NEW
THE
LIKELY TO APPROVE RICH MEN ENJOY AUTO CHASE. HIGHEST OOURT TAKES NEW HONDURAN LOAN UP RATE OASES TO-DAY 0 Bankers' Proposed Bond Issue to Pay NatIon's Debts May Satisfy Senate.
Southern
NEW YORK FIRM INTERESTED If
Agreement
Is
Ratified
Customs
Will Be Collected by Americans Appointed
by Taft
Spec al to T c il.cw York Tur.ts
W,\.SHINGTON March 31-NegoUa tlons ha~e no" reached a pomt where the State Departm"n hopes tl at a group of Southern banks rna:> be successful in 0.1" ranging for the $10000 000 Hand uran loan trom "hlch the Morgan group In New York has ."Ithdrawn as a result of the Senate s delav In l'atlfylng tho treaty The Southern banks through the Whltnev Central Trus and Sa~lngs Bank of New Orleans ha e made offers eliminating many of the features found objectionable by the Senate and these changes have al ready been accepted by the Honduran Congress The Morgan plan for [,nanemg railway de\ elopn;tent In Honduras has not been ~en by the Southern syndicate and their loan will be confllled to refunding the na tiona.! debt of Honduras The fees for the work of the bank m floating the loan are reduced from $450 000 to $300 000 The ract that the loan as now negotiated will come trom Southern sources instead of tram Wall Street is expected to attract DemocratIo support for fmal ratification of the agreement wben it reaches the treaty stage The otter of a $10000 000 loan by the ~orga.n grOUP recently was withdrawn '.rho Bouthern ba.nkers It is announced ~vo offered a simIlar amount under a new and radically dIfferent contract. 'rhey propose to limit the first Issuance CIt bonds to $6000000 and will require Of Honduras $300 000 a J ear to meet the cernce of the loan as compared With .~O.OOO a. year under the former contract. Il'he offIcIal announcement of the new lo~ issued to day by the State Depart JUent J?8.YB 1n part .. 'l'he Southern bankers lIm t the uses JCIf the!? loan exclus!. ely to the refund !n&' of the Honduran foreign debt and dis ~ the proposals of the Morgan group 't.b promote railroad bu alllg and other internal tmprovements and to settle internal debts and claims pending against the Honduran Government It was these prm;lsion" extendmg the aBeS of the loan beyond the settlement of the ~oreign debt that aroused critic sm against the Morgan contract ar d the Southern bankers assert that in el m nat inS these features they ha, e presented terms satisfactory to Honduras and that aoceptance of the loan may be expected - Their optimism as to Its fmal accept ance. however is based stmply upon the approval given their contract by Indlv d U{!l offlctals of the Go," ernment of Hon auras who have closely studied their otter With the general public In Hon uura.s the Southern bankers find them 6elves handicapped by a widespread ;prejudice toward loans In any form and say tha.t this oppos t on Das undoubtedlY been aUgIUented by the fa lure ot the Senate to ratifv the can' ention 11: the Senate rat fles the con.ention now and gh es to the " I Itney contract the taCIt approval which such actIOn 1m pUes it w II It is declared produce a ) wa" e of reaction m Honduras dissipating the blmd prejut! ce and Po., inS the way for a sane conSideration of the "\.. hltne~ contract on Its merlts The OPPOSition In Honduras to the loan COl ventlOn has been almost wholly due 1.0 ns connection w th the Morgan contract against v. hlCh popu lar opposttion had been aroused and" th the can.. entiOD dIvorced from that can tract and resubm tted III connection" Ith a. new contract indIrect! v approved by the United States Senate and Indorsed bv many promInent offic als 1n Honduras the bankers feel conftdent of its complete suc
I
t ces~he
new offer as de!;crlbed by ,\ctlng "1:.ecretary Huntington Wilson is for a ($6000000 loan pa' able In fortv :years Wltll interest at the I ate of 5 per cent. and WIth a. sinking fund after fn e years of 1 per cent The bonds are to be secured by the customs re\ienue of Honduras col lected as prOVided for III the loan con ventlOn by '\'mer cans apPOinted by Hon dura.. with the approval of the President of the "LnltEd States Connec ed ",tb the New Orleans bankers is the fIrm of W,1 lIam C Sheldon & Co of New York E.en berole the New York bankers had WIthdrawn formalh the r offer of a loan to Honduras tile Southern bankers conVinced of the Impossib lit, of consum ) mating the Ne", YOlk loan be~an to study the fIeld" lth a v ew to making the loan themseIv eS Certam of them haVIng f large Interests in Honduras it was es senttal to them that that countrJ be put upon its fee f!nanctall~ and ~he~ offered therefore to ad, ance a loan in accordance with Honduras demands limited ex elusIvely to refundIng the foreIgn debt "They ba'\e alreadv made considerable headway the Honduran Congress having accepted their terms for a prelIminarv loan of ~500 000 offered to meet the press 1ng needs of that Government.
r
FRENCH LOAN TO ECUADOR :Agreement 'WIth SyndIcate 400,000
for
$3,-
Advance Is Signed
GUAYAQUIL March <II-The Go,ern ment has signed an agreement wlth a French syndicate for a loan of 17000,000 fiancs ($3 400 000 )
------
SHIP NEWS REPORTERS DINE. :They Who Go Down tho Bay Have Collector Loeb as Guest The first annual
dinner
at
the Ship
News Reporters AssoClation of New York was held last night In tiye Waldorf Astoria Hotel and 'Was attended by sixty active I ~d honorary members of the organlza ! OD. Charles C Boucher the President '/ as toastmaster and the guest of honor was William Loeb Jr Collector of the 1 Port The Collector made a brief speech jin whIch he "aid that he was very glad that the mliln "'ho go down the bay to \ gather the neViS from the big ships had formed an assoctatlon He felt he said J that the reporters had looked upon him 't<l:nfavorablv "hen I e took the office of Collector of the Port. but he thought the:!, now reallzed 1.hat h s obJect was to gIve a Squane deal to e. ery one In 1.he mterest of all the people whom I e represented ~luslc ... as rendered bv 1.1 e HawaIIan band from the Blrd of Paradise com pan~ and the leader danced the Hula Hula 1>I1"s J{I ty Cheatham recited :MIss Stella :>'fa) I ew sang and Meh,lle Ellis from the W intcr Garden did won drous things "Ith the plano As If It had been pre' ously arranged with Father Neptune -not a s!ngle passengel steam slup arr" ed l esterdav to call tl e sh p news reporters a\\ay from the 1" feast to
t
1
William Earl Codge Escapes, but Seymour Johnson 18 Caught. J\fotor Pol1ceman Lieut. Van Steenberg of Yonkers saw t" automobiles pass along North Broadway In that city about 4 a clock yesterday afternoon at a rate of speed which started hIm instantly in pur SUIt He had no more than taken up,the chase when the nearer a.utomoblle slowed down and as he caught up with It a man In the car cried out Hello "Van Dtdn t get me that time did :vou? The man was William Earl Dodge of 18 East SI:x:ty-elghth Street whom Van Steenberg arrested In Ma.v 1007 for speeding his automobile and who was fined $100 then and sentenced to ten days in the Yonkers jail Under the law now a motol"lst lUU:;;t maintain hIS illegal rate of speed for as much as a. quarter of a mIle so Van Steenberg was forced to a~lt that he hadn t got Mr Dodge 1 11 get that other fellow though he boasted and went on as fast as he could push h1s motor cycle A mile away he 0\ ertook the fl~ Ing auto and ordered the chauffeur to halt As he was telling the man he was under arrest Mr Dodge s car came up Mr Dodge and a man vilth him greeted the occupants of the car Van Steenbers had stopped and tilen ].fr Dodge exclaimed Here Van I want J ou to know all of us Then he introduced one after the other WlIIiam K Vanderbilt Jr who was rtd Ing with him Seymour Johnson at 11 East Slxt~ thIrd Street whose cal" Van Steen berg had halted and Ogden Mills Jr who ... as Mr Johnson s guest Mr John son s chauffeur was PatrIck Fannen of 2.-'0 Eas 11ath Street and hIm Van Steen berg arrested Mr Dodge InvIted Mr Johnson and Mr Mills into his car and as Van Steenberg and Fannen :;;tarted for the polIce station the chauffeur dr" ing Mr Johnson scar Mr Vanderbilt halted him and handed to him a big roll of bIlls You d better take this he saId and pa~ "hatever tbls trouble come to Then Join us at the Ardsley Club With a wa,e of their hands to Van Steenberg and Fannen the 3 oung men drove on Fannen ... as held in $;;0 ball for a hearing to day and he put It up In bills stripped from t Ie roll 01 Mr Vander bUt had given to him
OUR LIGHT FROM COAL FIELDS Prof Adams Believes Electricity Will Be Sent Here by Wire SpeCIal 10 The New York T""u CAMBRIDGE Mass March 31 -Prot Comfort A Adams of Harvard believes that some da.y Boston New York and other eltles "til receive their electriclt~ for heatmg lighting and power by "'ire from tl e coal fields The mstallatlon of a million .olt tlansformel in the propo-ed unlvers ty electrical laborator~ ""II It is belle, ed pro, e that such a scheme is feasible We hope to ha. e an alternating cur rent transformer wtth a capacity of 1000 000 ~olts says Prof I\.dams who IS to design the apparatus No mach ne has ever :y et been bull on so large a scale The largest trar sforn ers nov; muse Ila, e ahout half thIs capac tv l\Iucll experl mentmg has been made pOSSIble with these machmes but there stIll remains a great deal to be done woen we get a transformer working at a million or so volts Electrical currents are now actuallv carried at 1,,0000 volts "lth succes,; and tra\ el fOr 1,,0 or :!OO n11les Our trans former w111 enable us to see what sort of
work can be done with currents at a voltage of tour or f ~ e tm es this amount
If a current at 250 000 • clts can be trans mltted ecconomlcally o'er a distance of 1,,0 miles or more It may be pOSSIble that a current of a mIllion volts 'W tIl be good for as much as 1000 miles When science has ehminated the los~es of current now mc!dental to carrytng elec trlc t.,.. O'\ier great distances we ma~ e:s:: pect the steam turbines 0 be bUIlt nght on tl e coal fIelds where the fuel IS at hand and may be had at an extremely low rate The turbines w111 drl~e d~na mos and the electricity produced may then be ca;rrled to whate, er I Oln it may be wanted Some dav Boston New York and other CItIes may \ ery likely be heated Itghted and supplied with power by "Ire f-om the Pennsyh an a coal fIelds The lnstallat on of the great transformer which ... e are planning will certamly make pOSSible expenments in this dlrec tion
SHELL EXPLODES IN STREET. Hurled from a Window, It Rouses Neighborhood and InJures Child A large shell "hlch 'Was hurled the pclice bche ... e from a roof or '" Indow Into West Forty nmth Street bet" een Nmth and Tenth '\'"enues shortly after 1 a clock lact night. exploded with such force that houses in the, Icinlty were sha ken and the netghborhood was thrown into a palllC Seven year old Mary Chase of 434 West Fort~ nInth Street and ftve other little 1511"1 .. were pla~ mg In the street. A frag I!lent of the shelf tor<> an ugly wound In the child s right arm Her mother who was slttmg on a stoop pleked up her c1aul':htcr and carrIed her Into the house The child was latpr taken to the West Forty seventh Street Police StatlOn and after her 'W ound had been dreosed b~ a sUlgeon slle re urned to her hOI c Fragments of the shcll "ere hurled through the wmdo" s of louses Thomas Ahearn the three ~ ear old son of J\I1chael ,\hearn of 144 "est Forty ninth S reet ""he> wns III In bed "as thrown to the floor Tenants at 44~ ''''est Forh mnth Street ran mto the street belle,lng that
FINED FOR TAXI BLOCKS. Chauffeurs Arraigned for Causing Traffic Obstruction Policeman Kittle of the Traffic Squad arraigned sbc: chauffeurs in the YorkVille PolIce Court before :l'>Iaglstrate Freschl ~esterday on the charge of obstructing traffic in front of the Rltz Carlton Ho el The drivers are emplo) es of the 1'.lason Seaman Company which has a permit to operata a stand for sIx cabs in front of the hotel Kittle said there frequently were ten cabs there and that the AIm,rl can Express Companv whIch Ions an office across the street had complained that its wagons were dela~ ed because of the cabs and that It "'as losing busl ness becaus6 goodll failed to I cach trains In time. Four of the chauffeurs pleaded gUIlty and were fined ~_ each The two otl er pleaded not gullt~ Magistrate Frc"c II havIng suggested to George Feinberg couns"l fOt the company that he n ght make a test case of It If he chose
subsequent
se;::,sion
of
Congress
MIssourI
Case
Alone
Filla
BRIEF 10,000
Pages-Decisions of Lower Courte Held
Rates
Confiscatory.
WASHINGTON March :l1-The State rate casea to be taken up to morrow by the Supreme Court owing to their importance and the bulk at the papers are considered the bIggest cases to come before that tribunal tbls term The Governors of the States interested will through Gov Harmon. ask perml8~ slon to file a. brief State rate laws and orders In 1'.Ilssourt Kentucky West V,rgmla Oregon Min nesota Arlransas and Ohio '\\ III stand or fall b;)l the deciSion of the COUI t State rate orders in practically evcry State oJ: the union will be swept out of existence If the court !tnds that the orders and law:;! now In que3t1on burden inter Stato commerce The record In the Misourl cases alone covers ten thousand pages ThIS repre sents more "ords than ha\e been uttered in both the House and Senate durmg the present session of Congress The JUS tices are each supposed to digest thlg record and the thousand pages of briefs besides The Minnesota cases are almost as bulky and have been teferred to as the most comprehensive Tile validity of practically all maXImum freight rates In tne State as "ell as the 2 cent pa..; senger law 1S Invoh ed 'Iwo questions are before the court The first Itl ewlsc arising til cases flam the other SIX State" is whether the re duction of State lates would require the rallroads to reduce similar mter State rates and If such reduction of State rates would be a burden on mter State com mercc The :\l1n 'esota Federal Court held thnt it would he such a burden The otht'r question Is whether the rates confiscate the property of the ra I roads In answer ng the latter Question In the affirmative the lower court adopted the reproduction cost new of the ralhoado; as sho"lng their fair value The State claIms that "as a "rong basis The State also objects to the usc of the gross earnings as the basts fol" dlVld mg the ,alue between mte State and Intra State bUSiness and bet" e"l1 pas senger and fre ght busllless In the MissourI cases maximum fre,gl t and the 2 cent passeng"r la ' 6 are In volved The Federal Co rt In Missour held the rates confiscatory hut not a burden on mter State commerce TI e controversy 0 er 1ialuatlon was avoided by an agreement to regard three times the taxation valuation as the fall" ,alue The Kentuclty case Invoh es the COil stltutlonallty of the State Railroad Com mission act and the 'altdtty of reduced rates nn distillery supplies from Kentucky cities on the Ohio River to Inla d cities The ratlroads Icst on both pOjllts In the low!'!r Federal courts The West "V Irgln a contt oversy relates merely to the validity of tile _ cent pas senger law The Supreme Court of West Vlrglllia held It did not burden Inter State commerce and "as not conf,scatorY Un successful attacks were made on the law because of tts penalty clause and Its ap pllcablhty only to steam r ...ilroads and not to electriC railroads Thc Oregon casee are almost Identical with the Kentucky cases The Constltu tlonality of the State Railroad Commls slon act and the ,alldlty of rates from Portland to other Oregon cities III the eastern and southern parts of the State are Involved The lower Federal Court upheld the law and the tates In the Al kansas cases the maximum freIght law and the 2 cent passenger la", were found by the Federal DlstTlCt Court to be confiscatory The valuation was placed at tWIC" the taxation valuation In the Oh,o cases the only question involved Is the vaildlty of a State rate f,xed by the Oh10 Ra,lroad CommiSSIOn or. steam coal from Eastern Ohio to Lake Erte Pittsburgh vein operators objected to the rates on the .Vheellng & Lake Erie The raIlroad con e lds that the frel~ht Is Inter State commerce trans Shtpped at Cleveland and Huron Ohio for Lake cIties in othet States The rallroad won belo"
I underst nd that
~
'l'D.A.VELERS'
Mahon
Enrolling Secretly Employes Other Than Motormen. While Warren S Stone Grand Master of the Brotherhood of Locomotive En~ glneers has been makIng a fight to organn:e the motormen on the 1nterborough liIles WIlUam D 1\1ahon l?Tesldent at the 4lllRigamated Association ot Street and Electric Ra.!lway Employes has been here organizing the employes other than motormen In the Subway and on the ele vate(J and surface railroads both In 1\1anh9.ttan and Brookl~n A prominent la bor official In this cIty who has kept In touch with President Mahon said last evening that the men were being organ lzea secretly and that any organlzcr who gives away any secret is at once taken off the 'Work • I believe that hfj.lt of the men are at present organized and tbe organiZing of the men w1ll contlnunc until thev are in a position to demand the closed shop be said The mun President Mahon is or ganlzlng are the conductors guards and other.. outside of the motormen who are beIng organized as members ot the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers The men are beln'F enrolled unknown m many cases to eacn other each ma.n be Ing enrolled stngly "\Vhen most of the I men are enrolled a unlon charter will be given to them and they '\\ III elect off! I
STEA.MSH~
GUIDE -
I T1l.AVELIlI1l.S'
~1~0~{~ggm11~~f~0~ir:l~~ t~lcg~~~~~:~~~
engagcd 'n the same classes of work Is looked for in manufactUring c::ircle q To effect this readjustment will cost Nev; England cotton manufact1.lrers $10000.000 annually. it is estunated.
Iroquotl!ll
Marengo Aneon Prins \\ lIIen> "\ Crown ot Na arre Prinz Freid 2ch
Aprd 25
June 12
a
~
Bennuda. Bermuda. Progreso
Cloth! ae Cun 0 El Or entf" )!omu'" CI y or Atlanta.
Jamaica Gah:eston New Orle~s
:u
london
PANNONIA
IVERNIA
a b May 2 a b June 20
May July
Fir. and
~tatcs
Untted
Ber In
31ar Mar
~taT'
"Iar
re
MAr
Antt\erp
Z,br
Hamburg
Ma.r
'-Ia:r
Gibraltar
Bermuda. Coppen!J. ne
Mar
Ma.r
Hambuf'&
Mar
Trinidad
San Juan Sara O)';a.
San
!l.lar
Juan
Ha ana.
Brazos
Dt;E
~Iar
Port Limon
Mar
li3.1 \,: e!!ton
Mar
Each
June 2
I
l!bau
Mar
Ant~€rp
~Tar
Dundee Para
!\olar
~ar
dIRT
~ar
~
Colonel W C. Gorgas, Chief Sanitary Officer at Panama, says: "Climatic conditions of the Isthmus in April are excellent, as good as at any time of the year."
c
Fmland
10 OOA H.
20
fggg~1 looPu.j BOOPH..
Pters
~~
N
R
!:
SOOPJI. lOOA.M. ~ 00 A.3L
61)
lOOPM looPM () 00 A.:It
Apnl
ApIII
1
U
Y
In 00 lIL
30()PM
-
l00PM
,Uny 11
Lot:.1s.
Ne v York-LondoD Direct, Pler .. 8 N R. l-l1ncetonl a... AI) n ~M :\f1 e a<;;. a \p 13 Mllnehaha Apr 6 10 30 A~t M n e onka :\lay 4
I
RED STAR
11 ()(} AM. 1 00 P :It. lOOP lL
CANADIAN SERViCE.
IC TRANSPOl{ 1
ATLAN~l
300PlII
a ) n e.
steamer's fron] Canada
Lar~cst
<;I
aTe- ope 1 on the pie'MI o!
n
in the 'WarJd
ten m nute. of
CIIARCONZ.) 9:1 rolle. ]II. M. North
P
PASSENGER DEPARTMENT
1210000
and French
'if 1
Pleio \i~
London Pans via Dover-Antwe~p .F nla nd Ap 131 L plan J \pr #)0 Vaderland Ap 1 roonlAnd Atlr.2 "',Yill call at Plymou\l n p ace or 1
AMERICAN
OOAM
1
ll00AM
1200 M
J~e~olj~A~l\I~ Plymouth-Cherbou rg- Sou thamp on p
~3 "6
:s
1° OO:M
AMERICAN
s
,p
18
.. ,.,
100PH.
PI), mouth-Chorbou ;::- ;) Jth3mpton
3
1~
"0
SOOPM
July 13
WHITE STAR
ar
Mar
FRENCH A LA CARTE RESTAURAI'iT, TURKISH & ELECTRIC BATHS SWIMMING POOL FOUR ELEVATORS GYMNASIUM VERANDAH CAFE PALM COUR r SQUASH RACQUET COURT
NEARBY Sf\ILlNG:,
2T
300P:U:
TIT ANIC ~ ~r,~JL
Ton.
28
::s
OutgOing Steamshlpe "AIL TO DA.Y
:;~oo OLYMPIC ~r~~ ~~~113
iI
23 23 :!1 "5 IT "6 2T
\\cD~E"D\T
Trlnt nd Gal cston
AND IOUIaMAFHNii: SIGNALS
Mmnehaha
400
Savannah
CI r!stla.nsan<l
Penns,) I anla
16 3
Largest and FInest Steamers in the
~~~~
SHIP~
Mar 3!ar !obr lIar
Ha
nnehaba.
l'oIar: :!.Iar
St Thomas Kln".ton Cristobal
DUE TO MORROW
~t..O\lR :ST~MER5 HAVE WIRELE;SS T£LI:GRAPH
AprIl
Over
Mar Mar Ma,.
Bermudian Oceana "\ Isllan la
nott~raam
Apnl
s s Co
Mar
Palprmo
"e lIIe
Corunna.
AdrIat
Larc:~t
Mar
Uhc m Bremen
Toura ne
Opp Battery
GUIDE_STEAMSHIPS
HAMBURG
Mar
Mar
Trinidad
~lxaola
l\'1tnnt>tonka
TRAVELERS'
:!.Jar
Halt!
Guiana Alblng a Colon
QuotatIOns furnished for any Tours
Hospital Nurse Was Just Too Late to Save Michael Shelak Michael Shelak who was suffer ng from heart trouble and under the care of a specl:l.1 nurse, In Mom t S nai Hospital Jumped Cram a WIndow on tlle third floor of U" I ()~pltal vesterda~ and was Ins ant Iy killed Sllelal<" as an ironwo kel \0 years old Rnd lived at 1 174 FI 5t I:)tt cet Btooltlyn He "as admitted to the hOll pital four "Weeks ago Shelak "a~ appn ently asleep at 1100n and the nurse left the TOOm for a nom nt Ju"t as the nurse stepped acrOE~ he thresh old of tl e (loor 011 hIS return I e saw hc patient astride the "indow 11 The nurS" succQeded in catching SI plak s nlghtrobc as he jumped but tl e we ght of the m'LD s body tore the garment! Ito shreds
!olar
Crtstobal
Mlramlchl
Tl"1este, Flume
Mate
Glasgow Hull
Atla.nta
Saillns hour noon
Mar
LI erpool
Ca.ledonIa
New York-Mediterranean-Adriatic Service SAXONIA
31.
March
Lonllon
Lord Setton
"\ IA QUEENSTOW;)J' .h~D FISHGUARD MeuretanIa and Lusitanla do not stop at Queenstown. eastbound
CARPATHIA
1 11 158
S:J3
Incommg Steamships. DUE TO DAY
SICK MAN JUMPS TO DEATH.
TONS
APRIl. 6, 9 A M
EXPRF.S:S STE U{ERS TUESDAYS DIBECT CO:-<NECTIO~S FOR ALL PORTS
London~Pans-Hamburg PRES GRANT .A~IF. RIK.A
Apnt 6 .April 11 ·PENNSYLVANIA. April 13 BLUECHER .April 16
-Hamburg direct
CrU1se Black Sea and to Caucasus FROM GENOA A.pril 28th to 1I1n:v 20th
.. AM _ l'~l
S l'M 9
AM
Naples.
Bcr~~TJn;;)
AlgIers. Genoa
OELRICHS & CO.,
PrA;~~:I J~cne
CRUISES
NE'V
FRENCH LINE
23 yeare ago)
~ORIS:
TnA VELERS'
GUIDE-STEAltIBOATS
BOSTON
?
Can you get away
LLOYD
General Agents
IS BROA.DWAY
Hambur~ Amer!can Line orl~Ln/l.ted Ocean Crulsln ..
for
EUROPE:
Crouse to tho Polar RegIons FRO~1 ERE:\IEN 07nly 18 to '\.u~"' 1.5 ~12,) up
THE MEDITERRANEAN
BALTJ3IORE BREMEN direct-One C ass (II) CabLn Passengers - WEDN ESDAYS
,r CI'\V 1 NOT c.all at AJ"le (The
GERMAN
THURSD'I. .. S
GIBRALTAR ALGIERS, NAPLES AND GENOA
S S Hamburg Apnl 4 12 Noon S S Moltke AprtiiS 10 A M S S Hamburg May 15 9 A M
TRAIL TEACHER'S ASSAILANT.
I~ CO"'TI~E~T!l.L
$200 up
"'d cabin only
MEDITERRANEAN GIbraltar,
to ,\ST ll-'l
LONDON-PARIS-BREiVIEN
Atlantjc Service
16 days •
AND POINTS IN NEW ENGLAND
EASTER CRUISE -TO THE-
PANAMA CANAL Cuba and Jamaica By S.S( 16VidoriaLuise GOO Taos)
s s. NEW AMSTERDAM S\I lNG APRIL·
HAVANA
and
Arr!vlng buyers mal' register In tblD column ttl telellhoninf;:' 1000 Bryant.
~ V;
R
0
IDEAL CRUI<iES
A.round the Wodd Nov 13 Inn I From Fob 2( 3 From New Yot'k Ran l~
?~. VICTORIA
JR~~~~IR~ b~I~
~:\n
LUISE t~6 :~o
('<7$650
t l'
10 ..
M
HOTTF.ltVA::\!
Marvel 0/ LUxury, Co 'fort Btfwdme8J Twin Qcre
,
iUr. :5T es
'!~~:rd~:stcrd.) m
•
*n
~
ndam
n A3.1
p"\ ;
Ap
tRotterdam
I
." IA BOI,;LO
COLON
reservat 0'" mso available on Easter cruise It7 TOUT'8ts at South", n Rc 60rta mall JOln tllta crUlae a' Havana
Arrival of Buyers.
LO~DO~
PARIS -
"1B. Plymouth and Enu Obr.~ a\hI
April 6, 1 1a. m. a:::r
tPL1: 10UTE S.
I
1R
\prll
"3
!I ~
XE
BOULor
"E
•
A
omc. 39 B lTay :-; Y
USTRO~AMERICAN
UN
Ir~~~~~~ja;jijii~r;;::;~~:::;ii
E I 11~~y lIU
11ElJITE'RRAl'iEAN ADRli\.TIC Between New York &: ALGIERS IT!l.L~
m.t!it!l"!
rf(~;;~f J:~~1ii~w~~iifG~~~~goiIft
Provldence Dlrect $1 50IWo~cester. $2 40 Da1l,y fneIudln&, SUDda~ 5 SO P :;u. Fr PI r 19 E st Rh er om e a
erature furnished on appllcatlon Flr-tcia.. $7 0 UP Thru Bookings Da.lma.Ua La va.nt Orient India China Japau. l'HELPS BROS. & CD General A:eJlt.. 17 BaUer:>, Place>. ~ Y Cib'
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Tel
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FOR SALE
5680PX
G G 30 P:of
Boa.tinS'
1 6.:30 P Y
3 Months for $ 5
12 1130 P)I.
and upVia.rds r.;.erv machine Is 10 tine working ord rand wJll be kept GO dUring
$30 UP
12 IS BOP¥.
terlTI of renta
Lnltla pa,} r.>rlt R. o\l.ed to WI!. 5J LL retJut1[ rna chines guaranteed fo one year rt.t a to3 hll: ot 60"'. to 760/.. Send 'or catnlogu. AMERICAN "'t\iRITI~G :M~CHI!\:E CO 345 Broa.dwaJ' 10 B:l.rc 3~ St Cor ot Leonard st. Doo:J!r m B \Vay Tel 5403 Fran", In Tel ~ ortland.
Saturdllvg 11 !I. !If 'I apply It purchased
BermudJan arc 1niece an.eable
~
1: Tlos r.oo & Son "'5 and 4S8.. B Oad\\8T 0)64 and 553 Flftl Av Raymond &; Wlltcomb .,.,~ Fifth Ay ~ Y
OR
to
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S ".dl.,.1 grandest Ilner Lowe.t r/l.te"" Bermuda Atlantic L.ne 90 B way N Y notJ"D TRIP
By
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TYPE\VRITER:; ~1~ei~~O~tA RENTED
sta1 CA.'" cs cora.ls..
BffiM"lJISA
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Transpaelflc
For new Illustrated Book ot Tours HI' !': DI;;R>;Ot-I BROTHERS 17 19 Broadway Ll 1£'8 palms
5S Mesaba. Lizard
LONDONDERRY
FIP.S:r CABIN • 0 ..."d $I&' SECOND CABIN $1I0 und upwa.rd THIRD CLASS $3' 50
Despite Small England
A furtl cr readjustment of wages "hteh
Arrived-Sunday,
LIVERPOOL, LONDON, PARIS, BERLIN, VIENNA
\\ rae for Itinerary:
O:lS 188 & 13
Canadian .. Lhcrpoo] liar 16 1\la anzas ::\Iatanza.s Mar 21 sa Lucb.en Bremen !\!ar 8~s City ot St Loul. "'""nanah :!Jar 2S. t3S Dela" are Philadelphia Mar ,,0
July Aug 10
Calling at MadeIra Gibr:.Itar. Genoa. Naples
1 28 803
Il 53
~~
May 4 1() A M June 5 1 A. M June 15 10 A 1\1 The Lusltama," Mauretama" and • Campania" Will sail from New York at '1 A M Wednesdays subject to the discretion ot the Comma.nder
Transit has received recently a leaflet over the name or J F Calderwood Vice President and General Manager stating that the management had noted an addi tlonal effolt On the part of the employes In the transportation department to show courtesy and forbearance In their deallngs with the public ThIS It is stated Is to be added to their credit In a coming courtesy dividend According to some of the conductors and motormen they have grievances and the complimentary notification from the oompany does not do awa~ with them 'I hey at e paId by the hour they say and a system of reduction of hours has gone into effect whIch reduces their pay
1 07 7tO 30
I)
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lAPAr1117 May 29 Aug 7 May 8 June 19 Aug 28 M July 10 Sept 18 June Jul,. 17
June June :!.9
] c1cets by .,\re:rdlan
In Una ulth New Bedford s actIon
Sandy HOOK
Go crnors Isla.nd Hell Cate
CAMPANIA26 May CARMANIA May 15, 1 A. M 18,10 A M 13
THE nO'l' 'l.L MAIL STEA:lt PAr'KET co
I
Miniature Almanac for To-day. Sun rises 15 {~ISun sets 6 :!4lMooft ria~ ••THE TIDES HIgh Water LoA~ Wpater. \\ AM PM = M.
AprIl 24 June 12 Aug 21 1 A M. July 3 Sept 11
It!
CARONIA 1 Apnll0, 10 A M
SHIPPING AND MAIL~
APRIL3 May 22 July 24-
Mauretanl L U o I- tan Ie a
ce~~ch emplOl e of t11c Brooklyn Rapid
our conlpanv has
ew
STEA.MSHIPS
Finest &. Largest Quadruple Screw Turofne Steamships
Fastest
...
Trade Outlook Good Strikes In N
GUIDE -
CUNARD $a
I
a permit but I do 110t see" hat ght the Bureau of Licenses has to g ,e a pe mit to a private corporation who ma' tte up traffic The streets a, e for the people said the Magistrate The case will be continued to-day
MONEY COMMISSION ENDS.
some
GOVERNORS TO FILE
UNIONIZING CITY RAILWAYS.
Virginia Posse and Bloodhounds Seek Negro Who Attacked Myrtle Rouee ASHLAND ~ a March 31 -Some 800 citizens of Hanover County on horseback and afoot folIov;ed bloodhounds to day over swamp and f eld In search of a negro who bruta.lI~ attacJred JI'fyrtle Rouse a school teacher last n ght Three negroes were trailed and held on suspi cion but because of the vIctIm s pre carious condit'on they were not takell before her for identification Though the po~se was armed there wa! an explosion of gas had occurred The pohce bel eve the shell belonged to no attempt at VIolence The negroes wero a satlor and that bo,s had found It and tran~ferred to the law offlcel sand on6 hurled it to the street The shell made a of them was formally eharged " th th6 hole a foot deep In the concrete pavmg offense Miss Rouse 5 cries had rouse(l the coun Storekeepers In the neighborhood said trl'slde and her assailant fled the:l' had received 110 threats
BOSTON March 31 - Although strike" are shll in progress In various Massachu setts textile centres the largest one "t Lowell there 'Was a noticeable impro\ ~ ment In general conditions lagt week. Several of the smaller labor d1frIculties have been seUled and a stnke at 30000 cotton mill operatl. es at Ncw Bedford dut~ "as averted by the action of the manu facturcrs 1.."1 announe ng the doubling of the orlgmal I> per cent advance In wages TI e action of the New Benford Manu It, Plan Not Likely to be Adopted facturers Association haB resulted In slm lIar advances In other mills In New Eng by ThiS Congress land so that at least 100 000 operatives WASHINGTON ]!.larch Sl-The Na. v;1ll share in the dIstrIbution In a. rna tiona! J\Ionetar) Commlsston after fram Jonty of cases the manufacturers had pre ln~ a plan of organl..lng the currency viousl~ announeed a 5 per cent ad\ance. system which "Ill not be adopted untll >nd I a\ e now added another per cent 'Went out of exlstcnce to-da~ Headed by ex Senator NelsOl " Aid rIch of Rhode Island the commission made an exhaustive Investigation of the monetary s tuatfon here and abroad and recommended le~lslatlon to develOp the Clearing Hou.se Idea into a. Nationa.l TOAr'Ve association.
Legality of 2-Cent Passenger Fare, Fixed by State Law, to- be DeCided.
1. 1912.
~RIL
YORK TIMES. 1\t'[OND.A.Y.
1!l600PJL
I
STEAMSHIP TICKET AGENT
FABRE LINE TWE RIVIERA! MEN-S TAiLORING AZOREB LISBON NAl'L~~CZWI~!\~~~ rlf'. S~~~'gPb'\tl CO 17 StatAl Sf. X %.
WEEKLYDESlG~EP.S PAYM~NTS
FOREIGN HOTELS AND RESORTS
TERS superb fabrics 1.:er,) att;st fa lions ab~o utely COl f de tta no referen es rete reu to DBLY, ERED ON S~rALL DEPOSIT I \"l:ME::-.1T
SKI] LFUL
A.
]l.'r~Q&
CABIN ALL OUTSIDE ~uO 00 & UP Campanella APT lllVolturno JlIay \I 1ST
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Uranjum S
Apr
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"51 Catn}'lanell0 Mav 23 .. td 13 B W/l.y ~ Y
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SAVOY I-IOTEL I LONDON, ENGLAND THE FAVORITE RESORT
OF
and
'"' U cl T
fi~e
EXCHANGE CLOTHING CO No
J9
PHS AeFES
II
Safes Below Cost of Manufacture Guaran el'd 8g good aA ne~ 0 er tv.: 0 hun For Latest Shlppin!: ie....... See ... ,1"' .... ~.1 ALL I drcd sate" all makes Full line of sizes that '\\ ere taken in trade as part pal'ment for
AMERICANS IN EUROPE
II
"A!OSLER Patent Safes ===~~~:;:::;:;:;::;::;~~::;:==;::~::;:::;:~==:=! Co. II or tel e pi 0 np PI"CADILL1: HOTEL LONDON THE 1I10SIER S'l.FE COi\I1''''~"T Evcrl modern impro enlent rIot Water Ra I S-.... -5 Broadl\ay N Y Phone 1010 Fr,ankUa.. dlators Hot and Cold "'ater and Telephone !n Roll ana Flat Top e\ el~ room 150 Batl rooms For tariffs apph Chain FlIlng Cabillets. To"n &; Co ntry Bureau S9 10 fth \ve N Y Oftlce Partition Germany
Jl.AD l\ ILDU~GEl'O -:ru;;;t;:;\od booklet from VQ du'lJrIlclr. 11 l'arlI: Pl&ee, N .... YOf&.
IDES}(S 11-1"1 ?iWill ~.i~ !~~d ';'fOkt';,SS~ePEI~~te 'LTA1\,IBURGER
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_~ wlll_-~-.-~ '1' Co, 31:: BrosdwaT
EUROFEAN undt"'r e-('o $IV·
0
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FRANK TOURIST CO.
Tel F .. nklln 1940
Clark's Toui'S Tlmee Blair :.; Y
396 Broad\\"I1..v New
To EuroJ:e
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Ca~
OriCI t Round the WorJ4 and South Amelle..,
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'~~. · "~; ·THE~~·'· <:Nj;SW~\;:;YORif={j~TrMEs/~:w.EDNESDAY~.)A.PRIL :3~ "1912~; " ' .' .. . . . . . ,." . . ' .' \. ,. '." . -'. , . .' . '. . .. . .. . ' .
.!IL
~.
III'
¥;Tl1E~:'TIMES'S DALLY TRANSA·TLANTIC ·WiRELESSANIJ CABLE DISPATCHES' r~-----; " " ..
'
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.
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.
I
Do~!~:O:,.F~~d.A ,~A:~~~:;a, BRITAIN WOULD NOT c~~:'~:':~~a~:~::R ,~~H~~~ 'WOMAN IN FLIGHT; :,~IS::d~~tR :~:,~~N ~,~~::I
BERLIN mWRATH
•.
AGAINST GOETHALS
By
)lar:O:mT:n::~::~c!~:~~7~:le;mDh
MarC~~rT~:~:r:n~:::'I~~~~~n;ele~Pb
SUBSIDIZE· ACABLE
!a~~nlt:rn~s~:~::~:~;~~I:t:~~~~~Ph:
LONDON TO PAaIS
Usher's' Whisky GREER
By By to The New York Times. to 'X'he New York TImes. to The New l'ork Thun. I PARIS, April 2.-The sale of the third BERLIN', Aprl1 '2.-Countess Louis do LOXDON. April 2.-Arthur Nlklsch. Explanations to be Asked-His section of the art collection o! the late Neither Does the Government G&!taui.l:r;lroll, · the oldest daughter of Crosses Channel as Passenger who is now on his way to America to Jean Dollfus was brought to a close Ambassador Le:shman. narrowly es-)' conduct tIle threc weeks' tour or tho Messrs. ANDREW Talk ~ith the Kaiser May Be- 1 to-day. The tota1 sum realized to-day Favor: a State-Owned .Cable caped serious Injury last nIght in a colwith Gustave Hamel, 2,000 London Symphony Orchestra. has been ' USHER& CO. amounted to $104,311, maklr..g f-n agAcross the Atlantic. IIslon between her automobUe and an Fe~t Up. specially engaged to conduct three percome a Diplomatic Incident. gregate for the two days of $294,37L auto-taxicab. The Countess was reformnnces of Joseph Holbrooke's opera. hi:lVe been appointed 'I'ne principal Interest to-day centred turning borne ~rom the theatre with a The Chlldren of the Don." the libretto ' EMBASSY IS EMBARRASSED on a splendid sixteenth century Brus- QUESTIONS IN PARLIAMENT male escort. l'hey received nothing MAKE TRIP UNDER 4 HOURS of whIch 15 by Lord Howard de Wal-: ~~.~~..:~ Purveyors of Whisky sels tapestry after Bernard van Orley. worse than a. sha.kln~, but the occu-I den, during Mr. Hammersteln's Sum- ' to H is Majesty entitled " Calvary," whJch was bought pants ot the taxicab. two vaudeville I mer season season at the London Opera King George V a,rtlsts named .. Fischer and RoblevUle, Miss Davis th- Firat of Her Sex tc House. The first llerformance of the. count von Bernstorff Also May Feel by lVI. Seligmann for $60,000. v There was also lively bidding for an- Postmaster General Says He Can not who are just back from America, su t new opera i ::: d ue Juno! -•. •I \ Effect of Affair, All Because of the other lar;;e tapestry, a late fifteenth Ask ' at Present for Further fered painful bruIse's and cuts. Cress the English StraltMr. Niklsch took the score of the : O. S . :o."ICHOLAS II: co, !'o"EW IORK. SOLE AGEl\"T8 Too Swift German II Denial." century French production representing ReductIons In Rates. The Countese's car was so badly Halted by Customs Officer. opera with him In order to study various personages connecte~ with tho:> damaged that she had to go home in a during the ,"oyage. The music Is stat- '\ ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;~ history of Troy, with their names in cab. The blame for thO' coll1slon is ed to be at a 'very declamatory nature: B7 Marconi TraD!latisDtlc WlreIes" Telell'raDh . Latin and French and Latin 'legends. By u.. ....onl Trnnsatlantlo 'WlTel""s ~clel:TDph said to be due enUrely to the chaut- B:r lIIarconi Transatlantic WIreless Tel~~pb ',In inct. It Is a case of Strauss out-I to The New York Time.. M. Stetainer's bid or' :$15,800 was sucto The New Yorn Times. teur of the taxicab. to The New York TImes. I Straussed. The princIpal part Is GwyBERLIN, April 2.-It Is not alto- cessful. LONDON, Aprll 2.-In the House ot PARIS. April 2.-Gustave Hamel and dlon. for a high baritone. ,;ether Impossible that the GoethalsA Flemish tapestry ot the fifteenth Commons to-day the Hon. HaITY.Law- TRY NEW HYDRO-AEROPLANE. MillS ~leD.llor Trehawke DaVis, the first Altogether there are five solo tenor Kaiser atfalr may become a diplomatic century, representing a. hunting scene, son asked th.. Postnlaster ' General woman to cross the English Channel In parts. four bass, two sopranos, Includincident.. Tbe feeling In offiCial Ger- with a border of flowers and fruits. was Whether hIs attention had been drawn Vlokers-Maxlm Show a Craft Built' an airshIp, arrived In Paris at 5:30 this Ing the Don. and a contralto. The :man quarters is exceedingly wroth, and sold for $1,080. .A Frencb tapestry of to a. debate 'I n the CanadIan House ot fer the BritIsh Admiralty. evening. having left Hendo~, near Lon- chorus does not figure very largely In Continued from Page 1 • some explanation will undoubtedly be the end of tbe sixteenth century, with Commons upon the cable rates betwe.. n B7 Mazoeonl Tl'IUlPAtiantlo Wlrelea .. Tdelrftlph don, In a. BI~r1ot monoplane at 9:38 A. the work, nnd what little there Is Is . required and given on both sides beCore a very elaborate border, was knocked Great Britain and Canada. In which to Tbe New York Tim..... M. They came down just before 11 only for male voices, the matter is allowed to restdown for $3,340. Two thousand two the Canadian Postmaster General sta.tLONDON, April 2.-A serlea ot BUe- o'clock, after crossIng the Channel Nelthcr Orville Harrold nor Fellce beaks forming tbe spouts, and a pretty : It Is held here that CoL Goethals was hundred and twenty dollal'S was patd ed tha.t he had asked the Postmaster ceestul tests wJth a hydro-aeroplane three miles trom Ambleteuse In Pas de Lyne. Mr. Hammersteln's American jar ot opaline glass. guilty of the most blazing and un- for an elaborate sixteenth century General to use hIs a.uthor-ity to pro- wh!ch has been constructed for ' the Qalals. stars. will have parts. as the opera is .. At the back at the shop Is a raIsed pardonable Indiscretion In publicly re- Parisian tapestry. mote easy and cheap communlcaUon British Admiralty were mads to-day at They bad a strong wlrid blowing them In no Wise lyrical. I pIece of masonry In "'hleb Is Inserted a vea.l1ng the deta1ls of a private lunchOne thousand nIne hundred and nlne- between the mother country and Can- Harrow under the auspIces of Vickers all the way. After luncheon Mr. Ha. /' /large copper boUer coated by time with . eon conversation with the Emperor., ty dollars was reallzed for a pIece ot ada.. Sons & Maxim. builders of the craft. mel and his passenger walted tlll the REFUSE REPRIEVE TO SEDDON : a blue patina, Its conr closes herHIs loquacity Is branded as conduct 1 Bernard Pallssy ware-a dog In en amWould, asked Mr. Lawson. the PostAfter skimming across the Cavendish wind mOderated; then resumed the : metlc311y, alld has a handle. surmountWhIch would meant cashiering. from t.he leled earthenware. master- General Bay what he proposed dock at a speed of forty-five miles an journey to Paris at 3:45 P. M. The Judges Deny Murderer'S Plea, but · E'd by a CupId, with a hole through army If he "'ere a German o:f!cer. ) A late fifteenth century FlemIsh mln- to do to carry out the wish ot Canada, rnOt~'t~~e a~~d~~dae:U:~~~ r~::I~~rd~~~ journey occupied over three hours and Petitions May Save His Life. , which to pass a chain. underneath Is The incident Is embarasslng In . the lature on >"ellum, depicting the "Tree, expressed by all parties In the Cana- feat was thrice accomplished success- a half, exclusive of stoppages. By ~r.. rconl Trawi!ltlllntlc tnrel .... Telez::rapl:ll a square hole for the fire. blghest _ degree to the representatives ot Jesse," brought Sl,3oo, While an- I dian House, for a cable owned by Brit- fully. As tile wInd fncreased, turther Miss Davis. Interviewed shortly atter to Tbe Sew York Tim"". I .. Another Yess('I, one Inch hIgh and of the United States in Berlln. It opens I th .' t f i t Ish Subjects and not controlled by for- trIals were postponed. landing in ParIs, said she had had the LOXDOX, April :!. - Frederlck Henry t~,·o ,,·Icle. has very deli(,ate handles ::Iti 0 er mlnla ure rom a manuscr pOll. ! I C ~ dd ' t t I f as h Ion the old and vellum of the fifteenth century was I elgn capital. nUmos g I ar.ng BUYS THE TOLSTOY ESTATE most pleasant 0 ex per ences. arry- ~e on, who was sentenced to death; ta('h e d to the neck. which ends in such d e cate question of AmerIcan presentaId f ~1 000 A I t fift h t Postmaster General Samuel replied: ' . Ing a large bunch of flowers presented under dramatic ci:-cumstances a few' a fine point and narrow hole that the tf n t t' K' d t f h ' so or". a e eent cen , h b 11 t F h h d f f o S 0 ne aJser an pu s res ! ury Italian miniature on vellum. taken .. I am aware of tbe general desire Report That C. R. Flint Will Found to er y a ga an renc mall. s e ays ago. a ter being con\'icted 0 mur- ' contents could only issue drop by drop. t weapons Into the hands of the cou: \. trom a manuscript. and representing expressed in the Canadian House or an Agricultural School There. said: ~:;~~j ~~s:;!~rr-~I~' ~~~I;~f~~f~~~d~~:: .. Cups of diaphanous glass. tin~' clay party, which opposes his Maj~sty 13 .. The Virgin and the Child Jesus." was Commons for cheap and easy commu.. I was an extremel~' useless passen- IIO\\\"1111st& ndlng a ten hours' speech In : lamps In the shape of a human foot in. hospitality to transatlantic viSItors. sold for Sl.020. I nicatlon between Canada. and the By Marconi Transatluntic Wireless Telegraph ger, for r did not do my work. I prom- hI" behalf uy :lIarshnll Hall. i a sand n l. on the sole o[ " ' hl("h Is the The opin ion is alread)- ventured that I' SI h d d d f t d 11 / United Kingdom a desIre which Is fully to The New York TIm.",. Ised to keep'the pressure pump going, " ·!thout calling on Sir Rufus IsaRc". I nume "r the 11131,er. . Spo ndlllus '; future p tat' '\1 b t l X un re an or y 0 ars was I • . VIENNA Aprll 2 Accordln"'; to In but failed miserably. :VIr. Hamel had tt,~ Attorney General. to reply, the I . f resen Ions WI e ex reme y 'd f I b dl t' k f ' shared by his Majesty's Government, • . ..,. . . . . . ,three Judges forming the appeal court, bronze lamps likc a .palr 0 s c ales, a · difficult, If not Impossible to put!, the Pal or a arge ronzeFor cana statuette es IC 0 : but no resolution was adopted In fa,. 01. formation d e l' tlleir decl~lon. "'. 1,I'S small t'.lb wit h t'.\ (I Iron hooks. a nd a · . sixteenth century. Ch I R from FII t a f trustworthy >< Y -k hsource. to do all tho ,.ork. "hlch makes hiS retlre,'l to ~onSl' ,~ .~ through. ' . . , . : of any s ecif!c rates or recommend-I ar es . n o . ew o. as ac- trip all thc more wonderfuL 1 was the signal for a dramatic Incident. ; c opper t<til " ,-c " mong the more than , CoL Goethals's '" break." as It is con- i of St. Sebastian . caned In "ood, flf- . , P Th . qulred the late Count Tolstoy's estate .. Before to-day's crossing I had done ' the condemned man 's wife at th 6 back i Son oi,je,'t,; ["und. _.\11 th" u:"nsils are . • . I teE'nth century German work. $600 was ator~ of definite l!nes of policy. c ., at Yasnaya Polyana, Ru~sla. . .. .. n v r : of the court bein;; SUddenly U\' "rc0me' . !lldered 1n Berlin. rna) also pro\e un- I paid. and a like sum for a wooden stat- , Postmaster General of Canada stated I It is said that 1\11'. Flint intends to a fair a .mount of .l>mg, but h~<l e ~ ,with emotl u n ann ha\'lng to be led out' admlrdble for :sImplicity and ei<'gance. comfortable for the Gcrman Embassy , . tt O f S '" f th I . _ I that he did not think that a state- I establtsh an agrIcultural school and been 0\ er the sea before. \\ hen "e. In a faintIng condition. I .. Beyond the fronts of these houses in WashIngton. which, It Is said. was. ~e e h t. • gn~1 0 . museum on the estate. drew near the coast I thoug!lt we were, As Justice Darling delivered the judg-- I e .... ervtl1ing is still buried , but the size e ve n : e~r y slXd ; owned cable would be neces"al"Y mainly responsible for paving the Col- : ~~~t d clel ntury. a1 d f unthred ~n.! .. 'When the question of - a 'Statei'lllchnel Kousmlnslp' a nephew of the going stra1ght on. but to my surprise 1'1 mletnht 0\ tehe eoburt. Seddon stuod erOCI and 'solldity sho'" probably that malJY • . ' SIXlY 0 a r s "was p or ana er pIece .. I ~. l' d ' 'Thl [ t "",. pale ace, ut. contr.:l.ry to cxpectn'. onel s way In Gennany. espeCially in f • d I t I' I t tl t! owned cable to Canada was consIdered late Count Tolstoy. who came here in saw \\e "ere paning o\\n. s ac . tlon made no attempt to address the ' valuable thlD;;S II c below thc nine ieet · 0 " 0 0 scu pure, ear ~ s x een I cen . , January. lOll, to find a purchaser for '1 t lIge to do my b d t regar 0 InspectIon of the Klel CanaL ury German, representing a Dlblkal by the Imperial conference last year. It ; hIs uncle's estate, made the announce- was 0" ng 0 my neg nee court. . ! of sand and lapII.I which ha\' e to e Foreign Secretary Kiderlen- ,VaechI wa intimated that endeavors ,,'ere be- r ment on Jan . ~3 of that year that Charles share of the "·ork. The petrol had Petitions In favor. of " reprleye >ire i removed. t d scene. I S " R . Flint proposed to take the properly ""' t d " 'e were obliged to come I being extensively SIgned all over the .. . .. . er oes not rank as R f riend of Count lIng made to obtain a. reduction of 0)0 under "ertaln conditions. Negotiations .,.ven ou • an country, and th",re is a strong r"eline; . The stone archllra\ e of anothpr Yon Bernstorff and might not be disTITANIC TESTS HER SPEED. per cent. on non-urgent messages in had been begun with Andrew Carnegie d o w n . , ~hat the Home Secretarv " ' 111 commute I house. which has been half excavated. · d to re I'leVe the A m b assa d or 0 f r9to take the ,,~, t ~ot ov e.~ the Channel In I th e sentence to IelImprisonment f' , IS . all broken. On the parapet 0 f t h e pose plain language, and also a possible re- d e cover lin eestate d . ' but :Mr. CarnegIe .. e j us., . 'spon5ibllity for the AmerIcan officer. T(;en ShA S lis for Southampton to I duction in the rate for press telegrams. Mr. Kousmlnsky saId that I\Jr. Flint time; otherwise we should have come - -, - , \'eranua were round hollow clay vessels h h ' . P af . proposed to erect a permanE'nt exhIbition AMERICA SCONDITION STRONG , for holdll1~ "a. ter. probabl~. for the us.. "tV om e i s d un erstoo d to h a'Ve so'' M Id V . These reductions have since been se- of AmerIcan agricultural machinery and d 0\\' nI nth e sea. .. cordially recomm e nded to the German . repare or a en oyage. : cured together with a large reduction cultivate the surrounding land by modern !'.Ir. Hamel, wbo was much elateu. lof the pet birds (,f the mistre ss of th .. Oovernment's courte~ies . Cy :\Jarconl TraDsutJantic ,,'Irele,s Tclp.crapb . . • I methods to demonstrate to the Russian said: So Says Lloyd-George WhIle Intra- h Tl" I' I eighteen teet .' '. to The :o;c .... Yori< Tlme8. . 1D rates for the deferred messages . farmers how they could produce twice "Tbe wind was favorable but was , ouse. l e ' erd nr.l s Unbiased obse~' ers pOint out that , _. . . Itnown as cable letters. the amount of crops on their fertila lands \'ery variable. We experienced conduclng the BUdget In Commons. I long and five fept \'. 10(' . th 'hl h h . : LO:-;DO:\, April ~,-The "hlte Sta r and save labor and expense. He also statf In I I ' h d LONDOX "'. d d ' I , . . . . . h f m,uc 0 e storm." C as ansen, . . . _ i "I do not "rjsh to regard these reduc- ed that five of the leadIng manufacture"" slderable buf et g unt "e reac. e " , enE'S a), Aprl 3.-Tha "ext IS 1\ sull fin e r ,"cran d a. " 'Ith m,'1g bt ha,'e blown oyer without dam- lmcr TItanic, '" hlch has Just been com I' tio as final but I cannot see my way of agricultural Implements In the UnIted Rochester, when ! !!teered some" hat Budget for the flnn("lal ,'ear 11)1::,13 I several stone Dor;" pillars with chana;g'e In any direction If the" denial de- i pleted by H.arland & Wolff, left Belfast. ns. States were Interested with Mr. Flint In to the west. I soon caught sight ~'as Introduced by Dav/d Lloyd-George. I I d t t a ertain height _ . h h' I d ,to demand further reductions at pres- the scheme. of the Channel. and crossed It at a " ne e 5 ucco up a C . -rtment" of the German Foreign Ofarbor t IS morn ng an proceeded to, h I ht f b t " 000 f et Th sun' the ChancE'!lor of the Excheq"er. In the . .. The other "Ide (,f the street Is more · . Belfast Lou h where the com asses ent. ANOTHER P AND 0 ACCIDENT e g o a au -, e. e , House ot Commons yesterday before the ficE! had not cleared for action with . g, p .. Any company coming ior",-ard to •• • prevented me from obserylng. the petrol I thinnest attendance on such an O~ ca- Intprpstlng tram an ard)aeologlcal than .. h a1 ·t were adjust e d and speed trials took gauge. so I asked Miss DaVIS to work slon tor flfte"n years. 'r tI tt I t f I Th suc acn y. . place over a measured mile with excel- I lay a cable, owned by British subjects, I the pump. She did not seem to pump ! The Chanc"llor was In the comfortable I rom an ar scpo n u v ew. e . between Canada and the UnIted Klng- L ner SyrIa Damaged In Collision to any effect and when we were still . posItion Of ha"ing !!<:12.7:!3,QOO remaInIng Ilouses th e re . three III number. have ......JL.was the Foreign OffIce ..,.. hlch tel!gTap~d to the Kaiser at Corfu to asl, lent results, d Ith 'Ith d d t 1ft t wIth a French Steamer. about a mll~ and a half from the ' from the yea.r Just closed. This. he sa.ld. , each an upper stun' nlld a. balcony. · , Later she left for Southamoton from 1 0m , e er" a re uce ar or a Fr h t th t I dd I g was the largE'st realized surplus on rec.. If Col:' Goethals s statements 'Were true, -, I the rates In force would be welcomed VALLETTA, Malta. April 2.-The Penlnenc coas e pe ro su en y ave ord. The loss to re"enue from th .. eoal .. Furth(·r excavatIOns are expected and On' the strength of his :Majesty'" whIch port slle salls on April 10 on her ·1 ' . sular and Oriental steamer Syria arrived out, There was nothing else to do but strike has been upward. of $~,OOO.Ol.ln. ~O ' to r veal quite a new cit \" bE'slde the . /. ,.... ; malden yoyage to New York with a by the Government. but they are not here to-day with damage/! bows. aiter to come down. and I planed to earth that but for the strIke the surplus would ; e . .. teply, ,Saturd?y s denial was Issued. . : prepared to grant a subsidy for the helng In collision wIth th'e French steamer three mlles from Ambleteuse." have been i!'35.000.000. l one already I<nown. a city bnghter and It I the Foreign Office had kept cO'll large passenger JIst. f t10n of su h a m " Circe near Algiers yesterday III a tblck Tha estlmated "xpenditu~es fO!: tha fI - . more JOYous, and possibly full of beaut ' , OTma c co pany. f ARABIAN PORTS BLOCKADED • increase nanclal year 191:':-JS are S!)34.6:!... OOO. an ! " a.n q,' let Col. Goethals s remark, s pass, HaN O'R Fa R PO NIATOWS KI. In answer to S, ir GlIbert Parker, the °fhe Syria was on n voyage from London of $2R,O<J5.000 over those of the :, titul thIngs. tlIlltoUced. It Is fairly certain tbat the I Postmaster General said that the Gov- to Japan, and was carrying ninety-four past year. This Is mainly due to th e _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ "·]jie.l,nful Incident" might ha.Ye been ernment was not In favor of a State- passengers. She was due to arrive hera Italians Also Cut Red Sea Cable-A Compulsory Insurance act for ,,'orkmen :. • . I Prince Is Made a KnIght of the: owned cable across the Atlantic. yesterday, and her non-arrival caused g British Steamer Arrested. and the. acquls~tlon of all the telephones i Harvard Club's Gift to Mr. Bacon • ..voided. '1 some anxiety. . In the United Kingdom by the State. The · S A \I ~ TI Han'ard Club ot ! Legion of Honol'. ThIs Is the third accident to Penln. ,.,,,·enue for !hc_ coming year he es\l- ; PARI. ror -.- le I~W ' EDISH SUFFRAGE BILL CREW OF THE FOXLEY LOST sular and OrIental steamers while voyPERIM, April 2.-The Captain ot the mated at \103 .... \l.I<>.QOU. lea"ln.; a surplus Paris to-dal' presen t ('d t o Robert Bacon t o"W • By 3lareonI TmnsatJa.ntic WlreJeRs TeJegraph ~ • . aging to the Far EA.St in a tew months. Italian crIser Piemonte. one ot the of $1.3::!O.OOO. ~a new taxes would be th e l~nlted Stntes An"lb:ls~ ndor, a h:tndto Tbe :Sew York Times. The first was the wreck of the DeIhl oft squadron of Italian war vessels which Imposed. some piece of sll" e r plal e in connection Not On~y GIves the Vote to Women, Only Four Officers of British Steamer Cape Sparbel, In which accIdent the late has been cruIsing In the Red Sea since Concerning the outlook, the Chancellor: .. f F d PARIS. April 2.-Prlnce PonIatowskI, V Duke of Fife. th e Duchess. and their the beginnlng of the war between Italy saId: "'th his dcnartlJr~ rorn ra n"" an t<> but Admits Them to Parliament. . who Is President ot the Ban ue Prl ~e . Saved- essel a Total Loss, daughters narrowly escapeil wIth their and Turke~· . t,!-day proclaImed a block-! "Trade throughout the .world a!lpcars, C'omm(>moral" the fn,·t t!,at he was the . ~ . ; _ q v, PuXTA ARENAS April 2.-A ChlleA.n' Jlves. The second was the stnklng or the ade of ports OL Lohela and~ SaIl! on the to loe In an exceptlonal1~ health). con- found"r and Is thC' honora)'), President or 8TOCKEOLJ,[, Apnl _.-The SwedIsh "'as to-day made a Knight of the Le' . Oceana In the Ell~lIsh Channel . with Yemen ("oast of the Red ",ea and Ql.~o dltlon . The ('ondltions In the L nllell G.,vernment Introduc .. d a bill Into Parlia- ; g! f H gunboat which was sent to the asslstanca 'the loss of several" lives and large of Kamaran Island,. the e"ole station States are strong.. r tnan they lla\'e been' the club. ____ , ___ . ___ _ _.' h _ I on. a onor. 1 of the Brltlsb steamer Foxley, which was amount of bullion Intended for the Chlneso which connects \'arIOUS cities on the for ye a rs. and Instead ot the den.:statln!; I ment to da~ extenalng to women t e par \ PrIncess Pon iatowski was aUss Helen , wrecked on March 16 ort the Ch!1ean GoYernml"nt Arabian shore with Egypt. cyclone ""a had a few year" ago from ; Prince of Wales Visits Fallieres. lliUllen1ary franchise and tha right to' . . ' ('oast, has arri\'ed here and reports t h e ' Tha Itallan ...-ar vessel has se"ercd across the AtlantIc. , ... ., are llkp.l y now to \ ~, . . ' nd for election to Parliament on the I Sperry of California. The Prince Is F(lxley a tOtal loss. ALG[ERS. April 2.-The French steamer the connection by cable between Kama- ha"a a sll"ndy trade wind. There Is onl~' PA RIS. April _.-Th" I ronce at "ale" me conditions as men. I well known in New York. His banlt Four officer.s of the Foxley were res- Circe arrived in port to.day with her rnn and. the Arabian maInland. one dlsturbln!;, factor. the Presidential i ('a1\E'd al tne EI~· ~"e Palace t,,-d2.Y and . Women whose husbands bays not paid bere deals largely in American securl- . cued at the tIme of the 'wrcck, tho rest fore peak full of w ater, owIng to damage The British steamer Woodcock has election . but I do 110t think that Is gomg I wa s re<',,!ved bv Pre,ldrnt F"alll~r~s. T ~,e taxes for three l'ears ara excluded from' I of the crE'W being left to theIr fate. The Incurred In a collisIon yesterday with the been arras ted by the italians In the \'1- I to ha"e a very serious effect on the p \1 t . 1 h '1' t t1 B It the vote. ties. gunbo at found no trace of them. Peninsular and Oriental steamer Syria. clnlty of Lohela because, It is asserted trarte of the t'nlted StatCE. That is fuJi res ( t"n return c:> ( t ~ '\ ~lt a Ie i- -- --- _ . ----- ---she was transporting contraband. of hope for our tracle here." , ish l·:m~assy.
