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as CHD DROWNED |, THE LAND OF WITH CHUM HE TRIED 10 SAVE Playmates Mourn Little Hero) and Comrade Who Perished | in Harlem River, NEITHER COULD SWIM, But 8-Year-Old Didn’t Hesi- tate to Plunge In When , Other Ws s Sinking. Two homes on Washington Heights are in mourning te and children West One Hundred and Fifty-first and West One Hundred and Fifty-sece ond streets have lost all thought of the holiday in the presence of the tragedy rhich robbed them of two of their mates, Julius Schiff, eight years| and Brown, seven, who} drown: the Harlem River ves-| In bated whispers} little Julius who, wim a stroke, jumped | N than The children taik of th very though unable to §nto the river in a Vain effort to save| his schoolm=te who had sipped into the water, | Julius wes the son of Aaron Schiff, Secretary of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, | living at No, 03 West One Hundred and Fifty-first street. Nathan's father Louls Brown, an upholsterer, ; THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 30, | MAKE-BELIEVE West One Hundred and Fifty-second street. The two boys were in the same class in Public School No. 186, on West One Hundred and Forty-fifth street. Waded Into River. NEW YORK GIRL After scl day, they, with Julius’s brother, Sidney, aged nine, after wandering around Harlem, went to the Harlem River at West One Hundred and Seventy-ninth street and the Speed- way. Julius and Nathan took off t shoes and stockings and went Sidney, standing by sing, watched them. It was nearly 6 o'clock. —_—>— There is a two-feet wide strip of beach | there. rocks, some submerged, all slippery with moss, The river is only ten feet deep there, but flows with a swift, silent, ortuous current. | Julius and Nathan, wading, stepped cautiously alor> the rocks. ney, watching, saw Nat’ an slip and plunge in the river, heard his ery for help, saw) CHICAGO, May 90,—Bighteen-year-old Jullus gamp aftor him and throwebiaesitella Biederman, whe disappeared from U. S. Agents, and Two Men Arrested. arms around him; saw the terrified, | her home, at No. 4% West One Hun- struggling Nathan clasp Julius in his gred an eighth street, New York, arms. They sank, they argse the! on jury has been found, and slent: olrrent carried them: away end) 1), < held here tn $10,000 covered them, batt i Saree One Body Recov. red. |iaw, which prohibits trafficking in Bianey's screams brought to IM) Women. Harry Daniels, who clalma to Joseph Gi sident of the Road | ye the girl's husband, has been held in Drivers’ As: nd Joseph Camp= | grog nat beti, a member association, WhO} Legere, .. is alleged, met the girl last were driving on the Speedway. The] guly just after her seventeenth. b hoy brokenly told what had happened. | Gay, and pers ta aeoemnneny he men hurried to One Hundred ar He m to Toronto, who Is a mar- eventyatifth street, where the man, later nt the girl to founted Policeman Martin go, it is ch and placed her awrenve © Ca foren ray resort, discovery of the whero- and the arrest of the two men to the e an age ris of WL ©, t of the Department of e, Who trailed Legere, who went ew York and demanded the reward which the girl's father had of- for information of her where- Dannen. fered abouts. The: girl » elve he for hours MeManon, 1 body a as youn will be detained unti! June timony to United States missioner Foote, before whom Le- © will be arraigned. ——— ee ‘IKILLS FOUR, WOUNDS TWO, than x | THEN TAKES HIS OWN LIFE. NO EVIDENCE GIVEN THAT fF; | Farm Hand Forced Daughter of the POLICEMAN KILLED STUDENT | Family to Flee With Him, Coroner's Jury Finds Ruddock but Was Run Down, “Die Mt rom a Bullet Wound”: PAWNEE CITY, Neb. May ® MeVittie and his wife and two chil- » Rail for O'Neill, dren were shot and killed and a third : child was dangerously wounded in their At Coroner beds yesierday by » Mielder, a farm Englewood, N. J hand who had been working for M