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BLAST SHOOTS LUSITANIA OFF ON HG. BOULDERS NTO BROAD Giant Rock Is Hurled Through Window at Churchill's by Dynamite. JUST MISSES ‘POLICEMAN daw ike od Foreman who dose of Powder: Is ploded Over: Ar rested and Fined: ite, was far too 1 shot a shower let big. boulders s unks of Jugged frock into Broadway this morning. On: | Projectile oa 1 through a wind: at Churchill» causing those he door;, an- éd past the ear of a police- (man, who ducked just in time. end “gust low enough to save his life. { Sadato Morgo, of No. 21 West Sixty- minth street, having brea ' ‘daybreak, was thoughtless about 1 ing a lot of late risers at Church suddenly lose Interest in their Brape-fruit and rolis. Morgo is fore- gman of the blasters who have been dblowing out rock at the southwest cor- ‘mer of Broadway and Forty-sixth street. adjoining the restaurant, pre- _Aparstory to'sinking the foundations for « theatre George Cohan ts buliding. Like an Earth Shock. Morgo falled to put the proper amount ef blanketing over a food heavy blast, and when he touched off shorthy after 9 o'clock Broadway and the upper Ten- aied to a shaking up ver knew F One large chunk of rock soared grace- fully out of the excavation, and with the provision of a Sandy Hook projectile hot through the restaurant window, Matting with a bang on a table, which was smashed to splinters. A walter who was just making the firet bow pre- fiminary to receiving bis tip broke all enown records by forgetting all about Mand making for the sidewalk Geven young ladies in rival style morning gowns and two lonesoz.e gen- tlemen who had been trying to read the Papers. propped against the carats: Without smearing soft-bolled egea on thelr fancy cravats Fose en masse and adjourned. No oné waited for his heck before hurrying out and the cash- ‘ter forgot to stop the stampeders beat- ing it & A second section of New York's strata istled most Measantly over the head of a motorman on a passing Broadway car, who did a deep duck while the rock smagked down on the Mraphelt with a baffléd thud. i Policeman's Escape. - A third rock just missed the hetmet ‘@¢ Traffic Policeman Alexander Knut- tel standing in the middie of Broadway at Forty-sixth street. The volley of @tones had caused a ively commotion jmong the chauffeurs and cab drivers pod borses. % eg —-Knurtet Pome cdol-headed quic fimated the numbc-—o! bout as fifteen. “reported. that yed person os- -tocks hurled One of them fell just $n front of an automobile that was try- | _ Ynx to make tho berth in front of the festaurant, and the man in the car lost Mts appetite and decided w! he neod- @4 was something in the way of liquid arve restorer. Altogether. it gave old way & sensation which stirred the Prost jaded. Policeman Knuttel, after feeling to Aemure himself that his head waa all Mhere, went into the excavation and Wrrested Morgo. He arraigned him be- Wagistrate Cornell, in West Side charging him with reckless hast ing ——-Phe—-Magintrate—and—former Btreet Cleaning Commissioner Wood- iY, who, sat with him on the bench, rent over the city ordinances on the @ubject, and Maxistrate Corneli an- Bounced that Morgo had Kklessly Blasted §% worth Morgo was being AUTHOR BALLOON DEAD NA QUARRY Robert .Louis Stevenson’s Bi- j; Ographer May Have Been Attacked While on Walk, DUNDEE, Scotland, Sept. 7.—Heary Betlyse Halldon., the blographer of Robert Louls Stevenson, has been found gead at the bottom of a quarry nei tis city. He started for a walk yes- ferdky with his dog. but che latter re- rnéd alone. A search was made for missing man, but his body was ly discovered thin afternoon, (There /wWas a wound behind the right mr, but whether it was the remukt of “an tack or sn accident hes ‘not do- ‘Mx. Halldon was lecturer on the Ei Han enguage aod iferature at Univ ere ty College,’ Dundee, and formerly was rer on tay In the imperial nlyerstty of Vienna, He was the nu- among other works. of “Robert Blevenron, a Life Study in Crit- nie “Emerson, Man and Teacher, in 3 “Introduction to the Poetical of Bir Walter Scott and nu- jerdus articles in the encyclopedias magazines. . ce OFFICIAL RESIGNS BEFORE / HUGHES HOLDS HEARING, _ ALBANY, Bopt, 7.