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FOR PRINCETON, Pleads for Higher Education for the Plain People in Helping to Install President Woodrow Wilson. RESTRAINT IN ATHLETICS. No Self-Satisfied Aristocracy in Ed-| ucated Circl Declares the N tion's Former Head, Should Mis- Interpret the University’s Mission (Special to The ning World.) PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. 25.—The Ipeech of ex-President Grover Cleve- and was the feature of the in- stallation as head of the university of Dr. Woodrow Wilson to-day Mr. Cleveland was greeted with enthusiasm by the great throng of people present, the students, their familles and gues! Mr. Cleveland's Speech. Mr. Cleveland spoke in behalf of the Board of Trustees of the University. He said in part: “I hope I may be allowed to refer at the outset to the manner In which I am moved by the stately dignity of Present surroundings and thus give @ hint of the impressive effect which such exercises as these are apt to produce on those who lack personal intimacy with university experiences and incl dents “This thought leads me to suggest the great Importance and desirability of influencing in, every possible way the plain people of our land in favor of high- er education It is largely from their ranks that recruits are to be enlisted for studentship in our universities and “colleges; and surcly neither attenuated y refinement {n educated circles nor a self- arlstocra m y among educated interpret to the un- Jon of these institutions. “Mantifestly they cannot, and even if jthey cold they should ‘net live for themselves nor for their professors and teachers, nor for thelr graduates, nor yet for’ the educated, whoever and Wherever they may be. | “We are not yet convineed ‘that the [time required for our ordinary* term of undergraduate study is too long, or that 4t unnecessarily and unprofitably re- \tarda the useful service expected of a jgenulnely educated man.” patistfed men = should Cae the m! Duty of Universities, | “On, the contrary, it should never, be torgotten that our colleges and univer- Nities cannot, without loss of their mort aseful oppJriunities, disregard any means of commending the substantial advantages they are. able to offer to those less fortunate in educational. con- dition, ‘This conception of close interest and reciprocal benefit which should exist between the agencies of higher educa- tion and the unlearned masses of our People Is not new at Princeton Uni- versity. Speaks of Athletics, jfiosect of athletics Mr, Cleve- es) concede recreation t athletics Should be en- these things triet subordination to the busi ition, which botn teachers and etur have in Mand; and that When extensive demerit, or a perce: mM absolute failure in all among those de. 6 and attenth t hould be arouse: f study has been thus should the full confidence rinceton. for her pre t iuem was In full swing asthe given for the heginuing of and th doora of the wung open and by Sussex D, Davis. marsha), took up the Mr. Cleveland, of New Jerses Rev. Pr L | and Rev ining presiien! The Installation, all had assembled in Alexander Morphy. as the presiding m9 proce: d= vaing ws Words, President Wil Preaident. Wilson, bls Inaugural, sald in part: “American universttios serve a ree Nation whose proaress. whose power. Whose prosserity.. whore happiness, woke jategrity. depend upon Indlvldual tlative und the sound sense and equipment of the rank and file. Thelr task Is tworfold-the production of. a great body of Informed and thoughtful anc of a small and investi- 2 Wilson spoke of # project tu bulld a graduate college as goon ae the funds could be a He “We mean, as our generous friends have arranged their private | finances in su a Way as to enable them to release for our use’ enough money for the purpose, to bulid a noe table x eke; a college of residence, shall Hve together n the wholescme comradeship of learn- ing." Guerts of Distinction, Among the distinguished guests of the university were former Shenker Reed, J. Pierpont Morgan, Chancellor Magie: Attorney-General Thomas } of New Jersey; Senate New Jersey: Robert T. Veagh, Samuel MeCarter, hn’ Kean, of in “in, Wayne Clemens (Mar! Preside ler, of Gaius neetlor MacCracken, of the Nes York University, and Presijent Hadi of Yale oe GIRL SERVES SUMMONS, a | Gndae In Indignant at Marthu| Ryan's Action ather’s Snalr, “Wh A daughter serve a summons) in @ divorce sult upon her ow mother? | You ought to be ashamed of yourself! | Wheat are we coming to!” | Judge Dickey. of the