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UREN Emr ur ne et a common good of the whole project. The | ten-year clause, as suggested, applying | to the present subway south of Forty- Second strest, does not necessarily mean that the company shail hold on for) only ten years longer. It is merely a lease of ten yeare which may be ex- tended at option “Every member of the committee Sell tn line with the proposal and T was @iad, for expediency’s sake, to witness that attitude, It means now that thi companies wit! have to ‘fish or cut batt.” The entire project will be up to them by Wednesday afternoon next, for we pro- pose to hold the board meeting for final | action on Wednesday morning.” £226 Maw voy wee UY owe te by CORONATION OF KING GEORG LAST ENGLAND WILL PERMIT, Both Comptrolier Prendergast aud President McAneny who listened as -~ Mr. Mitchel talked, agreed with him | Queen to Buckingham Paiace from in everything that he said and nodded! “Gigantic Farce” Sinful | Windeor and tunctions connected with their heads pprovingly B and Sinful | the central event of next Thursday Mayor Gaynor said he 414 not care I, will crowd one upon enother until July to discuss the work of the Board, but Waste of Money, Laird 1, when the Court will again leave might have something to say later. of Ski Thi t 6 ibo Thinks. London vi on ee ee Semi-state marked the arrival of thei When the MeAneny report was made | Public on Tuestay attacks were made upon ite deci ton for a B-cont fare to Coney Isiand—a concession to the demand of The Evening World for the | ‘ow rate, which was made imperative | when the Interborough amended its) last offer by withdrawing its original CALLS GATES A GAMBLER | | He Will Take Stand in Steel | Trust Inquiry When He Mase sion from Paddington Station to Buck: | connisting of drawn by four bays with postillions and escorted by the Ro crowds everywhere welcomed | een with hearty cheer ing and followed them over the whole tngham Large | the King and Q: few in Pali the metropolis, t ‘al Horse he proce: tandau Guarda, rtipulation that the city make good any route. deficit upon the Coney Island lines, Gets Back. Monday’ will witness the arrival of It has #ince boen pointed out that If most of the royal gueste and other the Board of Estimate will waive the op yrisslons trom sbrosas John oney Scent fare condition the B. R. | Copprgn:, 1911, by Pan oe. | Haya Hammond, spec mbassador T. will accept the proposed adjustment (The New York World). from the United States, will make his tai@ out in the McAneny report. SKIBO, Scotland, June 17.—De Mahsed entry ib the ay ub: Sevhi a " _|riving from the country where he is McANENY WON'T YIELD ON/|Claring that coronation 1s all a gi: |epending the Week Ghd Ife will be met SINGLE FARE TO CONEY. But Borough President McAneny of Manhattan remained firm, and neither gantic farce and a sinful waste of money, Castle to-day expressed the belief jat the Andrew Carnegie at Skibo | Connay and other oMfet fctoria station by the Duke of | representing King George, | @ the staff consist- he nor his associates have shown as yet ing of baron Sacdbuest, Teut-Col, , Qay dlaposision to put the Coney cent | ‘St Mngiand will never steed for! poss x games and Capt. C.F. Gd. fare clause back into the report which | Another. | Sowerby, er-ecially appointed to. at- | ie now before the Board of Estimate for} “Do you think I would leave this|tend the American envoy throughout consideration. It is now conceded that The Eyening World forced the Coney five-cent fare ondition upon the B. R. T. In the McAneny report, At the bottom of pege 50 of te report, under the head- for London on Coronation day?" , asked the laird. “Not much! I{ don't know ff there will ever be, another coronation, but I don’t de! ing “Comparative mileage of routes| leve England wil] ever stand for «nd trackage to be operated at a five | another foolish display such as this, ent fare with universal transfers within each eystem