—State Comptroller Wynn to-day was notified of the resig- tion of County ‘Treasurer Feng, ‘of Brooiy County, filed with the unt, Clerk of Brooms Count “Gov. “Hughes was to nave given a pext Monday afternoon upon inet King Ned by the Comp- nd allecine malfeasance in of: om five separate counts. ‘THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1907. - MAIDEN VOYAG RACING LUCAN Turbine. Cunarder Crowded ' With Notables as She Starts | Ocean Speed Test, | |SISTER SHIP SETS PAC iLiverpoot Fakes -2 Hold See the New Giant Lin Leave for New York. Pte POOL.” Sept and tts vieinity to-day con- rated thetr a consis —the departure steamer Lupita: Atlantic Iners. to New York Additional interest was given to the event in that the Lucania left port this afternoon, about two and a half hours earlier than the Lusitania, making pos- sible a trial of speed across the Atlantic between the former, steamer with reciprocating engines fly- ing-the British flag, and the latter. the largost turbine steamer. Both vessels will call at Queenstown to-morrow morning, but the tants wit Hor enter until the Lucania has cleared. so the older vessel will have a start of at. Jeast three hours over the boat which the Cunard Company butit with the view not only of beating the fastest time of its own ocqan greyhounds, but of regaining for Great Tiritain the dive ribbon of the Atlantic, which was lost to Germany a decade ago. Of course the officials of the Cunard Mne say that no race {s contemplated, but the engine-room crews of the two vossela have been busy for a week past | wetting everything in readiness with the expectation that the engines will be called upon to do thelr best on this oc- caston. 5 All the accommodation on both vessels |has been taken. For the Lucania 370 | first-class and 0 second-class passen- bwera’ haye been booked, and for ¢ Lusitania 480 first-class and 49% second- let The Include many notable | people. Among the passengers on. t. | Lusitania are Robert Balfour, M. P |B. C. Barber, H. G. Dolan, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hay, Mr, and Mr Robe: Goelet, Countess Dunmore, Mroand Mrs Cyrus H. McCormick, Laay Murray and 8. Cy Perkins. The Lucania takes the team of the Marylebone Cricket Club, which wil play & weries Of KAM In Amert ant Bipteo Ps J, O'Retlly DIED AT SEAAS HE HASTENED 1 SEE CHLDRE Andrew Ericeson, of Brooklyn, Sailed in Steerage in Hope of Reaching Home Alive. When the steamship St. Loula arrived to-day there were waiting at the pler the: four sons and two daughters of An- drew Ericsson. un undertaker. who Myed at No, 88% AUantic avenue, Brooklyn, and who died at sea on Wednesday as he was hastening home to vejoin’ his family. In spite of the fact that he was well- {Oxo MY Ertecson wad“ nie wits, Whe was his companion during a trip to his old home in search of health, were com- pellod to take swerage on the Si. Louls, being unable to Kel Nrat or second cabin pusrage on any steamer, ‘ Mr. Ericeson made 4p his mind two weeks ao that he was stricken with a fatal allment, and he told hls’ wife he thought a trip to his oid home in Sweden might do him so T faaiied mmediatels:. [didnot thrive: tn’ the-at He hastened to Sout first fast steamer home. would div before age -citme get the r fear tha he saw his six | Dassaxe In the ste Couls Ha Immediately me very ill, and on Wednesday he died, Yesterday Mra. Eiiccwon sent.a Marconigram to her children, anprising ;them of: their fath- ven deattr Ms, Ericoson was one of the best- known Swedish residents of Brooklyn and belonged to many societies. oe B. R. T. CARS COLLIDE. | Thousands of Workers Delayed By rage of the St iz anchorage of the Brooklyn Bridge to. day. As it stood an open Court street ‘ar, No, 3852, whizzed up, the motorinan applying brakes too late, The Court utreet car smashed into the Seventh avenue car, knocking the rear vestibule to_pleces. Fortunately but few persons were go- ing to Brooklyn at the Ume—9.30 A ‘Mt —und the worst was a shake-up for « few passengers and @ seven-minute de- lay for all the cars on the bridge, hold- Ing back some thousands of belated Brooklynites bound for work in Man- hattan, $< TWO KILLED BY GAS FUMES WHILE LOCATING A LEAK. HOLYOKE, Mass, £ept. John Collins was overcome by gas at South Hadley Fally this after- ovon. ‘Phe three men were employed ax repairers by the Chicopee any and were tryin, repair a leak in & gas main, L—The pedple of he swiftest ocean |’ Victoria | h children again as a last resort he took | Accident on Brooklyn Side. A jong, convertible summer-winter B. R. T.. trolley car’ of ‘the Seyenth | Avenue Une halted under tho Brooklyn} Woman Who Ca ot loo Ardent Gallic