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Report from Peking that Manchurian Forts Have Been Evacuated, But It Is Unconfirmed--Situation Is Very Grave. PEKING, May 9.—The official at Newchwang who sent the story of Russia’s reoccupation of the Manchurian forts telegraphs to-day that the occupation was temporary and that the Russians have now withdrawn. Official circles at Pckine are mystified. Their subordinates at New- chweng have not reported the reoccupation of that place, hence there is a disposition to question the correctness of the information, although the author of the message is generally considered to be one of the ablest and est-informed foreigners in China. WASHINGTON, May °.— Minister Takahira, representing the in- r2sts cf Japan, was in confereace with Secretary Hay relative to the anchurian situation to-day for ::ore than an hour. When he came out Mr. Takahira seemed to b> much aepressed. i * HE SITUATION IS VERY GRAVE,” he said. Secretary Hay heard from President Roosevelt early this morning, but will give no hint of what the President said. The full facts were laid before the Presider by telegraph yesterday afternoon. > ‘There seems to have been a misconception of the Intentions of the United States in the crisis. It is apparent now that Secretary Hay does not favor joint action with Japan and England to coerce Russia to evacuate Manchuria. His utmost endeavors are being used to keep this country out of uny entangling alliance. RUSSIA WOULD WIN IN THE END. ‘The opinion of Secretary Hay is that war may come between Japan and Russia, and that England may or may not assist Japan, just as the clreum- stances dictate. The State Department thinks Japan may win some vic- tories at first, but that the result will inevitably be that in the end the Bear will be found squatting on the throne of the Emperor at Tokio, and that Japan will be part of the imperial Russian domain, Ruesia will win, the State Department thinks, by sheer force*of numbers, ‘Phe activity o the State Department has roused the Russian Embassy to realize the gravity of the crisis. Count Cassini, the Russian Minister, called at the State Department to-day to protest against any hasty interpre- tation of Russia's action in delaying the movement of her troops from Manchuria, The Count explained that Russia did not consider the proper time has arrived to withdraw her troops from the province, and he very plainly intimated that unless Japan abandons its suggestive naval manoeu- vres Russia wil] keep {ts grip on Manchuria. It was also represented to Secretary Hay that the attitude of Japan fs one of menace to the peace of nations, Ever since Japan so badly whipped the Chinese the victorious nation has been hard to curb, and owing to the Anglo-Japaneee alliance the conditien has become still more trying. Count Cassini drew attention to recent reports of Russia’s action in ‘Manchuria, which he declared were inspired by enemies of his Govern- + ment. RUSSIA WILL NOT BACK DOWN. The general tone of Count Cassini's protest was one of firm resolution and indicated that Russia has no intention of backing down . from her policy. Secretary Hay is in constant communication with Minister Conger at Peking, and with Consul Miller at Niu Chwang. The Russian reoccupation of Niu Chwang was not known in Peking until after it had taken place, and was then a matter of great surprise. ‘The ostensible reason for the reoccupation was for the protection of the Russian railroad interests, the Government contending that its line, the terminal of which is at Niu Chwang, was threatened and in danger. The Russian Government was also quick to explain that |’ had not sent troops of soldiers, but mere guards. Advices from Consul Miller Indicate that the “guards” wear the same uniform as Russian soldiers, that they are commanded by Russian army Officers, that they are ful!- armed as in war time, and that they havo pecupied and are manning the forts at the port entrance, Further than this, the Russian troops have ordered great quantities of supplies and ammunition. Immense shipments of beef on the hoof have been consigned to the Russians, and the railroad has suspended public} business to transport heavy shipments of war supplie: to Manchuria, and especially to Nir Cawang. RUSSIA RESPECTS THE OPEN DOOR. | PARIS, May 9.