Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘Woman see web Buring Iftnesd, whom he deserted wife , took an enormous di that her companion was d tn @ M of hysteria she 51 police relations with him, Haven, for the honor. @ big lumber camp, and two weeks ago, mhame of it all, ‘Yestigation of the entire affair, Ait apes OTe. a Kolar tg’ of waters came Jer, beginning to cry. prietor or a policeman." Weat Forty-seventh atre mephew of Keplar. Raymond, but that his ungie wi back to thd Suesseus. woman ‘became hysterical, that was on her mind, Keplar left a letter sealed, stamped and addressed tor his tather. ” jy matt ® note for his nephew, Jack Ly ‘map, A number of letters addressed nweries on of Semuel Jones, of No. afternoon by his ing it wos / brother, ' fell dead. ary — Narre LUNCH | A \well-diresned young man who sald “Was Michael Ward, of No. 22 York Jeraey ‘was arrested to- ‘Whilo Ikaving the Astor Houre without paying his check. told Magistrate City, “LEFT WIFE AND CHILDREN. We Ran Away With “Mlareied and Once Nursed Him tthe MMe péksln 6 scat@al which began two weeks ago in the lttle town of Deland, Fia., was played ‘out in this city to-day-when Heérbert Leon Keplat; lying. beside the young married woman lnknown to his companion, and nies todeath, “Was pot until hours after his death Mrs, Dona Miller, the young and ¥ woman who abandoned her hue- tan to share the disgrace that Keplar ‘brought to himself and his family Via forgeries in Deland, discovered atid told the entire story of her ®ho'ls the wife of Dr, James Mille: Gentist of Deland, and Keplar was the @on of @ prominent physician of tho game place, He was a graduate of the University of Wisconsin, and at one time was. tennis champion of the South, having defeated Roderick V, Beach, of @ two first met in Bau Claire, Wis. When Keplar was injured while boss o Mra.\ Millor, ‘who wae greatly interested in obaritabl work, ministered to him in a hospital ‘Phere were no relations between them howeyerpuntil they met again In Delan It was at the Hotel Sucwseus, at No. 100 West Fitty-sixth street, where Mrs, Miller and Keplar had been living since ‘they arrived here on May 9 that the end of their rompnce came to-day. Kep- Jara body is lying in a room there now @walting the orders of his family, whil ‘Mrs. Miller, frantio with grief and t is in a cell until the ©oroner has made a more thorough in- Dead Beside Woman Companion. It wae at 8.80 o'clock this morning ‘that Mra. Miller cam® out of the room, @ wrapper thrown over her nightrobe, ‘Ten min- out again and roused the Leeeckecper, Mrs, Elizabeth Smith, “My husband ts dead," sald Mra, Mil- Tam sure dead. I woke up and found him cold + Denide me, You had better get the pro- Mrs. Smith went in the room Glance suMced to show that Keplar men dead, She called the porter, and ‘ge brought in Policeman Byrnes, of th station, Be: fore Byrnes arrived, Mrs, Miller hastily donned her clothing and calling a cab ‘drove to the Hotel Cadillac, John Ray- i mond,” the ,oafe cashier there, She did not see left word for him dead and then drove Woman Related Story of Shame. There Policeman Byrues told her he would have to detain her until the Coroner hel given sonse orders, The acid there | Was no reason for arresting her, as she . Was innoount of anything wrong, and if “the unburdened herseif of- everything on geen at a GeAllise to- to male on ‘ceil Florida scandal, yearn father would i neve bs ettied hi rH Deland, i" jank, b the “pante Officials would not permit it (land were determined to prosecute him, SHOT BROTHER | DEAD INPLAY Buta. nelt when he took lunch with his grand. "the expert replied, “He was in a sub-consclous state,” “What do you mean by a sub-con- scious state?!’ Could Kill and Not Know. “well, hia condition was like that of one doing something waile in a dream ‘That js what we medical could kil) another wi not know what he was “Do ¥ another and forget all about itt” “Yon.” “Where is there any evidence of this man having had queer spella that would indicate this psychic epilepsy?" “The one be Bays He had wt the Junc- tion after taking the glass of beer, That was evidently an attack.” “But yot hays only Wood's word for it?! $ “That's all." “In yout opfhion {ts tis person, Wolf a real person or a myth?" © “WhenT talked with the defendant I thought Wolf was a myth, as he always appeared just before a faint- ing mpell’ That is one of the aymp- toms jot this i eaeety fe Closed, This closed the defense, Then came Dr. -Btiwell's evidence in rebuttal. He was followed by Dr, Frank A, McGuire, official physictan of the Tombs prison, New York, After telling of the examination that he made of ‘Wood on Feb. 4 the physician declared that Wood was sane and capable of ud- ing all of his- faculties. “My attention was called to the case Dy my orderly,” the doctor sald, “and I put him through a thorough Bey: ination.” I ‘asked him if he had ever had a fainting spell, a severe hurt on the head, a sunstroke, &o,, and:to all my questtons he answered ‘No,’ '’ On cross-examinavton the doctor ad- CARONIA IS AFLOAT AGAIN; VERDICT SOON DUE an IN WOOD TRIAL (Continued trom First Page.) mitted that he examined Wood because {t was an extraordinary case, but again he declared that Wood was sane. | Dr. Pierce Bailey, a noted authority on brain diseases, head of the Vander- bilt Clinic and the colony of eplleptics. containing 1,000 patients, wae called, He eald that he had made a specialty of netvous dikeases for sixteen years, “You know «a great deal about epi- lopsy?"' was the first question put to the expert, which brought forth the ataetiing reply that one of every five bundred persons had epilepsy. He de- clared that Wood waa sane, but peared to forget nome things, Not an Epileptic, “In your opinion has Wood epilepsy?" "No, I have never seen a case of apl- lepay yet which {8 not aocompanied by fite or @ contraction of tha muscles, ‘There is nothing in Wood's history to Indicate that he has eplleps: the crime that Wood committed blews, upon ly thie aesaait e@ by ao mutilation o: ‘The m hooting of a man te the orime ot Heptio.! "Ig this man is not epilepsy what else “1¢ may be a man commits a follow- the hoay, ae Se se cons that om Feb. 3 this Ayr searee ig? of di stinguish- ig? etree Th T haven't ad bot pVidence to convince me tha hypno Bloty, and taker al over the cp ion on ended In raunder, the otaee: 3 teed pheredty oF f aha act, but ne 1 could. retain of tt was atiestion he waa a bet Teady 8 to answer, BELMONT ASKS FOR A SECRET "SAILS TO-DAY Anchored in Gravesend Bay Untt! High Tide Let Her Leave Harbor. The Cunard liner Caronia, which to- day wae hauled off the bank upon which the ran aground Tuesday afternoon, .|.eailed out of Gravesend Bay at 4 o'clock this afternoon, forty-eight hours late. ‘The passengers who had boarded the huge steamehip on Tuesday with the expectation of being hundrede of miles At pea by this afternoon lined the rails and cheered heartily as the towers of Coney Island silpped from view. Upon her release from the sandhank the Caronia would have atarted straight out over the ocean for Europe but for the fact that she was headed toward New York, She alid off, stern first, into the Main Ship Channel, which {s not wide enough to allow a ship of her length to turn around, By the time she got up into Gravesend Bay, where there was room to turn, the tide was running out and it was deemed best to wait for the next high water, Every officer of the Cunard line ex- pected that the Caronia would be. re- leased last night, but the tide and wind wore against the