Wooer used Arrest { | | | i ONCE MORE ARE THE Teeth ‘on the Job, T WASH jest s being tiga tooth 3 President Roose: ly to this bel that any which ts too! not cd erly be! curtos, In the s Patt or some one else qualined peak for the tadmt Tatton --o meme -On Le 1 eat ls withheld INI i—Your ary Loeb attitude of t to. predatory Mr, Loeb said: “T unquallfiedly deny stration in regard he report that | ‘PARTNER GONE AND FIRM OUT $315,000 Chicago Man Declared to Have! Invested Money in Los- | ing Ventures } i] CHICAGO, Sept. 7—The [or « reeviversfor the pre ' Melding-Hall Manufacturing | yeaterday followed close up. ‘of the discovery by the Company n the heels cone: that ite missing pri | Jesse Edson Hall, had fatied to ac Vor $315 0 of tH n'a funds As far as every cdvered dollar of this mon! t into mining stock which was bi tangible property, wnich maue no money, and other es which the credi are willing hua | yoluntaril he now is. | tion would back {0 this, National Bank!» ithe company aggr ‘A pathetc feature ‘0: [condition of the mtys! dren, who are} © case ‘Ig the | ao's two chile e Hall hone NATURE FAKERS PILLORIED ON THE ALTAR OF FACT +-—_____.- Smile of the Administration Shows All Its! }iast night heir Prominence and | Old-Time Vigor Unimpaired. there ix any such tooth in existence. 1 hay n bitten many tmes by the President and he never yet has failed to eave impression of every tooth ia me. SA ret “I have no thers. that I I tell FRAN TISCO, Cal., Sept. Metoa Das just been se —Sec- . He hesitation In saying that Is such h. tooth. Moreover, I feel m yioliting no confidence when ou that the tcoth is to be sent uise to the Pac! We must demonstrate to these insolent nese the true power of the national ces, YSTER BAY. N. Y.. Sept. 7—(From taf naturalist) Thave just retumed m Sagamore Hill where I found the | dent engaged in felling forest He had broken his axe handle vas biting them down, dQ him of the story in to-day's ork papers. roscribe this tooth to me,"" he com- manded, “I told him” it was four Inches long, llow in color and weighed a roof 9 pound. . When I was eh the President opened his mouth 6 fullest extent. after bidding me We tite teeth. I did ao. ea Now, then," he exclaimed when the ato was ended, “do you eve yiuch Puny teeth as that tooth in shook my head “Bah!” he safd. art at work again tooth.’ CRIPPLED LAD ___ MALS Ath Aided by Readers of The Even- ing World, Donald Red- mond Will Play Ball. ‘The nature fakers It Is only a horse's Doneld- Redmond cam.walk-itke-other | boys now. and he says he's going to run next and play baseball lke other, boys ‘The readers of The Evening World all know Donald by this time. A lot | of the readers proved the generosity of thelr hearts by contributing to Iterally “pat him on Wim feet after the fire: story printed In this payer abou the » six-year-old tellow wno wae com | fined to his mother’s home on St. Ann's | avenue, Bronx, apparently m hopeless | et from hip uisease, Donald wanted to be strong and play ames like other) boys, and ne sald so, Thousands of Evening Wold readers Fead about Donald's wants and a lot of them came to his aid with money. | Mrs. Emily Redmond, an industrious, | hardworking woman, had to be away} {knew ane didn't have ‘not AUGUST WOOED —|SLEUTHS FIRE WELL BUT, ALAS, MOST UNWISELY Discovered His Affinity in a Married Woman and Got Inw Jail. Mra. Lotod Haddrer, a pretty youns Frenchwoman who says her husband ip a broker in Chicago, appeared in West Bide Court to-day to tell of the all-too-! mental August; tas. decerter | ardent wooing of te Bounet, who, ‘trom the ‘French army Mrs. Haddter-has been mother, who cppducis a Fren at No. 247 West Tr of that “‘Toura. boarders. He months and works as she says, ! visiting her h pension | betn h pel Shottly after the arrival Mme Haddrer, August discovered that she was his affinity and those gc goo eyes at her. 1 y he made a det wth another boarder that he would win her by the mere rolling of} hin’ languishing orbs. He lingered tn | the hall with a line of conversation like © Balzac novel, but Mme. Lolse Lwas tnoroughly Americanized and to suffer such treatment here, so she appealed to her awther. i And Then August Moved. i Wuguet. the temperamental, moved his trunx tha; night to No. 1 West Twenty-sixth atreet | After _he went Mme, Haddrer found | he had taken a photograph of her he | had casually picked up, and word came to her that he was showing It around the nelgnbornood with that ane was his affinity. On Sept. o she received @ billet doux | .2 him written on tne stationery ot Ue Baratoga—ciub.