Newspaper Page Text
?jar Harbor's ? Best Season I ?o Full Sway fob? Valley and Swimming flubs Are Favorites With jjie S uni m or Colony; Golf Course Is 'Excellent Horse Is Coming Back ?iny New Yorkers Are Now fSecn Driving Instead 0f Using Their Cars S?teitl Dispatch to The Tribune nip, HARBOR, Me.. July 3.?People vrebecn flocking io Bar Harbor since V jur,?, but July 1 marked the ! 'opening of the season. Clubs and -,!u are all ?Pen nn& eic'1 train -..m man?additions to the summer it would seem that Bar Har ? ??to have the brightest season sines "it., Kebo Valley Club has been open j ?Vi?e? early June and has been a popu- ? ^gathering place. While no big af- ; sin have been given at the clubhouse! JjViar. the porches are dotted daily j ?'h small partie? tor luncheon and The links were never in better Wimon"' Ihe fixcd *vents are the ?\. annual tournament, which is ^l?! Aueusr lt>: the Waldron Bates iliTZ, which will be played ?Mnesdsy. August 24. and the Au ?n match, a stroke competition for ?mbers. to be played on Saturday, TCL Ketterlinus, of Philadelphia, b ?resident o? the club this year, and ' directors ave T. ,De Witt Cuyler, of ? delphia; A. M. Robbins of New v,'rk- Louis P-. McCagg, ol New \ork; nr Augustus Thorndike. of Boston; tinr? B. Mears. of Philadelphia and fcr Harbor; George S. Robbins, of ??-'?. ?elphia, and, Charles-II. Bartlett, V : Bangor. | Swimming Club Is Open ' "V Swimming Club ? lso has opened ; i.11 . season. This club is the popu- ; ithering place for practically the j , ? :- summer colony and one may ; almost any of his friends there j fctween the hours of 11 and 1, during j which time the pool is always used | ijv large numbers of club members. ?Among the recent arrivals' from New iVkare: 'Mr. ami Mrs. -T. W. Aucnir.closs, at ? ?irmachi; Miss Charlotte S. Baker tad Mips Clara B. Spenca, at the Wil? lows- Mrs. A. Bleeker Banks, at Grecn .-?' Mr. and Mrs. Cheater P. Barnett Rulie Cove, the Smith cottage; Mrs. V, B. Beekman and Miss. Beekman; ?jrs J B. Dickson, the Anchorage; Mr and Mrs. Ernesto G. Fabbri. at (foonriposo: Mr. and Mrs. William bawrence Orcen, Greenlawn; Ms. A. M. Haramarstrand, St. Sauveur; Mr. uid Mrs. James M?tt Hartshorn. Nan cau cottage; Miss Mary U. Hoffman. the Field; Mrs. Henry II. Hoyt, Yellow -: Juc'ge George L. Ingraham; Mrs. Cadwalader-Jones, with Prof, and : Max Farrand. at Reef Point; Dr. Ludwig K?st; John .T. Kearns; Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Kellogg, Ledgi Hollow; Mrs. Katherine McCook Knox. Miss Kathleen ?ncs; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Graeme Ladd, Eegouo?; Mr. and Mrs. William McNair, the Leeward; Mr. and Mrs. Samuel McRoberts, Brightholme; Mis? r'mny Morris, Fern Hill; Mrs. Leonaid Opdycke; Mrs. Charles F. Ostrandir. I eftson Road; Mr. and Mrs. A. Mans lield, Teviot cottage; Mrs. Elliott Shep ?rd, Buonriposo; Mr. and Mrs. Edward ?kinner, F.astcote; Major and Mrs. ?rehibaid Thacher. Onontakah; Mr. and Mrs. Frederick K. Vanderbilt, ?ono-> t.;;ec; Mrs. C. K. Wright. [ Major and Mrs. Archibald G. Thacher, , cl New York, have recently purchased from Philip Livingston, of New York and liar Harbor, Silver Birches, one i* the most beautiful of the summer ??'mes built by Mr, Livingston a num? ber of years ago. Major Thacher is ?resident of the Military Training Camps AssocMion of the United States and is now in Bar Harbor, but will be ding through the greater part of n the interests of the training ?'a:rps association. Many Fine Horses Seen One feature of summer life here . ? H-ason which is the subject of such comment is the greatly increased Miss Ruby Keeney Her engagement to Jefferson IX Dickson Jias been announced. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs., Frank Keeney. number of horses seen in the streets. Since motors were admitted to Bar Harbor in 1913 the number of Bar Harbor summer residents using horses has been very small. This year the horse seems to be coming into his own ; again. A riding school has been estab I lished at Morrell Park, the beautiful i tract given to the town by Mrs. Edward ? Morrell, of Philadelphia, in memory of i the late General Edward de V. Morrell. i Mr. and Mrs. Philip Livingston are j seen daily driving behind some of the ! fine animals which Mr. Livingston has brought to Bar Harbor this year, and ? Mr. Livingston frequently drives through town with his handsome fouv : in-hand coach, reminding one of the I old days, when the streets of Bar Har ; bor presented what has been described, . as a "continuous horse show." Mr. and Mrs. Walter Graeme Ladxl, j Miss Miles Carpenter and Miss Mc ! Cullough Miller are among the other': ? prominent New Yorkers who prefer their horses to motors and who are; seen daily driving behind spirited ani-r | mais in handsome vehicles. i Queen Marie Postpones Her Visit to America: : Formal Coronation in Septem? ber To Be Followed by Of? ficial Tour in Europe BUCHAREST, Rumania, July ? (By The Associated Press).? Queen Marie, who planned to visit the United States j curing the coming autumn, has been ( compelled to postpone her trip. The ! formal coronation of King Ferc?inand ! and Queen Marie will take place in