Buyreme Court, | Was Indignant when he heard that Mar: | an had served her mother, Mar- garet Ryan, with @ sum- the ault tor aivorze brought by her father, Michael E. ivan, of all River, Mays. and he dia not hesitate to express himself at ven ER on the subject, i “She was th person who could | properly fendant," ex} plained i Bu mpiing in tudge Git a RNELL'SSISTER CAPT. MACKLIN'S LAYS REDMOND. Asks Accounting of American Funds from Irish Leader John Redmond, Now in This Coun- try. R, Resort ROW ‘OVER ANCESTRAL HOME 8; MARIEN, LONDON, Oct. Mrs. Dickinson, sister of the late Charles Stewart Pa¥- | nell, has published bitter correspond-| ence exchanged between herself and John Redmiond, Chairman of the United Irish League and of the Irish Parlia- mentary party, in which she «smands a@n accounting of the tunis fn America to save Avondale, the estate charged w: of the late Mr. Parnell, from the hand#| ton people of outsiders, Mr. Davi In reply to her first letter, Mr. Red-] cerned tn mond wrote to Mrs, Dickinson, saying the objects of the American funds were the erection of a monument to Mr, Par- nell in Dublin and the purchase of Avondale House and lawn, which should be available as a residence for the Par- nell famliy. Mr, Redmond's bid was set aside in favor of one from a Mr. Boy- all Marien the trial be; Harding Davis, Heads Big Subscription for Defending Accused Summer capping” outrages this fashionable resort of wealthy Bus- the Plymouth County Super The trial probably will be the most sen- “Whitecaps.” M #., Oct. 2%, ith the notorious that Into @ panic. is was not the offenses that takes in the case. gins at the comin, lately personally DEFENSE FUND Novelist, TOPS LIST WITH $1,000. clad wy The Evening World.) -Rishard Harding Davis,, the novelist, has given $1,900 to the fund that has been raised by Marien residents and eummer visitors to pay for the defense of the four meu whi thr oo con- Distriot- Attorney Asa P. French Is now seeking to. fasten upon the gullty persons, but ‘his contribution, the largest of all those made, indicates the decp interest that He now is in New York, but will be here when term of lor Court land, who had made an arrangement eee that Plymouth County has ever wi cl -) ills th Jatin Parnell, ero(her! of (He) 401 stutly, sig0m) hae. been |raleed by. the ceased statesman. frlends of the accused man. and most “Thus,” said Mr, Redmond, ‘it was] of 1 comes trom people who apend their i hi a summers Marien, It is hecause many Impossible to buy the houne, and the ofthese: re auld to havea deep. Der, committee procesded whih the project of ‘sonal interest in. the “whitecapping erecting a Parnell ‘statue." affairs that the ra large a Mrs, Dickinson wrote again, saying Gofente fund was easy and that the trial that-Mr. Boyland now offered to ac-; -It still is fresh in the public mind cept the $25,000 collected for the pum that there was a strange exodus from chase of the estate, and would allow | Marion the balance to semain on a ten years’ | tarring and mortgage. To thts letter Mr. Redmond | announced did not reply. Shak d Le A proposal being made, that the Par- | Marien when Distri after At torn’ the first feathering his purpose arr vy connected with the affair. immer folk conclu ch, fn t ses were made. 9 bring to trial A a ded ¢ome- what suddenly that the mountain air in nelis and Mrs, Dickinson could reside Maine. New Hampelire and, Vepmons > . «. Dick. |Wa% More healthful than that off Mar- in the Park at ‘Avondale, Mrs. Dick-| [n° The names of several persons, well inson replied in effect that the proffer! known in. the summer colony, ‘were to make her family caretakers or gate-'given to th keepers was an insult which they re- e authorities as being those ,of more or jess active participants In (he affair. They learned of their peril, how- sented. 2 ever, and left Marien in time to escape Mra. Dickinsor demands .