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dhe says, he and the gl ‘ lac WOMEN, OH, SO for a Baker. “1 4on't know why I love her but do.” | Whis is the tenor of Ernest Wich- dendak: plaint before Mnhgistrate Mayo in the Harlem Court to-day, ‘@aly Ernest didn't sing it according to the approved manner. He woot, All the time he wax tolling hig strange tale of love, in which he confessed to @ deep dun! cdoration for pretty May Mtreit, the complainant in the case, id also for his wife, he was shedding big tears all over the bench ‘Wichlenbake, who is thirty-five years Hun- @red and Thirty-ninth etreet with his + (Wife and aix children, was arraigned on @14 end lives at No, 9 East 01 the charge of disorderly conduct. * “Pretty Miss Streit says that the man annoying her in front of her home wos fat No. 2229 Second avenue, last night. "Your Honor,” sald Wichlenbake them both, oh, so much!" Wichlendake sa; ferlously fascinating Miss Streit two Years ago when }p,Was @ prosperous Merchant in the Bronx. So subtle was of the fuir-halred May in: Cy t he left his wife and family and \Goenea' girl to Jorsey City, where they 0. ‘up a Dakeshop, After six mont! Y wave Up this plan, and ever since, irl have been in lous ‘places, hen Miss Streit's father, untouched the throbbing tale of dual love, vo- rously asserted that Wichlenbake ldn't love his daughter and never did man wept loud and long, ie toad tiy' he Gtled. “itt can’t eee her @lways, I love her and I love my wife, too, Oh, I love that girl 60,” MY qirprised even Magistrate Mayo lemand for her child by Miss Streit, “Where is this child?” saked Magis- Mrs, Wichlenbake, the wit .. Wichlenbake, 5 ahe had been cating for the husband over a year ago, on BET pela ts wan't my baby," ing Streit. Fy me Breit. Ihave more right to letrate Mayo instructed Mrs, bak in to produce the child lenbake Stier ee over to ite proper #) ave no if pave vy We Mpc ohild,” he ‘Wichlonbak till in 8, 8 tears, = Yerly lectured by the Maxistrate,. and yon hig solemn promise to leave Miss 4 it alone t : he Be ang 9 aia to his wife, ed BY NAN PATTERSON “The Flower of the Tombs,” « remark. able story which Nan Patterson wrote © while in prison and has since completed, @ serial exclusively in al eppear as : Bvening World, beginni ‘5 R. Te ey ginning next sat i HAD NEVER SEE HS DAUGHTER Washington Man Is Disappoint- ‘ed When 20-Year-Old Mary Lewis Failed to Arrive on the Teutenic To-Day. On the pier of the White Star line, waiting for the arrival of the Teutonte, | to-day, was T. L. 1. No, 81 U street, W., Washington, D, | Mr. Lewis had come there with his ond wife to greet his twenty-year- @id daughter, whom he had never seen. As the steamer warped into her dock he waved an American flag and peered a builder, of @long the decks in a vain search for a a red, white and blue girl wearlng ette on her shirt w t. Phere wa @ny such signal in sight, When the 61 e ashore Mr, Lewis and his wife walked among them, but falled to recognize the nussenger he was walt- passengers Ang for. ‘Finally he impressed the services of Chief Bischoff, of the Custom officer @nd Detective Tom Dunn, of the sam " ard. ) oMr, Lewis had with him a receipt f the ticket that he had pu naed and oh he had sent to his daughier for 4 age on the Teutonic. He could ne erstand why it was that she had not led as by agreement When I left Wales twenty years 0,” Mr. Lewis sald, “Mary was not rh, She came on carth two months after 1 left tie old Y and, her | VERY MUCH! ‘and a Baby Make Trouble try @an’t help loving that girl, She has a strange influence over me, I've tried to be tri to my wife and family, but d Tove thia girl too much.? But I love my ‘wife, too," corrected Ernest. "I love he met the mye- trange feature of the case which the for the bab; at was born to Miss Birpit and ‘her UT SS THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 22, tehgth uo (Air—Suwanee River.) Away dowryupon the Good Ground farm, Far, far away; There's where my heart {s turning ever, There’s where the Big Chiefs stay. All up and down the polis’ station Sadly I roam, MUST BNE UP $1000 ORL Man Threatened by Hand” Gets a Second Letter, but Police Think It Is Only a Joseph Vigoritt!, who Ives at One Second avenve and who was , | Monday night for shooting a revolver at a member of the | was making off with $100 of his money, was in Harlem Court again to-day with a second letter, which he declared he | had just recetved, The second letter differed from the | thing which resent Tooeevelt re first In that it was written with a type as nded $1,000 Instead of | ¢ that the man who was | e 1,40 would wear a white “Black Mand’! Jwently undertook and su. | writer and der DOWN UPON THE GOOD GROUND FARM. By T, E. Powers, iC be. Lib mmr Ta) Ne fewamrion HiGKee f ) a HERE WAS A, MAH BOUGHT APIG INA FORE put MuRPRY SAW IT AND He, MAN WENT) BROKE — TARVIS ( una AU “Tanwers Still longing for the old plantation And for the Good Ground home. All the city’s dark and dreary, Everywhere I roam; 5 Oh! take me to me dear old Murphy, Down to the Good Ground home. RVIS. ROOSEVELT AND CLEVELAND ARE CORNELL IDEALS Far East War and Equitable Quoted to Prove Their Greatness, ITHACA, N. Y., June 2.