—The French Ambassador at St. Petersburg has had an| interview on the Manchurian situation with Foreign Minister Lamsdorf, | which brought out a repetition of the statement that Russia’ had given| positive assurances to the United States that there would be no inter-| ALND BOY A PADEREWISK Little Child of Tenements, Sightless from Birth, Grows Into a Musical Prodigy and Stirs the East Side. |DREAMING OF GREATNESS. His Wonderful Rendition of Beautiful Classics on the Piano Moves to Tears the Humble Listeners. ‘There {8 Joy in a humble tenement ot the east side to-day, and In the happl- nexs money play no part, The centre of Interest and of admiration ts Louis Fir- man, the prize pupil in music in the | New York Institute for the Blind, | Thirty-fourth street and Ninth avenue, who lives with his parents on the top floor of the doubie tenement No. 60 Columbia street, Left without Instruction, so that wnat he played would have been by ear, the , ltd probably would have been a second | Blind Tom. He might have approached | the work of <he famous slave without having about the execution the savagery of touch that made the wild, weird cre ations of the negro famous. As it 1s. the blind boy 1s a finished musician, | with a perfect ear and @ touch delicate | AS a woman's, His work has attractea | the attention of those Interested in a complishments of the biind, and at the exercises of the puplis of the Institution on Thursday night the lad's proficiency Was the subject of much favorable com- ment A Wonderful Performance, At the exercises a plece of music was read to him. t once put It in wri Ing, and, having made an embossed copy of It as quickly as an expert type- writer would write a few Ines on @ machine, he ran his sensitive fingers over It and in two minutes had playea it. The plece was « chant, and was for the purpose of demonstrating to those present the quickness of the led in read- ing music and in writing it. The career of this boy, born slghtless, but with a pair of eyes blue as the sites, dead as lost worlds so far as seeing, yet as expressive as those of | any person, has been little less than wonderful. From the address !t may be seen \nat the Firmans are not rich. Little Louis was a burden, That the mother thought more of htm than she did of his brothers and sisters was natural, but to @ fam- flv on tho east side, where every hana ts trained to work, a child without sight was a hardship, It was another mouth to feed, another person ¢o care for. So, when the iad was entered in the blind institution it was a relief, There, it Was thought, he would be taught some useful trade and in time might be selt- supporting. Genius fn Sonl and Fingers. It did not take long for those to whom had been Intrusted the training of the blind child to learn that the Iit- tle hands were not made far the mak- ing of brooms, that the tips of the dell- cate fingers were for better efforts than doing fancy work, and that behind the closed windows of the soul there was struggling for an expression a great passion for music, ‘The sound of the violin, the plano, the welling of the organ made the child's blood tingle, and the soul-stirring chords of the great masters of music brought tears to his slghtless eyes, With a delicacy of feeling that regi tered the will of composers he was a ft subject for instruction, But the path was a long, hard one. Before he could | play he had to be taught to read em- bossed letters. ‘Then came the time of teaching to him the alphabot of dots so placed that they made letters, Then the ap- ruption of the open-door policy in Manchuria, and also the assertion that the mission of Gen. Kuropatkin, the Ruesian War Minister, to Manchurla was pacific. | The view held here is that Russia’s assurances fully protect the United States’ commercia) interests. The reoccupation of New-Chwang by Rus- wian troops is claimed to be a wholly political iasue between Russia, Great Britain and Japan, and as not involving American commerce or any cther | American interes! MAYOR LOW OFF FOR THE SOUTH. |CHILD FALLS TO DEATH FROM WINDOW | | | Sodus iva) | Accompanied by His Wife, He Starts Little One Waves Her Hands to a for a Week’s Cruise on Playmate and Loses Her His Yacht. Balance. accompanied