Jiuddock, seve etudent, who Michael 0'N Vittie Th | town, for a burglar, the jury last night ren-| dered this verdict: “We find that John Ruddock came to his death from a bullet | ‘Tracey's Investigation In . into the death of John een, a high school Was shot by Policeman I last Friday in mistak McVittles lived seven miles from Fieldey wished to marry a eter of McVittie, but the parents ted After murdering the parents and the . i 98. hildren Fielder forced the girl to wound on Friday night, May 26. : feave the ke Sih hirer bak bse Ps There was no evidence to show that| caped and alarmed the neighbors Policeman O'Neill fired the fatal bullet, Sheriff Fuller found Fielder hidi put the policeman has not denied this|{n a schoolhouse and ordered him to fact, and he placed young Ruddock un-| surrender. | Fielder opened fire, “and der arrest just after the shooting and| after shooting three times and seein Wer dhe end of considerable ‘chase, [the Sheri. fait shot himaelt i O'Neil! was arre te Saturday night iar ened on @ Warrant s him with mur-| HARVARD STATUE FAKED. der, and Supreme Court Justice C. W, Parker at Nowark yesterday refused |Co to fix bail. The verdict leaves the warrant in full effoct, but O'Neill is to be left in Engiee| CAMBRIDGE, Mass, May 20. ~The mwoed {0.0 © of Chief of Pollae Titus. | statue in front of Memorial Hall at Har- Ruddock was buried yesterday morne|vard, supposed to be a likeness of John ing. Harvard, founder of the college, Is a — = fuked likeness, according to G. F, Searie, WANTS SOLOMON’S GIFT. | protersor of phswice at Cambridge Unt | versity, England, who is now visiting Federation W Apply Money to here. 2 | “John Harvard was a graduate of a dorian ¢ nat iB: anuel College Cambridge, sald Six hundred and sixty sousand dole) rp rie to-day. “Several years Jars, with compound interest ranning | ago it was decided to put stained gla. finoe 1776, Is due to the heirs of Haym | windows in the chapel, one with a like- folomon from the United States Gov-| ness of John Harvard No picture of ernment, says the Federation of Jewish | Harvarmt could be found, and then the Organizations. Solomon was a banker] artist was instructed to paint the pic in the Ame m and con-| ture of a long, lean, consumptive loa! tributed amount of money | ing youth, When Harvard University to the cHuse xlom, decided to erect a stat t wa he The fed suggests that the| joned after the faked pleture, Government use the money to found a| $< {Haym Solor national university. in| Loan Shark BUI Passes. AVashington, D.C. A mass meeting to NM Aan aetna oh scam hly further this movement will be held 4 Witne di at the Konilath’ deahuran Sene night Senator Sullivan's bill | agogue, No. 117 Highty-fifth street, | # lary loan sharks, also Jt is suggested that the university be| passed the ( pr vill for the establish for research wor all branches ji ment of a State farny for tramps and thet absolute f. ) of thought and, the Cosad bill creating a State Board to epeech should prevail, j Promote Int it i Pounty Life On its outer edge is a fringe of | Stella Biederman, Located by| GIRL SEEKS DEATH WHEN URGED BY FATHER 10 WED Jumps From Window When Refuge After Leaving Home Is Discovered. Rebecca Boltzner, eighteen, No. 168 Norfolk street, is» aytng in Harlem Hospital from tnjuries received by leap- ing from the third floor of the apart- ment house at No. 152 East One Hun- dred and. Eleyenth street last night. She is a prisoner. charged with at- tempting suicide, The police tell this story concerning the young woman: Some months ago while she was living with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Boltzner, at the Norfolk street adress, she met a young Hungarian who wanted to make her his wife. The girl's parentsgencouraged his sult and urged Rebecca to marry him. She objected and would not even con- sent to an engagement. Matters continued this way till about a fortnight ago, when Rebecca vanished, Her father