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FINDING SEOOND I CITY AT POMPEII
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'WORK OF SCOTT'S -EXPLORING PARTY
Butter Point. No sPE'cimens or per-: was observed every hour, but very few: first time the k!ller whale, the wolf sonal gear could be carri€(l. I brllliant displays occurred. Atmos- pf the seas. in its native element. Some twenty foot crevasses were pheric electrlcity has also beep studied, crossed on the first day, hut then a and ice physiography afforded much MRS. 'SCOTT DENIES ANY RACE. route was found at a l,OOO-foot level fi e ld work. which avoided the larger crevasses. Vexed problems regardIng the orIgIn Says Her Husband Never Thought of One-Plans Formed Long Ago. They found all the sea Ice ·had broken of alpine topography when Europe and " Continued frOID Pnge 2. out south of Dunlop Island, After other temperate regions were undergo- By Marconi TransatlantIc Wirelees Telegraph :- ! coasting. around open water for the Ing the ice age are being stUdied In the to The New York Times. This necessitated relaying, and a spp.ed next ten dnys.'the party was . crossing examples offered by retreating glaCiers LONDON, April 2.-Mrs. Robert F. of .five miles a day brought them on Blue Glacier n-l'!en they were picked up In Victoria Land. where the age still Scott. although naturally somewhat Dec.. 1 to their destination at a cape by the shIp on Feb. 1[;. obtains. dlsappolntcd that ber husband is not nine miles inside Granite Harbor, It Is highly probable that the Terra The mainland offered a rich field for returnlug, 1s del!ghted at the prospect where a stone hut was built and a Nova wi;] be able to obtain the speel- petrology. wIth an abundance of min- that he will get another season of sclblubber stoye installed. mens collected at GranIte Harbor in eral bcaring quartz Yelns, but of no entlflc II,vesttgation in the antarctic, two months seal meat was 1913. economic value. Spedmens of coal of for she tak<>s the keenes~ Interest In his For O ~er , I I work. She said to an Interviewer tothe staple tood, blubber being almost V."-Ll!ABLE SCIEl"TIFIC "U-OHK. econom c va ue and well-preserved fos- day: the only fuel used when on the coast. sils nave been found near Granite Har.. I t would be the greatest pity It The first week 'was devoted to exThe general plan arranged for the bar. At the 'Vinter quarters an e..'!:-, such highly skilled, trained scIentists, ' g the northern sho~es. A furl- scien ti fic work of the expedition. has ce.\lent fIeld .exlsts for Ice work In once on the spot, did not have the opp]onn I I r I portunity of a second year of study. ous blizzard prevented them frum been carried out so far almost entire y. ml es 0 g aCler. In front of the hut OrIginally the lack of funds necesslsledging further north. Self-registering meterological Instru- [ stands a cape formed largely of a mas- tated hampering the activities of the During the next fortnight they ments ha,'e g!\'en a continuous record Sl\-e moraine with lava flows from expedition Into the space of one year. 'ledg'ed a~ound W est Harbor, fl' n-"ng of the pressure of temperature within :Mount Erebus. but everybody who has any Interest in S • UJ the sUb.1ect must be glad that a more masses of marble and remarkably the locality and dIrection, and these Pendulum observations for the value thorough programme is now decided large mine rals. sucll as topaz, h a ve been checked every four hours by I of ~avlty have been carried out, and upon. _~t their headquarters thousands of I eye observations.. Th.e upper atmos- a tide gauge has given a continuous " I f my husband feels any regret It d Is that it delays his return to his naval wingless Insects of two different I phere has been Inye~tlgated ~y mea.",ns recor . duties. HiB great desire is to resum" species were found, clusterIng half of small balloons, "hlch lla"e sho en Marine Biological DlscoTerle.. as soon as possIble after the expedition trozen under almost every pebble. the direction of upper currents to a is over· hIs position in that sen.-lco. On Dec. 27 they started exploring the height of sIx miles and temperatures Marine biological work has been car- :;;~~~hPI~~~ ~~i;Se;t~~~::a~.the forewestern islands. They passed tremcnd-I up to five m i l e s . ' I'led on throughout the WInter at a .. As regards a • race,' 50 tar as my ous Ice falls on :Mackay Glacier. By A.n almost unbroken record of mag- hole !tept in the sea Ice for nets. water husband' is concerned there never has -' th ell' · I d i n e t t e elements has been obta1ned and slUllples . and sea temperature. Quan - dbeen or any thoughtth of one. b Inparta ",.ng S e ge gear up o n e . d one I tblnk 't . thousand feet of the granite cliff and i absolut~ magneti~ O_bservattons have Utative and Qualltatiye observatIons until the ~r:;o~;rt ~n n~~~ ;~~~ \Veek. Self-registering of mlnui~ organisms at varIous sea - he will know nothlnl? whateve~ b 0 Id er-covere d s I.opes a prom I- i, been made t· seep . I every t i t \" d I _ . about nent nunatak " ' as reach e d. Here they ' magnetIc ns rume.nts we~e ns a Je n sons are giving interest!l'\& results. the race In which he is popularly supfound numcrous w e ll-pr~s e n'ed fosslls ~ room excavated In the SIde of a small P aras It 0 Iogy 0 f all sea 1s. penguins, and posed to have been a competitor. probable crustacean. 'glacier. ThiS eliminated c~anges ot other birds and nsh available has 0.1- In":J~o~\U~~e;; ~:t~ftlg~~1 !a~r:d ~~~ _ temperature. wbich ar,e a serious cause ready given good results. Some new a programme that was drawn up more DltuDlInou5 Coal Found. of error in this class of work. protozoa bave heen found. This work than two years ago. He reckoned on Debenbam discoverEd specimens at All through the Winter the aurora bas fully occupied the time ot the sclen- reachIng the south pole somewhat about the end ot December, that being b~ttun1nous coal there. almost certainly tlnc statf~ and indicates an ample field the best time at which to take theodderived from a well-marked outcrop at · for furtber research in every direction. ollte observations. b~acon sandstone on the nunatak.. Successful bIological work has been .. So far as can be judged he would Beautiful polished pavements ot carried out on the ship. the apparatus ~.;~ f~~:~ f::'J:;htO~~~;t~~eas~~tJ~ perched blocks characterized the vlcin·, - includIng seven traWls, wIth which a uled time. In other respects he ap1ty, fOnDing the most remarkable eX-I large coliectlon or the deep-sea. fauna pears to have been successful in hIs atrlples of glacial action bltherto seeD of the Antarctic has been obtained. A missiOn."
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WAS HIN GT 0N POPULAR THREE-DAY TOURS
1ii~Victoria
Land. I ·The work done last Summer by the geological party, in conjunction with ~ls season's work. has resulted in ." survey of some detail. both geological arid topograpblcal, of the whole coast north' ot Mount Morning to Granite
April 4, 18, and May 9, 1912
'$12 from NEW YORK IncludinG' botel accommodations 9.ll~
Harbor. including ,,"hat appears to be
necessary expe.:Jse!l.
rolite :to ·the inland plateau behlDd Granite Harbor.
Under Personal Eseort. Tickets a.Dd full Information of Ticket Agents; or C. Studds, DistrIct Passen-
a'gOod_' new
f>~~t:'l~;n~a~~;;;:d~~~·nt.r··~:3ESf~W~
r'(on::Jan. 8 the :Party returned to Stone
\~·~hhto. 'await :rli~~shlp's
"..,
arrival. but
Avenue (Cor. 29th St.). New York.
. ;, ,~ > thirtY. mil~7Qf.. .fast sea ice re-
- m&t "fid~tWeen si~dg.e.-afld open water. .M~~oiitli1.S:fC?r we~ptll only ten days :' ' : 8:~h1e sledglng-.:iood remalned; '<iii;;f,~ .<~diCided· "'tc:r·;'i"¢.tr~t over ~oit · fi@:I~tQ;Dis~bv~· Hi.tt . vi~ . .; :~
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TOUR TO GETTYSBURG BAmEflElD May2S $13 .. 00 . .. '
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number ot catches wlth .a tow net have been obtained, shOWing the . vertical distribution of transparent orga,nlHIIlS of the sea. 'Continuous meteorological observa.tions have been taken on the shIp; Ii ki A tr II d A t tl ' nNatural ' ng up history us a aresearch an n has arc ca. been tl ltd b .. In grea y ass s e y tbe use o~ c croa,,: tograph cameras. Many thousands of feet ot fUm have been used .1n..obtalaing ,permanent animated record" of Interesting bird and anImal life in these regions. '-Eve~ Pbue' ot seal, pen~in and ska.u gun ~ltehaB ' bee~ thuslIlustrated. . '. ... . ,/ " .. SOOle remarkable clnema.togoapbfllmlS
~~~~===:;:======~ ~eA.s.-.~ 7MTURES
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HIGH GRADE
L I- ghtl-ng F 1- X tU'.res
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made of the highest grade custom shirtings
values 2.50, 3.00, 3.50 and 4.00
at 1.85 The response to this remarkable' offering, which began Monday morning with 10,000 shirts, and will continue today and tomorrow, has already eclipsed last year's phenomenal sale. (]f One thing is certain-this is not a sale of split ballots. The number of men who voted a straight ticket for a full complement of Spring shirts in this sale speaks volumes for the
character of these wonderful values. The absorption for two days has been quiet, quick, methodical, and mostly plural. The threes and the fours and the .sixes-yes, and the dozens, which many men bought, say more for the merit of this unique opportunity in shirts than we can put in type. But there is absolutely no reason for surprise that a man should go.the limit of his requirements when he finds himself let loose in the company of such distinguished values.
f:IJ The fact is, Gentlemen, this sale is nothing more and nothing less than the equivalent of your being in the shirt business and reaping those advantages which are one of the emoluments of proprietorship. No maker of shirts in America has anything on you in this s~le. You ·enjoy equal privileges with any of them. And having put you in the shirt business, let.us now take a brief inventory of your opportunities. It really does not matter what"fabric you want, domestic or imported; what designs you want, what colorings you want, what size you want, or what sleeve length, you have it in stock. Laundered Shirts. The fabrics include imported and domestic Madras of the finest quality, In plain effects and Russian cords, the latter in any number of stripes, colorings and combinations. The models include six different styles of pleats, wide, narrow, and four intermediate widths, as well as plain negligee models. Soft Negligee SIUrtt~ Made of fine mercerized cloths and silk-and-linens that are a tribute to the class of merchandise you carry. Some are plain, some have' variegated Rus~ian 'cords. others have Jacquard figures. Plain and plaited bosom models.
"~'T' REASONABLE ....
And every single .hirt in this offering is tailored to the Sab standard, which is as near perfection 'as can be.
PRICES FOR
Home, Store .or ·Office. Sll·c::;m.£ ~'1o,..er 'lHOW. ROOMS: 20 WARREN ST.
_.A~Mi'~~il.C'tvH9~ ~~a:t:.~LN.,. r, =,;;;;;;;::;; ~ bi,,~ ·.b!.e.B" ~Pb~~9.4=)5iiOw~·:~,,":jh~<.~~~~·\
. ,'-. : .. ,' -. . '>"
Extraordinary Sale of Men's Shirts
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APRIIJ 0, l012,-[PART 1,1
rrUESDAY. MORNING. Lito'. 8ftuu" Bid..
Do not neglect your
INDICTED MAN SHOOTS WITNEss
essary sometimes. Make sure of the best-then go ahead.
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Mag.d,altma, Am" the Scene < of a Street Tragedy. Joh,n Core Add8 Another Charge to First One, Bu~let Wound Near Heart In-
health-I8xatives are nec-
lIgDyadi JAIlOS
ALBUQUERQUE, April 8.-[Ex· cluslve Dlspa.tch.] In 0. quarrel on the atreet todaY at Maedalo'na, Western 80corro county, John Cox, 0.. wealthy cattleman and member of tho weU· known Cox tamlly, shot and mortallY ~unded LIce Carter, a neichbor· Inc ca.tUeman. Bad teellnc had exIsted between tho two men tor a week, arowlng out of tbe Indictment of Cox In Bocorro a few 40..)'11 aco on the chareo of borse-steallng, Carter bavlne been the prIncipal ....Itneae a.calnst him. FrIends of the two ~men feared trow . ble' "'hen tboy met. Both men happened to be In Magdalena today and met by cbance on the Itreet., Cox took Carter to task for testifying agaInst him and In the arlrUment that followed, eye-wltneaes lIay, Cox atruc\: Carter, knockln&, him down. .When be arose, he bad o..n open knIfe In his band. He refused to put It up at the command of Cox and tbe latter then II a\leBed to have drawn a Colt's revolver, IIrlnc twice at Co..rler. Tho IIrst bullet en· tered Ca.rter's breast just below the heart and came out at tbe back. Tho • .,co"d bullet mll8ed. Carter ca.nlIot 8urvlve, 'pbyslclan8 MY. Cox waa arrested and taken to Socorro In. a motor car, arriving tbere tbll evening where he was placed In jail. Much excItement was ca.used by the sbootlng and teellne Is o..b·out evenly dIvided. . EDITOR'S WIDOW IN JAID. New York Coroner Send. Her to the Tomba Pendlnc Inqucst Into Co..use of Her Husband's Death. [BY A. P. NIGHT WmE TO THE TIMES.)
NEW YORK, April 8.-Mrs. W0..1tel' J. Snyder, wife of the edItor of the sports of the Times, wbo died yesterday from atab wounds Inllicted by Bell'80rs In he·r. bands, WII.8 arraigned before the' Coroner today and Bont to tbe Tombs. to be held without ball, pending the Inquest April 18. 1111'S. Snyder declares her hUlband Inflicted the wounds hlmBolf by seizIng her hands whllo she wo..s manicurIng her nails and drawing her violently \0 him. They were qunrrellng at the time, she 8ald. ,JAID·BREAKER lULLED. .--. '''-FOLSOM FUGITIvE VlCTIM. _ (BY-,": P •• NIGHT WIRE TO THli' TIJ4.&S.,
SACRAMENTO, April 8.-Attempt· Ing'to escape trom the Folsom 'Prlson this afternoon' Mo..nuel Roderlguez, · a .'M&«lco..n, ser:vlng one year o..nd a • half trom San BllUl..ardlno countY,_was ahot and tatally wounded. The convIct with others was worklnll' on the wo..l1 being constructed on the north side of the prison. RoderllrUez jumped trom the wall and was commanded by the guards to halt. Dashing o..way he attempted to escape In the hl11s north of the prison. As he sped up the' hili guards brought their rifles Into acUon. When nearly half a mile o..way from the wall a bullet struck RoderllrUez, bringing him down. RoderllrUez died soon after being taken to the prison hospItal.
PARLEYS WITH GOV. DIX. AD "Up~Stater" Who Thought the Executlve Bad Ignored Rand But Fl.JJaUy HelJl!l Auto Out. [BY DIRECT wtnE TO TilE TIMES.]
ALBANY (N. Y.) April 8.-[Exclu_Ive Dispatch.] The automobile of Gov. Dlx stuck In the mud near C,,LamMe, 0.. farmer, was requested to TbomPlon to Albany last nlgbt. Peter Lamorp, 0.. farmer, was o..ppealed to pull the automobile out with hll team. He refused. "I won't help Gov. Dlx," he said. "He had a - chance to help out this road and he vetoed the bill whICh 'Would have done It." The Governor offered btm U5 to &8Ilst hIm. Lamore stili parleYed, saYing, "Gov. ernor. you had the bill before You to Ill' this road and yOU didn't Ilgn It." ''Why,'' replied Dlx, "I signed that bill only 1118t week. The road Is one to be benefited by the new law." "You signed It? Then I'll pull your auto out for nothing." And the farmer hitched hIs team and the Dill: automobile waS 800n on it. ""ay to Albany.
GIRL'S "YES" DEFINED, She Has to Say It "Out Loud" to Her Sultor In MIssouri. [A.
r.
NIGHT NEWS REPORT.]
KANSAS CITY, April 1.Au emphatic ")'es" and not 0.. IImlle. or a mere nod of the head,' mUlt be given by the malden proposed to or sbe ca.n not recover damages for breach of promise to marn-, according to 0.. decllion In the CIrcuit Court here today. Edna M. . Cooke of this city sued Gar· nstt Spark.. a horse o..nd mule dealer of Bt. Louis, for $10,000 , •4&maIree.' but her attorner withdrew the case wben the evidence developed the fact that Ihe had not Mid .'y..... wben Sparks propoBOd, but "took it for granted that he • knew ahe ....ould Jrl&J'l7 hlmo"
I..
Second Allotment of Verdugo 'Home-buyers' Clu'b Now Being Offered to Public; $400 Secures Homesite ,and Stock Interest in Valuable ~djoining Property
'Water Natural LaxaUve Rceommeadcd .".. i'Jl)'lllcIaDs 101'
~O_N8TIPATION
flicted on Enemy, [BY DIRSC'r WlnE TO THE TIMES.)
II~
Announcement.
RUYPLANS . CAUSE A SCARE,
A
RETURN OF TROOP8 FRO)( THE PHILIPPINES. Denial From Waabtncton That Ibe Allllembllng 01 the RegIment Haa AD)'tblna: to Do With the 1I1e.:iean Situation or That It 8pells Intei-vcnc!on. (BY A. P.
NI~HT
WllU!l TO TilE TIMES.)
WASJUNGTON, April 8.-The workIng out ot plana lonl( ago mudo Dubllc tor the distribution In' thla country of returning Philippine troops undoubtedly bal cau.ed a;, revIval 01 rumors t!lat a large part ot the United States Army .Is to be &8aemhIed on tbe Mexican boundary. Somewhat Impatiently, the lI'eneral stair omcers today qUieted the rumors by pOinting to the various statementll luued from the War Department, the lut as recently as April a, showlnll tb. datea of sailing of tbe 81x rell'l. ments which are scheduled to end their troDlcal aervlce In the Philip. plnea In 1912. Of these reglmenls, the Fourteenth Cavalry, entrained todav at San FrancIsco en route to FL Clark and Ft. McIntosh, Tex. The ·Thlrd Infantrv. anont,· Is bound tor New York posts. Tbe other reiliments w\ll embark at Manila on various dates until as late u Jun., 18. It 1.1 not setU-ed where they will be stationed. but It Is "",_ peeted that one and perllaps two wl\l be lo . .ed In the Southwelt. These facts wore announced some time aBO. and can bave no connection wltb recent developments In MexiCO. The rumor" today of al'lother COncentration of troops on the border sr. said to have no more basis than the tact that some army officerl 0.1'0 "coutIng In Texas for eligible camp sites for such returning Philippine troops as may be assigned to the Departmcnl of-Texas. The general stair Is quietly keeping every branch ot the military service In readlnoss tor Instant response to a call for u torce upon the border. It Is pointed out that this, Is th .. prinCipal function of the general stall and Is' by no means to be taken a, an'lndlcation Qf an ,Impending. caIDpalen-against Mexico. On the oUler Iiand It' Is asserted poaltlvely that t1!~ President' has .no~ ·:wo..vered· In .the slightest degree' from his announced Intention to ke~p hands off In IIlexlco as 'Iong as All ,rlcan life and properl'
A type of foothill and mountain en-
Live oaks, green clad hills and stately. mountains within thirty-five minutes I of down town.
vironment that will soon be prohibitive except to people of wealth.
project. Let It be nnderstood that only' The second allotment of the Verdugo half ot the Improved lots will be allotted: Home Buyers' Club, conslstlng ot 400 to members Indlvldually-the remo..lulng beautiful acres, which will be known as half wllJ be owned and held jointly by Verdugo Heights, Is now ready. tbe club ss a whole, to await turtheT In· For those who want a homcslte In a cl'ease In value, which will naturally' location high, dry, foglesB, trostless, ensue becauso of the adjoining resl. balmy and picturesque-with Ideal footdentlal and commercial development. hll\ and mountain environment-someThe club's method of procedure pro- I thing In a elass with the choicer porvi des Immediate population, creating tions of Hollywood and Altadena, here large and rapid Increase In values. The I Is an opportunity extrnordlnary. It plan Is absolutely safe because it secure. really' amounts to a chance to secure this the land at first prices, below wblch It class of property at actually two·thlrds cannot go. less tban prevaUlng retail prices. The Millions of"iloUars are made annually first allotment of the Verdugo project by private syndlca.tes by openIng and Il!r was over-suhscrlbed, 80 per cent. having provIng and soll1lng residence subdivisbeen taken b)'''local Investors. Ions In Los 'Angeles and lIuburbs. ComThe Verdugo Home Buyers' Club Is mon sense clearly teaches that a land or the tenth. successful organization operathomesite Investment made upon this plan Ing, under the Western EmpIre's Land. Is tour times more advantageous to any Banking and Home Securing Plan. It Investor or home maker than an:; :octall Is merely a club or syndicate of people plan can possibly be, because, (first) you who are uniting their moneys tor the secure the property at halt to two-thirds purpose of buying what Is probably the less than prevailing retail prices, and prettiest and highest piece of desirable (second,) the force of such an organized acreage suburban to Los Angeles, at united movement of Investors and bomeWholesale price. Sumclent money will makers produces double the ordinary Inbe subscribed' to cover/ the cost of the cresse In value. highest type of' Improvements, Including The club property tncludes the cbolcest petrollthlc boulevards, .cement curbs~and -'.. portion of that beautiful mesa just north walks, water. system, electricity, gas, 'of G\endal~he most desirable elevasewers and extension of trolley 'system, tion from a climatic. scenic and resiat prllSent within a short dls{ance of the dential standpoint suburban to Los Antract. geles. Those who desire to take advan· A membership In the Verdugo Home , tage of this lI1lusual bome-!!ecurlng opBuyers" Club' w)1l ultimately mean two portunitY, sbould Investigate at once. As profits from one. Investment. Mombers stated before, the first allotmen t n'aa not only secure 0. handsomely Improved over subscrlhed, and the present outlook are,duly~egurdcd. homesite, 1200 feet above sea level, and would Indicate a similar eondltlon of afjust 0.. thirty-five minute trolley ride to tail'S in the second olrerlng. Special auto TO SPARE THE pOPE'S ElIIOTION. Broadway skYscrapers, In a community trips are made to the property twice that will easily compare with Hollywood, dally tor the benefit of prospective memProject .of Letting rum Hcar the Highland Park or Altadena, for as IIttlo . ,bers. WESTERN EMPmE VERDUGO ToWng of Campanlle Bells by as $400-but they also obtain a stol!k Relatit'e location map, showing commanding position of beautiful property selected by. Verdugo A.SSOCIATION, 100 Chamber of ComInterest In hal! the lots of the entire Home-Buyers' Club. Elevation 1200 It Car line Within short distance. Will be extended by Club merce Bulldlng, Los Angeles, CaL Phone Abandoned. . (BY DmECT wmE TO THE TIMES.)
ROME. April 8.-[Excluslve Dispatch.] The proposal of telephoning to the Po~e sounds of the bells which will be rung at the Inauguration of the newly-constructed Campanile has br.en abandoned on orders from' Dr. I\[archlafava, the physician In attendance upon His Holiness. Dr. :t.larchlatava feara the emotion whIch would be caused to the Pope by the sounds of the bells woul4 affect his beart In a'dangerous 'manner and Increase his depression due' 'to homesickness Which has been lately very pronounced. The Pope often thinks of his former residence In VenIce and was very happy when he heard that he could once again hear the bells of the Campanile. The truth of the abandonment of the telphone proposal has been hidden from tho Pontiff. He haa 'been Informed that the cancellation Is due to the Insurmountable difficulties. When the Pope heard the ncws he was keenly disappointed, but reconciled. He said he felt trom the beginning that the project was too good to bo true. INTER-MOl1l!oo"TAIN CASES. REARGUMENT ORDERED. [BY A. P. NIGHT WmE TO THE TIMES.)
FOR A CJJULDREN'S BUREAU.
TRANS-ATLANTIC New 45,COO Tons Each
TITANIC OLYMPIC
Sail a From
~g~K
Hem .. 01 ....... Apr. 25
GAM E S
}~~\\r: ~h!:.:" ]:.~~ ~~
OiiYMPICr.....:.rri!I,,~;,:·.]~~';"lg
~Iay 11, ,Jun~ Juno ~2. July
1 13
)1",. 25.
June Ui, Jill,. 8
Amer:can Line
While Star Line
Atlantic Transport
From New Tori, to Soutbampton, via l'17mouth anti Chrrboul'K' New 'York-QueeDlitown-l.l"erpool Doeton-QlleenHtnwn-Ll"erpool Boeton-)Irdlt ..rrunran.
From New York to SouthamptoD, ~I. rl,ymouth and CherbuuI'C PbUa.delpbla. QueenstoWII, J.lverpool
WIIITE STAR
Red Star Line
Steamebtpe.
NOR\wAY, S\WEDEN AND DENMARK
APRIL 20 MAY 4
Frenrh a t!a Carte 'fteifttnurant, Turkish and ElrC'trlr Baths. Swlmmln.: 1'llOl. F01lr EI~'".to"" (i)"1I1oalilum, 'Perandah Carr, Palm Court. HquDlih lta('qurt Court.
Ne... l'ork-LoDdoa Direct
SCANDINAVIAN-American Line
LINES
The Largest and Finest Steamers In the World.
'BY A. P. NIGIIT WIRE TO 'rHE TIMES.)
WASHINGTON, April 8.-Presldent To..ft probably will sign within a few days tbe bll1 creating a children'" bureau In the Department of Commerce and Labor and thus finally convert Into law a proposal that has been urlled on Congress tor nve years Or more, The object of the bill Is the collection and. dissemination of data relating to all phases nnd conditions of child life.
YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD HERE
Steamsbtpe.
The PreBldent Is E ..pccted to Sign lu a Few Do..ys the Bill to Estab. IIsh One.
Here are selections from our List Of A Thousand Bargains.
nO~IISIOS LI~T..
LarseRt Dnd On .."t Steamel'f' trom
Lon401l, Pari. \1a Dover-Aatwerp
:\lonlr~l
to Lherponl.
~~.Y 3265Pacific Coast Agcy, 319 Geary St.San Francisco~~r~t Francis
~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~I ,
fA Vi S T R A L I A
WASHINGTON, April S.-Reargul'Nlt Cta",.. S71.GO up. ment of tho so-called "lnter-mountaJn JaDe 19 to JulT ~~. ~t'('Qntl Cl ..... '62.30. ..... r.,J....booa'" Co.. ODS ~I ... toa Slnel, rate c&8es" W&8 ordered today by the HaI Saa Fraacl.eo, or aD)' 10t...1 acent 10 Lo. Supreme Court at the United States. Chief Justice White gave no reason AD ....I... for the reargument. merely sayIng 'hey "'ould be "restored for argument before 0.. full bench." The reargument ,,111 permit Justice Pitney to participate In the decillion of tbe C&8es. All the other justices heard the cases when thoy wore arlrUed In February. The cases Involve the constitutionality of the "long and short haul" provisIons of the Interstate commerce'law and the pO"'er of the Interstate Commerc.. CommissIon to make "blanket" ro..tes O\'er II. large zone of territory Instead ot local ra,tes.
TAHITI and NEuT ZEALAND ", SYDNEY, stopping at TAHITI, RARATONdA and WELLINGTON. LOW RATES: 1st class round trip to TAHITI, $135; to WELLINGTON (or Auckland), $264; to SYDNEY, $288. Second class rates also lo\\'. SPECIAL PACIFIC OCEAN TOUR (InclUding South Sea Isles) to Sydney via Tahiti, Raratonga. and New Zealand and returning to San Francisco (or Vancouver) via Auckland, FIJI and Honolulu, $325. Further sailings from San Francisco May 29, June 26 and e\'ery 28 days. :llake early application for choice berths. Send for pamph· let, "Islands of the B\e~t."
ThIs Fumed Oak Rocker Is upholstered In genuine Spanish leather. The automobile cushion slip seat has strong spiral springs, supported by double steel trusses. Don't faU to ~ It. SpecIally priced.. •
UNION 5.S. CO. of NEW ZEALAND, Ltd,
CULVER,
334
$12 SO
Office, 679 Market St., San Francisco.
GO VIA
Portland, Tacoma, Seattle AND THE
"MILWAUKEE "
through land where Nature has placed scenery unsurpassed in grandeur and rich in agricultural t:esources.
''TIle OLYHPIAN"'-''The COLUKBIAN"
n. nun Tralu Aer... the CoatlMat daiVlHttw_
TAtoM, SUTTLE &lfD'CIlltAGO
w. HIBBARD, Gen'l Pat_ger Agent, C.M.&:P.S.Ry_, SEA'lTLE,WAIB. For further infennaticm and descriptive literature, call on or addre •• D. T. BElRRY, Com'l Agent. "111. lIIew ..... TrIll;" 180 W. 6th It., Loa Angeles. • G1!:O.
$26 50'
The splendid new twln.screw S. S. MANUKA (10,000) tons dis· placement, of the UNION LINE, salls from San Francisco ~!AY 1 for
A. M.
On .Yout Trip East
This Dining Table embodies all that 15 1II0llt desirable In grace of Une aud perfection of finish. :Massive, without clumsiness, It II made of quarter......w9ll golden oak, beautifully grained and brilliantlY' pOlished. The ma8slve hand·rubbed pedestal Is SUpported by big claw teet and the <lS-lnch top extend'3 to 8 feet. Special price for this slle ....... _...... _• •
Agt..
South Spring Street.
trlI ~T trlI IL IT T lL IT TI CANADIAN PACIFIC IHI 'UI 1 ~ 'UI I.U I.U "Empresses of the Atlantic" ~~R~~;f~~r:;,t~~~~ 0~R~:t'1J.1~;'rld
This and several dllrerent dell81lS In quartered gold. en oak Dining Cba.ln with bo.: seat, uphol. Btered In genuine leather, Bolld, substo.otlnl and rich chairs of quality. Your choice of a wide range at •
and Other Steamships
tour for your vacation. DeltarhUul sea 1II0!>o"TREAL, Qt:EBEC Asn LU·ERPOOt. bathing at the famous beach of 'WalldkL ,II. lh~ The splendid S.S. Sierra (10.000 tODe of SCESIC ROl'TE TO ECROPE. !Isplacementl make. the round trip In , j 1000 \IIU;~ days, and one can vlalt on a side trip the 0:>< TilE ST. J, \WRESCE RIVER IIvinl; volcano of Kllau.a. which \a IreASO I.F.~~ TII.\~ 4 ".\\'~ .\T ~E.'. mendouoly actl ..e and see f(lr hlmoelf the 2033 )IH••:' PORT TO PORT. process of world' creation. No otber trip THE SJlORTE'T OCE'~ l',\~SAGE. eompares With thl. for the marvelous and FI ....t CabIn •.. . ., ... •. f92 ~o aDd up .....nd.rful In nature. Visit the tslando no.. ""....ad CabIn ..•. .. . '~J.,5 IUId up whDe you can do It 00 easily and qulc1d7 ODe-Cl... ('abla (~Dd <lao.) •• fSO.OO aDd up
and the volcano la active. Prompt atten- Thlrd·Cl.... tlOD
to telegrams for berths. Sailings:
4prtl 20. Ma:r 11. June I, June 2:, etc. .
173 M.~~e~As~~t.S.~n Cr?.:anclec.. 01' A. M. culver, Ag&., 134 S. SprIng at.
II ,
• I
•
•
~=B.~li.'"
·Xoordam..
••
May 14
"VIA BOULOGNEI oM 'PLYJlOUTH AND :BOUB. with BocqrltJ'
lU.. Co.,
'; .•. 1.AnT~t rat~ nn request
CanadIan Pacdic Office, sot 8. Sprlo« Stl"H't. l.oM .-\ncplel, aDd .n 1.....1 ....... , •.
Parla-London-Rotterd;am.
TwID'Scr.~ t'il:~np 'IueL 'Rotterdam ........ Apr. n tPoudam .•••.•.•• Afar. 30 t:-:e.... Am8terdam •.. 1Iay ':
$3 90
I!':.-~-nt.F1e!=rr!r;~ ~r;;.' nam...J.
011. SQlIIdll)'fl. Taf'Wdai"
.nd I"rht."'11
,
reA SAN
.mo n.f"III!aq and
-- ....
S.tel'd ...... FOTtlt'k ..tll f'f""'If'"l"O
tlOfl. froldt!f'!I latorm"lirn. QI'pl,
•
..~~~':~~~~s~~~·~~~.
,
This Dret!slnp: Seat, III Mllbog· any finish or Blrd,eye Maple. A handsome piece, copy of a design uBCd by Mme. Recal!ller, the famous French beauty of EmpIre da\'s. Spac1ally priced at .•..••
$2.85
•
"All the News That's fit to Print." NO
tm~s •
19,800
NEW YORK WON'T
*
NEW
INSTRUCT FOR TAFT
] 0 k T s Spec a/ 0 71 \e April 9 -When ROCHESTER N 1: the Committee on Resolutions of the Re publtcan St;l.te Com entlon adjourned at midnight af er practlcall~ an all day ses slon It had dcclded not to Instruct the four delegatcs at large to I ne :-;atlonal Con~ entlon fo President Taft but to recommend tl nt the~ as we I as the e gnty six dIstrict delegates \ ote Cor h m Here Is the resolut on a loptcd by he committee
We applaud tI e patr ot m 3.1 d Un oramatic courage 0" Pres dent raft 'I he o erwhelming rna or t) of the ~eprC3enta th: es of the part"
in th s con C'ntion e.s
sembled favor hi" renomi:1atlon a 1d we urge that the delegate" at large hE're f'eiected m their act ons at Chlf!af:v curry out this cl alce of RepuD cans () the Sta e and that the dlstr Ict dele"" ~s nile to the same end The resolution was offe ed b) Senator Edgar T Brackett at Saratoga and was aaopted by a ,ote of 40 to 3 There were fort .. three members on the committee The three votes of the OppOSltlon Viere furnished by LOUIS J S n th "ho repre sents the FIrst CongressIOnal Dlstnct v;here Col Roose~ clt 11. es and b) Leslie W ,Sutherland and John J Bro" n rep resenting the TWent} fourth and Twen y fifth Congressional DIstrrcts respectlvel~ These districts ar sltuated In Westchester Count~ where National Commlttceman 'Vrlham L Ward Col Roosevelt s onlef sponsor In this S a.te COntrols the Repub l1can organ zatioD. Tl e following wepe-nnmed bv the com mlttee and will be reported to the con "\Ientlon to morrow for delegates at large Senator Elihu Root of New York WlII lam Barnes Jr of Albanv WIlliam Berrl of Kings and Ed" In A ~lerntt Jr St Lawrence of These alternates were named State Senator Edgar Truman Brackett of Sara toga B T</ E Bro~n of New ~olk Charles" Anderson of New York and George Whitehead of~Ntagara Plank .. in the Platform The Important planks of the platform adopted by the commlttee roll ow The Re\lubllcan ParlY ot :<:ew 'ark In Sta 6 COll\sntlon assembled hereby declares Its Calth In those rundam~ntal princIples ot Sttl.tea
g~\~~~~~':,tpt~~;;a~vB~:~ ~~n~~u~!~:;ed ~e
bd v e that th:s s a tiel! controlled reprcsen atl e l1cmocraC' as llJustrated by the entire courso or our ~aUon81 e:xperten~
e belte e th'lt order Is the prerequIsIte and lhn t s ::,,\ational tradition ;:'a~r5Itrlc'2~ tob"op"pes TuOnl'esdn 110r prlnclp e be ~, ~ ur 'Ve 1>eJfC' e that tho guam Itees or the Bill of RIDh 5 a_ l<lcorpor.lted In the Con 611,ut on 0 the Lnl cd Slates for the protec tion of each It ZPJl e en It tbree.lened by" ;~"'p"~r:J.TY najorlt~ shall be fOTe er pre We belle e that publlo conscIence shOUld express l"'elC properl, and a!flrmall\ely In ttJ.c ctect on ot publlc ot c a'\~ ane... not ne::a. tl el) m theIr recall To re erae this order "nu "I1""ur:lge disregard of duty In electing ~
ot prosreS5
smblic off cers and pla.ce e. premJum on neg
C o l Ul d~) The fundamental conaluero. tlon that public sen ..",,,, shall be soberly ele ted rather than carelessly elected and cson ered ,\ e oppose a. sub crsl, e or our torm or go e nrn~n he nl lat! e t e compulsoI"Y leErl~ at e referendum nnd the recall eltber or public sen ants or jud eial dedslons or an de <e "h impairs ("ons stene)' and con n~1t n he: expre :slon of popular ... 111
~
tpom
e OI>PWle the <>call o' Jt:d!;'C's or an S 5 ) tc~ i 1 int oduce con-ard ce as an ele Ihe admlnl<tratlon of Juslice The
n ..-.t
autho 1 l
paired
or the judJciary should no
Two Cars of Famous Lehigh Train Thrown Off by Spike-No One Hurt Spec oI 10 TI, N<w l'orll T mC$ E'l.S1: PHILLIPSBURG N J April !) -The eastbound Black Dian 011U Ex press of the Lehigh VaHey R'lIit oad ~ as wrecked one mile east or this 1'Iace thl" ft A Ik I d th I hav!P °!rec:
ca:S~dac:he
r~~
one on the train v. as inJured
engineer capes
and
fireman
had
but the narlU\V €S-
The train was In a cut a short dis unc" east of the railroad ) aras and \ as It procee d 109 a t a sow ra e 0 f speed ~t tl e tlme of the derailment "hen 'hc <'n gine struck the splke It bump~d along the ties for about fifteen yards before lea,lng the roadbed It turned lUil! 0' er Engineer Goele~ and Frank Bessnr the ~ ~ firemen jumped In time to escapo being crushed The
baggagE'
car and
the
buffet
We urge the (}el.gates at large from New "York and the delegates from tbc Congress
of
Havmg Tried to Kill.
W.
VISITS
De~ectlve
at
K.
VANDERBILT
Aiken
Says
car
were drag~ed aft ~ th -' '" e. e eno·ne and both were derruled but neither turned o~ er It '" as the heav:\' weight of the train be hmd that held the eng ne and kept it from plungtngt11nto the embankment A.11 of the cars were filled w th pnssen gers but there was no undue excitement A second Black Diamond was qu cl I made up to finlsh the limited 0:: un to
Ne" York Fort) one minutes ,,(tpr the acc1dent the second Black D amo lei '''a~ on its way to that clh
HOWARD GOULD MAROONED.
the Evidence
SpecIal Cable to TIlE NEW YORK TIMES LONDON April !) -Frederick 0 Beach of New Yo;rk for ,,,hose arrest a warrant '\\as issued at Aiken S C yesterda, the ehalge being as"ault and batterJ on his wife WIth intent to kill arrived in London ast evening with Mrs Beuch having just come from Ne\\ "ork on the Cunard Line steamer 1\:1a UI etanla lIIr and Mrs Beach went to Clar ldge s Hotel and had Intended to stay there until Friday, when they had ar ranged to go to Paris Their pIal s were hurriedly changed late to day hoVl ever in consequence of Information which reached them by cable from America and they left at 9 0 clock to night from the Charlng Cross station for Paris Between the time of receiving the cable news and theIr departure for Paris l\'1:r and Mrs Beach put In an anxious time evidently not knowing what might happen It \\ as about 4 0 clock when Mr Beach appeared In
int"ss o--anizat ons shall establ sb as car es possible he prlnclple 01" insurance asa Dst
Yacht Grounds on Mud Bank Where He and Friends Spend Night SpecIal to The N.w York T r. s TAMPA Flo. April 0 I [lst n g It was the most unpleasant I ha e <'\ er spen saId Howard Gould of "(>,, 1 ork thIS morning atter escaping f o:n a d bank In Tampa BaJ on wllch 'laC marooned lor hours With }lrr Goulll on seat several times finally settling the mud bank Were do" n and lighting a cigarette as the thev all agreed" Ith h s Ie .... 01 the I" c, traln pulled out
1n ur.
perlence
JODa.] distrJcts to contend at ~at1onal COD'Vention for th~
the Republ1can adoption of the prlnclp es herekl indorsed and the repudlaUoD of the pnnciples heretn opposed The ne '\" and cons antly changing conditions inc oent to th e InduBtrlal deve-lopment or
the ase half centut") are Ins 9lent '\: demand 2n~ readjustment through legislation We
urge legislation to gi e better protection to life ana henl t h
a.n<i to sa eguard tho ., who
are engat;:>ed in d.angerous occupations :\.Ild '" e Cu ther 2d Oc:l te the enact men t ot a. workmen s compens~tton act -n:h ch tn large ~u
to ernplO\ e~
' RIdiculous" Beneb Told 1 rlentl
I
:hIr Gould and his frleno o r<'a 1 (" 1 I r(' Inquiries at Scotland "\ ilrd h d from Cuba on Sundal' n his \ ael [ "' I S 0'1\ e agara. and on i\londa) hired a a JT C a:-.d Ilhat the pollce authorities ha"e no went down Tampa Ba) for a da " lsI knowledge of any "arrant against 1ngo Thc~ caught a fe" fIsh and a vut Beach nor had the American Em.bassY ;) 0 cloCk \ esterda~ afternocn t 1e la l!nc.-h here From an excellent source THE st uck 3. mud bank The lIde "as solns NEW YORK: TXlJES correspondent learns O!!t and the launen remained In the mud that ~!r Beach told a friend before The Go lId part} failea to get the launch I I L d th orr and remained on the mud bank until ea... ng on on at the charge against the tIde came in thIs mornln!> when the him was ridiculous and there was not launch "as refloated The, nad some a word of truth in It refre"hmenls with them but spent the mght "et and cold and had no sleep LONDON April 9 -Frederick 0 Beach A.fter the launch floated Mr Gould ac d I t headed for S1. Petersburg about twenty cuae n a warran Issued at Aiken fn e mIles from Tampa By telephone he S C o t murderous assault on his wife ordeled dn clothing sent to the party told the Associated Press over the telafrom the NIagara the message being re pho e to d tI t th cch ed Just as arrangement9 Were being n ay 1a ere was nothing made to send ou a. searching part~ as 10 the charge_s_ _ _ _ _~Mr OOlOld IS absence had caused alarm SAYS .JEALOUSY MOVED :-'lr Gould and hIs Ir ends were bedrag gled and unkempt looldng ",hen they reached St Petersburg after their night 5 Detective Discusses Motive FrankJy ( xpe-lence and Says He Can Convict --------S,.."o/ ID Th • .N,w York T",1C3 NEGRESS ATTACKS A CONSUL. AIKEN S C April 9 -Something of DetectIves Save Ccl E S Hotchkiss tIle eVIdence on "hclh the local :lUtborI t es causell the Issue of a warrant tor the from SerIous Injury at Calgary arrest of F 0 Beach and on '\'i hlch the3i C~LGA.RY !l.lbertn Ap I U -Craked "III move for Ills e,.,tradlt!on ir necessary It IS sa.ld ny oru:;s and suCfcrin" under was revealed to day b) Detechve Baughn The Con,"cntioD Open.DJ;" halluc'natlons th:l I er father and moth m a frank talk about the assault case which he has been In~est1gntlng In bobalt The 1 ",<otlng of t le CommlU('e on Reso of the cit) lut O:-JS fo O~ cd a ('()mpalat ,('1\ sp rltless De~p1te a "all bv C 011\ er IselIn and short se 0 on of he con~ entlon It For :\lore "ntl-Trost. La .......
I
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Continued on Page 3
ContIDue.:] on E:rtra ranC'J fTC~h n hlte c10z 1\:J JO'lcd Farln
r"f'T'
lA4~
f:Jr('
A~TEDU
1:'11
p'\: er~
J £ nc.roenc,)
l! VIA~
O~co.slon-,.I')c
LL: t
WlfiSRE¥
i!fc}{;neslI or Ne v YorA.--Adv
D!JlntY
s Eros
PAGES
ACID IN BERGEN HILL MENACES NEW TUBES
TO PLATFORM MAKERS.
Herbert L Satterlee, who was ASSIstant Seci etary of the Nav]' In 1908 9 under Roosevelt, addresses an open letter to those In charge of the planks of both Republican and DemocratIc Con ventlOns full of deCIdedly InterestIng suggestIOns Read It In NEXT SUNDAY'S TIMES.
Jealousy
Caused Attack-Reveals Part of
House-and had an IntervIew with Am bassndor Reid On returning to the hotel he "ald he would not go to Amer lca but intended leaving for Paris on the 9 0 clock train At this point THE NEW YonK TIMES correspondent approached Mr Beach telilng hlm that a warrant had bcen is sued at Aiken S C for his arrest on the charge of murderous assault Mr Beach seemed '\ ery much agitated and replied Refuse. to lIlnke " Statement. I t isn t true =,\\'li~n asked to mal{e a statement he replied I have absolutely nothing whatever to sa~ On being told that a fe~ words from him at this juncture might straighten matters out considerably he again re fused saying I ha"e absolutely nothlng to say Mr Beach then went to the sulte where bls ~lfe awaited him and In a few mOIllents he was in telephonic com munlCatlOn with Wilham I... Vanderbilt In ParIs .As a result tickets were ob tained by them for railway and boat accommodation to ParIs where they Vlrtll stay with Mr Vanderbtlt Dinner was served to them In their rooms MeanwhIle their baggage can sistlng of four trunks was sent to Charlng Cross "\<\.t 8 30 0 clock they left the hotel arrh Ing a few minutes later at the statIon '\\ here THE NEW YORK Tn1Es correspondent made an other attempt to obtam some state ment Mrs Beach \\ as e\ Idently much dIs tressed She Is a tall woman "Ith dark comple:don and large brown eyes and "as dressed entirely in black with B. black fur boa around her neck As THE TIMES correspondent approached the Beaches she was standing a little way off but came forward and took 1\Ir Beach s arm He attempted t J soothe her tellmg her not to be upset In response to requests that he Bay something 1\1r Beach again sald I have nothing ",hatever to say Both then entered the train Mr Beach being palpably annoyed when he tound they could not have a com partment by themsel\ es owing to the crowded state of the train He en deavored to arrange it with the rail \\ ay offIcIals but without avail Hc "eerned very nen OUS as he changed his
be lm
Respect for the courts broken do \: n
the constitutiona.l protectlon of the llbaTt eEl of the I.ndh Idual "ouid be destro)ed
With Wife He Is Accused
the vestibule of Clandge s evldentlli much dIstraught He InqUIred '" hen the next boat sailed for !\.merica and when told it was the Tltamc to-mor row he repltE'd That s good I may ba"e to go on her Then he took a taxicab to Dorchestet
BLACK DIAMOND DERAILED.
~ :~~~o;o
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 10.