—President Roosevelt and Former President nas examp Amuglean charac energy an of purpose b esident Jacob Gould hurman in his address to the graduat- lasses of Cornell University to-day. Yo you thought of the unparalleled esstully a reas the man who got the $100 whe rand place the ‘Phe penalty for fall. ure of Vigoritti's 1 In court was a young fellow r Richard Cogan, of East One F gervice. Ho explained hie errand to them and they with a corps of assist-| ta,went all through the ship and | among the passengers on the pier In a Vuln search for the girl, She was not ul the Magistrate quested by a man named Jones to me Vigorietl was in wrth a ylew to the ending of the carnage in far-off Manchurta “No man ut superb courage | hone gpiration 9 have an honest purpose cou 18 a vast corporatl vst for widows and or; Ions of dol sIx months we bh object of unt H HUNT SHIP TO GET $100,000 IN DIAMONDS Officers Board Teutonic Off Nantucket but Fail to Find Alleged Smuggler. from abroad two deteotives connected Custom-House Sar steamship Teutonic off Nan- tucket to-day in search of a passenger who Is supposed to have In his posses- | than $100,000 worth of dia-| monds that he was smuggling Into this An extra force of secret me were stationed at the pler eo that when | brought to trial be: C. White and a jury in the Bupreme TST SUT ACANST SUB Capt. Stuart Seeks $75,000 for Injuries at Park Avenue Ex- plosion—Belmont, McDonald and City Also Defendants. Marlin Stuart's action to ro- .%) damages from August Bel- mont, John B, McDonald, the Subway yard the Clty of Construction Compe New York for tn, cuused him by the explosion of dynamito tn front of the Murray Hill Hotel, on January , 1902, which necessitated hig retire: ritlsh Navy, wae Justice Truman mont from the the ateamer docked an arrest could be speedily made. The men who boarded Nantucket watched the fifty-one first- cabin passengers carefully all the way They questioned the course, the nd Japan together into Quarantine. stewards and other offic giving @ description of the man A such’a well-nigh } no man without the tn- 1 the flower safely from se another example. olding in| nans unimagin= lars, But the best Life Assurance spotless rep: the captain. thelr man was not aboa gram to that effect was sent from Quar- | antine to the Collector A. rd and a tole were subject solid as | {M | tlonally careful examination of their | Court towtay. Capt. Sturat was a patron of the Mur- jvay Hill Hotel at the time the explo- | slon occurred, and he alleges that the nervous prostration induced by the ex- plosion rendered hie health such that a ers of the ship.| joard of Surgeons of the British Navy held aa examination Into his physical without dtsclosing the nature of thelr) condition and declared him incapacitated business, The only person on board! for further servic who knew what they were after waa| ty.fiye years of a the ship got te | Capt, Stuart 1s represented by Sandy Hook the sleuths decided that| Hawes & Metcalf and Frankiin Pierce, Austen G. Fox and De Lancey Nicoll |with Assistant Corporation Counsel of the vigilance of the, Burr and Stover, appeared for the city, on board| Austen G, Fox and Delancey Nicoll are counsel for John B, McDonald, | August Belmont 4s defended by Strong | the |& Cadwalader, Inspectors Were after 1s a big diamond QOIMPMRIAL yAciT cui, ther died soon . Since it time she has been reared b and as 1 was rather prospero! ently [ decided to send for } nd wife and I came from W. erday and we surely ye! ed | t ind her on the ‘Teuton Phere ty) Magistrate ¢ Ing for me to do now but go back young fashington and wait t from| had threatened him with it, bu au to why she falled to take pas- on the Teutonic,’ $e KING OF DENMARK » DANGEROUSLY ILL,|\% weror Will! —Court Alarmed, KIEL O@ernany, June ftern itiam received at pounding that King & stian of Den- is in a state Of groat weakners, Which 19 giving his entourage much