under proposed ad-| TRO people will gradually wake up justment,” is found this note: “Mile | to all such nonsense. has been aubtracted from Coney] “The investiture of nd line south of second fare dis | waies with the Order of the Gar- the Prince of who will ringham, was welcomed at the railway station by King George and Queen Mary, the Queen Mother Alexandra and a host of other members of the royal family and diplomats. This afternoon at Buckingham Pal recelved the American and his mission, Dowager Empress Marie of Ru spend the coronation pel the King \ conclus! original report, made a srovision | ter fe another old custom which Is other foreign for a ten-cent fare to Coney Island, | imply ridiculous. Of course, England | and the footnote was not struck out | always of the proofs. As was pointed out in The Evening World on Tuesday, the Interboroug! MecAneny report 1 Amittance of the B. R. nto Manhatten as far north as inth street. CITY HOLDS WHIP AGAINST TRACTION TRUSTS. has had coronations, and the eaying \s, ‘England never changes any- thing,’ but I believe they ere making euch @ nuisance of this one that it will prove a last, final fling. is 8 not eriticilem of the royal family. George will make as excellent HAND/|® King as hia father. 1 doubt if he wanted to be King, therefore it may take time for him to get a hold on the pubis in stoted ‘ne the ole ‘reesun for | People, but he is thoroughly Englleh McAneny’s report giving the B. R. T.| M4 will wield great influence for good, and Interborough the first call upon the| He will be thoroughly in sympathy pt jeture. with a few personal words with each of them. THOUSANDS OF AMERICANS TO the city Show at Olympte full dress uniform and made @ brilliant arrived his n oMecers parttcl; ‘The officer noon. pating fm the Jumping competitions at the Horse ‘= were in ‘The King welcomed the visitors cordial handshake and had a @EE CORONATION. @eration of the new lines. The aity| with the arbitration treaty with holds the whip hand, and if one com-| America, hea Agger any backs out, the other y oe the opportunity of fulfilling wants} WARMLY PRAI QUEEN AS A | etration. of the whole city, and if both companies WOMAN AND MOTHER. back out, then the City shall proceed| “Ag for Queen Mary, it is a long time with the construction of the independent | gingg Great Britain hed e¢ soble a qubway system. This is the McAneny | women and mother for Queea. Bhe has Tet aciatst ater tren the reapect of all the bi and Fridey, is the al he Brooklyn Rapid ‘Tran- ig men of the Ys @ almost ait Rat peny sees i iu vensvieatiog of | Matton, such as Lord Morley and oth- | transformation of familiar the Triborough and its Coney five-cent| ere. She neither paints ner smokes,| Churches, ancient fare the dashing to the ground of its/ and her love fer her children to an obd- pares oF Pay pesios, pty dag J Ject lesson for the whole world. I¢ is and a halt mi subway roadway ‘eapectal! oabi: the exclusive occupancy of that corpora. sitensinn eteroans Ole hee tion. Of this prospective B. tileage one and a half miles has al-|thelr children. Money never is the Itered its aspect | ready been built by the city, repre-|main thing, especially with children, . | sented in tho Centre street loop, “Being ea z vay almost alarmingly, although efforts while five and seven: he miles, repre- epee would 4 Were exerted to lend an air of age to tented in the Fourth avenue subway, prscomety aes cont wee ae ans, | the stucco adaition, Brooklyn, is rapidly nearing comple- indy. X don't moan one of the | The Parliamentary church of St. Mar- tion, If the Triborough 1s built both | Se-called ‘smart set,’ but ome of tBe | garet and adjacent Parliament square the Centre street loop and the Fourth | 04 Mew York famition whe regarded | aro unrecognizable in consequence avenue subway form e@ part of that aystem. Like Queen Victoria, ehe is eR Neeaypheed ia aang A charities, but she gone beyond Queen Victoria ir IMPOR “SPITE PENCE” LIBEL.