Keeps SIlent and Leaves London
HOLD-UP MEN CAPTURED. Three Cornered 60 In a Saloon LJut Got Nothing-One Gets Away Three men entered Bernard Naddler 8 saloon at " Rutgers Place. last night and demanded S-" from Naddler He declared he had only !l:la In the cash regIster and one of the men stuck a revolver mto his face declarIng Then you d better get 1t quick. If J;ou don t produce we 11 k1l1 ~ou We mean business The other men meantime had CO" ered a cro \d of about Slxt~ men seated in a rear room of the saloon with their re\ 01 ers and fmal1~ they ordered them all lnto the street Tl e crowd made a rush to obey and then the men turned to Naddler and his bartender John DaviS agam Two of them choked Da\ Is al most m~enslble while the other backed !'.:addler against the wall and threatened h m WIt! Instant death If he dldn t pro duce 5':2" Naddler was protestmg that he didn t ha"e that much "hen the bandits heard a noise outSIde Tl'!ey s arted for a win dow In the back and Davis tackled them. They beat him off lea\ mg hIm ha f con sclous on the floor and leaped through a rear window just as Borne of the cl0wd the~ had driven from the saloon returned headed by a policeman Naddler reported the holdup at the Mad ison Street Station and DetectIVes Farley and Cohen star tcd on a search for the men In a saloon In 1\lon oe)ltreet a man ordered three beers as they e}ltered the place That s the "arne voice exclaimed Naddler and the detectives started to ~ard the man As they did so he and two olbers rose and madl'l for a slde dOPE, One got through and escaped The others were arrested They said they were Julius Chne of 10" :-'Ionroe Street and Samuel Plaks of !:!4 Orchard Street Botll denied having been concerned In the hold up but the~ 'l\ere locked up
YORK,
BEAOH MUOH SHAKEN HURRIES TO PARIS
rHE TITANIC SAILS TO-DAY.
Largest Vessel In World to Bring Many Well Known Persons Here Special Cable to THE NEW YORK TIMES LO~DON AprIl 9 -The WhIte Star liner TltanlC the largest vessel In the v; orId will saU at noon to morrow from Southampton on her malden yoy BUI Convention Strongly age to New York. Although essentIally similar In de Urge HIS RenominatIOn, Glvmg sIgn and construction to her sister slup the Olympic the TItanic IS an Him a Full Indorsement. ImprO~eD1ent of the OlympIC in many lespects Capt SmIth has been PIO moted from the Ol~ mplc to take her OPPOSED TO THE RECALL across There a e t", a purs&rs H W McElr(;y and R L Baker Among the passengers to sail to morPlatform Adopted by Committee ro\\ on the 'lltanlc are Mr and Mrs H J Alhson MIS Aubert Major Archlat Rochester at M dntghtbald Butt Mrs Cardeza Mr and Mrs W E Carter 1\"r and Mrs Herben No ThIrd-Term Plank Chaffcss Norman Cratg Mr and Mrs Washington Dodge Mr and Mrs Mark Fortune Mr and Mrs W D Douglas THE FOUR BIG CHOSEN Col Gracie Benjamin Guggenheim Mr and Mrs Henry Harper 1\lr and Mrs Fredenck Hoyt Mr and 1\lrs ISldor Floot, Barnes and Merritt Go Straus Mr and Mrs J B Thayer and Convention-Dele Mr and Mrs George WIdener to gates Meet Again ThiS 1VI0rnrng
THE WEATHER.
500 REPORTED SLAIN IN MEXIOAN BATTLE Rebels Captured the
Town
of Jo-
Jutla, but Were Later Routed
by FIOHTING
Federals.
LASTED ~
Residents
of
Langtry
ALL
Texas,
DAY See
Encounter Across the Border In Which Twenty Are Killed
MEXICO CITY April 9 Rebel forces were drh en from the tO'l\ n of Joj lUa 111 the State of l\forelos to da~ and ,,00 or their number were kllled In thc b .. ttle. according to dlspatcl es mnde public at the Department of the Interior to nl:;ht The Federal loss Is placed at three officers and fort~ mcn killed or "ounded Alfonso Barrera Zamblano nephe'<1 of the President who was 10 command of a corps of ruralos Is among the dead Ear y reports that Emlhano Zapata was In pe sonal command of tl e rebels are denied Accordmg to reports brought Into Cuer na~aca by persons arrlvmg Hom Jojutla tha town fell Into the hands of Zapa tlstas variOusly esLimated at 300 to 1 ,,00 strong two days ago Latet reports stated that strong Fed era.1 forces from CuaUa. and Cuernavaca had surrounded the place and '" ere pour Ing a hot artmery Ure Into It It was said that there were many dead and wounded on both sides Spec nl to Th4 New YDrk TIn es LANGTRY Tex Aprll () -Moxlcan bor der guards were ambushed by about fifty scouting rebels from Gen Orol'co s forces opposite this town at the mouth ot tho Sora canyon early this morning and nearl) a score were killed In the con filet The fight oegan izI plain slSilt of Lang try and bullets from the combatants tell on Texa"!! soil ono shot shattering a wIn dow on the south side of the town and others striking outhouses In the same sec tlon As the Fedolral party neared the mouth of the canyon the rebels opened fire and one guard fell The guards then made for the Tex~s line halted where the land Is covered with boulders affording pro tectlon and replied to the lnsurreetos For two hours the fight went on but the rebels were una1>le to dislodge the guards and fmaUy gave up the fight and galloped toward the interior leaving elgh teen dead on the field
FaIr, cooler Wednesday, Thursday fair, rising temperature; moderate to brisk northwest winds. E7For full weather repor. 800 Pag" 21
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ROOSEVELT WINS IN ILLINOIS BY
GOV. D1X GOING ABROAD.
To Sail with Mrs Dlx on April 20 for a Month's Visit Spr 01 10 T u: C. WJ lorl: Tlmu ALBAr-;y April !) -Tho Go, ernor and Mrs Dlx will sail on the Titanic on April _'0 for EUlope The Go~ ernor said this Cement in Railroad Improveafternoon that his plans were tentathe up to to day ~hen he founit that he ments Is DISintegratIng and would be able to clean up all of the ~OO bills lett 10 his hands when the Leg1slat Engmeers Can't Tell Why. ure adjourned He said that he expected to be absent unUI the later part of Ma~ or earl~ June INVOLVED and that he would spend most of his time THREE ROADS In England Holland and France A "lslt to the Black Forest Is planned and Lackawanna, McAdoo and Erie Rail also a ,Islt to Mrs Dlx s sister 1\Irs Curtis N Douglas "ho Is In Paris roads All Affected by U nex During the Governor s absence Lieut pial ned ChemIcal Action Gov Con" ay "Ill act as Go~ ernor
2TO 1OVER TAFT Landslide for the Colonel Primary-Carnes Chicago
at
by 30,000.
CHAMP
TAFT CONDEMNS LYNCHING. Parts of the cement work on the new Lacl,awanna. and Hudson & Manhattan Railroad tunnels and the walls of the open cut of the Erie Railroad through Bergen H!JI are slowly dropping away It was admitted ;)' esterdav he cause of the disintegration of the concrete brought about by the action of some chemical In the rock of Bergen Hill the exact nature of which has not been determined While the engineers of the railroads concerned admitted that the concrete work had been affected they said that no danger to trains was Involved The discovery ot the effect of the chemical they said had been made In ample time so that the trouble could be corrected without danger to the publlo a.nd with but little cost to the railroad compa nles Each ot the railroad companies has employed chemists to make a. study of the very unusual condltlons The As soclatlon of Cement Manufacturers Is also making an Investlgntlon and It Is expected that an explanation at the dIs mtegratlon will be obtained In a few months Fir .. t Effects o[ the Cheru.lco.l 'Ihe Lackawanna tunnel "hCle: th~ disintegration or the reinforced co lcr ttl was fil st nc. tlced "as built in 1 Uu It Is the oldest of the modern tun 10 s ur. eel' the 10'" cr end of the Palisade" The tunnel extenos fl om Twentle,n Strcet and i\Ionmouth Street Jer"e Citv 0 west or the Hudson County BOu t', 'rd a distance of three quarters of a I 1I1~ The concrete in this tunnel Is flome t \\ 0 feet thick The effects of the "I emlcal we~e first noticed on the surfac(' In small cracks and sweJla The ne v Erie cut through the Pall sades runs close to the Lackawanna tton nel starting at Twelfth and Dl\ 1910n Streets Jersey City and runnmg for three quarters of a mile to almo t the same spot where the Lacka\~anna tLnnel terminates The e~ Idences of dlslnte grntion In this cut are all on the botH m and on the sIde walls thus causing less damage and danger than If they had oc curred In the arches which hold UP strec'.s and which ln some instances are noo feet long .As"' tor trie "McAdoo tubes 'the latest of the tunnels to be built nellr the Pallsadcs thfY lla \ e so far shown the least e\ I dence of dlslntesratlon This Is only noticeable in th.. halt mile stretch or the tunnels lying parallel to the Hudson River and directly behind the Erie cut and the Lackawanna tunnel Speculation and In vestlgatlon as to the cause Of tho dis Integration have been going on tor more than a year 1I1any tbeorles have been propounded and some have already been exploded When the walls of the new Lackawanna tunnel first began to swell and crack It ~as thought that the smoke and fumes rrom the 10comoU, es generated sulphurous acids which permeated the concrete anu resulted In th .. damage. But this theol y was abandoned when the same effects were noticed soon afterward In the Erie s open cut where the 10eomoU\ e fum"... escape inlo the open air It was thought. that something might be wrong with the cement used In the conlltructlon of the tunnels A chemIcal analYSis explod<'..(l thiS theory Tho locks In the palisades were anal~ zed and nothing was fOUl <'1 which should under ordinary conditions seriously :!offeet cement Chemists then ma.te a stu"~ of the surface drainage In the vicInity of the Palisades range thinking that manufac turIng concerns In that neighborhood might be dll3chargln,,; acids which would affect the cement Thev found that the discharged acids al;gregated such a. small percentag-e of the drainage that this could not possibly be the cause An engineer for the Erie Railroad saId
CLARK
WINS,
TOO
Snows Gov_ WIlson Under, Carrymg Cook County by a Ma-
PresIdent Says Man That Pulls the Rope Should Hang by the Rope W.\SHINGTON April {) -President Taft condemned lynching In vigorous terms to night n an address I efore the AlumnI of Howard University tho largEst ne;;,ro Institution of higher learning In this country In defending la\\ &nd or der as against mob rule Mr Taft d ..clnr ed ~ Ith emphasis the man that pulls the rope should hanl: by the rope President TaCt later attended 0. dll ner s1ven by the New Jersey ConSI essional delegatIon In compliment to Mr Justice PItney or New Jersey recentl~ appolnt..,d to the bench of the SUIlreme COUl t of the United States
Jority of 50,000.
PLEASED, SAYS Fight
Over.
ROOSEVELT
Declares
Senator
DIxon, and the Colonel Will
Be
Named on the FIrst Ballot.
THROWN INTO LAKE BY HORSE MANY
LEADERS
DEFEATED
I
Prof Seward of Yale Wife and Young Relative Nearly Drowned Dls-rncts of Cannon and McKlnSpee aJ 0 7 " 1 ork I ~ ley Lost-Lonmer's StIli NOR'T'H Gt.:ILFORD Lonn Apr I 1 l\fade unmanageabll! b. the ronr of In" In Doubt wnlor running o.er tI e dum At Lui" Qulnnlpau", 1 spirited horse lIr \ en b> Prof He bert Se\\ ard of 11lle lea oed Into the lake to da~ tl c profes~or I I~ I CLARK S VOTE A SURPRISE "Ife and mne 'car old co sin James ElShop gomg do\ n "lth the CarrHl.ge The occupants "ere nE:arh drowned Talk of Illinois a8 • Doubtful St t .. "hcn a resc lin" p"rt~ of "lingers pulled a e them from th~ "ater The \)0' was badl, -Cullom May Be Beaten InjU! ed by a ltlel{ flom the horse 5 hoof for Senator
I
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LIFT THE BARS TO REFUGEES. Two Russian Social Democrats Pel" mltted to Stay In America W ASHINGTOl'i: April!) -Two Russian Social Democrats refugees from Siberia were permitted to enter the United States to d,,~ bv Act ng Secretary Cable of the Department of Commerce and Labor One of the men Feitcl Kagan a pharm adst 24, ears old will join his sisters In Fond Du Lac Wls and the other Vasllel Llchatehotf a farmer 30 years old will go to friends in New York In escaping both men crossed the Rus sian frontier Into China and then 10 Japafl where they took a steamer fOl America. At Tacoma. Wash the majorIty of an Immigration board recommended their deportation The admission oC the immigrants was urged by Represcnta.t1ves Berger the So claUst Burke of Vlilscor,sln Humphroy ot Washington nnd Senator Poindexter of Washington
--------
WAR Ol~ "BUTTER BARONS."
Pittsburgh Women Appeal for Coun trywlde Fight Against Trust. SpeCIal to TM New Yo,k T.t>U3 PITTSBURGH April 9 -War has been declared on tho Elgin Board of Trade by the Pittsburgh Marketing Club and be ginning Monda} the women of the eoun Spoc.al 10 TI, New 1 ork T."IS try will bo nsked not to buy ElgIn butter CHIHUAHUA Aprll a -Believing the until the price Is reduced to 30 cents a new manager appointed by Oen Orozco pound and eggs to 20 cents a. dozen Intended to turn over all money found In The Directors of the club to day dratted the sates or the l\-Ie"lcan Central railroad this appeal offices between here a.nd Juarez .Juan Housekeepers of Greater Pittsburgh, Morales Secretary to the deposed manas Pennsyhanla. and America. Are you go er took 1$100 ()()() trom the compan3i s safe Ing to allow butter a.utocrats of the Elgin put It on a freight train and escaped to Board of Trado to filch from your pock Samalyuca Morales "as aided by Con etbooks any price for butter they see tit QUCtOl Sanchez and Engineer Romero to ask? Samalyuca Is thirty miles south ot In tho face of the fact that milk Is being reduced In price cows are becoming Juarez and at that point lororales and his fresh new Spring grass Ie making Its ap companIons left the freight train and dis pearance and all conditions favor an In appeared A SIleelal train with troops creased milk supply will you permit these bulter barons to charge you an unreason was made up and sent to Samalyuca In able price? Because hay hilS beCn ad an effort to catch the men with the ye8terda~ vanced $250 a. ton the last week are> ou Discard Electroly.ls Tbeory money It Is believed that Morales and going to permit an ad\ ance In butter ot We thought that the dIsintegration ~O a ton to stand? his companions are trying to reach EI might be due to tho electrolysis ot con Paso NEW NECESSITY OF LIFE. Gen Orozco bY proclamation yesterday crete There was much loose electricIty In seized the MexIcan Central which Is a that Vicinity and the theorY sounded plausible We lene" for instance that 'Tis Mrs Van Valkenhel"g's PaInted HarrIman line Iron within another material otten gets Portrait, According to Her Pleadings EL PASO April O-SI><t' five Amer covered with a coat or rust by the proc A new Interpretation ot the phrase I~an refugees from Parral who arrived ess of electrolysis and that this rust hns necessity of Ute "'Ill be e:tpoullded to day from Jiminez reported that the, a tendene~ to expand Such expansion If the rust accumula.ted on Iron to day In the City Court when the S lit of were subjected to a rlgot OUB search at course \\ Ithln concrete would ca.use the s" ells Chihuahua ana that mall was taken from and cracks which are tl1e outward e ... 1 Sflmuol J Woolf the artist for the !';? IJI)() which he contends Is due him for his life them George Drake of Chihuahua cal" dence of this strange chemical action But we could not prove this theory In sIze l)ortralt of Mrs Ne\ ada Van Valken rled official reports from the American our own concrete work We also analvzed Consul at Chihuahua to the State De the water which drains off Bergen Hill berg Is brought to tria.l Mrs Van Valk~nberg has had trouble partment at \Vashlngton which "'ere and found nothing In It which would at taken by the rebels In a pre\lOUS tack concrete It Is possible that an about that portrait before elj!ctrlc current could brealt I!own the trial her defense for not paying the artlsl "nter "hlch has crystallized In concrete AR.MS SHIPPED TO MADERO Certa nl:l' it there were sulphurlo acId In was that the portrait dIdn t resemble the the ~atcl this with electrolysis would subject- The JUfj failed to agree So In Taft Authorizes the E> portabon of break up the -concrete to day 8 trial her defenso ....111 be that the Ono of the engineers of the Hu"son and portrait Is a necesslty of lite hence a Large Quantity for the Federals Manhattan Railroad said that he was ot WASHINGTON April () -PreSident Tart the ol>lnlor that the cause ot the trouble Mr Woolf must collect from Phl11p Van to day autnorlzed the shloment into ~1exl "as to be found In the Igneous or erup Valkenherg her husband It he hilS the tl. e rock of "hlch the Palisades are right to collect at all The pr(!sent Jury t,.O ~t su~eral cons gnments oC munJtfon;C! large\) composed Su~h a~lds as are probabl)' caus!ng the although relle\ ed ot the onerous tast oC ~ ar {or the ,,-1 m~ or Pre~ldent Madero trouble In our tunnels and In other tun of determining the likeness will ha.ve to The excepttons to e .\merlcan procla n"l~ neal the PaJlaades It Is generally decide whether one 8 picture IR a Ufe mahan forbidding t " exportations or Voar knov; 11 come from pyrites he said bu t necellSity The picture was painted bv ~r material Into tile sou the n republic whlrh In the past engineers have not made spe Wool! fn .April 1011 and the stipulated clal efforts to guard against them This prIce In case the portrait pleaBed was to j~gl~~! a;l~n ~a~rrr~:o ~Oll \ t~ l~e ~~.g~"o Is largelv due of course to the tact that ha~ e been ;1;2000 It Is the artist s con rounds of ammLlnlllOn ~IJarf' unrlels al d ~ement had never been used In the Pal! tentlon that by all canons of art the should ha\ e pleased belts [UlO rifles with 1110 I cartrld"e~ sades district until a very tew year8 ago picture Mrs Van Valkenberg who was lIfrs SO reH)h ers and loul" ("" tr lIge loading 1 Ie oldel tunnels were bore" through William Hayes Chapman Is suing her the solid rock ana were reinforced by machines brick In places The brick does not 8eem husba.nd for separatIon In thc ::;upreme Court She caused a sensation .. st J.n to hal e disintegrated although It Is cer AMERICANS PAY LIKE OTHERS ta n tlat the mortar between the brlcke uary by walking Into the Clerk s of11ce that her 'HIS no more Impervious to the acUon of one morning and demanding F ore1gn Mi n Is t er C alero Demes Dls- th s slra nge chemical than concrete It Is suit come Immediately to trial Crimination In Dubes on Arms remarkabfe that bricks should have served From a SpecIal COlTespondent ot tho Central as iie~~"a'i.nth~~o h~:I"gbborbood of New KILLS HERSELF FACING GIFTS. New. LImited London Yon "" here more concrete Is used than MEXICO CIT"lr' Aprll 9 -Fore!gn Mln- anY"" here In the world the question Is Old Woman Inhales Gas Gazing at of great consequence The engineers Her Birthday Flowers Ister Cnlero letires from the Cabinet 10- with the coming of the concrete tunnel da~ and "'Ill probabl~ go to Washington thought that the) had a clean monolltntc toward the end of the month In an In bore which they belle~ ed would last Betore she sat (lown ln a rocking chair man\/' )ears The situation Is not at all to kill herself yesterday afternoon by In ter~lew last night he unequivocally de ~erjOUS so far as any danger or damage rued the report that the Government had Is concerned but It certalnl~ calls for a haling gas through a tube Mrs Catharine e"acted no dut on arms imported uv thorough In restIgation and the sooner Mangold of 633 Pr08Ilect Avenue the foreigners otllel than AmerIcans lis the englnec,rlng profession can fmd ou· Bronx arranged on II- table nearly all the declares no discrimination has been what Is dlslntegrat ng the concrete the sho\~n all belnl!:" required to pay dut) as better It "Will be tor future construction flowers Bhe had received trom trlends on requlled b:y ?llexlcan law In the meantime the rallwa, companies the occasion of 'the celebration of her The American colon~ besought the Go~ are protectll g themselves and the pub seventy third birthday on Easter Da~ ernmcnt to wal" e its IlglhS In their case ~Ic A t least one of the compatiTes has She sat facing the flowers when her body but Calero was unable to !lnd an:! jusLl I>or th~ last few months b('en using grout flcation for the exception In, lew or the 109' machInes ):0 r"mea) the harm done was fOuJld Mrs 1I1angold U.ed in B. two story frame I ... ct that from the outset the Mexican Thev bore t",o Inch holes Into the hone) Go~ernment has consistently malnta.lned combed concr"t", Ins"l t gas plpe c and b, house ot "hlch she was the owner oe that It Is competent to protect fOI elgners means of air press nrc pump a ",aterproot One of the impor ant diplomatic plob cement Into the fissures This method I c. p~ Ing tha lh e rooms on the upper floor lems awaltmg Senor Calero In Washing I surroLlnds the Interior of the tLlnn,,1 .,;It 1 ~ ll1e a n ece :\Irs Catharine Oestrlch tion Is the Chlmlnzal afillir wnlch It will all en\elope which kee;>s the acid Cram Ined on the lower be recalle<l Invohes the right to a con cnterlng the ma-s of concrete Mrs ?lIan;;,old s body was discovered by slderable tract of land south of El PaQo Mrs Oestneh who tried to get Into the and Juarez The settlement of this a[ Late8t Shipping News apartment and could not do so She fall' ootwcen the United States and Mel( ARRIVED- S PrInz 51g smund from called In Patrolman Buckley ot the Mar Ican Go~er.nments has been In neg-otla S5 l'urus f om Barbado!1 rlsanla Station who broke down the door tlon eel eral ~ ears I and sent In an ambulance call to Lebanon Tile Government reports minor sUe rllklt tbe at IIsh ,.ye lass.s at Spencer 8 I Hospital Mrs l\langold was dead how ce"Usse!! 0' er rf,bel" In Morelos, Guerrero, lte new lllaliht or Torlc 1'.bb~eL 1 Malden lAD"--1 e ... er before Dr Benjamin arrived from Ja. ~v, a.nd Sillaloa. ~ • .1.4, tha.t IJlliUtuUIl••
-----
In Grf!aur :New York f Elsewhere Jerae,. Cit,. and Ne..-aJ'k.. 1 TWO CE.~8.
ONE CENT
"'HAT THE WDiNERS
S~Y
PITTSBURG H April 9 -Col Roosl!vclt received the results or the I1l1nolll primaries to night o;hortly after a.d dressing a meetlng here I am much pleased he said 'but I will make no o;tatement to night- • W ASHIN GTON April 0 -The neWs of his success in illinois was conveyed to Speaker Clark by telcphone That s the best news I ve heard since the last baby wa... born saId the Speaker In an emphatiC tone S~"Ill/ I. TI" N.w Yorlt T't>U3 CHICAGO April 0 - Col '1'11eo"or. Roose,;elt and Speaker Champ Clark or the No.t1Dnal House of Representatives are the choices of 11lInois for tile RepubUcan and Democratlo nominations tor President of the United States. Both swept IllinOis to day In a. landslide vote InCOMplete returns at midnight Indlca.te that Roosevelt has carrie" neo.rl3" overy county In the Stat~ He defeated Presl dent T~rt by a. vote of at least two to one from Galena. to Calro Based on the i'eturns a.lready received. tbe vote In the State ts estimated as tollows REPUBLICA....... 2411 000 Roosevelt l~OOO Tart 40 ()O() La Follette DE:UOCRATIC Clark • 270 000 Wilson B5000 Both the Cannon and McKinley districts sppear' to have been swept Into the Roosevelt column by unprecedented pluralities Lh Ingston County the hom .. county 01: Col Frank L Smith. President Taft s Western manal:er Is In tho Roosevelt camp by II- three to one vote Roose,; elt carried Cook County by a. plurallly of approximately 30 000 Complete returns from down State probably will swell his plurality to more than 100 ()()() votcs HIs managers In Chicago aSBcrt that hs has swept the State by 200 000 La Follette polled a talrly good vote in the mining and union la,bor "1str1cts. In some sections down State his vote ran close to that or President Taft. CI amp Clark smothere" Gov WUso. both In Cook County And throughout the State The Speal{er swept Chicago by a majoritY o"er the New Jersey GovernOl' or about 00 000 votes Clark s lead In the entire State WSD run close to 100 ()() "otes It the ratio ot gs.!IlB malntalned at midnight continue in the later bulletins Early returns Indicated that Clark ha4 carr ed every Congress district In tho 1 State which probably will carry With 1t the Instruction of the deIegate3 at larse to be named I:> th.. State OonvenUon a.t PeorIa on April 19 Col Rooem-elt unlloubtedly bas swept all of the tltteen down-l5t&te CongressionllJ districts Althougll he has carrled Coole County by a large lea.(!, complete returnll ma~ show that one or two ot the Congressional districts in the Soutllwe8t tlon of Chicago have been savel! to Taft. Clair.. the 'W'bole Btat.. Delegation. At midnight the Roosevelt people were claiming all of the Congress districts a.na) contending that the popular vote would swing the State Conventlon Into Une for the Colonel They laid claim to the en-I tire 58 delegates trom 1I11nols to the R&-I publican National Convention I Incomplete returns at thl8 hour Indicate that Roosevelt s landslide "\iote downState was larger and more uniform tb~ In Chicago and Cook County He ap_ pears to ha">e swept the la.r!;e dUes anrJ the tarmlng communities by abo!!t tlls same lead In Peoria. County for Instllnce the Roose'\;elt 'IIot.. ran about t"g "ame In the country district!! and nmonS' the mining eamlls a8 it did In Peoria City and Pekin over In Taze"ell ('ount> Peorla County has more Federa.l "tnplO, os tllan an~ other clt~ In the S at.., out "Itle of. Chicago because or th" nternal Re~ enue Office there Roose' pit how e~er carried Peoria Count) oy a ~ote of more than tlve to one based en the returns trom thlrt) one precll Cb out ot seventy four Even Roosevelt Itlen Sorprl"ed Whlle it had been expected that Col Roose"elt would make a stron showing do"n State even nls most sanglOlne sU;) porters were astonished ~ hen returllfl filterea In from varIOUS districts sl owlns that Roose\ elt '" as po!llng apOI0X ma.telJt
"eo-
I
Q
"We Slugged Them," Says T. R. Grecnsburg, Pa., April 10.
tui
cr wmr:DT
tt tiro
ROPBS." This was Col.
tt
Tklie viihuli
Roosevelt's comment
ir r -
m
wkmd
CONVENTION BALKED TAFT PLAN Peace OZer From Goal Operators ....
upon hb Illinois
to-da- y
l,:i. Hldk 'nitv
w,ra la in
k;
w.afc.
EDITION. PRICE ONE CENT.
mm.
wa
W I I ska
i Ws w l
II
BkI
Ce.
w
i
rna
NEW TORE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1912.
t tork World I. iTk Nsw
CvMtKM.
"Circulation Book Open to All."
Circulation Books Open to All, $
mum mmm in nn iniii mil i
tim
rabiuhuu
GAMBLERS' PREY
ii
BLOOD ON CLOTHING
20
HAT'S STILL IN THE RING
GALLERY CHEERS T. R.
ON BIG OLYMPIC CHARGE SAYS BEACH Barton J. Harvey Meets with Got That, He Declares, Carry ing His Wife After She Was Curious End in His
x
PRIOB ONE CENT.
IS ONLY BASIS FOR
TO ARBITRATE T HROUGH
r' est airman uaer manes tnci ROOSEVELT RAPS
W IN
NO PLEDGE FOR TAFT;
ySjW' IT"
STRIKE COMMISSION
I I
I
PAGES
WWnen
DIES FROM DRUG
1932
--
CU M
mi ini
... i.i,, raaredar prwonfolr tat
1
AS CONVENTION ENDS
Attacked by a Negro.
Stateroom.
to Miners at Their Conference. UNO I
I
v
1
'iv
v
TAFT IN MESSAGE
But
i.
1
HAD
ILLINOIS VOTE
Subcommittee of Both Sides to Consider and Act
"WELCHED"
A
BET. HE
NOW IN PARIS.
IS
Delegates Depart After Approving
Standpat and Reactionary Plat-
Had Been He Went to Europe for Mrs. Beach s Health, but May ReFleeced First Day Out turn at Once to Face Trial. of $10,000.
Passengers
.SkMtnt
a)h4
y
form of Bosses Look for "Dark Horse."
sbwbBK
snJPwF
Says Results in Other States
Upon Proposal.
PARIS. April 10. -- Frederick O. Beach, When the White Star liner Olympic the New York broker and clubman arrived this afternoon became known Would Be Same but that Barton J. Harvey, son of the West against whom a warrant charging him ern railroad restaurant man, vho has with assault and battsry with intsnt to for Fraud. In Aiken. been a paaeenger on seven of the ten kill his wife has been Issued S. Oh arr.vsd hare early from trips the big ghlp has made since she London together with his wife. Mrs ORHP3.V9BITRO, went Into service, hsd died at s o'clock Pa.. April They went Immediately Theodore Roosevelt In a telegram ssnt this morning of a poison that affected Camilla Beach. to the rasldsnos of W. K. Vanderbtlt In to Madlll MoCormlok on the Illi- hie heart. the Rue Lereus where they are to stay nois election said: According to the Information given guests. "I am not only deeply appreciative of to the passengers, he had taken an as cannot ataeosa this matter new, "I the honors that Illinois hae done me, overdose of a medicine for headache. Beach Impatiently, when he was said but realize fully the burden of oblleta- - Dr. Beaumont, the ahrp's surgeon, reaaksS to comment on the charge tlon such an expression of the confidence ported tpat he had died of heart dis- "abst whan the proper time comes X of the people puts upon tne. It hi not a ease following alcoholic poisoning. will do plenty of talktag, and 111 do victory tor me; primarily It la a viotory Dr. Beaumont sent mearages to Harvery wlUlagly. fast now thsrs la tt for clean and straight governmental vey's wife and to his peopia tn the no ssas methods and for genuine popular gov Wast, iif lag to mass ma sees ernment and for the oauae of social and WOULD SAIL FOR HOME SAIO HE Harvey's home la tn Pasadena. Oal. Industrial justice. APRJL IS. In trips on his all Hnrvoy the boat to "Moreover It Is a stinging 10. -- Before April Vttrt6t:, leaving showed great Interest in the smoke the alliance between crooked rjussasas O. Beach told some London Frederick room an. bosses In alliance with special prlv card playing; ilend "the only basis for the charge On the first day of the. present trip llere to thwart the will of the people by against me Is my bloody clothing, which the scajidulous abuse of the Federal pa- a crowd of professional gamblers was Uv result of carrying my wife to tron ige and the use of other methods worked the passengers for over 110,000 our house after seeing her negro aseven more questionable, Including vio- Harvey waa among those fleeced. away. 1 brought my lence and the most shameless frauds. Night before last there was trouble In sailant running recuperate from her Europe to to wife Is which las; alone methods these "It the smoke room because of Harvey's have enabled our opponents to secure refusal to pay a bet of Kin he had lost r.ounds." On receiving a long cable message - es without one shadow of title to a fellow passenger, not a gambler. from New York Mr. Beach declared In Indiana, and It Is these methods to Harvey on the Jaw and that he would sail on board the Mauriwhich they are at this moment resort- The man struck 13 to face the charges In ing In the effort to override trw will of knocked him dawn. Harvey retired to tania on April America. He told a friend that It was "ie people In Mlohlgan and Kentucky. his stateroom and only appeared at evident the detectives were unabV tn In Illinois the people had the chance meaht. the negro and had determined to apeak for themseilves. In Indiana, Three of the professional gamMers locate try and earn the large reward by fasMichigan and Kentucky the result who had been aboard were acting as tening the crime upon him. would have been precisely the same If' nurses In hie stateroom when he died. Later in the day. after a telephonic the same ciiance for expression had conversation with some of his friend.. been priven the people. In Paris, Mr. und .Mrs. Beach left for "1 doubt whether there Is a single France. Congressional district In any one of Mr. Beach, however, is expected to these three States where the people are hurry back from Europe to face the not with us. I believe that every single chargs against him. delogate against us In those three States Mr. and Mrs. Beach, who sailed on will misrepresent the people behind him. ths Mauretanla last week, were at Clar- Ileyond question of all delegates who tdge's Hotel, London, when told of the may be recorded against us from these" warrant Issued Inst turn tn Aiken. three States the majority will represent IS EXPECTED FROM STATEMENT nothing but successful fraud. Illinois Is EACH. not only a magnificent Illustration of He and Mrs. Beach Intended to rethe genuine expression of popular Judgment when thu people are given the main In London unUl Friday. After rhance to manage their own affairs, hut getting ths new from America, howpeople signal proof how at the a also l ever, Mr. Beach, who seemed greatly of Michigan, Indiana and Kentucky distressed, signified his Intention of would express themselves If an honest Actress Little Says Jockey coming back at once. He went to Doropportunity were given them. Even unchester House and had an Intsrvlew der the present system all three States deleours, the with Ambassador Held. On returning to and In etch of them Was Guilty of Misconduct are gates will be two to one In our favor the hotel he said he would go first to condonation of the most unless there It Is bsllleved hs will seek Paris. and Here Abroad. frauds. the advice of Mr. Vanderbtlt, his chum and the best man at his wsddlng and GAY NOR HEARS WOMEN whose guest ha now is with his wife. once Jookey, Koan, famous Tod the It Is believed be will issue a statemem CLEAN STREETS IN MUNICH. waa In an Interna- after a talk with Mr. Vanderbllt todefendant tional suit for divorce. The present wife 'They Won't Do It Here," He Is Julia Sanderson of "The Siren" com- day. Mrs. Beach seemed greatly agitated Says, "They Balk at Carrying pany, and who was a success tn "The over the unexpected turn of events, and Arcadians." She says Sloan will prob- .it times, while they were waiting for i. Market Baskets." rain at Chartng Cross station, dun g "Mr. Burgomelster (Mayor) you would ably never return to America. An or to her husband's arm as hs tried 10 probably he surprised to know thst we der allowing service by publication was uothe her. lmve women In Munloh who sweep the granted to her. Sloan Is now training race horses and spend most of his tln.i MOSTLY HE MARRIES streets and keep them clean, too." "That all may be true," answered In London, Brussels and Paris. replying to Al WHEN HE GETS A JAG. Mayor Uuyaor, Mrs. Sloan makes numerous charges fred K. Kornfcld of Munich, "but we against her husband. One Is thst he OOUld not get the women of this counshowed too much attention to Miss Sometimes Wright Only Falls in try to sweep the city streets. We find Mabel Robinson on a train between New 14 No. Saratoga also at and Vork and go get anOUgh to to them to Love, but Two Indiscretions It hanl street, and also at No West Forty-fiftthe market with their boskets." Send Him to Prison. 190K 147 In street Weet by Kerr Kornfeld, accompanied the Mayor of Munich, Pr. Von Horsrht and and 1900. She charges also that he was "You sse. It's this way, Your Honor," Of, Von Miller, a member of the Houso unduly familiar with women whom she aid Thomas Wright, a butler by proof Lords of I' i aria, had called upon does not know In Paris, Brussels, fession but a marryer by Instinct, q). the Mayor to puy their respects, and other places. dressing Judge Snann in the Court of In addition to asking a divorce Mrs ticneral Sessions Her hus yet drunl:. fall In love with"whenever I GREAT FIRE ?WEEPS Sloan also asks allmorty. somebody band's narns Is given In her complaint viost always i escape, getting married, SECTION OF BUTTE. as Jumes F. Sloan, I t. don but sometimes That's all I got to say." Blaze Causes Sl.ooo.ooo Damage BIG VERDICT FAVORS of the evidences of Thomas Two Indiscretions were In y Within an Hour, and Late CORNELUS J. SULLIVAN Wright'sto bibulous. appear agains: him. Thov court Was Still Burning. Wright, Whom tie marrl...l were Nora A Jury In the Supreme Court late this In 1900 and Tallin Kggert Wright, who Ill'TTE, Mont April 10. A fire which started at noon In the warehouse dis- aftsmoon gave a verdict of ISol.719 41 to led him to the altar only lust Novemtrict In the southern part of the city Cornelius J. Sullivan Igalnsl Patrick J. ber. Both irlvei nodded their heads vigorhad caused loss of mure than 11,000,0 0 Ityan, who built the Manhattan Bridge. Sullivan claimed to have secured the ously and smiled at one another when within an hour and late was Judge Kwann gave Wright a sentence npieadlng northward Into the business contract fur Kyan. of from two und a naif to three years sectlor, fanned by a high wind. Werts BslMIss rarkUh Balk. at Sing Sing. Then they left the court Koui business blocks and thirty resirs eaes. Bath with private roessa. St. rnnm alth SHDI IlllUtt.l Mill! h.Tldn.M on were J .; lira. dences . written large on their facta,
PRENDERGAST SOUNDS WARNING OF TAFT ROUT. Comptroller's Spirited Fight for Col-
to-d-
Ite coal operators and tho repre--
lO.--
onel Provokes Storm of Hisses and Cheers.
y
hy the operators that the ques-- 1 be referred to the anthracite
in
mtm
nn
iHiinH
w
lit i
mv
urn
l
1
11
trike of 1902. This is the first looking to Of any consequeuce settlement that has been made ine miners iirsi maae tneir ae- nnn went lumen uuwn uv ae owners. t
hae not been definitely accepted so by the miners' delegates. Tin de- that tt would be better to discuss
nv in
ih.
old Htilkr commission :ui
A
operators made for peace.
tie
BAER. proposition was made by lieorge Baer, president of rhe Pnlladelphlu Heading, who is also chairman of operators' conference committee. Mr. MAN
"In answer to your nnientlon that have changed since the award the anthracite coal strike commission, as to make It Lnsqultabls to renew
"gondltlons
i nil We .1. W. l'.IlK to SSK ..nn.n.l urn 'nn . r -. ill If n . tll1 lIl'tlT- Whether such changes In conditions .,, n.iiii ... :,I1V itiiidl- m ..I.,.., .... .. . .. .. I - ... 1
t onmrn
W O
TBI
.
Ml ....
III
IT
'
.....
i
I...
I
,tinn Mr Wrmht it. .1 1r you are Willing to have the survlv- mernUers act, wg are willing that two vaoanelei should be supplied some fair way to be hereafter deter- lf I his general proposition Is ac- -
nr A
II
lUlrin :ie.l Pashas. .... - .. , . the miners' union
aoue.
an
inn iiiniuiri
vi mil
1. ...
asked
n
mi v
I,,.,. M'l.ll that Mr.
a
mur
Ui
to discuss the
operator,
Independent CIlUlIIUUil.
was
made '
i
at
ilttee should meet
2
jtajek
White said after the. meeting: "We could nut listen to Mr. liaer'.i In. ... ... ft mi .in nntt' White seemed to be In a bellig erent mood. The miners' delegate claimed they had won a concession from the operators. OPERATORS SAID TO BE AT ODDS WITH BAER'S STAND. The operators at the meeting were, "
U.'
(Com. mie.' on LaK Pane.)
JULIA SANDERSON
WANTS A DIVORCE
FROM TOD SLOAN
d
h
Forty-sevent-
h
d
IN
PENNSYLVANIA.
PITTSBt Kill.
April 10 Pol. Theodoio after a good oosevelt. refreshed night's sleep, left here at 8.30 A. M. today on a special train for a trip across Pennsylvania. He spoke at a number places and planned to reach Phlla- nh
nt
HI
..
,..--
I i
. ........
II..
.
ter City In most of his
he allude.)
m
1
To-Da-
.
y
though the tine was turning
hi
wa.
FOR RACING SEE PACE 11.
MEXICAN RANKS
UPSETS HARBOR ON
her firstttop out
IS
.
PUTJO
Suction From Largest Steamer Thomas
DEATH of
Fountain
Snaps New York's Cables and Drags Her From Pier. SOUTHAMPTON. Fng., April 10. The new While rtlar liner Titanic, the largest steamer ulloet, In starting on her maiden voyage from here o New York
10.--
had an exciting experience as she was proceeding down Southampton Water. While the gigantic vessel was paaslng When Villa retreated last Thursday the White Star Unsr Oceanic und the New Tork. night Fountain removed parts of ths American line steamer which ars berthed alongside eaoh other, place and concealed himself in a private the terrific auction of the Titantr'a residence. The occupants were Ignorant triple screws dragged the New York thst they had a guest In a part of ths from her moorings and seven of that house seldom visited. The American was driven by thirst vessel's stern ropss parted. The stern Of the American liner and hunger to reveal his presence on awung Into midstream and narrowly Sunday after Mveity-twhours of striking the passing Titanic, ItttPOgOd torture. He wae armed with which was obliged to stop while ths " revolver, but made no resistance. Monday he was c(mp!lrd to show Now York was towed off tn aafer th rebels where he hsl sorrcted ths berth. The Titanic carried 850 first class pas- - missing parts of his rapid ftrer. was and condemned xengere, among them many notables, tried by and these with all others aboard had to death, apparently for having disabled several distinct thrills. A great crowd j American residents msde every effort on the piers who had gathersd to wit-- I ness the new steamer's departure also l" obtain a modlll utlon of ths tn the stir. After the excite- - tence, but without avail. Finally Amer-men- t the throngs on shore gave three lean Consul Lotcher at Chtlhuahua sent rousing cheers as the Titanic resumed to Oen. Malazar what Is believed to have her voyage. been an appeal from Washington thst ,,, .11. , ... ,, The Tll.inle Is HI feet i.ina, . " " """ has i beam of 1(3 feet In. hi s, dlspla. eg I T " - issbbshsjsi ' '"ui re M.000 t n. und Is of I8,im long ne: regis- - """" i nis is tne last resort." fer. She can carry J.lwfl passengers gnu miincim the saloon, WU In the Second cabin II Mexl 'o they have recour.e in what tnd i.ww in the steerage while she hui Is known as "the law of flight.'' under i crew of K0. which u prisoner who has been condemned but where there exists a doubt FAUST SEES GIANTS PLAY as tu the legality of the sentence is his freedom within certain tllOWad YALE A DOUBLE-HEADElimits. The prisoner kn .wa that his rate I. O0RS1 BY INNINOi Kven If he d es nut walk a step, . waled i( Yale 0 II u 4 0 I 0 2 from some unexpected uuarier the fatal -7 (Hants bullet will come, and the report will tie Yale made that he was .hot while inflight' New Yor'c. f. firms, o.f. Devore, It was thus In Fountain', case. He Merrltt. 3b. Shafer. 2b. told the corresciondent that there was f. c itellly. grass, Bnod no hope, but strolled about the streets Ilennett, 3b. lin ker, r f. waiting for death. Hidden, lb. Merkle. lb. When his body was hr. Might In It cun I'arhardt, r.f. Hsrsog, lb. Btotgon, a.s talneil four bullet wound., made by liruli. s.s. Burns tta, c. Myers, c. shots tin from behind. ott, p. Wlltse. p The yuung man's father was Cul Albert Fountain, who. with annthri In r Yale a on The (Hants took son, was .hot by cattle rustlers tn Maaj this afttrnOOn and a thousand Mexico fifteen ywtrx ago Col. fountain to see the fun. Ths was one of the moat fammis lawyers fans were on hand nf game Itnelf wal of small moment, how- the then Territory and was tinted i with the excitement particular as a BTOOSOUtOr, ever, as compared nn the (Hants' bench OVaf the uoex-p- e aYBBY womax x ir own ted arrival .if Charles VI tar Kaust ' uniform, but in hi. anil man too, fur '.hat matter, I. that Charley had .. age IS clothes, citizen', Joke llliug tilth gov Willi eiit lie liu.u till: it..Mi prominent seat on the i.en. li and no 'e susasi nens i jusi snout MS amount Of persuasion could B d
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The Roosevelt followers look upon the instructions as a subterfuge Mexico, Federals' Artillery for the sake of expediencv. The Republican leaders who do not believe are hoping that another man may come out of tie Taft can be Man, Executed by Rebels. and June on whom the delegates of the Emnow between background support their centre may pire State EL PASO, Tessa, April Ameriwas stand pat and reactionary from start to finish. convention The can newspaper man, who returned today from Parrsl with 1M American and The Republican party is still split wide open on many important issues. ut her foreign refugees from the battle The Rochester convention, taken in connection with the Illinois primaries, duel riot, brought news of the exerutlun Fountain of Las Crucea, has spread a Republican chill. if Thomas It N. M., by the rebels. Leaders of the organisation, talking dent Taft cannot be Fountain was captain of a Federal for publication, say the convention will the first time tn recent Now Tork fs history that a delegate to a help toward harmony. llticni gun under Oen. I'anche Villa. be a great
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(Special from a Staff Correspondent of The livening World.) ROCHESTER, N. Y., April 10. Although he Republican party and th of the State tentatively instructed the four delegates-at-larg-e eighty-si- x district delegates for Taft In closing hours of the convention this afternoon, influential leaders of the party do not regard the Instructions as binding in a political sense. They consider that, if the bat interests of the party should dictate the nomination of another at Chicago in June, the instructions issued by the Rochester convention may be disregarded, inasmuch as they are construed to carry only a moral obli-
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convention has declared his belief the majority of the delegates m upon political suicide. Certainly Prendergnat tki not make himself j lar with an element of his associates, an many hisses indicated. Mr. Prendergnat got Into so approaching a personal controvsrsy the New York delegation when down to a discussion of the recent pri-b- y merles In New York City. A groat hoot of surprise and protest want up frosa the New Yorkers when Mr. Prendsramat Mld Col. Koosevelt had no organtaatloa In the primary fight. Preodergaot la a good debater, and not opposition even the combined of than 10" delegate, on ths floor ..erveg to
Speaking privately, they deplore the that the feeling, so manifest united rank and file are certainly not on the on Taft and are widely divided platpollutes enunciated In the State form.
BOSSES' ELATE WENT THROUGH
SERENELY.
arranged The convention programme through' the RspUbUoM Iwsses went The with only an occasional slip llepulilloans went on rooord as favoring the rcmomlnatlon of Pres'dent Taft, hut absolutely declined to Instruct Its dels- Th-- ' nates to Chicago to that effect nsriv Dlaoed Itself squarely on record ta opposed to ths Initiative, referendum and recall The platform as framed last "rattle" htm. r.lght. and In which a compromise was. The aplause that greeted him nt ths arranged between the warring elements, elote showed that his auditors r.spSBtsd vote, his courage, whatever many of thorn ,i.i adopted by an overwhelming gc were thought of his political discretion, delegate The four Comptroller Prendergast got Into oe- .tarted M their roundabout way to tae hlcago co. .veil. Ion. "urged" to aid the tlon following Mr. Wadsworth. Ths I President, and tie Republican delegates Comptrollsr was In good form and the P,tause that greeted his opening posl-a- s started for their homes, widely dtvldsd to the wisdom of the action of ths j ttve declaration: "I am going to vets The convention adjourned against that platform." showed that ho gathering I had a big section of the audience with Ine die at to P. M. The BSSSJSg said they did the best they ' him. Molt of the spplause came from the could, and they congratulate themselves A delegate from New Took on avoiding a fight over the Taft In- - galleries. Hut County called attention to this. "Ths the bosses l.irsemeiil resolution. people ars more often in ths gallery had Impressed upon ttielr political pe eptlons during ths two sessions of this than on the floor!" shoutod Prendergnat. invention the alarming fact that a Uut ths appUuas waa not confined to .in.Hlerable percentage of the delegate, the gallery when the Comptroller thai hs is unalterably opposed to and a great majority of the spectators i. iuiiii.it ion of President Taft. am oppoaod to President Taft and will ne "What's th. matter with UllaoUT" not vote for Ills the bos.ii were told, some one shouted. In aUdltlon "Illinois Is all right, too!" shouted the frankly and directly In open convention' amidst a stoma of by Comptroller William Prendemaat of Brooklyn orator, ;, York, th tt I' eJld. nt Taft should cheers. GALLERIES APPLAUD PR EN OE ft. because he nut be renominated This QAST'S 0EFEN3E OF COLONIC loomed to defeat at the polls. greeted! revolutionary utterance was u wa. uultu apparent that the attttsxto with some hisses, but the preponder-- ' o( Pfgndergast hud support In all parts) ic.ee uf assent showed that very many f the house. However. Mr. Fiends! assemblage held to the n the great t,t was perforce compelled to content i'rsndergast theory. The manhsho himself with applsuss. The spectacle of practical delegate programme was loo tlrmly grounded to ippUudlug Mr l'rcndergast's predlc-- he displaced by argument speaker protested against MM Ion of defeat uad then voting for ieso- Tie charge made that those who favorsd lutlona Indorsing Toft eloquently e policies wars hlbttod how fragile the Taft support in certain pr ;r party III New York State really Is. Ists. Comptroller Prendergast of New York "Socialism had only mads h sad Slay City created a sensation by hi. frank in this cuuntry when ths two uorsepenoivs to gtateatetu that la bio Judgment Frsei- fuiuvs had 1
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THE
EVENING WORLD, MONDAY,
APRIL 15, 1912.
COL. ASTOR AND BRIDE AMONG miles southeast of Halifax, mora than n day's Jourwr at her beet epeed In command He . J. 8mlth U In rommand of the .Titanic. collided with the cruller too when Olympic, latter ahrp, the of Iit eleter Hawk in t tviiaeit MM soptswitier. The Canadian Pacific Steamship Comrany'i IBmprese of Britain, 'which reported having encontrad an Ice field one arrived at Liverpool hundred tnllea In extent when three day out of Halifax. The failure of tha Tltanlc'a wlreleas apparatus two hours after tha etdeat waa probably due to tba flooding of tha Are room and the stopping of tba engines, aa In the rase of tha Republic. Under tha agisting admiralty laws of England no passenger ship Is permitted to carry gaaollne or petrol In any quantity, and thereby Is debarred from running auxiliary gasoline engines for the wlrelesa apparatus. If tba Are rooms were flooded tha auxiliary ateern engines that ran the ablp's dynamos and wireless sppsratus would fall and there would ha no means of furnishing power. This la probably what happened aboard the Titanic aad accounts for the long delay In getting any word from tha crippled liner. It waa reported at the White Star offloa this afternoon that W. A Dobbin. John Jacob Astors "private secretary, had received a Marconlgram that Col. Aetor aad his bride were safe. Qov. and Mra. Dlx bad engaged passage on the Titanic and expected to eall for Burope on Saturday The White Star liner Baltic waa tha abtp that brought In the rescued peaeengwra from the sinking steamship Republic. In January, 1909. wlreleas, started At that time the Baltic, summoned foy the tar the Republic, which bad been rammed by the Florida on the morning of Jaa. tS. She reached the two disabled steamers that evening and found that the passenger and crow had been taken from the sinking Republic by the Florida, which waa badly damaged. The paseengers and crew of the Republic and the passengers of the Florida. 1,660 persons In all, were transferred at aea to the Baltic aad aha brought them In to New York. J. 0. Phillips, the wireless operator aboard the Titanic, waa formerly em. plnyed in the same capacity aboard James Oordon Dennett's yacht. He waa alto wlreleas operator on several other vessels of the White Star fleet tOO
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PASSENGERS
NOTABLE PASSENGERS TAKEN OFF THE TITANIC
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GUOL'NDS. NATUJNAL LKAill'E April BOSTON, It waa a dull, cheeriest day that free toil the (Jlanta upon Hielr nrrlvul here. Aa the day advanced, however, there was every Indication that the StSMSBheiiC conditions were Improving, and about a'l hour beiforo the ajatna atiwteil uha auti camo peeping through the cloudt and promise of a uod uftornoon waa at hand. In the first Inning Devore waa out, Spratt to Houser. Doyle doubled to centreflnld. Snodgi .it popped to Spratt. Murray fanned. NO HUNH. Aweeney out, Bha.Vr to Snodgra. Campboll flow out to Devure. Miller grounded out to Snodgrasi. NO RlN'S. Docker filed out to Bpratt, starling the second. Ilerzoc alngled to left. Sharer sacrificed, Kllng to II outer, Herzotr olng to second. Meyer singled to first and stole second. Mathmvson filed out to Sweeney. NO RUNS. KalscT popped to Shafer. Houser flied out to Decker. Bprstt was retired. to tfnodgraas. NO RUNS. Devore popped up to Meyera, beginDoyle walked. Snod- ning the third. grasa hit Into a double play, Bpratt to Houser. No hits. McDonald out, Doyle to SnodgTaaa. Kllng sent a long fly to Devore, who made a great running catch. Psrdue Sweeney was safe on Doyle's error. singled to left. Perdue going to second. Doyle and to Campbell tent on Rwetney waa thrown out, Doyle to Shafer. No runs. Ill the fourth .Murray tingled through the diamond. Becker filed out to Mil- ler. Hersog forced Murray. 8weny lns;iel to rigxit, to Spratt. Bhafer golne to third. Shafer atole iSSSS. Meyers walked. Ailing the bases. Matliewson out, Sweeney to Houaer. No rune. Kaiser Aled Miller popped to Shafer. took care of out to Doyle. Snodg-r- a Houter's drive end retired him at flret. Me-e-
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MUm R Trout. William J. Tumln. Dorothy Turptn, EHen Tooney. Mose clsas aessanasra M A. Tronptansky. Mrs. A. T. Tervan Is as follows: LUCILLE CARTER. T James veale. Miss CMDOROBTTA ALEXANDRA A William Master CARTER. Ash-bAneis John Mra Oeorge Wllklnann. Ada C. and W wtfa MAI ILL. HOWARD B. CASB. Wilkinson, vviiuam J. Ware, Leo Samson AbeUon. Henna Abel-soJ. B. MAOU1RE. T. W. CAVENDISH, wire and maid pold weiss, Matilda Welsi, Fm Edssr Andrew. PIERRE MARBCHAL. Wheadon, John James Ware. ward KBRBBRT F. CMAtVBB and wlfa B Lillian Bsntham. Ada R. Balls, Kate D. W. MARVIN and wtra iriorence u. ware, suiaie Webbr N. C. CHAMBERS and wife. Bias. Robert J. Bateanaa, Lawranes M'CAPPRT. T. 3harle Wllhelm. Marlon Wrlrh Miss OLADT8 CHERRY Bsssler. Mra M. O. Beiker and three TIMOTHY. J. M'OARTHT. Beaala Watt, Bertba Watt E. ArPAUL CHEVRO ohlldran. Reginald Butler, Edward M'OOUOH. Week Ada West. Constanru thur J. R Ml. B. M CH1BNALL West, Bean. Ethel Beeae, H, J. Barbara West. Edwin a. MELODY. ROBERT CHISHOLM. Jose as Brlto, Rev. Thorns Wheeler. Mrs. Addis Wells. Miss .1 BDOAR J. METBR and wlfa WALTER M. CLARK aad wlfa. Ralph Welle, Wells. D. Nellie Wal Byles. Mr. Bembrtdgs. SoloR PRANK D. MIL LOT. OKOROE QUINCY CLIPPORD. orofL C. Williams. mon Bowenur. MUdred Brown, Perer MXNAHAN, W. wtfs aad Dr. R E. P. C ALLEY. Miss H. TodU. Bally, W. HuU Botaford. William daughter. There wars elso T40 thlrd-c- l ra- Mra. A. T. OOMPTON. Barreman, Cart Brylil. Dagmax senaere MOLBAM H. MARKLAND on board. W. S COMPTON. Miss Bryhi, Karollna Brstrom, rTaoarish CLARENCE MOORE and man ser A. T. COMPTON Jr. J. Banflcld. vant. Mrs. n. C. CORNELL. O Erik Oollaodar. R C. Coleridge. HarCHARLESTON WINNERS. Mr. MO ROAN, wife and maid. JOHN B. CRAPTON. vey Colly er. Charlotte Collyar, N HOWARD O. CROSBY, wife eat Collyar, Irene C. Corbett. Mra FIRST RAOB pure OHARLBS NATRON aughter. C P. Corey, John H. Chapmaa. MOO; selling; four and a half furlorsga. A. W. N SWELL. Cbapinan, Rev. Ernest C. Car-ta- r. Torkvllls, 114 (MuTanart), 4 to 5 and JOHN BRADLEY CUMMTNOS ssd Miss ALICE NEWELL Lillian Carter, Alloa Christy. Arat; Sprightly Mlaa 111 (Turner), Julia Christy, Ctiartas V. Clarke, Iout. Miss MADELINE NHWBLL. to 6. 2 to I and out. second; Stavano. Ada Maria Clarke, Oiaar Cameron, MISS HELEN NEWBOBL 4 to 1 and 1 to 5, P. D. DALY. Stuart Collett, Charlea Chaoman, lot (Peak). 12 to A. R NICHOLSON. ROBERT W. DAI WUIlatn Carblnaa, Harry Ootterlll, third. Time 0 68 Insurance Man und o ATbart P. Caldwell, Sylvia Caldwell, Cedar Brook alao ran. THORNTON DAVIDSON and wife. B. C. OSTBY. JHCOND RAa'K Aldan O. Caldwell. Mra B. DEVILUBRS. snd Miss HELEN R. OSTBY. B Baron von Draohetedt. sbeatlaai up; purse (300; selllnaj: five and a half A. A. DICK sad wtfa R OV1BR ds Carlo, Herbert Danbury, James furlong. Arbutua 11 (Turner), in to I. DODOS, WABBBNOTON v. Draw. Lulu Draw, Harebell 4 te 1 and 8 to 6, Arat; Duat. IDS P Draw, Agnes Davla, John M. DaM. H. W. PARR. t tu 1, a to and 4 to f. second; Mra P C. DOUOLAS. vis, Florentine Duran, A Daren, .Rank, ion (McTanxartl, 4 to 1, 3 to AUSTIN PARTNER. Mr. W. DOUGLAS, wtfs aad maid. Paroy Draoon, Charlae Davit, Sam ' tut t .nil t,i r. I si V. PAYNE, WILLIAM O. DULLES. William Dlbdtn. Mary Davla. Will - boarili Oreuas. Argonaut and Mines. THOMAS PBARS and wlft, urn J. nori ion, 1'oiing. Miit .meat aio ran. VICTOR PBNASCO. wife and maid. Doling and Lena N. Del KAOR THIIII" Mra P.OULTON EARN SHEW and -- Stanley Major ARTHUR PEUOKBN. Pox. ArneJ Pahlatrom. Har- - upward, purse MOO; condition; aU and MtSS CARUNB ENDRBS. ry Faunthorpa. Ussla Feunthorps. one-liWALTER CHAMBERLAIN PORTER. furlong. --Tom King'. HI (Al KISS L. M EUSTIS. rinuruut. Anill rjun, len), :u to I. I) to 1 and Mrs. THOMAS POTTER Jr. to i. rlrst. K-- a A P. L KOANHHSM. and Joseph Fynnsy. Feather Due'.er, IOC I lloff man), 4 to .V Mfrrd (latksll, William Gillespie. 1 to fi and out, second. B!la Hrvson. JBNKHBBR REUOHLTNJO. Eitnai uaraiaa wiiiiem ailbert, (Turner) I to I, I to 5 and out. J. L FLYNN. narry wait, b. iraia. jonn uiii, jh OBOROB RHHBMB. .Kirrl Tlm B. L POREMAN. I.R AndrHlnra. Sleeth Uiles, Halph ROBERT Mrs. m l EDWARD R Jisns maid. Lady Mghtnlng snd I'apatt alto VTfr MARX FORTUNE, wtfs and (Jreenbeig. Ollea. Bainusl Fred ROBSUNO W. la. A Coupled. daughters aad son. Bdgar Ollss ead Lewrenes devsr. C. ROLMANS. P. FRANKLIN. I Mary D. Hewlett, Walter Harrla, ROOD. HUOH Doetsi Baaed Hyate She Sana. Otorga Harrla, Samuel Herman. T. O. PRAUBNTRAL. MRS ROSENBAT7M. g When John Dalton, a Jena Herman. Kate Herman, Alloe Br. HBNRT PRAUBNTRAL as J. HUOO RBSR Stephen Hold, Herman, Annie printer, want to hla home at No. UO Wla avenue thle morning he OOUMTBSS ROTHES aad maid. Hold, Oeorge Hunt, Leonard Hick- - Manhattan Miss MAROUBRJTB FROUCHBR men, Stanley Hickman. Ambrose found hit mother, Mrs. Margsret Dsltou, M. ROTHSCHILD and wlfa. 9. FUTRBLLB aad, wtfs. Hood, benjamin Howard, Bllan T. lying dsed on ths psrlor floor In front ALPRBD ROWR Itswete B'nJ"'0 Hart Bstker of Ike plane. She was e sufferer from 0 . ARTHUR ) N.ujhN.rt told Dalton Han. Bva Hart John Harper, been dleeaea. ARTHUR OBR dawgHtsrs aad Nine Itarptr, Anne Hamalalesr that ab had broken off short m ih, Mr. HnsTssen two aad sslddls ef a hyms which aha waa ,a- aaa.ta fast, . -
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FIRE-PROO-
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New York.