& full ace {Mtrert et nee ald to n 7 je leaders of society are rald counting from Mr, Redmond, saying | nod Marien in distaste. and to fave nls chance of success in America woitld | made up their minds not to go ba be better “Hf he could show that as re- there, soon, Their names, it in said. t 5 ai [would cause a shock to the community Rards the funds. he collected to redeem.iie they were published in this connec- tho ancestral home of ha former leader | tion, he had honestly and ndependently ca ried out the plans and faplied the mon- the purposes for which they were subscribed.” THIRD VICTIM OF A PET DOG'S BITE Cook for the Rollinson Family, of West Orange, Seeks Treat- ment at Pasteur Institute. raise all thi conduct who eys to OUT 0 A third victim of'the bite of the spaniel of the Rollinson family, of West ¢ nze. N, J., has just become a patlent of the the charged with having committed Ws whitecapping that is fense of money legal Imes, F PRISOK Was to-day or on a charge | These facts have made It very easy to Needed to the men 10 FORGE MORE CHECKS E. H. Kennedy Used Knowledge Acquired at Sing Sing for! New Swindliig Operations. aigned in of passing | vert RIVER IN CELL ON CIRL'S PLEA, Miss Mabel Dailey Shows No Leniency in Court to Man Who Drove a Suffering Horse | —He Is Sent to Prison. THE ANIMAL DESTROYED. | This Is Her Second Appearance ina Poli Court to Appear Against! Inhuman Owners of Beasts. Cripzied It was Miss Mabel Dalley’s second ap- pearance in a police court in behalf of a misused animal, when she caused Tons Pirotta to be held in $99) bail in Harlem Court this morning for having driven a crippled and unfit horse. testified with much emphasis and feeling, ant sald she will appear at the trial of Pirotto in Special Seesio Miss loy ts the daughter of Granville manufacturer, and nie twenty-year-old hat Dailey, Jus Gowan, Her home is at No. One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street. She and her mother and aunt were driving in Fifth ayenue, near One Hundred and Twenty: set yer- terday, when she saw a man driving a horse that limped along tortured by a broken fetlock. Hastily alighting from the carriage Miss Datley commanded the man to stop. He did not understand what she meant when she said she was a member of the Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, s9 she settled the MISS MABEL DAILEY. matter by unhitching the animal her- self and leading !t away. The driver followed. In court to-day the prisoner, who eaid he was Tony Pirotto, of No, iif Pleasant avenue, admitted that he knew the horse was Inme, but sald he was a driver for Salvator Lapp!, a fruit deal- er, at One Hundred and Tenth street and First avenue, and was i@ing for a load of vegetables when he was stopped by Miss Dailey. Magistrate Meade made short work of the chee on the girl's testimony and as Pirotto could not give bail he had to remain in prison. The tiorse was de- stroyed a little later by direction of the court. On a former occasion when Miss Dailey appeared in court ina similar case she consented to iet the prisoner go with a reprimand by the court. She was not Inclined to leniency to-day, HERE IS COLER MONEY. Plenty in Sight, bat Bettors Want Big Odds. Charles H. Mingenheimer, of the out- side market; says that he has $190.000 to bet on Coler at odds of 1 to 2%, In any amount. Cook & Judge say they which they will wager against Coler carries Kings Count NEGRO ASSHULTS SOCIETY GIRL, Miss Bertha Worrell’s Narrow haye $5,000 oo) that Escape from a Thug in a! Lonely Street in Jersey Village MOUNT HOLLY, N. J. Oct. %.—J Willams, colored, was lodged in Jail here to-day on suspicion of having TELLS OF PROF LORENZ SKILL. | | oe i i ‘Dr. John Ridlon Explains in’ Medical Report Details of the Critical Operation on Little Lolita Armour. | || BELIEVES IT SUCCESSFUL. ! He Says shat the Famous Vienna | Surgeon Receives $30,000 Operating on the Daughter of the Multi-Milllonaire Packer. | for | New York Medical Journal. dn its Insue to-day, tells tn detail about th speration recently performed by Prof Adolf Lorenz, o the Untversity of Vienna, on Httle Ls a Armour, one of} the richest babi in the United States. The article published by the Medical! Journal is from the pen of Dr. John | Ridion, the family physician and sur- geon, who performed previous opera- tions on the Mid's hips. Dr, Ridlon, in his article, says the fee! vad Prof. 1 was $30.00) This} |coverel all Hing froin ‘Vienna to Chicago for Lorenz | and his assistants | | Dr. Ridion’s article in the Medical | Journal ts In part as follows Authentle Report of Cane. | Complying with the New York Med-/ |ical Journal's request of Oct. 11, 190%, 1 herewith submit # report of the case of Lolita Armour, Mr. J, Ogden Armour recognizing that a e that has re- much attention from the news- papara as has recently been bestowed upon this case must be of interest to medical men, kindly permits me to make this, the first authentic report that has been made of the case. “The diagnosis of congenital disloca- tion of both hips was first made by me, |in consultation with Dr. Frank Billings, ‘on Sept. 3), 1900. | On Oct. 4, 190, the first X