and mother were heartbroken and Mr. Boltzner began a search. He traced the girl to the spartment house in East One Hundred and Eleventh street, where ne found her at 9 o'clock nployed as a servant Ww a ‘ather and daughter talked two hours, Boltzner ap- girl to marry the young ‘o return home, “All right,” said Rebecca, “I'l go with you. Wait till I go to my room. she added as she left her father. A moment later he heard a acream, went to his daughter's room and found no one there. The window was open and looking into the court yard Bolt ner saw a white figure on the flagging below. He hastened to the yard and found his daughter unconscious. Patrol- man Van Welsenstein ummoned Dr. Cole from the hospital. ‘The surgeon said Rebecca's skull, right thigh and foot were fractured, and that she would dle. for pealing to the man and urging her earnestly ——_—>—___ LAW ALLOWS SELLING MUD PILLS OR WATER AS CURES. Court Holds Tiat Labels “False in Prophetic Aspect” Are Legal Under Drugs Act. WASHINGTON, May water or pills of color Sweetened 1 mud may be ‘Ms cousin, Jon a fair way afternoon sidewalk 1911, TWOGHILOREN By Eleanor Schorer| BURIED IN RUINS AS SCAFFOLD FELL Third Severely Bruised by | Timbers of Wrecked Plat- form Over Sidewalk. FIRE ENGINES CALLED. One Man Knocked Down by Apparatus on Way to Scene of Accident. Oswald Pasquale, five years ol, and | Rosa Colomon, nine, were to recovery this morn- ing at Flower Hospital from the severe injuries they sustained late yesterday when a platform over the in front of Nos, 407 and 409 East Fifty-stxth street collapsed and fell on them. Oswald's right low is | broken and Rosa |.as severe internal in+ J tes, The children were playing in front of Oswald's home at No. 4i1 East Fifty- sixth street when the platform erected in front of two houses that are being demolished crashed down upon them. The workmen had quit for the day before the collapse occurred. Two weeks ago the platform was bullt to protect passers-by. Yesterday the work of tearing away the front walls of the houses was finished, That meant that the back support of the platform was gone, This caused the collapse. Saved Life by Quick L Meyer Reiss of No. 419 East Fifty- sixth street was walking under the platform when he heard the crunching sound of breaking timbers, and some one yelled to him to run. Reiss saved his life by leaping to the stoop of one of the demolished how the oniy part that remained, As the structure fell toward the street he was unhurt. Harry Doyle, 9 years old, of No. 411 East Fifty-sixth street, who was play- ingdn the street, was bruised by fall- ing boards, Hundreds of persons rushed to the spot on hearing the noise. They soon were busy in the work of resoue. The body of the girl was reached first. Bearhs had fallen across her. Ske still clutched a plece of chalk she had used in marking the pavement tn a game of hopscotch.’ It took only a few minutes more to reach the Hoy.’ He, too, was uncon- scious. Oswald's father and mother, frantic with grief, seized the body from the diggers and started to run with It to thelr home. They were held back and the tworchildren were placed in the same ambulance, y Sent Fire Alarm. When the.wreckage struck the street a cloud of fine dust sailed into the alr. Tt looked like smoke and sme one cried “Fire!” A boy ran to a box at Third avenue and Fifty-eighth street and sent in an alarm. William Reuss of No. 352 Peart strect was crossing Third avenue when Engine No, 8 galloped by. He tried to cross in front and was knocked down. ‘Though haken up, he refused medical atten- dance and went home. There was noth- ing for the firemen to do wien they reached the place of the collapse. E. C. BENEDICT’S YACHT MAY BE FLOATED TO-DAY. Three Steamers Are Standing By and the Weather Conditions Are Favorable. CAPE SAN ANTONIO, Cuba, May #— Via Wireless to New Orleans.