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(Special to The WASHINGTO> Roosevelt annou © favored a strong Chinese exclusion act Samuel Gomper eration of Labor, called at House to discuss the The Prest¢ any modifi elon that sich tion in his mess STRENUOUSNESS AND JUDICIAL CALM the ive the Impr aMenda 1 the deetsion cy thought they Hod won and they stayed in the gym A New Roosevelt Story as a) vistin t) talk it The more the jl ; dked the sorer they got, Finally Side Light id Judge vn sade ‘I'm going in that ym_and Jerome. [talk {t over with the referee and the | Anew. story on President’ Roosevelt |? yon do nothing of the sort,’ | Hewas told this afternoon by Jon tar een oe tee tyeu are too quick phy, a Boston cloak man, Gu ree en tempcred; I will’ gov in myself. ‘The 8 Nd ie Un a ota Were came needs a man Who will talke calmly 6 veny . Asad d judtela tly. talking of Justice William Travers |" A eaeaie inte Jerome and the Incompatibility of a itautslie Btrenuous disposition and the juliclal temperament. “Ever hear the story dent Roosevelt argued ad w Pres! ision tn doxing match at Harvard?’ sald Mu phy. | Nobody had. ani Murphy told the yatory. “Billy Gaston, now of the Boston ele. “vated railroad, was in Roosev Gaston was a good boxer, and he and 5 IDENTIFIED President of the Fed- Watte ROOSEVELT WANTS TO ~ KEEP THE CHINESE OUT. KY we i ne = ton nt th jasiing go, and at Its © and the judge the oMclals—decided it a draw “Roosevelt and Gast | sud saying, ‘lt | t's class. | aboat only t Roosevelt often came together in the was br "TROLLEY AOAD jtea had « down snd THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 11, 1901. President Opposed to Any Modification of the| Exclusion Act. mnasium, In the course of time Gan. | erybody tht in the 1 was pro- almed the arvart me 1 ade Leavis arly good A boxer, He n im and a ma Re sevelt had supr etn and was GIRL DARES CONSUMPTION IN THE CAUSE OF SCIENCE. ums of rag rushed in| 1 found Roosevelt beating the judge] fo the referee, He had the out and was fh Jaston pulled aht yout telal about sputtered second vat would 4 shins him Ige when away mands 1 owas trty force, BY GUNSMITH. WAR RESUMED Dramatic Recognition of Mrs. Chartrand by Man Who Sold Her Pistol. Willlam Noelte, a gunsmith, of No. @% Washington strect. Hoboken, posi: | tively identified Mrs. Vencedora Chart- rand as the woman who bought from him a pistol with which her husband, John Chartrand, was killed in the Hoboken Rink. This confirms the con- tention of the police that she bought the pistol with intent to kill her hus- band, ‘The identification was dramatic, Noelte, who remembered the sale of the ‘ieiol, and had identified it, was stuken to the Hudson County Jail. Mra. Chartrand was brought In with halt a Score of other women prisoy co Noelte picked her out withou: hestta- ton. “She ts the won tol, he trand. Shei knew the impurt of his words, Aid not Minch. She lait emiied jpelilian his finger teve she will say her to buy the they can show that rifles and pistols 1 bought the old w shot him with MURDER TO PUSH INSURANCE FRAUD. an who bought the | sald, pointing to Wes. | but her. 1 yoosny he had a 1 would 1 yon that his hac! ne police bee | t at her husband sent | | T eau be MYSTERY DEEPENS WITH AR- REST IN RATHBUN CASE. (Bpecta! ‘The Fvening World) LOUISVILLE, Noy Bérrounding the death , was sald to be Newell © in, int te Falls City Hotel, at Jeffersonvill: Dut whose corpse on arriving at Little! lock, Ark. was anced to be tot ‘that of Rathban. deepened 7 by the urrest of 4 at the United States recru: who