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Ave.,
405-40-
CARPET CLEANSING
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The Phllllr started trouble right at the etart by daring eight run in ins am Inning. Knabe lnlcd to left centre and on Daly's miserable fumble Kot around to third. Titus else lnKld to centre, coring Knabe. PSSksH also laced out a single, aendlng Titus to third, and on the throw to that bag I'atkcrt not to second. Cravath walked, tilling the bate. Luderu' STOUadSf wsm fumbled by Downi allowing TttUI 10 tally. lowney louie.i out to Erwln. Doolan alneled, scoring Paskart and fravath. Bargcr was then taken out M the box and Kent UtMJtiIntad. Daaln lngled, tilling the bae Moore forced Dooln at econd. Luderu Knabe tinkled, ecor- nroaalns the nla;-inu linolan. Titus walked. Pakert ln- led, sendlnk Moore and Knabe home. Cravath walked. Luderui wa out. Kent to Daubert. BIOUT The Dodjei managed o get one run Jloran walked and went In their halfto second on Daubert'S retirement at on I'oolan's muff of acored flr.'t and I.u.lcrus's throw to third to cateh hlin after Downey had thrown out Smith.
cnll-In-
-'
.
--
Now York
Boaton Time of
0 ne
5fflHl9iEt3
--
nwi.u,
1
IH.tr
It
l urtaln. ROOM
--
Oak Hldeboard. bevelled mirror, or eleMew Ins Machine wlili A year' suar-aniee- ,: Leather Oak Heat t'ourh. Oak IllnlDa tiialrs. BH-leDla-n- rr Table. yet. Table Cover.
aUTCUKN
gant
KllrheoTlo.i
Maes or Chairs. 44) T I a ware. 1 Table. 1 Tr ' nun.
in ii. wnttins.
$75 Worth $100 Worth $150 $200 $300 $400 $500
$5
Down!
$10.00 Down $15.00 $20.00 $30.00 $40.00
$2.50 $3.00 $4.00
$50.00
$5.00
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE MAILED FREE
1
Spring
hour and thirty I
'
PH LL ES SCORE EIGHT AT START
.i
Come to most people snd caue many Plmplo. bolls and other troubles eruptions, beside loss of eppetlte, that tired fetllng. blllouanc, Indigestion and headache. The sooner you get rid of tbem the belter, and the way to get rid of them and to build up the syatem la to take
Hood's Sarsaparilla
The Bprlng Medicine par excellence a aliown by unequalled, radical and ficlslie Tl,. L.enlna Worldl. permanent vurea. WASlIIMrT.JN PARK, BROOKLYN. In usual liquid form or Get It harley Dooln and hla chocolated tablet known a Saraataba. N. Y.. April lo. y
I
L
t urniahed $110.00
esses
FREE-'"T-
s.
"
iitli iloo tSm.
rinKenberRS S.E. Cor.
Open Kvrnlng.i 1241k 3tf Ave., N.
.
Dr. DUeos Facial Tonic T 4
he great Hi iru..
acktl i .on.- bs. nlui ed s k . ol rtn..- liletlou t thin She at e.ver woninn u Irrli'uiii.. AkaV' nuei It
Hull
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itrlnklen and till. rnlnS WSgllU on...'. ...e. nit ritr p'.uiiir. ami ' ..... Uei ibneed 'sale St.aii. au.iiu.
st Klkrr. Ilrteiii.. and all Rood ... ..a rfMil. tel.tr... lr... VARI OKS. DB. nil Koa UKAl'TY 47 3 KllITON ST . B'ttbTS.
AB
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Huiiyadi JeUlOS .Water MATOstAU LARBTITB
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$2 00
ITTailTURE . ' gSIUP' Humors M'i; rI Fiat. rliVinafllb.
Special lor Munday, (be 151b Special lor iuesday, (be 161h ft Unl.tKH I'HKAM lid MAI'l.n M T t HKAM You will tone up yout Lt Ml'ni 'Affc. la. BOX. 1 VV tWh BOB. 1UC system Rnd feel better foi OFFERING TUESDAY'S OFFERING MONDAY'S d ;S Hithi.IU MIM.il t'ANOV Usung, in the tnoming, 'i guiaa or ePKCIAL a ff" t value. mar 15C XII awn.) hmi 1(11 Ml BOX. POt'ND BOX.
.
(
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Our Liberal Credit Terms $50 Worth 93 lown lT5ttUB3
RUNS Spratt tiled out to Devore, a pretty McDonald singled to centre. ralcb
ZZZl.
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run.
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Thl. home esastsu of Bedroom, Blnlna Koum aad rsstsi Klteh en. and I on tiblHIIaa el ,swmnwn. rn.isiaua: I'AKLUK -- Hue It ltHlIMMMlaidai lour Mill. A nieces. I'ler Mirror, rreoeli and uresalaai Caa ate I'srb.r kla.i Samel led irel Bed il.raM, fret); 'I able trimmed Sr. 'i... Liiitiii and bundMiine Ued ttorias rlVlr. i.li.he pair of hand..fl TOU WlttHHM. some rl. ture: large Ortealai Ku, T.Ui 1 11.11
In the Afth Devore went out, Perdue Doyle f ulled to McDoiud. to Homer Hnodcrat out. Spratt to Ilouaer. NO
-
bni
lus-
3
I (lame-O-
minute.
five
Rlg'.er and Flnneran.
Umpire
Meyera for New York Kllng balled a McDonald fanned. liome run over the left Held fence an.l the first homer of the nenson was warmly welcomed by the taaeniMsd fan of the Huh. Perdue was out. Doyle to Hr.odgrns. Sweeney filed to Becker, one RUM. Bnodgreas tiled to Kaiser In the Slghth, Murray fouled tn Klln(r. Bsoksr filed out to Kaiser. NO rtl'N'S iiinpliell was safe on aocnnd on Ds VOre error In left Held In the elwhth. Campbell went to third on Wilson muff. The play was close. Hush Campbell sufe after a desperate slide. Miller singled t" centre, scoring I'ainvibell. Kaiser out, Wilson to Snod- grass, Miller solng to second. Miller out. Mat hew on to Ilemoir to Sbafer. ... er safe on first. Spratt Singled to left. Houer on second. McDonald fanne I, One run. HOrSOg Mnttled :o centre In the ninth. Shafer tl .Ml out to Cnmphetl. Wilson MoCormlok struck out. batted for itoCorsiiok filed out to Maths waon, Sweeney. NO RUNS, The final score: ft.H.E.
allowed sn si cash salsa Ws pa, Irtifht snd K K
be m.
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.Ireet Park Sow Allaedourt'ortUndt slurs, open atiird
Milk Chocolate Covered AMorted Nat Clastert A
eel.ct.d aatertmtnt of rour favorl4 euta baaahee tesstker -aad rasu'.s.a is a thick, rtoh coatef our rrtmlum Milk
ruvnu sua
39c
ersaiaj until II eieulug mull I f o'clock. o'elork.
54 2
BARCLAY CORT1ANDT
fl ft
ARK ROW & NASSAU
3a06:6AOWAY veer rHi"i
TJi
Tht specified wclant la tack lattanv baleens las seatslser.
MEMORIAL
NOTICES.
SLOAN'S. in lerlng memory of BVA BRADLEY SI..IASK. brlaved wife of W. O. Hloaii. wh etciuai real April
tutrd
is, mil.
L08T, FOUND AND REWARDS. uiu. eosn.llea sst.'h WSJ Ui ..ii.FT.1 ii M.jr-ii- .
II
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Tiid
muriwa st. tad
HELP WANTED
and cksla..
MALE.
Sssaal
myg would,
thi
J
Capt. E. J. Smith ot Titanic, the World's Biggest Ship AHRflr-
UI.IUII-
orhlla nr III- -
nuniL ui uLn
i
I
l
HER COMMANDER
--
-
OLD MAN OF SEA"
the bad trouble at tba atart baeauaa of bar graat auction. Aa aha 1 bwrtac bar prer tbara waa a eouod aa If of a mountain battery balng abargid and a nab at pabaaagara to tba port rail followad. i
waa dte- -
ataamablp paaaad out Into tba stream aba bad Aa tba blc 46,000-toBaikal tba watat Between baraalf and Ua quay to aucb an aslant tbat aaran fasts bawaara wttb wbleb tba American liner Naw York waa moorad bad aaappad and tba Naw York waa drifting helplaaaly, atarn Brat, toward Ua n
Ttanle.
Tba btggaat raaaal afloat reverend bar angtnaa and la a faw minutes bar band way waa stopped and tuga tbat bad ruabad ta tba Naw York pre-- , ranted a bad amaab batwaaa tba Unara. Tba TlUnle waa tba largaat ablp afloat Sba waa nearly 1,000 tone ' greater tbaa bar alatar ablp, tba Olympic, aad, Ilka bar, waa 100 feat longer feet In tba beam then tbalr neat rlvale. tba waa 811 8 feet loag, 01 toaa register aad bad a displacement aad 4 feet deep. She waa of fMOO toaa. At tba ease time aba waa a floating marvel of luxury and carried literally a towatal of people Ms. The TMaale wai Sfteeo tori 8
t
The floor, were named toe bottom, dou- -
TITANIC COMPARED
bottom, pad platee, lower orlop, WITH TWO TALLEST middle, mala, eeteon. upper, BUILDINGS IN WORLD. promenade, upper promenade, boat and platform. oompeae ean deeka and eatre With ofneare aad erew numbering Ho. the Tltaale waa. capable of oarrytng 1 t.eae to Ma peaeengera eabla aad steerage, the wee built to be tbe leat ward la alee, apoed, power and eee luxury, aad It weald lake a powerful imsgiaation to conceive tbe and deUII tor comfort and luxury and pastime on tbe great ablp. Its interior more closely reeombles s hap hotel, with heavy balustrsded wide stalrwsye. elevatora running up and down for nine storlee; Ite great saloons snd restaurants. Its miniature theatre, equaab and tennla courts, pools and Turkish bath-- mlmmlnr I,, mmi amnkln room, aard grooms and beautiful music rooms, ana aecxs e even on the top of Its 'miniature golf links t IN COMMAND Of ADMIRAL SMITH OF WHITE STAR PLC IT. Capt. Smith, bar commander, the admiral ot the White Star fleet, was In command of her sistr snip, the Olympic when she made her mafdea voyage to j MstrutmlUaa 8. Titaolr. Woslmrtk Bull Alas. Vet. n,c. M2H Naw Torn and also when sne collided weak tbe BrlUrh "uiter Hawks la tbe Judged through bs from the fact that Solent last September. The Tltanlo was launched at Belfaat this arrangement of bulkheads the huge wss vessel considered unslnkabls. Key at last year. J. Plerpont Morgan, who was tbe guest of Lord Plrrte, chalr- - IT CONTAINED THE LAST WORD i and managing director of the White IN REOAL FURNISHING. lane, and J. Bruce Iemay, chairman Two suites on the Titanic were K330 of tbe International Mercantile Marine each for the single trip. These apartCompear, witnessed the launching. Sin. ments, which were called the Hegel thaslaetlc crowds, lining ths banks ot Suit, were Just abaft the grand cm- tbe River Lallan, cheered heartily as ths panlonway on the B deck They con big veaael took the water. sisted of sitting-roomsleeping chambathe and wardrobes, with a tORT AND DIVIRSIONS OF A bers, garden," "front a wide private promeWINTER OR SUMMER HOTEL. nade extending the whole length Among tbe attraction on the Tltanlo euite and having Its own sea rail.of the trere Turkish and alectrio baths, swim-- . The occupant of one ot tlvese suites mtag pools, tennis courts, trill room, sun could omoke, read, loll, exercise or do partus, winter gardens, palm eourts, se he chose on his own desk with all ayaeneriam and? a sports deck. The the privacy he could enjoy oa his own squash reequete courts wa, as good as plaasa st bis horns. any that eouM be found aehoro. It was Tbs construction of the Titanic waa 'thirty by twenty feet la slas snd carried out under the supervision of Alex; up through the middle of decke ander M. Carlisle, general manager of aad P as high as tbe mala, or K Harland a Wolff, ths Belfast shipbuilddeem A ooeek waa aboard to leach ers, whose distinction In ths ahlpbulld-Inthese who could not play. craft Is suoh that he has been mad tmeb stateroom bad Its own tub with a Privy Councillor to ths British mon aS kmda of water, There was a ser- arch. Mr. Csrltsls is a modest msn vants' ball for the valets, maids and about alxty years of sgs snd has had ether servant of tbe voyagers When more than forty years' experienoe as a tbap were not actually engaged about naval constructor. tbe a arsons of their employers, servants When he was In this city on a brief were expected to remain in this hall visit In Jury, 1110, he was enthusiastic ' though they were travelling for big ships. There was, tie esld, precBy lass arrangement the dlfaoultlee that isely no limit to the else a ablp oould have soma times arisen aboard ship be built, but he oould not do all that he wbea a valet waa mistaken for ale mas- wished In thst direction because he had ter ware to be avoided. to consider channels snd doc j. In deAnother (eaturs was an old Bngllih signing slss hs was limited only by high chop bouss with backed stalls of barber conditions and in ths matter of The arbors In ths palm spsed by the willingness of the travel black oak. garden were another novelty. They ling public to pay the cost ot It. were artificially contrived with vine NOT DIFFICULT TO HANDLE, amid bank of real flowers. AID CONSTRUCTOR. sitting-rooms In soma of the suites The It was a ml tabs. Mr. Csrllsls then v ers as large as 1415 feet. The restaurant aas larger than that lit the Olym- ssld, to suppose thst a big ship waa They answered the pic and had a novelty In the ahape of hard to handle. halm very readily, he declared. ' a private promenade deck on the starWhen Brooklyn Bridge was building board Ills It led to a reception room Mr. Carlisle crossed the East River on Where B0U and hosteeass could meet process of con- their xueals before going into ths res- one of the cables then In stiuctlon. taurant. Mr, Carlisle was hare on the Olympic gom Ides of ths Immsnslty of tbs she mads her maiden trip. great vsssei can be gained from a few whenughout"1hat voyage he waa warmly n her double bottom alone Thi figures. congratulated on the way the great vesInches In there were iOO.OOO livete, 1 sel, the building of which he had cardJgiaeUi snd ths weight of thsm ried out, had behaved, especially the amounted to 170 tons Ths plstee In the storms that vexed her path on herla first bottom weighed 4 4 ton, each and Journey across .the ooeaa. Speaking wore ail feet long. uld then of the Titanic, he aatd he The etern frame weighs 70 tons, ths also accompany her on her maiden rueYer 100 tons, snd the boss , arms voyage. tons' aft snd 44 tons forward. The 1 Ve N. Orgeat beam In her was d feet long CANADIAN LINER MEETS 4 tons. more Thrss weighed then and million steel rivets wars uesd in binding 100 MILE ICE FIELD. her massive platss, and tbs total weight uf them waa 1100 tons. LIVBRPOOL, England, April 15 The The Titanic has nlns steel decks. The Canadian Padflo Bleamehip Company's Itnsr Empress of Britain which lert S' hull la divided Into thirty water-tigcompartments, ths doors or which oould John. H. B., on April I arrived here lo be simultaneously closed by throwing! day and reports having encountered aa aver a lever oa tba bridge. Some Idea cs Ssld ot a hundred mile in extent af MS) da mag done bp tbe aolilalea map wbea three days out from Halifax.
tive
s,
n
g
first-clas-
s-
-
NELDJYjraOPS
af the mishap la iba Tltaale. espreeaed the opinion that the ship g In no Immediate danger. He based hta pinion on the facto aa brought to hla mention "The extent ef the Initirtea ta the hip," he esld. "depends on tbe epeed at which aha waa travelling. Inasmuch aa Iba Titanic l equipped with the bell en ho apparatus which give warning of the proximity of Iceberg, and the lee-berg always atve almospherlo wamlni
Captain of the Titanic Known On Judge's Order, Axe Is Used as Skipper Who Tool on Doors of Chicago Armory No Chances. Where Democrats War.
-
The TlUnle left Sonthempton tut Wednesday on bar maiden Toy ago ar Mr York. Ska had than 1,800 paeeengere. UO of (hem In the first
.
CONVENTION HALL
UXURY
Floating Palace Fifteen Stories High, Housing 3,500 Cabin and , Steerage Passengers
f
POLICE CHARGE ON
CALLED "GRAND
AND MARVEL IN SIZE
'
ifit.
11,
000,000 TITANIC, WORLD'S BIGGEST SHIi
m.
l
afbil
MoypAT,
a
m
TudbVsWd hamntM
by a drop la not Utah tbe Titans
af ita
tar. I
avv1aj at eeyl
iraieaa tbe forward end af the was entirely smashed in, shs sat any danger. Aad avail hT ward end she aid be gmaeked. tb ships are so aiaxflitJed, bulkhead but lUeohir. tbat rente sheotd float. However, th Tltaale must bapai leaning badly, or sa a seat a wlreleea can for ga be In
tat
$25 Spring Suits
p.
The honor bestowed on Cant Edward chioaoo. April ii. with i.ooo John Smith, when he waa selected to llcemyn aurroundlng the Seventh Regicommand the Tltanlo and taken from ment Armory and fOO special deputy gmfl gaUagxmtl' the Ornrepte far that purpose, was con sheriffs uadsr command of Chief Depsidered remarks)! amona staa.inae.in uty Charles Peters storming th door commanders, for It la a deep sea tradl. for admission, Col. Daniel Morlprty, The daintiest and dressiest suits in tlon, that a captain' career I ended with 110 National Guardsmen, had th vogue, snd prettily suitable for a dozen building entry barricaded refused and when his veaael meet with serious misto ell partle when the time for conhap. varying occasions, yet reduced toThe Olympic Had twice met win, ml.. vening tho Democratic County Convenmorrow to $15. to feature in our series tion arrived fortune with Capt. Smith a her comof After-East-er Both th militiamen and the police mander, but the White Star Company Reduction Sales. The knew that they were Justified In placing were backed by court order. One Style Pictured every rellaao on ths man who has guardsmen were upheld by a restraining rulsd over the flneet steamships in the order Issued fcy Judge M L. McKlnicy Every Favorite Fabric last night against the ruling of County world. Judge E. Owens who appointed In truth, they were made to sell at $25 Capt Smith has been In the earvloe FlectionJohn Commissioner Caameokl, a of the Waste Star for thlrty-ela-years. and, if anything, are worth more th&n to organise the convention a i w He baa commaaded the Republic the Th battle for control of the conven that. A choice of every favorite style E.J. SMITH, old Republic, nek the one the Florida tion was ai heduled to be waxed on Okie by the Roger Hum van forces and TITAN I in popular Spring fabrics, including sank off Nantucket Ibfhtshl- p- th Bri- aide on the other hv the tannic, ths Oermanlc and the Majestic. followers. Bedford cords, serges, striped novelties He brought over the Baltic when ehe "Upon advloe of my attorney I have and mixtures, in severe or tailored waa tbe blearest vessel on the eeaa, then decided to Ignore Judge McKtnley' nr- "I tbe Adriatic and lastly ths Olympic, in der." said Sheriff Michael summer. styles, each bearing the latest trimming the White Star service he Is known as will act ae If the order had never been Issued end will follow th Instructions or tailored innovation, at $15. "Ths Old Man." ui v.vuniy Judge Owens. FORTY YEARS HAS HE POL At noon Judga Owens appeared at th A'terationt FREE Armory end demanded that ths doors LOWED THE SEA. SALE AT ALL THREE STORKS Tbs total loas of one great steamship, the Atlantic aad back, whsa on Feb. 11 bs opened. On being refused be ordered years more forty is It rather than tbs secret of whose fsts has never ehe left the Mersey, New York bound, AsCapt. Smith first went to sea. the police to break In ths door been revealed by the Jealous sea, has with a crew of sixty and fourteen cattle sineswas sistant Chief of Police Scheuttler. with apprenticed He an to ths sailor men naesenarera. aa an axe, began haltering down th door. stood on the debit column of the White been posted old bouse of Andrew Olbeon A Son, Judge Owens arrived on the eoene a Slss line since 1X93. That was the giant Long after the Naronlc had freighter, Maronlo, which disappeared as overdue, the Rritlsh eteemsmp Cov-at whoaa lumber ships sailed between New few minutes before noon. When Capt. arrived Orleans and Mobile and Liverpol. His Ootlgan refused to open th door th from the eastward winter track across entry, out of Fernandlni. March J. Her captain reported first command waa th Bsssls Qlbso pyi Juage asm: the Atlantic some time after Feb. 11 or Bremen on March 1 when in latitude that pretty ship in her day, that mad gk "Tou ar tbe flrst mam I shall gt." that yeer, end not one of the seventy-fou- r north, longitude west, he had passed a Then turning to Assistant Chief of Po Mi and IS We 14th 8t root -- New York souls aboard her ever was found a white lifeboat, capslsed snd elmost fortune for her owners. He roae rap-- lice Sehuettler.'be comtnanded: -- fujto" atwat-Broo- klyn to tell the tale of her destruction. submerged, upon the bow of whtdh be Idly, and after having had command "Break M6-4- II down doors." the StrPat Broad Newark. N. J. Becr.us thought he had been able to resd ths of sailing veaaela joined the White Star the only traces of the Schuettler railed tor an axe, sod with later the as fourth officer. dt that ever were found subsequent- word "Nsronlc." Twelve hourswhits the aid of policemen hacked down the aMIShan. life, passed another Coventry ly were two lifeboats, one overturned had He la tall and of weight proportionate door. The soldiers were drawn up at and the other empty and floating awaah host. Hdlng right aide up, but half filled to hla height. His white hair, white attention Inalde, but offered no resistwith the waves, stssmship men and wifh wafer. him called ance Behind Aohnetfler were 100 poTELL whiskers and mustache-maLIFEBOATS marine underwriters could do no more DERELICT by voyaged frequently licemen. A hundred policemen entered who have those thaa build conjectures ss to the eudden TR AQEDY'S OUTLINE. the hall with Judge Owens. Election Old hi car "Tbe Orand under Han of Commissioner blow that had overwhelmed the big vlslbls Anthony Caaraeokl and Th name Naromc" wae plainly Except , Sea." mishaps ship In mtdocssn. the the with ths snchor see wss a other officials. Caarnsokl, ths Republion this boat and thsrs PROBABLY BLOTTED and oars lashed together drag- - Olympic and ths trouble at tbe opening can Election Commissioner, then preOUT BY ,.r voyage of the Tltaale. he pared to call the Democratic Conveneine over the stern. This Indicated to at tbe COLLISION WITH ICEBERG. Rtfitttrtd AsfssfiaW tion to order under Me instructions avaa of the Coventrj's esptaln that has never hod an accident. Either an Iceberg or a derelict, they the read Mara) occupants of ths CART. SMITH NAVIGATOR WHO from Judgs Owens. With the police a Crnfsr been Btif hsd who those agreed, had been responsible for blot guarding the door and eoartered second lifeboat had encountered heavy NEVER TOOK CHANCES. ting; out tne naronic, for there waa weather snU that ths sea anchor had hall, the delegates, who through the Capt. Smith waa saaentlally a careful had been warring since nst ths remotest possibility of a Are been hove overboard as a despairing efA. M ware destroying her, and no' other craft, fort to keep ths craft's heed to bhs sea. navigator. He never took chance. He neemit tad to enter. entering bapan delegate Th niara where the Coventry bad attended himself to every detail of bis which ralirht have been In collision the After was with her, wes either reported missing elxhted the two lifeboats wse about M0 duty, and never left to others what he the hall Ufa Firs Department or came to port with ths tals of dis- miles southeast of Newfoundland, far ought to see to himself. He never did called and amaahed dowa the other armory. Liver between aster. below the winter tracks what it waa the duty of pome one else doors of ths Ths disturbance which tor a time The Naronlc, Capt. William Roberts pool snd Naw Tork snd almoat In the eome one was at tats post. commanding, wss the first twin screw path of New Tork steamers bound for to do If thatIs threatened to end In blodahd finally Southampton. England, His horns at freighter to be built. She was s steel Gibraltar. How far the two boats hnd resulted ta two convention, on by Oh Pure bright Silk, trunk tops and soles ul $1.00 force and th othar steamship of ,5M tons, with twn sets ef drifted from the Naronlc after they had and be lias a charming wire and a Lisle. Value 11.50. engines capable of developing 3,1V horse been haetlly put out In some moment pretty daughter fourteen year old. Hla by tli followers of Roger o. gnilHvan, power snd was 470 feet long, with 53 feet of disaster could only be a matter of hoiitry is reading and hs kept himself National Democratic Committee. The beam. Built for the rattle carrylne speculation. The see covered Its secret liosely posted on both th American and victory. If there eras any, went to ths Pure bright Silk, extra double welt tops. 1.00 faction, who captured 0 trade, ehe had made acveral trips across well and has held It to, this dsy KngUah politics as wstl aa other forms Silk soles. Lisle lined inside the sole. Value 91.75. leaderUnder the hall. convention the . ahfej of news. John HoaUton, Chairman of the n ship Ths other officer of the Titanic In- Cook ofCounty Democratic Central ComPure bright Silk, $1.00 double welt Titanic !s now reported, have been In no, IMMENSE ICEBERGS way unurual. The Titanic Is reported st clude: Hiirawon, W. F. N. O'Loughlta: mittee, the aMIIvari delegate went to tops, Cotton soles or Lisle lined inner soles. Very clear Burgeon, E. J. Simpson; about CL48 north and M.14 west. The Ico Assistant With two aete of delegates DROVE CARMANIA FAR and sheer. Value JU.50. Also Pink, Blue. Canary and H. W. McElroy aad R. L. another hall. fields as fnr to the Stat Convention at as that are about Pursers, ltarkor; Chief Steward, Albert Latimer. elected a few staple shades in this lot. SOUTH OF HER COURSE 41.48 north and south 60.40 west. In that vlln-ItPeoria, April W, the convention there also one of the hrdrographlc msps will be obliged to decide which faction 3So 3 eight derelicts, but thst number 2,400 HAD BOOKED $1.00- - Extra values In plain Lisle la rightfully seated. t. H. Wellaford. a Liverpool shipowner, isshows not unusua ' After tb police entered the armory fl Thread Stockings, light and medium weights, in Tans, who reached New York yesterday on the OUTWARD PASSAGE Reporta from shipmasters of lee packs ON Octlgian. who commanded Oapt. Thomas Black and White. Value 50c and 75c. finer Carnuuila, gave an Interesting ac- observed en route between British ports militiamen and who refused to let fl TITANIC FOR SATURDAY. the y of the Icefields the sli p and New Vork showed tS In April of count enter, waa arrested snd taken delegates on year 3 35c Banks last 13 aa against Grand up to the 12th $1.00 Black Lisle Thread Stockencountered oft the to Juojge Qwen'a otmrnbsre. il of ths present month. The last report Thursday. was stated at the Whit Star of. It ings. Cobwebs, regular and trunk tops. Linen heels and 1! "I have crossed the ocean nearly be-a wss of April 11, from Capt. Dow of flee hare this morning that TOO passen EXPERT NIXON SAYS toes. Value 75c. the Cunard liner Carmsnla. lie advised gers had booked fl rat --class staterooms hundred Urn as." he said, "but never TITANIC COULD FLOAT fore have I aeen ice eo far south and in by wireless from 41.5S north and M.tO on the Titanic for hsr first sailing from Lisle Thread Laces in a large variety 80c west: "Passed numerous Icebergs and such great quantity. EVEN BADLY CRUSHED. thla port, whlob waa eehedulod for next Ice floes." of patterns our own design- s- in light and medium "An Interesting feature of, the field," extensive second-clas- s Saturday. 600 the In only The report conberths of unusual Ice he continued, "wss the fact that the weights. Value 75c. , Lsswis Nixon, when kef armed at his sea. although presenting a surface like ditions was from Capt. Jacobsen of ths t.ad been enaxdted. and mors than US i i steamer Armenian, who eent this pssaagea In tho Bast fifty third street. home. Ho. glass, was moun'.slnotfs. A thick fog British message 43 20 April 7 from north and necessitated frequent atop, and when 48.W west: "Saiw several large and the fog temporarily lifted bergs were Icebergs smsll 42.M and latitude st port and discernible off both longltuds 4!).3 Heavy Held Ice. IndiThe moot Impressive featuros cations Ave. waStRiS. thVt are there is an unusual were the numeroue 'growler' large qusntlty large and smsll Icebergs and bergs that had melted on top until they field and ofpack Ice. The southern limit were almost awash. In bad or falling of the Ice appears to extend from latilights they were extremely difficult to 42.34 4I.M, running In longitude to tude dlaoem, and very dangerous because an direction. Changed the of the great qusntlty of ice below ship's course south to clear the Ice." waterltne. "The Carmanlx, after spending moot pasMGR. MoNAMARA DEAD. of the day trying to navigate a sage through the field, decided to put passsge to s msde she Thus about. Broeklya CleraryassB ths south and avoided further damage." Mated to illness Following a Fall. The people at St. Joseph' palish in LWYDS REINSURE Brooklyn heard with grief of th TITANIC FOR HALF death of Mr. Patrick J. MONamara, Vicar General of th Diocese of OF LINER'S VALUE. senior Long Island, at Amity villa, leat evening. , t who was LONDON. April 13. Lloyda agents Father are reinsuring the Titanic, year oid. slipped on the tee on the step here ot th church In Jan.mry. Th fall but In doing so indicate their belief In caused a stroke of paralysis. ' He died- In Oar craftsrsen utilise the same amount the gravity of th situation by demandStat.-r.-- ' AmltyvlUe, Sanitarium of labor ia Us making of these suit ss ing snd receiving a premium of M p- - the In County Clara, Ireland, Father Burn they do oa highrr priced gar inenls. aad Derbies & Soft Hata, $3 6V $4 Spring oent. was In St. Francis educated Vtc.Sanie.ra our designers outline the aesrest laotlei A member of a prominent firm of unXavler'a In thla city and St. Mary' Colsay. ia their fertile braias. aad our burers derwriters, whsn Informed of the dis- lege, Baltimore. He, was ordained by said: aster to the Titanic eeieti tae oaest teaturua from Hlhon KoU-- in 1870. Pope I,eo XIII. gave em Stl Unwl.u port, of HUa reaches Uonslnor and X. the world' Mm the Ilus "Even if the Titanic represeaUtive giviprothoiiotary Mm asjssi on 4ostollc, mills, so these su.ta are msde (Mr BesokV to calculate created will owners bave her 1ST HrasSssi. s an at.. ruiis ia same ths leagth of tints sad a loss of at least t7U),0UO. but It aha. ng- him the prlvllexe on certain to wear the miter and robe Jf aw rath at. Uppustte 011? Hall. require tbe same atU ntiun ai a totai lOPg It will bo an become the "World's Beet." Weksvr The vessel a blshofi. serious mntter For the last fkfteen year he had been Her hull Is to build choice selection of new aad cost tlO.OUU.OOD r . Joseph St. of the at valued, fcr Insurance renounced patterps (or S pri.ig, 000,000. " ..nj P. and aak you I "Then, there are all sorts of missee these suits at this u.n. cellaneous matters to be tken Into account for disbursements an. fnr pas sag money and freights paid In ad Men Young Men vance, a well as for stores, bairKuxe I li suppose I V3l( things. not do j and other Tear what this toa waa Ilka In the owner ar covered to the extent of Tas Stares. 1 1 past, drink It now. The same more than fv.ac.ono or at tho utmost 4j cs 7,5O0.0W." amfMaaVTaV'
"
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21
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Loss ofNaronic and All Aboard Also Probably Due to Iceberg
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Only One Uncr Has Reported Extraordinary Number of Bergs in Steamer Lane.
CEYLON TEA Double
Aecordlig to reports received by the United 8!..'s ilydrographlc office, at No Tt Broad th Ice packs and WbJti gas fields in tbs atesmsr laas, wbrs th
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_,,-_-_1\NIG IN PERIL
ON LEAVING PORT of Giant Liner Breaks Hawsers of the New York, Which Floats Helpless.
TUGS
PREVENT
COLLISION
Catch the New York with Ropes Just In Time and Drag Her Away LIKE THE OLYMPIC ACCIDENT Suctlon Theory Shown to be Correct -EnthusIasm as the TItanIc Bo gins Her Malden Voyage
Spacial Cable to THE NEW YORK Tuma LONDON April 10 -As the great hew White Star Uner TltanJc was 1ea.v1ng Southampton to day on ber malden voyage to New York a. dis aster was narrowly averted and dramatiC proof ot the correctness of the mucb debated theory ot suction was given. AI; the Titanic passed from her berth out..to the open stream or Soutbamp ton water she sucked the water be t'W'!'.en het'Sel" and the quay to sucb a degree that the stra n broli: thD strong hawsers with which the American liner New York wa.s moored to the quaYside and tor some time a. collision between the two vessels looked I kely The New York began drifting help lessIy stern first toward the Titan!o A witness on the shore describing tbe incident. says The crowd watching from the quay was breathless with excitement The people climbed into rallwa~ trucks to see wbat was going to happen As Boon a.s the New York broke loose the Titanic re<>ersed her engines and in a brief space ot time stopped dead and began to back. Then the tilgs Neptune and Vulcan raced a.t the New York caught her w1th ropes by ~e bows and stern and tried to lug l1er back to her place It was difficult to tell the dIstances looking broadside thut there was not much room to spar(, between the N av. York s stern the Titanic s side However no one In uniform wae ~ed The Master ot the Port 1Mtll a. megaphone stood on the quay tssu Sng orders across the water as calml~ as 11 he were ba'\ Ing tea. He had the New York pulled back to the quay and there moored securely Then he let the T!tnnlc go Otl agaltl toward the open water She had backed rlght a.way toward the deep wa.ter dock whtle the New York was being tugged about llke a naughty chlld Q
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Pair. .U&,lJt17 WanDel' Thandan Friday. probably fall" llKbt. variable win" p'l'8r f\lll w....th.r
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NEW YORK.
CAUGHT BY VOLCANO'S FIRE. Sea CaptaIn Says Hundrod. of Pan sma IndIana Were Killed MOBILE Ala. April 10 -HWlCrelle or persons hs.ve geen killed and whgle 1n dIan Village, swept away by the eruption of Chlrlqua. Peak nea." Booas del Toro Panama according to Callt OIBvlk ot ths Un ted Fru t ateamer Fort Morgan which arrived here to day Capt Olavlk Bays the eruption occurreel on April I) whlle the Fort Morgan was berthed nesr Bocas del Taro Reports ot the large casualty Ust were brought from the Immediate scene to Bocas del Taro by refugees who escaped the on rushing lava The Captain saYs he watched the eruption on April 5 until he put to sea Soon after the eruption BayS th~ Captaln the Fort Morgan was caught by a great current and tore at her moorings When we got Jnto the open sea great rocks were sUcking out of the water in places where before we had na.vlgated the vessel Small Isla.nds could be seen all around the shore Cblr!qua Peak as far as is known has never shown volcanic activity be[ore
STAB BASKET BALL PLAYER. General FIght When One of St Ga brlel It Team Fell, Cut In Back lU valry over a game of basket ball resulted yesterday afternoon In the stao bing of .Joseph Maher 16 years old of 629 Second Avenue a member of the basket bil.l team of St Gabrtel s Ro man Catholic ChUrch In East Thirty seventh Street The stabbing it Is said was done by a. supporter ot the rival team an aggregatlon of young athletes who I ~ e near the Hudson RIver In the neighborhood of Fiftieth Street Yesterday s game which was the third of a series was played In the City Play Ground In E eventh Av,enue between Fifty ninth and SL"'CUeth Stre t Both of the teams had one game to their credit and the third wa.a tc) decide the champion ship The last gathe It was said had been rough all the part of the St GabrIel s team and the west elders wltb plenty of team enthusIast!! had mnde threats to get even The St. Gabriel e team won by a close Bcore and wI en the game wall ended a general fight ensu"d nnd Maher who was In the m dst of his ene mif's fell Blood flowed from his bac!e! and he was taken lO Roosevelt Hasp ta on the shoulde s of h s team nates The other players and rooters fled before the po Ice arrived b Maher was able to give a goOd descrIption ot his QSsail lint and It s belieHld that an arrest will Boon be made The boy S condit on Is not serJous 4
MT. McKINLEY ASCENT FAILS
Returned Fairbanks ExpeditIon Old Not Seo Parker-Up 10 000 Feet FAlRBANKS Alaska ,Ia Ashcroft B C A[Jrll 10-The Fairbanks rimes Mount McKinley expedltlon. wbJcl1 eft here on Feb " returned last nlght hav Ing been unsuccessful In the attempt to scale the mountain The party succeeded In attaining nn ele a t on of 10000 t",et on the no h side of the mountain east of Peter G acler Furtl p ooress "as barred by preclp ltous ice cl ffs aDd ac\< of suppllea while the lateness of the sea on made t Impract cable to renew the at em t by another route Members ot the partv belle e tt c ascent feas b e but not along th" rldl:: No b no ~ as seen of the exp e a t on ec] by Prot Herschel Parke r ot Co u b a I nl vers ty and Belmore Brown 0 rae na \\ ho left Se"ard ear} In Fe~rL1a The expedlt on was compos d f ruur men-Geof""e S Le \"1 !ormc.:r1} n sael ate engineer In the Un ted Sta es Tecla By Wlreles. matlon Servlce at Yuma Ar z Mnrtln There are about I 300 passengers Nasb of Da\\son Y T Anson McCabel aboard the Titanic of whom 350 are In '\\ ho worked with the Governmecnt ur ey last Summer n tbe FaIrbanks dlstrlc~ tbe first cabin J Bruce Ismay Chair and Jack PhilliPs. a noted dog m sher It was the ntenUon of the exped t on to ma.n of the WOlte Star Line Is malt confirm the story of Tom J ovd who 1ng the trip and occupies a 5\1lte de led an expE'dlt on In 1910 that he r ached the summit Of the mounta n oy mak ng luxe the ascent from the north sl.. e Among the passengers Is Clarence Moore of Washington who came to see the Grand National run Wh Ie here he bougbt fifty couples of bounds Cornelius Leary Accused of Demand drawn from the best packs In tbt: Ing Money from Hotel Man North of England They wUl be shipped Capt Cornelius Leary of the Astoria to America shortly for use with tho Loudoun hunt In Virginia of 'Which station and Policeman Otto '" Reich of tho same precinct Were suspended Mr Moore has been appointed Master , esterday by Police Commissioner Waldo for a term of three years Nr Moore after Lou s Epps and his wlte Amelia, who Is usually one of the judges at the "ho keep a hotel In North Beach had International Horse Show at Olympia made affldav ts that the had gl n is not com og 0 er for this year's Leary S" and Rel~h S10 and later after t'etuslng other demands for money by show Leal"} that EpP3 had been arrested and Mr and Mrs Is dor Straus are re turning home after "Interlng at Cap fined S50 for v olatlon ot the excise law Sergt. WIl lam ].I 0 Connor of the Mer Martin IncidentallY Mr Straus has cer Street Station. who has beE'n suspended since March 29 was trie d b) Deput) Com been Investigating the currency ques mIssioner D I on } esterday on charges tIon In Europe for the purpose of de preferred by CapL Dominick Henr) The rlving infonnation that wlll help us Captain found 0 Connor asleep n the ette Hotel in the early mot'n ng Qf in neW legislation for reformIng our Lafa March 2S) Later 0 Connor left the sta. curren y Mr straus who Is en tlon wlthou~ perm ss on saying he .... as and was going home Decls on '<Vns joying es:ceUent health says he does sick reserved when 0 Connor sald hE> had felt not look tor any great revl'<'al of dizzy and had ente ed the hate fo II. cup busine~s until after the Presidential of coffee falling asleep at a ta" e brfore It was served He said h" had been great! upset over the Une s of a daugh election. ter who has died since then Major Archibald Butt Is also a pas Commissioner Waljo got 9 letter vester J;enger He spent last week with bis da~ commending the work or h " depa t brother who lIes m Chester and ment. It was scnt bv the Taxpa ers Assoc at on of the Th rtv ~econd Wa d says he had a '\ ery pleasQ.nt holldu.y ln Flatbush and dea t w th the speedv but is glad to be getting home again arrest of the ilia} ers of Wa ter life er t;o the Flatbush Avenue haberdnsl e who Other passengers besides those men was shot In his shop tioned in yesterday's dIspatch to Doorman Charles J Knoepnel of the -THE NEW YORK TIMES are W T Stead Whitestone Station "as d missed from who goes to speak at the peace cele the force yesterday on charg-es of conduct unbecoming an off cer and lolat on of bration io Carnegie Hall on April 21 Robert W Daniel the Philadelphia the rules preferred b~ Capt. " II am F PeabOdy hanker who takes a champIon French bulldog whtcb he rec"ntly bought here CoL and Mrs ;1 J Astor Coutltess Rothes who is en route to join her husband and Mrs ;1 Stuart White. Search of the Aqueduct Camp FarIs l\1r and Mrs Henry B Harris are to Yield Trace of Her also on the Titanic. They have been tourmg In North Ati-Ica. Mr Harris said the only definJte theatrical ar Aque rangement he made here was tor Rose n ~orthern West Stahl B appearance in London In the ent out a general Spring of 1913 in Maggie Peoper the sixteen year Col and Mrs J .J Astor J E Widener and A G Vanderbllt joined the TlUUUc at Cherbourg
::en
ana
POLICE CAPTAIN SUSPENDED
GIRL LOST FROM VALHALLA
The escape or the Titanic recal s the r&m1llIng of the Tlta.Dlc" sister ship the 01)-mplc last Sept. 20 by the lIri Ush cru~er Hawke. The Olympic outgoing Was In Cowes Roads on tile north side of the Isle at Wight. The Hawke which was })asslng the Uner to starboard Was suddenly
THE WEATHER.
'rHURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1912-TWENTY PAGES
$100,000,000 PRIOE ON RAILWAY MERGER New Haven Must Spend This on Improvements, Says Foss. to Take Over Boston & Maine
ASKS FOR PUBLlC'S VERDICT HIs Plan Includes the Control of tho Roads by
a
Strong
Publlo
WHY CAPT BUTT WF.NT TO ROME. The real reason for the visit of PreSident Taft's AId to the Pope Is told In an InterestIng article in NEXT SUNDAY'S TIMES
TWO BRITISH LORDS TO FARM IN CANADA
ServIce Board
JUMPS TO HIS DEATH UNDER SUBWAY TRAIN
DR IRA REMSEN RESIGNS Johns HopkIns President to RetIre at the End of Academic Year S~t:~al 10
Tht: Nt:w York T_I BALTIMORE 1\ld April 10 -PrOf Ira Remsen Pres dent of .fohns Hopkins Unl versity since 1001 sent his resignation to the Board of Trustees this evening It was referred to a committee of the board It Is bel eved that the reSignation will be accepted Dr Remsen In a letter to the board intimated that he Is des rous of returning to is more congenial research work and he wUI retain his position as B N Baker Professor of Chern stry Dr Remsen has an international reputation for research In chemistrY He Is one of the or glnal members ot the Johns Hopkins Faculty headed by the late PreSident DanIel C Gilman Dr Rem.!!len said In hlB letter We are face to face with new prob lems which will require W1se consideration for many years to come It lB not to be expected that I Bhall be able to guide the policies whtch are to be Inaugurated tor a sufflclent length or time to Insure their ultimate succceS3 I therefore feel that they should be Intrusted to one hav ng a reasonable expectation ot long tenn of service The resignation Is to take effeat at the end of the present academic year /
FOR CITY COLLEGE STADJUM. Tract
Taxes, Says Earl's Son. Here to be a FruIt Orower OTHER NOTED SIr John
Hare and
PASSENGERS Lady
Hare
on
TheIr Way to Canada-George W
Vanderbilt ArrIves
With more than two thousand passen gers on ooarq of whom mors than nine hundred were in the first cabin the White Star lIne.r Olympic from South amp ton arrived late yesterday aftf'rnoon As the Olympic steamed Into Ne" York l:at'bClr her sister ship the Titanic started on her malden voyage from Southampton for this city Therefore the Ol:l'mplc has made her last trip to Nev. York as the biggest ship o.f oa.t Herearter she '" I 1 share that honor with ber 40000 ton sister shlo the Titanic Lord Hyde, son of the Earl or Claren don and bls brother n aw Lord Somers were among the most Interestlng passen gers on the b g I ner for they are leaving England to start I fe anew In Canada as fruit farmers The new taxes of Loyd George brought It about Lord Somers says Lord Hyde said that he expected to spend his lite In Canada. W th Lady Hyde nnd their two children he Is going to Plcl<;er ng a HUe town about twenty mUes away from Ottawa. Lord Hyde has bought a tann of about 200 acreS near Pickering Our Immigration !Ba!d Lord Hyde seems to be a part of the general ex odus from England This exodUS Is due to the present tax laws We shall go ba.ck to London now and then but we expect Canada to be OUI" home hence forth Lor/l. Hyde sall1 he Intended to become a. Canadian farmer and that fruit was to be bJs specialty Among other saloon ~seugers On t\ c OIy'ml>lo were Mr a.nd!!.in George "Vanderbl1t W 1I1a.m Ellis Corey S r John Hare the Engll!3h actor and Lady Hare William "Phi lips Secretary of tI e American Embass) In London J'.lrs Fred enc Coudert Count de la Forest Dlvonne Claude Cas mlr Perler a son of the late Pres dent of France and George VIlllers The big liner averaged near y twenty knots an hour on her ~ ay over and made the 2 889 m les In sIx days and on(' hour Mr Vanderbilt said that ne 1 ad been motoring vdth Mrs Vanderbl t and the r little daughter 'VI: JJ air. E Cor~ ex Pres!dent of the United Stales Steel Cor poratlon declined to talk to the reporters Sir John Hare ....-no Is on lis way to Ottawa., w\l1 be one at the judges of the amateur theatrical contest for the trophy offered by Earl Gre;o. ex Governor General ot Canada. This contest will bring to Ottawa amateur actors and ac tresses from all parts of Canada and Is one of the big events In the Dominion The contest begins next Monday Sir John was asked If he contemplated another American tour In the near future No I am afrBld not he answered For while I have not retl ed I have nearly done so and the stage wi I see \ ery little nore of me I have been act Ing for I early ~I ty years now and I think I have done my work I oh ... I al ways look back upon my American tours as among the happiest of ml life And of the tI ree that I have made the last Is now alreacly a pleasant memory nearly twe" .. y"ars ago (or It was In 1000 .n the Gay Lord QUex that I was last n America.. How Is Mr Winter? asked Mr Harp. When tol i that the venerable er tic was In good l:ealth 1I'Ir Hare expressed h s pleasure I had a long letter tram 1\ Inter not ong ago Mr Hare 8ald 1 thought I could dIscern a Bhake In the penmanship tor Ilke myself \\ Inter Is ow an old man 'Ii nter Is one of the Cew great dramatic crt tics of hie time He Is cer talnly the greatest of the American er t Ic,; If not Of nil of tl em Sir John :lal"- tl at he "as soon to cele bt;:\te his sixty eighth birthday " he the report"rs told him he did not ook his ye ... r he sml cd In apprccfat on of thc compliment. He said that he would spend some three weeks In OttBwa a d "ould then return to New York (or a 81 ort lsi In wllch he "a d he hoped to renew many old frlE'ndshlps How about the stage In New York? Sir John asked He "as told that In New York a new theatre opened nenrl) every week and that some times ne v stars seemed to come just as rast This made Sir John laugb heartily It was reported "hen t\ e liner arrl E'd that two or three of the passengers were sWlpected of being profess ona gamblers One of the men w 0 was po n ed out as a susllected professIonal card "ham wh .. n asked If the report was true hat moneY changed hands on t e way cross sal that all he had seen would not buy an acre ot Arl%ona desert land Ful er Chener) 1 :l'ears old a so re turned on the Olymp c He brought wi I 1m two small monkeys a pair ot big pigeons three dogs and a parrot Hu has been at school ln Europe Others cn the Ob mple re In~rsoll Amorl' Mrs J Herbert An l er~on Tlon as J Barbour Lleut E H Bale Mrs Frederick Benedict C S Battle Capt.. R .J Bentlnck. Mr and Mrs E D Brande gee Mr and Mrs Edmono. L Bro~ n i\T and Mrs R.. M Bull Capt. Walter B Cart wright Mre J B Cobb, Mrs Julian Co man Mr and Mrs. William Cre:.;hton Mr and Mrs David Dows Mr and Mrs M W Flournoy Mnlcolm Graham H W Flint Capt George Haml1ton Mr and Mrs Walter E Harrington Mr and Mrs G G Haven Jr Capt .John C Jamison Miss Mary Stuart Kernochan Mr and Mrs H R Kunhardt Arthur Lord Mrs Dlgby Maitland Mr and Mra J Franklin McFadden Dr Walter B Palmer Mr IUtd Mrs F H PrInce Mrs E A. Rains ford Mrs E Tower Re1l1, Mr and Mrs C!harles Richardson Grant B Schley Jr Mrs WllIoughby Smith Lloyd Warren and Gen B M. Whitlock.
of Ground CoverIng Two Blocks GIven by the CIty The long sou~ht much desired stadJ.um and ath eUc f eld for the College ot the City of Ne'\\ York was made finally pos sib e yesterday wben the Sinking Fund Commission voted unanl=ous]y to give to the college the tract ot ground east of Amsterdam Avenue extending from 136th to 138tb Streets coverlns two blocks A large etadium wlll be erected on the new n.,ld Adolph Lewisohn the banker has offered to donate $50 000 tor the p!.U' pose There was opposition to the plan of Fres d nt John H Finley ot the college for the stadium which Is now assured largely b~cau"e Park Commissioner Stov er objected to seeing the land pess from the Jurtsdlction of the Park Dellartment. It was the plan to haVe the college au tbontl s supervise the new 'field and Preslde'Dt Finley several wceks ago dedared that the development 01' the plot as proposed by the COllege In the end would meet the approva.l of These plans as PToposeadn~'ltr.i~t~Fo~~_e~~. pa.rslyolls Fin ey contemplate the c of cement or stone person~ on the "a'''~''
KILLED AT THE ANSONIA. Aged
MAY TURN TO HUGHES AS PARTY CANDIDATE
Woman Fell or Jumped from Hotel Window Mra Mary Levy eighty two yeMs old a widow who with her Son Isldor occu pled for many months apartments on the Herbert A. Sawyer of Boston fifth floor ot The AnsonIa., at Seventy Washington Leaders Say Roose'7 fourth Stx:eet and Broadway was k lied velt VictOry In Makes Springs from Platform Be- by a fall from a "Indow at her apart ments at 12 30 0 clock thlB morning Mrs Compromise Necessary fore Waiting Passengers. Levy played ca ds with trlends early In the evening and appeared to be In good spirits v. hen ber son said goodnight Hotel employes heard a noise In the DOUBT IF TAFT CAN WIN WIFE SEARCHING FOR HIM courtyard and an Invest ;:atlon re\ ea.led the body of the aged woman The pollee In the West Sixty eighth Street stat on Had Won Success wIth the Gorham reported that Mrs Levy elther fe I or New York s UnInstructed Delegation Regarded as Strategical Move to Jumped from the window Company but Suffered Nervous Swing to Justice Hughell Breakdown Through Overwork.
