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viaae in front of the 614 church tetore | xe fighting Ceased, The streets were) full of hate, dropped during the fight, id stained with blood, Residences res had been broken open and a \ Nquor ae possibile. broken open. They had been vol ag footholds of defense and pro- isetion, for sleeping quarters and what were es and drink they offered, Federal Colonel Dead. The fighting was confined to the sou! asierm portion Of the otty near the \-acks when the correspondent was tne plaga, Whether all the soldiers {Hi in the barracks or only a fe w pained Was not known, One lone was standing off ten rebels the Manta Fe street bridi i Olvera Zuniga, official Federa dan in Juares, wae seen in the Te said that in the hospital on De La Pas there are forty wound- wenty-five of whom are @oldiers ad fot counted more than fifteen eral dead ¢ doctor knew that Manuel spborel, in command of the garrison, hed been wounded, and he had heant | at he waa dead. Tamborei was the ‘hope Who-aaunted the insurrestos with wardice and dared tiem to attack e insurrec had retorted that they 4 kik him tf they caugh: him. Phe! tor also that Col. Manuel Puebilto, mmanding the Federal cavatry, bad on wounded, though Gen, Juan Navarro, with @ command, resolutely held out in| « barracks near the centre of the « the rebel took most of hie can- » and after noon directed their fire 6 last Federal strongiold, The firet vt had a tellink effect and it was poced there would be a siaughter un- fore Gen varro surrendered. Gon, Pascual Oromo, com- funder, interviewed {1 Juares, decinred toat none of his chiefs had been hurt, that he bad practically driven all Co « Federals from the town. The cor yondent talked with Co!. Puebitte of Federal anny, who has @ wound 11 eye, Puabditto aid that Col, Tam- He said he hardly had could take the 1 was dead. eved the insurrecte san 90 eanily All night long there was intermittent | ©, but most of the troops on both es took advantage of the night to some rest In preparation for to- y's confllet, Fires started tn the | rnoon by the insurgents broke out | v at nightfall and spread from «| points in the city. The Juares -offlce and several adjoining butld- 1) “8 were destroyed. Atl A. M. the * began to subside and Gen. Orosce, manding the insurgente, ordered his tire force of 1,500 Into action against {the penned-up Feders:s, Orozco and Villa hoped, by concen- ating their entire attack on the tufid- nas defended by Navarro, to Grive ‘ Federals into the open and force < invarro to surrender. Navarro appear- el to be plentifully supplied with am- sunition, however, and hie men poured withering fire into the rebeel ranks iss they attempted to carry the gait iS The final assault ,frongholis bedmn shortly after day- te vt Word that Blanco's reserves ere coming caused Gen. Oresoo to neentrate his fire on the jail and VEnchedral, Custome-House and school- e. By § o'clock the Federale had! 4 from the Custom-House and the to and to hand encounter occurred. Most of thie force of Federals were killed or wounded, it te reported. Volunteers Fight. By ® o'clock Orosco’s tronpe nad )Pressed @ emali body of Federeie into | ie @ohool Mouse and were attacking | \fleroely. A quarter of an hour later the Federal commander evidently touched a Niddem mine near the echool house, as there was @ terrific explosion and the | rebels scattered. The Federals were [evidently frightened by their own mine, |however, for when the insurgents re- tturned to the attack the school house | was deserted, Oresece then turned to the cathedral, and was pouring @ withering fire into the Gefenders, when Bianco « reinforce- mente wept up the street and into the old ehurch betore the Federals could form and stop them. Geveral wounded rebela who partictpated in the fight at the cathedral have been brought he | They report that the defenders of the hurch offered a most determined re sistance, and that moat of them died figthing, When they were driven trom (he emtrance to the cathedral, the hand- ful of Federals surviving fled into the tower, where all had to be killed by ‘Too Good to Keep Here's some news that’s wwing to be filed away as All stores | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY * MOURN AT FUNERAL OF DEAN OF RABBIS Police Hold Throngs as Body. | of Jacob Weiderowitz Is Borne Through Streets. ;HELD HIGH