The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1911, Page 3

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T a ST imine SADR cree chien ie RUSHING PLANS "TOPUT POLE N # THREEPLATOONS Charts Likely to Be Distributed Among the Various Sta- ions This Evening. | IN EPFECT ON MONDAY. | Public Gets Hour More of Real Service From Each Police- man Every Day. Tt ie expected that by night the charts fee the three platoon system which Commissiongt Waldo will put into effeot | @n Monday will be ready for distribution | to all the station houses and torouge | Mees of the Greater City, \ Svening World last night had th exclusive information that Commis- sioner Waldo had decided to put the Uiree platoon system into operation on Momday Deputy morning next at 6 o'clock. Commissioner Dillon, repre- senting the inspector rank, Capt. | Mdenry Cohen of the Rockaway station, too statistician of the Department, Lieut hard Enright, Sergt. John T. Nteland | ua Patrolmen Peter J. McEntee and | John H. Ruddy worked hard all day in! the chart room at Headquarters tryin ‘9 wet the schedule completed. Although st goes by the name of the turee platoon system the plan in reality will create four platoons, or at lei it with take each man four weeks to com fete his eels of duty on the vartou Matoons. POLICE DAY DIVIDED INTO} THREE TRICKS, | The day js divided into three tricke— | one trom 6 o'clock A. M. to 2 P. M., one! fom 2 P.M. to 10 P. M. and one from | P.M. to 6 A.M. again. A quarter of | the force will be on duty during the frat | two shifts and a half of them on the iate trick from 10 P. M. to 6 A. M Under the new arrangement % per cent. of the men sill be on duty during the Principal daylight hours instead of 20/ Der cent, ae at present, and during the | remaining elght hours 9 per cent. will] Work instead of 4 per cent. as under the five platoon arstem now about to be abandoned. A patrolman will work eight hours a day for two days in succession and va the third day he wil have stxteen Gours. of duty—eight on post and eight mn reserve. Once in every twelve weeks he will have one furlough of twenty. four hours and one of thirty-two hours, ‘There wil be twice as many men on! atrol in the nighttime as during the daytime and twice as many reserves in the station houses in the deytime as at night. WORKING OUT THE PLAN FOR STATIONARY POSTS. | ‘The old “butterfly posts’ on which a/ man would patrol a stretch of avenue with incursions for a given distance {nto every side street are to be abolished | altogether, and within a few weeks the | Commissioner hopes to be able to In- urate his plan for stationary posts. Che working out of the new pian may essitate slight changes, but in the ain, the Commissioner says the sohed- wie alrendy prepared wit) be adhere? to pretty closely. it should be known,” said nissioner to-day, “that in fu- public will get one hour more the Com ture t! of actual service from each policeman every day, and the policemen will get ue hour more of real rest than he now enjoys and will do bis work continu-| ously insteal of breaking it up into| bits. The public will beneft by the new plan and so will the man In uniform.” CHAUFFEUR FAINTS AS AUTO HITS MAN ON BROADWAY Steiner, Confused, Jumps in’ Front of Car and Is Se- verely Bruised. ' apartments The late crowds on Broadway teh excited early this morning when they saw Peter Steiner, sixty-seven years old, of No. 2% Court stre Brooklyn, hit by a taxicah at Forty- fitth street, and the chauffeur of tne machine in a faint ay he orougat hie va op. Jos nurgh, the chauffeur and q the car, who is twenty: at No, 2 was driv when Ntelner atcempted street, became confused ing out of the way of again in front of tt, was thrown several feet, Pittsburgh mmed on bis brakes and brought the hachine to a stop, ‘Then ho fate, falilng across the steering gear, Some excited individual crled that t chauffeur had died from heart failure