by wal aken Detectives Suiliv. tive that the prison was sald to have been found ¢ bolvon last week. The Chief . prisoner is a deserter th Brates Army. and will hold him ont charge asw S the suspicion of mur- 1 custody Who says om pollee ation and the now ad- the mun je puzzles the Most plauslole exp! Yanced {4 that Rethbu Ten k, te Nobody tas y jow the body wa. owever, Another theory is t lead Ten Eyck, who was k y fun to get the insurance despatch that the corpse has been id Rath n Little sent on as Rathy for Ientitication. white | tre carrylag on say m1 that city William "Ten Jeftersonvit! who registered us X48 not known in that cit FHoriing to be from Tp the writer had bad owith Tathoun “in. dettersonvllie. UBBamnuun deserted artivon th a oman nam 1 Wt te now thought Eilin ts the Ten fee je case. Wn, letter kK, dated Alderman Will Demand Seat To-Night. pan-eleot George A. Fischer, of On, N. J.,, ho was chosen at the it election to serve the unexpired of Alderman Long, who died last Proposes to claim his neat at the the Board to-night, notwith- contention of City Counsel that his term’ will not pe Neanact to fr py @ Might in his'bo- bu siN rooms siding at nun} tele sch the arr’ ing [3 Bits The Interrupted hearing a: LOW REOPENS “VAN WYCK WON'T FILL MY PLACE."? | inquiry interrupted by paign?” he was asked, With a gripsack full of letters and termination tice in the Court of Special Sessions, Judges, Wyatt and McKeon, his associates on the bench congratu- lated him upon his election. Before going on the bench Justice a | Big Fight Over Huckleberry’s Rival Again Before the State Commission. | radlroud for suburban service from the Harlem MISS EMM A H. KING. River, at ©. Hundre and ‘Twenty: b at at Sa tS tS fa CSc et Ss a St a er Hi street, «tu Porleheste and or , Conneetieat. alate lus was reoumer it MISS: EMMA KING'S AFFIDAVIT before the State Hatlroad Com mission att When the granting the franchis 1 De. George DD, Barn +; ier iat aaa “You may fool all the people part of the Hallroad Compa wid te “Huckle 2 Sie ferns aynceniy a which the pevpemel ft Crequinye welewettte UNGER SPENT $8,715.33. aft, Mr bulldins wdoread est Gottehall nad HEADQUARTERS. 1 from } snoumbrella, His priv. waiting him outside the drove to his home at Ma hue 1 Sixty-fourth street Mr Low's Juhn retary, ow band hi uy aring rent mn the the 1 avenue. 1 and Mads w rerams of congratulation and a de- to foll the Tammany eme to appoint his successor on bench William Travers Jerome Ived at the Criminal Courts Build- at 19 o'clock this morning. fe took his seat as presiding Jus- ing between the two Tammany All of Jerome view the fact new doubtless aid sulted { that official, 1 think,” ted for Mayor will ated aphorier —a public office nd will not use bis position ‘) ward friends of Mayo: successor “Ehnve piled aay that Iden (Week will som a Pera uy te ti ia When the diverce sult of Dr, Walter! fatiure, The mald-of-all-work brought ltueleeneniaewas fete pu le name Assistant Foreman » Uitaaai of Greseentnare nue, {t to the table lukewarm, weak and pees j Wiliam J. Wieland, of Truck 21, on the | Jersey Clty, was biped ode LATHE ther lacking in characti WIHT you continue the John Doe! }Ghancellor Stevenson to-day W! altogether racter, We , c eligible Nat. for. p after | Co! § y Willard 4 H your cam.) ‘sible Ust for promotion. A jury, after | iy Counsel \for2Mrs.;Emma Joseph: | ere in despair, but decided on one! “T ain't got nothin’ to say touchin'! Lean in the Supreme Court, to-d. would make no defense, The Vice-; on or appertainin’ to that que sc hiaemaray Pace : : : iused four teaspoontuls to the pint of arat (heee vaniy WMesON,” | jivered a verdict In favor of Wieland in neellor then granted the doctor 9) Vater tet ft boll full fifteen tilnutes Justice Jerome wa fect the opposition of Senator Platt | oan! to certify him for promotion. and up-State Republeans would have upon the proposed move to amend | af tne Wwe the Raines la “Well,” he said, slowly Platt ts a mig) . My 7 or col of his. cruelty, 1 |use Postum, with remarkable re-| tees eeaat for the day Wits short, | mission notted tim tha: his papers had | fone’ ,0f Ds cruelty, and she averred/aults, ‘The wife of m college pro. Justice Jerome announced that he ex-| peen rejected on the ground that It had | 28e he Es ame use °f fessor sail to me n short time ago pected to put in much of his time in} been altered after {t left his : ‘ hir private chambers answering the| else another paper had been substituted great accumulation of correspond- ence that has reached him since elec- tion day. Croker has stopped talking, But he ts stl thinking What js he thinking about? | If you are 4 mind-reader, perhaps you know. Even if you aren't a mind- reader, perhaps you can guess. | The Evening World will pay $10 for 'the best diagnosis of what Croker ts thinking abou Send your answer iu prose or {n verse, Ing World, P.O. box 1354, Chg ty. Here are a few mind readings already recely Dreads Eng The Squire ts th What will my English friends think of A beaten xport? Where is the money now coming from to keep up W dogs and boys? How did Ne City stand me so long? 1 never knew how bad 1 was until the press pletu me. My, but what fun fo have ha How was | beaten at every turn? ‘Th Van Wyck is a hoodoo, for sur Where's other Job coming fron an Scorn, pking: JUST WHAT CROKER IS THINKING ABOUT. i fers $10 to the mind-reader, humoro: or seriuusly, but in not | | More than 100 words, | Address “Mind-Reading . Even- w York |% CHANCE FOR MIND.READER:: 1 OF WHAT IS CRUXER THINKING ? Croker is done talking! But The Evening World of- professional or amateur, who makes the best diagnosis of what Croker Is thinking about. The mind-reader can tell it in prose or poetry—serlously or humorously—but {n not more than 100 words, ¢ Send your mind-readings to “Mind-Reading Editor, Even- ing World, P. O. box 1, Y. City.” 6; you may fool part of the people ithe time, but you can’t fool all the ple all 3 was the on which he (for the first ume wants a poor, broken-down pul- 3. FL TMAIN. vetical Thoughts, rothinka: “Alas! what might been know now I had known but Van Wyck unto me came red, ‘Dicky, don’t forget my yu falthfully throughout the to make It sure, don't put me might: y cut no lee,” he sald, he public not tike ft, ‘In thts cam- For Town the trust that-hax gained ! such fame.’ \ But the public has shown they cared ! nothing for ice, | ne has promised to rid them of : AL MITTENTHAL. Sixth avenue, Brooklyn. Consolation, conutaon of Lito t daw much | soles Hime | Sut my mistertan is an Intermittent | mental equatlb- inevt the supper his reth fully es mn ribed before me Defeated Candidate Attar: EON TE ING this ninth day of Voven GUSTAVE Gutann, of for Diateinte to Large nintter. ommisstoner of Deeds for the e ity sew Verk and the tine y that » with effort Dis- 4) of It to which Mr, of No. Satu " with ser in| DT ICar ‘Miss Emma King Sub- mits to Infection by Animal Tuberculosis © , tame the Suprem of campatz aegare chi : to. Disprove Koch \ 4 or Al Theory—Dr. Barney Wie iy cos mtor for titer ote tor out Paibistyrh ed ne and epent $H0, ‘ Laughs at Threats of EU ANC