""ITO.s
SPRECKELS WILL VALID.
Draven Out of Britain by the New BOSTON April 10 -The creation at a Public Service Comm 5S on and the direct lease by the New York, New Haven & Hartford of the Boston & Maine RaUroad on condition that the New Haven spends Sl00 000 000 for improvements in and near Boston are suggested in a message to the 'Pub'lc to n gbt by Gov Eugene N Foss At present the New York. New Haven & Hartford contrOls the Bosto 1 & Maine through thc Boston Holding Com l>any The statement came from the Governor's otflce after many conferences between the executi'i>e and the officials of the two railroads and It Is understood that the proposItion ln general Is one whl~h the ra Iroad off'le1nls w1l\ favor In part the statement sa) a The transportatfoJl problems ot this State seem to me to haVe" reached a crlt leal sltuat on Our freight and passenger service Is notoriously poor and we are at a disadvantage as compared with oU er commercial dlstrl~ts and other Atlantlo ports Publ c sen Ico on the Boston & MaIne In particular has practically brok en down The Sta e exercises no real power of supervision and control over the railroads In my own experience as 0. manu 1acturer a longer time 0 rcqu red to d.e liver carloads of freight from Hyde Park to Lowcll than from Hyde Park to Chi cagO because of the circuitous 1'0 Iles nnd junction delays As a flrl!lt step toward better cond tlons I have asked the LegIslature to create a Public Sen; Ice Commission with broad powers of regulatIon and control over the railroads and other public serv lecs And now because the railroad situ at on is so urgent I ha e decided to go direct to the people of' the State for a wIde expression of popular sentiment on the tol ow ng question It tho Legislature createe a powe!'ful Publ c Service Commtsslon to control our railroad servIce then are the people really to permit the New Raven Road to leas!! the Boston & MaIne on the Ilonditlon they expend ,1oo 000 000 In the actual connection at the tracke on the north and Boutb at Boston makJng a tour track tun nel under Boston tor that purpoBe electrl fying all their oomblned trackage withIn the metropolitan area. and brlnglrig the whole system up to the highest standard of eff c enc~ 7 No such lease ought to be granted unless tho State f rst asserts Its power of regulation and creates a. commif3slon pow erful enough to enforce It r think the des gnatlons New York New Haven & Hartford and Boston & Malne should be abandoned and the name New England Lines substituted that this new corlloraUon should maintain general oftlces In Boston and that all new securities must be offered tor public sale In Boston on as fa.vorable terms as In New York I hope this railroad problem will re eel e Wide and Immediate dIscussion. eo that r may place be1'ore the Legislature some measure expressing the wishes of the people of the State
ONE CENT
A young man whose height and weIght ma.de h m a strIking figure stepped from beneath a staIrcase ou the downtown island platform of tho Subway at Grand Central Station and jumped onto the local traclq; just as a tra n was pulling Into the station not ten feet from where he jumped at 7 :!O 0 clock last night. There were manY persons on the station and cr es or fright arose as the man leaped off The train was Jolted to a. halt as rapidly as the brakes could check Its momentum but alreaay the wheeis of the flr-st car had passed over the mnn s body and from Its appearance afterward It was decIded that he might perbaps have struck the third rail a.nd been shocked to death before the train touched him Several hours afterward the dead man was Identlt ed as Herbert A Ss.wyer the Boston representatIve of the Gorham :\Innutacturlng Company sl1~ersn hs and It was earned 11 at when he sprang from the platto m his ou g wife an<l his brot er "e 0 s earching for him Sa" } er "as onl:l' tl Tty years old and h s sulc de Is "aid a ha e been the result Of a. ner ous brealtClo"n brough on b) the severe Viork "h c ad brought him from a m nor pos t on to head or his compan} s atta rs n Boston Tho Identlf cat on was made by W F ur nt ot 491) E ghth \ ven e Brooklvn wlo sad he "as nod trend of M Sa" } e and h s fa nl !\Ir Grnnt g name and address \\ere to on some papers In the dead man s and he "as not fled by tI e pQ,l check In the pockets a so overcoat left a t the and this clue ed to Mr SaViyer had hIs aeath tho nor enga.ged a Accord ng to recently had been an tarlum near ~ew York terday morning It Is ·~~~d:~~~~~~f,~;,~ notified his Wife of ,-. made an appolntm o clock at the was
Supreme Court of California Upholds Executors In $10000000 Contest SAN FRANCISCO Apt'll 10 -The Cnll fornla Supreme Court reversed a deels on oC the lower Court to day that had held nvalld the Claus Spreckels will In~olvln!; an estate ot 510000000 John D and Adolph Sprcckels had attacked the w 11 In the Superior Court. To day s decision Is a victory for R" dolph and Claus A. Spreekels They as executors claimed practically the entire estate under the trust created by the WI I less the bequest of $2 ()()() 000 to the wldo"", Mrs Anna ChrlsUana Sprecke s
I
E>
Henry SIegel Offers to Department Store Pure
PERHAPS CENT WAS A BRIBE.
PresIdent Steers Doesr. t Know but Glvcs Man Benefit of the Doubt Borough PresIdent Stecrs at Br.:>"klyn was puzzled yesterdal' when he received through tl " rna Is a. cent sent by a resl dent of Hempstead L I The coin was Inclosed "Ith a letter the ",.Iter of wh eh Bsked the Borough President to send him a permit to fish ln the Hempstead reser voir at the Brooklyn water ""arks There was nothing In the etter to Indl cate v. hether the cent was Intended to pay return postage or was offered as a bribe by the Hempstead angler Pres thnn dent Steers dec ded to give his corre was extricated from be spondent the benefIt of the doubt and and then It- waS" done only had been jacJced up by a- ... 111 not refer the matter to the Grand Jury In either Kings County or Nassau crew The work occasioned a hour delay In the service The body County was taken to the West Th rtleth Street !'otation v; here :Vrr Grant mMl" the luentl flca-Uon and later was remo ed to an ndertaker s whence It " 1\ be sent to hIs tormer home 8 Floral Street Newton 18 tho Youngest Member tho Su Highlands Mass a suburb of Boston Mr Grant refused to sav la.st night preme Court Bench where Mrs Sawyer and hel" brother In S~ dd to The New York T ItIU la.w were stopp ng He seemed unaware that the 1'amlly had dined together just WASHING .rON Apr 1 10 - Associate before Sawyer s death Mr Grant declared however that noth .Juetlce Charles E Hugh"", 01' the Su Ing except unstrung nerves could have preme Court of the United States ror driven Mr Saw,er to su c de He said he merly Governor of NeW York will be ,,0 had an enviable post with his compan} years old to morrow He s the ~ oungest and except for the strain ot 0 erwork was In go<>d hea.lth He sa.ld that he fre member of the Supreme Bench and with Quently mB4'-e business trips to this city the single exception of Oscar WUnder usually stopping at the Hotel Knlcker wood Is the youngest at all the men prom boeker and that It was there that Mrs Saw,er went looking tor him at first Not lnently mcntloned as a Pres dentlal pos Mr Underwood find ng him there Mr Grant said she alblllty In eIther party went to the Grand UnIon and there s the Justl~ B Junior by twenty f ve learned of hlg suiCide He said he be days lie ed that the sanitarium had notified Justice and Mrs Hughes wlll spend the Mrs Sa.WYer of her husband s absence day quietly to mo row and the Justice At the Grand Union however It was will attend the sittings ot the Supreme said tha.t husband and wife had met and Cout't The r <laughter Miss He en tha.t It was after d nlng together that Hughes returned to Vassar to day attcr Sawyer went to' his death an Ea"ter v1.elt. Their son Charles E Hughes Jr who Is now at Han ard did S~ 01 0 Thr Nrw Yor-" TI_I not get home tor the holidays BOSTON Aprll 10 -Herbert A. Sawyer was the manager of the Gorham Siver ware Companv In Boston and a welJ known huslness man He had been su( ferlng from nervous prostration which necE'ssltated his being taken to the Mul Giants' TwIrler Was Injured In the doon San tar um at WhIte plains N Y Subway-He Ac:cepts a Settlement on Monda} tor treatment Tuesda.y night his wife receIve/! ames Supreme Court Justlce Brady brought sage at her home that he had dtsap about a settlement yesterda.y In the $2<> pcared trom the sanitarium Rea Izlnghis condition she Immediately Icft for 000 damage aUlt brought by Louis Drucke New York Cltv "here she said she wou d a. pitcher for the Giants for Injuries BUS make her headquarters In the Grand talned while riding in the Subway on t nlon Hotel nt I she found her husbnnrl Oct 20 1910 Both etdes agreed on $.4 00 Sawyer was haunted by ths fear that witnout costs as satlsfac orv and the he would go Insane or dIe It was derided case was str cken from the calendar st a fam Iy conference that he should 1;0 1I-lacager- 1>lcGra... and Capt La r~ to Muldoon s and he was accompan ed Doyle were- n court prlm"d to e I h.:>'" there by his bro het' In law P D Ludy skillful a pltcher Drucke "ould ha c be of Newlon Highlands come It he hadn t been hurt ar.d When I left him on Monday night he phys ctans were ;:>re ared to test! fv was In splendid spirits Bald Mr Ludy the ruptured musc.les and hardened 1 to night and I felt convinced he wou d ments with wh ch the oung sl> ( tpr Is "oon recover his health Buttertng were probably Incur:lbl Mr Ludv returned home to day With the $4 100 Drur.ke .... m go back to Sawyer lived with h s wire In a new his home In Waco Texas and b a house they had recently built at 46 Rock ranch In 1909 he was herald e d a" a ledg-e Road Newton Highlands They wonder find by Manager McGraw and had no children of the three games he pltc ed In the Both were prominent I!oclally. M1" Saw League betore his acc dent h e n two yer was reputed to be wealthy Sa,,} E'r S tather and two slsten! MI!ls Grac" JI.{ SaWYer nn assistant book keeper In the Chelsea Savings Ba.nk and Mis" Mabel saw, er a teacher In the ~hurtletf School Chelsea live at 13 Grove Ohio Constitutional Convention Won t Strcet Chelsea His brother George Saw Hear Negro Offlc al \ er Is a manufacturlng jeweler at Attie1>0 0 Sawyer was promlnent In Mll.8on c CQLUMBUS Ohio April 10 -By a large circles vote the ConStltutlona Can en on to da reconsidered the action b~ wh ch t yester da, Invited W lL Lewis ot Boston negro ASSistant Atto ney General of the United Chicago Idea for a Perfeot UnIon States to epeak bero e It on the e cnlng Meets Quick Response ot Ap:il 11 and ent the motion made b~ Delegate Bov;dle of C nclnnatl Sp al 10 Tho N"-JJ YorA- T m., CHICAGO April 10 -Two marriages lo the committee W H. Lewis s c ect on to the AmerIcan took place In thIs city to night after the Bar Association at Ita mectlng In Boston l'er Ons desiring to be united had pro duced health certificates conforming to last Summer was the occaston of a BpI t The Sou hern m " n n the or<;an zat on the standard set by Dean Walter T Sum b"rs cleclared he I ad been c ected und 11" of thE> Episcopal Cathedral 01 SS fal po I reten e Adherents or Le" Is pp er and Paul '" hlle Miss LII Ian Moyer ot Kenwood urged that 110. ng been e e~ted without .... aa belnf; m ...rrled to lL Laurel ,John a quest on of color ha. Ing arisen the as son of Lafayette.. Ind. In St Paul 9 Epls sccfatJon wa5 bound to stand by the vote Several welb ago tl €I ExecuU\;e Com copal Church Miss Ruth Palmer "'as mlttee passed a. resolution resclndlng tho wedded to Albertus W Bode a pol ce telegraph operator In the Cathedral of election or Lewis but Attorney Ceneral Wickersham took up LeW s s case and S9 Petar and Paul Both paIr" before they Vl'ere mat'Tled has InSisted that he be not ouoted showed to the officIating clergy certlfl cates that they were in good health and fit to marry ThUll was Dean Sumner e fdea uphe d Brldc 8 CousIn Arrested for SpeedIng After Chase In Jersey C ty
HUGHES 50 YEARS OLD
0'
PITCHER DRUCKE GETS $4700
"I),
RECALL LEWIS INVITATION
TWO" HEALTH MARRIAGES"
HEPPENHEIMER GUEST FLEW
------._-
TAFT SPEAKS HERE TO NIGHT
Mter attending the wedd ng of his cousin Miss Gladys May Heppenhelmer nt the home of tI e brlde s parents Gen. and Mrs W C Heppenhelmer 211 Mont gomery Street. Jersev City last night. Arthur DYer 23 years old of 62 Prospect Street. East Orange N J was arrested In his motor cnr bl Motorcycle Policeman Neary In Hudson Boule anJ at Gray !>'tr"et following n chase of more than a mile begun at Montgomery s:treet. Dyer was locked up at the Montgomen Street Police Station charged with speed Ing but his release was obtained atter Ernest J Heppenhelmer a relative had telepboned the police that he would go surety for.-Dyer until hls appearance tb~ momlDg ;' fD :itJIi FUJrt.-Grlmlnal Ctlurt.
Jenll7: CUil:~~ -'¥.I"~
0'
think of the Illu ol!l racr hear the story at the nto a f bht with a Btran t "doctors ad broubht blm e:l If 1\" had III tlclpated C' got He r pllp-d 'Well b.. hurt ome l>ut clldn t ",hole sy"teru cave4
$12,000 JOB FOR DR
"0
The PresIdent to be the Guest of the UnIon League Club President Taft will arrIve In this city at 8 30 0 cl<lck tlrls evening have dinner and deliver an address at the UniOn League Club and wlll depart at 12 30 o clock; to morrow morning The occa slon Is 0. notable for the dub and
Sp. a 0 TM ~r:D York T mes WASHINGTON AprU 10-lalk ot a third candidate for the Republican nom InaUon Is nfe In V. ashlngton to day and If Justice Hughes '\\ ould perm t the use of hIs name thero would be no (lUeation a~out wbo that thlrd candidate would 1-_ The e!!e~t the Illinois prlm~r es has been tremendo s The Taft managers who ",ere too muell overwhelmed last n ght to Bay nnythl~ Issued Ii ",tatement to night explaining that the r de!E'at was due to 'local fJr " Cony.ressman M<:l Inlo~ the c Taft C:l.mpa gu said this to
;;
n '-" unable to make h(' p evalling y he M ddle ot so much. that l IIno s Wiscon It Is chlefiy- tha" ahnche majorto use St:nator D" n ~ phrase They ~eem t n leate s"rh n fcE' ng agaInst h m hat Champ C a k or Wilson might car y th".e S at s f Tart "'ere the can dido. c and the Roose .. t peoplo contend hat Ohio and Ind ana. would be elm I arly aHected On March 2l! T IE TIMES printed a "asl nS' on d pa ch Sill! nS' that JusUce Hughes "as under cons deration as a comprom se cand date and that Mr Barn(,B had been sending for dlst:J1at Icudera nnd sa) Ing In ctrect til each of them Don t y ...u know that Taft can t b" e ecteO any more than Roosevelt cWl be nomInated? Then why not bring out a third candidate who can both be nom Inatell and elected? On March "0 ex Gov Stokes ot New Jersey publicly declared for the Z\Cl:~d~ tlon or a third c"ndldat.. Senatol'c'Pen· roso ot Penns} I anla publlcl~ "llenl1!~"tlBI,t he was cons derlnG' the nomination of CY one but Taft but pr vs.tely he admitted that he had no obje ction to the election of oelegates "ho might be tor snother can dldat .. In dIstricts where such a canell <late s favored The troub e w th J stice Hughes Is thllt ho w lJ not perm t a boom to be started tor him The plnn therefore has been to make It clear to the de egat"" that It Is fooll"h to nomlnnte a man who Is fore doomed to defeat to I ammcr on this Idea n I It has become a commonplace o.nd thcn wIthout Jus C p Hughes!l knowl edge or consent to spr n~ his name at the con en Jon and stanlpede i
ChBncee of a St"D>pede Aga.lnst thll~ Is the his tor cal tact thBt no Republ can convention has ever been stampeded The delegates have always been ~opper rIVeted The only stampedes have been Democrat c-such as that for Seymour In 1868 and for Bryan In 18!l6 Dark horses ha e been nominated by the Republ cans but on y where there has been a long deadlock and In all suoh cases the nomination has been the result ot care!,,1 mamp' latlon The Garfleld nom nat on In 1880 "as not the result ot a .. tampede But It Is pointed out that all the old political traditions have been broken wide open tills year and the tradition about the Imposslbl Ity at stampeding a. RepllbIIcan Convent on may gO by the bOard l'lt any rate the third candidate talk Is on e en I P to-night. If Justice Hughes would abandon hIs detenninatlon not to be a candidate a boom would be started fOr h m publicly Mr Ba.rnes tougl1t him when he was Go ernor ot New York but politicians do not hold grudges when there Is some advantage to be obtained by forgen nil' them and everybody recog nlzes the fact that Justice Hughes could be ele t There Is an undercurrent of talk a.bout ex \ re P e s/den Fa rbanks but it 111 genera h recoon z e d that he would be a. ... eak cpo nd tla e Senator Cummins was n Ited by Senator La Follette a year a.go to be a cand date and the Badger Sena.tor offered to keep out at the race tt Cummins "auld enter It Cummln. declined and It Is probably now too late to br ng him torward It Is true as lIlr McKinley eaYII thAt local lesues cut a large figure In nUnols. but the tee Ing was al agalnst Mr Taft.: Strange to say the President s attitude on Cane.d an reciprocity had a great deAl to do w h h s defeat. The resentment a~a nst him among the fs.rmers was ex treme and a very large I!hare of tho a er helming vote agaJnst him was cast bJ men who shared thlB feeling :Mr ~TcKlnley la arguing In private that It was the ch ef cause or the deteat. One of those "ho heard hIm said afterward Then here must be a lot or farmere In Chicago But thls gibe Is not Quite fair ln Ch cago the vote aga nst 'l\;I.tt was compounded partly of disgust over the Lor mer ca e partly of dislike of tho Adm nl~ ration and the tar ff and part b ot adml at on for Roosevelt In the country dl>.trlcts Cana.dian rec proclty was a lc"dln~ (actor though the other Influences mentioned bad a prominent plnce 111n.". Affect ItllchfgB" One of he Taft managers speaking to. nlsht about the 111 nole resu t sn.ld We cou d ha e beaten Roosevelt If he had started hIs campaign thlTt> da>,. earllor Rut starting lt when h~ -'11'1 he wall able to take advantage of the Lorlmer case and play It up fo all I wns worth He Is the keenest man I e~ e saw tor mixing poker w th pra> ers lI.lalne to-day gave ten ot her twelve o es to Roo e elt and the outlook Is that c III no s r esult will ha e an eCfect on ho:\1 cl gan State ConVf>n on n-hlch "I I meet to-morrow Up to h s Ume Taft has had "Is own wal' In ~I chlgan Tn" Tart neadq arters omltt nS' the Illl nol" delegatea from Its f gurC5 on the s-:-ou d tho t the tfnal f orures as to the variOUS districts were not ~et a allable mal e the toHowln!J claim ot 1e e~tes IaCt 313 Roosevelt, 30 La Follettc 30 Cum I lns 4 senator" Dixon at noose, elt head quatcrs said to day Four hundred and tift> two de egatea to the RepUblican I'iatJo!1al Can entlon have been elected up to date Of these 130 are for CoL Roosevelt, forty for lIlr Taft four tor senator Cumm us thirty six for La Follette ninety four un Instructed Including eighty four from New York State and contests are pending In cases of the remaining 148; Tho Republicans ot IlllnoIs have recorded theIr Verdict. BY an avalallchQ majority o~:=-,OOQ ~b&ve.~d no< ~ce that thQloIW"J'naJtel'A.~,;~sel\
Bfo^frfe täMMEm ©Ifante*
"
=-**-*S-*.-'~~~ PAGES. 1912.-FOURTEEN "M',;,:r;r.K.*. NEW-YORK. THURSDAY. APRIL 11. =
V
V"' I.XXI1
23,888.
r"d"
SÏAÏE CONVENTION. Looting SUPPORTS ML TAFT
1
Trail of Severed Heads Put Stop to
dent's Renomination.
and Resolutions Are Adopted Without a Rollcall.
Teletrrai h to The Trlb-ane ] l". -With only the :, April men voting in opposition, the
Roosevelt orfanlzatlon programme
for tin- veal Btate Republican the of spring business to day, when Convention went through nomination of Presiden! Taft wm to the urged and four delegates-at-large entlon were elected. A chi,..
County President Koenig
Peking
Boston Wan Kills Himself a5 Wife and Brother Seek Him in New York
Hotels. FRESH FROM SANATORIUM
SEIZE WOMAN AS ONE OF $10.000 BURGLARS
Was Representative for Oorham ¿ Co..Slipped Away from Muldoon's Farm and Went to Grand Cen* tral Platform.
and «iid not put on record any
will¬ upstate Republicans wlio were not be could which t.. for vote anything ing construed M Taft Instructions. The Taft «Preaidentlal plank found an William A. opponent In City Controllerwin» made .a .'renrh*rgast of New York, the platform )i against vigor* ami declared that «President Taft tv't i>e
Mia
re-elected.
wm opposition t<>
HAT MATERIAL THE LOOT
\
CHAIRMAN
said the Macdougal stPeel police station last nighi charge with having ratered ¦ on the sixth floor »of th« seven atory building at No. 1«'l Varick street, occupied i>y th.» \. A B. Hat Company, and carried away raw material valued
the only al
Is
convenanl
-.Tulip «if the most
aacompllahed
power and the weak- busin<BS*llke bui'glars in the cit>. individuals «'as the Senator's aa- Bhortly before 7 o'clock Tutaday SSTtiOh, To tell a judge that if he makes morning DetectIv«BS Donahue ami «L*aw« decision he will !>¦- recalled
and
overwhelming
l'kAN.'IS
Settles Louis Drucke's Action for Damages, and Giants Will Open Baseball Season.
HKNUKlC'Ka, «>K 8YKAC1 8K
NW
woman
«
n
HAD SUBPOENAED PLAYERS
Driven by Thirst and Hunger to Surrender. He is Shot "in Fiight."
For a Time It Looked as if Stars Would Be Required in Court to Testify in Pitcher's Suit. Th«» Interborough Rapid Transit <*om-
CONSUL'S PLEA IN VAIN
tp-nlght If Its attorney had not put plain common sense before dollars yesterday.
Condemnation of Death Appar¬ ently Because American Had Disabled Gun After
Even a soulless corporation would know that there was something doing il" thou¬ sands of ardent rooters for the Qlants had gone to Brooklyn to see a new basehall aeaaon start off and found that their idols w-p' in court, subp.naed to testlfy In a suit for damages. But.-"fan- l'i akee
pany would
.'
unpopular
1er wer« told that the v.-iri.-k street declared. loft building had b«een entered and that him, Judicial system <«f a .«?i<i.«in» robbery had been committed. restraint upon tin- p«ople makes poa- A substatpient Investigation shoated them e-5ji.it- the continúan' e »ef th»- country's that thievis had shinned up a (111
an
li°
makes a coward <>f The perpetuity of the fr»-«' institutions.
The day's seaslon was- given over en¬ to speeches on the platform made Kect. James W. Wadsworth, former Speaker of the Aaaembly; Mr. Prendergasl and Job Hedges, ».f New
tirely
York. After the Mete on the platform and the selection <«f th.- delegates-atlarjre and their alternate« the convention adjourned, and most <.f the delegates departe'l f«>r their homes OB afternoon
cape in the r«»ar «.f ih>« building. The fir.-l Indication that met the eye» of th«« sleuth.« which told them that they were dealing with an unusual set <<t crooks came during th« ir examination ««f the window through which th««y gained ent«rance t> the fir«*t '«»ft. Th«» Window sill a» well as the loft floor was covered with dust and the detectlves were unable to find s«» mm-h as a mark, t«> say nothing of th«- usual
Villa's Retreat. m
neuppi.;
ti
or
of Thoiii;;« i'.«iiiit,.lii. ..f Imo « *ru»-..««. \. M, captain of .« federal >gun under,
"e
«¦
wldotn .. to the robbers, th<» detec¬ house i There should be no mistake in the tninda them a lew Th»- Ami ri' d "..' B-! No at tives visited B sh'«|i of Republic-ana and of the electoral. t.. reven] his presence on whole a* to the meaning of the convention avenue, where they found, they »ay. und hunger I sell .-»rter wventy-two Which ai-Journed to-day. Hunday, it _.-¦ ai earn eat sober appeal to th« several h..ts answering the description of waa arm««! ^^ i«*ti .-« i il«tortore ste i eat its will sii.mi.] be expi 1 the stolen propert) Th« proprietor of Impose*] bul mad« o«« realatanci nial coherence« an«! deliberative revolvw, show to than through hiatrlonlc th" Shop explain' «l that the hats had «waa*compelled < »n Monday he rlarmtlon. man, who ordered the The r'latf.crm endeavored to ahow the con- been left by a young the rel-el* where he hn«l iwcreted usir-n« -.' and continuity of the de«/elop- bands to be put on them, saying thai he Brer. hi« rapid of miaalng »part«
WIDOW OF 02 KILLS SELF AI THE ANSON
.Mrs. Mary Levy Jumps fro j Window in Her Fifth Floor
'
Apartments.
American deas and their formu- would return yesterday afternoon at 2 law In an orderly rather than a tried by court martini, and condemn««! manner, 'l lie achievements of .,-, i. disorderly t.. death, spparenl for havlni th'- Re"imhliraii part) have all l««-en won When tins y««iing man «li«l not k'-ep -, th« «nn. ratl.'r than to prejudice. That party would this appointment the sleuths wenl to even ettori Amcriei«!! resident« made us entire Internal quality an«i and «Vh street, where they sentence, if it offers Third »venu« « modification of th« riognomy obtain to She Nurse American vain bopea an«l dreams In- were t"!«i he was «>ft.«ii s<-«-n. and there, »Finally ;«\ini people without steari of substance. found hihI arr«'«*'«-d but 111 Later of .'t Chihuahua -<nt to \" one disagrees with 1'ii» fact that from th« police say, they Letcher, iv« I h to «lay t., rtay an.l > en to year Improvement Hamuel FVank, a nttl«- ix-for'» ». o'clock, ¡Consul beltoved la what to Her Death When General Bulaxar Iti political conditions and In the admlnlathat Frank. th<- detectives sav, led their. tration of public affairs should be made, an appeal rrom Washington th«been Left Alone. «iiffet from us Is t«i th" Fast '»th str«"-t addraas, where but where our his lit«' be »pareil In delivering r''" In the method opponents The convention which adwho woman the to ""' 6on,ul thai under pur form of | they wer«- Introduced widow, clghty-ts Mrs. Mar». Levy, jjourneri believed missive '" ¦ i« MOT\ irreal f «-«it« have come an«l was iRt.-r taken Into custody and who, marked- "This last the ith h« r s««ti [«id« w ho lit el old, fulfil h-it that structure Is amply able to was his what t" claimed, man stoutly the young er demand may be made upon It. In the Antonia, Jurant In Mexico the; have r.urae months f«>r many the deunder The convention Itself reflected the <-har- mother. While In the apartment the "law of Right," fralta .« «rindo« <«r her apartments on tl a "r "1 the platform In the <iii-iiity <.f its f"¡n«i several to known »s win. has «been con¬ fifth floor Into an adjoining courtyai on whi.-h t«-tives say thai they proceeedlntrs and the deliberala«t s prieoner which that it eh successive covered trunks, which were demned, bul where there extota a doubl shortly after 1'J'*¦" o'clock this morí ),» f.,. th;.!¦ h'.-il and contained, they claim, Hih sentence Is al¬ Ing. as te, the legality of property. P.endergast Makes Protest. **ertaln Umita. She w.«s killed instantly within greater part of the stolen his freedom lroiler Prendergasl eniere.i -mWhen the woman was asked where lowed knows thai his fate Is With .«-'un" friends Mrs. Let -. had be« The prisoner protest against ti,.- pr«ogramme in sin- gol the «tuff «In» declared thai tie- sealed, Even if he does n<>t walk ¦ step, i laying cards earlier In H.venlng, an eh which hrouRht QUI a r>-ar of trunks belonged t<« a man who told her quarter the faiai s<»«-ni«'il to be In th«- best «,f spirit«« wh" nnexpfcted the and l«-ers from beginning to end. t«. k«-«'P them th'-rc until he returned. from some report will i>and said |.' night to h< r come, will bulle H> took Senator Root Dr Butler, ex- She said si)«- did n«'t know this man's was shot While "in flight h<Hotel employes heard n noise In Ih that r Wadaweorth and »'hairman name About an hour iat«r then» cam« told He case. snd nn Investigation resulte Fountain's in courtyard, tlius Mame, (o task f««r tlie stand-pat plat¬ a rap on th« door, and 8 voung, BtOCktlv it was there was no in th«« finding of Mi" nged woman's bod) that «_orreapondenl 'th«his h<» got iform ami speeches upholding it. He in- built man entere«). Ilefoie i"n strolled about the streets wait¬ The police at Ih« w est SSth street Benator >".o"t vas wrong when he fool across ths door síü the «¡«-te th.-, hope,f'<r death. When hit« body was lion i"|ioit«-«i thai Mrs i...vy either f«-i 'le< lare.l the »recall would make rewards had him covered with their ravolvars ing \t th i" it crontained four bullet «.r jimiped from the « Indo» of Judges. This was Pruakln. The police »ay ho broughi made bj shots lir.-d from be- Anaonla it was d« Uni st it»»d lhal WOUnda, "It would make a coward «if no mar confess«ed to iIt» theft had Jump«Bd. bind. . v«h«. waea't a coward ¡. th». first place," father was Colonel The '""K .¦> -1 fo ind h John Colllna man's The young red Mr Prendergaat "You mi_rht hit son, with another who, the night watchman. Vfter bidding th« Albert Fountain, ¦.<>u'«l make a < ..ward of lefl in New Mex¬ mother go «d nlghl Mr, i.«-\ rustlers cattle was by «hol lier hv orrlerin« him to the front." Man Sues Doctors He hotel and had not retnrne«] ea^ly Ihli ico fifteen years ago. Colonel Fountain <>f bin Leery had a mux- an« Criticises Dr. Butler. lawyers mornlns known was on" of the beat Mia Martha Ooetse, Ih maid Mr. PrenderKast crltlciaed l»r. Biitlor brought S few weeks ihe territory, and waa noted In eparticu* a the oil« e thai sftei *..; for reference)» in his spee.h yesterday lo A suit like that told nurse, " for utor. a s physician lar a« i. d her lnt< retired liad pollti-ai patenl medicine men, exclaim* «p,, b) s w.-.m.inin against Lev) her abrönnen following i«-a\iiic s towel feeling III. k.i and omi lug her Jacob an operation has been brought by nil¦... «¦¦.¦in Into another room I« The the ¿* an, a«amst the -I » hen she «. Weiss, of No. 120 Easl 87th street, ;,,- m« dlcln« i T* en yearsJ presided over Picture Theatre and y,turn« «wtlnlesi of fhi- untry. ': .¦ had with a record of against Dr. Otto Klltunl, <»f N'«> 77 Wesl «i »lie found thai ¦-liT.li.I administration win, splendid and 1 »r. Herman Flacher, of Hou3c Btteet, \ gl:tn< b n th« open w In¬ 14th i.» nenta, betas Tenement i headlined as tçtil'-vt it. -a, patent medicine man n. you know Hie No. IOW ijenintXteai avenue, fur 110,000 di w -, as nugh '¦¦ «tpl iln Hei dlsspTwo « «plosions, lielle*» ed bj <-ent. I'»'- damage« for alleged neglecl in leaving s. the hot« i.Sh« :> ca«uaed-by i».ini)s. ,-ii..e>i< pea rani «-. be t.< have in his aliiloiu'ii two sponges following an ih.it part of Harlem In th« \ Iclnll of i i., -i one*, and Ix ul the same llm« Job Hamngm d.nie.l )...-,. ,hltt ,h. .,,.. operation at the German Hospital. tl tilth sue. í and Flral avenue shortly Colllna, the watch mi n, -. »it» \ anl. huai patent medicine men" .ll« of Weiss alleges that ths defendants per- !;,i!,.i 11 o'clock laal night, blew a hole phrase Dr. Butler was Intended t., went to th« wall >.f a moving picture i»r. Thornley, th« house physician, ex¬ apply *., formod th«- o|,«-n.Hon ' lie1011, «Colonel Roosevelt HeaaJd II was and was In the brick mean ho*] Ital "n Januan 2157 First avenue, hurled amined the bod) and sa« ;it once thai at «Mo. theatre for Dr. rVoodrow Wilson. Whereal thas cured on March I. He doors the width <.f the death had been Instantaneoue. ll<- In discharged front the glaea '< nventieon loar.-.i, ,,.,1 much pain after that, and went the twenty fain« i'«'rni.-.i the «'o:mer's oui«¦<. and ill" po¬ frightened an.) avenu« Mr. Prendergasl waa even leas of Wt> '.".¦ Baal '-«.th nt house next lice. tcn«in» Bsjgsjra, Dr. gentle story to six a In ili.-s will. Mi. Wadsworth. who had spoken who urn tormod aifuthei operation door t.. th.- th« atre. «*< great length, attacking direct laglsJa* On ths plalntlfi, and found in the wound Owing to the vicinity of s big >gaa tion and the recall as retí m«-di<.-«i mat.-riai. (¡as Coospany, .,,,,. ponge* and other tank «if tii" < onsoiidai«.1 in th.- political journey m ¡aiding the >pollce turned Eats Dozen in away, feet from representative fr.vernment He BODIES OF AMERICANS ON WAY. a hundred and ran through the ten¬ alarms, in two for Calls and said. >«f bodies [«eroj women and Panama, April W Thei'«nn. ti.. -i rlhmse I i.« onard ement horn.- .-.lid eCarried t«i,<-.';.|.1) and Bj «Harrlaburg, of Cannon, ' ' ', -«ii'iiaii. April 10. John I'.n'fii. ¦ He's afraid ol i¡ ip.ii-i-, of ilalveatoa, Tex., hava arrived I « hildren Into the rti legislation and n.. recall u»n i,. ar«- in chargi of i'airi"k O'Reilly, employed Ma watch¬ Cincinnati freight handler, made g wager <>' theae days Hr n'l, ,v hate troto SieataeVnx end <*á«mnuel i: Velaa man by the K:,:¡ «'««Hipa liy, WSLS «Standing wi;h a Cincinnati Mliilstsr, rn. i. saioonkeepot g mouth the Nicaragua«.""! Or« mere set utad bs the thmtra a».", that he could sal one dosen bananas in ih«- yard next d«««»r to Mr Prendergaat's spa« h vs.,,, u. ,,,.,;,. canaoa ><t PreakJent Zebtya In ISM after they when th«' tkOmbS «'.vploded ami waa gai h day lor ihirt» days and top «»ff (he order ur«- ,. the »lays seaal«*n. th«« «in« Before he revolutloaary hurled to the ground win n the tirst mi.» it ».ii «ai'iun-i ti b] sating ñon tesen hard boiled Hi platform had I,., ,, ,..;,,- »)V |jr i,..i Th.- i«»'ii«s «ill ,'" transshipped to went off, 1 ¡r.' followed th" exp|ei.sioii:.¡. mmmyi atld two «1"7."ii raw «.yst««rs. Hs at N« I« V,.ik mi.) egg» ;ih nothing mor.- than a 1*0U«'«»usul.. t. the .v.*l«aiar,'uali The damage to th« theatre and nement n. sssfull] flnlshwl the lask to-night, u"' " of approval, elanator N« »a « u i. aaa 1 house »us esattmated at about 110,000. and announced tha- h« would begin in s eariíestii".:. in speaking on th" Claret or Sauterne Punch n.^.v'. a fen days t«> s«»e h« n quickly h«- c«»ul«l ¦I recall hud Ini BITTERS ,i th« .Mer.r ail »'" Isl Functions ANGOSTURA » 'tis Of CO..HSFult«js8t.(N.Y. IdiiA ii«;pony cat aiK.th-.-r thirty dosen bananas. H T "I WKV * BONS retirlos f«-r lnsomiila. .A»l\L AdVt. «te-eUiaaed ou »e..»ue! Vm%s>t fmriu srtwa rn-
¦.'
lat'ren
int..
SPENT NIGHT PLAYING CARC
Compbinc Says Leaped Feeling
.
"
f'.ment
.¦
«¦
-
"
¡mail«'
..«
SPONGES LEFT IN ABDOMEN
»
Alleges
Performed Operation.
..¦¦
BOMBS STARTLE HARLEM
Moving
,.
l.'i,m*:lUl
,,
¦¦
Damaged.
,
wndofiîr
ïasc.*^1
rej»ort«wl
¦.
HE
.
¦
THRIVES'ON
BANANAS
Thirty
Thi-ty Days Eggs.
'..
?,'"'
'
¦
i«sspe«ctl*/el)_
ItAXNAUl).
IIF.HIM-'HT PARS« 'N.-' VXIi
("enera! Pancho Villa, by th- rebato.
-
have
n«it
s
friend In
town
shut off his power the boa'. train. The couplings ,,f the first gOX «aught Baw-fer"« body and drew it beneath 111 wheels, aim the tram was not brought to a stop until the body was 1,. under the first truck.- of the second ¦ m Platform Crowded at Tim«. The platform was crowded af the tfflM of the accident; and many winner« wait¬ ing then for trains who heard the < lie« of ihe men »landing on the platform ran from the pla.-e in terror. As goon as the irain ha<! b-en brought to a stop the ni.etorman and Pauvltnan K«»ubsky. of the West Nth surent police station, Jumped to the tracks and crept under the body ,,f the car until they found Sawyer, wedged bet»veen the two sets of wheel.* of the forward trucks. Dr. Vtetor, »if the New York Hospital, who had been summoned, accompanied the men. and a single glance at the mangled form was sufticier.t to cominee bim that life was already extinct It required the aid of a wrecking crew with a train jack before the body could be
dom's" mighty voice was forestalled, Louis Drucke, the Giant plu her, whose injuries In a subway accident nearly «.uis«»«i thousands of eases of "heart failure" Of the. degr*'e common to M«-a, hers. Is nearly .««."..«nh» ii« h»r. and.on" 8hudd«M*f at what might have been; a ¦Igfa .«f relief- play Ball! The Interborough had sul«|"rnaed four«
in A
Tea aiu in.in, who r« turn, d t..-day fre.in Parral with im American and foreign refugee« fr» m tin- battle i dlatrict, broughi news of the execution Kl Pi«....
Wh<en Vllli retreated last Thurt nlaht Fountain remised part« "f Hi»trains. prints. ¡in.i concealed hlmaelf in g j>ri\.«t«. «»n th.- ih.'iuy that »«.me «if the small piece Chairman Barnes's Statement. ipanta were Ignorant houaa The State «hairman William Harnes. Jr., bat cleaning eatahllshments In the lower that they had a gu>aet In a part of the end <>'' tli« 11>- might he alile to give to-night authorized i his statement;
THB 'PHONB.
INIERBGROÜGH QUAILS
$10.000. Th«
¡"AUXMS AT
"FANS" 1PIIG;
«vornan and two men, one ««t v.ii'»ni he ".".ai-' h«*r ¡-on. «rere i »«- 1k »«. i up In
and the young man. who the plat¬ speech made In s her son, gave their names form. Mi D -.i Prank, of No. 41«> «"«th United States Senator Elihu Root one ..«. sire«:, and Samuel Frank. <<f the same» of the "big four" sel.i to go to Chi¬ addreftS. Th" <»th«-r man descrir-ed hlmthe of chief the was champion cago, aa «;. ttii«-i» Pruakln, a tailor. He. in platform, and delivered a speech, said lhat ho live«! with th« Franks at which he made ¦ vigorous defence of the 6th street address. In addition t>» a and sharp American Judicial system the charge ..f burglar) he was held f"r attack on th<- recall «if judges. i arrying a revolver, the declaration of eternal piinThe «letectlvei said they believed xhev Mt up l'y ih" people f«.r their guid¬ had «raptured in these three persons ;i ;' t>etween arbitrary ance
Herbert A. Sawyer, Boston representa¬ tive of Gorham & Co., silversmiths, at Fifth avenue and 3.")th «treet, committed suicide during the rush hour In the sub¬ way last night by hurling himself in front of a local subway train as 1*. «II pulling Into the Grand Central Station. The police He was killed Instantly. learned that Sawyer had been taking treatment for h'.s nerves at M u Moon s sanatorium, in White Plains, and had left there only a few hours before he killed himself. A dispatch from Boston says that Pla¬ yer had recently completed a fine new home in Newton Highlands, and the worry over this caused his breakdown Samuel E. Lewis, of No. 4.37 Troy ave¬ nue, Brooklyn, seems to have been the only person who observed Sawyer clor.ely Just before he threw himself before the train. He told the police he saw the man enter the subway at 7.15 o'clock and walk about for several mlnufes. Sawyer did not appear unduly agitated a moment before he threw himself on the tracks. <}n the contrary, he sur¬ veyed the approaching train calmly as it was drawing Into the station. Lewis had been standing close to the e«lge of the platform, near Sawyer, as the train came in. but withdrew g pace or two as the first car approached. He expected to see the man beside him do the same thing, but instead Sawyer de¬ liberately took a step forward, toward the tracks, and when the first car »vas only a few yards distant threw himself With great vigor off the platform His body landed sq'i.'ieiy between the rails, and before Patrick Mul\aney. the motormaa. could apply bis easorg-ency
Police Sav One of Tvvo Men Charged with Complicity Confessed Crime.
mina the positiv,' strength of the R nun.
mM_«.«»»
JUMPS 10 DEATH Aï SUBWAY STAIN
shake.
.»¡ipil h> i'n'l'iwooit & i:n«ier«'.ol |
the Two of Prisoners Say They Are wniwrvative platform. Including Presiof th.renomination Mother and Son.Detecplank urging dent Taft waa adopted, it waa adopted, tivos Recover Part which vote, however, by ¦ viva vow deter¬ of Goods. for a line-up to gav. xelt
(lt> ef New York. JeMeyilt^nd Moebokea.
Next Sunday's Tribune
ALMOST A UNIT
Controller Prendcrgast Makes Only Speech in Opposition,
Slate Chairman Barnes and
a
In
1-1-1- »1*
CONVENTION.
ROCHESTER
SKETCHES AND SNAPS AT THE
/W'l" _,<I-*'YT' LLM PRICE ONE
_¦_¦-.. *
at A little while asio the ancient capital of China passed through ivvo nights of horror, being given over to thieves and flames. One who was there and took careful note wiil teil all about the thrilhng scenes in
New York Republicans Adopt a Conservative Platform Strongly Urging Presi¬
DELEGATES
mm. s
te.'ii members of the «liants, ineiudlng John Mi «'.taw, the manager, to ha in court as wltn<esses to tell ««««me <>f th«: things that Drucke «lui In the b«>x even Mf Sherwood Prints Newspaper Inafter ho was Injured. The witnesses .is Yuan Shih-kai gce's Picture lud.-d all the stars <>n the t«-am. or most .¦: i; ti t«l TtJe Trlintn« 1 of them, and they wer«' in court yester¬ \pril 1" Sherw... day. Phi li'lm. ü ider "f the Philli« Drucke had sued the interborough other morning, l for |25,«000 «rUmaOaas for incompany of marked copy tin.i In in shoulder when a subway his IJuries to
BALL PLAYER AS PREMIE
,
¦.
Kofi Smith. Ark
net» ip *\"-r
with
a
«toi
Prealdent, Vna Bhlh-kal, taking the throne of »'hin The story waa Illustrated with a plctui M SWln«gln*{ lustily with his ha .¦
..
and it
11 t
was
the lu.'iits and .» storj broken In health rdlng the peace tun
"i
1 with
t
a
nine-llr
: «rlental ru'. of hon he had b«je since the strain of the throne
<
LINER SUCKED FROM PIEI New York Almost Hits Gian Titanic as Latter Sails.
riding in left ihe track at station. That was in October. 1D1»>. Fortune had to deiide be tweeji th«4 railroad company and the big the pitcher, and. of ««»urse, gnve IfDrucke the triai better Of the uncertainty. of that suit had been called at any time between October ami April it might have h.'li'-.l the defendant company. But f.-r the «as.- t.- come to trial the «lay before the opening <>f the seas«-, made the raso f..r the company helpless from the begin¬ train he
was
the Pulton
street
ning.
Nevertheless,
the
It looked for
Interborough
was
a
going
time
removed, traffic on the southbound line being delayed in the mean while. After the body had been removed to the West »Hhh street station a sear» h of the clothing produced several cards with Sawyer's name. There was also a bank¬ book, several railroad th'kets on New Kngland lines, a sum of money and pieces of jewelry. There was also a coat Check of the Grand I'nion Hotel, an 1 this was the means of identifying the
if
as
to be re¬
for a delay that Brooklyn and M inhattan "fans" would never forget. The cas«» was not called until the after¬ th« of collision noon, and If a s«"ttlcment had not be«»n »he have result..I in a Olympic and the British cruiser Hawk. efTecte.l It would have b""ii «uiestlon of
Southampton, A| ill
1". Another
ex
or
disappeared under th»;
sponsible
ampli' of the suction caused by a crea t. nue- Vu., s rallar t" a hat is said i. .
man.