j Transylvania late in September and ; later the King and Queen will malae of , ficial visits to several European aoun : tries. It is probable the Queen will | not be able to depart for America be ; fore next spring. The Rumanian government has ap ? propriated the equivalent of $20,000, I 000 to defray the expenses of the coro i nation ceremonies, which will be very elaborate and will be attended by many i European sovereigns. Kansas Helps Navy Club j Mrs. David Burr Luckey An n ounces $10,000 Pledge Mrs- David Burr Luckey, president! j of th)C Kansas Women's Society in | New Y\)rk, announced yesterday that' ! Kansas had pledged $10,000 to the en- ! I dowmciit fund of the Navy Club, 13 | East ."Forty-first Street, thereby assur- ! I ing sleeping quarters at the club for I | sailors and marines from Kansas. | Mrs. Luckey organized and directed the campaign in Topera, Wichita, Kan- j sas Citty, Hutchinson, Atchison, Par-1 I sons. Independence and El Dorado. In i addition, she established in Fort Scott, I Yates Venter, Sabetha, Hiawatha, Era ! poria, Stockton and Salina chairmen I who five cooperating in raising the ? Kansas pledge, which was made to the j Navy Club by the Kansas Women's 1 Society in New York. r~OrT?(JO Years , Collector Seeks Hand-Painted | Decoraron in Old Home Special Dispatch to The Tribune LEE, Mass.., July 3.?A collector of i curiosities has offered Mrs. George i Beach, of this village, $200 if she will ! let him take the wallpaper off of the walls in her parlor. The room was i papered morc^than one hundred years I ago. The paper; was painted by hand in | France. It is in a series of panels, I depicting the adventures of a knight ? in armor. Mrs. Beach has not decided whether I she will seU. Margaret Nichols a Bride Margaret Nichols, daughter of the ? Rev. and Mrs. John F. Nichols, was married on Saturday to the Rev. Robert ' Radcliffe Carmichael, in St. John's ; Episcopal Church, Williamstown, Mass. | The bride'.s father performed the cere ? mony and was assisted by Bishop Da j vies and Dr. Franklin Carter. Helen I Beekman Rouse, of Geneva, N. Y., was : maid of honor. Wallp & 51bs. H|Cane Sugar Granulated ?ffi^^ 5 lbs. Cane Sugar Granulated AnnncM Snjar Rrtimng Compatir. Don't let raspberry time slip by with? out doing up all you can ? both black and red. ' , There is so much nutrition in preserves that they should replace more costly winter foods. The cost of your sugar is a small part of the value of your pre? serves, but the importance of the right sugar is great. When ordering your preserving sugar see that it's Domino Granulated. Domino pure cane sugars, are accurately weighed, packed and sealed by machine, in con? venient sturdy cartons or strong cotton bags. American. Sugar Ke&iing Company "Sweeten it with Domino" Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown, Golden Syrup. Church Youth Of All Nations To Meet Here 15,000 Christian Endeavor-' era Coming for 6th World ; .Convention, Beginning 6- j Dav Session Wednesday j _ Parade To Be a Feature! Entire Body to March Up j Fifth Avenue Singing; i Bryan Will Be a Speaker | More than 15,000 delegates from all | parts of the globe are gathering here to-day for the Sixth World's Christian | Endeavor Convention, which opens at! tho Seventy-first Regiment Armory, ; Park Avenue and Thirty-fourth Street, ! Wednesday evening. A reception com? mittee of two hundred New Yorkers is ' meeting them at the railroad and ; steamship terminals and assigning ; them to quarters in thirty different ! hotels and over three hundred private \ homes. The delegates represent some 80,000 Endeavor units in this country, in Europe, in the British Dominions, and ' in the mission fields in China, Japan,: the Pnilippines, Burma, India, Persia, | Armenia, Egypt and Central Africa. ? Most of those from foreign lands reached here last week. Delegates from five Soutli American republics ai^eady ! have arrived and twentv from Mexico ' are en route. The largest of the groups from other lands will arrive by special i train from Canada to-morrow. More than a score of special trains and several boats have been chartered ! to carry the Endeavorers from differ- ' ent parts of the United States. Dr. Francis E. Clark, who founded the Chr?3tian Endeavor movement forty \ years ago, will preside at the opening session on Wednesday, at 7:30, and J Homer Rodeheaver, long associated j with Billy Sunday, will lend the sing- \ ing. Mayor John F. Hylan will welcome the delegates for the city and Dr. Finis Idleman for its churches. The greet- ! ings of the convention committee will j be conveyed by its chairman. Immi- j grntiop Commissioner Frederick A. Wallis. The principal address on "Christian Endeavor and Business" ? will be delivered by Roger Babson, the j statistician. The feature of the six-dav program j will be the citizenship parade on Sat- ' urday morning, in which all the 15,000 ! delegates will march up Fifth Avenue j singing, from Twenty-third Street to | Central Park. There a demonstration j will be held on the Sheep Meadow, at j which the speakers will be Edwin Den by, Secretary of the Navy, William Jen? nings Bryan and Immigration Commis- ! sioner