POSITION. | Was Chief Rabbi of Orthodox Jews of America, Per- haps of World. * thronge ewarmed through Streets of the Fast Side to-fay to the passing of the hearse that , the body Jacob Welderowtts, rabbi of the orthodox Jews of Americn mame way chief rath! of the orthodox of the World—who died at mid- tn his home at No, 220 Henry the atch carried chiet ) procession ata the Rabbi's home at 2 o'clock. Henry street wae lined with police hold back the great crowds that pressed tn upon the funeral sort Not since the funeral of Kis predecesor, Rabbi Jo- sepn, has there bean such an outpouring of the orthodox Jews in New York, and the reverent multitude followed the sioW moving procession of carriages to the foot of the Williamsburg Bridge, Which the cortege crossed on tte way to the Bayside Cometery Route Well Policed. InMector Schmittherger had policed |! avery block of the route followed by the funeral procession to prevent any neh outbreak as that which occurred at the ed trom to funeral of Rabb! Joseph ‘The procession moved from the aynas moaue at No. 160 Henry street to Pike street, to East Broadway, passing the Home for the Daurhters of Jacob at No. #1 (an Institution for aged women fn which the dend man was greatly in- terested) to Delancey street and thence tothe Williamsburg Bridge <Sinoe-the deat) of Rabbi Joseph, Wel- erowitz had been the dean of the orth: odox Hebrew clorsy of this olty, He had occupied an exalted position among the rabbinical clergy of New York aince he came here from Moscow, twenty-two years ago. His grasp of Talmudic and Tabbinioa! law was coneldered unsur- | throughout the world and it was @ epecial mark of Mstinction for any young rabbi to have pgesed a satisfac. tory examination at the hands of Rabbi Weiderowits. Friend of Rothechtid. ‘He had travetied extensively tg Bu- rope and was a close friend of Baron De Hirsch and Baron Rothachikt He was urged by Baron Rothechild to take eharge of Jewry in the Argentine Re- pubic, but upon arriving tn thi country he decided to end his da: here. He has left a Talmudic library of many thousané volumes. He is survived by two daughters, Mra. | Edith Pear of New Brunswick, N. J., and Mre. Hannah Schissersom of Mon- the victorious insurgents, as they fused to eurrender. Watle the evacuation of the city by the Federal troops was compleie, emall equede of Juarez citizens who volunteered to help Naverro de! Weir city at noon were still Aghting from behind barricades, One auch equad, comprising fifty men, stood be- Rind the ruins of the jail and held the {nsurente at bay, refusing to sur- render under any conditions Madero himself did not actively par- tietpate in the fighting at Juares, leaving the direct command there to Orosco and Villa, while Blanco remains with 9) men outside the city, prepar- ing to prevent any flank movement, ‘The removal of the inaurgent wound- 4 was carried on under the personal ‘on of Gustavo Madero, Ameri- under flags of truce, wero doing the work, Gustavo Madero hav- ing pereonally guaranteed all expenn The United States troops had conald- | erable trouble with the Mexicana on tho American side, who insist on lining the fiver front directly opposite the firing. Two or throe were arrested for throwing rooke at the United States soldiers, re Koneteh: important history. § Imso far as it is of decided |} nlue to publicity-seekers, Skhowing them, as it doc 8, | he greatest source of adver-| sing RESULTS, it is set forth here for public perusal; Advertisers had 490,620 in- dividual announcements printed in The World dur- ing the first three montis of this year—169,260 more than in the Herald~-more than double the number blished in any other ew York newspaper, A Record Worth » Remembering! ‘ ww ~ / Rvans, vf. Mowrey, 3t Zimmerman, sb. e Hergen, ¢ Ragan, and Day Umptres—K lem to The Prening Wood wa IN PARK, BROOKLYN May le ane’ weather con the Hrookiyn and St. Loule teams, Both managers were bent on Winving the game, Salles, the Cand na Wy SOULHDAW, WAR Bent In to do & for Bresnahan's crowd Kana 6 of Dahien's new A the plitoning vie Dod ry Ainals got busy sieht off the to neore two rune in Hu " pacrit etchy'a® oraten t hird, the ball 4 a ate ty eat, Znmerivay and ond Wvane'e inBeld ovr. i umay hay of the Gaynor. stand, squad have be Shield > storm, to Watch Funeral Procession of Rabbi Dean GROPSEY PICKS. Class, Fourteen of Them Being