|tertr car centers ime Supreme Court Upholds Allgor’s lft oh again peedne “that Conviction, but He Says He'll the great omen SF Be steatness is Go to Cell First. a ee “As for the coronetion, I am glad to TRENTON, June 17.—The New J see that so many Americans decided to conviction of James M. Allgor of Se: Bright, who last September was fined $200 for libel in connection with his famous “spite fence.” Been last night at his home in Sea- bright, Allgor declared he would go to Jail rather than pay the fin Aligor the first settler at Sea- bright. He had a little shanty on the Runson road, and when he retired from carpentry, opened an ice cream parlor. His near neighbors were Cornellus 3 depending upon Americana fo: alf empty,” GAMBLER,” HE SAyYs, Carnegie sald of the testimony Mr. given by John W. Gates before the at Congressional Committee: “I don't want to put dirty words my mouth, This man Gates ts broken-down gambler ' to do with him, entirely ands, buildings and open premises and private residences have changed their Starting with the Westminster Abbey | itself, the annex added to increase the accommodation h of the gigantic ple bunting, them from view. etatue of Lord Beaconsfeld look down on the | a: from a private box at a theatre, for it is enclosed in @ square wooden palisade reaching to the breast. 4,000 OFFICIAL GUESTS WILL BE Then along Whitehall confirmed the |stay away and that some London hotels | *tand varies the usual appearance 0! sey Supreme Court hes their | the Ithposing Government offices and the | jold fashioned Admiralty, Square Land: te A, BROKEN-OOWN |peared under timber tiers of seats. Saint Martin's In the Flekis is cloaked in bunting @nd surrounded by crowded spaces, api ands covered A notable feature along the lines of froute to be followed by the newly crowned King, in his procession through | the streets of London next Thursday complete eights. edifices, public dusiness pearance, with pur- | surrounding and hiding On the ing proc SEATED, At en's tter spot the Ppears to cession as ntand after | Trafalgar Hons have disap- ola In response to many petitions from al, f Works ha: {9 ) participants in the coronation ceremo- the Office have Nothing ty permit those present to pu: 8 decided hase as sa ‘Professor BURNS CHARGED ‘WITH KIDNAPPING ‘The final preparations for the corona: | tion festivities throug next week are rapidly being brought to a close, and fast being given over to a| spirit of holiday rejoicing on a colossal! scale, with untold thousands of visitors from America and other parts of the to join in the reyal demon- fouventrs the chal tools on which | None of them bought ice cream of Alle |t?sh I don't know why they wantia. worg ‘oronation” and embossed gor, and when he shut up shop he put up |e Merely for sensation, 1 presume: | with the crown and the date of the oc- & series of big legends on the fitteen-| but when I have finished the publlo| currence, | foot fence, none of which was pl may then judge for themselves whether oP a ses a | tng to the millionaires, Algor ex-|1 or this man Gates has told the truth, npecub Gaty, G6: te. Albnosition | plained that he w arring and feath. ering’ bis enemies by proxy. ‘Then he strung up & line of old un- @erclothing with legends suggesting that somebody had atolen the Firemen's relief money and church funds. The police raided the line and took away the clothes, Algor eried “Thieves!” and Mayor McMahon of Rumson and Mayor Packer of Seabrieht had him indicted for criminal libel, which re- sulted in the $200 fine, A promise of prison for future of. fenses was made, and ince then All- gor hay put up signs calling the Mon- mouth County courts “rotten.” ——— SHIPPING NEWS. i tee loam rises, 13.47 Hie W, Low Water, A. AM. HBA TG He PORT OF NEW TORK. ARRIVED. La Lorraine aayre vee Blane Tr wan engaged in the Karl Marshal's London, numbering altogether over 2+ paierine “Auguste V ‘foetus | oNpON, June 11.