Wallis. There will be eight sessions of the general convention in the armory, the j delegates assembling both morning and afternoon on Thursday, Friday and j Monday, and also Saturday morning and Friday evening. Homer Rodeheavcr will give a course of. three lectures on ! "How to Lead Singing,"' and the long list of speakers includes William J. Bryan and doctors of divinity from all parts of this country and many mis? sionaries. On Sunday afternoon Post? master-General Will H. Hays will ad? dress a meeting on world-wide Chris? tian Endeavor. Most of the general sessions will bei simultaneous with other meetings. , Oil) Thursday afternoon there will be a| rally of the Pennsylvania Christian En-.; deavor Union in the Collegiate Church?! of St. Nicholas and at the same time | the thirtieth New York State Christian j Endeavor convention will be held inj the Marble Collegiate Church. Friday*! afternoon the junior world convention:'! will be held in the Marble Collegiate! Church, and Saturday morning in the^i same place there will be a rally for theifj Intermediate Christian Endeavor. An all-day excursion on the Day Lined steamer Hendrick Hudson to " West? Point and Poughkeepsie will mark the j close of the convention on Tuesday of 1 next week. Chinatown will be called: | j upon to furnish in appropriate setting for a missionary tea on Thursday ? afternoon, which will be the occasion i for a demonstration by the Chinese.; children of the Church of All Nations..] The time fr.om 8 to 9 on each week-, day morning will be devoted to quiet j hour services in the Marble Collegiate ? Church and the Brick Presbyterian] Church. These will be followed byii leadership training classes, in which, j small groups scattered at the various U state headquarters, in the churches of I the city, and the side rooms of the armory will take up the problems of! their own denominations, missions* recreational plans, song leading, prayer' meetings, religious vocations and kin? dred subjects. At noon on Friday and Monday sixty*; teams will be sent out into the high? ways and byways of the city to give instant effect to the work of the con? vention by conducting revival meetings' on street corners scattered throughout, the Metropolitan district. These gath-. erings have been arranged under th?->i auspices of the New York Evangelistic: i Committee in cooperation with the city] authorities and various civic and busi-l ness organizations. r Throughout the convention twenty-j two missionary boards will have exhib-j its on view in the theater of the , armory and an all-nations bazar will j offer for sale the gifts of Christian Errdeavorers in all parts of the world j who were unable to attend the gather-?j ing. A missionary pageant has been\ arranged for Sunday afternoon. ??-?-Z I Vacation High School Is Forced to Turn Away 2,i00j A statement issued by the Board of Education says that of the 6,000 pu pila who anp?ed for admission to the j Vacation High School only 3,600 can.1 be admitted because the appropriations i provide for only 36 teachers. 1 "As this school originally was estab ?? lished to help pupils make up deficien \ cies, it has been decided to accept only ; those students who have failed in a . i subject during the past term. Pupils . who wish to take advance work. the. i board savs, cannot be provided for. ? Going-On To-dav DAY American Museum of Natural History. Admission frre. Metropolitan Museum o? Art. Admission free. Aquarium. Admission free. New York Historical Society. 170 Central Park West. Admission free. Van Cortlandt Park. Musuem. Admission free. Zoological Park. Admission free. Convention of the National Cooperating Committee. Southern Commercial Con? gress, Waldorf-Astoria, all day. American Association for the Recognition of the Irish Republic, parade and cele? bration. Parade starts at 9:30 o'clock. Speaking In Central Park at 11:30. Anti-prohibition parade. Starts from Wash? ington Square at i o'clock, up Fifth Avenu<- to Sixtieth Street. Memorial services for General Bechel Roehefont'aine by Sons of the American Revolution at St. Paul's Chapel,. 10 o'clock. Memorial tablet unveiling, I.eake and Watt Alumni Association, Yonkers. Bronx Community celebration, 23Sth Streel and Van Cortlandt Park East, 9 o'clock. Knights of Columbus, Veterans of Foreign Wats and American Legion combined I celebration, Central Park Mall. Athletic events In all city parks und play 6rounds, all day, under ausplcca pt tue layor'a committee. American Feat of Arms Painted by Du Moulin Noted French Artist Arrives to Install Diodrama of the Battle of Chateau Thierry Among passengers arriving Saturday on the steamship France wer?. M. Felix Dnnbe and a corps of assistants, ' whose mission to this country is to in- ! stall the diorama of the battle of Chateau Thierry, recently completed by M. Louis du Moulin, an officer of the Legion of Honor and official painter for the French War and Navy ministers. Du Moulin was awarded the Grand Prix at the Paris Exposition of 1900 for 1 his cyclornma of the Tour do Monde and also is the painter of the "Battk> [ of Waterloo," now on view near the | scene of that famous conflict. With the assistance of Major Gen? eral G. C. Marshall, of General Fersh Ing's staff; Brigadier General W. Slat ten, Colonel Stone and Colonel G. Kel t-on, chief of staff of the 3d Division, who furnished him with necessary data ' fiom official sources, M, du Moulin has I depicted with great accuracy one of the ; most thrilling of American feats of arms. Generals Pershing, Foch and I Petain are supporters of the project. Minority Zionists Plan Separate Palestine Aid Pittsburgh Conference Urged to ! Find Broad Economic Pro? gram of Development Special Dispatch to The Tribune. PITTSBURGH, July 3.