by his wife, Mayor Low, his versonal thel Reading, four years old, m a window of the third fell | floor at rivate secretary and se “Tsu. plication of this system to music and the boy was ready, His little hands had been taught the key-board of the plano and the organ and the strings of the violin, Opcatng a New World, Instruction in running his fingers over the delicate dots of the music, memuriz- ing bar after bar and then, aaving done picking out the melody, humming the tune as he read the music, and then playing It foliowed. Jt all took time |For nine years this boy, who is now nearly twenty, has been plodding along. |oys who grew up in the tenements, who pitied thelr little blind fellow and [wie for him a life as a peddler of pen- tis, have grown up to drive trucks or go at some other strenuous work and | \E3w listen to his playing and marvel | as he stirs them With his music, ‘A piano in an eust wide tenement is |not an everyday ovcurence, but in the | | wei van ent |No. 119 Charles street th frnoon {home of the fuimily of the dir eral servants, boarded the yacht Aur- see Melted, tntreet thls atternoon | arg ky one. It 18 the Boy's lnsisuments fae to-day, walch at once got under| 2", Was killed Instantly When he came from (he institudon at | Pr for the South. The vessel had re-|_ The ittle one was playing in the front|fatervaia hie Visits were looked for oy | way room of her home, Her mother left the | (he nelEnDORS Hoe Rot ag nel auled f m stem to cently been ove At that moment little ould take a/ fully : ce and toppled out of th Mayor determined that he 1 yh balan y Aweck'’s vacation, He will cruise slowly) {iy She tell head. first on the atone move & : at on the stoi vie will be F Mown the Atlantic coast and put In at paving and her head wan crushe), won’) try, Tawi wilh be James River. Ye will start on the| One of the chiidren ran into the hour, (Me resi ‘ta, make agturdahcntaht. and told the litte one's mother. A po right vision fo I trip next Saturday ment He teoman, called an ‘ambulance from ‘Bt CE a Mc Cr to be back at his desk the fyl-| Vincent's Hospital. The surgeon ¢a is Wonderful ‘Pat RP sron ng. the child had been killed the moment = aarat Ing Mayor Low's absence Presle|#he struck the pavement, es, he has great tayent. He has A | ——————— na good pupil” waid Prof, wait 3s Fornes, of the Hoard of Aldermen, tution, “He has i Feed New York & New Haven Divid Rend the day Famiyeo nae at? Q b lend. {spend the day with his family. tae. 1 ie the acting Mayor, with Vice- airman McInness, of the ing President of that body. iLL DOWN AN AIRSHAFT. Board,| ‘The reg of the Ni jford Rattroad Company was noid this afternoon at the Grand Central Depot, |The regular qyarterly dividend, payable - une 3, was declared Only ‘routine Skil Fractured by | Matters’ were discumved and, nocondin to. Benator Depew, no Tuldrence, wa from Scaffold. Po sea shad 9 labor troubles. » twenty-two years old, of —————— “Bixty-tiret -otreet, while) Bright people get good positions fe coo esa AY through Sunday World Wants. if you seek help a Sunday Work Want mi n | inate nt tO De KULE, UE A good room for a few minutes, and while she he parlor of the cram, n for the ¢ in Southern w 8, / = i} me she) was in the camped hore: ae tere Mayor has been looking foriiWa% Bone Ethel went to a fron: wine |‘There, Ne sing or tie things the | whi - |dow, which was open, and ned out | Belghbe p ward to for several weeks. Ito wateh a ; jin ‘the. f | Te was only when he had finishod ati/t2 Watch a group of children at pay in| wnowwill Welcome, im aa "they | ings on the many Logislative | the street | Welcomed Pemuker of pianos wi the hearings fe many Legislative) In the street she spied a Little friend area ree that, the inetree ae ile whica came before him that the/and began waving her hand ae A Sard and see that the instrumen cted the chant he wrote and’ then ayed it tn two minutes id one, so 1 found one that |was a hundred years old, one I certan he never had heard, v jread to hen. Then he sat at the ma chine and wrote It out. He memorized it and then went to the plano and payed i. biMere are few bars to it, hut a rapid test to show proficiency.” And this man with tron-gray hatr, ho has invented the machine to write |read and. pl ho {|m! THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING SIGHTLESS MUSICAL PRODIGY OF THE EAST SIDE AND HIS WONDERFUL PERFORMANCES. DOCBVENUUOD OULU HO TONDO S-FDOSGESHSIOSISSPIPOS ISO MISO SHIP se pen Oe 3 4 $ & i 4$90OO8995-99450990005000000 0, he cannot ses big, hla heart t= su sood. plano. He can play that Vika and the organ, too. ho gets from that! Sometimes neighbors cry when he plays. So times I cry myself," and the big to coursed down her ‘cheeks. They were tears of joy and pride in her boy, ‘There is his There Is the What tones the e- of the principal of, the lke a typewriter. never more than elght—make letters In the alphabet acters, capitals and low | the notes In music. Upon this’ mac have been written all the great. ope: jali the classical pieces which the prize Pupil has earned to play. ‘he Firman boy 1s not ready to leave the institution yet. When he does, those there hope it will be to realize his dream. At present his audience is his family and the neighbors, to whom t is No sweeter music than that he gets from the plano in the corner of the Columbia street tenement. GROUT OPPOSES SUBWAY PLANS. Comptroller Says Engineer Par- son’s Scheme for Extension! Is in Violation of Municipal Ownership Principle. Institution 1s the GIVES ALL TO CORPORATIONS Comptroller Grout to-day declared that all the plans of Chief ingineer Wiliam Barclay Parsons for an ext:n- sion of tho subway system were simp.y extensions of existing corporations and in violation of the principle of munteipal ownership, “In all of Mr. Parsons's plans,” 93/4 the Comptroller, “there 1s one serious defect which Invariably prevents their acceptance by the city. Each of the extensions suggested by him is an ex- tension to the Hnes of some existing when we will have municipal ownership ownership is rendered futile. “Every one of the lines projected by Mr. Parsons Is an extension of an exist- Ing elevated or surface line—elther the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company, the Manhattan Plevated Company or the New York Central Railroad, and the hove of municipal ownership Is blasted before the present rallway 1s completed. “There is no reason on earth why the efty should not have its own rapid tran- sit system without the co-operation of the corporations. We should have an |underground system complete in Itself, The present subway is to be tled up for eoventy-tlve years, and during that long term the city will be tled down to a powerful corporation. “Unless the extensions are made a system independent of the transporta- tion companies the day will never come | when we will have municipal ownershp of the railroad lne: In this great city.” UP FIFTY TIMES ON ONE CHARGE. Chk! | After Waiting Nearly Five Years, the) Coroner's Report Is Filed and Engineer Tate Goes Free. After appearing in court more than tty times in answer to @ charme of hom! that had been on record against him for almost five years, En- gineer Phillp Tate, of the Long Island Rallroad, was discharged by Magis trate Connorton {n Long Island City to-day. A delayed report of the Cor- oner’s inquest Was responsible for the unique case. ‘On Nov. 25, 1898, the train of which Tate was the engineer struck and tn- sbtantly killed Mrs. Winnie Whalen, @ \iMner, who lived in Manhattan, Tate was arrested and released on ball. A few days later a jury held an inquest, put the report was not made to the court, Time after time Tate was arra'gned | ye tue BABITMAS, Aad east an adjournment was granted on the | plea that the Coroner's report had not w et |Muaie and literature for the blind and who has given forty years of hi to thelr Inatruction |p grea old bullding. amt mph a: ‘Ahi my Louis,’ een recelvel, The report was r ceived by Magistrate Conaorton yeatei Th Tate were com: me and the y hen His eyes are #0 | The machine which Is the Invention | & The dots—there are | Ime | Sessions Maul $0444 11000 PAROVREDLYYROAVODOEURUOODODEDOVOODO® MUSIC WRITTEN FoR THE BLIND. $ Ms, i \ ) $ g a @ $ELOSOOOHHOOOOK WAIT AAD MS WONDERFUL KLEJDOGRAPH, ODDO FID GOOHIDD GFOOOO96 TRANSCRIBING THE MuSIc. ne oo BLCDSHODEGHOHHE HOOH0H340HEOSHHOOHOD MURGER SUSPECT RAN FOR FREEDOM Wanted In Philadelphia, Daniel Roe Is Caught After a Chase in Newark. (Special to The Evening World.) NEWARK, N. J., May 9.