and that the man nad been killed, and this added to the excitement. Many muests of the Hotel Astor witnessed the occurrence, amd the rumor soon spread through the hote! that two men had been killed, Patrolman Gleason summoned Dr, Hughes from Flower Hogspita!, and Steiner waa taken there suffering from bruises and contuaions, His condition ta not yerious. Pittsburgh was soon re- vived. No arrest was made. em Fogarty Asso: Outing. The J. J. Fogarty Benevolent Associa- tion of Evergreen, L. 1, will hold its enth annual outing at Hillen’s Park, Mendaie, L. 3, on Sunday, June 18. ‘Tickets are $1, Including refreahments.| Automodiles will leave the clubhouse every ten minutes for the park, and lives Sixty-seventh street, on Broadway to cross the and, after jum the, cab, ran b uM Baba In India Spiritual Love and Equality Are Developed, and the Wife Serves in the Home While the Husband Carries the Burden Outside. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “Woman's heart rules her mind, but in man the} mind controls the heart Bharati, sage, philosopher and holy man of India. “But if man’s mildly. This looked a trifle pu to door, as holy apartment at No. robe of yellow ed, ah! pu ictal turban lay in sclitary state upon the mantelpiece. “I do not understand your ques again. If man’s mind controls his heart, why should he write indiscreet let: Why should he get shot trying to recover them? ters? New York millionaire be in the hosp’ his account?” It was evident from the Baba's in news is not permitted to disturb the Any way I was not there to talk scandal, but to ask this latest visitor from the Orient what he meant by #ay-| ing the other day that New York} women forget their minds and give all} their attention to their many layers of | goregous raiment | “But T did not eay tt,".the Rabe pro- | tested in the booming voice which is Nature's first best gift to the religious Philosopher. “I will tell you what I said.” And forthwith the Baba took a long plunge, really a sort of psychological | high dive, into the depths of East In-| dian metaphysics. “Besides the mind, the bory heart of which man is composed,” philosopher said, “there is back of all three the I-the soul—which sees all! nd criticizes al. What I said was that! in India, where we go lightly clad, we do not lose the consciousness of the body, but here you must necessarily wear many clothes, and #0 you lore the consciousness of the body and ac Quire instead the consciousness of clothes. : OUR WOMEN NOT DIFFERENT) FROM OTHERS. ‘But that is a matter of geogre- phy, of climate, and Z aid not orit- ieize your women partiouleriy. ‘Women are women everywhere. ‘They love to adorn themselves for their busba: ana = relatives. ‘Women are the heart of a nation. ‘They uve spiritual, devotional man can never be. When you edu- cate a woman's heart, and then her mind, you have a rare being—« genius. "In India we educate our wonien spir- itually. True, 60 per cent. of them ean neither read nor write, but in the West | you lay too much stress on the three! ‘Rs.’ What ts the meaning of educa-} tion? The unfolding of self, is it not? Education,” he added, poetically, “Is the unfolding of the petals%of the mind- lotus under ‘he rays of the spiritual sun, Slowly Baba Bharati unfolded five plump flogers to ilustrate his point. “The spiritual education of woman in India begins when she !s six years old she ix told stories of religion, she ts taught the practical things of the house. Between twelve and fourteen xhe marries, and if her mother-in-law dies she Is able e over every part irl of and the} the | of the household as no American indeed any fifteen ©: een oF could begin to do. “In my language, they pray with their g te tied together to indicate their spiritual merging. With ua the men of the household live in the outer a) nts, the women the interior of the house. “When the men go into the Interior the women wait on them. They ave