-The future role of the minority group of the Zion? ist organization of America in Pales? tine development and in American and international Zion affairs was dis? cussed this afternoon at the opening session, in the William Penn Hotel, | of the Palestine Development Associa- ' tion. The associates comprise that i group of Zionists, headed by Justice i Louis M. Brandeis, of the Supreme Court, and Judge Julian M. Mack, of I Chicago, which was defeated last month in Cleveland at the annual con? vention of the Zionist organisation of America. One hundred and thirty-seven per- j sons, leaders in American Jewry, are attending the conference. Prominent j among them, besides Judge Brandeis and Judge Mack, are Jacob D. Hass, of j New York; Professor Felix Frank- j furter, of Harvard University, and Rabbi A. II. Silver, of Cleveland. Judge Mack was elected chairman of j the conference and Mr. Hass secretary. Judge Mack, who resigned as president j of the Cleveland convention, said that j only such support should be given Palestine as to make its residents "self-reliant, self-supporting and self- ] respecting." Making the minority group a mil- I itant body to fight those in con? trol was favored by Rabbi Silver, who i suggested that the minority group carry its fight to the next world Zionist congress. Prof. Frankfurter and Robert Szold, the latter of New York, proposed a wholesale credit or cooperative or? ganisation to aid in Palestine develop? ment. A broad economic program was declared by the former to be the best solution of muddled conditions in the Holy Land. Messages of greeting were sent to Sir Herbert Samuel, High Commis? sioner of Palestine, and Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, of New York. The conference will continue to-morrow. Nicaragua Seeks Alliance Republic Asks to Join Central American Union TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras. July 3.? The Federal Council of the Central American Republics, comprising repre? sentatives of Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, has given out a communica? tion from the Nicaraguan Foreign Of? fice, addressed to the government of Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, in which Nicaragua urges that the sig? natories of the past concluded recently at San Jose, Costa Rica, take con? certed and speedy action toward a set? tlement of the obstacles which have prevented Nicaragua from becoming a member of tho Central American union. Nicaragua proposes that the members of the union name conditions to form a basis for negotiations which would ultimately result in Nicaraguan par? ticipation in the union. Nicaragua's step comes as a complete surprise, as that country had rejected the Central American treaty and re? tired from the San Jose conferences. American Catholics Urged To Provide Milk for Italy An appeal will be made to-day to the Catholics of America to support the work of the Committee for Free Milk for Italy. Pope Benedict XV, in a let? ter to the committee, gives the Apos? tolic blessing to all who have given and to all who will give to this post bellum relief for the children of Italy. The appeal in the diocese of New York has been started by Archbishop Patrick J. Hayes, who has made a per? sonal donation of $1,000 toward the col? lection and has sent a letter to every parish priest in the diocese urging their cooperation. The appeal is for one quart, costing ten cents, from every member of each congregation. ? $19,392 for Russian Relief Received by Committee Here Princess Julia Cantacuzene-Speransky announced yesterday the receipt in June of $19,392 by the American Cen? tral Committee for Russian Relief, 625 Fifth Avenue. The report of the executive commit ? tee shows shipment of fifty cases of ; clothing and shoes to Constantinople to be distributed among the most desti ? tute of the 300,000 Russian refugees ! there. ; Russians of the educated class are : reported in great need in all parts of I Europe. Clothing, medicines and ? funds for relieving immediate distress and for assisting refugees to find em I ployment are badly needed, j ? - i Col. and Mrs. Harvey See Navy-Army Baseball Game LONDON, July 3.?Four thousand i persons, including Colonel George ! Harvey, the American Ambassador, and I Mrs. Harvey, and Vice-Admiral Albert LP. Niblack, commander of the Ameri ! can naval forces in European waters, ,and Mrs. Niblack, saw the Am;:icai' Army of Occupation's baseball team .defeat a team from the armored crui iser Pittsburgh. Admiral Niblack's flag .ship, by the score of 2 to 1, in an ex I tremely