—-Chartes 2. Behwar | ome over & month in sending out | % men mounted or on foot, are a: amie. : Hamburg} at the Savoy Hotel to-day confirmed Courteous refusals, UE yal (ia conasddensan’ ah pase INCOMING STEAMSHIPS. John W. Gat testimony regarding €0,.900 TROOPS TO KEEP LINE OF ginie rushes into the main thorough: DUK TO-DAY, the midnight meeting at New York, MARCH OPEN, fares from side streets, barriers of um- fyepciace, tien eure, rum ick. when matters affecting the steel trade) 4 peculiar dilemma arising out of ber sre crected at the most dangerous . "Genoe. Aliai, Kington. were settled, lene scarcity of firstecla carriage | #reet Junction: ame, pice, Apache, Jevbsanrile, Jonn W. Gates when in declined ty» horses, which } developed since th — 4 reply to the attack on him by Andrew universal introduction of the motors WAR. : OUTGOING BTEAMSHIPS. Carnegie, contenting himself with the Can afte many members of the DELAWARE ARRIVES SAILED TO.DAY. atement; "The Laird of Skibo is an| PeeTawe and ancient nobility partici. FOR CORONATION, Ls . ” Beeiae ay) Pating prominently in the rewal func-) ToRQITAY, England, June 1.—The Peay eal Mens and processions of the corona: tniteq siaies battleship Delaware ar § q " vga tion. The question of horaing the cums °UMed Bt L , KING AND QUEEN hermoaye hit slewaritly emiblanoed fain: "WE ere to-dky to take part in the | a , ily State coaches which have teen in, corenstion naval lew next weel ARRIVE IN LONDON nviba’ AAimAhings dah. Ohmi n Delaware will be tie most powerful | FOR CORONATION, | *0) ovcastons became tn many cases. Dattleship in line, Hh C4, Galveston Cameric, Varaguay. “They say I sold out Trust. I know trust, I sold to Mr. Morgan, simply bi When I quit 1 quit for good: thei were no conferenc with Gates co cerning tt. “Z— America from now on all parti to monopoly must open thetr books critical investigation by tere mui penalties, ond at last capital will tortion.” —_—— “LAIRD AN OLD MAN,” GATES’S COMME. LONDON, June ~The coronat the return to-day of the King ai te the Steel nothing of any steel cause I wanted to get out of business, He made me an offer which I accepted. I never owned a share of Steel Trust etock, I never have been in thelr oft io my life. Aitoras | of the royal family, de no concealment of any. | “nd representatives of ioreign States, thing; evasions must meet with severe 1.450 peers and peere: treated liberally and get handsome re. | lomatic corps, privy councilors, bish- fura, while labor will get the high: wages to which it is entitled, and the) rosentatives and eonsumes will be protected from ons | festivities were fully inaugurated with | of the guests has fallen on the Earl | Marshal, the Duke of Norfolk, who for many weeks has been the busiest man | "lin England, His task was rendered alt | the more difficult by reason of the tact very lmited and before he was able to take into consideration any of the | thousands of applications for invitations | re from the distinguished visitors and ath. | mers ¢ ce compelled to provide sitting room for | no fewer than 4,040 official guests. These gue: en to 50 foreign rulers that the apace in Weatminster Abbey is | succeed Jullus Harburrer, at th sirous of being present, he was | public livery stabl comprised 40 members | "8 repr | 4, 670 members be o% Parliament, 300 members of the dip- ops and judges, 600 official colonial re; 730 officers of the army and navy, King's counsellors and members of the royal household, | As slightly under 6,000, only about 2,000 places to be disposed of by the unofficial publte, A lay Od 4 } INMPNAMARA CASE, WILL BE FORGIVEN Detective Indicted by Indian- apolis Jury—Count Also Against Labor Man, INDIANAPOLAS, Ind, June 1%.