gracious hostesses, offering the best tidbits and serving the men But if the woman goes on a pilgrimage his heart get him into so much iroublet’ 1 inquired bronze and | tues / said Baba Premanand mind controls his heart, why does imposing yogi from the Bast zeled. In his own country, he told me, he goes clad in rags and begs his bread from door men should, but yesterday, in an 84 West Twelfth street, he wore a ised with blue, and a red and yellow So I began all over| | | tion,” he sald. Why should a ital and two young women in jaf] on creasing bewilderment that our local ‘en tenor of his philosophy, ated of the heart, and the heart Femains undeveloped, L are three Binds of 10 the spiritual, the love of ponees. ston, and the love of barter. The last is the kind you have most of here. ‘2 love you, If you don't ion if you love me. fe me, Z don't for you,’ says the ‘Ambrlona wae an. She introduces ¢; ides of a Dargain, of a mean trade into the | most sacred thing of all, the cen- tre of the universe—nove, “The love of possession says merely 1 love you because you are mine, If yOu cease to be mine I cease to love pu.’ But spiritual love, real love, favs: ‘I love vou hecause you are YOU. for your faut Your virtues; your faults stil, ou ceare to have vir- | T will noz stop loving be- | cause you drink or because you gam. | ble, for vou will still be YOU. 1 will | help vou and trv to save you always.’ | “That ts the love that women under- stand In India, where woman wields a | Sewelled sceptre because she speaks to Y with the voice of the heart, the intuttion of @ spirit Worshipful and meek | “Here in America you used to have | ‘long courtships. Then it was possible | for young men and women to marry | with some knowiedge of whether they ! pos: the real spiritual love for gach other, They learned to know each her's faults and virtues, and if they wore satisfled to marry the hands they | @ enc other held their hearts. and ir those hearts their souls.” pecctlaatabi Bat {DRUG CLERK ENDS LIFE; | WIFE FINDS HIS BODY. Left Note Telling Her Not to Weep Toe Much About His Death. Dr. Hartung, Coroner's Phy- | Was calle] to the home of Har- Wilberg, at No. 223 Sackett! street, Brooklyn, to-day, he found the! man deed. By his side was @ bottle! that had contained cyanide of potash. | A letter explained that it was a case| of suicide, Wilberg was a drug clerk employed by the Iegeman siore at No, 200 Broad- way. He made $15 a week. Every week | when he came home to his wite, Olga, | he gave her $18 of the week's wi reserving 82 for all of his own expenses When stelan rah &, As he passed over his earnings each | week | gallantly apologizee for his} lack of to earn more. His wife did embdroidery work in order to help w the household expeases. She came over to Manhattan to visit | friends yesterday, When she returned home this morning she found his dead and a note telling her to take his agurance money and go back to | her people in Norway where she could be happy | ‘Don't ery too much about me, 1 am! inere to | only sorry ‘that you cannot be kiss me goodb; he wrote —- DESTROYERS IN OCEAN RACE. — | Fast 1 From Norfolk to Newport, the men carry the children and the! O01, burdens, leaving tle waman to wale iy Sep Hi botnets Heats) Hi free. stroyers of tie seventh vision @ ‘Phe idea is that woman shoald which arrived serve man in ber own provinos, the jane so.day from Norfolk, Va. ‘The trip interior of the home, and maa fnay a seaming trial and virtual). shonld serve woman in his prove [amounted to a race between ‘he. tone ince, the outside world. That ts | the division, the Preston, Smith real equality, real love--for love d Plusser Pepys, | , The Preston arrived tn port here near! an hour and a half ahead of re HERE ALL THE BURDENS FALL | or tiie feet having covered ing 1a tat ON MEN. between Norfolk and Newport at an | average speed of vhirty’ knots an Here in America, which !