tugs, ‘To-day the en- ginea of the big steamship were started astern, and the seven tugs attached to the hull began to pull just at the mo- ment when there is slack water tween the change of the tides. Th was smooth, there was no wind and the huge steamship slipped into clear wa- ter with scarcely a jar, Absolutely Unhurt, “There is absolutely nothing the matter with the Caronia," declared Vernon H. Brown, the local agent of the Cunard Une, after a visit to the big whip in Gravesend Bay. ‘Barring a big hole in ber coal bunkers made by the necessity of keeping steam up to work her engifies while ehe was on the bar, her supplies are sufficient to send her across the Atlantic, The coal will be Yeplenished before she sails, “No blame attaches to the pilot in whose hands the Caronéa ran agound. He was tn the position of the driver of a fire engine who steers his team against an 'L’ pillar to avold running down a group of children in the street. Followed Down Channel, at anchor she was passed by t er Wilhelm Il, ‘The foe lifted a trifle and she followed the Kalser Wilhelm down the main channel, “Close to the junction of the Main and S8wash channels, off Bandy Hook, the tog closed down like a curtain, The Kalser Wilhelm LI. stopped in the chan- nel and her anchor was dropped. The Caronia, groping along, came up to the Kalser, “An immediate turn to port or star- y Rowland Jones, eleven years old, son - 60 Ravine @venue, Yonkers, was ehot dead this brother William, \ ‘twelve years old, In their father's home. they were playing in the house when * Mam picked up a revolver and think- mot loaded aimed at his weapon waa discharged and Row- BILL, TO WIN BET. board was necessary to avoid a colll- sion, Off the starboard bow was a small schooner, Had the Caronia been turned that way the schooner would have been crushed like an eggshell, She was turned the othes way and pushed her nose into the mud on Flynn's Knoll, The tide running out swung her stern around until she pointed back toward New York, and in that position she lay until this morning.” Se BALTIC ARRIVES TO-MORROW. Message from Deln: er Received To-Day, The White Btar Tine steamer Baltic, from Liverpool and Queenstown for New York, is reported as having been in communication by wireless tele Yaphy with the station at Blasconset, Wirel TROAD DEAL Wants Third Track on the Second and the. Third Avenue Lines, Prior to the meeting of the Board of Rapid Transit Commissioners to-Auy the Committees on Plans ahd Contracts held a secret on. This wae done at the request of Aug- ust Belmont, President of tho Inter- borough Rapid Transit Company, who sent a letter asking for the considera- tlon In seorst of a proposal to add a third track to the Second avenue and the Third avenue lines. The board had already rejected the proposal of Mr, Belmont to four-track the Sevond avenue line and he now wished to substitute the plan by having one more track on both the Second and Third avenue lines, Mr. Belmont told the board that he would rather discuss the proposition without the presence of the public, Mr. Belmont alo told the board in another letter that the section of the Yaleway running under \he Hatlem River would be finished by July 1 and he requested tho board for the privilege rd running half of the trains the Bubway route the Third avenio Mr. Orr Announced hat the commit- tee had decided to aot George 8. Rie permane: Chiet ‘ineer of the The Pe taeecte of th cot are eae ape fe conomitiee was ay: proved by the board, PI paiatio) SS, JUROR REELS TO HIS SEAT; TRIAL STOPS Recorder Goff Abruptly Ends Case Before Him, Sends foreman Home, by nd ne by way oe After the noon recess in Recorder Goft's court this afternoon Clarence Belden, foremen of the jury in the case of Abe Katz, on trial for receiving stolen