von. ry ve nments, HER PI —————___ RISON STORY, rm, exclusively in The Eve Magistrate Mayo dismisse Vigoritt, and told the Hast C on T av ts abour the a | thentleky of the second letter Vigoritt! | has received, MILITIA WORKING HARD. ‘Twenty-Second ins Fortifications at State m Gets News That }@ Awed Monarch In Very Weak TATE CAMP, Peekskill, N. ¥., June 22—Afier three days’ rs. are now being instructed In the Reports from Wiesbaden a few dave ribed the King as well enough Wi out and take part in small en- the unfavorable f the camp ‘re- noon & pro- 1 porte, Was carried out, Funs, and 4 Flower of the Tombs," a beau- Fomance written by Nan While in prison, will appear Rext, Saturday, pf ra, its orga tegrating, and the s \y Mf bankru 6 appar w Jor | kon | fore ro i the |Pa of that sturdy, honest, and absolutely rellable Amer! Grover Clevelan: — ROOSEVELT NOW WILLIAMSTOWN, Willams College by students, alumn conferring n the President | United States the somewhat degree of L, H, D., President Roosevelt reached here |. to-day honored him. e n the spring and thit| he purchased a quantity of loose dia~ monds in Paris, Berlin that he booked passag White Star boats sail nd Vienna, and on one of the Nl oceuptes a site on the college grounds, He faced a day of activity. which called not only rtielpation nthe commencement ox: sex but the deliver the people of Wil Aeparture on his retur of an address ‘nto Washington, ama and Pittsfeld and possibly other fg hie train passed thre college, exerolses, according. | ‘ Arm tho custom of years, were held in the DOCTOR OF LETTERS. | Congregational freshly cut from the nearby woods, Besides President Roosevelt, 2nss), oid Tune 22 = lege Was oat to Fh 8 thronged to-day | and visitors to wit- | ness one of the most Interesting and Im- bridge- | portant events In Its history, Joseph H, Choate, Root and Mr, he LL.D, degree, President's reception amounted After the applause had subsided he delivered a short address, At the conclusion of the exerisers and after_the audience had been dismissed the President | wn the aisle of the church from which point he ad- large gathering of oltizens ‘Williamstown. A of his addresn to the fara ieee er ww Ls North Adama... that of | of the unusual! ctor of letters.” to an. ovation | evening after a busy day at Worcester, where he recelved a doctor of laws degree from Clark University, and for the night he wus the guest of President Henry Hopkins, of the college which |by President i public, The President found bis guiet night’ shortl: fhe home of Dp ipa, wich trade went | A Test Case, The case is the first of a number of at case in order that it may be decided whether the city, the Subway Construc- tion Company and John B, McDonald. who built the road, are Hable, It is maintained that a public nulsance was jointly maintained by the city and the ‘8 of the Subway In keening similar sults, and ts brought as @ construc’ not perform the work, Bubwey was & Gen, Ira A. r was died a plosion from injuries recel: | rock fell upon him in the Subway. nt trlal, Frai the plaintiff, fendants were been grossa neglect r olty In petmittlyg the storage pounds of dynamit proximity to the dwellings In Park av B. McDonald was the first wi! q nh ‘4 ler, ine sub-pontragtpe of sootion 4 o} of the Eubway, opeciat rhe plain ‘counsel then proceeded ‘the contract. | | Duke Nicholas Nicholalev fense He is now but for- a quantity of explosives In Park aves hue without proper safeguards, and that the elty 18 responsible for Injuries quatained by persons, althourh it dia contractor for the section of the Sub- way where the explosion occurred, and efendanta to the sult assert’ that It Is sald the case wi! be carried to the Court of Appeals. ter what nkiin Pp nitiined the case for ) en a shed In close 1908, \_ CASSINI NOT TO BE ONE OF PEACE ENVOYS Baron Rosen, His Successor at Washington, Likely to Be Chosen, (By Associated Press.) 8T, PETERSBURG, June 22.