* verylang me time the Preston menmiga dear to my heart and where [have thirty-one and one-half knots an hour, mo: than &, disciples the men |The Smith was second the Reid | arry all the burdens, They serve) was third. Owing to a blower becoming woman the (ime, Here a young |disafled, the Muster way obliged ® lady does not rise when an old man. Withdraw from the trial speaka to her, Why should she not | respect his years? But the man, no| matter what his age, must stand, must) bow, must remove his hat, if « woman speaks, That ( not equailty, “T say to your women: ‘If you want | equaiity, why do you Inmist on these observances” [ say to your men: ‘If| you really belleve woinen ave your Ine tellectua! equals, why not give them the vote? Why decry the suffragette? | 1 do not believe women should mix in | ‘politics, Politics is muck and woman! 3 a flower,” the philosopher added, with a satisfaction in the simile that all persona have who don't raise flow- ers or know the humble processes of > — LEAPED 175 FEET TO DEATH. Sieh Man From High PIOLADELPHIA, over the railing Walnut Lane bridge whic spans Winsalickon Creek | in Germantown, Henry Shermer, ant treasurer of the Germantown Tue of the mat | Say- lage Fund Soclety, juimped 1% feet into @ shallow stream. He was dead when ad, Mr. Sue Who was a prom inent resident of tie fashlonable su burb, had been in ill-nealth for some time, He was about fifty-four years old The bridge ie one of the highest is this section of the country, WW woman St A LOTUS FLowER Ano Rures wire a Jewecen SCEPTER, THE HAN GETS THE CEST THINGS TO AT IN AN INDIAN HOUSEHOLD :] ssphrgfene— Miter BABA + BHARATI THEY WANT EQUALITY GUT REMAIN Seated WHEN INTRODUCED “WHICH ONE IS ME?” “POUNDS” SHORT, DEPEWASKSWHEN CHERRY PEDDLERS. HE MEETS DOUBLE ARE ARRESTED emetic Striking Resemblance to Up- Nineteen Pusheart Men Taken State Pastor, ling Same Ship, Is Puzzling Pp § on on “Short Weight” Charge Former Senator Chauncey M. Depew amissioner J. IT Walsh of the and Mrs, Depew and her sister, Mis#} Bureau of Weights and Measures ad- | Mildred Palmer, were passengers to-day | ministered a set-back to the ripe cherry on the hil phia of the American! season a ind oad and Ohurol streets line, They are bound for Paris where! to.day when he and bis men ratded th the ex-Senator expects to spend some-| push carts and arrested time in settling up the affairs of his) diers wife's mother who died here some) Cherries have just come in, and the weeks ago. They will noc return home} lors have been displaying them, until the end of October ‘nicely polished in little round boxes The D L Luquer, rector of! marked “On pound for 2% cents." They | St, Mathew's church Bedford Hills,; have been enJoying a tively sale, but! N. Y., also salling on the Philadelphia, | Commissioner Walsh heard that the bot. 80 closely resembled Senator Depew in of some of these boxes were height, sine, fa ner, that the shoved ie the cylindrieal | rhip new porter at first mistook the | sides that it was in vie for them to! clergyman for the retired politician. hold a pound, so and Deputies Mor- When Senator Depew # intreduced / gan, Green and Hanson pald @ visit to | jto D. Luquer he sald iaugilingly,; the line of carts. Hach bought a| Which one is m pound nd then made the arrests. | Speaking of Judge Gary's ony | Wh boxes were examined they! ore the ¢ nal Commission; were found to from four to five! at Washington, Senator Depew said: | ounces short of a pound. ‘The peddlers, “It's a fine thing—It's tal. Thejwere held by Magistrate Harrie in the men who are investigating Stee! | Tombs police vourt in $4~ each. ‘Thel Trust would never have gone Magiatyate Warned fiat the. peddlaral Papers would not have to find out who sold them and make a few | Statements {he same ominence arrests in that quarter | they ap w form th -_— aid to morn restive itis sors make | BOLICEMAN RUN DOWN. iw deal with gre corporatios | roar | gy Wecree