Brown gaye 1 Fito the Hatten, Wat Iarney 1 Arcest. | wil! ree Trade with Cuba, i Aimer ttend the coming fn Washingto: of Delaware, Sty things in) th: James 1 2 speech advec Ween Ciba with a Joint p CLERGYMAN’S CHILDREN, Coffee Ucing Replaced by Postum Food| Coftce. “Lam the wife of a minister, About } j three years ago a warm friend, an ex-| cuplary mother and the conscten-| tous wife of a minister, asked me {f! ' had ever tried giving up coffee and| ‘ising the Postum Food Coffee. I had’ been telling her of my excessive ner-! vousness and {Il health. She sald: ! “We drink nothing olse for breakfast | but Postum Food Coffee, and it is 1! delight and a comfort to have some-| tuing that we do not have to refuse | the children when they ask for it.’ } “IT was surprised that she wi i FIREMAN WIELAND WINS VER-| WIFE ABANDONS DEFENSE.|permit the childron to drink poe DICT AND VINDICATION. COURT ACTS QUICKLY. Kind of coffee, but she explained that ; it was a most healthful beverage ————_— ard that the children thrived on it.! A very little thought convinced me! that for brainwork one should not} ively upon a stimulant such as coffee is, but should have food and the very | = best of food. “My firs: trial of Postum was al Barney could be pr he fathed to ise in the event oping consumptior ubimtted to a short Hie Was asked ff, tha Police inter- in view of his relations with the FORGES HIMSELF ON ELINBLE LIS ‘om lasioner would be close and contiden think he would be ning the appointme not GETS A DIVORCE. he sald, “that the man he eel + public ish enemies At dao you chink of the sehe Van Week to name y he was asked hed over the Hive J ir opt ides Clvileserviee © Must Certify \sstn premun for Promotion, [She Mad Charged Cruclty, bat Ne Winn on the 1oof more trial. At the second trial we faithfully followed the directions—, a trial last week before Justice Mac | Wilkinson, announced that his client asked what ef-| 4 sult for a mandamus to compel the | Wilkinson ight sujt- on the{ after the real bolling began and statutory grounds. In hin complaint he Served It with rich cream. It was de-, charged that Mrs, Wilkinson deserted | Hclous and we were all won, H him on July 15, 199, going to Ohlo, and|_ “I have since sung the praises of that he had not seen her wince. Mra.|Postum Food Coffee on many, many Wilkinson, In her anawer, sald she was | occasions and have induced numbers compelled to » the plaintiff on ac-; Of friends to abandon coffee ant Dr, Wieland had been™¥asistant foreman ‘est Thirty-#ixth street company four years when he entered the examina- tion for foreman Oct. 13, 1899, In March, 190, the Civil-Service Com- “Senator potent Influence.” ands, or that nothing had ever produced so marked a change in her husband's health as the leaving off of coffee and the use of Postum Food Coffee,” Edith Smith Davis, Appleton. Wis. At a former hearing, Dr. Wilkinson @aid that he had received a letter from his wife, dated at Summit, In which she sivon by} deolared that she would never live with ‘im; again under any circumstances. in {ts place, showing a higher percen- tage than had originally been the examiners, Devery. j1t would also Nave proved a real glit- edge If Vd std ngland and Ince 18M) falled to fool enough of the b full. 7 people to keep the dough OURNDREW J, WAYSON, Singac, N. J. MANILA, Nov. MASSACRE PLN FLED Filipinos Routed in Surpris Attack on Eighth Infantry. FIVE REBELS KILLE |Deserter Richter Captured in’ tl Uniform of an Insurgent Officer. M.