ray pleture was mate. On Oct. 1, 192, Prof. Adolf of Vienna, as- Lorenz, of the University sitsed by Dr. Frederick Mueller, of Vienna, and Dr. D, D. Ashley, of New York, Dr. nk Billings and myself being present, operated on the right hip ‘The Operation. When the patient had been fully anaesthetized, Dr. Loreng seized the right thigh near the kneo, flexed the thigh strongly on the abdomen, and pressed firmly downward, siretcliing the soft parts at the back aud below the He then, with the leg flexed to a strongly abducted It. saw- ing aguluat the upper part of the ab- ductor muscles of the thigh with the ulnar border of the hand until the foseae which appear above and below the upper Insertion of the abductor muscles when they are put on the stretch had disap- peared and the thigh could be abducted to the plane of the table upon which the patient lav During this stretching process the pelvis was firmly held by the assistants. ‘A sheet was then passed between the child's legs and {ts ends were fastened to the head of the table to maké a fixed point against which to pull. Both as- sistants now selzed the limb and pulled downward with a heave-ho motion while Prof. Lorenz pushed downward against the greater trochanter. ‘When the head had been pulled: down to, or below, the acetabulum, the thigh was again flexed, a wedge-shaped block placed heneath the greater trochanteric region for a fulcrum to pry over, and the thigh again strongly abducted, even bevond the transverse plane of the body. In this way all the soft parts binding Ue femur to the pelvis were stretched and torn subcutancously until the head could be freely moved avout in all di- rections When Bones Were Replaced. Then Prof. Lorenz seized the thigh just above the knee and, ucting, flexing, rotating and adducting, lifted the femoral head into acetabulum. The click of replacement could be readily heam and the jump seen and felt as the head passed over the cotylold ring. Then with the head in place the thigh was carried into extreme lateral ab- duction, and in this position the ham- Joint. right angle, string muscles were stretched by stralgh ing the knee many times, Gets $30,000 for Work. What the ultimate result of Prof. Lorenz's operation will be cannot pe |tord until the plaster splint has been r moved and the limb has had free _u: for at least six months, but we may reasonably expect that the result will be good, By a good result is meant either a real replacement or an an- terior transposition of the femoral head which correcta the shortening, flexion deformity, aod lordosis and gives a secure resting place for a false joint. Prof, Lorenz receives a fee-of $30,000. | This includes the services of his two assistants and also the after-treatment here and in Vienna when the plaster aplint is removed. ——_— LOLITA ARMOUR’S DRIVE, Both Dr. Lorens and Her Father | Sure of Perfect Cure, | (special to The Evening World.) | CHICAGO, Oct, %5.—Little Lolita Ars) mour has been out for a drive and when| | THREE MONTHS’ BRIDE WHO Iss UING FOR DIVORCE. NEWARK PEN | A “HOSPITAL” Sick Children Held by the City Health Authorities ina Ram- = shackle Building that is Declared a Public Menace. HOUSE IS FALLING APART. Windows Broken and Plaster In Danger of Crashing Down on Lit tle Ones Affected with Contagious e—Board Is Helpless. pe. ae ee ae (apeiat to The Bveding Werllaye NEWS No J.. O20 BAA story storm-stained ramsiackle, barn of a building with the glass ‘broken from almost every window int stands: at Camden and Cabine: streets, this city. Paint is a stranger to it. The shutters are faliing from their hinges, Dirty cotton curtains, once’ white But now brown with age, flay, in the winds: [that go whistling through the um stopped holes into the buttiding’s tm) terior. It is a miserable, woe-Vegone, desolate looking place, unfit for habe } tation ‘The face of a seven-year-old git! ape PANIC IN HOTEL FOLLOWS BLAST Explosion in the Subway “Dan- ger Hole” Causes Great Com- motion in the Grand Union and Murray Hill. THREE PERSONS INJURED. An improperly subway “danger West corner of Fort Pourth seriously Injured two men and a boy to-day, Miled the nelgh- vorhood with fying stones and pieces of lumber, administered slight bruises to @ score and nelghborhood into a panic. James Foley, the blaating foreman, was arrested, charged with criminal negligence. The excavation Is sixty feet deep at the point where the explosion occurred, but stones were thrown to the sidewalk in front of the Grand Central Station by the force of the blast