ert prporatlon® | Strack by an Anto Near the PL mittee. They wa nk, to make) and Slightly Injured, ‘ampaign material mainly, «1 he has! seountea Patro Dowling of the gone further than Congressmen or even | central Park 1 was struck by an] nal muckrakers would dare to/ automobile at Mifty-niath street and| 0 by urging | verninent should) mien avenue to-day and drageed for actually run Interests and that some distance. Two ladies who were Shey should made directly oN" | ahout to leave the 1” Hotel in their | Obie fo the ernment for t onduct| a tomobite inteered to take the In- of their Was ne the man to the h ul, but Dowling biters being preferred to hay itomobile that “LT myself e In government super-| had knocked town have that vision and. ¢ » porations. 4 | trouble do © kovernme should] He was taken to Flower Hoapttal, an 1 Wit) | Where Dr. Knapp ind that he had a , {lacerations of the scalp and body . bruises. The automobile that knocked ‘| the policeman down Is owned by Samuel bis |icayton of No. 182 Hast Seventy-third a mela * |etreat and was driven by Alfred Wor. | me | to slo the | ttesky. Dowling was able to go hoine! ‘ ) atter his Injuries had been attended to T Rurn scllve, WaK alae Gancsee teybu A passenger. Me will be away only] sa geinoy Tune Wittam | ashore between Jondon and Paris [Stuart 1 baby rot the | oblate | Htoune of Representa a son of | Church to Borrow 125,000, Mayor Reyburn of Philadelphia, wae | Justice Cohalan in the Supreme) inarriel here to-day to Miss Georate F, | Court today gave permission to the) Maury of this city, Phe wedding was | i in & opal Church, Rev trustees of the Roman Cuthollc Ohurey| Waiand cotton Sith oMclating. — Me. | of the Ascension. West One Than yourn Was elected to Congress trom dred and Seventh street, to morteame wlelphia » suceem!t the late Joel thelr property. The mortgage wil | taken by tie German ngs Bank f¢ Saaeainaemnssats (AARON, ana part fader Pies a we hble ter Naturaltzatio: the Emigrant Industrial Hank for reagent OF she $58,200. The remainder will he usei States?” asked County Judae Ca | to erect a parochial The Rey,| an Itallan appiicant for ne uyalization | Edward M, Sweeny tor of the| 9 yy yesterdi ghureh, the prompt repiy ~ SCHEIB'S STORY W that has not | whore | Company's plant to-day. | Benjamin Aquini Notebook and Pad of Transfers! eet Antler, John Edw 1 utney eiteen years old, of No. 94 Jefferson av Rich jinond Hii, Mot into a row with John Hrros#, @ vonductor on the Myrtle ave- n e, early to-day ae the oa . ny trough Kienmond Hill Latsey drew a revolver a 1a shot, ‘Phe tullet paxned tlic eof Drogs'a t without tou he flesh and then struck his t It burled Itself in a 1 and | of transfer Luteoy told Magistrate Connolly at Jamatoa that he Was drunk and did not know what he was doing Me was bald HE EVENING WORLD, SATURDA:, Jiu 10, 1911. ‘American Woman Never Knows Real Love; She Develops Head, Not Heart, Says | Bartered Love, the “I-Love-You-l1-You-Love-Me” Kind, Prevails Here, Indian Yogi Declares, and Blames Our Education. OF WIFE'S DEATH REPEATED BY GIRL fent Into Detail and Told of Little Girls at Funeral, Says Miss Blake. ‘CHEMIST TO. TESTIFY. o Witnesses to Be Called for Prisoner at Next Hes ring on Monday. Only two other witnesses stood to-day mm to he introduced by the prosecution against Marry A Scheib, the chauffeur held without ba fn connection with the death of his wife, Mrs. .illlan O'Grady Sohely, whose body was found in the bathtub of .helr flat at No. 611 East Seventy clghth street, almost two we One of the witnesses probably will be Prof. Larkin, w nade the chemioat analysis of the vieceva, Sohelb's laws ra do not expect to vave to lntroduce ny witnesses when t before Magistrate ternoon, ‘The evidence heard yesterday Was largely of the confitct'ng st ments made at different times by Sche!b ns to the whereabouts of his wife, He had already admitted to the police that @ told inquirers