—Followed by a crowd of about 300 peraons, Daniel Roe, alas Henry Jackson, of Philadel- phia, led Policemen Wolzendurg and Kuhn a lively chase to-day in Market street. He was captured finally and taken to the First Precinct, where he will be held until papers for his extra- dition can be received here, He {s wanted for complicity in the murder of Joseph Butler, who was shot through the heart in a saloon brawl in the Quaker City almost a year ago. His arrest came about In a pecullar manner. He had been in the custody of the police for almost forty-elght hours on a charge of being a tramp, without hls Identity becoming known. An hour after his discharge he was recognized by Will- lam A, Ballard, of Philadelphia, who told the policemen about him. When the man noticed policemen g0- ing towards him he darted into a saloon, He succeeded in gaining the street again after upsetting overything portable in the saloon, He retraced his steps down. Market street, followed by a crowd and the two bluecoats, After running a few ‘blocks the officers caught him and la ided him in a cell, ANOTHER LORENZ PATIENT CURED. Eleven-Year-Old Charles Willett, of Washington, Operated Upon Last Fall, Now Walks Easily. WASHINGTON, May 9,—To-day the plaster casis were rem from the Iimbs of eleven-year-old Charles Wil- lett, who was operated upon last fall by Dr, Adolf Lorenz, the Austrian spe- claiist, for an extraordinary case of club feet. The result is pronounced by | the boy's attending surgeor to be a per- fect cure, The boy walks easily and naturally. cage Medical C next week will be presented to the ‘ongress which convenes hore oe BOY FIREBUG HELD. KEddle Luke Must Stan’ Trial on | Charge of Setting Fire to School. | set fire to Public School No, 183, on Fourth avenue, near Butler street, in! Brooklyn, ‘Just to scare the teacher,” was given a hearing in the Myrtle Avo- nue Police Court to-day. The boy waived a preliminary trial, and Magistrate Nau- ns: pir) to the C the mes meld, bing to ths Court of Bpectal die was known as One of the bright- | st t rested this afternoon for speeding Edd\e Luke, the ten-year-old lad wo} 4 PASSENGERS HURT ON STATEN ISLAND BOAT. Castleton Crashed Into Her Slip with Such Force that They Were Thrown from Their Feet. In entering her slip on the New York side this afternoon the Staten Island ferry-boat Castleton crashed into the spiles with a force that threw many of the passengers from thelr fect. It was the first trip of the boat after an ox- tended stay in dry-dock, Capt. Sam Coler was in command, There were between 200 and 300 pas- sengers on board, most of them women and children—a typical Saturday after- noon shopping and matinee crowd, Mrs, Lippencott was thrown to the deck with such force that her right arm was broken, Her companion, Mrs, Van Hautenberg, was hurled against a rail- Ing and fainted, Both lve in Mr, Woods's boarding-house at No, 105 Mont- gomery avenue, Tompkinsville. A phy- sician was called, and after medical at- tention both returned to their homes. For a few minutes there was a panic on the vessel. ——— BANKERS ELECT OFFICERS. | Members of Groap Eight Meet and Entertain Assistant Treas- urer Fish, The New York City bankers who are members of Group Elgiit, of the State Bankers’ Association, held thelr annual meeting this afternoon at the Lawyers’ Club. A luncheon followed, at which Hamilton Fish, the new Assistant ‘Treasurer of the United States, was guest of honor. President Willlam A, Nash, of the Corn Exchange National Bank, was elected chairman of the Group in the plow» of J. Extwgrd Simmons, who re- tines In accordance with the rules ot the assoclation restricting the office to one term: Charles E, Warren, Cashler of the Lincoln National Bank, was elected secretary treasurer, and the following, Executive Committee was chosen: Will- {am M. Bennett, D. H. Pierson, W. A. Simonson, C. I, Robinson and H Stout. ‘A resolution of regret on account of the death of President Williams, of the ‘Chemical National Bank, was' passed. a “CHAUFFEUR WENT TOO FAST. Schermerhorn Were in ¥ Lowis Martin, a chauifeur, of No, 203 West Dhirty-fourth street, employed by ermerhorn, a lawyer, of orty-fifth street, was ar- Sentral Park Weet, bi : cond aad Eighty "ftth fireets, Siz. and Mrs, Schermerhorn. Were in the automobile, Martin was taken