—Major William | of the Eighth Regiment of 11 commanding the Mindore aap dition, reports that the garrison of Abi Not Dead Yet. De Ilog was attacked yesterday by Oh, these are the thoughts that come|force of insurgents commanded by Li hot and thick, zs oo In the inghty cerebrum of Wantage |e cuinos apparently attempted | vonce more Vd have swatted a big ten- {repeat the Samar tactics. But th at Americans, who were breakfasting ful! If oniy Va scratched me old chum (p)|armed, completely routed the gent Van Wyek. My star had not set in defeat unsavory Hind 1 ly bestowed a swift kick on seratched But one Age. my brain nS, ‘The Tiger and I are not dead; we're just sleeping.” who left having a rifle and ammunition, One American Was seriously wounde: Major Pitcher says he recently cal tured three officers and a large part. in ¢ men dead on the field, eac mpany, all fully arme he insurgeats recent! e 1 received an llcit supply of munitior of war, Capt. Noyes, of the Thirtieth Infantr: commanding a detachment of fifty mei MAGNELIUS. | has captured a deserter, named Richte A Cockney Sarmine, of the Sixth, Artillery, wearing the un er ¢ a ‘orm of an iasurgent ‘Lieutenant. or mS ries thiniktas f is “ome, CATBALOGAN, Island of Samar, No\ Ad pthate noon iroeta W—The ina ts are Hocking: forth itr; e en ward, ¢ suffering greatly fro: Rah ea et fram, derome. | famine, Many isolated bolomen Bay Bas WAS) iekeesa | surrendered. Only fear caused by Luk it woultnt pa ban's proclamation, threatening wit se andidet Lsfnade death those who surrender, prevents inkin’ allt general submission of the {nsurgents Tut It 1s expected that this will be se A _SOUIRES cured In a few days. B.Altmank Go. SILK UMBRELLAS. Tuesday, Nov. (2th. TWILLED SILK UMBRELLAS with handles of English Natural Weod; 26 and 28 inch; regular value $3.00, at . eight TWILLED SILK UMBRELLAS with novelty handles of ivory, i Pearl, and Horn and Silver, 26 inch, eight rib frame, or | with handles of Ivory and Silve Natural Wood —iilver trimmed, 23 inch, eight rib frame; regular va'ue $3.50 to $5.00, at Horn ind Silver, and $2.85 G BOYS’ CLOTHING DEPARTMENT. 8, Altman & Co. are showing EXCLUSIVE NOVELTIES in Children’s Russian Blouse and Hood Overcoats of White Corduroy; Blue, Tan and Red Kersey, Also Automobile Coats of Blue and Light Tan Kersey, with Persian Lamb or Nutria Fur Collars and Cuffs, Sale of American Cut Glass with Sterling Silver Mountings, 75c. and $1.00, Cut Glass Cologne Bottles, with sterling | Cut Glass Vinatgrettes, with sterling silver tops; value silver tops; value $1.00 and $1.95, Cut Glass Cream Jars, with sterling silver tops; value $:.09 and $1.25, Cut Glass Fuff Jars, 4gc 55¢. and $1.00 75¢ value $2.00, $1.45 Cut Glass Ink Wells, with sterling silver tops; value $1.00, $2.00, $2.25, $2.75 and $3.00, 75¢., $1.25, $1.45, $1.75 a4 $1.95 Cut Glass Claret Jars, with sterling silver rims; valuc $4. 75 * $6.95, Lord & Taylor, Brosdway & 20th St WHICH DO YOU PREFER ¢ Years of patient drudgery and prac- tice to supply the mere lifel fin. gering, or a Planola to do It for you? In the one case, a life-study to pro- duce indifferently what the Pianola will do in a few minutes faultlessly. In the other case, a Iife spent In en- Joying to the full all that musie ex- presses, without the physical fag of studies and scales. PIANOLA RECITAL IN BROOKLYN, To-morrow, TUESDAY, November 12, at 3.30 P. M. No Cards of Admission Necessary. SOLOIST Mr, WILLIAM H, RIEGER, Tenor. Prelude, ‘AEO! Mungarian Rhapsody, No, a PLAN A May ernie! PROGRAM: Cavalleria Rusticans,...ascagal LIAN ORCHRSTRELLE AND PIANOLA. MR. RIEGER. MR. RIEGER. nied with the Pianols.) Nuns.