—in-it-the Guiltc heart-breaker said ne was denperately in love with her and wisheu ner w auow het appreciusion Of his unseiush devo- tion by giving im 2 franca per woex— jn other worus, #% in the cun of ine busin Unis, The indignant young woman brough: the better to ietrate Cornei in! West Side Court yesterday, and the Magistrate rose in bis wrailh aud told her to tell the police of the West Thirty-eeventh street sation to act. Mrs. Haddrer took Polico.nan Culhaoe to No the comment} 1W West Tweaty-sixth street | While (he policeman concealed himsets | she sent up for Bounet, who cans grandly down and kissed her hand with a fine alr, demanding: | Will you elope witn mer” Yes,” answered you want money, mon an ‘Mais oul, I want that money for my board,” cried the impetuous August, Certainement!”” replied Sime. Had- drer, "L will see to your hoard ata place where you will learn English, | tots was Culhane’s eve to jump out In court to-day Bounet “ana! ‘ang nap him ladmittea writing the letter. bur sald he was drunk when he did +—<Only_tour_months here?" exclaimed | TMaglstrate Cornell aghast “What will] be doing when you've been here rou a year? I hold ou, 19, $1,000 ball for | trial in General Seasions charged with attempted blackmail SULTAN OFF T0 BATTLE FOR THE RULE OF MOROCCO Leads Army Against That of His Brother, While the Powers Face Crisis. TANGIER, Sept. 7.—Events in AMo- rocco are progressing with great ra- pidity, Yesterday both the Sultans— Abdul Aziz and Mula! Hafig—were re- ported to be leaving the rival capitais, Fez-and Morocco City, at the head of armies which had been levied in hot haste and which may decide within a fortnight the destiny of Morocco's mon- archy. The immediate objective of these forces {s the anclent city of Rabat, on the Atlantic seaboard, the prior posses- sion of which great centre of Western Istam's national Lfe probably would have an important, if not a decisive, desiring upon the struggle ter supreni acy. Halfway between Fez and Moroc- co City, Rabat ts the natural frontier port, dividing Northern and Southern Morocco, and there the dramatic tn- terest of the situation for the moment culminates. | Both Sultans are ons of the same fa | ther and they are daily issuing pas-; sionate appeals to the patriotiam and re lgious enthusiasm of the nation—eac: denouncing his rival as being worse! than an infidel, a traitor to Islam. In the meanwhile the Powers have yet decided whether to recognise Mulat El Haid. his correct name, ax Duilun of tae pouth, seemingly await ing the tesult of the appeal to the ar disiament of civil. war, The general iupression here, based upon telegrams from London and Paris is that France and Spain have resolved Central Park South was the scene of a lively Uttle riot this afternoon in| ‘Han he has worn in ‘several’ years | which m orowd of clove to: 1,0 men | Untted States Senator Chauncey M. | way and the driver was on his peat and out | Broadway to Fifty-ninth street and | his way to a telephone and notified the from home dally, earning money to sup-| Upon the, immediate occupation of all Port lier two children, and she left’ the | the Morocosn seaports. which has caused F | Unlversa: cousiecation, tor It ts feafea Uttie lame boy in care of his fifteen-: by those who best know the charsets, | In Winnetka in charge of a housekeeper, Since Mr, Hall left they have | Tecelved no wo om him, nelthe- have! they received any money: with wh: meét the household expe nes. aoe tate how the boy Was fret brought 621,000 CHILDREN WILL Peteaniner oie Musas tieteekeiis ees and thls Was so Unusual and the boy's hupes to be. slroug. were so. « {uae the sory, touched many pease | Firat Donald received crutcnes ‘ands pustor cat, and then Dr. Hoth. of No far 'Park avenue, heard about. him through The Evening World and omened Lopate weak: to: tiie épotor kc eid wen! @ wel and to-day he walked Into The Hventry Wurld office to thank”the edttor for i REGISTER IN CITY SCHOOLS. Increase for the Coming Year Esti- mated at Twenty Thousand Over the Last One. According to the estimate given to-day repute | UP SeremAry sen fe Board ot nf, ee See taact Hg Let S aebep Om soreday bee | nde: Ve — . Houlter and John Lyona were killed and| total registration for the puoiic eonosts| Bway ae © BOY. Te when eis ROE purpos