whatever happened pop into t's mind, he aid not want have to explain that his Wife had lett tim. Mise Mae Hioke, rheatre, was net case ts resumed ‘gan Monday af to s Lyrt 5. Sane with his a fellow. rin the ho’ she formerly ved on hth wy We, about the middie of March, She testited that when sne aired how his wife was he ex- claimed that she had died of pneumon'a Bix Wee efore—about Feb, l-in the man Hospital. TOLD AN AFFECTING STORY OF WIFE'S FUNERAL, He told me," #ald Miss Hiake, “tha in death she had presented a very ugt appearance, her lips burned by fever and her face discolored. He seemed to be much affected as he told me this, and when [ invited lim to call on me he accepted gladly. Then he told the same thing again to me and people with whom I board. He described the fine funeral he had given his wife at @ cost of 8, and how little girls of her home town, and ell her friends and retatives, had ‘turned out to nt the fun- I) was ve: affectiny tc listen to him. Another witness wae Mrs. Fell, pro- Drietresn of the laundry where the Schetbs had their washing done. She said Scheib told her and her husband that his wife was very ill in the Ger- man Hospital and that he was gtving up the Seventy-elghth street flat and moving to the w His tast visit to the laundry owas Zeb. 12. Dan Smith, Janitor of the Seventy- elghth street butlding, testified to find- ing the body, but brought out nothing cen published, Kd Mc- ‘urley, the engineer, said that on Feb. when a famtly two floors above the cheib flat began complaining about an) unpleasant odor, he and some plumbers spent weveral days trying to locate th cause, but failed. ‘hey never thought of examining the Scheib flat, ae they believed It to be unoccupted. Miss Nina Pray, rent collector for the bullding, told of having called at the/ flat every Tuesday up to Feb. 9 and re-| ceiving an answer from some person! nousher at th nineteen ped- | whose identity or sex whe said she could) pigs were bitten, an the not recall. After that date, however, he wan unable to get any response to her calls, though the rent wan paid, at irregular intervals, up to May 10, She opened the door of the flat on three oc- canions, she satd, and found it each time in precisely the saine condition Liout. Gloster of the Central OMice, who) took Scheib to the Morgue, told how Schell had at once {dentified the skull ay his wife'x and had Ingered around the remains, thowg. he (Gloster) was forced to leave the room becaitse of the odor. j —~<——— | SHOT IN STREET FIGHT OF CLEVELAND STRIKERS. | Cloakmaker Pursued by Crowd for Showing Pistol Fires Into Crowd and Man Falls, ULEVELAND, ©, June 10, A man name is not known Was shot twice, once just below rt and once in the groin, in @ quarrel of atrik- Ing Karment Workers at the H. Black He may die. | No. 1100 Orange ave- nue, a cloakmaker, waa arreste: charged with the shooting, ‘A crowd of pickets protested against Aquina displaying @ gun in his posses | sion. He resisted, then fled, followed by a crowd, and at @ point near Buclld| avenue and East Twenty-third street 19 | alleged to have fired on his pu one falling. His arrest followed aulckiy The street Was crowded. fh 2 lie SHOT AT CONDUCTOR. for examination Bank a ‘The statement Ting Hou banks for the week {ssued to-day shows hat the banks hold $35,840,200 more than the requirements of tho % per cent. re- rve rule. Thie te an increase of| 880 tn the proportionate cash re- as compared with last week GIRT. WHO TOLD week's viait the Swedish |onded, the second division of ( States Atlantic fleet malled this mora. | Se ee a |YOUTH PLEADS GUILTY. TO ABDUCTING GIRL OF 17. STORY DEATH. OF SCHEIB OF WIF ere Ua Howa felis and Caroline thes Fled Together to New Brunswick, N. J. Howard Co Leste aged twenty-one, of ple in the held The John ¢ ber ¢ “ yektoy et, Brookiyn, 1 muilty te ‘arge of abduction h court today and was irand Jury without bet). mplainant against him