— Elght indictments, two charging De- tective William J. Turns and James Hossick, a city detective of Los! Angeles, Cal., with kidnapping John J. MaNamara from hia office here In ‘onnection with the alleged dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times and a third charging ‘McNamara with conspiracy in blowing tp the Industrial Works of the Peorta and Pekin Union Railway at Peorla, ill, were returned shortly de- fore noon to-day by the Marion County Grand Jury, he five other indictments returned are Iso in connection with the kidnapping and dynamiting charges brought in con- necgion with the McNamara case, but were kept secret by order of the Court, Gebthaidied SLi A EA LATONIA ENTRIES. Latonia entries for Monday, June 19, are as follows: FIRST RACE,—Selling: (wo-vearold maiden colts and geldings; five. firton + 106 Oud” Chum 105; Chiekge Baik, 108 tarton, 103; Bagie Bs ; Robert, 108) Jinige Sale SBCOND.” WAC 3 five furlong Fras Vance, 10s, Dal 103; Sanit carte nile Pe Bal, Gold “Oak, f 105; Hen 10: 108! Div Htewon, 108; Meluni street 11 Natt 0; ate furlongs Goiten A aay, Mapadelng of Olen " semald. (Oks tPantter 4 “ Mra C10; Rudiger, “Tt!” Nambu Pe HAC: “Phreeseorolts and. wyg seven ‘Hell Hore, M1, Melvor, Oy °, Hoan. TOF; oxi Wibew, tot, Voance cal, 115 MATE HAOR,— Settin anda sixteen! ve tO: ida AL acke fio. Hea prunes!” 3140 Font At: Bitver ipnight, ‘1 ng Ting, 11k; Judge Wal: ba i mond, 110, Wander 116 \ leader of the Tenth Assembly District io gestion of Harburger. Goldenkrans was formerly leader of the Citiaens’ Union organisation in the district. who for a time enjoyed something of their prestige. No fewer than 0,000 troops, compris exentative regiments of the r ular army, (ie Yeomanry, the terr rlal volunteers and detachments from Canada, South Africa, Ceylon, Hone kong, the Malay 5 Malta, Ber+ muda and the West Indian colonies, tor gether with a naval brigade, are to be engaged in keeping the routes along the line of the procession. These are un- der the supreme command of Field Marshall Lord Kitchener, who was sp the Abbey Is capable of holding only | ially appointed to the post by the there remained | 10#: In addition to the military the entire |police forces of the city aud of great s Daughter Who Ua ty ava Wedded Her Riding Instructor Secretly ARMY OF NOTABLE WOMEN PARADE AS SUFFRAGETTES e Many With Titles and Others Famous in Professional Life in Ranks of 50,000, GIRL WHO MARRIED ARIDING MASTER Belief Current That Prof. Pupin Will Bestow Blessing on His Daughter. Although Prof. Michael I. Pupin of | Columbia University refused to-day to discuss the sudden marriage of his| twenty-one-year-old daughter, Varvara I, Pupin, to her riding instructor, Hugh | Willoughby, at Hoboken yesterday, it) was generally understood among friends | of the young couple that the proverbial |@#t Procession of women in support Parental blessing will soon be forth-|Of the suffrage movement that the LONDON, June The coronation procession of suffragettes which trav- ersed the streets of London this even- ing prior to the meeting at Albert Hall was probably justly described by “Gen.” Mrs, Drummond as "the great: coming, {f it has not already been| world ever has seen.” telegraphed to Springfield, Mass., where; Some 50,000 women, according to the the bride and groom will spend their jestimates, marched in the five-mile | honeymoon attending the horse show. | procession, which started at the Vic: Miss Pupin left her father's summer |toria Embankment, which leads home at Norfolk, Conn., yesterday|from Westminster Bridge, and pro- afternoon, being met here by Willough-| ceeded along the coronation route to by. She ts wealthy in‘her own right, having come into her fortune upon reaching twenty-one. It is because she was of age that the quiet marriage is not looked upon to-day as a real elope ment, in spite of the father’s known wish that his daughter walt several years before marryli The father is said to have known of the mutual attachment which grew be- tween his daughter and Mr. Willoughby soon after the latter met the girl, but it was also known that he opposed @ marriage at present, at least, Willoughby was manager for George Watson, a dealer in fine saddle horses and it was by special request that he