Patrolmen. Commissioner Cropsey announced to- | day that the lists of policemen who are to be awarded medais and honorable mention #n the police parade next Sat- been made up. There are nixteen men in the highest clase to re- ceive honorable mention and be com- mended for personal bravery. comprine fourteen patrolmen, @ Heuten- ant and @ sergeant The winners of hinelander, | Club and Brooklyn Ctttzen be selected from this list in dt will also get credits of three points each tn thelr civil service examinations, the Departmental, B Meyer, Automobile medals will | These and the men In the st @ingled out for commenda- tion alone cow, sixteen grandchitiren and elght | groat-grandehildren, lidutenant, Seer ees | patrolmen excellent there are one captain, one three sergeants and forty For honorable police serv! one sergeant and se men *have been selected. Names Kept Secret. ‘The names of the medal winners will Several planned for this & e@upplementai picked men, who will execute fancy and riot manoeuvres in front of the grand Another will be a of thirty-two Breen and Seret United States army, The following nm awarded hon and commendation, the ¢ each case being deemed to constitute an Individual act of personal bravery Wheelwright, Lieutenant . B82, ear's James M features dress parade. 1 Mth precinct, for ing @ man and a woman from drowning tn Jamaic mention for © one Heutenant, n patrol. have abe Kept secret until they are called out ‘ine to be honored ®y Mayor heen One it parade of dritl men under LL ‘Troy, formerly of the by 192 members of the force rable mention cumstances in Bay during a violent glectric June 18, 1910, Patrolmen Who Are Commended. Shield No, 8148, Dantel the Newt re for J Firat precinct, for the rescue of a man from drowning in East Sept. 8, 1910. Dennis O'Mea DOES TARE m drowning at the Battery et N pr the O'Leary, duly 10, 1 in attempting drowning in Hast street, Sept. 2, 1 James Ge a irty f three drowning in 1 sixth #treet, Ju Martin B. Zeldier Hundred and Sixty River, wi Vier 1, Shield No. 2463, the rescue of a man Park Boat Si gos, evidence IDANGEROUS WE! WEAPONS BILL PASSES THE SENATE, Landing, | 10, 1910, August Schi MD, shield No, 6758, manth children at @ “fire at No, 14 Forsyth treet, Manhattan, March 11, 1910, arts 5. Owens, shield N , ninth <ayiigm inet, for the rescue of we BATTING ORDER hildren at a fire at No, 104 4 4 street, Manhattan, March 11, 1910. Hous aud bv precinct, for the rescue of a boy bil ning in Kast River, at Hast | | (Specially Phe ~ FAGING HUSBAND, MEDAL WINNERS | SINGER NEARLY ONPOLICE FORCE —FAINTS IN COURT nes! Cour: early the wh Soup I isn't Broadway oadway and Wall street, ered in a room in West Forty-fifth street and earned $105 a week wh ing Pi shows" Anna Held, to the extent of The husband n Justice Sixteen Men in the Highest But Smelling Salts Save Her— | Husband Says He Can't Pay Alimony. Mme, M. Genevieve Luneschioss- Mosher, a tiny brown velled, trembling woman, who calls herself a “prima and who sang in several recent comle operas Jean Lu- Was so nervous when her action for absolite divorce came up to-day tn} Justice Gerard's part of the Suprem that when the clerk called Meyer Moscovitz as @ witness she arose hiesi- was discov- this year with a young woman He pleasantly greeted Laneschloss and asked him. to have a seat, which ws de- clined, The name of the young woman was not disclosed. Called to testify to her occupation Mra, Mosher stated she was « singer le engaged in he had lead nocolate Soldier." rts in several oth: and was at one time averred that his Income was “so small aa to be entir nifleant, in fact, indiacernible. was a time, he sald, some ye When he was married in 18, when he earned something like $4,000 a year while with A. D, Mosher & Co, He ts hot connected with that conce and does not get that much, he § “Oh, what a fibl just Ike him, Announced the falr young plaintiff, Court adjourned with their lawyers, assembled n opposite places in the corridor, te looks well and he's dressed well, he, and I'll bet he makes jlenty she added, still trembling the unexpected vist of the hus band to the court-room with his f Mosher's caring eapacity ographed tor The Even rg Workl) 10, 1911. rm three | Rose and ¢ 9 to i r TH bhre Chap zi Mo | Mullet | the Warring | | Amal. Am. NM (Shut to 10, " }ran and finished as named, SBCOND malden twa-ye PIMLICO RESULTS. RST RACE