exciting game on the Stam ?ford Bridge grounds here to-day. Ambassador Harvey threw in the .first ball. ? Rusby Reaches Bolivia Dr. H. H. Rusby, of Columbia Uni ? versity, and a party of explorers, who : are to search the headwaters country \ of the Amazon for new drugs and ani ! mal and plant material of scientific ; \?.lue, have prrived safely at La Pa*, j Bolivia, according to cable advices re ) ceived yesterday. The party passed i through the Panama Canal on June 9 and reached Callao on June 15. A visit was made to Lima, Peru, on an invita I tion extended by the Peruvian govern? ment. John F. Wallace J Noted Engineer, ! Dies Suddenly First Chief Executive of Panama Canal Construc? tion Also Held Many Important Rail Posts Built Chicago Terminals; -? Did Notable Work in Con? nection With Missis- : sippi River Improvement! WASHINGTON, July 3, -John Kind-j ley Wallace, first chief engineer of the Panama Canal and actual head of the working force that created it, one of the best known civil engineers in the world, died suddenly here to-night. He i was sixty-seven years old. Mr. Wallace was born at Fall River, Mass., his father having been David Wallace, an eminent Scotch Presby? terian minister. After completing his high school course at Fall River, Mr. Wallace attended Monmouth, 111., Col? lege, and later took the civil engineer? ing course at Woos?er in 1882. He a+so was a student at Armour Institute, Chicago. In 187G he had made a reputation for his work in improving the upper Mississippi River and Rock Island Rapids as assistant United States en? gineer on upper Mississippi impreve ment, and became chief engineer of tho Pcoria & Farmington Railroad. In 1878 he assumed the same position with the Central Iowa Railway. In 1881 he be? came construction engineer and genera' manager of the same road. From 1883 to J886 he was bridge en? gineer of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, and from 1886 to 188fi was resident manager and engineer at Chicago of the Chicago, Madison & Northern Railroad. He was engineei ?'of the Illinois Central Railroad Com? pany from 1891 to 1904. He was mad? first American engineer of the Panamr Canal in 1904 and Isthmian Cana Commissioner and vice-president anc general manager of the Panama Rail road and Steamship Company in 1905. Among the notable works of Mr Wallace was his construction of thi World's Fair railway terminals at Chi cago in 1892, also the new passenge terminal for the Chicago & Northwest ern Railroad, one of the most notabl railway structures in the country. Mr. Wallace conducted extensiv surveys and examinations and create' | the first construction organization fo j the Panama Canal. He was chairma of the Chicago Railway Terminal Com j mission and engineering consultant t | large corporations. Mr. Wallace was past president o | the American . Society of Civil Engir ' eers, the American Railway Engineei i ing Association, Western Society of Er gineers and a member of the Institut of Civil Engineers of Great Britaii He was a member of the Union Leagu Club, the Automobile Club of Americ. Bankers and Engineers, Sleepy Hollo County Club, New York; the Metropol I tan and Cosmos of Washington, tl J Union League of Chicago and the Soul i Shore Country Club of Chicago. M i Wallace's home in New York was ; j 390 West End Avenue. | Wood Indorses Women's Fight on Tuberculosi ?General Says Spread of Diseas in Philippines Demands Strongest Measures MANILA, June 3.? Indorsement 1 I Major General Leonard Wood of tl j proposed women's convention t*> di I cuss means of stamping out tuberc j losis in the Philippines was receivi I to-day in a letter to the secretary | the Anti-Tuberculosis Society. The disease is so widespread and i : progress so insidious, General Woi I said, that its eradication can be a iconiplished only through fullest c ! operation. ''You have undertaken a splend ! work," he said, "the successful oi: '< come of which means much to t 1 Philippines. Your campaign for co j trol and eventually eradication tuberculosis is worthy of strong: su port from every source." ? London Reported Askinj Chile-Peru Arbitratio Latin States Regard It as Feel? to Learn Stand on Tacna Arica Issue j SANTIAGO, Chile, July 3.?Pi i posais that the controversy betwe | Peru and Chile over the future stat \ of the provinces of Tacna and Ari : be submitted to arbitration are t ! subject of comment in political c ? cles in London, says a dispatch to t i Mercuric It is said the suggest! I has been made by Great Britain a i that it is being considered by Chi i In well-informed circles here it ? stated, however, that it is certain official action in this matter has be ! taken by Great Britain, and the : ! port is looked upon as a "feelt | thrown out to determine the state i public opinion. "Chile will stand by the terms of t ! treaty of Ancon," said a high oific ! of the Foreign Relations Departmt | yesterday. This treaty, which was signed at i | close of the war between Chile a i Peru in 1883, stipulated the provim I of Tacna and Arica would be occup ? and exploited by Chile for a period I ten years, after which the people woi ? vote on the question of remaining