to the West Sixty- eighth Street Station and admittel to bail, According to Bicycle Policeman Tiedinger the automobile was going at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, t and worst boys In the Butler stee | Last Wednesday Principal Lugs h Into a class of third. | girl pupil prompted him to start { ge one of the ‘school-rea shane faa day. vo fore much Cay hs Laundry Wants—Female. family tronora; Missal B Woot 118th my “ih hoor ean bv | EIGHT SCHOOLS IN COMPETITION Enthusiastic Crowd Shouts It-! self Hoarse at Spring Con- tests of New York Interschol- astic Athletic Association. YOUNGSTERS THRONG FIELD. Main Interest Centred in Sheffield, of Berkeley, and Ellingwood, of Dwight, of Whom Great Things Were Expected, BERKPLEY OVAL, Morris Heights, May 9.—With perfect weather condi- ons, and in the presence of a large crowd, the twenty4ifth annual spring champlonship events of the New York | Interscholastic Athletlo Association were held this afternoon, Followers of the eight schools competing for the honors were out in force. and their cheering and sing.ng would have done Justice to the Yale-Prinzeton fouthall match, In all quarters of the fleld the various school colors were displayed. Long be- fore the time set for the first event the fleld was allve with youngsters warming up, and from appearances all wero in perfect condition. Interest wae centred in ShefMeld, of Berkeley School, and Ellingwood, of Dwight School. Much depended on the work of these two youngsters toward winning the honors for thelr respective schools, 4 “They say Sheffeld will score thirty points," sald one of the fair sex in the grand staond to her companion, “but walt and see Ellingwood just walk away from him. Why thie boy Elling- wood {s a wonder." Just then Bllingwood made his ap- pear and the girl cried out: “There he is! There he | s!"" Isn't he just lovel; : It was apparent that she was a fol- lower of Dwight School. Dr. White, of Berkeley School, was on hand early and predicted a victory for his school by 75 points, Athletic Direc- tor Selxas, of Dwight School, would only say “Wait and see.” The first event was started promptly at 2 o'clock. The Summaries. 100-Yant Dash (contor)—i ' Koch, Berkley School; A, Lyon ativute, second; time, 10 4-98. Second Heat—' by L, T, Sneed, Berkley . Fh La Salle Ineutute, secon i ‘Heat—Won by F, Pretn,’ Columbia Grammar School AL Wechpler, Sacha 1, second, Fourth’ Heat—avon dy “J. Francisco,” Dwight Schoo! |. H. Purdy, Berkley School, second; time, Us. 106 Yard Dawh, Junior, frst heat—Won by TS. L. Goudder, Cutler School; A. Goodwin, Dela- salle Institute, second; time, 114-58. Second heat, won by 8 Soon, Sachs School; EB. Alker, Cutler School, second; th Third heat, won by H, Telfair, Berkiey We Barnami Sahool, second; time, 11 3-5s. by J. Ellingwood, Dwight Dwight School, second; H. jeacham, 104 Clausen, 3 Cy sit Seymour, Dwight School, third; M.'L. Me School Dani Borkley School, fourth; time, 2m. SheMeld Wins the 100 Yard Final Heat—100-Yard Dish, sentor—Won dy L. T. Shaffleld; J. Francisco,’ second: R. Koch, e—Won by D. Miller, Adams, Berkeley School, i thind; second; L. P.” Bassare, $r., Kendall, Cutler School, fourth; time, 60 8-58. +) Your drugatet will retun SEVEN NOW RELD “INGARREL CASE Diovani Vacconi, Named by Cor- oner’s Jury as One of the Ac- cessories to Murder, Is Under Arrest. SIX WITNESSES DISCHARGED. They Had Been In the House of Ne tention, but It Is Now 4dmitted by the Coroner that They Had No Connection with the Ca Diovan! Vaccon!, the seventh person named in the verdict of the Coroner's jury as an accessory to the murder of Benedetto Madonia, whose body waa thrust into q barrel, was arraigned in the Centre Street Court to-day. He te the proprietor of the butcher shop at No. 16 Stanton street, where the, mur- dered man is said to have been seen before his mutilated body .was found. Two other Italians were arrested as suspects In the case. They are charged merely with being suspicious persons, and the police refuse to make their names pu Six Men Released, The Coroner ‘has discharged from cus- tody six of the men arrested originally and held as witnesses, Against the men discharged there was nothing to show they ever had been con+ nected with either the Mafia or anything else of a