The police eommundated with the ho¬ tel and were told that Herbert Sawyer of contempt «>f "fans." or contempt court, with the f.irmer's end finding no was not registered there, but that hi* given here lo-day, veeae lakers, as ths players would have been wife and hla brother were guests tMere. Star lin«r Titanic, the largest The clerk *Uao said that Herber! Sawyer to-day, afleoat, «ailed on her first voyage fot required in court However, the attorney fir the Inter- had visited the hotel during the fore. New Y figuring He Boon, had checked his roat and left. V; i!,, rítanle was passing the Whit« borougti did soin«' rapid «>f twelve the Over the telephone a man who said h« amona: jury that «l«». Ided Star !1n»-r Oceanl»' and the Amerl an be at least ten Jurors was Her!»« it Sawyer's trother, In reply Line 8te;tnier New York, which arc men thete would to see the game. "I'll to inquiries as to whether he knew where lierthed alongside ea h other In t-outh* win» would want with a popular baseball Herbert Sawyer was, sai«l, in an ex.ited «haines no »ak" the ..»»nielen \\ ati r, ill«- terrific suction of to-«lay," he said, and after a con¬ tone: Tltanlc's screws dragged th« Neu sftb hero Druc!-c's lawyer It was an¬ "No. he did not register here. He his from her moorings, snd reven of that ference with the suit had be.»n moitié,l threatened to harm himself several timea that nounce«! stern The rn «l'a at» rope p irted. for about f.V'»<»'>. has he done It this time?" trial -i without of the American im«r swung Into midi*"-jttter-<8es for to-«iay's game: For Wife Was Seeking Him. im and tin owly missed striking the Marquar«! nn«l Meyers; for When told that his hrother had killed passing Titanic, which was obliged to X'Yawk, Erwin. end Rucker Brooklyn, himself by throwing himself In front of slop while the Now Y'-rk was t<Owed off -i'i.iv bell!" to ;. safer "berth. a SObway train. th» man s.»id Mrs. Her¬ bert Sawyer was ai the hotel with him The new liner arrie« .".» first »Mass and knew nothing of the a,'t Ot her hus¬ paaaengeri There waa a large crowd to band. After saving that he would go at and epreaenl to witness her departure, and Lord George once to the police station to identify the enthusiaitli cheers were raise.) as she Live on Canadian Farm. left body, th^ man hung up the telephone. wh«> reH>de, Herber! Lord «¡eorge The Titanic li fW2 fa l H Inches I-'uk. He did not appear at the police station. to de« i«ted and cently sold his lands h'W.v .:-. ha« be m of 0*J feet fl Inch« i, dto| here forever, arrived «Later ¦ man who «aid h«< was \v F". »'»;.¦ »in tons, and Is of lO.OOM ton« net leave England liner Star OlymWhit«the <>n "f No. 4t>5 Kighth avenue, Br»«»kirrj ;i.»iti » paasengi ra vi-si' r«la> accompanied by Grant,called at the station and positiv, ly iiotl in the saloon, .".»'n \n th» second Ipfjc, from Bouthampton. lyn, <;«-.'i".:.. and his two children, the body as that ..f Herbert A Identified cabin and 1.000 In the steerage v. hue Lady Hyde Villiers, six years old. and Joan Vllltet*!, Saw \ er, the Boston representative ef s(c h.e> I I'e-W Of S6ÛL three years old. Hertford- Qorham'a He said the dead man was Lord H»-<1<». wh<» «onus from and ha«l llveil ,,t intended to thirty-three years old,Newton Bblre, said ft -.tenlay that he Highland-. Kloial street, I Mo. twenty live ¡»t Pickering. Canada, abouthas Mass. Thinks "is Rival** Will Havo miles he purwhere (*rom Toronto, Saw ye » had been In the sanatorium for ocrea, Nails Full of Hair. based a farm of 201 "1 last two wtjeks, Grant said, and h.ul the t«» fit. Telrprnph t,. Th.. THbtaM "Teg." be disclarod, onamthegoing th"re suddenly yesterday, not being left farm work my¬ I«. ...ti I \' at shall I"i II 10. ¦ Apt Lincoln a fanner. restraint of any kind. His wife under own «t«> her I will .-..!-.v« rk !«» «ia> Senator i.a F.e|i,.ite. self, and Lady Hyde told of his departure, and cam« bad ebnen servant«! n«> will keep victory In the housework. We mentlng on thentlRooeevell Newton Highlands with S»wfrom on th.» feel thai .i Imary, «aid: llllnol i"- Id tor s while w.- the brother «hildren, whom we] yer's .I see i:,..e-. veil arried Illinois«. That will be better for After visiting several hotels where their titles an«l is all right, it mean« thai Tftft cannot have taught to torweft Sawyer was In the habit of reg¬ Herber*. visit We may an.'.-stry. i«e nominated on th iirst i.ai!..t. it will i)rivt,.ratic tl-ey went tr. the Grand Union, but istering, oocaaiosmliy, U>e wteter help ni\ candidacy, if i believe I would England In will L«»rd not mowing that he had checked hl.i be in Canada." have ee;ini..ii llllnol« i «amid have cam* OUT liotn«' th«'re earlier in the day. coat brotherhis by ac«'onipani«-«l ...i in th.it state f«.r ..tie week before d -.,!,. was Somera. the primar] ' " |S aaked not t.. permit in-law. Lord were SUFFRAGETTES BARRED TODAY. ,)"' ballot in Illinois, Among Otfcefl OB the Olympic my nam. th«tre was trag man who William KMa «"rev, Mr. an«l Mrs. I.e.ndon. April 10..As a precaution imt i instated Mr. and Mrs. F. H. against suffragette' demonstrations, tick¬ want«-,I to vote for the principle« I stand QtorgS \'«ri«:*-i"»»iI*.11.Perkins, for he «heould ehnve thai eh in Mrs. Frederic ets for the ladle1-' sallen ih the Hou.e -f ;i M in the recent I'tiiue. Robert "If thlni to-morrow ha\e been restricted lg they indi, ate that W. H. (-.,ii«l..rt ami William Phillips, secretary Commons primai r election the wive* and daughters of member«. Roosevelt «ill have of th«; American Embassy at London. Taft snd Tlwodore full «>f hair." their near lote «>n
'-'". IWll, wai when the new Whit«
September
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WANTS TO FORGET TITLE Hyde
Family
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LA FOLLETTE'S LITTLE JOKE Finger
bal
changa' j
Bngegint-ili
and Secta! Incident*
he behind ua In the afternoon, when made each and ! must thunder storm» oceur. the aun Is sumnv-r insist that oftices Fhould be kept filled passing months have even ..ne of them a "Home Run" BatLOt went of us, therefor«», WS turn our backs With incapable men just because they are constituency, an admiring see the rainbow east of ns to the sun v.-terans. The inevitable (»«inclusion is in the hopes of I Campbell. Mr. and Mrs Otto H. Kaha, AT THE WHITE HOUSE. and the ml Vfe can atean«l a rainbow in the'we-t wie n Mrs. Gouverneur Korfrlght. Mrs. Willig that when ¦ iiihii. veteran or civilian. Ig absence from the diamondhave rest«.red thun«1er ¦« ''¦ Wont i-'ioin The Ti mm »torms occur In the morning.that the DiicheNS <|e Chsulnes, Miss M«r_ ..lay. of bis raeulous spring training work the to do abb' HO Ha:H.'leu longer Miss Washington, April t#. guérite Shonts, Julien T. Davies, Brlnt«*a 'I HUBBDAY, APRÍI* H. 1012. It or be the hutting aye «I*»*, urhlch "was Is, In the we»t while the sun Is in tbe from been who has be be must dropped student, place ber, S nryn Mawr «In-gory, Major (J. last season, is gone like east." returned :¦, Bu.-kwalter. EliotMowurd transferred to some other place the against them" all Townsend Mar. ¦ tail-emb-r Buffrag« it.- -I «lefy dny one to name s wiih Miss Taft Bln.- lildny, Webb, is Cretghton not There the evil an by Roelk«r daily .1 spell. to per¬ Kleanor able and still Otcned published datte« "f which be is than In the ¡field of endeavor In which men do not to- her school to-.lay. Miss K'K'iker, daughters tin. Frederle-k M Baldwin. Edward R B«. lower t.» finish I« that going and Mis« Edith Go«l«lar«l more consideration than women: form. T. Sanford Beaty Tribune Atwi'ttion, a VêtP York oorjn> on. W. Mude if not actually in Brat [celvs Votes from crowd-What about the bally ! of Mr. and Mr.«. William «Î. K'.clker. ¦««' ihkI K. «'larenceNellson, That «l«.es not mean. lio«vever. flint the "first dlvlsl.»n." Jones. ballet?.Punch. better will and ration; Oodcn M. Held, Prcxi-tcnt ; Conde old Vork, arrived tills afterncon. place, whal with the and players After the luncheon Mr. Martin |N<SW reteran is to be coldly turned outfa* to with (lie ex¬ be Miss Tafts guests for some days. Four the exhibition of old masters In aid visit«*! namlin, Secretary; Jaines M. Rancit, of th« himself, or even that lie to than In yiars beforeplayers "found'' to ehlfl for from over 'of her SChOOlgtl. friends came PREVENTION OF FLOODS young Treasurer. Address, Tribune Building, fare no better than a civilian. He may traordinary for lunch¬ Dickens centenary Fund, at No. 19 East remained and Baltimore today the gaps." Vo. VA Xustiau street, 'S etc York. still lie provided for under the pension "plug afternoon. In tlie ß'.'d street, where he gave an address en We are speaking of the game in gen¬ Another Engineer Indorses th«* R«ig- eon, leaving here this Miss «-base, Mls-t Dickens. nr»» not f-'aries, Miss were system, the benefit,1« of which and party of the Oiants, the pride for «»lvllinns. In such a case, eral, not Mr. and Mrs Klbrldge T. Gerry ga**«-, Arthurs and M_M Hammer. To-night Mis« gestions of "Gargoyle." of New York. Of the glory especial npfrankly should and her house guests, the Misses dinner last night at their house, In East bounty the however, estateI tlie <>f Tb» Tribuna tlie Mali. Poetag» of of To for the Editor occasion the gUBSCRIPTIONofRATEg..Bf no people chope. Sir: In the rush Incident to the masnl- Re.elker, attended the hall given by Mr* «list street, for Ambassador and Mrs. H«*» Judgment It is hon««rable Giants there is Greater New York. "f'Rld, outille pear as ;» pen. »«mi. which receive, upon th<- ('overnor who ««pp..-es a prac¬ to on* month.8 ¦"** and not Regarding the Giants there Is nothing tude Robert W. Patterson for her daughter, rick. to honorable 4 00 and of accomplishments expected each day ''..unless give it Pt luoiltl»^. tical plan for making railroads atete less than certainty. Who has a tremor Kleanor GIzyeka. neither 8.0 tin which «.ne yeai. The like Tribun«, you salary, a of ns an newspaper uncnrne«l Miss Madeleine Dinsmore save a danta their own coal the nulaanoea of their own month.60 about those wonderfui "wings." wouldgreat The President and Mrs. Taft were guecti doubt of Daily only, «,-, ni'.nth»._..8"<> the credit. some of overlook with State¬ perhaps llx iry-M last evening at Sherry s for her niee-,. Miss 6.0U creation and who at the same time drops be paid nor accepte«! about those hatting eyes that never get ments of vitnl Importaras noted In It» Of th» Brltlah Ambassador andtl-Mrs. Dally only, on« ye»r. 1.91 reception Melen Dinsmore Huntington, daughter ef man at dinner and later attended .sun ..iv only, »l» i oath* . "off"? SAO fron office ¦ particularly efficient columna And this not-» t«- only for the r»r. and Mra »Vhsrles ITenry Fuller gara Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. MunMnrton. .oar. ACT IOS. railroad PROMPT of dislike Th« the Instil u incurred in had h fall who lose more public attention Men closely of may fixing purpose all i-ounlrle» In the large ballroom suite, decorated w*ti| hecause «>f his Insisten«'«The unanimous vote by which the Pub¬ tions and grow cynical about, public men, Upon the enKlrieerlnsf «-tatem^nts of "Oar« In honor of J'istlce Pltn»y. ng «YosUge. corporations ¦ was used for flowers, Its spring the daneln*», :.v AND si NDAY; assessment of their prop¬ lic Senke commission instructed but who would doubt the members of the ¦go-, |e," under the heading "The Mississippi which was general throughout the even« THE CABINET. On» month fl.M¡«3ne test.$17.W upon aIthigher must he home In mind thar sin¬ counsel to draw up contracts for the op¬ home team, which had Just won the pen Floods," °n paite « of yesterday's.Sun« erty. UA*f ONLY: wss snd followed a Ing by «upper at ml«.. was a fFroin Th« Tribune Bur**'i 1 Six month»... 83tr7|On« year.I<>.1* Tribune, There are embraced in that gle track roads may lead in rarloufl di¬ eration of the proposed subways Two nant, or which had been knocking at the day's communication DAII.V UNlaY: Washingt'ui, April 10..Mrs. MaeV«agh, nlsbt. f»"ts known to srery short which or for One month Amone of first $l-02|Ona y»ar.$12 2« rections and to ration« terminals, and triumph for Commissioner Will cox. th« "*U_Ste, "bo were r.ceK-a'1 door years, other place of hydraulics which are Mrs. Wlekere-ham, Mrs Nagel nn«l ihnt while dosed sidings lead nowhere members of the commission bad opposed had been rejuvenated with "finds" and careful student their by Mrs William B Dinsmore, Mrs. Tlunt. of flrst the held UATT*?. h*. Cabinet of MronMB CANADIAN m'NPAY: to hun¬ lead t" disaster (be terms agreed upon by the city «with was sure to be fighting It out with the Of mon-» than pa«»lng Importan«'* IDY IND of the spring sea¬ Ington. the hostess and her niece, wer» .$10.0H «»pen «switches sometimes of thousands of the American people. Wednesday receptions <">n» month. f a few friends with Mr and Mrs. Sydney P Bréese, Mr. sn1 the Interbor.uigh find the Brooklyn Rapid top ones thl* year? The fierce loyalty of dred» had Each son to-day. to DAILY ONLY: It appears almost Impossible, however, Mrs. Courtlandt Dlvon Barnes, Mr. and. 1.80 i» «/ear.$8.00 SS UM Transit companies, and a new member his partisans toward the ball player tret «he of Congressmen and them during the receiving honra. crear V/U' YORK FOR TAFT. majority DAÏ O.NLÎ of one of those who throws | light on the feudal system. other ieKisiator-t interested i»i these simple The Se^retaey of the Navy left here te¬ Mra Archibald S. Alexander. Mr. snd Mrs, the taken bad place Jne >r e.u.$4.."»"< conven Ill" passage by the Rochester eyraderle F. de ninim, Mr. and Mr«, win. to attend voted for those terms. Rut «vhen It came The man who In old days could crack I hydraulic problems, which are therein »et da;.- for a short visit to Boston mi" a. Ht Stm "i orit an Ente«-« In m Karl Dodge. Mr. and Mrs. Pauldinj tion oí a resolution urging all the No* t.» ineethig of the Harvard Overseers. rommlestonera two the this witness «,f statement vote eren Aa ii forth of the proof modern knight as «s head surely York delegat<f*a i<« «ChUrago to wort for The Secretary of war eni Mr«. Ptlms"i Fosdick. Mr. and Mrs. Pradartch Edey, Mr, of the f.ega favor hy »ivt»who bad been in th" opposition did n.«t «Oijr rea^«'.the diamond can "crack the sphere" »lid the failure for -.ear after ye.ir au gueits for som» davs Dr. Ptlm«o«i and Mrs i.ewls Iselln. Mr. and Mre. G«r» «nomination of Prealdent Taft win have of and bl« to pi icur» » to ai sti-A« husband In the WO}' own is1 obstacle of our ature Ing u» when tl an not lack devoted followers, it Is merelj seel Ml«« Btlmson. the father and sister ««f rett B Kip, Mr. snd Mrs. Brad'.sh Johs* the great mass of venture to put of copy of Tb» Tribun» from »»"»it newsdealer! the picot approval the power-making« the subway conserve Qod-glven. Of Addre«n. Trlh-i"-. Circulation IVpartment. «on. Mr. and Mrs Menrv W. Bull, Mr. aril is not worth while expediting the solution force? of nature by the »tnraKc. of water the Se-retary. Republican voters. Tt th«» Wllleox'eI I question of hitting, heads or halls. Mrs lieber R. RlKhop. Mr. and Mrs. Jamil« ¦-.. inmrunge of a problem, and commissioner "11 111« upper tributarle» of the rivers of «*<»n splitting hairs over sort of \ Burden. Mr. and Mrs. charles Pan«* THE DIPLOMATIC COUPS. so long as it renolutlon for the drawing up t«>-da^. of convene of this will To student tbi» the declaration Murphy state. enaineertng Cibson. Mr. and Mrs. Goodhue Livingst«)«, tracts passed by a unanimous vote. THF WBW8 THIB itOHVIXfr. The ! th« Bureau 1 Tribune almost «-fms essential The Trent its \ thla p»irpose. negllgencs problem accomplishes Mr. and Mrs. E. Livingston Pell. Mr an«! The Incident shows the real strength Controller Prendergast will be retnem- a crime. Bo, too, If Congress could grasp Washington, April 10- Tlie Austrian Am- Mrs Tribune advocated the passage of a gtanley 0. Mortimer, Mr and Mr«. CITY. Stocks were active and wcai:. resolution of positive instruction«« at of the dual subway plan. Kven those bTod as the en font terrible of another for s single minute the reasons and tho basssdor and Baioness Hengelmilller were W. Forbes Morgan, Jr. Mr and Mrs. Ger. to rou¬ a dinner to-nlglr, at are II honor likely of for floods the sr*= President Tail U>uk up with th disastrous guests do not who for approve preventing lhat is tin* customary state convention, where ho eulogize.! remed> al'i r,. Moyt, Mr. and Mrs. ApHisM and Co___t*9SS crltlei-m. Minister rallroada and the engimers tho qu«-ti«. i Hochester hecausestate Danish the so mere to with the Valley, future the In Mississippi and district con¬ tine their opposition Woodruff as warmly ns he Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. »'harles *'ary Rumof mediating the differences which method used In some Moltke as hosts. bad rO«ted Timothy T,.culogl/ed sey. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Karle Steven», Mr. Roosevelt «»n-1 clearly Stated by "CîarKoyle," possibly to put en recnnl the wishes If members of the commission ''threaten a strike, a* The Democratic yesterday ventions and flrat secretary, British «»eorge Voung, be taken. WOUld Mr. and Mrs. Forsyth Wt'kes. Mrs «State C'-mmlttee met and outlined tho of the voters for whom th»' delegates so R8 tp Interfere «lib the preparations denounced the supporters of GovernO. action four engine..ring o>t te-p«»tident wrote, no Mrs. Voung will sail from New Vork for ence Gray Dinsmore. Mrs. Marry W. Clar¬ state convention here to¬ are to act. Most «inte conventions to tieoeeMry to carrying it out they would Hlgglns «s plans=for the man >'-. as he yesterday de¬ bitterly to-morrow. a England be to Bosthe A pseudonyme "Oargoyle" supposed day. Vlekar, Miss Virginia Alexandre, Ml«« so In the fare of public «»pinion nounced the followers of President Taft, doubt, under of the attaché element iCalpaschntkoff, Andrew «llstructlve ton travelling salesman was lulled by a the la*t fifty years have followed the bare done hoping to avoid that went to Philadelphia this Cornelia Van Auken «"hapin, Miss Agn«s subway train ;it the Grand Central Sta¬ practice of Issuing forma! instructions. and they would have made up a lonely so prevalent In ail good work -the "green- Russian Embassy, g, cinflln. Miss Frances T. Bréese. Ml«« The theit of a deputy sheriff'.«* But H is of oinparatively Httle conse- opjiositlon. f«>r tho city administration is tion. Taft Is right In thinking eyed monster".and thereby turn the atten- afternoon and was entertained at dlnne-* t'rsula Prealdanl W. Brown. Miss Claire Bird, Mt»s badge and ov« rcoat r*auaed many police has Dix* will return to-morrow. Ho and Gorernor there its favor to-night. the deleto lu enl the united to to the the that Is directions only way prob¬ banging ttofl away from his personality quenco how syi.ii iDougtas Miss Ansonella Kane, mim «complication.«-, tho culprit finally onevad¬ -1 m Its for the Amer¬ way are to 'is he they done bis utmost to open the irat»<s arc convey««.!, so l"iig a passenger lynching. Hut where are the self-gov¬ lem which ought to dear every Pamela Poor, Miss .Marian V. R. Kennedy, ing arrest. IN WASHINGTON SOCIETY. from excesslve recognised by all It» lie explicit and execution. The prompt action of the erning people of even th" most progres¬ ican citizen. I may. perhaps, Imitate his Olympic died, apparently MISS Klean-.r Mortimer. Miss Winifred \V. that rumors ffrom The Tribune Bureau.! drlnking, though there were commission In ordering the preparation sive democracy to 1.0 found who will example by the signature. »'hisolm, MISS Frances W. Henry. Mils btadlng. bin W. had loases OF driven Robert )if.'«\y gambling VEARi A PTLDKNT Washington. April in -Mrs. Jane N. Morgan. Miss Ell-_-betli R. It wmild have been more closely in of contracts on the day after the Gov¬ give verdicts of guilty against their own FORTY-TWO to commit Riiicitle. ¦¦,. :..:, The Woman's honor in Patterson's ball to-night, given HYDRAULICS. Thompson, Miss Maude G. Shepherd, Pe¬ Ktiffragc party held a meeting in the in¬ acenrdanee with «Republican poll'T and ernor signed the Wagner bill means that lynchers? The communities where ni..', of her daughter. Countess Kleanor Gl- ter Cooper Bryce. Albert Eugene Ilndeon fella n v., April I. mi terest of the «.'hiñese population of thu practice if the committet» on resolutions If the courte decide that the preferential rule prevails too often regard lynching Gallam zycka, was the second large dancing event tin. -*red«rlc A. Jutlllard, Robert Walton city und several «'hin« se men and women had not fol!nw»*d the example sot In payment Is constitutional the city will h i 'ase of the "people taking the gi.vBEST of th«« week and in point of beauty has Goelet. PEOPLE THE SERVES HEWHO By compromising 190ft of made addresses. Plc^nlx [ngraham, ¡«"redarle! T. The granel seeming to Include within the be ready at one«, to come to terms «with "ernment from their representatives tut .> n<-ver been surpassed here. f«.r .<.">«mhi the damage suit hmught by FrellnghU**sen, James T.. Bréese, jr.. «; »star I s.-ope .if the declaration "the delegates the operators. The first decision M the "their own hands" and are not re.idy to To the Editortitof The Tribun* party stand marble stairway, the ballroom and the en¬ venor Drucke, the Interborough enabled conn Bin Lei Republl«"*an Atttrbury, Ilowland S Da \ Is, Whit¬ In players for the Gianta, who euereMember.-« were abloom with spring elected from Hie «'o-nt-ross districts. A preferential payment may lie expected punish sui'h applications of the Initia¬ squarely on the re«cord made and being tertaining suite as witness.«a, to play ball, of New ney Kernochan. Henry F Osborn, ir Ar¬ orchestra, Conrad no jurisdiction shortly, as the court has probably been tive and referendum. The lias flowers. convention that state He believes Taft nold Whitrldge, Reginald B. Lanier, mads by President ol th» Housewives' League anil mark«'for the dandntr. "he who serves the »people (the whole peo¬ York, provided the muslo nien, In their white aprons, had lun«h- .«ve.- any delagatM hut the delegatee-at- waiting for the action of the legislature bv Worthtagtoa Whltehouss and R. Thors* In assisted was receiving Patterson the Mrs. and best." The "dawg" h|t somebody In Illinois. t.. e««n and discussed improvements planne«! large, and it suggests a lack of famil- and Governor «m the Wagner bill to sim¬ ton Wilson. tantea his party ple) at the I'ountess Kleanor <»1_> cka and her daugh¬ <T needed. larity with party history when a Rethe question before It. «people will -respond i" that principle I'.ittersoti. Medlll Mrs. Joseph ter-in-law. Mr, and Mrs «' < »liver Tselin will re* malcontents, DOMESTIC.The Boutb Carolina au¬ publican state gathering issues any rec- plify of Times" "The Fairbanks expedition, ballot boa T1 vaporing«« thorities Insisted Frederick ». Beach I ommendatiOfl whatever directed to Ihe <>f smlssaries of of Clil»ago, who will be her house guest for turn to town from Aiken. S C., on April of discord, fomenten scale Mount failed of to McKinley, RTS. Tin: COI Till: PRRBIDBVT AND would be tried un an alleged attempt t«< numbered more 21, and will stay at the St. Regis n Ml« have l.orn extremely ill e.|lllppe.l hatred will not count ageinst the Gibraltar- several days. The guests kill his wife; a Paris dispatch said Mr. representatives of the independent Con* her In the city. In a speech before the American Par ¡must like attitude «>f righteousness upon which than on« hundred, Miss Taft and to versatile wltli from chroniclers, Judge Beach would sail fur th« United State- grass districts. Nevertheless, there will Association a few years ago President house guests, the Misses Roelker, of New;¦ nt Taft has planted himself. p on April 10. :-¦-The Republican Mat- he little dissent from tlie statement of success in the earn« Cook's "The Dr. prncprevious MlSS Annette Buckley, daughter of Mr«. dancers. Taft was reporter! ns saying: The pcopbi were fooled by a coterie of Vork, being among the younger Baroness convention In Rochester adopted a plat¬ tlie "tica! administration of justice In the venture. Richard Buckley, will be married to-.!«v platform that in voting for Mr. "United in list, whan President Harrt-. The Austrian Ambassador and form "urging" the d«»taa*ates-at-larg« politicians dvinour is states a reproach notp remedy. I and the district delegates to the national Taft'fl renomination both delegatee-at- "sation." But he proposed «i«feat«-«i by ths same tactj«*s no» Ifengeitnüller. the Russian Ambassador and at the house of her mother. No. fi* Eagg What ««.« need nt this V.me Is not rhet¬ ¦on sr«as and district «lelegates will "carry have never mndo any arraignment of the oric, convention t«> support President Tall. to defeat President Taft Mme. Bakhmeteff, the German Ambassador T.!«! street, to Philip G. McKadden. «f employed being bul remcdlei Controller Prendera«"!. in¬ ---_-¦ The Vermont state convention ch'.ico of the Republicans of courts «pilte mi sever«-» as the arraignment the "'out ths bard times that fol- and Countess von Bernstorff, the Italian Philadelphia. In The price paid elected dalegates-at- "this state." dorsed Taft and Then why so mu<ii rhetoric" In this speech by Mr Taft contained not been forgotten and the i*ecol- Ambassador and Marchioness i'usanl and lowed r^= has Roosevelt Mrs. J. Rodman Townsend will gi\e « to hlin. largo Javorable Spanish Min¬ [dinner difference Is that, whereas Mr. Taff lectlon Is too freak In memory to permit a r.'enna Beatrice Cusanl, tlie -adherents dominated the Maine stats New V«>rk Is as strongly for the Presi¬ The fo-nlght at her house, In East Tth whatever, no remedy Min¬ Danish the ;;ot Miss to el\»M'.lsnnt's Rlano, only d«-term!nnt|on de Sefiora and proposes ister e p« [forman, at this time. lonvention, b'.'t the delegation was no'. dent as Illinois has declared itself to and he Is against «very practical remedy street, for Mrs. Henry Lea the Belgian colonel. Moltke, and to the that "if r the Countess theory Instructed though pledged 'I he people '»i"t the shouters» are with ist, -r and the un- that has been proposed. 1 propose a mod« up flying m and Mme. Havenlth, the Post¬ Benator Jones, of Washington, in lie for Colonel Roosevelt Mrs William M V. Hoffman will «lv« the quiet, conseneatlve «rote. Republl« Minister (Jeneral, r«-iii««dy by which "every <>ne who slays with it long a speech in the Senate, portrayed Theo¬ onaHfled ami unanimous announcement «rat«- and constitutional Representative and Mrs. [a luncheon to-day at her house. In U er-1 «lue delibera- "enough" shows unusual discretion f..r «.an«« and Democrats alike, will be with him master dor.« Roosevelt as another Pontius Of that fact l.y the state convention will the people themselves, after naval at¬ the French J. Peters, 51st street, Will be able to obtain justice.. an aviator Kohod] can expect to hear at the election if rTooeevrtt should run In¬ Andrew Pilate, and attacked his proposed reca'l dispel all possihle »Imiht as to New ti<«n, d'Azy, Mr. Colonel Roosevelt at Pittsburgh. tern there will be more l letnocrats tache and Viscountess« Beno|st Editors in Western York's preference and a charmed life Indefinitely In so hazard¬ of judges. attitude a number of and Mrs. C. Ledyard Blair end the Misers general : for him than Republicans; no doubt and Mrs. Joseph I_elter Pennsylvania report a steady growth of Tbis Is as err«»neons M Colonel I'«»<»se- ous an occupation. from the diplomatic Blair are due to drive In New Vork to¬ the «S. people younscer C. Sentiment for Mr. Taft and predict:.¦his In the next national convention. that of that the velt's assertion the other day sue«.ess in the Keystone State. corps and resident and official society were day from their trip to Panama. Mr. «n«l fjovernor Wilson seems to have been tooth Orange, N, .1. April :, tflt President had done nothing for the wel .Mrs. Wltbert Bloodgood and MIm .i.«s»li.»» the guests. / «Colonel Roosevelt told Pennsylvania THE ILLINOIS among RESULT. fare of children, when as ¦ matter lucky In getting out of minois wi»h even "PIG THAT WOULDN'T GO" VERSES. The Italian Ambassador and Marchion¬ Bloodgood are also returning to the city howds that "we knocked them through the ropes In Illinois"; he expressed the The supporters of President Taft teve of fad the federal children's bureau one suit of clothes. at a to-day from their trip to Bermu'la sal ess i'usanl were the guests of honor To th.» Editor of The Tri' 0 belief that he would win in the Keystone no desire to minimize tlie result of the 1)111 had and Mrs. Panama. just been paseed through bil Committees representing Sir: The a.-count Of the origin of a dinner to-night with Senator Stale. Illinois. Mr. election in Though The White Star liner Titanic, which well known nursery aa hosts. efforts. anthracite operators and miners at a ¡Tuft's story given In to¬ Rayner Mr. and Mrs l-'rands Burrall Hoffman campaign managers acknowledged So far from laiing against remedie! sailed fro m Southampton yesterday, Is day's The Russian Ambassador and Mine conference In Philadelphia agreed to Is very Interest¬ 29) pare(March and Eliot Gregory are hooked to snll te»at luncheon entertained ut their differences to sub-commit- that tire outlook was far from encour¬ which would improve the adminiatra- DOW "the largest vessel of the world Bakhmeteff were, ing;. Many «>f th«» Mother Goose songs are day foe Europe. i«-«-.s. a proposition «ta reconvene the old aging, they did not expect, and even Col<>ral centuries old, but that tf.-.lay by Mrs. William F. Draper, w'n.ese tlon of Justice, the Prosddenl has repeat« Bui how long «rill it tee ebefore there Is -i «strik.» ««Immission -nid lay the matter nel Koosevcit's managen did not other guests were Count »'habannes, Mr. expect, edly advocated a variety of changes ¦uper »Titanic T Mr. and Mrs. James gpeysr, who "«cent «thing compared to th» "traditional and before It for arbitration was rejected by so Mrs. Woodbury Blair. Mr. anet Mrs. abroad S fortnight complete a Roosevelt victory. There lhat «would cheapen ami expedite Its Of the Jews." I wish to sugar«.nt, il"- minera. The Stamford Savings ago. Will return to Kdward Mrs. nnd Mr. Blair, Montgomery in and New Vork before the end of the month. strongest is no reason, however, for thinking that proccsecg. II" has a«"ivl«-e<l ilu» limita¬ Sentiment In Illinois ninnlfests Itself however, that when you say that one of Bank, one of the oldest »V Glover, «Vharles Mrs. Heale In its a McLean, shortage discovered of "The Connecticut, They are booked to sail from Englanl fer the conditions which the vote of Illinois tion of the right of appeal so that the In curious cross currents. Mr Roosevelt these Paasover .""tigs is the model Gibson. Mrs. Ri.-har-I U Id this port on April 17. funds exceeding $8fj,000, and Major House That Jack Built" von "have the Mrs Presten Gains. Mrs. and Turing, I>r. Holly, its senior teller, was arrested on reflected are widespread, either In the litigant with the long purse may not appealed to the v.,ters in the nani<» of wrong Mrs. Rogers, story pli by the ear" for it is a pix rest "f the Middle West or In the eountry exhaust his poorer rival by fighting ¦ Progressiven««« and w-«.n. a charge of embezzlement. Oovernor Colonel and Mrs. John Jacob AMMtt Roger", Mr. Kalpaschloeely r«esemble those "f Miss Draper, Miss Thornellke, at large. They are not typical, as has case up from one court to another. tie Wilson appealeSd as strongly in the n.»in* of Boston; sailed from Southampton for New TetW FOREIGN..Ths membera of the Brit¬ nlkr.fT, John U li ».-»tig. h Jeu the on touches the ish Cabinet put finishing |.e«'ii shown In Indiana, Michigan and has urged siniplifyinir codes of procedure of Progresatveness with many of th« r-r-land Mararfson, Dr. pe¬ yesterday, and on their arrival here they ] may like 10 compare those words Major Morton, the Home Rule bill, which Premier Asl'ont snd i'hauncey will go to their country place, at l'..i!neKentucky, and will h»i shown later in so as to eliminate the te«hnl«',-ilities that sams doctrine« und lost with each other. 1 think the child'a story lai.ey, Menry Du quith will Introduce-.- In the House tit Ohio. beck, n v. Iowa, Missouri and Kansas. It to-day make justice slow and nncertatn. Th6 new White Commons to-day. which 1 refer to and whleb Is very old, Is Mackett. Representative and Mrs Nicholas I.ongStar steamship Titanic, the largest will not he wise to measure Mr. Tuft's When the administration <>f the law is "Tim Pig That Wouldn't Oo." TU.K cal TEE OF TEB DAT. Mr. and Mrs, Robert L. Livingston will . orth er.tertaln«'d at dinner to-night pre¬ vessel afloat, sailed from Southampton (strength anywhere outside of Illinois by "The rope began la hang the butcher, it win have t«. h.» iiong the Improved return to New fork from Europe In «uly. .ut Mrs Patters.»n on her first voyage to New York; the ball the ceding butcher began to kill the «>x. linea proposed by Mr. Taft Stallkeejvers In Washington market have The "v auction wag so great that the American the one-sidednoss of the Illinois vote. Yls-cunte-es i'hlnda, wife of the Japanese lo drink the and Mr. water, The Mra W. began r^mblm-d Circumstances from her pic.I The propose«! re-all of d(?cistoni would not yel «gol ever ihr- vlll j>.«irt them re¬ Cockrai liner New York was torn unfortunately Ambassador, was the guest of honor at taken possession of Bourke their count;-y | » f>- -* The Italians landed a strong force to permit, the unfair use against the have no effect upon the law's delays or cently bj a contingent of K«W York houv«- The watei began to quench the (ire, with Mrs. John Wy-th a luncheon to-.lay, at Fort Washington, LoBg Island. and occupied an Important strategio President of an Issuo which had no rela¬ technicalities. It could pol be employed wiv»-. '-They were nice, perfe» t ladies, all The fin- began to burn the »ti««k, as hOSteSS Among her other guests were on the coast of Libya, while the Tbe stick began to beat the dog, ef one of the oldest marketmen in Mrs. Foster. Mrs. Bymora, Mrs »'harles D. Sahin gme a > i-ltce» Mrs. tallan squaoron created a diversion by tion whatsoever to his candidacy. That In bringing about justice between man th«»(hem," Glllesple. the to bits The pig. began dog building told a reporter the other df_* around was the Lorimer issue. Many voters In and man. Colonel Rooserell himself has Miss Mary Patten Mr«, party yesterday at her house, Il and Mrs bombarding the Turkish positions== t'ropper t«> And th«go tig began hut what se,me of them kn< «r >aboul mar¬ It Illinois were Stuart Zuara, to the west of Tripoli. Wyeth. will) Itth street. apparently mi«i«'.i Into be- said so. disclaiming any Intention of keting, or rather what tits. .Il.ln't know, ivs been told that this famous pig \\">eth and her son, .was said at Peking that no date had Washington to-morrow and sail from | h«sen settled on for the assembly of the lieving that they could beat express their settling ordinary cases by reference to was amaslng. Why, one of th-- ladtas, ¦torj is Introduced Into one of the public leave the sum-i \-1. iuncem«tn( whs mad« yesterday t bt nd New York OB Saturday t'i pp. coalition Cabinet, and grave foret"«« ing» <ii. satisfaction with Mr. Lorimer and the people. Whatever his plan might do, epretty ns g pletura «am« t" my «taod and school readers as a classic c, «tlgag__nenl "f Miss Madeline Knot !*«**1. abroad mer | w .were in circulation in regard to th It would N. not make if easier or Y<,«k, llareta ff, IM& lega pointing to a smoked hum Mid: 'Please l"t with tlie I'nlted States Senate's failure to any was the guest of .laughter of Mr? r> Henry eKnowiti Maillon Pltney Jiistl<-e tlnucd disagreement among the different unseat him by voijng for Colonel Roose¬ expensive for the common suitor to get me have two veal cutlets off this.' An¬ factions of the government," the leaders »liarles Menry Butler at a reception to¬ John K. Co«.lii*. the well known polo la«'HAILSTONE SALAD. of them went n» .lerrv'-» stsnd over Mr. Cow.lin Is ,i wi'lowe.- .,¦ of tho various sections display inability velt and against Mr. Taft. The I/irlmor justice when s««me one owed him money other night, when he met the member« of the er. t<« establish a capable government. zssrs: faction unfortunately thrust Its support and declined t«i pay. And the practical there and «aid: 'I want a sirloin steak from To t.. 1..liter "f Ths Tribuna !¦ corns, th- Judi¬ three children. Klliot «'. Cowdln the diplomatieCabinet« Thomas Fountain, of Las Cruces, N. M.. on the President, and that handicap on ev..ryday faults in the administration thîit lovcly I'lerp.' m-.tlotilng to n Deck 'ef dir: a» Hi«- (Caster dinner «>f one of N'ew ciary ami ofllelal so.-lctv. Mrs. Butler as¬ E. »e.w.lln. Jr. and Mrs. Charlea M' £_" >c« ef hanslns ,pu .» hook There was nii- York's I« idlng hotels was served thla célé¬ .was executed by Mexican rebels; he \\.\-- Ids Knowllon Of ami of has <>f «'ivil ar.three sister-, ¡¡¡l ».II criminal, in the hospitalities canvass proved insuperable. Yet it is J0t9t.ce. captain of a federal gun under (ienerHl otlier here that wanted BotiM spare rlhs brât« '1 dish, tbe chef thers being a grandson sisted her husband with her Mrs. Latnar known in .-... i. ty Th-y BIS Mr?. Allan Aitlie evening, and had Pancho Villa, : ..- P. p. Carp, the Ru¬ mi Indisputable fact that Mr. Taft did vastly more Importance to the public from a hln.l quart«? of lamb, »an you beat of it invented von who Herr Kuturenoseof, pletOD !:..!.I.Ins. Mrs John In lee P.I,. and other «women. manian Premier, resigned, together with not think that Mr. I/orimer was entitled than all the ultra conservatism that tho It?" serve hla (list to It to ma-Louise was Mise nnd Knowllon. aUgUSt the Ministers of War and Public Work?. to a seat in tlie Senate and frankly ad courts have ever shown in Interpreting Bdaia V, Morgan. Ambassador to Brazil, "Youne man, ho« Ho you expect t.) marry ter. the Emperor <>f Austria, on the» battle la the house guest of the Assistant Secre¬ THE WEATHER-Indicationa for to¬ vised iu favor of ousting him when th»» the Congtltirtkm. it an> tu debt?" SOCIAL NOTES FROM NEWPORT. Held of Solferino, June M, istV, wliere srlll my daughter if you day: Fatr. The temperature yeBterdav: of st it- and Mis. Huntington Wilson "Whv, rir, in my «¿pinion If« the only be remembered occurred on«» of the nnoot tarysome report of the first investigating commitHighest. ,">r> degrees; lowest, 40. .¦». [By fleer«»«, i.. Th« rib for da) F'iuare thing t'» do The longer I am en¦i hi: MISSISSIPPI. !<¦(> was before ihe Senate. Newr.ort. A|.rll M..Mra WilllaiM t; i.'rrli çag«d to lier the WorM «iff I will be." -Life. terrible hailstones recorded In history. Mi. an«l Mrs. John Hay« Hammond en¬ The llr.aiigllo, <«r Fellow River, has it has long been known that bailst<mes tertained twenty-five young people at din¬ has ¡ilar.il Rough Point, It is one of the characteristics of an ftr\OLE TRACK A\D SWITCHES. her Ne«wseri PT_AT HAM,! W««<< of China, be¬ are not simpl) congealed water, bul contain ner at the Chevy «base club to-ntght in place, formerly owned b> Mr and Mr» Governor Wilson's own «pstlmate of American electorate when aroused to long l»oon Called the besides about 49 per «..¦nt of edible food, rich honor of Miss Leslie Page, <>f California, Prederleh W. Vanderbilt, on the a gimeral election at one head, cause of its vast, uncontrollable ami de« To-day Ih» world of carklng rare In strike marbd himself n- possessing a "single track without Will fHile, and In Its place In piot«-iii--. phosphorus ami «"»arbohyd «ho has be.'ii their guest tier the winter, Mrs. Leeds has not occupied th« pla»e heeding too closely what damage sfriictive floods which have probably Will mind" may be generally accepted with¬ with an Kden Garden fair; when combined spring protenchyma. Which of Mot nine.» the lllns«lale, BpitngS, death of J«-an Miss ami h.-r to Innocent «bystanders. been the worst In the world, devastating fare And over out much «lemur, but in view of some re¬ may be done sapaclally common grasa, produce la the Ark., both of whom are returning to their Mr. and Mrs M. A. husband, Van Buren, of Ne* Cullom went d«>*.vn as a result of thousands of miles <>f land and annihil¬ Will sprend «Very a am.le of ample size. human system during digestion a proteo« lUMMa To-iuoitow nl^ht Mr. and Mrs. Fork, ar. gueeta at the cent performances there will be a strong Senator Mu«nchlt\ger Klatfanil-Iiorimer revulsion put he voted ating the home» of million of people. And Jfiy will cover all iviii- equilibrium delightful t«> sap«Brienea. Hammond «rill ftra a dinner dance at their Inclination t«> credit that single track the Mr. ati'1 Mra Alfred Owls, «.f be** to uphold Mr. Lorimer's title, and so was We shall be fortunate if a corresponding Already list the anxious crie«: Whether hall, as some scientists ci'tttind, home, when Miss Taft anil her house party Creek, with the «»quipment of several switch«?« not Pene., and Mr. and Mrs. Howi.rd Ü Taft had taken name Is not appropriately flxed upon the "Play balllM is «-inii'i\- a meteoric shower of comminuted will be among the guests. »iialiain. of Chentnuf Mill. I'ciin are ami perhai«H siding, all In agile working the blameleess. President matter thrown off from other plants bv he has which was for view, woe men their opposite yet sacrificed. will Mississippi, forget many yeiii-s To-day arrive at their summer homes earl> In M« order. Upon r.o other theory does it One state does not carry a national been periodically the w«.e of America, The fights they've fought, the Imocka .some great electrical distúrbanos in ths In¬ NEW YORK SOCIETY. Mr. and Mra L'Ibridge T. Üerry, of N>>* ««»eeni pra<ii«-*ar>l«> to explain his course In visible ether Which pel li --lite, all HpaCO or humps whl«-li dally life hestows. fork, were \isltors here t»»-»l.»y. Ius|h*<__M relation to railroad grade crossings nnd convention, and the slluatlon in Illinois and which, with th«» progress of time and And simply bits of les whloh In passing through Frederick Townsend Martin gave a tlulr fis Matty In the box?) summer hone. Sea Verge, an-i ih« f t«> the assessment of railroads for taxing is not likely to he duplicated elsewhere. the increase of population and of prop¬ To-day hope comes to downcast hearts, the food stemeuta, is »tin an the air absorb the for luncheon at Sherry's yesterday yacht, the Klectra. Meanwhile, the Taft mar'airers may turn erty values along its course, shows no To linger 'til the fall; however It may be, ui,il«'«l«l«'«l but, pur* «op«-**;. question, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Pish VV« tttf, newly appointed Ambassador to France it is <i fact that omhin,-.,1 with fresh mown and Mrs. Myron T Merrlck and Mr. and who have and gloom departlaflst year, if r»e remember rightly, the the lesson of Tuewlay t«> pood account. Inclination to mend its ways. takes the been aiiro.nl foi nom« me, * ought to realize that a certain kind The problem of «'ontrolllng lhat great Joyriay ball' stage, It makes the finest salad In the world, Mrs. Bradley Martin. It was served at a Governor wa«« so much enamoured of the They grass to start for home'oa June ij. of stream as to prevent disastrous flooils to and that support may hotel in.1nri.nis. at In the prove the portion supplied and .»with to abol¬ One need not l»e Mea of «'onipelling the raiimnds .COlWI sight large tab!« in the main restaurant. .1»-. Mr 8 Inej Webatei will arru. (he I»'" i-pi« stloii we may «.ay vvas taken from hall >rated With pink roses, ferns and pink t To tell what turns the tid»-; ish dangerous «-ruth» crossing.-- at (h«»ir the President will command the fullest may appear liisoliible. It doubtless Lenta .ui of th« month for the summei Is known the what «ans In In gs wherever .\e,i he stands popular by In and approval iliflleullies. left and pendous on evl«l> magnitude right, The n<-e, rambler toses. own expense that he arraigned tho He barbs M Scott, of New V'Tk. 1« a St*' vacillation sy<rt«tm< whloh so most completely and exclusively on his Yet its very magnitude Indicates the Insists: won't he denied; Ouerteklan The guest«, numbering thirty-eight. In¬ visitor, publican party platform for not being own admirable record as a disinterested, urgent desirability of H««ftens the stones that they can be sll«jid cluded Mr. and Mrs. William Douglas port it. Wo may To-day clerk, hanker, merchant, 003 Miss Cle«*«lan-J lias rn«l«-«l her \ i.-it n*A solving Rtremiotis enough on thnt point, until ll !th u aerVOd salad Is The like vegetables small: shoulders, great and wise and progressive statesman. Bloane, Mrs. Btuyraeeat Fleh, Mr. and Mrs. grant that It will Involve the greatest en¬ Rub heart on M.H. VVIn«low and I re was shown to him very etTe«»tlvoIy that In a-thrnh with equal J"v ths neu mayonnaise dressing of rtornrtandy M>ra« Edmund !.. Baylies, Mr. and Mrs. M turnedCam« t<« New Vork. gineering works ever undertaken in tills Fach of oil fact the Republican plat form was much penglun and .volk A. bean vinegar. W. ITTINii. soya I'lay eballl Orme Wilson. Mrs. Yandcrhllt, Mrs. Jama« Hugh D, AUChlncIos« was heie i,i II' more explicit and emphntle than that on Till; REDUCTION OF VETERANS. or any other Country, but that does not eggs. The new disk will be listed on hotel A Bürde,,, Mra K N. Breitung. Mr. and hi summer place Hemm« "Coins; a «a«' this summer?" spectlag iic«-essarily and If imply Ceneral l/.tid's re¬ the Salad ImpoaslbUlty, minus was M ''sterrypln protest against which li.» himself standing. It Mrs »'luirles B. Alexander, Mr. and Mrs. Earin. "No. My wife has decided she can get. engineers it NIOIL competent riTZ should out more duction in <«r tired pronounce rank of all War vet¬ Civil comfortably by itaylne »ïrmond G. Smith, Min. .lohn B. Draxel. pay Keeiiie«! i<> him then r«»«-.«! politics, when Mr. ami lf-1 Alfr» d Tue-kerm«n. ef possible the problem would resi.lv«. Itself, at home.".Detroit Kree Tress. New <«rk. April «. till Mrs Joseph Bttefcney. Mrs. Moses Taylor fork, have arrived ai th« Malcolm appealing f«-r votes, to demand that the erans who are employed in the public first, eott into the «selection method of the best One of the last numbers of "guceesa' grade t-roaslngs should be abollabed with¬ service calls attention to an'important NEW YORK FROM THE SUBURBS. HONOR FOR JOHN out «««»s« t.» the people. Well, the I,egls- C'indition of aft'uirs which is Inexorably of work, and, second, into finding the contained this yarn illustrative of the meBURROUGHS. ; WILL READ ANDERSEN'S When II cornea «« arMtratlns «Pli a New to s.pilrtn out of an latv.i'«'. i>. a pronounced lunjorlty, pnssed Imposed i.v the pi*ogr«_ss of time and ways t«. defray the cost. That would be cess of S Scotchman The pupils of the Horace .Mann S.-lmol A dramatic leading of IhS tal", "f ISM Verk ihvi.mIi "an. even a member of the dlptosituation. no enormous, anpleaaatit matter were what method which is t«« be ri^garded from the'points will Rive a reception for John BuiTOUgM :« bill requiring the jib,«iiti«.i) ««f grata i.i.i i|. ,,11],« I» Hal.le to li»»» hi» tioub!««. Andersen h> ICIIih ll"uni.-n a«J «Christian Seotrhman could "The pot find Ids ticket. hut loss adopt»«I. contrasted with it Is the In celebration «>f his «-eventy-f.fih annlv.-r- »IstH «.ro-sings at the sole expense of the rnil- <«f vi«>w both of sympathy and of busi¬ by the Misses Kuller, lu .-.»stu'«ie. On the «.onductr.r'a second round it was St.« -lilngtnn Star. Milthis morning; at It O'clock In the l'llfsllsli tiieair«roails. And now Gov«?rnor WHsi.n r«Hoes ness It, seems Intolerable to disml» or periodically imposed upon the nation by still missing. »li ni»iit an and S'-.'ttisli folk \*l'l b\ By tiie epenlag of Teachers College. given for the benefit of th<- «"lia; it. The "single tntck mirid" hns develoj»e«l to (legrada a former soldier of Ihe 1'nlon the floods to which the river is now sub¬ .Iu«-ol> | fl 'What's that In your mouth?' he a«ked. Chicago baa ifeown Mea York thai II i»as not Thompson C.vrnnaslum. a .lust now we "»it the aatss ject, are 'He in»t Is ward night" iM NelKhbo. ho..«l ftctlb-nieiit >m entering upon al 3Í a switch, which carries him around hta just ebecsnsi be has >growa old In the ser¬ "Sure enough there wus the missing LUNCHEON FOR BISHOP TUTTlE. p. m., at th.« Hotel Plaza. April 1«, priesa ilia basier i»e-m<i«-rat »n-i Chronicle. f«»riner position upou h line of thought vie,. ,,f (he country. t«> his hardship and final strokes of what bag been «»all«"*d the ticket tne » of for »»winsMr. Reumert «s tin leading «-«.inediSi Bishop Tlittle, tbe prcMding.Hisboi> Vers «."Uhu »ne» a éerier Which li"i«l> It to be unjosl to the rnil- distress. \et, on th«« other hand, from greatest engineering work In the world. "Th* conductor puip-hed It and went on be Protestant Kpiscopal Church, with a nim- of the Boyal Theatre, Copenhagen ». up in i,, r Interior, Um »ih perhaps ti«> r««n«is to «l«i to i hem the v«»iy thing which I business point of view, which is ti.>! It might lie worth while to ««otisldor the hls way. l.lll «he t" P*V ber of sleigyiueu Hint laymen, was the eomss to America by special |»«'rmi.».xi'»n a i «uní large »nr.iigli a few months ago be lnslat«?d otuihi t<» be -arily harsh or hard-hearted. It is practicability, two yeare hence, when the "'Ah. i^eei.' amti Randy, in reply »,, his SWHf.!«-.| wende in f««r iha mlaatag apeaga Cleveftaad riain guest ysstsrdaj at s luncheon gtv«*i by tin» King «if Denmark. Among the pS not just to the epoblte to retain men In Isthmian work is done. ,,f directing the fellow paî-Kengerï' hanter. Tin na»> me Dealer. done. Chartes H. l.aiu!» at the National Arts tronesses are Mrs. ({rover < "lev eland. Mf alisent-mllKled as ye wad think v. .. .Nor i« Ihln the only relief f«-oni tlie_ places which thay are n«» longer compe¬ engineering ability which has prove«l so very aul«l ticket, and I Just su« k«leu, New Terii ».«.-hi« Bremen, "i'« ¡or seoai to Club. Kishop Tuttle was In the city to at- Cl. v.-l.iti.l II Dodge, Mrs. S.in Low, Alrt n sfl the inoiaifoiiv ,,f (h,, single ii-a«-k. Th« other tent t.. till and at salaries which they splendidly efficient at Panama toward date i. pwemlcal se metier wbel il meta sie .Mag tiii'l a me«.ting; <«f the HOUSS of it-shops Th suden s r:««os'-\«-it, Mrs, Herbert Satt«*the problem of abating the Mississippi «m matters relating t«» the Afttag at nennt I«»«- anil Mrs. lli'lr ««WH iiiark-tlt l| hii-I an- t««l. IiIiik UMtl pHl day the «iovenmr deellm*d to r»«uppolnt caiin.it earn. Behuylsr van Itonssslssr know your wife didn't Ilk« It Miirks-I flood«; .syr.T use Feei stami- BSea Kiederick I l.aml. a brothfr. and It is h pathetic i_i« t. no doubl, hut it Tickets can b«> obtained at the Plaza to the stale Hoard of .«isiwiMors a proml« becatis». you took tue home unexpectedly to chassa iiiiiii. In (aatesbi hosts .I"» ph c. IaHtnb, a coualn, assist«-«! 88 sri dinner last night. from Mrs. Norman \V. l'ini'»«-, No. 8 W*"ii«?ni ..|.rogr«'ss¡\«.'' heinoci-at, who had is still a fact, that men do grow old ami Parks Nonsense! Why, you hadn't beat "All tbS wiirl.l i« Stags'1 I- an <>l«l BSW, aaJ at the lunehson. :-7th stri« t Tin: v/.iM'v o/*/;\.v lieeii hi- earnest supporter, and uained in unlit for further service, anil flint vet¬ S«ue two minutes hefore she remarked thai It «night Be milled that ii.-irly all of New York» She wa« glad It wag no one eme i.ut %ouJii> place a souicwbal i":i<«t¡«»nary Demo- eran soldiers are no exception to that 1 fl M Huweser, all the peoses EMPEROR A. V. ARMOUR'S GUES' MAY WEAR PARENTS' BADGES. buiMing» m Tll-Hlta lhat I could hit the world a belt. ci'iif of no «'xperieuc«» or knowledge of the rule. Public otnees are not und should in Hi«« w.'iM hi« ii"i "»ta«»."- Klmira AAvat «¦ktim. COL, Aorll 1" -Soil* aid dau«,-M- Corfu, April 10.The German KlUP-* Ml Rain-Sows will made he not soon be along in plenty User. eleemosynary institutions. Bo writes the poet MMs«'lteld of one of iotlicate and tniportiiiit duties of that tcrs of Civil War veterans -«re aithorilOi was tho Kuost at luncheon to-day of AH No reasonable man should object to the his heroes. That is the way we suppose »nd "St. Nicholas" for April says «,f ,*Th« iii.-.l.«« In t.« wear ths bninze button of all.» C.rand son pill«'«'. Tlie "single ti.. might l*«' Morgan 0 Iluta««!« » of th«. Rainbow": "Th«> [atnbOW i.« oiVlf-r to get viit«K '««i «he llepul.li> an CSadtdStS Arm] of the Republic by s r«8Äutlon m- «vansV, InArmour «in the steam yachtsho««1 lllive li'.'l exp.-teil to >: ii-ix Jo "pro. giving <»f preference In appointment to they all will fltsj who,, they face the Why the the Ktnperor rriotnlng the l.y reflection of sunbeam '. BUI fOSa. Il"- former trod teed ..i s m.'.tit.« hers of . for Mmiir of ll.oifi'iil \\f" M:i«-s. lull the «'onvenienl switch retaran s«.l<liers, M long as they arc i-a pa¬ pit.-ber to-day and the s*>asoii of 1912 be¬ produced Mr« Anroiii and Professor Rlcliard Soft* ralnrin.ps. \v, h;,i t look toward BasalOT Will r*cellecl IbSI '"TIB :iilllvan nave iii'-nt Of California and Nevada '¦''.. k ever the extensive excavations now b*»" nado it «'a»-y i<» abandon the man who ble of performl-ig i in« rcqnlred duti»-s. gin.-. That, ai ,uiy mte, is the way all falling in the raindrops order to »ss th.t «ted tlieni nv.iv pa year» la N«w Voik f.«i the cam» tun» was taken In an «1'iort to'"'e>tnt tt«o 1 made at (Jarliza. a suburb of Corto. hud (IHitiguUdied hlnisclf by comj^liof Hut neither should any reasonable per- their admirers feel about theui. The rainbow snd not toward the sun. Whleh jpurjiune. W »f-rbury Republican. \anlshlng of the decoration. j
MttD^JitTtM Qirïbmt.
the railroads t«. pay | ninth largor share »if .taxation and to pal Into his piuco one who VU M favorrbly regarded l>y Ih« railroads thai snim« of th^*m discontinued i.r p«.Hti>«.ii«e»l I heir hearing before the Board "f Assessor« until the change In 1rs iii.einlierslii|i should ta made, deeming It worth while l«> <!'» so even at the e..«t of a Ii.' per cent tax tat the delay. No doubl ii was «forth while ,o arrange the sake of getting ri»l >poBtpon_-nent for the of the man who added h handred ami fifteen million dollars to the assessments! Switches and sidings are indeed very convenient on a single track road. But it will be highly totere«.Ing to observe
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THE San Francisco CALL
itlfclALLLEADS IN POLITICAL
THEATRICAL
REAL ESTATE'
SPORTING
COMMERCIAL SOCIETY FINANCIAL
VOLUME
1111I PIlAff 1 lf\ II 11l flIfff V II I-I If \
IfIf I I
Iffc \II u25a0 \u25a0 LI W \u25a0 \u25a0
('XL—NO.
SAX FRANCISCO.
133.
CANTON BANK'S OPIUM SEIZED AS CONTRABAND
[Special Cable to The Call\ SOUTHAMPTON, Eng., April 10.—The new White Star liner Titanic started on its maiden voyage for New York today. With 46,000 tons net register it is the biggest vessel afloat. The Titanic is 882 feet 6 inches long and has a beam of 92 feet 6 inches. It can carry 3,50 ft passengers and has a crew of 860. .\= in the Olympic accident, the terrific suction of the huge ship displaced the water so violently that shipping was imperiled. The American line steamer New York, which was lying alongside the Oceanic, was dragged from her moorings by the suction of the Titanio's triple screws as it passed. Seven ropes parted and the stefn of the New York swung into midstream. The passengers on the Titanic include many society people, among them Colonel John Jacob Astor and Mrs. Astor.
President Look Tin Eli Sus= pected of Illicit Traffic in Imported Drug State Pharmacy Board Confis* cates 300 Tins Found in Bonded Warehouse Vault Doors Drilled and Opened by Experts When Combina=
tion Is Withheld eeisure of $21.^0 worth of stamped opium yesterday afternoon, after a vault in the Broadbomied warehouse, Battery and Broadway, had been drilled \u25a0Jid forced, is believed by agents of the •tate board of pharmacy to establish the fact that T.ook Tin E!i, president of the Canton bank, has been engaged
THE
SWINDLE CHARGED TO LAND LOCATORS
in the opium traffic on an extensive •rale for several years. While the confiscation opens the "way for prosecutions under the state poison law, t^e egents of the board regard it of greater Importance, inasmuch as it proves to satisfaction that the Chinese bank president and probably the institution are members of the "opium ring." This organization, which is said to consist of wealthy Chinese, is reputed revenue from to derive an immense speculation in the contraband drug. F. A. Foutherland, inspector for the pharDetermined to drive out of business macy board, and Louis Zeh, secretary, representing themselves as agents men the Canton bank was inbelieve that terested in the importation and distri- of the United States land office and bution of the drug through its presiwho, it is alleged, are defrauding prosdent. Look Tin EIL pective settlers on government land, "The bank no doubt interested itself fn the business as a matter of speculation," said Southerland. "We have proof that an average of 800 cases of the drug owned by Look has been in the warehouse vault from which we years. made the seizure for several -:e of this amount was 0, but it couid be disposed of here at a profit of almost 900 per cent. A rich revenue would thus be derived by any person or bank engaged in the traffic on such an immense scale." Th» seizure was made yesterday by Southerland and Zeh, representing the state, as the result of the expiration of the three year time limit granted gc^4pT.rn?nt for the disposal of opium in storage when the poison law becar Since that date thousands of dollars worth of opium has been taken from the vault, according to Zeh and Southerland. \u25a0
F.
C. Dezendorf,
chief of the
Only Two of Supervisors' Proposals to End Litigation
and
arrangements
Root, Chief Champion of Platform, Sharply Attacks Recall of Judges
for
\u25a0
Continued
on I'age 10, t olamn
"EARNEST, SOBER PLEA," SAYS WILLIAMBARNES
1
Declare Suffragists That There Shall Be No Let Up in Agitation
Secretary of War Approves Recommendations Made by General Murray
Among those who charge Moltz and Lynch with trickery is Anda N. Dllling-\ ham of 716 Washington street, Oakland, ; who says in his affidavit that Moltz
\u25a0
\u25a0
\u25a0
Steel Door Drilled of the board tried to gain the consent of Louis James, manto open the ager of the warehouse, vault. Ke refused to disclose the combination, according to Sutherland- and Zeh, and access was sained by drilling through the steel doors. The opium was consigned* to 11. G. Playfair. a clerk in the Canadian Bank of Commerce, and previous shipments : to' him of large, quantities probably were handled by President Look, according to Southerland and Zeh. The vault was built especially for the storage of opium, the agents say; and if their information is correct, " has housed more than $1,000,000 worth of the drug. The vault of large dimensions was protected by a steel door of Experts two layers of half inch steel. from a safe and lock company took 30 minutes to drUl the door and force the , -'..%' locks. One of the directors t of-.the Canton bank was present when , the safe was forced, but made no .comment. Attorney Riordan represented the pharmacy board.} The contraband opium *is in the custody of the property clerk at the : hall '• f justice. While prosecutions have not. Sheen instituted*as a result of the seizSutherland said that ure. Inspector Look, thejowner of;the; rehouse arid the consignee of.the drug:, might be 'charged, .with violation,. o£ I the poison lav.
