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“fms the verdict of the jury and com- ‘has been unable to locate all her ac- THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, MAY 5, 1902. MISS MOORE’S PING PONG VICTORY WON BY CLEVER BACKHAND GUARD. Though Miss Clark Was Ahead in First Woman's Tourna- ment She Suddenly Quit— Arrangements Being Made for Other Contests. Phe first open ping-pong tournament in this country, and the first in which there has been & woman's prize ended in @ peculiar situation in the women's ‘palf, The handsome silver trophy cup | went to the young woman who, of the two final contestants, had the smaller number of sets to her credit. After four days of play in the Brook- lyn department store which arranged the tournament, the finals were reached swith Miss Alice Clark, of Clinton ave- nue, Brooklyn, and Miss Blizabeth Moore, of the Hotel St. George, as the contestants left out of twenty-elght who had entered, Both were tennis players of note and Mies Moore was the tennis champion of America, so the crowd of about two hundred persons that watched the final play looked for a long-drawn out struggle. Mine Clark in Strong Form. Miss Clark, playing a quick forehand game, won the first eet 9 to 7, the tour- nament being played with regulation tennis scoring, Miss Clark wop the seoond In dashing fashion dy 6 to 1, and took the third by'a weaker score of 6 to %. Her advantage ended there. The fourth game went to Miss Moore on a clean reversal of form by to 1. The audience applauded this showing and grew enthusiartic when Miss Moore won the fifth set by 6 to 2 Here, ‘to the astonishment of every orf, Misa Clark announced to Referee Bradford that she could play no longer. ‘Mr, Bradford was unable to induce her to continue or to play another time. The final match was to ,be decided by the best four out of seven seta, and as Miss Clark had won only three, Mr. | Bradford had to award the cup to Miss Moore, who had two. To Miss Clark he ave a consolation prize. Experience in Question. Phe success of these two tennis ex- perts in a tournament In which twenty- eight women competed created a great deal of talk as to the value of tennis experience jn ping-pong contests. Both ‘of the young women who forged to the front deprecated the {dea that thelr ten- CLUB PRIZE CUP AND WINNER OF BROOKLYN TOURNAMENT. nis play had helped them any more than to give them supple wrists, It was pointed out that Mias Clark, whose tennis play might have been expected to give her great endurance in the lighter game of ping-pong, had had to give up @ cup because of fatigue. After her victory Miss Moore dis- cussed her methods of play. Both she and Mias Clark had used the vellum racquets that most of the men experts in this gountry sneer at. Miss Moore possibly from old tennis habit, had played with long-handied racquet and grasped it well away from the head. Miss Clark, who played an entirely forehanded game, had used the gen- erally accepted grip close to tie head of the racquet, Miss Clark was at a RICH WOMAN KECPS RELATIVES OFF. Declared Incompetent by the Court She Barricades Her- self in Home and Refuses to Tell of Wealth. (Special to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., May 5.—Su- preme Court Justice Keogh to-d: signed the order which officially con- g@dssion Geclaring Mrs. Elizabeth Hun- ter Ludlow Warren, of New Rochelle, Mer estate is Mrs. Warren, the committee of her He led a bond for $100,000 with ‘Garrist L. Cox and Catharine L. Sear- fing as sureties. ‘Mrs, Warren has locked her home, at No. 41 Looust Rochelle, and defies her relatives to r Move her, declaring that they are more tnsanc than she is, The woman has so much money de- Posited in different savings banks, and @n which she bas not drawn interest for twenty years, that the committes herself in eounta, and she refuses to tel! anything concerning them. MS, PALMA HERE ON WAY TO CUBA. President's Wite Arrives with Family Under Escort of a Large Delegation of Women Friends. Acocmmpanied by « be delegetion of women Mre rivets Peime sorived tp Rew Tare today wih ber tre oni Gren, Ghe wil! lewre oo Mourmday oe Bard tne geome tor Havens We join ee ‘ te eee wiiake arvagitel ports thew Me Relves homme le ‘im tow ew DEFIANT DETECTIVE HELO FOR TRIAL. Charge of Oppression Is Made Against Vachris, Who Ar- rested a Man Despite Mag-// istrate’s Order. Detective Sergeant Antonio Vachris, of