Kensington, Militant and non-militant suffragettes combined on this occasion, al! question of caste was put aside, and queens or those garbed to represent such characters a¥ Boadicea, Catherine of Aragon, Mary Queen of Scots, and Queen Victoria, rubbed shoulders with ow Workers in the suffrage cause m the sweatshops of Whitechapel professional represented, | ot Every and among title, phase of industrial life the parad prominent Hundreds of historic chara: early ages down to famous like Charlotte Bronte, social, was being actresses women and coll rom torlans, the [acted as riding instructor to the giri| Marling, Jenny Lind and Mrs, Brown- who had recently purchased a string of | ns, Were portrayed horses, His home ts in Lexington, Ky., ven hundred women who had been where the couple will go for a visit] imprisoned for the cause form when the Springfield show closes striking feature of the pageant ee. carried lances with banners and suffragette colors. HAMILTON ENTRIES. ‘There were many Americans in oa 4 a? ranks. Julie Opp appeared as an rcenirien for Monday's races are} asco”. Miss Ince Milholland of New FIRST RACK, Selling: three-year-olds and up;| YOrk rode at the head of one of tho furlungs. Tove, Di; Vredamie 114,] brigades. Gertrude Elliott, the Amori- serrata F tin Dosie, 10:1 can actress, Wa another parader, {Ore tate] = Miss Bryce, @ daughter of John Bryce, member of the House of Com- “Camu mons, and a niece of the British Am- sen. 6 bassador at Washington, was at the Qctaetlbe erie Th: head of one of the contingents. Other Fs 10) rere Bor. 7: itush Unter, | prominent women in line ineluded An- | » Wt Lamb, 102 ‘ont. Le m 1Os : *Maxents, fs Moukes, G8; "rie Forty, 1s, | mie Besant, President of the Theosopht Boras, 166, cal Society; Sarai Grand, the novelist; | THIRD RACE-Hotel Royal Haadica) e Yhuleep Sin Mrs, ’ E year-olde and nahith Princess Dhuleep Singh, Mrs, William Botomis, 8; Ci fainpton G. Cavendish Bentinck, Lady Frances | FAR: Avtemer, 107: spade + Stanley Balfour, sister-in-law of the Unionist FOURTH RACH--Dundas Handicap steeple | leader; Mrs. Millicent G. Fawcett, Mra, hase; fouryeatolis and ua: about two) mile Emmeline Pankhurst and ta by pond S40) Woterurida 190, Wate: Pankhurst, ee ore One of the brigades was made up PIPTH RACK “Wentworth Plate; threerear| oe women pipers in Highland costume, Bh Doreliy, 115; Semprolia, 115] who played a@ stirring march at the RIXTH RACE--Maidena; two-vearoids; tive| Head of the procession, while scores fylowe. Bard of Bo if ae " Ponpy of ds led different contingents. 3. aGold Blade, 115; cPatior Gi seh Bae Tipsand, 115; Rod and Gun, 112; bSenex, ato mace, 112 Communis 4 {To use ever, te, Comes SE DRIVER IS THREATENED. Dabieltideets “oatn B—Witiow © “SEVENTH RACE Maidens; two-vearolds;| C¥lee of “Lynch Himi" After He five furlongs.—Gold Fern, 112, Donald 8, 11 Orimar Lad, 107; Dynamite, 110; Anmagh, 107; | Mad Run Down Boy. Toe Tio: Veones tata, Va) PIM HOT!) Samuel Katz of No. 281 Monroe street, FIGHTH RACE Selling owd around (he wagon and there were ries of “Lynch the driver!" Policeman MORNING GAME, . F 7 of the Hast Twenty-se acute, and recourse had to be had for —— ~ eveland....O 2001004 1 | Byrnes » Hast Twenty 1M | heir supply not only to the stables of POSTPONED GAMES. Boston 2 00.0 8 00 1 8-8) station eacorted Kats from the do the country mansions, where most of | tease Batteries—Greges and Laud; Woog the injured boy was taken to Be ind | the animals are now kept, | Mospitai. ut to the| PittsUurg-Boston game rie rain, and Nunamaker, Bonnie three-vearolds aud| the driver of an ice wagon, was threat: | up, 4 cnesixteenth. miles on the turf. — . dock at the] Wir Rante tae Hioeaed shes, Thi ar. eam. | ened with Iynching an the dock at the ees 18), “Puperneet, 82; Wooderatt,” 111,| foo: of East Hignteenth street t Thint Rall. 107; *Judge Lasang, ©. Counter 4 had accidentally run ove Blackford, 106: *Mermen, 05, Coup. | 2fter he-had a in ov Ne; seater