and a piece of woud was projected into the “Li station in cond street, too, deepite the fact that imm over the scene of the explosion there is a heavy wooden bridge constructed for the passage of wagons It is sald by the police that the blast was not properly blanketed, The men in the excavation were warned, and all got out of the way except William Gor- don, a timekeeper, of No. $23 Amsterdam avenue, who w @t work in the north end of the excavation, 150 feet from the blast. He was struck on the head by a stone, sustaining a fractured skull, William Plerce, a schoolboy, of No, 22 East Forty-second street, was leaning over the side of the excavation watching the workers far below when the blast took place. He ‘was struck on the head by a stone, and it is feared that his skull {8 fractured, Together with Gor- don he was sent to Flower Hospital, William Temple, chief carpenter charge of the work of constructing t subway station, was sitt!: bridge, @ feet above the Diast, may prepared blast at in the hole,” the south- second street and avenue, threw tn He was struck on the head by and on the back by a heavy’ p timber. Completely dazed, he * | ‘aying on perch, and would falien Into the excavation had not ave of the workmen 5 him to “safety. Jured and is in icceeded In dri i ew York Hospital. Many of the cabmen havi fa Fourth avenue were injured by Ave ing stones. Their horses, although used to all sorts of explosions ‘ang une toward happenings around tha became frightened and some of trent ran away. Madison avenue car No. 1236, south- pound, was just. turning into’ Routh avenue from Forty-second. street whan the explosion occurred Some ot the windows were smashed and the passen- gersf most of whom were women. were showered with broken glass, woman in the car tried to get out th rear door at the same time and numer. ous torn frocks resulted jomething akin to @ panic happe: in the Grand Union and Murray ane Hotels. The telephone giri in the Grand Unton, remembering the fatal explosion Inst’ winter, dropped the receiver from rhe returned marked improvement was seen in her condition | It Is now nearly two weeks alace Saal assaulted Miss Mactha Worrell, doctors at the Pasteur Institute, | she began a term in Sing Sing| Moarestown, Monday night |she was operated upon by Dr. Adolph] is Theresa Kepplet, cook in the Rollin. }on a similar charge {fn January, 1M, and) M who js well known | Lore bin pueon pia great anaci lise ; was only released on nt. 30, last | sect town, was ona lonely |in hip diseases, anc & physiclan Sons Doms. While In 8! Sing Kennedy ry Pe She . od | the father of the child, J. Ogden Armour, Misses Phowbe band ‘May. Rollingon| White In Sing Sing yin a street Khe Was atincked by aS Ast bis ten’ HFM. per spaniel which OTA boakkeenes was utilized eRnpsc Mie cepaaned Nee AR TOR Are Cohen corena in Ne subasquentiy dled "fn convulstons, it] While at the had learned t ad selzing her by tie wa aif cat-| od authority € | waa? on anniveté that the dog haa{ Ames of merchants in this city from] ried and dragged he ss a lot despite | which. sum. incl Alo hydrophobla, Whetner others were bit- | IM supplies bought fur the; her struggles. He th ned her with pald to the physi ar ten by the dog fs not known, Af ale eeath te sheinade:a nd kept one eet month ‘ Lael SALA rms, order s shipped! hand over her mouth, The aporoneh of | 5 ‘ e Miss Weppier made her first visit to prison, but ng Would] several persons fr E operation. Ww sh Pe ed cask was informed by the dostor that she} Hat tt be car | stien Weerelt! line rent f now ready and will be! was {n as mush danger as the Misses| of JW Caddies ston Minn Weerelis condition remulein put on Sanday or Monday Lolita will R 4 n Shay bal aA ous Goddard & > %]the attack and fright, ix eald to be seri-/then be able to stand on her feet for ollinson, The 1 not make the| Hleecker street ‘ys before Bualivvediil In hued’ mitrart ay ernee tat Cie she Nad’ Ghee met enas before | ous, She ts silll In bed suffering from | Cie first tin os i} 11 yesterday ai WN Tietter trom shock. (The polize were notited aad | Se til yesterday Mora Frson warns | Willams, who answers | some respecte |J+ Be Jackson Minister to Greece, ee xcheme Was belng sui Hy worked. |'the sl by 3 forvelt| WASHINGTON, 2M s . T AWhanstKanntigvecate kel.) tne deac given by Miss W 1 , 2 25.