The
agents
company, H. IL McCloskey, has co-operated with Dezendorf in gathering evidence against Lynch. "My attention," said Dezendorf esterday, "has been called to advertisecalling themments of a company
the 'Acme Land company* with in the Hearst building, and of which E. F. Lynch claims to be the manager, wherein it is stated that the company has been appointed an agent by the United States land office, or the department of interior, to represent selves
offices
government
properties
and homesteads
and it is proposed by the company to locate intended settlers and entrymen on government land. "I have received a number of complaints in regard to this company and feel it my duty to notify the public that the 'Acme I,and company' ha* not been appointed an agent by the department general land office of int to locate settlers or prospective entryland. men on st The government does not appoint any company or individual, as such an agent. themselves as "Any one representing being an agent appointed for such a purpose is misleading the public and as representing falsely themselves
MOBILE, Ala., April 10.—Thousands have been killed and whole Indian villages swept away by the eruption of peak,
near
I tain
Bocas del Toro, to a story of Cap-
Olsvik of the United Fruit steamer Fort Morgan, which arrived today. Captain Olsvik says the eruption occurred April 5, early in the morning, while the Fort Morgan was berthed near Bocas del Torn, and that he witnessed flames shooting from the peak. Reports of the large casualty list were brought from the scene to Bocas del Toro by refugees who escaped the onrushing lava. He says he watched the eruption April 5 until he put to sea. Even far out on the gulf, Captain Olsvik said, lie saw evidence of the disturbed elements. The sea was affected in many places and the air was filled with smoke and dustCaptain Olsvik .«aid the the inhabitants of Bocas df-l Toro were panic stricken, believing that the place might be overwehlmed with the lava that was belching from the peak.
SACRAMENTO SOCIETY WOMAN SEEKS DFVORCE Mrs. Ralpha
Young's
Charges
on Secret File [Special Dispatch to The Call] SACRAMENTO, April 10.—Following stories of family troubles which have been circulated for several months,
Mr?. Ralpha Young, daughter of E. \V. Hale, a local merchant and a leader in Sacramento social circles, today filed suit for divorce from Walter D. Young. Young up to gpvpral months ago was manager of Hale Brothers' store. agents." Young and his wife separated sevThis immediate action is being taken by the government in view of the fact eral months ago. she taking the two \u25a0O.fioii acres is to be thrown open children. It is understood that sensato settlers next month in Mendocloo tional charges are made in the complaint, which is on secret file. and Humboldt counties-
Root Is Chief Champion
1
Sudden Eruption Sweeps Away Husband Indian Villages, Creating Reign of Terror
according
Late Developments In Flood Situation
United States Senator Root, one of the "big four" selected to go to Chicago, was the chief champion of the and delivered a speech in platform, ississlppi! In the lower 31 riveri CHICAGO, April —Promoters of I [Special Cable to The Call] which he made a vigorous defense of the : pine continue* below Helena. in j the woman's suffrage movement LONDON, April 10.—Count Festetics, 1 There ; bun been a break la the the American judicial system and a Chicago who hoped at; yesterday's pri- i on the rights bank '\u25a0. of f the young man of high lineage and popusharp levee a attack on the recall of judges. maries to.prove that the men voters of } AtHiafalavji river about five Today's session was given over enlar in London society, as well as on the this city were farer of * "votes for mile* below Melville, La.,* and the: tonight j continent, was arrested today on requi- tirely to speeches on the platform by women". - begun to consider town of Krotx Springs: and ;»'\u25a0> Senator Root, James W. Wadsworth, * what the prospects were. sition papers charging him with comlnrsre body, of agricultural; land in speaker It was discovered that not a Btagtfi former of the assembly; mitting a fraud in Belgium. Avollle* and St. l.andry parishes \ Prendergast ward In the city voted in favor of the Job 'Hedges of New and >\u25a0, are threatened overflow. When arrested, he said: "Is it on acmovement. York. Reports from river town* In,\u25a0 count of those earrings—that old case ;" "Suffrage has received" a setback so After the vote on the platform and (bow Illinois and Missouri a of two years ago?" the selection of delegates at large and far as any immediate prospects of getmllKlitly improved • situation in was ting it in ; Chicago are concerned," the convention adwas informed that their alternates those dinerici*. ;; Count Festetics journed. the general opinion of voters, but the knowledge of London the to the best women were more hopeful, declaring It No Mistake in Meaning He deMEMPHIS, Term.. April 10.—Flood police it was the same case. their intention to keep up the agitation. Jr. State Chairman William Barnes The vote of 135,410 against the prop- | conditions in the lower Mississippi val- clared he was innocent of any wrong. tonight authorized this statement: 71,354 with in ley still are alarming. j osition to let women vote The work of rerecently was Count Festetics "There should be no mistake in the favor of it was regarded as significant. j rescuing hur "~eda of persons marooned ported to- be engaged to marry Mrs. minds of republicans and of the elecChicago University of districts the In the in the Arkansas lowlands and task Ava Willing Astor, but when questorate as a whole as to the meaning of the suffragists broke almost even, but ' of strengthening the levees in preparreport Mrs. Astor authe convention which adjourned today. In some other places the vote against ) ing to resist the crest of the flood in tioned about the thorized an abjsolute denial. "It was an earnest, sober appeal to In was two to one. the ward that Mississippi them and Louisiana continues. ' was arraigned j Count Festetics in electorate that its will should be the house, of which Miss Greenville, Miss., is the conspicuous embraces Hull allowed to furnish bail—a expressed through mental conference point in the impressive flood picture. court and Jane Addams, a leader of the suffraand deliberate judgment rather than gists, is the head resident, the vote was For three days the river torrent has surety of $20,000 from a bonding comsurety through histrionic and ambitious declaown for $30,000. pany and his 1,162 through dykes 2,495 against and for. to break threatened * rations. guarding the city, which is in the cen"The platform endeavored to show ter of the world's richest cotton counthe consistency and continuity of the try. development of American ideas and Last nlerht it was felt the crisis had their formulation into law in an orcome and when the thousands of bags derly rather than a disorderly manner. of sand which had been thrown into the flood's maw by state convicts and Won Through Sobriety battalions of plantation workers held "The achievements of the republican off the current, a murmur of relief party have all been won through soRepresented as of went up from the delta. I briety and an appeal to reason rather Many river cities are beginning to than to prejudice. That party would be of Proprietor cisco Woman Coming to feel the effect of the flood on business. false to its entire internal -quality and Merchants receiving inquiries as to must change its physiognomy If it ofSystem's tify Missing hopes and people vain the advisability of shipping in goods. fers to the New Orleans and other cities have dreams instead of substance. protested against exaggerated reports [Special Dispatch to The Call] "The convention Itself reflected the [Special Cable to The Call] Ky., citizens of damage, and Paducah, NEW YORK, April 10.—A man of character of the platform In the dignity LONDON, April 10.—Lady Hesketh fine appearance held an indignation meeting. who went under the of its proceedings and the deliberation has had so many disappointments that name of Barton J. Harvey, posing as which characterized eachfuccessiv© act Trade Cairo Resumes the son of the Harvey who founded the that it performed."' she dares not ttti sanguine, and can CAIRO, 111.. April 10.—Mayor Parsons only hope that her son has been found. issued a proclamation today rescinding system of hotels and cafes on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad sysThe New York agents of the Hesketh one issued some time ago asking busi- tem, died In his stateroom on board the GUARDSMEN iMUST TAKE men to close their stores and aid ness UP BRONCO BUSTING family have been instructed to make an east of Sandy Hook this mornin fighting the flood. It is expected Olympic investigation, and Captain Thomas Fering-. that all kinds of businesp will be reAdjutant Genera! Tells Cavalrymor Hesketh, who is on his \u25a0way to He was "Bud" Hauser, a notorious sumed within two or three days. The men He's From Missouri wife, formerly Miss gambler America with his and all around crook and conriver stands at 53.8 feet and railroads Breckenridge of San Francisco, will go have been unable to resume traffic. The fidencS man with a criminal record, it [Special Dispatch to The Call] tonight by those who knew out west for the purpose of identifying SACRAMENTO, April 10.—Before the patrol of levees will continue untfl the was said the man believed to be Sir Thomas Heshim well and had seen him often. several feet. has subsided members of Troop B, cavalry, of Sacwater keth's second son. The Olympic's officers denied a report ramento can convince Adjutant GenFarrilies on House Tops that the man had "welched" on a $50 eral Forbes that they know anything Feelings Harrowed April 10.—The gambling bet and died as the result of NEW MADRID, Mp., they will have to NEW YORK. April 10.—Lady ITescontinues to fall slowly. Sixteen a beating. The Olympic's surgeon said about riding horses river agents Redinglon are busting that he haa keth'a American do bronco some tops in that Harvey, as he was known aboard families were found on house & Stillman. lawyers of Nn. IB William for them. The adjutant the neighborhood of Sugar Tree ridge the steamer, died of heart disease fol- mapped out they street. last December general will buy 10 California broncos Since have and Barnes ridge today. They had no lowing alcoholic poisoning. been investigating the disappearance of boats with which to »'S( apo and were and will require the troopers to break Colonel P. B. Moore, a real estate j Frederick Fermor Hesketh. the lieuten- forced to sit on roofs until rescued. these for cavalry purposes. jant. Leland S. Stillman of the firm has | Several hundred head of cattle without dealer of Springfield, Mass., says: "Harvey gave me his card. It reads been in direct charge of the search. food were found on hills. 'Pasadena Country club.' I'll tell his "Lady Heskeths feelings have been folks all I know. He was either a relso deeply harrowed by this long hunt River Bursts Levee BATON ROL'GE, La., April 10.—The ative of the Harveys of the Santa Fe for her missing son,'" said Stillman to The Call's correspondent tonight, "that Atchafalaya river burst a levee a few system or a bunco man." our instructions from her do not allow miles below Melville, on the west side us to enter into the history of the case. of the river, today, endangering a large MONOCLED DANDY ACCUSED OF THEFT We had been quietly pursuing our in- area of Avoyelles and St. Landry par\'estigations over the whole of the i ishes. Including the town of Krota Kleptomaniac Arrested Alleged United States. For months we have Springs. at Santa Cruz had reasons to believe that Hesketh SANTA! CRUZ, April 10—Lyman | Indeed, we had ROMADKA SCANDAL was in this country. claiming to be the scion of a' CovelJ, CAUSE OF FAILURE one clew that seemed to lead to anwealthy family of Philadelphia, was ar- ! other part of Montana than Fromberg, where Doctor Woodard told the World Great Firm Could Not Survive rested today for an alleged theft com- j . mitted in a hotel. the Notoriety he had seen and assisted a man answerHe was fashionably dressed, affected j ing Hesketh's description. MILWATKEK. Wis., April 10.—The Evelyn Romadka of a monocle and, it is alleged, purloined romance of Chi"Immediately after seeing the arfame and her without regard to their usenegro we "afarticles Tuesday's cago police ticle in World wired Doe. tor Woodard. The description in tlw finity," whnm she aided, it was alleged, fulness, his loot consisting, in part, of World tallied exactly with that sent in many Chicago burglaries, was the women's apparel. The prisoner's parents telegraphed to us by LAdy Hesketh. although the indirect cause today of the failure of picture left some little doubt as to the Romadka Brothers company, one of ! that they believed him to be suffering I WJ 167 CALIFORNIA ST. whether the man in Montana was -the the largest trunk and leather goods from mental disorder. ' ' •'\u25a0\u25a0"''- '\u25a0-\u25a0 jl \u25a0\u25a0' ":'- •'-\u25a0•\u25a0 \u25a0' \u25a0;\u25a0 '-;-i | object of our search." America. being? Covell is held for examination. bouses in
PANAMA VOLCANO HESKETHS TO MAKE KILLS THOUSANDS TRIP TO MONTANA
Chiriqui
Titled European Society Favorite Arrested in Connection With Earring Case
Chicago
sion regarding the drill ground. The delegation gave assurances that the exposition authorities would provide a new drill ground on the flats near the life saving station, and on this assurance Secretary Stimson directed that General Murray's recommendation be approved. Orders to that effect will be issued tomorrow. The exposition will thus obtain the drill grounds near Letterman hospital as a site for foreign government build-
j Panama,
N. V.. April 10.— The republican party of New York state in convention here today declared for the renotnination of President Taft and adopted a resolution urging the state's delegation to the national convention to vote to that end. The Taft presidential plank found an opponent only in City Controller William O. Prendergast of New York, a Roosevelt delegate, who made a vigorous speech against the platform and declared that President Taft could not be re-elected. The platform was adopted viva voce, with only a few dissenting votes from the 1,015 delegates.
ROCHESTER,
Levee Breaks in South; GETS P.P.I.E. THE WOMEN IN DEFEAT Families Marooned COUNT FESTETICS ACCUSED OF FRAUD PRESIDIO GROUNDS PLAN FOR VICTORY On Housetops
Accused of Threats
Chief Dezendorf wired to Washington if Lynch had been apto ascertain pointed an agent of the land department. He was informed by return wire that neither Lynch nor any individual or firm every was appointed an agent to represent the federal government in such a capacity. There is a local corporation with a name similar to the company Lynch claims to manage. This is the Acme Land company and the attorney for the
STATE
DELEGATION IS URGED v TO VOTE TO THAT END
' joint use of tracks in lower Market street and Point LObos avenue probably will be among the important results of a "get together" conference held between I Thorn well Mullally and the supervisors of the public utilities committee yesterday. : A number, of big propositions: were presented by Mullallywhich promise to difficulties and I settle controversies ] which have existed between the city andthe United Railroads since the municipal road first whs proposed. , Mullally's propositions for joint use of tracks and dismissal of litigation were made in response to suggestions meetings. jof supervisors at previous
second
cording to Chief Dezendorf, this does not give him any right to represent himself as an agent of the government. To make certain on this point
..
See Page 13
Flood Victims Are in Peril TAFT TAKES Torrent Threatens Dykes NEW YORK
adjustment of all litigation , between-the city and the United Railroads -over the Geary street railway,
TODAY—Showers; consouthwest winds.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
Will Get Use o! Tracks to Ferry; Exchange of Transfers Refused
THE
brisk
For Details of the Weather
Geary Road
a pistol because he threatened to expose him if he didn't I Search Warrant Served return the money Dillingham haul paid said him. night," trland, "probably because of Look Thomas Quinn of .3379 Sixteenth Tin Eli's absence in China, the 300 five street and Harvey N. Pearce of 609 ; tael tins were overlooked. We knew Kamm building also have made affi- j that there was opium in that vault, davits charging Moltz and Lynch with j ings. and "were aware that possession of it questionable methods. They claim to by any one was contrary to law, even have been deceived as to the character though it were held in a bonded wareof the land. It is alleged that Moltz house. So we obtained a search warLynch showed them smooth land and rant and forced the vault." adapted to alfalfa and when they paid The agents of the pharmacy board ! their money the land allotted them have been prevented during the last; was in the mountains. three years from seizing the opium which they felt certain was in the No Agent Appointed Lynch has been admitted to practice vault because of the law protecting bonded warehouses from search by any before the local land office, but, ac-
process of law. At the end of the three year term it became unlawful for opium to be held even in a bonded warehouse. Collector of Port Stratton yesterday notified the pharmacy board agents that he had determined to release the United States from responsibility for possession of the drug-. * Strenuous efforts were made by Attorney H. U. representing Brandenstein, the Canton ' bank and President Look, .to prevent the forcing of the vault. Judge Deasey, who issued the search warrant, refused to delay its service.
cool; tinued "
50;
Rochester Republican Convention Declares for Renomi* nation of President
field division of the general land office, with the co-operation of the United [Special Dispatch to The Call] States attorney's office and the head of WASHINGTON, April 10.—A conferthe land department at "Washington, ence was held at the war department today at which Secretary Stimson and D. C, is directing a statewide investiGeneral Wood met Representatives gation. Hay, Knowland. N'eedham and Stephens Affidavits have been made by several and the representatives of the Panamapersons charging D. L. Moltz of the local Pacific exposition. They discussed Genfirm of D. L. Moltz & Co., and E. F. eral Murray's recommendations for the Lynch, manager of the Acme Land and ! use of portions of the Presidio and Insurance company, with offices in the Fort Mason by the exposition comHearst building, with misrepresenting pany. the character of land on which the ap- I These recommendations had been displicants paid to be located. approved in part under a misapprehen-
threatened his life with
FQ^S&l^nFoß
A GLIMPSE OF THE GREAT FLOOD ON THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER. The photograph gives a view of the inundation at Birds Point, opposite Cairo, 111. Many houses were carried away at this place and hundreds of persons had to flee for their lives when the levee was broken by the swollen Mississippi-
Mullally Opposes
E. F. Lynch and D. L. Moltz Accused of Defrauding Pros* pective Settlers
Proof of Drug Deposit
THE
THURSDAY. APRIL 11. 1912.
TRUCE BETWEEN Many CITY AND U.R.R. River IS IN PROSPECT
Suction of Latest Biggest Vessel a Peril to Shipping
WITHER temperature, YJE^T^Q^^jM^st
I
Former San Fran* Iden* Relative
CLEVER GAMBLER DIES ON STEAMER
Son of Himself Santa Fe Hotels
I ROYAL 1
NESTOR I Original London I Cigarettes
& Cairo
ite EDwWoLr Co.
\u25a0
I
I
'
Fair
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and
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-
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morrow; moderate temperature.
THE WASHINGTON HEftALD
NO. 2014.
ILL1IS
WASHINGTON
ITE
SKHT&E CAUSE OF SUIT.
PROVES EH16MA
New Tork. April 10 Jacob Weiss brought suit in the Supreme Court- for S1O.00O dam- ages against two physicians. Otto KUlamr and Herman Fischer, for sewing a sponge Inside his after an operation. "Weiss sap's be carried the sponge in his abdomen .from January 1. 1311. when- - he was discharged from the German Hospital as cured of "hernia, until June. 13. 1911, when it was removed by another physician.
D. C. THURSDAY.
APART 22 YEARS: WED J it CAPITAL years, "After a separation of twenty-tw- o caused by,t,love quarrel. Edmond Flnley Iutson, fifty years old. a government employe, .and Mrs. Laura Klmmel Gow, aged forty-twdof ioOO H Street North west, were quietly married yesterday by Rev, "Wilbur Both formerly resided In Lteonler. Ind.. where, when Mr. Klson was twenty-on- e and his somewhat belated bride waa sweet sixteen, they were engaged to be married. They bad a quarrel, and Kit' eon left Lfgonler. never returning. He traveled an over the country, never hearing, word of bis lost sweetheart. woman married James Gow and. moved to Washington Her husband died several years ago. leaving her- - a baby daughter., Mrs .Gow, remembering her old sweetheart, wrote a note to him at Luronler. innnirinr In m. friendlv war how- the 'world was treating Mm and ask tag- after the health, of his family. The letter was forwarded to lie KItaon at the Lincoln Hotel in this city, and when ha saw that his former futncee lived In Washington he made tracks to the H Street residence. After talking It over they decided to. be married.
ABJEOL
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19:L2:-POmT-
PAGES.
EEN
pLSOf AND BRIDE LEAVE FOR SOUTH
ISEET
Yonkers, N, Y AprJI 10 Daniel Wh'te. of Elmsford, tried o start his balky mule. Flossy, yesterday by applying fumes to her nostrils,. He is believed to have a .fair chance of recovery. His two broken ribs are mending slower, and he can see fairly well out or one eye. White had heard that ammonia sometimes worked well on horses and decided to try
For tbe oast two days Washington has angel unawares
been "entertaining an in the nerson of Mrs.
ffie Pope
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ONE CENT.
AaoMBi;Xik;XR7 Xecever
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'Tft
CORHEH STONE OF UNIVERSITY CLUB
the tw months' bride of the. Washington"! and Pittsburg millionaire, toward n. Atsop, and also- ths "angel's" husband, "N This Prediction Winds Up Mr. Alsop himself. According to rumofi" which were S) last night at Mr- - Alsop'a residence. Whirlwind Tour of 1582 Twentieth Street Northwest, the sev- It millionaire and bis d bride, following Pennsylvania, of Ke- Taft Man Make Chief Executive Uses clliatlon after their reported estrangement In H tw- York. came, to Washington Monday night and rema'ned at their hoase, Despite .Rumor f Trowel in here for two dsjs. Last night they left HUGHES AGAIN HITS AT TAFT tor the South, Servants at the Alsop Candidate. Block. objective state their residence refused to point It is believed, however, that the coupie went io Atlantic viiy lor a lew days, after which they wfli go to Pine-hur-st In Stirring Tldkrklpia Speech Be CLARK 100M8 STRONGER EXPLAINS, AIMS OF CLUB It was learned that Mrs. Alsop, who two weeks ago was suffering from a. nervous of President links breakdown and waa removed to Dr. Bull's sanatorium In Litchfield. Conn. Is much with the Bowes. improved in health. She Joined her husBoomed in New York as a Masonic Ceremonies Hark "Christ Democrats Say Besnlt Is Heavy band a fev days before coming to Wash ington and. the pair intend to continue Possible Presidential Blow to "Wilson's Hopes Cul- honeymoon, Interrupted waa Ciyil their which tning" of Handsome New Employe in Philadelphia, April 11 Theodore Rooee by the bride's illness. lorn Blames Lorimer. his" nomination for the predicted velt Nomine. Structure. . ,' May Send PetitioHS to Presidency after a whirlwind trip through Pennsylvania. Congress. came, after a day of tumultuous acclaim What the Illinois primaries mean In a by enormous crowds that were aTemlnder CONVENTION IS CLOSED Accompanied by the. beautiful ritual national rente was an enigma that stirred of his campaign days of 1310. His pre and symbols of the Masonic order. Presipolitical Washington last night. dictions he couched in these words; dent Taft in' his capacity aa a Master forces, Late In the afternoon the Tatt believe we will win tlUa fight. If we "I THEIRCHIEFS Mason, laid the corner stbne yesterday TO FIRST through the medium of Representative do we must make our success tell for Rochester. K. Y AprJI W. "Favor, not afternoon at S o'clock oj the newvUnlver-slt- y McKlnlcy. director of the Taft bureau, social Justice." Club- building at Flfteeenth and X Instruct for Taft.' spells "Hughes for announced that the result did not In 'the alL but It was enough ta That tbe Presidential nomination," in the Judg Streets Northwest, assisted by officers Against Extortion- show that the least Interfere with the President's plans. President Taft yesterday signed, an considers tne. ment of many "old guard" leaders who and members of the Grand lodge, A. P. The Taft forces he declared, had not exTaft strength broken at last, that the State's Twelve Votes in the participated In the finish of the A. M.. of the District. In the presence order permitting officers and empected to cany Illinois. The result was ate Bates Gains Desired Illinois victory ho takes to be tbe turning ployesIn the civil service to stndjpetl-tlon- s Republican State convention. won by Col. Roosevelt. Mr. McKinJey ot .many members of the club and a large point in his race. said, because be participated In State Though the four delerateS-at-Iars- e the street in front of and other communications toCon-gres- s and crowd whteh lined Go to Convention the Keaytone, State; Alert. Reduction. Issues. Jn conclusion, the President's the structure ' through the heads, of thlr respecdelegates were the e)ghty-st- x district campaign manager reiterated his asser- tive departments. The weather waa ideal and President On top of the Illinois sweep, tbe colo urged" by overwhelmingly resolution Colonel. tion that more Taft delegates would to The order is similar to previous orders in excellent humoc. The seemed nel found Fentis) Iranla on the alert The auoptea to --carry out tne cnoiee ot tne Taft instructed to the 1911 convention than of the club, preceded by a, the subject. The only new provision Republicans ot this State." antl-Taaa members outpouring of crowds was beyond bis were present when the President was on of mounted police, officers, and is that the department heads will forwell as sentiment has be- squad expectations. SELLING During day GUNS was AT nominated" In ISO. ARE he $8 the reIn Masonic members futl of order the come so manifestly pronounced that pre ward to Congress such communications hailed by crowds aggregating M.0C0 peo Talk of DarL Horse." dictions are made the delegation from galia, and the "Msrlneon Band.'' marched without delay and with such comment FOR KENTUCKY TAFT? ple, while Sixteenth clubhouse from their and Philadelphia turned New they deeraproper. as ultimately York will be thrown to Streetss to the new clubhouse, where K Senator Dixon of Montana, Senator out a crowd running op to another employes, All officers "and however. the former governor. Borah, and others of the radical Rehad been erected .for, the acKill be prohibited from attempting to se As a result of' ths protest against ex M,00CL The Roosevelt invasion of the When Chairman Barnes was asked to platform publican feet Ion lost no opportunity cure day about an article predicting the entry commodation ot the Presidential party. legislation except in ti--e prescribed tortionate prices for arms sent at the State waa one triumphal swing. to voice, their Joy at this "evidence scanner Verbrycke, grand chapRev. Russell J. 10. ApOril Bangor. Me., of Indorsement or liugnes race, The new executive order Is as order of the State Department to Amerireplied: into the he "We slugged them over theropes. coining direct from the people that follows: will he? lain of the order, offered prayer, after cana In Mexico City, the department yes cried tbe colonel exultantly, as his train bis administration was the consolation Why, Hughes won't take which An Ine W. Johnston, grand secPresident Taft was not wanted as the delegation The New con pulled Is given York Taft." for by Stata Pittsburg early out day. President Taft the In of the Aevr Bxf en tive' Order. . gave practical assurances terday that retary, read the list of articles which, Republican Presidential candidate." "But will It stick to Taft to the nnUhT" were Well go on and win Pennsylvania. ventlon here Co. Roosevelt won In a copper Tor ia tho "It is hereby ordered thst peti- rifles would by distributed In tbe Mexi- The "You must wait until we reach Chi- corner deposited One persistent rumor during the. day fight has Just "begun and the people 73 Instructed delegates to 497 for the stcne, embracing a copy of the .. can capital at tS each, instead of CO.. tions or other communications recago and discover what the. whole are winning" was the assertion that as a result of was This tho attitude are delegates Bible, a copv of the Masonic Yar Boole All district the President Urged into action by the specific alle Roosevelt carried throughout the day. Is all there is to be said." That the hopeless split In the party a com' garding public business addressed to and charter, a copy of Tbe Washington promise candidate would be chosen. the Congress or either branch or any gations of ih petition, the State Depart- - wnereier he talked to the crowds or tho for the former President, and thus he "Urged" for Taft. Herald, plans of the University Club Report a sain has it that Justice Hushes, committee or member thereof by onnieni xuuvcu wuu cxpvuiuuu md iiciu Illinois sweep he would get a reverber will have Maine's twelve votes. Tbe Barnes platform amended so aa to building committee, tbe name of the arch which did of the Supreme Court, will be suggested cers or employes of the civil service out, after communication with the Ameri- ating cheer. Tn his bristling speeches In tho district conventions, Itect and builders, a signed photograph. not Instruct the delegates, resolutions favor the renomlnatlon of the President ns the man who may bring the two of the United States shall be transcan Ambassador at Mexico, the confident the colonel admorrirhed his hudlences to were practically pledging their and "urge. rather than instruct the nine- of President Taft, one ot the chairman warring factions of his party together. mitted throjgh the heads of their hope that redress would be afforded to repeat next Saturday at the primaries supportadopted bcildlng committee. CoL Mjron of the platrorm to Rooseirlt The. ty delegates to elect delegates Democrats In the House yesterday to the district and respective .lepartmenta or officers. York to "carry out M" Parker: one of the president of ths complainants. Its opinion, after re State adopted for the Stste elections favors the choice from NewRepublicans seemed strongly inclined to accept Champ conventions what Illinois did. who shall forward them without delay. tbe of the ot the club. Masonic documents and coins. the situation and the facta "Don't let the .bosses take, your fight Presidential primaries and demands Clark's victory in Illinois as positively with such comments as they may viewing waa State." conthrough .railroaded tbe i presented. Is that a fair price would be aay from you, he shouted. "Go in faithful enforcement of the liquor law Uses Silver TrflTrel. assuring his candidacy; though Gov. Wildeem requisite in the public Interest. vention after., tempestuous debate. IS per gun. as It now stands. and vote against them..'' son's friends predicted a victory in "Officers and employes are strictly The delegates-at-larg- e and alternates After applying the square, level and The protest transmitted by him to the In bis speech at the Metropolitan Opera that would offset the result in Kentucky TaftT for prohibited, either directly or radl- were by selected plumb majora to the corner stone. President line tremendous asserts that a committee In House Senator-eleIllinois. Ollle James deRoosevelt .bitterly Inrectly from attempting to secure department ity, the Roosevelt managers naming no Taft stooped and spread a trowel full ot to Charge VS veighed against Senator Penrose. He Louisville. April 16. Failure on the opponents. clared that "the overwhelming majority legislation or to influence pending Mexico was endeavoring Those chosen were: on to credentials on the surface of the part probably proportionately the committee mortar a of cement xun. for and a In Illinois for Speaker Clark means his coupled SenTaft'a name with that legislation except hi the manner pre Delegates-at-large Ellhu Root, of upon which the corner stone was) the ammunition, the coat ator Penrose. Senator Lorimer, st caused tha adjournment triumphal aeteetlon In Baltimore as Senator report scribed above. This order supersedes high rate for York: William Barnes, nt Albanv: stone thousand Guggenheim, and the other machine lead-er- s, of tbe 8tate Republican convention here New to rest The trowel which was nsed by oCwhlch.ln Washington is Chairman Padg- - fh. jvmifti nrAr Af J.nmrv4 . 31 William King, Berri. of . .. ,,.& candidate.!... A. . and Edwin il. f rounds. The price of a gun hero is S8.40. the President waa of silver, bearing A as the allies of any action be Inter- until , isos. ana- MDvemoer y unc: "" ne-- w if . mwji ctis.Ki jr.. or SC Lwrence. There is ' distinct .impression among ests which are jopposlng, the people. ing taken. A stormy session was held uerritt. engrafed legend the event fotlauch 11 aswreo vnai uwurn w If. .1KB. regarding the came, general memberaof Alternates Edgar. P. Bracket, 01 was Congress who wera seen on Afcslaihe .linked the PretMrat's name with Speaker bad mire. tthan --secondary used. by the bredent'ats committee Saratoga: " ' Anderson-(cmatter." CharlelfW." tea subject' yesterday whole the, strengtn. ana neprcsentaava snrze. The original "gag order was issued lho,'bositand'',JeDhVH.tciio3te-"anwhich werev in ored) and B. w; K. "Brown, 6f New p Ben yV,'5lurch, grand master bt ihi various over uuulests the sought to make' John Gi llltburn. 8t ireVTork, aa being stituted by oraer, .ana ana corn who bails from "WUebnsJn florae of the by President Roosevelt In J9CS and re scheme b which l,was jxiurea tac wino scattered nooseveit Ta'l Yorlt, w. George and, Whitehead, of and OIL symbols of prosperity, refresh citizens In Mexico City- pay allied with thore who wjshjto make the tions. 'No announcement was maae Dy Insurgent mavement made the assertion by President Taft in IMS. It American these tremendous prices for safe pro government run by the corporation attor- thr committee as to what tho report will atagara. that the Illinois primary "proves Speaker liaued ment anHfJay over the stone, after which and time, the created sensation at a Vice very President Sherman Is ugly investigated ought to thor be tection pon neys .man yeunaaent to whom one Clark all prohibited the dlsclosurept any Informaresting be the loweredU-lt- s and the bench. This he did In de- be of the failure to even mention it was John Duncan, oughly.' fending bis Judicial decision recall. applying the neces-scr- y elements at the- Democratic party- - can tion to members session of the contention. because At of Congress except by either In speech or platform. He piace,cement unite. foundation. Tartft to Be Rescinded. The Rough .Rider expressed, his willing. Senator W. O. Bradley was named as him direct permlsslonof the President or a nought an Indorsement for renomlnapast Myron grand. CoL M any or temporary Parker, a push and the to campaign In chairman entire nets the State 3tnnn P.xprcted Result. XYllnnm Sulzer, the Representative member of the. Cabinet. tlon. Barnes is said to have pledged master of the Masonic crsft. and chairnia leaders aawse. Tnia may carry .mm ganisation favors President Taft now Despite- - the optimism shown by DIreehimself to it But the convention end- man of the building committee, thanked chairman of the, House Foreign ReU on stumping a Pacific ever, Sam J. Roberta, leader of the Taft ed tour out to ths In whisper without a commendation President Taft for the Interest he has tor McKlnley, tions Committee, said last nlgbt that he Coast before the battle Is over. Jle forces from the Seventh district, stated visitors at the White had assurances from the State Depart' tackles Massachusetts and New Hamp- - that In all probability the delegation from of "Sunny Jim." Mouse yesterday showed little enthusi always displayed In the University Club. y ment that the tariff would be rescinded. smre on a asm. He expressed the appreciation of ths trip, starting Kriday there will be spilt, giving the Roosevelt club to the President for the moral sup Representative Hayes cf California and of this week and goes to Nbraska the forces hslf the vote. In the convention. NEW LINER TITANIC Representative Mann, of Illinois, said port asare the o( It that Berger, Predictions he has accorded the organization, next Representative week. of Wisconsin middle might expected," been have 'the result HEAD sert that the government should, have AS his contribution to the building fund. Taft forcea throw out the Roosevelt o Longer TJpblll Job. but would not say anything more aa to ON FIRST JOURNEY and Referring to the clubhouse, CoL. Parker provided their defense free to the dtl a separate convention forces -plunged Senator Into Roosevelt his the result In his State day of will be held by the tatter's friends. As aid that It would be one of the finest sens of the United States In Mexico who went- - down In the defeat of buildings of its kind In the country, and City, whose lives were evidently seriously speecbmaklng at Jennetta, where from It now stands, 3 delegates will be sent to the national convention for Roosevelt and Southampton, April 10 The new White that Its cost toald approximate 333,000. the. Taft machine, expressed his convic menaced. tbe platform from his car h told Chemist Drops Executive Famous Is Whitestatement for House Taft it S The that Star 3,000 largest Titanic, liner tion that bis defense of Senator Lorimer tbe crowd of vessel Concluding his remark', CoL Parker in that he was contending President Taft who, in order to could take no action In the first instance, for the people sgalnst the politicians, afloat Is well on her way to New Tork troduced had been responslole for his defeat. for Duties in Favor of a speak, to the members of the-- club and bat has referred tbe complaint to the a. square deal and fair play: dea after exciting somewhat Representative Sells of Tennessee, a Re . AFFECTION guests report who occupied seats in ths Department for their a State the for parture. The Titanic, canning 30 Younger Man. publican, stated that he was surprised "I want to ie Pennsylvania do as information of the committee of three passengers, got away about and disappointed in tbe Illinois result. ." hundred, who signed the protest. The Illinois did yesterday," he said, "and Continued on Page Three. VALUED AT $3,000 and Representative Slerap or Virginia this afternoon. people against the bosses State Department began" to handle the declare for the another Republican friendly to the Ad SpkUI to Tbe vt.biEtoii llmtd. The backing away from her dock was when Jt was Informed of by 100,000 maiorlti." case ministration, seemed downcast by the without Incident but as the gigantic HOME RULE DEBATE The throng jelled "Well be with Sprit! to Tlie.Wuhiiietm ltatld. Baltimore, Md , April 10. Dr. Ira Rem' tbe protest. As to the price of the guns you!" result, though he expressed his belief as down Southampton vessel In K.46. costing which, the United States Staunton, Vs., April 10. Suit haa been water underproceeding that the Presidents chances of securing sen tendered his resignation late this was about to be. run up her own steam, the suction to CO each with "I'm glad," replied the colonel. the nomination are not greatly impaired. afternoon as president ft the Johns a possible COMES UP TO-DA- Y The colonel spoke to 13.000 people from entered here in the Circuit Court by W. from her triple screws tore the steamer $C additional for each 1.000 "Tea, I am defeated," said Senator Hopkins University, occasioning a great rounds per gun, the state Department tbe balcony of a hotel at Lancaster, say II. Stone against S. O. Page, claiming New York from her moorings, breaking Cullom. 'It looks like Sherman had &0CO damages surprise in educational circles. He win says that the trouble has been the ex- ing: for alienation o'f his seven ropes that held her fast The COO. I am through, and I am glad of it. London, April 10. An immense crewej penses incident to the shipment Into 'the 'All you have got to do is to come out wife's affections. Both 'Stone and Page stern of the New York swung into the however, the professorship stream and narrowly escaped atriklne is expected In the House of Commons I did not want to be a candidate again. retain, on Saturday and vote. Show j ourselves are wealthy farmers of this county. City of Mexico. chemistry at the university. I told the boys so, but they seemed to tne xitamc, vvmen was oouged to stop your One- - of Stone a attorneys stated to own masters, be Dr. been driven .not Remsen when the Premier, Hon, had and of the head at think I owed It to them to go In once the great seat of learning for nine years, from the political arena. We have that the plaintiff had long suspected Im- m oraer inat tne isew xorK could be Henr) Herbert Asqulth, will bring up tha Coatlr Fire at Bntte. more Well, like Sullivan, I went In the succeeding Dr. Daniel Colt GUman, home-rui- n the Butte. Mont, April 10. A fire starting knocked them oyer them ropes," the col- proper relations between bis wife, who Is brought under con trot bill. This w(ll be the third ring once too often. Wasn that what original president. Since onel went on. "In Illinois the bosses a very handsome woman, and Page, and that time the attempt of England to establish homo stotion of this city this went Sullivan said! lou see. I am eigniy-iw- o ho had recently found them together in down and I want you to take has acquired tbe great tract in ths warehouse rule for Ireland. The lobby of the Honss years old If I bad been LEVEES I university afternoon spread Into the business sec- count on them here in Pennsylvania."the bis home when he was supposed to be at Homewood, the original home of tion was all day by people endeav. would have been eight) -- three when I Johns city damage of the and did away estimated on a business trip. It was. also Hopkins, and active plans are The throng was so densely packed in orlng to secure permits to attend totook office again. Frankly, a man. who now being NEAR ORLEANS morrow, made to transfer the unl at a million and a quarter dollars. The front of, the hotel that Roosevelt had stated that there were some sensational but all seata had been granted has served as long as J. have in public verslty flames, spread nj a high wind, were be- a hard time getting back to his train. and incriminating letters which would to was location. that to It due an early this morning eighty-threhour at life ought to be willing to quit at this great undertaking that undoubtedly yond control for seeral hours Help was The Broad Street station here was pack- figure In the' case. Sirs. Stone, has left Premier Asqulth is expected to speak Dr. Remsen to step aside fori summoned from surrounding towns. Five ed when the colonel arrived at 6 M rer husband, supposedly Just after his New Orleans. 1., April 10 With the nt least two hours. He will be followed "Don't you think so? Some of the boys prompted or six business blocks and thirty houses o'clock. Fully 009 men chased after bis discovery that alleged Improper relations great flood In the Mississippi rapidly by Sir Edward Csrson, with A. Bcnar In Illinois told me to make the race, a younger man. Dr. Remsen is a native of New Tork were destroyed. nearlng New Orleans, active work has Law. the Unionist leader, winding up for automobile as fie rode to the hotel. existed between her and Page. and when it was over, if I lost, aa I told and graduate of the College of New been Inaugurated to strengthen the the opposition. Rsmoay MacDonald will them In advance I thought I would, they York aCity, and has been honored with John Redmond, the NaX got an aplevees that protect the- city. Hundreds propably folio said they would see that pointive office. Bat I said to them: 'No. degrees by nearly every university ofi of men are at work for miles above the tlonalls: leader. The debate, w hlch prombe protracted, will probably b prominence in ina country and Europe. city and along the water front here ises to up It I am defeated. I will welcome the As reputation chemist his wound the government by Sir for worlda is oppcrtunlty to quit. placing tons of sandbags on top of the a . . "But didn't Roosevelt make a great wide. embankments to keep back the rise Augustine BlrrelL run? He cextslnly surprised everybody. which promises to- - break all records. rising rapidly. H is still a good politician. H saw WU TING-FAN- G The river Is IS the overshadov-lnissue in Illinois and The president of the levee district OPERATORS YIELD; seized upon It." offered a reward of board late lsKSSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSBsBsslnsSBBBSSBmsBSsllsH RETURNING TO US J300 for the arrest of the person who cut Tou mean LoriroerT" the Senator was asked. the-- levee, at Atchafalaya, where a sec"Tea, Lorlmer was the issue. That Is AVERTED ond break occurred The break Shanghai, April 10 A dispatch re what defeated me I voted to seat-hlis. In the same vicinity as that which ceived here from Pekm says Wu Tang-fanoccurred last Sunday, and the authoriSSKsmmmmmmHKHsSSHBwtQKSKBHsSssHBHBBBB sf Clark Given Oration. isMS.. VIHrmmVtl opinion for years Minister to tbe United ties are of the that both breaks TcsUrday waa a great day for Speaker were caused by the old Chinese Empire, waa Champ Clark In tbe House of Repre- States from Anthracite Miners Are Overjoyed appointed by President Yuan Shlh tp---' sentatives. When the speaker put In Kat of the Chinese republic, to represent INDICTMENTS TO STAND.' by Prospect of Peaceful t an appearance at noon be was greeted uie new government at wasiunglon. ' Minister Wu had been under considwith applause that swept from the floor Deninrrcrs Filed In 3IcNamara DySettlement. eration for the head of the foreign of v to ths galleries. "Hoss Rucker, namiting; Case Overruled. Democrat from down Ozark way, was fice in tne new caoinet. Dot it Waa final. ly decided that his wide acquaintance Indianapolis, Ind, April la In the bubbling with excitement, and proclaim:' T sBmmBEMmisuisBmmvftmm "? popularity in the United States United Mates Court WJikcsbarre. Pa.,- - Aprl 10. Miners Judge Andered the Speaker by shouting. "On behalf and B would make his services there of great of the Mlssourians of the House and to son overruled demurrers to Indictments throughout the anthracite field received, ' show their great appreciation- - of the vaiue to we new repuoiic against Edward E Phillips and John with Joy and rejoicing the news from ' 9slsssssssssssH splendid tribute paid by the R. Carroll, former officers of the Inter- - Philadelphia, that the operators Democracy of Illinois, I want to say nitlonal Association or Bridge and Struc and tbe union will settle their difficulties that tbe result of the primaries makes tural iron workers, charged with con without a strtkf. While the, men are STAGING OP CAKMDATZS. Mr. Clark the inevitable Democratic spiracy in the McNamara dynamite out loyal to the organization and will bade nominee for President." rages. Speaker Clark choked off further demonstration by Phillips and Carroll pleaded not guilty White as a unit In any step he takes, standing they, nevertheless, believe- - that "Aie op The of the calling the Hotee to order. Throughout Presidenthe day the Speaker was warmly contial candidates last nlgbt. accases will take a course .similar to those erators have been forced to- - offer Im- and that tlrelr of- gratulated by Democrats upon the cording to the latest Information before the court some weeks ago. All of"0111" concessions-tx,-arbitrate s a victory in Itself lHsllllllllllllllllslBsllHslslBsflslHS4 showing he made In the Illinois primaliEiJfisliSHsssH these will go to trial October 1, received, from the respective or the cause. ries. headquarters, was as follows: When the newa spread throughout thai American Shot by Rebels. working district that Presldent'Baer and Republicans. Alex Barnes Arrested. ParraL Mexico. April 10 Thomas Foun the operators' committee had asked or Delegates In convention.... 1,0 A Winnipeg, Manitoba, April ML Alex tain, an gun operator machine American reconvening ot the anthracite strike a Necessary to choice....... . BJJ Barnes, who formerly ran steamship for the villa Insurrectos during the time commission, there was" general .rejoicClaimed for Taft... jll the- - federals held this city, haa been exeticket offices In New York, Philadelphia, ing. There wera small demonstrations . :jg Instructed ifor Taft., jjfifflfaWMssmsmmmsmBsmmBsMmW3mHK tsMml BMsmmmmmmmmlsKKlHHBISIS&: and Merlden, Conn waa arreested here cuted by the rebels. The rebels claim in many parts and the miners declared Claimed for Roosevelt...... no. by Detective Sergeant George Smith tothat he attempted to escape. v Fountain that the operators had seen, the handwas a, native ot Las Crures. U. Mrx day, charged Ub obtaining money from writing on tha wall, and had been Instructed for Roosevelt.... ss)' brought to realize that, a mere wags foreigners under false pretepse. He adinstructed tor La Follette.. J5 mits his identity, but will fight extradiSldna Allrm EaeapeaT Increase was not enough to send the 4 for,Cummins..... instructed tion. Hillsvilb?, Va- - April Al men hack to work. Democrats. ien and Wesley Edwards, colef actors Delegates In convention., .1,0)2 n. A. Abbey's Will. Greatly Redaeett Rsuad-trl- p Fare In the tragedy of three weelfs ago, are Necessary to choice. .... . v;g sssssHmmVssssHmBsKHsnak' Via Southern Railway London, April 10. The personal estate believed lo have made- theft- - vv out From Washington. D C arid points In gEBH5SSS9sBmmmmSsilssssmBM9BmmmS' Instructed for 3o Clark.,,,..., -BssbkBEKWVirginia to Macon. Ca.. account annual of the late Edwin A. Abbey, the AmeriCounty, Va CSrroIl to of According so Instructed tor Wilson...... Veteran, May can artist, who died several months ago, information received the-- two reunion Confederate, Washington tflLW for round Instructed for .Marshall..., 20 bas been eorn in the court here. It feudists managed to sellout of the Fare from r trliw The only TJrus operating through county two days ago, and 4Tm now sup- sleeping tao,m&U Jotal ot COtt. car from Eastern cities ta Max Oiief Zxecnttte-- D; sed Bflyer Trowel to TAyBlocslYesterd "Afternoon posed ta bs In. North. CatDllaa, cob, Gt, vl ,Wt!Wft, , A
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PRESIDENT
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THE WASHINGTON HERADV SJOCPpjAX AffRIL U. 1912
Coal Strike Forerunner Of Industrial Conflict London. Anrll IX We are living In stir ting timet and people are shaking thelr brads and .ntlclnsilns: dreadful events; thaf the for the opinion coal strike was merely a skirmish, a forerunner of far more serious troubles. During the whole time of the coal strike all sorts of desperate precautions were taken. In the neighborhood or the QlalmV called rrs.l flM ornlnKt what the Impending c11 war. The workers of a set England generally are as of men as It Is possible to And In any country, but they have learned the enorare they they hold, and mous oower more eagerly listening to the golden promises Of agitators, who in striking colors paint, the mnerences oevween uungs as they are and as they ought to be. In anarchistic circles it is that the moment for which the enemies of law and order have been waiting since IMS is near at hand. It there ever 1s to be an English commune the time is drawing close. At the same time the anarchist leaders art. disgusted with the tractablllty of the English tollers. History can show no parallel to the coal strike. Nearly two million workers out and not a single serious act of violence nay not an angry word spoken against "What are we- - to do with such people''' the anarchists are asking At the tame time they have by no means given up the attempt to rouse them, well knowing that if tbey are once roused they will Toe far more dangerous than tny others
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Baronet a Socialist.
There Is a real, live baronet among the firebrand Socialists. His title goes back to the dais before tbey took off the bead of King Charles, and he Is the ninth of his line. Moreover, he owns five seats In Torkshlre. and the family was settled In "Westmoreland before the Korman conquest. So It is no exacaly the sort of race that might be expected to produce a Hyde Park orator. Yet' the editor of the Herald of Jtevolt claims Sir Walter William Strickland as one tf his most trusty comrade and contributors And what the Herald of Revolt Is the title tells plainly enough. Sir Walter Strickland s latest effusion Is a play, laid In a classical milieu The characters have the most unpronounceable names, and it Is not yet possible for the ordinary man to be quite sure what it Is all about. Hunting men who remember old Sir
Charles Strickland, the nonagenarian hunting baronet, will be "doocid sorry" about this development In the family. The ancestor who Introduced the turkey Into England did more service to humanity. . A Military. Anecdote. An entertaining little Incident transpired the other night "between one of the best known judges of the King's officer, bench division and an by no means "unknown In London's social world. The two met at a reception, and found themselves side by side. Tne Judge shook hands warmly with the officer, and said: recall "I know we have met before; your face perfectly. Do you remember where It wasr The soldier smiled grimly. "Tes. sir."' came the blUntreply. "It was at the Old Bailey, when you were good enough to tell me that I ought to thank my lucky stars that I was only In the witness box and not in the dock!" What the Judge replied Is not recorded. Although the King of Spain, who recently underwent an operation. Is apparently again In vigorous health. It Is an open secret at court that he Is suffering from s rather serious ear and throat trouble. This, however, has not prevented him from keeping all his engagements, and he occasionally gave 'his doctors much trouble by his determination to behave as though nothing 'were the matter with htm. Throat trouble seems to be hereditary in the Spanish family, for King Alfonso a second son. Don Jalrqe. has suffered from his throat even since bis birth. Lately King Alfonso has taken to wearing whiskers, but this Is not the .first time that he has dona so. A. tew jears ago he grew small sldewhlskers, and told Queen Victoria Eugenie that he thought he looked like an English admiral in them. "Oh. no," -- eplied the Queen, with a laugh, "you look more like an English butler." After that the whiskers came off. but. apparently, the King Is too fond of face fungus to allow a wifely Jest to stand In his way for all time.
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A remarkable attraction has been provided by the vicar of Rothwell Parish Church, Northants, by the neat rearrangement of the skulls and bones in the famous twelfth century "bone crypt." The discovery of the existence of the
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charnel-hous- e crypt wa accidentally made years 80. When the sexton, dig jghttra grave to the south aisle of the. church, broke through a vauuea row covering a great heap of skulls and human bones. Two'moaths ago. following inspections by various historical and sclentlflo per sons, the vicar "and church wardens decided to. restack the bones uthe center of thn rrvDt on the shelves on the sides. The remains represent no fewer than 11.060 skeletons a number arrived at ny counting tho tops of the 22,000 odd thigh bones, although the number of complete skulls Is only MO or SB. Mr. T. vV Bull,-- F. 8, A., tracing the history of his "valley of dry bones," finds first mention made in 1712, when "the great multitude, of men and women's skulls In the enamel house at Row ell was already "famous." " The earliest church register. 161, made no reference to the crypt, neither did Bridges, the Northamptonshire historian, who carried the list of "Rothwell vicars down to ITS). A theory that the bones might have been brought from Naseby Field was the discounted by MaJ novelist, in ISC because Naseby Field was more than" ten miles away. He also was a monastlo scouted the Idea that It place ot sepulture, as the skulls exwhilst some of hibited ghastly-wounthem seemed to be of Ethiopian Origin. He concluded. In view of the absence of evidence of gunehot wounds, and Jtt view ot the great size Of the bones, that the remains were those of Danish Invaders, slain by'our Saxon forefathers. The Dane theory was attacked by another authority putting the data of the crypt as UW or later, and stating that Other conboth sexes were present troversialists enggest the plague as the origin, which Is, of --course, absurd. Some contend that, this crypt s simsuch ply an ossuary 'or charnel-housIn as were common tiroes e. g, Hythe, Folkestone, Dover, Rlpon, and Upchurch. Mr. F. W. Bull says, that In view of recent discoveries. It seems clear that the bones were placed in the crypt before and for some little time after the reformation, on being exhumed from the churchyard, when It was getting too
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National Defense Bills Furnish Another Difficult Problem for the Chancellor. v
By FREDERICK "WERNER. Berlin. April 12. How to meet the national defense bills without arousing too much opposition against ihe imperial government Is the most difficult problem JVHflEyKXsisssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss "S , i 1&4 " the chancellor has to face at present, i $" 5 and the- leading minsters ot all the German Federal States have, during the last two weeks, had several important conferences In thlscity tor the purpose of discussing ways and means. The change In the political situation, and more particularly the conversations with England, have had no Influence on tire character of the bills. Germanla. I HBBssmisssssssssssissrawfrWTisrssi the leading organ of the Center party declares; but though German taxpayers would undoubtedly be glad If, as a result of diplomatic negotiations, the German empire could do without "any new army and navy bills, the paper points out that it is not England alone which must be considered, but also Germany's relationship toward other powers At a recent meeting Herr Bassermann, leader ot the National Liberal party, stated in his speech that the bills would not come before the Reichstag for some time yet, because differences ot opinion have arlsn among the ministers. This may possibly lead to the fall of the cabinet or radical changes in its present makeup. , The Jvew Navy BUI. Rear Admiral Kalau von Hofe, retired, writing In the Magdeburger Zeltung, says that according to the published information, the following are the main points or the new navy bill First the squadron formation of a third battle-shi- p in the active fleet, secondly, three new The new White Star liner Titanic, which has usurped the Mauritania's place as the largest vessel battle ships and two small cruisers: thirdall, 92 ly. Improvement In the running of theafloat. The Thank's gross register is 46,328 tons; length over all, 882 feet 6 inches; breadth new subfeet 6 inches; height from bottom of keel to top of captain's pilot house, 105 feet 7 inches. The insert is whole fleet, and, fourth! , some
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Excitement on Boulevard Saint Martin Over Assault on One of Hie "Breakers."
"Academy of Pronunciation" Established for Benefit of the Operators.
Paris, April 13. Tremendous excitement prevailed on the Boulevard St. Martin when the driver of a taxi, with a municipal guard seated at his side to protect him. "was treated to a shower of bricks by a party of drivers' on strike who had Just emerged from the Labor Exchange, where they had been holding a meeting. Bicycle polleemen who had followed them singled out one of the most aggressive, and were about to arrest him when he sped away As he was on the point, of being caught. he pulled a revolver out of his pocket and fired on them. Tho bullets whistled by their ears, but fortunately no one was hit When the man, who had thrown his revolver away was finally captured, the crowd which gathered around thrashed him soundly, and he was In a sorry condition when he was taken to the station. He is now an inmate of the depot at the prefecture of pollca on the double charge of attempted murder and the earning of a forbidden weapon.
Paris, April 13, The latest departure on the part" of the paternal French administration is a school of pronuncia tion. It Is Intended for the benefit ot telephope girls whose elocution has been neglected or whose provincial' accent stands In need of correction. This is a step in the right direction, fpr a large number of "ces demoiselles" come from regions In France where the dialect has much to aniwer for. and to hear them rolling off the "r" and final syllables on the telephone Is EOmeUmes amusing and at other times, exasperat ing. Perhaps one could "more readily forgive their accent if the exchange girls would take more pains to ltsttn to the numbers asked for by subscribers It is rarely that a day passes when I am not called to the telephone need lessly because some one has asked for a number that resembles mine. Nines are quite often mistaken for fours, thirty-tw- o are conand twenty-tw- o founded, and many other numerical combinations give rise to rolstakei on the part of the telephone miss. Of course, it is not always her fault she has all sorts of "abonnes" to deal with, and sometimes the subscriber's accent Is as bad aa her own. One day a traveler, annoyed at the slovenly fashion the porter was drawling out the name of a station, put his head out of the window, and remarked, in a crlUcal toner "Won ami. you might pronounce the name of a station a little more clearly." The employe stopped- - turned around, and replied, In withering accents: "Maybe you'd ljke a Le JBargy (a famous master of elocution) for 3300 year!"