goods, entered the room after the other members of the jury had taken their acate, A diagram of ols course from the door to the jury box would resemble the diagram of the coprse of a yacht In a race againat the wind, Mr. Belden sank into his seat with a loud sigh of relief and composed iim- elt for sleep, The court-roont was in dend silence. Everybody was gaging in amazement at the foreman of the Ju Keoorder Goff saw that unless some thing was done in a hurry Mr, Belden would goon be wrapped in slumber, Ac- cordingly he addressed a few hot re- marks at seat No. 1 in the jury box, “to see A man appearance and eianding in much a condition, Probably you don't Know what 1 am talking about, and you certainly are not In dition to Wikn*to evitience In thin. cai Bolden tried to tale back, but restrained by a got offtoe en tukned fo ch splat ct patney | an rent, thal he would ua iincharge. the dary hn nd aclare a Cora ja, whic me no to are thes Reoooier, Mass,, at 1.90 P. M. to-day, The vewsol art ‘miles bast of Nan- ‘Drobably, dock about bind 10 0. wth wet Beith ap- | W nANK AOBEERS IDENTIFIED BY Stockwell Declares Watson and Mullen Were in Gil- bertsville Gang. Faward Watson and John Mullen, who were arrested with Mabel Wat- Bon in the furnished room at No, 231 t Forty-ninth street on suspicion of being concerned in the bank robbery at Giibertsyiile, N. Y., on May 2, and {nh Whose room a complete set of bur- Blare’ tools was found, were to-day positively identified as two members of the gang by 3, C. Stockwell, a clerk in the bank of H, & Brewer, from which the thieves took $10,000 after blowing open the safe with nitro-glycerine and holding off the townspeople with their revolvers, Btockwell took @ peculiar delight in identifying the men,-aé)they maltreate ‘They were turned to Sheritt Mather, of Otsego ity, and started back to Gilbertavillé. Both men pro- ‘tested that they wer not in Gilberts- ville at the tine, plory told by the Wateon. ii yas Hine with Vatson When ai etective Bergeant Peabody Veg ie aw follows: am just twenty-two years old, and by Pet pene 4 linge i was 4 wiy- trl and years ago, went et ‘Aufneneny, a te there I first is man Wathon, He came to the lot of 54 nt it fee! . month Rte am Placed a thousand ere on a bane beside ae ania wen Bet ree oa. Wo dlan't aut until ¢he vps Abt came to New York ‘won to, tee att 04 e furnished-room 01 st No. 21 ‘eat LG al Fo Ware, there tor severi days, short of ‘money and fuklon gr! an't"have much. We had to fe serz, lent LAs some money i In’ Pittsburg, some $1,600 in Be hd got it. 1 went ad i Ror aie ad told me they were going oneMay 6 and the mon came a e had Pent of Roney, pte tor that and lived at Lian had #o much money ig didn't i Ave ts epend ‘any of that I had drawn in uh a + know of the marten rent I don't kn I got_them i} and corner after aaa Ded several squeezing processes naked them if they were not in Gilbertaville on May 3. “Go to hell,’ said Watson “Bmole up'and find out for yourself,” said Mullen, and that was every word that could be mot out of the men, aoe OSLER HITS THEN PATS NEWYORK In Spite of Its Frivolity and Other Things He Hesitates to Mention, Doctor Says It Leads for the Sick, “Sit aga WASHINGTON, May 18—"In spite of {ts frivolity, in spite of its size, In spite of ita other things which | hesitate to allude to, New York has net the pace in legisiation, institutions and treat- ment of tuberculosis.” Dr, William Osler made this state- ment to-day in an address following that of President Dr, Edward L. Tru- deau, in opentng the first annual meet. atudy and prevention of tuberculosis, Dr, Herman M. Biggs concluded the opening ceremonies with a discussion ot the” technical wide of the question articulariy relating to reporting and recistering cane Dr. Osler eal ing tuberculosis