Fillles and years old and up; six fur Que 113 (Shilling), e& put, w Nightfall, 10, ‘out and out, second: out third, ‘OND RACE-Selling LEXINGTON FINISHES, and upward lo, 12 (Gou e), Kecond Time—1.12 Jack, Butter Jig, Ball, Bluetrina, t Mist also ran RACK ), secone me, 0.01 ‘oreopsis, I Walter B., and Foxcraft also 1 RACE Handicap reald# and up; #ix fur uultapec, 121 (Koerner), won Mi A; ¢ sworth, IRD thir er also ran. YALL STR STREET RACIN mares, . out OS (MeChaey), lexamira, 8 to Land 7{ Herpees also Selling; purse $3 for six Dainty May ons, RESULTS AND ENTRIES PIMLICG ENTRIES. RACK TRAC «for la Wood tatingly and walked to the railing, Her | olds; Montanimery and WS discomfiture was aggravated when her| Lamb, Yon ra hCG Maiden Retr husband, Howard H. Mosher, a tali,|! to by firs . Fi ‘ handsome young man, ranged himself | "7 tae and 7 to 1. se alongside lis counsel and took notes. third J Mosher did not defend his wife's charge | Mollie Ke Naughty Tare View Monive of statutory offenses, but contested ger | Dipper, Ei Maxentus | oe eFit? act. Maite vat plea for alimony. jalso ran aud fints wried if 4. “I'm going to faint; catch me” ehe| THIRD RACH exclaimed to her brother, Jerome 8. | Inile.—-Springmas, 106 ¢ Laineschloss, “en she was called to the |S to 6 and to 10, first stand, but whe did not faint, thanks to] (Shilling, 1 to Le # to 1 te 8 thera use of a dainty bottie of smell. |Ond: Unerisi. 10 iMecahey), Ist ing salte. Idle Michael, Kenyon, Knight of Her brother gave testimony on which | Uncas, ‘upervivor and Cully Hunk also Mrs. Moshe sked her divorce. ond= jran and finished as nan ing to him, Mosher, who 1s a broker on | —————_— I fur- len FOR TODAY 7.9 Moon’ rete... 8.9 ~—GUNTS START OFF After Typhoid WITHILEAD ON CUBS, — enn BATTING ORDER. & f scale Mitera nce, th, Heil well Devlin, at ‘ Movers, « Wiltae, Carpires—Rresnan and O'Das foeei9! tn The Brenig World AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK, NEW YORK, May 10—The 1a hot fight between old-time enenies drew A crowd of 140M entivelsatic far to the Hin ‘Top this afternoon to take a tecond stant at the Giants and| i the Cubs, The throng was a trifle too large, for the stands and pes had to be stretched in left fleld eo + the overflow could romp on the grass. This aleo necessitated e establl: of al Ground rule limits hits that direction to two b The atmosphere was so that} hnindreds of fans shed the! coals and wave the first elirt sleeve diepiay of the season. Incidentally the hot weath- er played havoc with the crowd in the subway, who crushed againet vators, Two or three and others, rather than take the c of being mashed, climbed the tong | ways to the surface | Managers Chance and McGraw ally picking Pfetster and Wiltae, two veter- an loft-handers, against each other. Wiltse got away to a flying sti veld the Cubs a reaching firat base. Giants then took their war sticks and made things hum. Before the dust had sovtled two Tuns were across the plate ein the opening round, and New York was off in the lead, ed with a clean sini@le to Was forced out by Doyle, ing Doyle to seco them romped home on Murray's long | drive down the right fou! line three ‘There a Kreat chance for run fanned and fouled the catcher. TWO RUNS The Cubs again ate out of Wiltse's ning, the side going three order. It was their Kot a little scare when Zimmerman led off with a base on balls. This was changed |to joy a minute later, however, when | Kling hit into a double play. Pfeisfer singled, but Sheckard died easy | In the last half of the third the Giants again started things with a whoop and practically cleaned up the game. De- Vore got a base on bails for a starter, And L. Doyle hit to J. Doyle, who tried to make a@ force play at second, dropped the ball and both run- were safe, Snodgrass bunted, but Devore out at third. FACE Removed Noting can be more distigurivg or em: With Freckles, hiperfiuons F Res re when demonstratin, ind up-to-date rem eh fmtlish for’ you Marvellous Methods John H. Woodbury Only at 23 West 23d Street New book free, ‘How to for the Skin, 48 the of prdy Complexiin: Hands” the Halt acd Scalp.” Easy to Remember Easy to say to the grocer man; easy to get—most all of them have it. GET IT TO-DAY, DDYS BRAND OW English SAVCE {t adds just the right zest to gravies, soups and salads, Per bottle Made by E. 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