession is said lo haveheen received by Mr. Banton in a let¬ter from RafTaele. It. was said lastnight that an investigation into details of tho confession already hadbeen launched by detectives attachedto the State's Attorney's office.

Immediately on receipt of the let¬ter Assistant. District, AttorneyDeneen went to Sing Sing and held along conference with RafTaele. In thismterview the Italian is said to haveelaborated his confession, going intoevery detai! of the plot, which event-ually led to the Varotta boy's deathOiuseppe Varotta lived with his par¬ents at 354 Fast Thirtcenth StreetHis body was found in the HudsonKiver off Pierpont on June 11 1921On that day RafTaele. Melchione andthree others were in the. Tombs. Raf¬faele was first brought to trial andsentenced to death. On April 18 theCourt of Appeals affirmed the convic-tion of Raffaele and his execution waaonginally set for May 5. When Raffaeleleai-ne, that the Court of Appeals hadi.ecidcri against him he is said to havejotfered to tel! all the facts in returnfor commutation of his sentence to lifeimpriaonment.

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