disreputable nature, and least of all that they had had anything to do with the murder of Madonta. The men released are Domenic Peo- caro, Morenzo and Vito Lobardo, Glus- seppl Lamio, Nicola Festa and Guis- geppi Minda. After more than two weeks of ime Frigonment the men were told they were rea hy the Coroner and hastened out to meet their relatives and friends who were awaiting thelr releas “We were treated well in-the “House of Detention,” suid one of the men throvgh an interpreter, “but why we should have been locked up I cannot sav. unless It was that we might have eaten in some restaurant with our fel- low-countrymen who the police say are ullty. Surely we would have been o} and as witnesses. There was no n to lock us up and keep us away from our families and our work." Coroner’s Explanation, roner Scholer said: “It is sometimes a hardship to keep men locked up. But the men were not in prison; they were in the House of Detention only, and as witnesses, and no stain attaches to their characters because of the detention. It was done to insure thei? presence when needed in the course of the in vestigation. “A grave cnime had deen committed and every precaution had to be used until the affair was cleared up. “Some of the men arrested original were desperate men. The men dischar, were unfortunate in having been seen in places frequented by them. It would ve been the same no matter what nationality was involved.” Henry J. Goldsmith swore vut write of habeas corpus for three of the men held under the verdict of the Coroner's jury. They call upon Coroner Scholer and the Warden of the Tombs to pro- duce Antonio Genova, Vita lu Duca and Pietro Inzerillo before Justice Lischott on Monday. a A Guaranteed Cure for Piles, Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles, your money !f PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure you. 50 cents, * I was troubled with eczema on the face for five months, during which time I was in care of physicians. My face was in such a condition that I could not go out. 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Cured in One Month by Cuticura Remedies. ‘The agonizing itching and burning of the skin as in eczema; the frightful scaling, as in psorissis; the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disfigurement, as in pimples and ringworm; the awful suf- fering of infants, and anxiety of worn- out parents, as in milk crust, tetter and salt rheum,—all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to success- That Outicura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent are such stands proven beyond all doubt. No otatement is made neperaing them that ls not justified by strongest evi- dence. ‘The purity and sweetness, the Best For The Bowels $17 Stagg St., Brooklyn, N. Y.| power to afford immediate relief, the The above letter was received in 1898 | certainty of speedy aud ent cure, and he again writes us, Feb. 19, 1908, | the absolute safety and it economy “T have not been troubled with eczema | have made them the stan okin cures since.” of the civilized world. 1d throughout the civilized world. PRICES: Cutioura Recolvent, TOU RSMNpID wc athena cd vot OR cee Ra fond forcheyreat work," Homoars of ihe Blood, Skin and Scalp, and How to Guie ‘Tiem. ‘ Bear a Con By abe Potter Drag and Chemainal Dorporation, Jols Bropristore, Boston, = DIED. AROHBOLD.—On Wednesday, Stay 6, THOMAS P. ARCHBOLD, of pneumonia, “a Begin & Leake, tindertakers, ‘Burial trom & er i 1 295 Spring at, at 2'P. M., Sunday, May 10, x0 Pacgarene & Bnd cepa wes men he | CROWLEY.—Very suddenly on May 1 1908, Chet Sea Bark Aves, Now York tay, W.¥, | Tuners, Wil tase piace 08 Gunter May 20 taking parlors, 406 34 ave, Interment im Calvary Cemetery, HORAN.—On Friday, Mey 8 MARY Admg- HORAN (nee Riley), widow of John Horan, Funeral from her late residence, 63 Baals st, Monday, May 11, at 10 o'clock; thence te St. Francis Xavier's Church, West 16th st M'KM@VER,—On Saturday, May 9, af & mort Hiness, WILLIAM JOSEPH, beloved. son ef Robert and Mary McKiever, aged 15 years. Brooklyn. WALKER.—After short illness, JOHN A! WALKER, beloved Ausband of Nellie Fisher ty, ia Bie year, Funeral Sunday at 2 P. M., from ie late’ Fealdencd, 62 Howes ot, Brookive, % ih a al a a ET a MAY 9, 1903, rs lat } * | |