—E. ©. Benedict's yacht Virginia may be floated at high tide to-day. ‘The Virginia ts lying on a laht ec bottom in uneven water, eight to sixteen feet deep, with a foot and a half rise at flood tide. She went aground at about high tide and it ix expected that ald wili be necessary in getting her afloat, ‘Three stea are standing by to render any assistance necessary and an Attempt will be made to get her into deep water this morning when the tide ie highes:. ‘She is not leaking e sea js smooth, with fine weather poe CORONATION FETES BEGIN. Grand Concert of 1,000 Voices At- tended by Royal Family. | LONDON, May The coronation | festivities begin t week, which will be a very buay one socially in London, | The King and Queen, the Prince of elled “cures and sold with impunity Pranoe. 8 RARE the fonal Pure Food ana| Wales the Duke and Duchess of Con- Drugs act, according to a dectaton| Haught and other members of the roy just rendered hy the United States Su- Senly Gs hea & mrand pe balla 668: | Dreme Court in the cake of Dr. O. A.) ronces of the Alvert Hall Choral Society, Johnson of Kanvas City, Mo. provided! numbering rly 1,000 volces, and the there is no misstatement on the label. | ftoyal. Air 4, ail Eeiaen ee Justice Holmes announced the major-| sisted by Mme. Kirkby Lunn and othe ity opinion, Justice Hughes delivered a| operatic singers, under the leadership | dissenting opinion, in which Justiees/of sir Frederick Bridge and Arthur Harlan and Day concurred, Payne. | The Court acknowledged that “the| The King has patd an unprecedented label was falve, or at least misleading,” | honor to the Javor movement a} but “only tn niandatary anée| ‘eenmenal levitation to ten a prophetic aepect.’ Where the MS sentatives of the trades unions to at were “undesertbed and unknown" {: d!* tend the coronation ceremon not come within the 4 ac POPS ON TROLLEY—WEDS. open from 9 A. M day beginning to-day, This exhibition period will ce maintained during the oummer, + | ation Makes Ride te at Altar, CHESTER, Pa, May %.—Oliver P. Mann and Miss Mary Hatz of Camden, N. J., were married in thix city by Alderman Charles’ K. Melville. The bridegroom sald (hey started out | merely to enjoy # trolley ride. At Cam. den led to pop the question. He | | rec 4 ‘yes’ and at his suggestion | the couple decided to have the nuptial | knot tled at one —_——_——_ | Can See the en Longer. | The Aquartum at the Battery will be unt! 10 P.M. every | The King and soi princes will attend meeting daily until Friday of the Fapac The 4 | will alxo attend the meeting on Wednes day fdr the Derby | ——<-—— GRAND AUDIENCE GREETS | MME. NORDICA IN BERLIN. LI) ay distingy! audience, in which might be seen prominent American in Berlin and t | whole diplomatic corp greeted N dica at the Royal Opera last night # | Isolde, She was in fine yoloe and sang} and acted the role superb! | Gruening, who sa Tristan, was al disappointment. The ot ier singers, in- | cluding wold, were satisfactory The audience, however, showed less enthusiasm than Was expected and at the drop of the fina) curtain thee was ant applause. GIRL ROUTS 006 SURGEONS WORK WITH RACQUET IN BY AUTO'S LIGHT FIERCE ERCE BALE AND SAVE LIFE 29 nheEeARN FOURTEENTH STREET West of Fifth Avenuc ns neers | CLOSED TO-DAY | Vicious Bull Had Attacked) Dash Thirty-two Mil From | Sree SLs aR ie Woman and Miss Trop Banquet at Midnight to Went to Rescue. | Operate on Patient. J l ] NE S A | E Miss Esther Trop, a pretty gtrl Fel 1 he tf el@hteen, after a savage battle yest ory He )SP IT \l ' IGHT S PAIL. x day afternoon, vanquished « bie wt es bulldog that 1 viciousi¥ attacke ey in { C Off at , Mra. Helen Mineur of No. 540 Pox street | Electric Current Cut aty hy SEER ailelgi Continued To-morrow dren's May party in St. Mary's Park Critical Time, but Auto the Bronx. Miss Trop, who lives at No. 7) Cautd- | Lamps Help Out J well avenue Bronx, wa n s parks Sees ee 4 ent or WILLIMANTIC, Conn. May ba nd Stiner of No, 1061 Union avenue. on Habe eed ig SHR ay Muslin Underwear Women’s Suits and Dresses hood were laying a white cloth prepara. | SU! cal operation in St Joseph's Hose Corsets dirls’ Dresses and Guimpes a@ luncheon for their littie| pital in t to the number of fiftee At the mom reachea the| Washable and Silk Waiets Shoes twenty, who were playing about on the | eritical stage o ation all the i Mee . eran electric Iights in the hospital suddenly Petticoats Boys’ Clothing and Fur ngs broken by the setecone of the mast!’ |Zully finished by the gut of the eute-| Milliaery Men's Shirts and Furnishings / in which the children's voices joined, | Miles oll lainps. ; Miss Trop and Miss Stiner st hed | wont to a. eedical: sottewy. Ginder ab te game and, looking toward the May) [totel Harde in ri Sunday night "0 party, saw Mrs. Mineur engaged in) A at OL ma w carried SE iy ag et Pete tae There Will Also Be nm exami covered grip on their tennis ri equets and start on a run, but Miss Trop easily outd TTC Monk ahet Tk ite ' fle 4 - es ¥ outdis-) strangulated hernta and that his life anced her companion, aid be saved only by an Immediate Miss Trop waded in with her rac nd beat the dog on the head until he had enough. By this time Mrs dress was badly torn and, according to Miss Trop, the animal's teeth had lace- rated her arm rdous for the resident by his fellows, he hoi Minour's Assisted he telephoned to tal’s visiting surgeon, dinner in Hartford him and easily dis- who was at the He and two others A Great List of MORNING SPECIALS! The dog retreated to the centre of a| hurriedly left the festive board, Jumped group of Hdre who had huddl into a motor car and burned up the together from fright, and the thirty-two milee of good roads from a@ panic until son young me Hartford here, making the run in less were playing ball then ran up a than half an hour. $2.49' Women's Silk Shirts. 1.64 | 79ct. Mer’s'd Damask Napkins, doas.8S baseball bats killed It Everything liad been made ready for “That shows what a suffragist can| them, the patient awaited them on the] @8et. Marcelline Petticoats........ .359 12hgct. Huck Towels—19x4, said Miss Trop after battle, operating table, which is brilliantly tMu- is a om Mrs simont'#| minated by big electric lights and re-| 82.98 Boys’ Covert Refers... 1.95 | i6ct. New Art Sctims.. and worker of the] tlectorss Att st critfeal moment ee the operatte lamp in the] 69et, Boys’ Blouses... wT 12! jet. White Cambries vt ——— oo ~ building was extin the ourrent : FEDERAL JUDGE LANDIS ad been cut off 2ct. Boys’ Caps. .... 6... eee 29ct. White Dress Linens......... M8 The physician who was admintster- i ° Ste a AFTER THE LUMBER TRUST her to the patient kept him under | @6ct. Featherproof Tickings..... Sct. Satin Fig'd Pongees......... 19 Ghend co sient Be | fled rly rushed to the| L0ct. Glycerine Soap..........4.+5 5 | @4et. Silk Mixed Shantungs....... «1S grand Jury to Be Impanelled to S : aie tigate iGatain a we le, grabbed a wrench e9ct. Sleeve Irons 20 '| 17ct. Mercentsed Poplins........+ MB stiga “erta ases the t big lamps of the utomobile of the Busines tothe operating room, 61.60 Leather C +++ 72 | 40ct, Mobairs—$2 inch. . see oD ‘The operating surgeon went on with CHIC. oO, May Po phey jal Be wr his wake sufficiently delicate by the Jury will be tmpansiied be Jnited | light day. He finished it; the States District Judge Kenesaw M.|patient, whose life the surgeons’ LOOK FOR THE CLOCKS! LOOK FOR THE CLOCKS! Landis on June 5 to investigate “certain | promptness had saved, was coming up phases of the lumber business’ with a] from the ether, when— Clock Signs Denote Morning Specials view to pros cutions under the Sherman The room was flooded with Hmht; the EAL ESTATE FOR SALE— |< NEW JERSEY. Anti-Trust current was on again! A petition was presented to Judge| The physicians were intensely angry; Landis to-day by Assistant United|the whole affair seemed ke a grim States Attorney Elwood Godman in the|and dangerous Joke, The visiting sur- presence of Clark