strive for, He discussed this ieature| Under three ‘heada: Hdueuilon of ‘tho uublic, of the physician und of the bac that education regard- the thing to ho public, he sald, was awake, but on the edge ot the bed and not Teswed, In. awakening, how- Seer, hermnoribed much Nad eeem acon: Diighied over past conditions, hen tne public got dressed hi dicted that much aoa would much would pres follow persion ished phases for two ‘days, baer papers are to be readin the a0 eae ection of the confer- pneo, and technical papers are to be Pres the scotion designated clin- cat and climatologicn Jed up to hig remarks about the lendlos’ position ‘New York, hun taken In the matter of, the treatment of tuberculosis by saying that education Of the medical profession, of the public and of the afflicted, wan the advance step to be taken at this time In the war against consumption, PSII Rss Bera ARABIAN STALLION WORTH $5.000 DEAD. Succumbs to Blood Potnoning—Ant- mal Belonged to A Sewell and Runsel! OYSTER BAY, I. L, May 18.--"Clay Feltpee," one of the handsome Hunt- ington Amblan studs at the Fleetwood fatm, died to-day from blood poironing, The horse waa a beautiful animal and was valued at $5,000, His death was the result of a pecwllar accident, While being driven Borne Weta Ny sina he stepped on & plece of one of the jay ms was fy 3 nto, the under part his body, A awelling was soon Ras ed and a veterinary surgeon was | called if and tteated the animal, Blood waning developed and in spite of the ‘| fori ‘of veterinary:surweons the horso a nod. waa formenty Ridin by ph Huntin MAN THEY TIED hl tor Nan Patveraon, had told him she ing of the National Association for the | lic | eral hard races. rf 08, breesing; |NAN PATTERSON ISIN TOWN, BUT UNDER COVER, \Getting Costumes Ready for Vaudeville Engagement at $2,000 a Week. Nan Patterson {s holding a secret @udience to-day with a skilled army of dressmakers, lingerie artiets, millin- ers and feminine haberdashers in preparation for the most elaborate out- fit that @ chorus girl has ever pos: Sessed, When the young woman makes her debut in vaudeville week after next she will have, besides a pretty face: something to show that will atone for her inability to either sing or dance, Nan's muoh-talked-of engagement with Hurtig & Seamon Is practically closed, The contract will not be signed | until to-morrow, but the girl has ver-| pally eccepted an offer to sing a few songs, with a background of _ protty chorus gitls, for @ salary of $2,000 a week, Opening In Harlem. She cama to New York yesterday afternoon to met ready for her opening In Harlem a week from next Monday. She will go on the road later on, On arriving at the Penneylvania station she was met by one of the Hurtig brothers and conducted to the St, Paul Hotel, where, however. she was unable to secure acvor'modations, She is now under cover in one of the Broadway notels, Nearly one whole year in the Tombs, and consequently an exile from the shops, wrought in Nan an acute case of clothesitis, Her managers are giving her an opportunity to sausty her manta for new adornment, and at the same time provide their new star with a sect vf costumes that wil dagsie the eyes of a curious New York public. Levy Denies Sioux City Yarn. A despatoh from Sioux City, Ia., pu | | porting to give & statement from "'C, |itwin, @ reputable lawyer," to the ef- fect that Abraham Levy, chief counsel held the pistol with which Caesar Young was shot and that it wae discharged in a struggle for possession of the weapon, was shown to Mr, Levy to-day. “If 1 were to express my full opinion oft him my remarks would pot be fit for pubtlentgn! said Mr. nnd emphatical- y. “f do not know man; never Keard ‘or him never Tain ht -him, and never told any such story to any ‘living pe: son, in