—The Russ sayy It 1s authorized to say that Count Cassini, the retiring Russian Am- bassador gt Washington, wiil not par- Uelpate In the peace negotiations, but will leave the United States immediately on the arrival of Baron Rosen, his suc- or. From independent sources The Aaso- clated Preas coniirms the statement ot the Russ that Count Cassini will have ho part in the peace negotiations, Foreign Minister Lamsdorft 1 Indis- posed, It ts understood that his condl- tion Js not serious, but his physician was called in last night and ordered the Minister not to leave his room to-day. There {s no int{mation, however, that this will appreci®bly delay the pending negotiations, It $m possible that M, Nelidoff, the Russian Ambassador at Paris, may not go to Washington, Dean of the Russian Diplomatic Corps he was the fitst choice of the Foreign Office, but he is of advanced age and his health is not robust, In such an event it 1s considered cer- taln that Baton Rosen will be appointed, -—. BRITAIN WILL NOT ADVISE ARMISTICE. WASHINGTON, June 2,—No assist- ance 1s expected {n Washington from the London Government In whatver ef- forts the President may initiate to bring about an immediate armistice or to prevent a clash before the conven- ing of the Washington Peace confer- noe. While the London Government Japan athy as shown the President belligerents togett feels that It cannot undertake to sug- est an armistice at this time. he British officials belleve, accord- ing to advices reaching this govern- ment, that Japan would be sacriflcing at deal {0 consent to an armistice At this time, and that after another defeat on land. the Russiass will be more ready to discuss peace, This, however, {9 but an honest dit- ference of opinion between Washington and London, Offictally the bellet here js that another defeat may Inspire the Pusslang to continue the war Indefinite- ly Tt le understood, however, that Lon- don will do nothing to hamper in any yay the President's efforts, having ex- {ts sympathy with’ his general pres purpose, —_—e-— GRAND DUKE HEADS NATIONAL DEFENSE.) T, PETERSBURG, June 2%2,—Emperor Nicholas has definitely appointed Grand second cousin of the Czar, dent of the Council of National De- WOOTEN'S TRIAL TOBE TO-MORROW (Indicted Lawyer Astonished by Justice Davy’s Action When He Appears with Counsel Pre- pared to Seek Delay. Much to the surprise of John W, Wooten, indicted on a charge of grand larceny In the first degree, and his counsel, Ernest Baldwin and George Gordon Battle, the trial of the case was set by Justice Davy In the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court for to- morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Wooten appeared tn court with his counsel to fix a day for trial. He Is to be trled on an indictment charging him with the theft of a check for $1,000 given him by David Rothschild, now a convict, but formerly President of the Federal Bank, which Rothschild gave him to pay to the Bankers’ Surety Company. It is alleged that he never turned over the money, but kept the weheck, ‘Nhe indlotment 18 separate from the Joint indictments found against Wooten, Armitage Mathews and Lawyer Ferguson in connection with the Roth- sohlld disclosure, The other cases are in abeyance. ——— PATRICK MELODY FREED. | Friend Will Care for Irish Patriot Who Tried Suicide, Patrick Melody, the Irish patrolt, who attempted to end his life in the fountaln atyMadison Square on Saturday night las, was to-day discharged from custody n the Workhouse on Black well's Island by order of Magistrate Beker In the vefferson Market Court. The discharge wax granted upon the pplication of “awyer Michael O'sul- ltvan, who told Magistrate Baker that Gen, OBelrne, Roderick J, Kennedy, of No, 66 West Fifty-third street, Robert O'Flaherty, of Fortleth street and Pighth avenue and Patrick J, Byrne, of No, 105 Fast Thirty-first street had interested themselves {n Melody and would seo to ‘it that the mah was taken are of, . SEND POSTAL TO-NIGHT For Circular and Views , of EAST ELMHURST, -¥- city On the Hills at Ploturesque Flushing Bay THK (DEAL PLAGK TO. LIVE Comparison is challenged with every pain other’ town site j Half Hour from Herald : quara.%¢;, 07 Kach lot has water front privileges, Bankers Land & Mortgage Corp, es] MANHATTAN AVE., _BROOXLEN,, Tailor Shops: 110 Fifth Avenue The merchant tailor often gets ‘‘fits” from his clients because he doesn't give them fite. Our clients get perfect fits beéause they* wear Atterbury System Clothes which are ready--for-service garments made under modern Single or double breasted Naples Blue Suits— about half custom. 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Summer Suits ; These are clothes that show character at a that are as perfect fitting as a “full lined, that hug the neck and give ample room and grace at the shoulder, breast and back—Trousers that Febrics: Worsteds, Serges and For instance, our have neither OUR VALU. )FullTailor’d are “symmetrical.” Tropical Weaves, mein ade arerouolh ¢ have mi ‘ol 200 Mixed o'aithe 2s, 3s and 4s 0 a kind in the Suit stocks of the “upper” grades and marked them Broadway, City Hall SUNDAY WOR] 1D WANTS WORK MONDAY MORNING WONDER;