i ' der Chilean rule or returning ) Peruvian jurisdiction. A dispute ar ? as to those who should be entitled i vote in the plebiscite, however, : | as a result of this controversy the v ? was never taken. ? Hayiies Demanda Efficiency j Field Dry Agents Must Make Good or Be Let Out From The Tribune'i Washington Bureau , WASHINGTON, July 3.?Federal Pro- : ! hibition Commissioner Roy A. Haynes i will demand of his field force^ 100 per ; ; cent efficiency in the enforcement of | i the Eighteenth Amendment or changes ' I will be promptly made to accomplish j this result, he asserted to-day in mak-j ' ing public a letter he addressed to each j ?state prohibition difector upon his ap : pointment. Commissioner Haynes cautions state i directors against paying political obli ? g?tions in the selection of their force, ? and calls for the appointment of thor? oughly dependable men. "In the perfecting of your state or ? ?anization," Mr. Haynes wrote, "noth? ing must guide you in the selection : of the personnel except the determina | tion to develop the highest possible j degree of efficiency. In other words, j real results must be produced or nec i essary changes will be made to pro ? duce them." i Rigid economy must also be prac ' ticed by the state directors, Mr. Haynes added. J. S. Mitchel, Well Known ; Sporting Writer, Dies! Former Holder of World's Rec ford for Hammer Throw; Author of Several Books , James Sarsfield Mitchel, former hold? er of the world's record for the ham? mer throw and a well known sport writer, died in Roosevelt Hospital yes- ! terday from heart disease. He had been in the hospital for almost three months. His home was at 260 West 122d Street. He was born in Tipperary, Ireland, in 1868, and came to America at the age of twenty. He was the champion weight thrower of Ireland before he left his native country. , In his first appearance in the Unitea States Mr. Mitchel, competing for the New York Athletic Club, threw the hammer 118 feet 11 inches. Th-e weight was later found to be two pounds over the required 16-pound hammer, and in ' another competition a few weeks later he hurled the regulation hammer 125 I feet 10 inches, establishing a world's record. He improved this mark almost annually until in 1896 it stood at 145 j feet 4 inches. In 1901 he lost his j crown to John Flanagan. He was a member of the sporting ? staff of the New York Herald and the ; author of several works on rowing and j pole. He was a member of the New ! York Athletic Club. Funeral arrange? ments will be announced later. m-1? Lieut. Dewitt Coleman Given Military Burial Tenafly Aviator Was Killed on Italian Front on the Day Before Armistice Special Dispatch to The Tribune HACKENSACK, N. J., July 3?The remains of Lieutenant Dewitt Cole man, JL.of Tenafly, were interred there yesterday with a ceremony attended by many friends and relatives of the young officer. Lieutenant Coleman, whose body ar? rived recently from Italy, where he served as an aviator under Major La Guardia, president of the New York City Board of Aldermen, was killed in combat during an attack by Austrian planes the day before the armistice. A full military funeral was accorded, the casket being conveyed on a gun carriage from East Orange, army offi? cers leading the cortege with members of the Dewitt Coleman Post, of Tena? fly, following. Major La Guardia made a brief address at the grave. The Rev. Calvin Mead, of the Tenafly Presbyterian Church, conducted the church services. Lieutenant Coleman was the only foreigner to receive a valor medal from the King of Italy. His mother was presented with this medal on the steps of the City Hall in i New York by General Guglielmotti, ' who came here on a special mission ! representing the Italian throne. THE REV. I. M. PATTERSON TRENTON, N. J., July 3.?The Rev. j Isaac Matheson Patterson, senior mem? ber of the Presbytery of New Bruns? wick, died here to-day at the home of his son-in-law, Nelson L. Petty, after an illness of two weeks. He was eighty | nine years old. Dr. Patterson was graduated from j Dalhousie College, Halifax, in 1854, re I celved his theological education in the : Presbyterian College of Montreal and | his theological degree in 1858 from j Princeton University. He was accepted j by the Presbytery in New Brunswick j on April .14, 1858, and the following year was ordained by the Presbytery : of Baltimore. He is survived by a son j r.nd two daughters. -. LORD EUSTACE CECIL j LONDON, July 3.?Lord Eustace Cecil, second son of the second Marquis of Salisbury, died to-day. lie was born in 1834. Lord Eustace Cecil was late chair j man of the Foreign and Colonial, i American, Foreign and General and j Alliance Trust companies and a direc ! tor of the Great Eastern Railway. He j was an officer in the Coldstream 1 Guards. > Frank Stammers Buried The body of Frank Stammers, a i writer for the regular and vaudeville ! stages, was buried Wednesday in North j Brookfield, Madison County, where he j had a summer home. He died June 27, : at Roosevelt Hospital, from typhoid ? pneumonia, and, his last wish was that he be buried at North Brookfield. After producing musical shows on ! the Pacific Coast, Mr. Stammers came I to New York. He wrote plays, librettos for musical comedies, vaudeville acts ; and lyrics. The last rehearsal of 1 "Honeysuckle," his last vaudeville pro ! duction, took place under his direction j at his bedside in the hospital. He is survived by his parents, Br. and Mrs. Joseph Stammers, four sisters and a brother. ? 