the Brooklyn force, was held in $1,0% bail for Special Sessions on a charge of oppression ‘preferred by George Hoyt before Magistrate Devoy in the Coney Island Police Court to-day Police Magistrate Voorhees was a wi ness against Vachris, Vachris is th officer who defied the orders of Magis- trate Voorhees in the Coney Island es-|Court a week ago by arresting Hoyt after the Magistrate had discharged the man and ordered the sergeant not to arrest him. “It does not make any dif- ference what you do, aid to the Magistrate, “J #! anyhow.” He did #o. Hoyt was charged by Vachris with larceny. Magietrate Voorhees pad re- fused to tewue a warrant for Hoyt's a vest on the ground that the «viden was insufticient, but Vachris went “bead with the case, jet 00) eos to-day teatified v entered private room a Sad tried to! induce him to unti! he, Vachris, had gave to convict. WANTED: AN ACTING GOVERNOR OF N.Y, District-Attorney of Queens He Can't Find Him and Wants Him for Requisi- tion Pagers. ia aiiyt os evidence if some one whe hee the @uthor’ will kindly eet ae the Governor of New York for» tow moments he wit Mort: wot ty able Anheiriel Athorney of ” beowe faeul thor bee started for une and be Menie #el Irene wf Bpeaber Niaen, whe reer) Pebee Hie feet tn the Heer of Merrial eresiwus Puibon Uimw Mt Aiammand bonny tobe oon! te te Gpeeie! Gentine Cour te disadvantage in placing the ball, and she tried very little of ft. Her strength lay in regularly returning it over the net, no matter where her opponent ent It. sistent backhanded game, and had not used a forehand grip except In serv- ing, She sald she found backhand play gaye her better control on the average over the ball than did forehand, backhand Koa foresand play Jectionable because every pl has a weak @ side of the bi to turn the ri opponent of s) ball repeated wouul frequel tion er changing apeak, @ good return, Moor ping-pong only a short th here was no reason why should hot become export in it weeks She said a clev acquets, 60 to a in'a few Wor the “Penholder.” In the matter of grips, H one of the Gwo leading players of the Yale Club, and probabiy one of the hal dozen best players in the United declares strongly for the penhold t is but has land. Ic to win Deen somewhat. uscd in was this grip that did im the Yale-Princeton ini of b st week for the blu hi fe the heat i ie of nomenon he thet ge inch b around the handle, ringing t efinger on the he Jets St meet the forehand side of the bh because of the thinness of the biad Cotton Dress Fabrics. Tuesday, May 6th, Special Sale of 7,500 yards Silk Ginghams, Mercerized Arni Suitings, and 44-inch Embroidered Swisses, values soc, and 6oc, yard, at 38c. yard, White Goods. 48-1n. French Batiste, 35c. to $1,00 yard, 48-in, Wash Chiffon, soc, to Sc. yard, Special, 9,000 yards Hmbroidered White Madras, wide; value 4ge. yard, at asc, yard, Lid& AZT a Laylor, Help Hiiiod— daw a ee Miss Moore sald she had played a con-| and | 4 t hear the right! ! catch the mak Ret | ta 1 consequently unable to make | The Strc has played | it In this She sald| In | Theodore L. | 8 Theodore L. Bogert Won the Havemeyer Cup at the First Ping- Pong Tournament of the Strollers’ Club. is best used with the wood racquets, them, “The penholder nip ness of hold that is at the same time & certainty of control over OF tito racatiat that tt wn sald ila Werose|t, it crosswise at and Hetle ingyr eatehing ft lengthwise T can give it the slightest variation of T have thught about Dy and in every case t the end of the fing was improved position necessary. ten men that & to 100 pet BOL Esat " of 1 aturday night and there are now left eighteen of the fort: contemtants, ‘Phe club. ai the byes first, aa ty frequently the tennis score 4 n the twenty=poln Ore frwatientiy employed round four original not Dlay stretched from sit was tn that hayer and J t only after ‘three sets Cloge contests also, y Bogert and F and detw Vo, Lambert hie maten with E howWed such prowes: the om as a likely cam didate for the » championship and the cup offerad by Arthur Turnure The Strollers’ Cap. The Hw r Chip put up at the Strollers’ for {ts first ping-pong tournament Saturday night went to Bogert, who put up a won and smashed his ands with shigh Is he, defeated atraiyht sets then met Robert C. Watson; Jr.. who was fresh from q hard contest with Herbert N. Rawlins. Five ‘sets were necessary to give the palm to Mr, Wat- son, In which the scores were 3-4, 6-4, 8. 