ichengeotiating peace, The Gen cuping | of Greater New York will be about @21,- 2 to. walk * five until. to-morrow, when he wil 000 for the coming year. SUA Ss aan kere fo, agend w maron on Taddere jaa Waite Gae| ‘Thin ts an increaee of 20,000 over tne|ing a good Ume.” said onan caia gpeity enemas otediither’ te to locate and] resietration of Maat year, whioh, in turn, Mm ial} i je Uh pes anion eommes, tn pewctiating wit | was 18,000 over that of 1906. pA recnuc se ered in | Frm commander are only ing te Yeur-old. sister Joespi ne. RecA to] “Some sympathotlc Ute girls held @ iho Moore that any extension of thi bataat to raise money for Donald ang itervention of France and Spain wil infallibly provoke further massacres of Christians Jews in ihe various towns on the coast In other words, @ situation has de- Yeloped which waa never contemplated at the timo of the Algeciras Conference, and it appears that serious events will follow. Spain, Sept. 71—The Germa Charters teeth to-da. CADIZ, Arg a from Casablanca ved I ternocn announced that [DEPEW IN FAVOR SHOTS IN CHASE | OF THIRD TERM AND START RIOT) FOR ROOSEVELT Mobbed by 100 Men iti Cen-|Senator Back. From Europe, | tral Fark South Atter Pur- His Remotest Idea That | of Resigning, | suit of Cowl Driver. 1 Win a better color and a brighter eye | Depew arrived in New York to-day on the “American lirer St. Louls tour of Europe which began. . last Senator Per mobbed to detectives and forced thein to take to their, heale Preeating this. the detectives had chased a coal truck from Fitty-seventh atree{ and Broad- fitting thelr revolvers at the driver. They shot nine or ten times-with utter Tecklessness of consequences. Witnes- fom assert that one of the sleuths was very drunk : The trouble’ starteq at Fifty-seventh sireet and Broatway, wliere. ja email v climoed on @ truck of the Thetford Company grabbed a thunk of oul ant heaved at the driver This impelled the driver to Jump down from his seat and wrap his whip around the «mall boy’s Ings y Sleuths in Pursuit. Two men wearlig detectives’ badges were mtanding On the western aide of Columbus Circle and saw the act of the driver. ‘They started for him, but | one of them couldn't run very, fast | | Depew talked freely at the starting with a ltt Joke ind fin- ishing with. the declaration that he Is in favor pf a thind term for Préaident | Roosevelt. He deciured that resignation | from the Senate was the thing furthem | from hia thoudghia and that he will go to work at his offices Monday. In hia white Fedofa hat and tery | Nght suit, the Senatur was conspicuow: among the passengers that cromled the | rail as the St. Louts came uj to her | berth. Mrs. Depew was with him. Sie held his arm while he talks to the reporters: Europe's Financiers Uneasy. “I am in favor of this new system of custams declaration,” he said, “but {t caused, some of the passenge:s on the St, Louls sone uneasiness, bectuse of thetr unfamiliarity with its workings. One of the 2 women, who forined such a large part of our first cabin list of 34, told me that she had « paper of pins and asked me wether sne iad etter Geclary it. Another woman, who was bringing “over& pair_of—trousers for her hudband, wanted to know whether she should declare them.” Whes thé. Senator was asked about the feeling in financial circles In Bu- of sight around the corner of Fitty- seventh street with his horses on the run before they fairly got into mouon. | When the detectives got to the Broad- | way corner the team and truck were just turning up Seventh avenue. The | detective who Is alleged to have been drinking drew his revolver and fired two shota. They pursued the truck up hing 1a unsettled over there. east on that thoroughfare half a block, Trance, which {s, of course, the no “accident or incident.” When he was asked how he felt he aid: “Never in my life have I been in better health and spirits.’ en hay they tried to slug they would have been worsted. and realizing tois they beat a retreat. The driver, safe from pursuit, made Thatford frm where the team and | trunk might be found. The man who! arrived to take charge of the team re- fused to give the name of the fugitive. nor-coyid- the-names-of tre detectives: be ascertained by the bystanders. BRIDE DIES SUDDENLY. Mra. Laura Bunderson, the nineteen- year-old bride of Samuel Bunderson, captain of the tugboat Albion, became ion board -her husband's boat while it wae steaming down the North River with @ tow of barges to-day. Capt. Bunderson put into the Fifty-ninth atreet pier and asked Policeman Galla- Kher to call an ambulance. When a doctor arrived from Roosevelt Hospital, the woman was dead. She waa a cot sumptive. BE SURE AND READ 5c. the Copy $2 the Year. DEMOC Jour plans. IT. SAMPLE COPY SENT ON REQUEST TELECRPHERS TO HELP STRIKE WITH Bl FAR Chief Russell Says Companies Talk of Machines As a = Threat, } Dantel L. Runsell, chief of the thie | Telegraphers’ Board of Strategy, oa' out the following stateqent to-day: “Wo are pot letting the strike settioe ment stories interfere tn the least witm Weare going along on tis assumption, based on twenty-four years of bitter experience, that we must make a finish fight, We have accepted adver tinements for the next six lesues of Fate Play, and we will continue to aceept them until we are satisfied there Is ne longer ahy excuse for the paper's ex- Intence. ” f _ "We have engaged Tammany Hall tor two weeks, beginning next Wednesday, {f the hall can be properly Atted up oF that time, for the most omginal fair ever held in New York. We expect to illustrate at the fatr the prograss of the. telecraph from Its etrilest days up ‘to the jatest Wireless inventions. 2 “We will establish wireloss telcgrapm ‘ons ‘n different parte of tho hall |The ils at our Fverntt Hall teade quarters are busy making kni-k-kracks foc their booths at the falr. We ee | timate that the fair wil! being in bee tween $18.00 and 29.0%. Machines Confession of Weakness. “The confession that the telecmph © oMctala meade tho: they are competied to use mechanical devices between New York and other bie citfes for the pure pore of handling me*mees js not news: to us. They would not have made the confession but for the fact that they saw an opportunity to fand out an Im= piled threat to the strike-> that ‘hotr Fifty thousand tickets have been ts sued in the district. The merrymakers will leave the clubrooms, at No. 33 West Twelfth street, at § o'clock Mom day evening for the picnic grounds. THE BRIDGE CRUSH IS NO PROBLEM A quick and effective ‘plan for its relief has been known. to the Bridge Department for six years. Why the Delay? First chapters of this interesting story appear to day im DEMOCRACY (The Leading Potttical and Civil-Service Weekly-) 32 Nassau St, New Yoru. RACY’ Established Forty Years [== ONeill Adams ett. Extraordinary Announcement See Sunday’s World Co. 20th, 2ist & 22d Streets giving full particulars of The Greatest Sale We Ever Held Be 4 right at the beginning of the New Fall Season -for our immense advertisement A most remarkable event fring occasional ahota, ontheother side. the| ‘obs would he filed by mr @ von if tex OZ ef, peeliig (hat the sicuths Hyonowe “France had | 416 not return ta work Immediately, BEN “i ready WBE on Rim. ewung ais team invest in the, United States. but the to the curb, siapped the brakes on nis! recpa’ shrinkagen In prices has learned 50,000 TAMMAYY MEN wheels and disappeared into Centrai {he French investor so much that for Park. When the detectives arrived ne| rareg “t ost the money will stay tn INVITED TO FESTIVAL, a waa out of sieht. Favors Third Term. ae of Apparently the baffled guardiana ot! «1 nave heard a great deal of thira| Leader Culkin, of Fifth District, the peace determined to arrest some | term talk on the other sie ami I Providee tor Grenis tetera bodyi for they reached out, grabbed two| know there jaa been great deal of it rovides tor i ratard here. I am in favor of President Roose- + . LnEcaIn Way mETTLATE Coto forthe! Velt and I any not a bit superstitious Night Carnival. crowd that had followed the chase about a third term. If the President 18] Xrrangements were completed to-day Attacked the Sleuth. three times? I favor Mr. Roosevelt.” | for ths summer-night festival which the One big, resolute man stopped up ana|_ “HOw about the ‘Big Stick? “ he wee| Tammany organisation In the Fifth Dis- cnashade: teav detectivesoeeor somes ene aria tare ot Men Te elt the | trict will enjoy Menday night. traces of drink, a jolt on the face that! s alor repeated | Leader Culkin has engaged a band of The crowanersoie iia er naan liuttaveatd Tre had done some automobii-| fifty pieces, and there will be fireworks were separated and so hemmed in ine |ing while abroad, had» met a great|and m parade of sight-seeing autome- they were unable to get to their clubs,|™any Americans and had encountered | piles. ok t