500 Youths'Wield Hoes Children's Garden Feature of Fruit Guild Five hundred children have plots in ' the children's garden conducted by the National Plant, Flower and Fruit i Guild at Avenue A and Sixty-sixth 1 Street, according to a report made , public yesterday. The gardens have ; been a feature of the guild for a quar ! ter of a century. Through its efforts, | many city families have moved into 1 the country and taker? up farming as j a livelihood. "The garden," the report states, "has grown in usefulness as well as in size. i In addition to the children's plots, we I have set aside ground to be culti j vated by families of the neighborhood, i In 1920 one family raised vegetables : valued at $33. The total market value ? of the produce grown ir. 1920 was es j timated at $1,115. Reports from police \ officers in the vicinity show a great decline in juvenile delinquency since ! the opening of the gardens." Gen. Sawyer Advises Youth Of Nation to Attend Camps From The Tribune's Washington bureau WASHINGTON, July 3.?In pursu? ance to the desire of President Harding that 100,000 young men of the country apply for instruction in the citizens' training camps to be held during the present month and August, Brigadier General C. E. Sawyer to-day communi? cated with the health commissioners of every state in the Union urging them to encourage candidates to seek admis? sion to the camps. General Sawyer believes that every man who attends these summer .camps will increase in worth to the nation, as well as obtain benefits of personal value to himself and to his community. $1 Worth of Chuck Steak Now Will Feed 15 to 20 Laborers WASHINGTON, July 3?At present wholesale prices "a-?-.dollar's worth of chuck steak" will provide meat for one meal for fifteen or twenty men doing hard physical labor, said a statement to-day from the Institute of American Packers. General wholesale meat prices are low, but forcquarter beef prices have reached a price which "offers un? usual advantage to the judicious i buyer," the statement added. i ' No comment on retail prices was ! made, but wholesale costs of all cuts ? of fresh pork were said to be from ! 25 to 40 per cent below figures a year , ago. Partially as a result, it was | added, the packing industry is begin? ning to enjoy "a revival of its pxport I trade to the United Kingdom and Europe.** Birth, Engagement, Marriage, Death and In Memoriam Notice? may be telephoned lo The Tribune any lime up lo midnight /?r in tertian in the next day's pa^tt. Telephone Beekman 3000. DEATHS ADJ.KV Pa*?"! nwav July 2. 1921. Isaac It.. b?!ov?d husban'l of Emm? O Ad!?r Funeral service? at his late horn?, 272 Hroad st.. R?d Hank. N. t.. on T-iesda: July 5. at 2:30 p. m Please omit flow?ri BITI.KR? Louis? Colons, ??loved wit? ?'. William Allen Butler and daughter o! the t?te "Charles and Mary Terry Co'lin*. at her. home, a? Southampton. < ?-. Jjly 2. Funeral servie?? at Round Oa<. Tonkers. Tuesday morning, July S. at 10:30. on arrival of the 9:50 train from Grand Central, daylight saving time. CANTOR?On July 2. in his ?7th yea-. Jacob A., beloved husband of the, lale T.ydla G. Cantor and devoted father of Margaret. Ruth and John Funeral serv? ices at his lato residence. 2345 Broadway Monday. July 4. at 2 p. m. Interment privtte. Kindly omit flowers. CHAMBEHMIX ? Charlotte Roberts, widow of the late Governor Abiran Chamberlain. Funeral Tuesday, July 6. at 2:30, at the First Congregational Church, Meriden. Conn. COLLINS?July 2, Helen Veaonica Collins. Funeral from her late rea&d*nee, 215 West 88th st.. on Tuesday, at !30 a. in.: thence to Church of St. Gregory. Weft 90th st., where a mass of requiem will be celebrated. | ELLIOTT?On Thursday. June. 30. 1911. Elizabeth C, widow of Edward Elliott, in her 80th year. Funeral services will be at the residence of her cousin. Miss E. L. Jones. 528 Madison st.. Brooklyn, on Tuesday, July 5, at 2 p. m. ELLIS?On Saturday, July 2. 1981, after ?i lingering illness. George, beloved hus? band of Hattie A., father of Arthur Clar? ence, son of the late Charles \V. and Margaretha Eliis. Funeral service, at his late residence, 80 McDonough St., Brooklyn, en Monday evening. S o'cloc... Interment at convenience of family. FWVCKTT?Gorge A., beloved htislutn ' of Gertrude E. and father of A. Edna, on Julv 2. Funeral from his late home. 16 . IJorninick st., Tuesday, July 5 2 p. en. USHER?At his residence, f-51 West 170th st.. on Juno 30. 1S21, Cleveland D., son o* the late Mydert M. and husband of Lucie Pell Fisher Funeral servie s ar the Church of the Heavenly P.est. 6th av., above 45th st., on Tuesday, July 6, at 11 a. m. GROSSMAN?At his residence, on July 1. 