Phingerne, 88 yearsold Gustay Lorena of No, fil East digo qisibie No tart: | Fifteenth street, The lad had eva wled cree Vor, NOt THe Golda Butters, 100i | vader the wagon to get a bit of ice ra hyprtation allowance claimed, — Weather| when the driver started his horses, The OC AS | wheel of the wagon passed over the Saeatitneenaasatieiennd | | boy's foot |CLEVELAND BEATS BOSTON.) ‘Young tovens’s ertes brought a oi somone nS ascnceasenitent ee BOY FINDS MOTHER SLAIN AND ROBBED IN EAST SIDE HOME clinical | Crime Committed in Five Min- utes Ho Was Away From Flat. POLICE SEEK TWO MEN. | Were Seen Following Woman | | | Upstairs by a Neighbor and Then Running Away. Mrs. Tkelstein of No. 21-2 Catharine street, going up to Aer apartment at M1 o'clock to-day, met Jennie Marlenta, Jher next elghbor, coming up with some from the store on the street Following Mrs. |Marienta were two short, dark men [with Nght gray cay Twenty minutes later, when Mes. Ikelstein came upstairs she found Pecer Pelliclaro, Mre. Marlenta’s twelve-yeare old aon, rushing about the third story hall crazed with frisht and grief. Dom- vusband, left her © yeara ago and she took her maiden name. boy had come down from the roof, where his mother had told him 0 to beat rugs becore she went down nd had found the door puld get no answer knocks ad the people tn the store had told him his mother had gone upstairs a quarter of an hour before, with the two men following her. LAD FINDS MOTHER DEAD ON | HER BED. | Mrs, Ikelstetn let the boy go through |her flat to the fire-escape thu into his own home, His entra: was followed with a sorlek of horror whieh echoed through the whole nelghbor- hood. A ment later the boy burs into the hall with his eyes starting m his head, He led Mrs, Ikelstetn jan others who came running into \the halls Into his mother's bedroom off the dining-rapm, Mrs. Marietta lay on her bed face down, Her hands and feet were bound together by strips of torn bed clothing. |Her head had been deeply cut. She |was unconacious. Her large diamond earrings, four diamond rings and a |sum of money which she carried tn | her dress were al! missing. | With young Pellictaro, Mrs. Ikelstein ran out to the atrect, At Madison and {Catharine streets they found Policeman Gates and Detectives Maher and Me- Carthy, Gates telephoned to Hudson Street Hospital while the detsctives |ran back to the house with the woman jand the boy. They found that the woman had been strangled by men whore finger nails had torn her throat and ripped great 5a 8 through her cheeks. Dr, Orr, who came from the hospital. said that Mrs, Ma ta was quite dead, although hody Was still warn, WAS AWAY FROM FLAT ONLY FIVE MINUTES, Maher and McCarthy made a Kk trip through the street and the neigh- |boring tenements. They could only learn that two men, undoubtedly the same two Mrs, Ikelstein had seen, rushed out of the house and down the street a very few minutes after Mra. Marienta went up from the grocery store. Yonng Pelliciaro was taken to Police Headquarters to see Inspector Russell, He was very positive that he’had not EXPRESSLY FOR THE HOME $1.25 the case of 24 bottles —one cent a bottle more than the ordinary beer. A little higher in price ~—a great deal higher in quality. FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS T DREAMS Kills All House Bugs. eta. i. « Sold Mant wtnvas by heen on the roof more then fi utes, Ho waid that he had flat door open ao that his mother get in, Ile had seen the strange when he camo down, The voy recoxmsed them, he Vis mother had been talking of galling out her furniture and going badk 17 Italy, Tae two men described by the neighbors called upon Poter | oat4, at 9.20 o'viock Unls morning. She went. od $0 for her furniture and they At 19.90 o'clock they came and offered her $%, and wore threatening in their tone. Mra, Marl- enta drove them out of the place ioe bined the door on them. A ltew later she went down to the detectives to Peiliciari, at Ne © he is a stone cutter Pelliciari made a briet took Domine ‘Kk street, wh | for eculptor | statement | HUSBAND SA * YS <HE HAD ABOUT $6,000. on te my wife in ald. ‘She bad too 1 had either to kill alo and 1 did leave her alone ew not a good wonan Rul ahe made much money. From what I have heard she hed edeut £09 on deposit with Guarini and Can- 1 have not twelve years, |many friends, her or to leave f u dela of No, 2) New Bowery and many diamonds and mucy mones hidden in all morte es around {he house--under carpets, In the mattresses, in cupboards, everywhere. All the nelghbors knew thie. ‘They told me The poles and the Coroner ratisfer themselves that Poll! near his wife for not detain him, tay many had not been yeare and dtd Capt. Toole, as roon as he heard of the munter, hurried he reserves of tin t station to Catharine stree: ant! justified by the multitude which poured the neariy Ipating @ great crowd. He wac into tue street east wide streets oroner Fein flat and started in hour and wered. SUCCESS IN TREATING SKIN TROUBLES | A Remarkable Record of Itching, Burning, Disfiguring Eruptions Completely Eradicated, from all as the ‘& took a0 investigation wit- \alf efter the crime jong and hope: lessiy Htchings and frritations of the ridin and scalp, and who in all manner of treatment, may learn what Cuticura soup and Cutleurs ointment have done for other skin-sufferers, by reading the following remarkable eon: densed testimonials, Mrs, Wm. Hunt, 25¢ Fairmount Ave.,’ Newark, N. J.: Whole body forturing ecrema, AK jair ali fell out snd eare seemed ready to rop off. Clothin, would stick to bleeding flesh. Hoped deat! would soon end fearfu: suffering. Cuticura remedies cooled the itch ony was ing, bleeding flesh ot once and soon cured her. Mrs. M. G. Maitland, Jasper, Ont: Itehy rash came on her baby’s head when but three months old, d over entire Put mittens on him to prevent tearin Reduced to a skeleton. One bath with Cuticura soap and application of Cuticurn, ointment soothed him to sieey One lot of each cured hin. Thinks child would have died but for Cuticura soap and ointment, Frank Gridley, 32. &. 43rd Bt., New York: In twenty-four hours he became few ead to foot with a dreadful burning teh, Bulfered agonies and could not lie down of Tt spi y. ait up. Cuticura soap and Cuticurs olntmens cured him in a single day. Mrs, Delaware Barrett, 11 King Bt, Had o' breaking out aif Wilmington, Del, When scratched it would over her body, bleed and become very. sore. She could Searcely sleep, as the itching was worse a! night.” Used “Cuticura soap’ and ointment three weeks and trouble disappeared. Mrs, H. E, Householder, 2004 Wilhelm 8t.. Baltimore; ‘Her baby had itching, torturing eczema, Nose and eyes nothing but sores, find one doctor's bill after another: but it did no good, ‘Two cakes of Cuticura soap ‘and one box of Cuticura ointment cured her. Hale Bordwell, Tipton, Ia: Itching eeze- ma from birth until 55. Found norellef, Boils formed as big as walnuts. Was in frightful condition and could hardly work. U Muti cura remedies eight mouths and is cured, Aivhough Cuticura soap and ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everyw! Mberal’ sample of each, with 32-page on the skin, will be sent, post-free, on cation to “*Cuticura,” Dept. D, Boston, HELP WANTED—MALE. Remarkable, indeed, is the fore- sight and generosity of Mother Na- ture, She has never created a desire without a satisfaction, For the unstrung man of busi- ss, for the overworked house- wife, for the recreation-seeking youth, Nature has given us a myriad of seashore, mountain and country places where sunshine, moonlight, cooling breezes, whispering leaves, sparkling streams, placid lakes, plunging cataracts, ocean waves, ¢tc., etc., enchant the mind, uplift the spirits and renovate the body. The World Printed 1,802 “Summer Resort” Ads, last Sunday—About FIVE TIMES the 364 in The |Herald. See Sunday World | “Summer Resort” Ads. | To-Morrow. f aa s