the frat place such @ story tmrue, T could not have told it It 1 Wanted to, and I would not have told 1 TES AMAN WITHOUT INJURY Bricklayer Got Up, Saying, ‘?'m Going Back to Work,’’ Robert Waleh, a bricklayer working on a chimney at Bixty-fourth street and Twelfth avenue, Brooklyn, to-day slip- ped and fell to the graund 110 feet ve- low. The wind rumpled_his hair a bit, ’ {his clothes were a trifle disarranged, his breath wan almost taken out of him by the descent, but he was otherwise ‘uninjured, “That's a long way up in the air,” he said to the men that ran to pick up his pleces and send them home in an undertaker's wagon, ‘And nowsk'm go- ing back to work," he@aded, "The foreman, the superintendent, th: master mechanic and the union boss, all of whom wore doing something for the Angel Guardian Home, where the chininey was being erected, showted in concert: ‘Not on your life! A hospital for yours.’ “Not on your life!’ answered Walsh. One of the men summoned an ambu- lance from the Norwegian Hospital and Dr. Hastman responded. He sald that Walsh was not injured in any way, Dut couldn't understand the thing at all, He had no dclentific theory to ft the case. "If you don't let me go back to me work,” said Walsh, “I'll go home.” And he left his friends unaccompanied. “I don't remember much after I got @tarted untél I looked up and saw the top of the chimney,” he sald. “I know that I began turning and turning al- moet et the beginning, How many times I did that I can't my, When !t wae all over I was astonished to find myself where I was. I'm all right and I need the money, I want to go to work.’ ‘The police and friends were inter- cated in Walsh and they tried to find chim at ‘his Manhattan address, Ho must have had some sort of an aphasia, for no one of that mame could be found at No, 901 West Fortisth street. —- THE PURPLE DIAMONDS, ‘The attempted theft of two vriceless purple diamonds is the motive of Contras Piece," second ageteg story it if tt EEE Bae teen: teue been true. FAST GAL AT LOCA breesing, 100° pounds up, Is recefvii a very thorough preparation and will be y for a race in a very ehort time. PRINCE HAMBURG Pour tartones in 0,65, Dreesing, 100 pounds up. A vers fast colt, and if he keeps sound will win a lot of raves, COY MAID—One mille In 1.65, handily, 100 pounda vp, Tho writer has always contended this was not a high-cle filly and doesn't change hia opini She oar win in cheap company. BELLATRIX — One ile in ate handlis? 10 pounds up, Looks very w and can win if placed where she be- longs. COMRET—Three furlongs in 0.43 breesing; 100 pounds up. Has a lot of speed and on a fast track will take some beating next time out, JUST—Fonr furlongs in 0.66, breesing; 110 pounds up. An ordinary colt, but AL for what he can do METAMORA—Four furlongs An 0.64 8- 5. handily: MOD pounds up, Frere Wke muddy footing and ‘might nice race*in it, Has quite a ‘nice turn of wpeed XALAGATC-Three in 0,48, breezing; 100 Needs racing’ fore the will Be atan PUL “tour tutionge in” 058, 100 pounde up, a very nenr racing form, and looks very well, | ,RAMELA-Three turlones. jn 0.89 ah ened pounds up, Did not lke Wa abe race, but she seams to fallan thin heavy footing, ane may run DOU e SRAM bt Bit ?NFlomag R preeing! 