1921, In his 63d year, Gustave Grossman. beloved husband of Anna C. and father of Margaret. Martin and Adolf Grossirai Funeral services at his late residence, 82 Ilillerest av.. Park Hill. Yonkers. X. Y . Monday, July 4, at 1:30 p. n\. Interinen: Greenwood Cemetery. HARKNESS? At Sea Cliff L. I., on Satur? day, July 2, 1921, George A. Harkness. Funeral services will be held at his late residence. L?u Bols av., Sea Cliff. L. I., on Monday evening, July 4, 1921, at 7 o'clock. Train leaves Pennsylvania Sta? tion, L. I. R. R.. 5:25 p. m. dayight saving time. Interment private. IIARTNETT?On Saturday July 2, in her S8th year, Harriet H. Hartnett. Funeral services will be held at her la/e resi? dence. 225 Bast 17th st.. on Tuesday morning, July 6, at 10 o'clock. Kindly omit flowers. HAWKINS?Mary Louise, passed suddenly from this life on July z. 1921. Services at her late home, 20 West 104th st., Monday, 4 p. m. i MYERS?On July 2, in his 57th year, Ed? ward N., dearly beloved husband of Jose i phlne and devoted father of Xathanlel i C. Myers, brother of Henry and Edith. Funeral services at his laje residence. 600 West 113th st., Monday, July 4, at 10 a. in. j M'A VOY'?Suddenly, on June 30. Rose E.. beloved wife of Anthony J. McAvoy and daughter of John aim Mary Mara. Fu? neral from the residence of her parent? 65 Park Terrace (West 215th st.). two blocks west of Broadway, on Monday, July 4. at 9:30 a. m. ; thence to Church of Good Shepherd. 207th st. and Broad? way, where a requiem mas* will be celebrated. Interment St. Raymond ? Cemetery. Automobile cortege. I M'ELIIENIE?On Sunday. July 3, 192'. Bella A., beloved wife or' Thomas D. Mc Elhenie, In her 72d year. Funeral serv ices at her residence, 266 Kyerson si . Brooklyn, on Tuesday. July 5, 1921, at 2:30 p. m. Interment at Wooster, Ohio. ! M'MAHON?Suddenly, on Friday. July 1. 1921, Albert R.. son of Robert J. and Sybella Thomas McMahon. Funeral services at the Lefferts Place Chapel. 86 Lefferts pi., near Grand av.. Brooklyn, on Tuesday, July 5, at 11 a. m. NICOLL?Suddenly, on Saturday, July 2. in the 66th year of his age, Benjamin, son of Solomon Townsend and Charlotte Ann Xlcoll and husband of Grace Lord Xicoil. Notice of funeral hereafter. O'BOYLE?July 1. John A. O'Boyle. hus? band of Catherine Fhelan, at his resi? dence. 530 5th st., Brooklyn. Funeral Monday, July 4. Solemn mass of re? quiem Church of St. Saviour, 10 a. in. Interment Calvary. Automobile cortege O'BRIEN?At her residence, 44 Prospect st.. AVhite Plains. N. Y., Juno 30. 1921. Mrs. P. J. O'Brien, beloved wife of 1'atrick J. and devoted mother of Mai garet M. and Mortimer S. Solemn re? quiem high mass Church of St. John the Evangelist, White Plains, Monday morn? ing at 10 o'clock. O'MAHONEY? On the First Friday. July 1, Anna Leah, the only daughter of Denis D. and Mollie A. Moore O'Mahoney and sister to Vincent 1'. and Joseph .\i O'Mahoney. Funeral frum her home, 54.1 West 129th st.. on Monday morning. July 4. Requiem mass will be offered for her soul at Annunciation Church. West 131st st., at 10 a. m. Kindly re? member do not send flowers. Automo? bile funeral. Sacred Heart of Jesus, have mercy on her. REINOEL?At Cnion Hill, N. J.. on Sat? urday, July ?. 1921. Alexander, beloved son of Barbara and the late Leonard Reindel. aged 42 years. Funeral Tues? day morning, private. SCHEIN?Abraham, on Siv?urday, July 2. at his residence, 67 Lenox av. Funer? I services Monday, July 4, at 1 p. m. SIMMONDK?The Rev. William I. Sim monds. pastor of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, Providence, R. 1.. July 1. Solemn pontifical funeral mass Monday. July 4. at 10 a. m. i SYMINGTON?-On July 2, 1921, at the Whit? Plains Hospital. Havelock Symington, i;i his 64th year. Funeral serviced will be held at the Grace Episcopal Church. White Plains. N. Y., on Tuesday, July 6, at 10 o'clock. TOWLER?Vv'illard Adams, suddenly, ;,r the Hotel Lafayette, on July 2. 1921, In the 63d year of his age. Funeral *er\ ices at the home of his brother, Edwaid V. Towler, 22 Cranford av., i'ranfonl. N J.. on Tuesday evening. July 5. at 8:30 o'clock. Train leave? foot of Liberty si . Central Railroad of New Jers.y. 7 p. nv. daylight saving time. St. Iajuis, Min? neapolis and Uetroll papers please Copj . VYHITLOCK?On Friday, July 1, 1921 Thomas Wells, son of the late Mont? gomery P. and Mary B. Whitlock. aged 45 years, husband of the late Mary Mllli cent Whitlock. Funeral service at A. Stanley Cole's chapel, 524 Orange st.. Newark, N. J., Tuesday, July 5, at 2 p. in. Interment at convenience of fam? ily. WILLIAMS?Suddenly, at Clifton "pringa. N. Y . July 1, 1921. George H. Williams. Funeral services will bu held at his lal > residence, 768 SpVingtield av.. Summit. N. J., on Tuesday. July 5, at 3:30. A COMPLETE FUNERAL In composed of hundreds of ! ; He details W? pay atte/,:ioij to seemingly unimportant on-a. At the Hour of Death Call Circle 1-500 FIFTH ME ?RIAL iuneral Directors ( \on-Seotariun > 40 Weit 57th St. Anjrwhtt? "Cajsnpbeli Service" Call "Colombo? 8200" FRANK H. CAMPBFH, , ?THE FUNERAL CHURCH" be ' ( Non-Sectarian) 1970 Broadway at 66th St. Dovataw* 0?6?. 234 St. & M A?. INC rodertakar?. 2?7J R.VH??I 107th St & Amsterdam At. BraaciM*. New Y?rfc * Hreoi.j? THE WOODLAfTS CEMETERT. 1 IJ3d St. By Harlem Train and by Troll??? I Lola o? ?ana.l alia {or aaia.