—Mintaver Golden State Limited. Suber enna gerered: a eof tae [Of Mer aesatiant, was arrested. He de-| Henry 1, Wilron, who was to have brea ones, Islan HP] ate new train from | clerks, telepho: [nies His gull: sferred from Santiago de Chit to camo to Calitornla. | Service com=| ters. Detective Mundas” weat to. the | rece, has declined the t and menoea Nov. & to Los Angeles, Santa | stove. On his recoamendation tie choos ier igen Barbara and San Francisco. Most com-| was carhal. It wa» found to be a tors 2 \% Says Seo ee fortable train {nthe world. No « ger} y A Sunday World Want, not taxing | John at x and standard siqepe | Mugiatrat fare. Compart dnt Broad Ne fe Flammer’ tn est Fifty. it stre the nt and Nbrary’ cata, | Court torday: held hity ty $1,000 ball ees He: Rtottor, sald hia nage “waa Mi hei J. Ba r of No. 333 Tombs He . Barrett, et, ‘nuch space, Brings housewife fave to tan and homosceker Mioiaer Mr, Francia, who wi gts 2, to Greece, succeeding resigned, | versed and o her ear and ran out into the hotel ome Guests in the writing room, which Is on the Fourth avenue side, directly across the atreet from tho explosion, made all haste for the open alr There was, considerable confusio; the Grand Central Station. of the explowion shook the ing and the train. she flocked to the spot fro: hood. attracted by the rr other disaster had happened in tlon of the subway already Duptized with t STATE TROOPS DEPARTING. Only Four Companies on Guard Duty in Hudson Valley, SARATOGA, Oct. 3.—The union strik- ers on the Hudson Valley Railway ap- pear in a new Hght ording to a statement made publ. ay by one of he strike leaders, James M. Sheehan, who says that “the militia was brought here to protect the non-anlor men, but ft now seems that co 8 have CALLATINS PART. ON WEDDNG TAP Beautiful Bride Goes Back to Her Mother After Three Months’ Honeymoon Abroad and Talks of Divorce. YOUNG “JACK” MYSTIFIED. Three months after her romantic with John Nicholas Gallatin vlopement hia bride, who was the dashing and beautiful Miss Pauline Cary, is home with her mother, Mrs, David Munro Cary, at the Park Avenue Hotel. And while young ‘dack"t Gallatin ‘pleads In vain for a reconciliation his wife's attorneys are preparing papers in a sult for divorce. Late lust July Mr. Gallatin, on the ' eve of Miss Cary's departure for Europe, ‘persuaded her to marry him, | He had been an ardent suitor, but Mrs. | Cary did not favor him, His name had ‘een uscd too freely only: a short time before In connection with that of Bank | Wallace Hopper, | However, Mrs, Cary relented grace- fully and gave her blessing when her daughter and Mr. Gallagher came home one afterncon from an automobdtle ride and told her they, had been to the Church of the Ascension in Fifth ave- nue, where the Rev, Mr. Smith had mar- [ried them. ‘The young people were off to Europe | for their honeymoon and everything was lovely for awhile, Their wander- ings brought them to Scotland, where |there was a little tiff. Mr. Galtetin {denies that Scotch highballs had any- thing to do with it. Anyhow, it was the little rift that led to thelr sudden return and final estrangement. | Young Gallatin declares that his bride's desire to be free from him is = mystery beyond his comprehension. He {confesses that the quarrel led to thelr separation, but he declares it was a trifling thing, “I love her dearly, he maid to-day. “1 cannot understand why she wishes to leave me. I have been faithful and affectionate, and I have asked her to come back to me." Mr, (jallatin Is a grandson of Albert Gallatin, one time Secretary of the Troasury, and founder of the Gallatin National Bank of this city. He will i inherit a great fortune from his mother. WON'T LET ILL WOMAN LAND, Brother Ready to Care for Her, but the Officials Threaten to Deport Her. Despite the earnest appeals of her relatly s city the immigration author Siiis Island are detaining Mrs. Zollie Younger, a Hungarian {m- migrant, and threaten to deport her, is so tl that she Is unable to stand, the offalais will not allow her, take her to his home and bol to 4 hev Mrs. Younger came in the.steerage on ‘one the incoming steamships on Thursday and since that ¢ime has been ed by the immigration authorities, brother, Franz Younger, Mark's place, went to meet her welcome her to his home, but per- on for ver to land was denied, of force Ia need compar relleved comnantes duty. Twenty-oue married members of a company still remaining were per: ited to return to their homes in henectady. He has been to Ells Island every duy since, but without avall. The woman 4g not suffering from any disease that would bar her from the sounuy) he pacerte. but yA} weak that had on @ cor ever mince, SBRatne trav