McKercher, a special n made a few remarks over the assistant to the Attorney-General, .It| phone to the power station of the Wil was learned that a definite plan of pro-|limantic Gas and Electric LAght Com- cedure had bees mapped out. A special Grand Jury was asked be- cause of the activity of t Present one in the oleomargarine: c: 4. make some repairs to the dynamos,” pany and got the reply ‘All good oO Zot Lhe We know of no other medicine which has been so suc- cessful in relieving the suffering of women, or secured so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, In almost every community you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E, Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound. Almost every woman you meet has either been benefited by it, or knows some one who has. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files con- taining over one million one hundred thousand letters from women secking health, in which many openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking I -ydia KE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. L ydia E, many women from surgical operations. . Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is made ex- | clusively The re ingredients which act directly upon the female organism, restoring it to healthy and normal activity. housands of unsolicited and genuine ‘testimonials such as the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedy. Coloma, Wisconsi For three years 1 troubled with female weakness, irregularities, backache and bearing down Tsawan vertisement of Lydia E. P Vegeta Compound and decided After taking and I from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmless. must se not thank y ham’s Vegetabl Mrs. John W Coloma, Wis Women who are suffering from those dis- tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability Lydia I k= ntland, R. F. D., N isin. |Vegetable Compound to restore their health, people are in bed at this hour, so we thought it a good time to Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved ason why it is'so successful is because it contains | Pinkham's| een GREAT OPENING SALE of Bungalow Sites on LAKE LACKAWANNA The only lake in Northern New Jersey stocked with trout. If you want to enjoy yourself in a wild and healthy country, then Like Lackawanna is the place. Lake Front Plots 33(c. Sq. Ft. Mountain Plots 1c. Sq. Ft. Come, see and purchase a bungalow site at this most charme ing lake section of New Jersey. * Free Special Train to the Property June 4th, Write for free tickets and full information. 6Room Bungalow Fronting the Lake for Sale, $1,600. W. G, REEVES & 60., 124 E. 23rd St., New York City EXCURSIONS. $99, i eae Foi i ne ‘uate r Tite | cae. dwas, shade bungalows, 46. 's LEAVE PIER (NE, | 9.46, 10.90, 11.15 A, EAL ESTATE FOR SALE— BRONX. Tot, soNewnen 197th st, Rear Brigas av. R. 15 Mercer FOR SALE. NOW. 7.20 “M Halt and’ Tac Ware: Gentlemen, The; Ladies, Oe, STEAMER “GRAND REPUBLIC’ SPROIAL TRIP UP THE HUDSON Decoration Day, Tuesday, May S0th. | oumat’” WEST POINT ant Pha | we NEWBURGH \4 er 1. North River, 9 0 M., Wet | © aw } 1A Skee 1 Me Lj | Steamer imited to wit tte vensed « pacity, |] Meme clothes wade to ond. "* er Decivenen ui east tata Beaeteresese 9 od wormsenrabte SCHANGE CLOTHIN ‘The Only Downtows Oredit Tailor, Ne. 19 Park Place, Ne. Sroadiragy AM |O vices Je al = S One Pick aa «CRED: | 170 BROADWAY, COR. MAIDEN Lan |. DIAMONDS ON CREDIT _ Kiverican Watch and Diaeend bay ond Con @ Maiden lane, Tel, 6867 Cort, ‘Take levator, DIAMONDs, Rents, accepts NDICATE.¢ lays fro 0 A.M ta 0 ander 10 free exceot Bate, & refreshments. McAllister Steamboat Co " Sig ht Seeing Yachts leyou gh Observation ng day from Battery Sa RUE RA esta Heady Had ast TNE Nand Bandy Hook BRE TInt Qa AN SV lS ietaming 8 es STEAMBOATS. PATTEN ‘LINE|* Highlands, Seabright, Long Branch, Asvury a rg gem W. 35th at 7.48. 1050 AM {us Battery 6.20, 00, 11.90 a M., 340 yew