TO
BOTECT OYSTEBS,
April J3. In view ot the announcement that a precenUon'of cruelty to oysters campaign Is to be Inaugurated by the president ot the Alabama State Oyster Commission, a professor of physiology at a London medical school today said 'The oyster has certain nervous structures and undoubtedly has a certain amount of nervous sensibility. Its nerves can he readily dissected, and that jt can respond to a touch Js shown by the closing of the shell If one taps on it when it is partly open. "It Is Impossible, however, to say whether 5ts nervous sensibilities are of sufficiently high development to enable It to experience pain. In any case It would be7 hard to find a more sudden or mora merciful way of killing any oars' ter than by eating Aim." London,
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Home. April 15. It Is reported that Count Bonl de Castellans will appeal to the Supreme Court of Cassation at the Vatican, viz.: the 'Tribunaie di SIgnatura PapaleT' It Is believed here that the Holy See, by aystemically denying tho ever-I- n creasing peUtlons of dissolution of mar riage, which .are almost exclusively ot American origin, wishes definitely to In twenty-seven- " tobacco establishments put a stop to the rumor that American In Kentucky 3,06 women ax employed, sTOid can do what It likes at tfcs VaUc&H, t an average wtfl&y wage OX jib.
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GERMANY FACES ANOTHER BIG BATTLE SHIP BUDGET
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Berlin, Aprils 12. The project jfor build-- 1 revealed that many theatrical establ!sh4 con- Ing a canal; which will give the traffic! ments are on the brinlCof disaster-la sequence of 'OClntopp'' competition. The of the Rhine an outlet on the German craze for film shows la not only dealing coast of the North- - sea at Emaen. is taking practical shape. A committee has actors and actresses from, the legitimate' been formed In which the town council stage. The case was cited of a. Berlin ef Smden, the Chambers of Commerce of leading lady who has succumbed to the Cologne, Harburg. and Altona. and one higher salaries offered by film concerns, Prince and who did not hesitate recently to fling1 of Germany's the prinThe plana herself Into a lake, to portray Balm, have representatives. cipal role In a "Klntopp ' rnelodrama, wholly lie for the canal, which will v "Tired of Life." within German territory, are belnr printed for submission to the government and Tha consensus of opinion was that moReichstag. They will also be sent to tion pictures should be confined by law? to science and education, and should be all corporations and persons uiteretteo. the sacred realm! The canal, as at present projected, will debarred from Invading of the drama. It was decided that onaj start Irom Wesel, on the Rhine, run to- of the most potent means of fighting thai ward the Dutch .frontier, and turning "Klntopp" place a prohlblttvot would awav at Leer, come out eventually in BBBBBBBSV,itP!3SBV duty on foreign films and the Im-- J K'3:iSSNS "$HL the River Ems, The cost of the canal Import perlal government will be petitioned to Is estimated at 357,50.000. "Klntops" continued! German shipping and the terminal that end. Meantime,them towns will not be the only gainers from to sweep all before The Kaiser's impresarios themselves the bulldlner- of the canal. One ot Its capitulated this week to a seductive otter most beneficial results is expected to be Royal for the rental of the obsolete the drainage of large tracts 01 coun- Operetta Theater, which will now ba try, particularly the Immense Bourtan-ge- r & "Klntopp." Into turned cultivaMoor, and their subsequent iSubBBBBBTI WHLswSWBLWtBLwWI jgy1 XgBgSBBMBgaBBBBPBsgBBa.',I tion and habitation. Bir St. Fetersbarr Flat. Princes, millionaires, priests, peasants, None of his unofficial titles is dealer representatives of practically every and of to the Kaiser's heart than that "Germany's best business man" That class of society to the number of 1M, are being so. the German Industrial world the accused in a gigantic trial which la has decided to commemorate his maj being conducted behind closed doors lrr esty's silver Jubilee in 1813 by printing St. Petersburg-I- t PSSyiTpSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBM PSHBSsu . T jS?KiNt. a monumental work devoted to tne Is one of the roost remarkable eaies-tha- t progress and development of German have come before- - the Russian trade and commerce during his reign courts for years, and the charge Is or comprehensive book, a be which will The In revolutionary work liv participating fcssf affair of four volumes, on which fifty the Caucasus. eminent economists are already at work, In order to establlth the guilt of tho will deal especially wltn the part the accused the depositions of witnesses and. Kaiser himself has played In the "made other documents have been altered and In Germany" cause. A gorgeous copy of forged In the most sharaelets fashion: the work, bound In gold and sliver, will in many cases the evidence taken at tho be presented to the Emperor on his next preliminary inquiry has been so manipubirthday, in January. 1313. lated as to represent the very reverse of German managers, actors, and play what was actually stated. wrights have made ready for action The responsibility for this gross at tempt at perverting justice rests with, e against the all conquering one Lyjlun. mania. At a meeting of delegates ot na- the examining magistrate, tional associations representing histrionic This Individual has on a previous oc In Berlin this week, it was decided caslon been proved guilty of similar acta art PKLNGESS P0NIAT0WSKI. that heroic measures were necesrary to promoted by the minister of justice, and Paris, April t. Members of the Amer cause ot the high honor that has Just preserve the theater from ruin at the It Is said that when the US Armenians crowded. (can colony here are congratulating been bestowed upon her husband, who bands ot "Klntopps." as motion picture have been duly condemned his handiwork will receive a still higher token ot apNow that the restacklng of the bones Princess Ponlstowskl. formerly Miss has Just been elected an officer In the shows are called here. Reports from Berlin and the provinces preciation. is complete, the vicar invites visitors to Elizabeth Sperry, of Stockton. Cal., be- - Legion of Honor. make the journey to Rothwell ro view the collection. A P0BTX "XEABS' ENGAGEMEUT.
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London. April B. The youthful. Prin cess Mary is becomlng.one of the most beautiful young womenOn England. Falr ot complexion and with bright blue eyes, she alnays had been pretty as a child Tall and slender, she Is now beginning to ' flu out-- " and is expected, to possess a mot cerfect flrura by the' time she. rounds me age 01 eigmeen next year Princess Mary Is" a lovable young woman, quiet ot demeanor, and With a g bewitching smile. She Is like her mother, and some day will make an excellent wife for eoae young eon oC .European rojalty.
marines and airships. The whole of the new work Is to be extended over the years 112 to 1317. The cost of the extra demands de scribed as nonrecurring, namely, for snips' araments. submarines, airships. &c. amounts, he adds, to 330,000.000. and the extra permanent cost to 330,000 000 spread over six years. that is, The active battle fleet will thus consist, he continues, of one flagship, three squadrons each of eight battle ships, eight large cruisers, and eighteen small cruiser as reconnoltering ships. The re serve cattle fleet will, as before, consist ot eight battle ships, four large and twelve small cruisers, and the foreign fleet remains, as fixed by the navy act or 1908, namely, eight large and ten small cruisers In the opinion of Rear Admiral Kalau It la evident that the new navy bill has been drawn up to meet the wish expressed, half as a request and halt as a threat, by England: that the German navy programme and budget may not be altered and Increased In such a manner that another turn must be given to the taxation screw in England. It Is. how. ever, he adds, hardly to be believed that "our government has limited Its naval demands In such a manner unless England has for her part declared herself ready to restrict her armaments for the same period In such a manner that, while German reduces her construction ot capital ships from four to two. England will not continue to force the construc tion of 'Dreadnoughts' as she has hither to done. "We certainly wish to live at peace with England." the admiral writes, 'and are ready to accept an adequate basis to be proposed by England for the mutual restriction of armaments. It Is a matter of course, however, that, although we have no thoughts of aggressive pro cedure against England our fleet must remain and become such an instrument of power as to Insure for our Just wishes now and In the future that sufficient measure of respect and consideration which England unfortuntely has hitherto frequently refused" He believes, therefore, that the half measure now being adopted by the Eov ernment will meet with condemnation In patriotic circles. The Trlpolttan War. The war In Tripoli still goes on. and there la little prospect ot its coming to an end either by an armistice leading to peace or by any sudden sensational un dertaklng on the part of Italy to crush the power ot Turkey and make It ask for peace The war. Indeed, looks to become a hardy perennial In Italy, It Is true, the popular! of the war Is gone, but there Is an Increasing feellng-o- f ani mosity toward the powers, which Is clearly expressed In the leading Italian papers. The Corriere deile Sera, commenting on the attitude of the powers toward Italy, remarks- - "The truth is that In Paris and In London, as in the other European capitals, what people realty like was an Inert Italy, without Initiative, outside colonial competitions, and espe cially outside the scramble for the African coast ot the Mediterranean This was an Italy which, while remaining In the Triple Alliance, did not oppose the designs and the action of France and Great Britain Jn tnat sea. London and Paris are not yet accustomed to this new Italy, which Proclaims her sover eignty over Libya, and wedges herself In between Egypt and Tunis." The Messaggero. discussing the same theme, is much mora severe to "tne allied' than to 'the friendly powers.' From the latter Italy, as the Roman democratlo organ admits, had no right to expect more than "an attitude ot be nevolent neutrality," but from her two allies .something over and above that. Accordingly the Mesaggero urges the Italian foreign office to "speak- - clearly and strongly at Berlin and Vienna." so that Italy may" know how to shape her present and future coney. The prevailing feeling in Rome Is that the attempted mediation by the powers for peace wilt not be successful. It Is practically certain that Italy will not accept the offer of mediation unless she Is formal! assured that Turkey unconditionally recognizes Italian sovereignty In Tripoli and Cyrenalca. Qn the other hand. If (ha powers are unwilling to bring pressure to bear on Turkey, but merely offer their good, services In the hope of ending the war, their Wierveauon wm hot alter tut situation.
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English Couple Finally Married After Prolonged Wooing.
London. April IS. After mearly forty years of mutual devotion, Mr. Thomas Matthews and Miss Ann Parkin have Just been married at the Congregational Church at Ridding, near Altreton, Derbyshire, to which they have walked every Sunday to worship for over thirty years. The cause of the prolonged courtship la stated to have been a pledge given by the bride to her dying mother to brother. The look after an afflicted brother died a short time ago. and at about the same time Mr Parkin, the bride s father, a farmer well Tcnown In the district, also died With none of her family to claim her care. Mill Parkin felt herself at liberty to consider her own feelings and marry her fiance. The wedding was extremely simple, a caj with a brown horse being engaged and no wedding favors being display ed. Mr. and Mrs. Matthews, who are respece aged fifty-foand tively, are described as having been lovers since childhood.
ABSCONDER MAKES
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Changes
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They have looked up the question and that unlike Orientals who favored the beard and only shaved in token ot mourning, the Romans after a certain period, did the exact reverse, thus following the example set by Sclplo as is attested by Ltvy; but that was not until 300 years after Rome had been founded. Beard were still In honor up till then, as is proved bj the Incident during the Invasion by the Gauls, who found all the senators bearded, and insulted one by plucking his beard. Do not historians show that beards never entirely went out of fashion, and do not documents In the Louvre demonstrate that even the great Augustus grew one aa a sign of after the death of Julius Caesar? The chorus men consider that they triumphantly, but case proved their have at the same time they are Inclined to be conciliatory They suggest that a few lines might be introduced into the opera ot "Roma" by way of explaining .that at that date the city was In mourning, and that therefore Ife male Inhabitant were wearing beards find
London, April 13. When lnrormed tnat his wife, Julia Sanderson, the beautiful actress, had Drought suit tor an absolute divorce in. the New Yorlt courts. Tod Sloan, the former star Jockey, declared that he hid nothing to say. uioan 4a sow training race horsea and spends the greater part or his tune in Brunei. Parle, and London. Hloan has made such a. success as a. race horse trainer that it Is probable he will never return to America, except lor- - p. short visit.
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• Htrcot ,,('ro hI)8tnttKf'tf, V·rldn)' aCt('r" 110011. at R. huu"k'\r('hll"f Nhtl\\ cr l'Um111\",,,nllng JlllaH Olllfh~ HI') nold~. "'hollO hntrothlll tn Wllllrr lluUer \\"11" R.nnounl'pd IIhnut 1\ 11louth ago. Th~ ur.. rRI .. w .. ~ rllj"y",1 h\ Mrs. Albert 11. J'.:bn('.', :'o1r", .JuC")( J.:. l'oOIJCr. !\lrtl. ler",1 ~r.· Rrnnk. Mr •. J. \\'rlllht • '0111· t~r. lITH. OUr, Hl·hhlM,.nl~r, MrA. Tudor
Tledemllll, Mr., n. 10 , ~ '110rlcs H. 1Irown, ~Ir". Grant, :lrrH, (·hllrlr. B. Sidney Il. "·,,t,b. llr.. How"r. ,Jr., ;\Ir~. Albrrl 'JTM
~.'"IIt.
I
Hllmptol1.
Mrs,
lll"" l-:thpl,
Gllhl. ~I rs. ~~d" 111'<1 II. (·lIt,·., ~I ... 1".lIzemll .',
H. \nnl~I', .Tt·r'Jlm: VnU
DIl\'('\lllorl.
:'II"R
. !~~~~ :'Iy~:h~r'!:.~~~ ~~~dFRi::" ~~!ijl~~ 1("rn". MI." llnnl'la Smith. :'11"" lll". 1';(1",1 (·.. nfielcl. ~II." 1Ynl1. ~I,·n"nnltl. lit •• 1,01. HUlldlr,
~I"r"
1-"101"11 :'11"" AJl<'c IJIIII~r and ~II". lIulh 1:lIl1cl·.
fa II o'clol'k; "1'1111< 1,11.1\" .1111101'. ~lol\(lny. lind 1'hllr"Itn~". nl ~::su 1'11\, IlnraslIl UlIlI<'r, Mondll)'" 111111 'j·hul'.· dll)''', at 7:30 p.III.;. "~1~8"'u(~ "r Hed. Utld Ito.,· ... "londll)"M IIIHI J'·rlllll)o. lit ~:30 11.111.: Jlnl'lW .rnpI'Y :'111\11 •. 'r'I<'RIIII)", nl 7;~o 1>.111 ... LII.1 I·'rldn) •. at 4:3~: )'''~'hUnl; "horl~~~ 'fll~"'tll" ILlld !:rlda)~. ~ ,1'.111.; l.lrl •. lllri •. ~Irls. d~nc .. , \~,~.llIr~II")"". ~ I·~m .. KI •• 111\ IIIlt\OIl, WrdllrHdu)'", • :~Q p.m.; "La TO.l'n" d"n~", "'011111,"(111) •. 8:30 JI.m. __ ~ :\llIlh..... l'nrl,. "\1814 Edith nl"hmlllld IIr ~IIII 1'1'.111cI~"o t\el\ghltullr rlllf'rlllhll'd. onr UII' IA14t w"ek. with " 1II111111l'0 11111'1) III Ih~ nl'las,'o, r,,\I"'~"1I Joy le,l Ilt 11,,1,.1 AI/,xIL",lrln. \\"I",r" ,·",·.,r~ W~Tl' lul,1
~I
I I 1'lIlk :'::~~."
d 1111. rs.
Wnlt~r
_"TheEx<lushJeSpeda/1yHouse(orFem/nineA••arei"_
Itl h c •
IIl\lIntlon .. 0111. ~1"lIIh"ro .. r tile .\nll"'l'" "·hap· Irr. l"lIltrd nnughtl'r. or Ole l:onrrd· r •. ", wIll /0:1\'" thrlr IInl1unl.uhllrlt)' 11 .. 11. April 22, at ~loldb.'rg.lI".II')' a8' 1II'lnhl)".rooms. The plitroueRacs nrc: ~.lr8. "· ...11')· ('lurk. lIn!. .T .. llolfll Unrl., ~lr8. WI\lInm 1 1"\'1 nil' Uol\llI~' wurth. ~Ir!l. 1':r'lRmulI "'I\son. lIlr". O. X. l'olTlIIlllI, Mrs. A. IT. StrJll'\c nA• ~Irll. John Wolrsklll, ~rr". lJnthow S. nub· crl.on, lrr•. J. T. 1·'lt1.go,... ld. !llr•. I •. I'. Bnlllfl, llrq. Wult .. r Prrr)" Slory, ~Ir" ('. Q. Rluolon, ~Ir.: .\lIlln l~lIl1lr· ;\Ir.. Itlllph "llllnIllR•• Mr~. I~IIJlI~I:1 AII"rl'~,S, .~~r~q S~mll"1 Knl,:ht ~1'1I1'I' .llr•. I ~~'I h '1;. 1.~~mO{~ ~:'Q for Mist'. G~nr' tp"4~ J':""lI(I1f1~1 ~lI~t'o ~\ h •• I::r':!~~~cd ~,o~n \\'i\r~ c1~ n~~ Marlun Uall<. J-.ll\lh ~I""furcl, ",I'h I" ullnrr .\ slJuthrrn ,~UI'Jl"" MlsH LOllI.,· 1.111111" ol·lh. lll" GI'I- II III h~ Rrf\·I'd. '
"".s
fdV ~lefd~
~.
1.,,"
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Ilf-
Exclusive Walking Hats The IIC\\' 1I1l'tI'll)lolitalJ Ellglish models. 'rhc hats that hal'c l'aptlll'cd Fifth .A\'e. Showll Ilt thc !\) ul'\·e!-))onciav. Also- -a IIC\\' lille oi' "Hatill~" l'clulv-toWCltl'S-- \'CI'Y J!1lJ!1J)1\l' rot' cm')v SlllllnlCr wCltr.
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"
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443- 445- 447 So. B"oadway ,'
·I··
1":11.
I
-1
~
_
~:
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Waists and Neckwear Temporarily on Main Floor TaLe bEAR Elevator «or All Other De"artments ~ lt~ " JlI
SOOlDl'~e2ldly -, Watch fm' O]tYcnRng .Anlll®\lmcement-
@lUllr
Greater Store
\mYORK i~ bcil1g' hllrried at cvcry,point'and,it is only a 'if'if matter of da\"s when announcement will be made 01 the inrmal npcnin~ (;r thc (;rcater ~Iycr Si,cgc\' & Cn. store. III the meantimc (lllr tcmpllrary c!epartmcnts arc- crowdcd with mcrchandisc and I1l1u~ual intlucements .are' being malic ill lIrtler to reclllce ~tocks, anti rclic\'e thc congestion cau~cll hy prc~cnt lack or display allll ~clling spacc~ ,
lLli[u~~ ~ANCrrNIG fll'oCOC§ 211m JP>Allf.'ll1Jll'csses For Misses and Small W6men
I
They rlln the tull J;nmllt or girlish rancy, theSe'lovely IIIt10 round length trorkN aud part~· dreSQC8. for misses nnl! Arnall wOlllen; modd'! In chilton. crcpe-dc'mctcor and taltela.
-...
1·'0.. :\Jr~. f;IBllton, llrs. 1-' '~, SIAnton uf N.,. 4tS .\n· urc\\s buule\nrd ('llnrmlllP:ly rllll'rtHIIIUd "lth a IlIlIrheon. TUI·sclll). tn "omplilnent to b"r daughler,ln.):,\\',
j
~tr:,. FOI'~Ht f;tnntoll. nnltlt~· hlo~:OC(lms:
d ... ·nra''''1 th" tllhle 111111 Iho cards I>or(' Ih" nnmes of ~Irs. Alhl'Tt C,utch· I'r, lll". \\"II<1dllo,·r. llrH. William l.c\\'I~, llr •. ,Joseph Bohom, !\Irs. AI" thllr Brill)', Mrs. Jnmes Brebm, ~rr~. Hay Htephells;, lIrs. Alhert StrphOIlS, .1r.. :'Ir.. Itnlph WillIamS and Mr•. LoulH Tolhursl,
. Seml'Rnllual Bull.
Xew mo(lels In eyenlng gownR, made elCpressly for !l\Iyer Sicgel & Co •• ell'gant enolll':h for the mOS1 excluslv(I or E'lnhoralo function. All the now coloring!! In chlf· tons aye .. satins AnI! meteor~, etc.. etc.. $6~' to and Up $~~, or YOIl can pay as high n.q $200.
$65 to $95
5
THE EGAN SCHOOL A~XOU:NCgS
A
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. ;\Iore than GOO guesta respon(\e.l to Invltntlons Friday ""enlng (or tho semi-Illlllunl charlt)" bnll gl"cn at Goldbl'rg.Ilosle)· s.tIIIemhly·roomH b)' 1l1emherR of thc' Hobert E. I.co Chllp' ter oC th" UnIted Dnul:htcrs oe thu I'onted"rac)'. Those named Ilq patrun· esses arc :'lr8. A. W. Hutton. Mr". IT. C, ,,,'urden, Mrs, n. 1". Nellums. ;\lr8. W. X. Perry: !lIrs. W. ,\, Kerl,,)". :'11'9. .rnmep Westphellng. 1\Irs. E. A. llmpr. lJrs. Benjamin F. Church. MrR. E. E Wood. lIIr•. S. n. Thorne. Mrs. T. If. Brad)' and Mrs, T. W. T. nlchr,rl1s.
. Miss J~lllllla Parr. soci~ty fll"orlte ~f Toronto who. with her ?rother. Dr. Russell
• -0Parr. Is ~njoYlng an extended .sojourn In this cIty. In II1lss Parr's honor a theater purty, ne"ent' ~~rrormnnee. EnthusIasm In the new orlelltal followed'by supper at the Alexandrlli, wll!;be given next week. ,;. opera, "Jo.ppyJand,' to be 'presented ;\Ioy 2 and 3 at the ,\udltorlum. un· ns. }VILLTAM GRANT FITCH, H.' I,.~ "liller, .T. H. Holmes, Julius der;the ali~plce9 of .m'embers of the ·well· knowR .In the ·9OOInl· circles 'Vnllgenhelm, .r. Wellington Boyle. o! Los, Angeles, hilS rl'centl)· '.'I'ho dl"phl~' of el"!I'''"t spring crea· F.bell, Club and directors o( the "te· I(lnlry Industrial Home. Is growln!;, Jlublfshed IL boautlful ana Interesting l\un8 of .apPllrrl WIlS 0110 or tho clnblittle, hnok ".ailed "HnIIPY 1l01idILYs "rate fenture8 oC th~ oecas\tm. numer- ,Ially. ' ... Irrady the Ebell Cluh, where , In IndIa" at the time of tho J)urbar ous m .... '·IlIs of Imllorte,l gown9 be· tho rehollrsnhl ha\'e been taking 11Ine(, lJr 1902. lIlrs. ,\fItCh 'hull tho good Ing ,worn. Tho danco opened without ""ery' All'crnoon nnd e\·enln!\'. hall (ortune to securo pns"u!\,o -Oil tho the' IUlUnl "pf'ctaculllr reature of the bei", ab.indoned Co.. the lar,:"r' 011111• "Tllrll." a mngnln<;cl1t '9hlp- hlll\~ !lSJ'~' ;::ranu march. Hetween dances amI torlum at Goldborg·Bosloy MRI·mb!)'· ('tally for :tl,',,"'lilio oC tho "lcereg81! fon"')"ln[l', the guP"ta engaged table.. rooms. The rchenrsal ",111 hr as fol(lnrt)· at tho limo or thc Dllroar, 11 lIn tho grlllrooll1. where jollity and IOWA: (leIAh .. girls' ehorus, TUl'sua)" Waft on thIs ship that her 0001< waSjl:OR9111 relgnod. amI J·'rttlll}·". nt 3::0 _ p.m.; Spanlh" • \l"rl~ten, r _ , "it l'l\'lt~ltlOIlH.I.lI1\·" heen l,slI('d (or the dance. Tuesdays lIn<l FridH.YH, at 2:30 .' 'lIIr": Fltr.li's first;"' Hkctctr' Ill· iJC 'mil niarrlilge.'o! .l\£!s;",i\r.lJdro·d >Ilr""'II, II. p.m.: Oergoda mllldA, :.rondaYR 11.11<1 .. -n<ires alfd~ Its !ponY,lntorejlting:1t1ghts, l:!,lIn&:. 8~I!I~tl" w!'man ;of. thl,! cIty, nnel ·Wedn"sdo)·s. nt'3:30 p.m.; Chine"" _.'ome of, thl'm. mpre gr,uosomo than .En~I!I'1I Rlchord' :Wuest' ,of the U·fI·S. mnlds, Mondays and "'rdnl'sdoys. Ilt ,green.ble:- ,Here ''She' "lslted;'tho! 1",1. ilfllrylnnd.· 'The,' wcd,1\ng'''wll\ "e ene 4:30 .'>.m:; modern Japane"/', )\(01/' 'l('e' or the dllaho.raja. At ,LuCknOW,! of . ~he, l)rllUant navy e~'ents, or the dnYll and 'Vednesdayp. lit 4: 30 p.m.: l'hlch occifples tuloth'er Chdriter 'or the "raslm: The. el'remony ,"III'take placc flower.. nnd rILI ..ylnnd glrl~, Thursda" •. hook, sho "Ialted nil 'the outlying at'St.,Priul·s Et>lscopal Church 'Tues· at 4 o'clock, ntld Soturday morlll';l1'" /llaces. ns well 8.8 tho bszlUlrs. At dny e\'Clung, A1>rlt 23" nt· 8 o'clock. •\~a. Mrs, Fitch "lsI ted the Taj lIIuhal I An Enster brl<,le lunelleon WRR gl\'en ot whleh her book contaIns an In. 11IIonda)' aft~rnoon by MrR. D. C. Col· tere~Ung doserlptlon. A poem, "The lIer'lIt her hom". Collier ShllCk, Ocenn Crown Lady's Tomb," 19 lnehllled In Bcnch. Mrs. Herman Pink, a seclety 'e.. book. The Po .. t 'of .\grn. and womnn' oC Superior. ~VI •. , was the U""ha ..'11 Tomb nre descrIbed. In her ~ompllmented guest. Cnllfornla.· pO(l. ,hapter on Jeyporo she gll'es an ell' pies, ShRsta. daiRIes and Cherokee :rrtslnlng necount of hotel customs roses were IIsed for ,Iccn ..ations. Th" In Inrlla. . I hostess \VnA asslstillr In entcrmlnl,,!: Then a chapte.. on Delhi and an· ,II\' Mrs. Mne Copley Rnum, Mrll. ,the" on Calcutta complctc Mrs. James- Gibson •. MIss" Jessie Burbeck ~Itch's literary Itinerary. The all., nnd Miss Edrth Cop Ie}'. Mrs. Col· tho .. does not Ilttempt the history of Illor Also Sn\'c n. brIdge Inncheon Prl· ,/llaees \o1slted bllt Is content to gIve tlay aftcrnoon .. , Il few ,personul impres,qlons of th~ -0ltrane:e'bE'aut\es of Indln. Her book l[L..... "~ton Wed .. In Xo..th. Is charmingly Illustrated with numer· Despite the rnln Wedn"sday arter· nus hnlf.loncs, snd bound In lI~np nnon the weddIng of MIs8 Dorothy I~ather. .' -. Eaton lind Rnfus 'Hnteh Klmbnll wns • -0Holemnlzed Ilt the home of the brldo's Sun DI('RO News. parents. ~i'r, nntl Mrs. ,Cha..lcs 'Pred. The gayest e,'ent of Snn Diego's erick Enton, at "Hlso VI\'o," MonteRoclal seaHon, th .. charIty \)all; WIlS cit f). ' Plans hnll been made to perheld Tuesd!!-]. nla;ht In the ballroom Corm tho ~eremlJny In the fomou8 ,ot the U, /Yo Grnnt Hotel where -ten Enton' gard"cns, hut there wall a ,thollsnnd rosell were IIsed' JlII decorn· drenching raIn nnd th\, wedding leok tlons. BesIdes the roses n gllrd.en oC 1,lIlce withIn the nome. 1.'\10 brl<lnl pottrd pnlms concenled tho orchestra, pnrty wnll fJed b~' two brlde"mahls, Se,'en hundt;ed socl~ly poo(lle Ilttend'llIIlss Frede.. lrka OUII of S.lIl l~ran· ad. O<'."up)·lng hoxE's wherc Im- cIsco an)1 MIss r:mlly !llcBrld.. ot promp\u recrpLlon8 were heIr! wcre J Pnsadenn, ,)o'ollo\Vlng them cam .. tho limes. Jolln Dupee. J. W. Sefton. A. mnld of honor, "lIss Cora Otis ot W. Mitchell, A: G. Spahllng, ClnuH San Frllnrlsco. 'The brIde wore It Spreckels, F. J. Bolrher. J'1'•• \V\llInm gown nr whltC' satin wIth nn O\·er· CIR)'ton, H. H ....ron('S, C. P. Douglas, tunIc of lIet embrolderrd In poarls A. I!' Daniels, Pe ..ch'nl Thompson, alld a \"~Il of V"r)' rare point <I'Aleneon l
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A
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Shakespearean Celebration In honor of tlie three hundred forty·elghth hlrthdnY of the Empcror of all Dramatists. at
('oplplI or forelp:n models-that explains lhe eyldent distinction of Ihese tailored ,,'nlklng dresscs or wool. for_"·omcn. They como In flne French .<;ergp. blue. blnck and black and white checks; flnlshed with a varIety of decorath'o touches$12 50 pipIng. lace collars. ratlne trimming. Priced (t 'd mod~ratelr. H2.50, $15 to $60.00. 01725 an Up
to
The Auditorium, Saturday, April 20th at
2 PRECISELY
J'rocessional l')ageant of Characters from Lcar to Puck, Represeuted b~r 2()() Playcrs in Costume. ., • I Twellty!ollC Tahloids of Immortul Scelles, The best Progl'ummc of' Shukespearcllll :Music c\'cr gh'en in Los Angeles. proffered by complete or<;hestra mId large chorus ulldcr a l'CIl,OWI1CU baton.
Gel/era! A dlllissiOll 50 Ge11ts:
StudeNts. 25 Gmts
ScaL ,Sale dfll'ing the early part of the week at the School • Halllbm'ger )fnjcst ic Theatcr 13uilding. Phonc F266.'5, Seat Sale at A IIditorilllll 130x Office on lind aftcr 'l'hul'sc1ay, April 18th,
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At $40 we teature 0. silk .·lUlt and a silk coat. THE SUIT III of hlack tal'leta In combination with white broadcloth; Jacket and skIrt are both glove stitched; comblnBtloll silk and broadcloth cult and collar. Princess skirt. . THE COAT Is full length; of black Faille silk, col· ored messaline Uned; "elvet cu\'[s and collar Which halt ~ revers In on~'8lded eltect ............. , • , ..•• , . ... . •• .• ~I \UI
4'"'
Smart ready·to,wear hats for children and misses. some aultable for ,,·omen. so exceptional are the stylesboth dress and tallorer\; of llllnn. peanut and hemp braids and rough straws; In plenslng combination with. yol\'et ribbon, !lowers and tailored bows.
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ciI)l
41-
alilldl Up
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ClhlnndlreIDl9§'cOnor~dl Wal§Jbl]l)rc§ses'
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or such excellent material they will look better every time they're laundered; colored wash dresses of IJnen • g\nghllm and ehambray In \'arlous colors; waist and IJllllted IIklrt styles; sizes G to 14 -years. lIUDDY BLOUSE models-6 to 14 years-$3.75 up.
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Unusual. Indeed, Is the great l'arlety we provide In these ribbon flowers-so fayorcd now for <;prsage-the very latest Ideal! In CHRYSANTHEMUMS, BABY nOSES In shaded elfects. with ferns and foliage; large SINGLE ROSES In American Beauty Bhade; blmchps of \'IOY"ETS. PANSIES. APPLE BLOSSOlllS. FORGET· )IF.,XOTS, fill! bl~om POPPIES in nriegated shades-iSe to $8.50,
§i()'C:
S~~cial
-FULL BLOO:'o[ ROSE in' these shades: 'AmerlcBll Beauty, Cerise, Yello,,', Pink and White.
Fashion conceives nothing too flne to lind its way to 'our Neckwear Dept. HANDSOlllE new arrivals In lace collars for coat. or dress; In Imitation Point Venlse, Irish and Shadow Laces-SOc to $6.00. REAL laces. $6.50 to $50.00.
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Reductions of one-third to one-half on every side rulfle In stor:k. i5c oneS now 50c. $15.00 ones now $9.75. $2.00 ones nov; $1.35. $9.50 ones now $4.25.
______________________________________________ -"The Exclusive Specialtu House for Feminine Apparel"_
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Fashionable Hair Goods of Highest Quality The Weaver.Jackson shOWing of hIgh-grade hall' goods Is preeminent In Los Angelu. Ou .. hair Is all Imported by us dlrect--and all of It .peclally treated and mado up Into dIstinctIve haIr pIece. rIght hero In our own light, aIry. sanitary workrooms, ,
SCHLOSS BROS. &: Co. F'me Clotlaes Maken Baltimore &lid New York
nearly forty years "SCHLQSS CLOTHES" have been known to Clothiers as the very best of Men's-Ready-
FOR
to-wear garments. They have been" but little advertised-for their high quality bas always limited their output-but experts have ranked them at the top for years, It is time you knew about them.
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Th8i, real puperiordy-espe~i9.f1y in pO;IIt Of <Norkmallsh.'p, style and perf~ct flt-il very apparent to the Keen observer. rhey are a/l wool; hand$()me throughout· de,iE' ned, tailored and jitted by high-priced experts. Why not try a Sehlos$ Baltimore Salt tillS SprinE! Moderate prices-$15 to $40, Ask to see tlaem • BALTIMORE
. Cbarm1J1a;
--.:.
:\Tiss Elizabeth Bo\·ce. ~da. P,rl.Who,ls.tp mlUT1lLBak~1'lIlleld man "~, ,~:;. ",~,,. " 1 "
dUr\\g the
,
m~ntb.
'
. Schloss Bros.
&
Co.
NEW YORK
If you are crItIcal ab-out the hal .. you purchale, you will find here any desired pIece In any Ihade and ef IUC'l quality 1I8 will assure you .. complete .atlef.ctloft.
FREE
, Sample
of Weaver-Jaek.on'. faee cream-tlle molt exquilite and .melant cream ever prep.red~
...... . '... :~ . . :"
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THE
-. GRANT'S BODY MOVED :~AND NO DRUM BEATS
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THE NEW GI.t\NTESS TITANIC.
James McCreery. & Cos
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On Monday, April the .15th.
Commander and Past Commanders of U. S. Grant Post March with Coffin First Picture I
The WhIte Star liner Titanic which, for
f:erry nIne gr,,-y-haired veterans of the civ1l war. all of whom had served under Gen.. U. S. Grant and who are members of the U. 8. Grant Post. G. A.. R.. In Brooklyn. These nine men had also taken part in the fun~ral ceremonIes over the famous Union General. The nIne ,·etwere WlIUam. Wallace Grant. comI:lUU1der ot the post; Henry M. Calvert, a. P. SmIth. B. F. Parsons. Henry W. Kn.Ight. MUes O'Reilly. George F. Tait, -GeoJoge A.. Prl!lce. and Thomas W. Tappan. The eIght last named are all past commanders of the post. Others on the ferry boat General OUs when It steamed across the hay tor Governors Island 'Were Gen. BlIss. Capt. Fenton. and Lleut. Howze. wbo were Gen. Grant's aIdes; Col. George Andrews. the Adjutant General of the DIvisIon; Col. John A.. Hull. the Judgo Advocate General of the DivisIon; CoL James N. Allison. who was a. class ma.te at ""est Polllt of Gen. Grant; WIlliam A.. Purring-
erans
t:on. a. nephew o:t
~s.
. I .. 'I s. 3 ear at east. nIl1 ba t.Joe argest ves-
made
as
only
the
socond bIggest
Kai.l5erln
Auguste
Vlctorla.
(Hamburg--
ship afloat. 'I' he tonnage or the Olympie Adrf.aUrAmerican) .......................... ·· ~5,OOO (White Stru-) .••.· ................ _4.54. t 45,324. while that or the Tltanlo 1s R'ltterdam (Holland-America.) .......... :H.l1'O
46, 328 tons..
Balrle: iWOite Star) . .• .o
~~,~70 ........... _."",00
.................... .
AnM.rlka (Hamburg-Amerlcan.)
"Then the Titanic Bleam" Into the Hud- Kronl',-inzessln Cecllle (North German Llu~d) .................. . .. .. ........ 20;.000 this week New Yorkers wUI see a. Like hE"1' Sister. the Olymplc,·tbe Tltanlo ship that Is more than fOUl" cIty blocks Is a rour-funneled boat. the great staclu) Ion!:". and ,,:hleh. If stood on end. would rlsin!,;· a fraction over 81 feet above the be 181.7 feet higher than the Metropol1tan upper deck. while the distanoe from the Life tower and 270 feet higher than the top of the runn"ls to the keel Is 175 feet. As {or the passenger accommodations. Singer Building. lhey are among the most gorgeous of any H it were possible to drop the Tltanlc IShip eyer built. There are also many infOI' travelers. They who can into Broadway. fOr Instance. at Thlrty- novations .. fford it can In the future have a prieIghth Street. she would ocCUpy a "pace vate promenade oeck all to themselves. mOl:e than 92 feet wide. her rudders would These private promenade deck" are In connection with some of the ffner suites. be about opposite the Knlckerbooker Tbe- awl tile Titanic Is the first vessel to orrer atre. while the point of her stem would this additional luxury. extend about 80 feet north of FortyOther features are the Parlstan cafl'! and the Palm Room. In the maIn dinl'tg second Street into Tlm~s Square. room passengers can olne In corneOrt Twenty-two years ago. when the ar- at the600 sama time. nnd there is In' addition mored cruiser Saratoga. thell the New a French restaurant where 200 more m ...y York. went Into commission, "he was con- dino tl. 1:1.. rarte_ Then there are Tul"klRh haths, a swimmIng pool. a tlnely tlu"a sidered and was one of. the crack tlght- gymna~lum. and a squash racquet court. Ing shIps of the worlil. The Tltanlo is Among the p"-'lsengers wbo are coming bigger by more than 1),000 tons than ov""r In the Titanic are Major ArchIbald would be ... cruiser fIve tlmee as big as Butt. Prcsld£'nt Taft's milltary alii; Col. Mrs. John Jacob Astor. :Mr. and Mrs. Sampson's tlagBhlp at the battle ot San- and Isldor Straus. W. T. Stead. Alfred G. tJalro. She IB more than 15.000 tons bigger Vanderbilt. and J. E. WIdener. · son
Body of .. Taft·s Engineer·' Arr.lves. President Taft's trtps to the canal he was The body of .John Hagan W1I.S brdught n.t the throttle of the engine that pull"C] to New York on the liner Panama ~·e!O- the Pr~sldent's train. He was lcnown as terday. For years Hagan was an engineer .. Taft·s englneer." Hagan was a nati\Oo on the Panama. Railroad. and on both of of Ohio.
Grant; Mrs. Potter
the
had arranged for many Interesting cereinonies. nlilltary. and religious in t.he
chapel. bringing together troops both.·Nat.lonal and State to take part. Gen. Grant·s fondness for his home and surroundings on Governors Island. where be had been in command for six: years, 511e said, caused his family to feel a deep sentiment in taking his remaine back there. Mrs. Grant sl!!!o announced that Oen. Grant·s broths!:. U. S. Grant. Jr.• was en route to New .xork from Callforn.1a.., hav-
ing started on receipt of the news of· Ills brother's death. She saJd she and her son. Capt. Grant. will remaln at the St.. Regis for the present WIth Mrs. Grant·s· sist.er. lIIrs. Potter Palmer•. and other TTlembers of the fam!ly. to await the a.:'riyal of Princess Can tacuzen e. SYDlpnthy 'roUl Many
PIo.ee ..
Hundrods of messages continue to come to Mrs. Grant from all parts or the coun-
try expressing sympathy for her In her sorrow. One very much apprecIated was from the Society of the Twenty-first Illinois Infantry. a regiment once commanded by Gen. U. S. Grant. That meso sage read: . . SoCiety of the Twenty-first nUnols VeteraI\ lnCantry bemoan the 10s9 and comrade.blp or
. t~
most: dlsUnsuJsbcd member.
ear1lest military experience as
OeD.- Grant·1I B.
lad was ha-.1
with the Twenty-first Ill1nois Yolunteer In!a.nlry commanded by hIs {atber. . 1 am d[-
.reeted hy this society to
con~·ey
to you the
'deepest sympathy at the surviving membe.ra of this regiment 1n your great beI"eavement
country·s 10S9. Cornelius Vanderbilt sent this letter in behalf of the Roben Fulton Monument~:o';ia:A~nlncOofrp~r~io~s ?en. Grant was Let me express to you the deepest 5YIIlpathy
23rd'Street
In Beth Store ••
Hand .- embroidered Tailored Linen
1.75.. 2.50
"raista. l.
and
3.25
Lingerie Waists in effective models.
2.50.. 3.75
to
5.75
Linen and Muslin Waists in styles suitable for morning, athletic and travelling wear. At attractive prices.
FIBATIHlIBJR
NECKWEAR.
In Doth StGres".
Taffeta and Marabout Scarfs. ; '~"'7:::-. value. 6.2"5, I 4.25 Taffeta and Ostrich Scarfs. ~-:~ ••••• ' \-alues 7.75 and 8.75. 5.25 and 6.75 Marabout Stoles, black or natural. \-slue 4.2"5 to 9.75. 2.50 to 6.50 Ostrich and Marabout Stoles .••••.•• values 5.r5 and 6.75. 3.75 a.nd 4.75 Natural and 'White Marabout Capes. value 6.50. 4.50
23rd Street
34th Street
A.m~rlcaD
or
SPRING AND SUMMER MODELS. _ Smart Styles in Boots, Pumps, nials, Gibson Ties and Oxfords.
colors.
.':' Vaughan's Specials"·
wlll pr'O""e in
0. few weeks what we say here ~hn.t they contain a mde ran!;" of colors o~
l.it,J:gest
sI7:e
f'lowers,
cODlprising
e,,-ery
de-
o;irable shade. but are dominated by the llghter colors now most admired and IlBed' (or the table and parlor decoratloIl!l. PRICE-Vaugban's Prize Mixrure-Ib. $1, l/z-lb. SOc, %-Ib. JOe, oz. 1St. pkt. IOc.
S·O:W· NOW
"Central Park" LAWN SEED
The best permanent mixlure. Make. dOle "Jilvery .turf. No foul seeds; nO weed.. New ~p; sure to grow.
Per .lb., JOe.; 5 Ib$., $1.35; 15 Iba., $3.95.
M1tiihan~~egg~~~~ .~ . ~~tarOjllem~~
•
. MME. NAFTAL, 69 West 45th St.
For 20 yenrs a.t 748 6th .kY. ina.ugurate her new shop on Monda.~· ;.\.prU 15th, w:lth a. special offering of Ladle~ -"d MisseS" Tailor-made SD1tB of the flneat
mil
guallt:Y,. a.t . the-
Te~
lowest prIce!!.
. He:- ·Old ·PatrOns are
Colo~
Made of Tan and Black Russia Calf, Glazed· and Dull Kid, Suede, Patent Leather, White Linen, etc.
~""Uropean.
e5Pecla~
.Telephon6 670 Brya.nt.
inviteS.
50.00
ana
30.00
and
38.00
3.50
and
4.00
per pair
Boys' and Girls' Sorosis Shoes for . dress, school or general wear.
2 ·. 50 to 4.00
per pair
Men's Sorosis Boots and Low Cuts--:
4.00
to
7.00
per pair
James McCreerY· & CO~ 23r.d Street
34th Street
Twenty Thousand Yards of "-hite Silks. Striped Crepe Eoliennc. 42 inches wide. value 1.50. . 75c a yd. Silk Poplin. 42 inches wide ......•• value 1.50.
Dress Satin.
a. yd.
35 inches wide ....•••
value 1.25.
Bl'idnl Satin.
1.00 75e
Q
yd.
33 inches wide ......•
value 2.50.
1.35
n
;yd.
Sup('riol' quality Chiffon Ta£feta. 36 inches wide. value 2.50. 1.35 a. yd.
Imperial Crepe Charmeuse. 40 inches v. ide. value 3.00, 1.90 a yd. H('R\~· quality Shirting Silk. r:t7 illdlCS ,vide. value 1.50 95e a yd.
:
.........
~~
~
:
.Several Thousand Yards of medium a.nd ·light weight Fabrics, for wall hangings, 'draperies, etc., 60 inches wide. {ormer price. 1.25 to 2.2!J. S5e a yd. I ·10,000 yards of French and English Cretonnes, for furniture slip covers and ~~Iiler fln.n:Ishings. 31 inches wide. former price BOc to 85c. 1 Be to 5 Dc a yd. 150 pieces of 50-inch Imported Cretonne and Taffeta. Designs arid colors in colonial and French Period reproductions. former price 1.50 to 2.00,
75e
and
1.00
A
yd.
·Bar Har,bor and French Willow Arm Chairs' '. ahd.' :Rockers. Large size in natural finish, complete with cushion.
,.
5.00
. ~.500.pairs of Fine Serim Curtainsj~ hemstitched or: cluny lace edge. former price .1.~5 to 1.75. 1.00 per palr
James . McCreery & COm 23rd Street
IIII. Botb StorelJ
Fifteen Thousand Yards of Imported "~hite French Voile. 47 inches wide. value 750. 280 a yd. 1 ~,OOO yards of French Linen Suiting, -pure flax; soft finish. Large assortment of the latest Spring shades, also 'Vhite or Black_ 45 inches wide. value 65c. 48e a yd.
In Both Stere:.
In Botb Store.
'>
which freqnently con tam only sorplns. undesirable
and
Extra qua lity Wilton Rugs in perfect Oriental reproductions. Sizes 8 ft. 3 in. x 10 ft. 6 in. and 9 x 1~ ft. usual prices 50.00 and 55.00, 37.50 Royal ·Wilton Rugs in rich designs,small figures or medallion centres. Sizes 8. ft. 3 in .. x 10 ft. 6 in. a.nd 9 x 12 ft. . ... ust;l\atpric~s ·36.00 and 40.00, 25.00 .". 'Extra qu,aIity Seamless "Tilton Velvet andSaI,lford's Seamless Axminster Rugs in a complete assortment. Size 9 x 1!l ft. . usual price 30.00, 19.50 Seamed Axminster Rugs in rich Ori~ntal patterns and colors. Size 9 x 12 ft. ~~ual price 24.50, 1 5.00 IBUNGAILOW..!RU(li§, CAlRlPIET§ « ILITNOJILIEU M§. . Alr:W ool Scotch Art Rugs in an endless variety 'of color combinations~-figures or plain 'centres with band or floral borders. Size 9 x 12 ft. usual price 13.50 to 17.50, 10.50 Wil ton Carpet .••••..•••••••••.•.••••• usual price 2.25. 1.75 a yd. Body Brussels Carpet, with or without border. Best qualities. . usual price 1.Z'5, 1.35 a yd • Inlaid Linoleum in hardwood and CfI tile patterns. 1.00 sq. yd. usual price 1.35 to I.6~.
,
·celv~d·
Special of these and oth"r flowers
25.00 .. 40.00
. .
,cbaracters that America produced. To say we are all greatly shocked is puttIng It mildlY. It Is Impossible tor me tD ~,...n my personal sympathy aa I would like. .Yours in sorrow .
Famous over ludf a Century For Exclusiveness. Quality and Value:
IW ASiHI l!)IRIES§ GOODS.
-----------UPHOLSTERY IPAIBIRHCS CURTAHNS.
In your be.r-eB'-""ement in the 10S9 of your tllu8-
wIth u.s does not mean growers' mix t u r e 8,
.': .
In J!loHt Stgre!J
20.00.. 30.00and 40.00 C Iii rf on it,l's former prices 35.00. 65.00 and £4.00
DOMIESTllC 'RUGS.
On M8Rday. AprlI the 1lith.
-tdOll8 busband in the name ot the Robert Fulton Monumont Association. We are mlnd:rul 'that Gen. Grant was It!! tlrst PresIdent, .and· Edded much to its success. In this ca. ... ·pa.olty It a.fforded many of Its members to ~oIIle .1n closer contact wlth one of the t1n~t
SWEET1I1i.1::mres PEAS
size Bedstead. former price 205.00. 165.00 23rcl Street Store Only. Bedroom Furniture in models that are to be discontinued, from 2.5 to 33~% less than former prices . . Bureaus, former prices 32.00. 44.00 anCt 66.00
33.00.. 35.00
EXCIEIPTHONAL V AILUIES
I "McC]R18IEIRV" §HILIKS.
Burfi!a·u,. Chjfioniel', Toilet Table, double
34th Street
an~ OUT
. Otners . trom whom telegrams were roare Gov. and AIrs. Charles S Deneen of nIlnois, Gov. and Mrs. Dcr of NQw York. Jl.layor and Mrs. Carter H. :Hs..rr1son of Chicago, To 'I'akalmle President· .o t the Nippon Club; TImothy L. W"oodruft. Satouel Fallows. Gen. GrenVIlle M. Dodge, an9. ths JapaneSe Ambas. sador to the United States.
White· · Ena.mel Suites, - BureaU; Chiffonier and Toilet Table. former price 52.50, 40.00 Rich l\fahogany or "White Enamel Suites,-Bureau, Chiffonier and Toilet TabJe. former price 97.00. 75.00 White Enamel Suites,-Bureau, Chif.fonier, Toilet Table and Twin Beds. former price 117.00. 90.00 Mahoga.ny or ·White Enamel Suites,Bureau, Chiffonier, Toilet Table and Somnoe. . former price !29.00, 1 00.00 'English Suites of Solid ~Iahogany,
Bedsteads , ... "" ............ " ... " ....... . former prices 52.00, 58.00 and 60.00
She Is expected to arrIve 1n about
ten <'lays. On her arrival the funeral will be held and the body taken to West PoInt tor burial . A ·gUard of regular troops ·was· plllet'd In charge ot the cortin. and It will be under the constant gua.rd of'theSi! soldiers· until it Is taken to West Point. 31rs. Grant Issued, through Lleut. Howze. a sta.tement. In ·.Whlcli" she said that Gen. Grant was personally interesttf.l In the Chap!'l of St: CorneUm! the Centur. lon, as he had been Instrumenta'l ·in getting· It for G",·ernors Island and had addE'd J;Teatly to its interest by placing In tt many flu!;S of hiStorical memorIes. He
Bedroom Suites.
18.00. 28.00
James McCreery & COm
Cha.pel.
At Governors Island the entire garrIson. consIsting of e. battalion of the Twentyninth Infantry, waited to act 8.S the escort trom the terry to the chapel. Col. Cecil was In cOIIlmand. The coffin ~ontalDing the body- was borne on 8. gun caisson to the cnape!. It wlU remain In the chapel until the arrival of Gen. Grant's daughter. the PrIncess· Cantacuzene. who is DOW on her wa.y from RUBs1a..
On lUonday, April the 15th.
ToiJet Tables ...........•..•••..•.••.• former prices 28.50. 37.00 'nd 44.00
Stone. U. 8. _I\.. til.
than a hattleshlp twlce as bl!!' as the great dreadnought Delaware. The (ollnf;':ing table sho~'s the tonnage I of the t"·,,lve largest liners now In the transatlantic trade: Tlta.:lIC (White Star) .................... 46.328 Olympic (White Sta.r) .................. . 45.324Ma"r~tania (Cunard) ............... .. . 32.000
Is
PalIner of Chlcago. Mrs. Honore Palmer. a nleca of Mrs. Grant. a.nd Capt. 1lL J. Re!Oting
I
sel In the world. Is due to arrive In New York on "-'ednesdav afternoon at the end of her malden we~tward passage or the AtlantIc. The Oll"IIlplc. the Titanlc's great sister. started from New York yes- Llls!:'ania . (Cuna.rd .......... _ •• , ••••••• • •• 3~.OOO G .. org~ ",YashlnG"ton (N. Gennan Lloyd). 21.000 terday on the first voyage that she has F'T;J.nr.e (l"rench Line) ........ . ......... 27.000 eve-r
34th Street
lPURNiTtUIRIB. tho Water of tho Biggest Liner, Now on Her Way Hero.
-Funeral Day Not Fixed.
a.ddItlonal escort there was also at. t.he
23rd Street
IEXClEPTllONAlL V Al.UlE§
HM1POIRTANT SAILE§
LIES IN CHAPEL HE FOUNDED
The ·body of the lato Major Gen. FrederIck Dent Grant, U. S. A . • who died in the Hotel Bucltingham. Fiftieth Street and Fifth Avenue. last Thursday r:ight, was renlOved from the holel to the Chapel of st. Cornelius the Centurion. on Go.ernors l8land. yesterday afternoon. The transfer was marked with extreme simpliCity Three mounted policemen rode ahead of. the hearse, while Mrs. Grant and her son. Capt. D. S. Grant, 3d; Brig. Gen . Tasker H. DUss. U. S: A.. and a few of Mrs. Grant's relatives and close friend" followed in closed carriages. At the Governor" Island f.erry landing at South Ferry. which wae reached a few minutes before 4 o·clock. a detachment of soldiers waited to act as an escort for the body. SiX veteran SergEAnts or the ~enty-ninth Umted States Infantry were there to act as pall bearers. As an
34th S(reet
23rd Street
·Three Mounted Police Escort the Hearse to Landing Pier for Governors Island.
34th Street
lPARASOLS.
In Bof11
~tore!l
Taffeta Silk and Pongee Parasols with wide floral ribbon borders and insertions; Black and ""Vhite stripes with fancy ·borders; Changeable and Plain colors, Embroidered Linen, etc. value 3.50 to 5.00. 2.85 Extra quality Taffeta Silk Parasols In all the leading plain colors. Gilt frames; handles of assorted Ebonine and Carved Wood. value 3.00. 1.95
WOMEN'S StUnTS & GOWNS. Fancy trimmed Tailor-made Suits fn severa.l models and various new fabrics. values 49.50 and 65.00. 39.50 and 47.00 Smart Tailored Suits of French Taffcta,-plain and trimmed models. values 39.50 and 47.50, 29.50 and 37.50 Plain and fancy trimmed Suits of Whipcord. Black and colors. values 32.50 and·42.50, 25.00 and 32.50 Smart Afternoon Dresses of Taffeta. Satin Charmeuse, Foulard and Chiffon. value 35.00 to 65.00. 25.00 a.nd 45.00 Decollete Gowns in a variety of handsome materials. \-alue 115.00 to 145.00, . 85.00 to 110.00
WOMlBN'S COATS. Imported Voile Coats; braid trimmed. values 22.50 and 32.50. 17.50 and 21.50 Evening Wraps of Satin and Charmeuse, lined with satin. values 32.00 and 49.50, 25.00 and 39.50 Dressy Top Coats of Chiffon Taffeta., TIned and interlined. values 22.50 and 32.50. 17.50 and 25.00 Travelling Coats of Changeable Silk and Double-faced Satin. values 22.50 and 2~.50. 17.50 and 22.50 Motor and Travelling Coats of various materials. values 19.50 and 32.50. 14.50 to 22.50
James McCreery & Co;' 23rd Street
34th Street