100 payne Ub. Hae haa a let-up since his race in the Metro- | polttan, and it will no doubt do him some fond. BANK~Six furlongs in 3.24 3-5, hand- dly; 100 pounds up. ‘Has not been let pwn and hard to say just what he is capable of 4 SPARKLING BTAR—#ix furlongs in 1.35, handily: 100 pounds up. Doee not have any. dash to work, evi: Gently necde a. realy aa he has tind sev: HOT ®HOT—One mile in. 1.65 2-6. handily; y pounds up, Is not.as a fa) ‘ally @upposed to WEET ice Thtee furlongs 9 pounds up the a | footing and no doudt will yb Bette tae TASR before long. She Me hardly at. ATLANBRRS-One mile in 1.55, handily; uns UP, Ran a fair race last time ang fh Bec handity | 110 gary filly, She NYA—Four afutlonas nants: 100, pounds. Up. work of the morning. She Tent trim and will ese furlo; ms 0,40 266, far the In in ox race naxt time VRONBIDWLThEce furlongs in 0.42 8-6 handily; 100 pounds up, good colt and will improve on his last race, thy degheeeeey TRIALS AT “THE BAY.” The day was a bit Bfoomy in the curly hours and training exerci#es were delayed, When the sun took command, however, the course was alive with horses, and tHe raiibirds were sur- prised to note many falr gallops. Trainer Carroll Reid allowed The Picket ‘a seven-furiong breather at three parts speed. Tha Brooklyn Handi- cap winner of last year looks in the pink of condition and should stand a jot of beating during the Gravesend meeting, John Higgins allowed Bedouin, Chieftain and Rose of Dawn a alx-fur- Jong gallop at @ two-minute gait, Chief- tain looks, particularly mel and should prove an important facto! sine ‘=e (Continued from Firat Page.) run & much better | 1.4 rin his many | rat Bea! vf the great geries, ‘Ra! ie Ama- teur Cracks bry it will ri 4 in the four-page color lement of next gat urday’s ivenine ’ orld, May 2. Read it. LOPS L TRACKS Jon; cays 1-2, 0.98 1-2, 0.87 1-2, 0.50 a ent mud runner, Worden, tet 116 ee inde up, 5 pounds up; alx FF furlong 618, 0. 0.55 1.11, 1.95, breeming, “ainer NEWMAN—120 and an bgt, miles, Bas, ay be 3, 0.88 08, OB Ne of TRG Pst chan, ste Feakes, t JIM 1n past seasons, C, Git Aka Pounds up) alx fur. *TBhe pulion ‘ap’ 103 G. Buitrphy, trainer” 48 furlon, iy. Ha ree-year-oll. suas Re and Sere BALE ETT 1B GREGORIAN, 116 pounds u (ones, in 1.14, breaaing, Bi, Wh Pasha, NEY swi5tee— ls 0.18, om 6 ae, Bi eee very Re “hea 5B aie amine, Bien tn Te Ate list, Bde Dh ita at >. - lungs, 0.40, 0.26 sf 0- i eagon: ‘mene 3 Sah 58, breesing. Fi M5 pounds up, and CASTOR, | un i ety i rene) nes OITA Py ses 115 pounds up. 4 Pounds, NEN DBR 1i0 fi Remar na bie ate | 05 mounds Wo: 0,41, handily, SS iinaner, MJ mt i "ath icollocine.“G. Klemn her re nina ye A halt mile ini? Ns Th food mud perform alo An bal 115. pounds he fa! Pas a ea, eae it Me Mt 0.40. 0.5%, unde up. | ree thy, ONY, ROY—l15 "pounge. up; ff in 1,57, breesing, 8, rif TAO AN TIDR—110 pnuevd bi in sanity. Tu hy 0.54, it ‘tan t a PENI RY 106 raunda uy wee 1,19, walloping. Mp "Win alee, RACING YACHTS FELL (10 FEET | NOT SIGHTED + Janta sutering of itis Boy ON OCEAN RUN Due to Make Fist First Turn at Nantucket but Fog Hid View. NEWPORT, RFR. I, May 18.—The yachts whioh started yesteniay from Sandy Hook in the transatlantic race had not been alghted from the Nan- tucket Shoal LightatMp, off which they were to make thelr first turn, up to noon to-day, A wireless message from the lightship received here gave the weather and conditions as follows: “Wind northeast; ght brees thir teen miles an hour; fog; sea smooth; barometer, 29.67; fog all might; no yachts in sight.’ At 1.15 the weather was fine and the fog had cleared. The wind was blowing from the northwest at the rate of 18 knots an hour and the sea was mod- erate, It was pomslble to see fourteen miles, SCHOOLBOYS ON THE GOLF LINKS Jerome Travers Wins the Low- Score Prize in Intersoholastic Tournament Which Bégan at Garden City Course To-Day. (Special to The Evening World.) GARDEN CITY, N. ¥., May 18.—There were thirty starters this morning in the qualifying round of the Interschol- astio championship, representing thi teen different achools, one from Bo: ton, one from Worcester and the other: from New York and vicinity, Only three teams. were entered for the team cham- pionship, one by Montclair and two by St. Paul, The low score prise was won by Jerome D. Travers, the interschol- astic champion, who did the oourse in 7. St, Paul's first team won the team championship, 862; Montclair being 3%. 