was crocer of No. 629 Dean alleged that on May 2t Les with hit seventeen-yeare 1 took as . where ‘ eval id wife, g Madavit t fother added that — icked by @ fake ceremony hod been married to ' while the youth Mire Iken vee eget = tife With Gee, — + sixty-seven ‘ 1 a store nd dead on a Sed vop early t « tube atl Flacin the i old Ow a Bi lived In hie the girl w into t | cash ve Brooklyn wa «! Cignrmaker ¥ wan fo) ok Here comes the While tie groom & ovide You couldn’t make better if you wanted te, No matterhowhigh . your standard is nor how careful you are nor how much you spend in money and time and effort, you couldn't produce any- MAD BULLDOG CAUSES ALARM NEAR ARMONK > sane wer Stree Bites Forty Canines and Other thing better than i ‘ 1 Animals—Quarantine Is ; Established. { 4 A mad white bulldog which ran TOMATO i through Armonk nd along the Bedford Pp ‘4 Lit 1, seven infies from White Plains, P biting at least forty ee and a number And if are par- other an vax caused great alarm destat as Ait hich among ¢ sidents A number of h Ww iL wealthy New York men who have aum-, we hope you are—you mer homes in that neighborhood are be the first one to say that eapeciaily worried nothing better could be So far, according (0 word. received vy| produced at any price. And Sheriff Henry. Scherp torday, six val- ' uable animals have been shot because, today Hd bay bane day in {t was feared they were developing ra-| he week to find out. Dies. After a gun chase by villagers the bulldog which caused all the trouble | 21 kinds 10cacan — was killed by Alfred H, Thorp, whe} Juat add hot water, > i fired six shots toto his body. To-day i a, Deputy Commissioner of Agriculture bring to a boil, Predton established « quarantine of the and serve. @ Armonk section and now all doxs must) Josey Campane : be muzzled and held tn leash. | Foaater The mad bulldog first dashed tnto the Camden N 3 ot George Sniffen at Ar-! attacking lls valuable | 1 at a big bull and almost | dairy farm monk and aft pet dow sump Look for the red-and-white chewed his nose off, After that he} sank his teeth In the leg of a valuable label Jersey cow. “oth animale had to be} shot | Then the maddened animal continued | a wild run northward, past the! ountry estates of Richard Harding Da- | vis and seyeral millionalr in the | neighborhood, A number of es along » highway were snapped at, and one| man, who ts a dog fancier and keeps 100, dogs in his kennels re that some cf | them were bitten, Mr. Sniffen also fears that some of his | OK Was seen, in the piggery. Two years ago Mr. | Sniffen had to kill a number of pigs be- | cause they had been attacked by a doi suffering from rables, It is feared a that some of the valuable cattle on sev eral of the large country estates were victims of the brute and they are being | watched closely A quarantine has also Ushed |, New Rochelle be antics of * mad dog been estab. | of the SPOCK HOLM 10 10 F ing for Cronstadt, The ships are duc | a! the Ruslan port to-morrow and dur. | Ing thelr stay wil Vinited by} Emperor Nicholas, nperor wiil| also recetve Admir and the Neet offi | burs. | LEANLINESS in food is essential. Rheingold Beer is cleaner than milk. It is the cleanest of food-drinks because prepared under cleaner conditions than any other manu- factured food, PALE RIPE RHEINGOLD Brewed by S bmani Sons, Brooklyn— visitors to brewery welcome. $1 a ~ 24 bottles at all lore’. Order some today. When the deep-sea waves, thé | mountain breezes or the forest | streams call you to the summer's recreation and rest that every city person needs, bear well in “mind that A Far Greater Diversity of Places to Go Are Advertised in. The World Than in Any Other Newspaper in the United. In last Sunday’s World 4, different “Summer Resorts" vidually advertised — FOUR TIMES the 3$9% the Sunday Herald, About 1,500 ‘Summer | Ade, in The Sunday | To-Morrow,

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