44, Mr. Bogert showed #u- yerior speed and ability in placing the ball, and he practically shut out Mr Watron, ‘though he had The scores were ully strohg game, through all. the: 8 » setilet good player elf to be. Be eo, 6-3, 6-0 Coming Tournaments. being arranged by lo Club, of Brooklyn, oY Manhattan: its winners us to hay: bis team lub is arranging for nts. One if to be for a R. Barton shicap aftnir Handleapp Hshme st to attempt Brooklyn has taken a strong hold in th Sus fivairy has de school tournament 16 Polytechnic. the Tov's High, fley and Adelphi College. the Hef- SCHONCE GRRCERIES 4 ALL HEAVY SYRL $ cen ee Aces, 1c RS, 4 Gen CHERRIES, Anparague, Maiiiiver, hone inent 23> dhder Viner, ere femme ry deapeveted Apubes, coos + 'o ft Jobliged to cor FOR YOUR WELFARE. You Are Urged to Make Health Building Your First Work This Month. PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND Puts You in Condition to With- stand the Enervating fects of a Hot Summer. If you aro ailing, sick or diseased, It is our earnest desire fo interest you th your own personal welfare We try to @o, aaa by simply urging yort to make hoalth buldMg your first work thls month, as offorts to banish disease are much more difficult when, in ad- dition to physical sufferings, you nd with the enervat- ing effects of a hot summer. Medical ‘{men know well that a sick person when treated with the proper medi- cine in May has a much better chance for life and health than Is possible in July or Angust The in that Paine’s doing in. making of good Able amount 1d compel the attention of evi king man and woman now in sickness and suffering. Faulty nutrition of the nervous neuralgia 1 are now suffering from, When p ple have blood that is palo, watery and full of impurities thelr nerves cannot assimilyte food properly and derive nourishment from tt Paine’s Celery Compound use May cleanses the blood greater nerve foreo, regulate: stomach and bowels, arouses a healthy appetite and brings about a normal action of the dormant liver, Paine's Celery Compound in every case gives a positive and permanent ure, It is the most thoroughly hon- ext medicine that run-down and sick ly men and women can employ. Its life-giving effect on nerves and blood is truly marvellous. 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A few good second-hand Players fi y mee, Y Michaels at BARGAINS and on small month ly payments. HORACE WATERS & CO.,. 134 Fifth Ave., near [8th St. Har’em Branch (Open Evenings), | 254 West 125th St., near 8th Ave. | mE No SLUMPS, BUT DAILY, REGU-| LARLY, month in and month out, in| => Condensed Milk—Special § Butler’s Famous Brand, made on our special order by one of the best factories in the country, from the richest of unskimmed milk and granulated sugar. We guarantee it to be absolutely pure. 3 Cans for 23c—=3 Cans for 2 3 California Canned Fruits|Choice Canned Vegetables STANDARD BRANDS iCanm Tomatoes, 1Can Corn, 1Can String Beans, ) Found ( ‘an, 19¢.| New York City circulation The) World maintains a lead of Tens of Thousands over any other paper. CHOICE), oy Gres ERIESy, ie All for 25¢| Mine Mee ‘ cetaceans Le alter Baker's Cocoa | = a high-grade, rinnie manufacturer over, 200 “e couchoa have never beon offered for INV seit them for only $9.98. 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No charge tor Examination or THE LIBERAL HOUSEFURNISHERS, THIRD AVENUE AND 84TH STREET, ae \| 0 ata Tox evaring, fino ra} Yards Ofloloth; 26 pleces Tinware; 1 Kitohen | 1 Gas Stove, This solid ash RE ERATOR, ratsed (JBAUMANNS 2 DOLLAR PE! Bros.,, CLOTHING, FURNITURE, CARPETS # HOUSE FURNISHINGS On $1.90 Per Week. OPEN EVENINGS. SELL Consuitation, All Work Guar Full Sets of Te Gold Crowne, Gold Filin Silver Fillings Waterbury Dental Pariors, new YORK BROOKLYN ours 14-410 Polton 8 Dentistry. Whether you need a full set teed 10 Years $4 W. 28d ae Naas tA Mor m and W, » MCRULTY. ewer wed 1 eeth, Sle oa i juarantoed. ; ow ier esi | : g) WENKLt, coer a ; WIN DON hvetion tales ; R WEEK OPENS AN ACCOUNT. Railroads, NEWYORK CENTRAL Traine arrive depart from Grand si York, 94 follows: Arrive We al ‘Albany and Troy Fi Albany’ Gpesial ori - Wuftalo Special “eaten era Spec oe Superintendent NEW YORK “CENTRAL fi ROUTE it | NEW YORK A AND a Springfield ax BOSTON. 4 ALBANY (New York Central & Hudeon River RR. eave Grand Central tation, cup up —) » “rn — REMOVAL ete LENOK ALE twa