48 83 8G 4 bt 4460 48 203 48 190 # gr co 46 OOF 86 113 48 06 48 90 By 54 100 3 118 80 100 49 105 a) S2S3S Brice ‘ John Colbran, aa Edwart B. stureses, C, Knowles, Bt, Milla, Brown, Witttam: Biandy, Bt, FINES FATHER FOR ™ HIDING SCHOOLBOY. Magtstrate Tells the Defendant in 7 \t Case He Wii " Pen- alty © Be Heavier, “I wish that I could give you a heay- fer penalty, but the law does not per- mit ft," said Magietrate Moss in the Easex Market Court to-day when he fined Samuel Lichtenstein, of No, 156 Monroe ptrect, % for keepnig his four- teen-year-old son away from studies in @ public school. Lichtenstein sald that he did not know the whereabouts of his eon, us he ran away a month ago, Truant Omcer Willlams, of the Board of Education, told the Court that Lichtenstein was not telling the truth, as the boy was being hidden so the school authorities could not.get him. Detective O'Farrell, @€ the Mndinon street station, told the Court that he arresied another son of TLiohtenstein on Tues<ay for horse steal- ing, and he was certain the boy whom the school alithorities wanted was being ouncealed in the city. ‘This angered Magistrate Moss. He seid that if the boy was not produced in court within a week he would again tihe the father, Sleaeass: in H Recommended by Di “Health a Vi; or Every lass of actors for its Health-Giving Qualities, ted, Nor Alcoholic | 5 MASS OF SORES } from an Itching Humour CURED BY CUTICURA Not One Square Inch of Skin on His Whole Body Uneffected Mv little eon, a boy of five, broke out with an itching rash, Three doc- tore'prescribed for him, but he kept getting worse until we could not dress him any more, They finally advised me to try a certain medical college, | but its treatment did no good, At the time I was induced to try Cuticara he was so bad that I had to cut his hair off and put the Cuticura Oint- ment on ‘on bandages, as it was Arle wane totonch him with the bare | hand, There was not one equare inch of ‘kin on hie whole body that was not affected, He wasone massof sores. ee pesoaaee used toatick to hisekin | in remeving them it used to take See cic creierihern and the screams from the poor child were Leh gada eg ing. I began to think that he wou! never get well, but after the second Sepllearion of Cuticura Ointment to ace si Py oF E Lobroresin * be with the third gud fourth mup Orne { cations the sorce men \ . His skin peeled off frenty tine, : brtit fully ‘fielded to the tr Now I can say that he is en! ty cured, and a stronger and healt | ou never saw than he is to-dayy> ! bee RT WATTAM, 4922 Center Ave., Chicago, I1l,, Dec. 30, 1897 SIX YEARS LATER: lr. Wattam writes “Your letter of the aret in regard the case of my little boy at hand, 3 am truly thankful to say that the cure effected by the Cuticura Remedies has been a most thorough and successful cure to at Chicago, Feb. 23, 1903. gee fn salah alt Shigat tei 4 S eattis ese | SUIT * SALE Saves You One-Third .: | Grade |, Men's $16 suits at 99.50 ° | Grade Il, Men's $18 Suitsat $11.80 ¢ Grade Jil, Men’s $20 Suitsat $13.50 | Grade IY, Men's $25 Suits at $15.50 Get the Habit. Go to Bil Brothers UNION SQUARE 14th Street, near Broadway. 279 Broadway, near Chambers. 47 Cortlandt St., nr. Greenwich. 125th St., Corner Third Av CALL AND MAKE er a OWN TERMS Write for Our Speclat Catalogue of Those Outtits, \fiaioa CAN DY SPEOIAL FOR THURSDAY. je Cocoanut Cream BROWN,—Mrs, JULIA BROWN, beloved wife of Adam. Brown, May 18, Servicoa at late realdenon, 398 Bree ks Brooklyn, on Batardi 20, at 8 P, Interment at Weshington Comotery, day, at iP, M ht LAUNDRY WANTS—FEMALE. ¥o ‘ea ne) ite ki-par 4 naa hea aging ye ae ile ates Pcie LAUNDRY WANT ORAL rat at