the shin, peared at one of the windows this | morning and looked wistfuNy out at ‘the sunshine and at the children ef the tenements on Warren and Cam-~ den streets, who were playing not fifty feet away. The child was wan and | thin, Misery was in her face. She looked hungry for compantonship, Pleads to Go Nome, “I want to go home,” she said plaime tvely to a man who had ventured neat “Why? asked the man, 3 “It's lonesome here and at night It's | cold,” sald the child, “I want to ge to my mother.” i “And won't they let you?’ inquired the stranger. No,” she sald, diphtheria, but I'll be well then I'can go.” ‘Phis child is one of nine who are com fined in the miserable old barn whith the city of Newark calls its’ Isolation Hospital. The building stands next te” the magnificent new City Hospital, eo vlose that the name of Isolation seems «| ridictlous misnomer, but not so ridiou- lous as the noun hospital. x Even from its outward appearance ome would hesitate to house antmals im it, but its interior fs worse by far: No repairs have been made in months, Decay has ravaged it from root to cel lar. ‘The plaster {s falling from the ceilings and’ the walla. ‘The iittle pa-+ tlents in thefr cots tiave this diversion: | They may gamble with themselves as” to when the next plece will fall am@/ possibly land upon their faces. ree Health Commissioner Furman, whe haw been trying to Improve the condition | of the isolated children, recently asked Dr. Herold, President of the Health Board : “Suppose half a ton of plaster should fall on a patient, what would you do?” “My dear Commissioner,” replied De. Herold, “I do not believe there im a) halt:a ton.of plaster left in the plaos,| It fell tong ago.” a There was. grim humor in this, but not, for the poor little things who have} to live In the hospital, Residents in the ~ vicinity say they are the living sacri.” fices to a dimgraceful condition of affairs, which should be a humiliation | to every decent person in Newark. © Canmot Get a Site. There have been efforts, more or Jems! determined, on the part of the Bosra of Health to get @ new. Isolation Hos. | — pital. The members of the Board, pe- ing human beings snd acquainted with | the conditions existing in. the hovel at; Camden and Cabinet streets, have. waxed indignant and insisted that anew - building be erected, The municipal ad- ministration has stood ready for some time to purchase any site selected for a new building and several have beém choaen, iss The minute it becomes known auch or such a site is to be used for pur 1 the nelenters Hoenap fa teat, They wo to court about tt far they have been able to p consum! ion of Sie of the 2 ‘The last site chowen was in Hl tre eo money wae ali eppropriate for its purchase. Then the neighbors Tose up and the courts sustained So the little ones still jive mm this bal barous way. No money is allowed .% the repair of the building because | structure, as the people generally ig not worth even the powder to blow up. The men who hold the pu are willing to spend money for:a building, but a cent for the old ems would waste. Nine Little Patient: 4 Meanwhile, the victims of Giphenera and scarlet fever in the families of ft! very poor who haven't money to their own ohtlaren must go to this In this structure at present are. the following children, none of whi mare than twelve and one of who! ut four years old: atte George. Kertergr, No.. 10 Camden ' Mery Btn ~ No. 181 e den abe lenny, -No. Inger. No. 12. Camde: le len, No. 24 Broome hur Gambel, address not reine Taylor, corner of, Sixth and Cadjnet_ sti o nor, Warren ¥ JeS AS Wehcrer. ‘Now es Weat Kinney patient# come from ‘4 'm sick, I've got 9 oon, and street. treat, stret. street. iven. < oA th t mt locaitty, immediately surrounding hossital. The majority, as. noted, from Camden street. | Warren crosses Camden within a block of hospital. Broome street is only a si stan away. vi Oise Present hospital, euoh aa it menace to the public health, bel ted in the centre of a thickly # ated tenement district, The nelm have tong since given up protesting, building Is declared @ disgrace to jooality’ as Well ag to the city. . Pusiio sentiment is belng aroused, however, and it Is probable that bego long a site will be chosen somewhere th the Meadows, distant from all % where no one Will be endan| od the children may have decent care the same time. Magnate Invests 82,000,008 im Pittsburg Realty. “tg (Special to The @rening World.) PITTSBURG, Oct. %.— Frick has bought the whole trict from the Schenley ae