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| ' ‘ TN TORIMOND” FIRST SOUNDED > REY YEARS Impatience of the North 1861 Recalled by War Anniversary, PROMPT ACTION URGED. * Ignorance Led Many to Believe * That War Could Be Ended in a Month. By Philip R. Dillon. ‘The battle cry of the million, “On to | Richmond!” wae sounded by the popular leaders of the North fifty years ago in the third week in June. That : THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911, Pastor Who Is Celebrating His Silver Jubilee, and His School | q the FATHER RAYWOOD SCHOOLBOYS TRY 25,000 SEE GAME GIANTS WIND UP FIRE IN FACTOR ONTHEHILL TOP. ST. LOUIS SERIES BATTING ORDER. Detroit Shalier, If. TOMARK SLE WBLEEASPREST TRAVERS | | | Friends Will Honor Pastor of Garvin of Englewood Wins Ghurch of the Guardian | The Rev. J. of the Church of the Guardian Angels, | scholastic champions and champions to in Woat ‘Twenty-third street, is recetv: | be the felicitations of friends upon the occasion of his @tlver | siips for the firat time since 186, when to-morrow being fifth anniversary of his ordination to, Priesthood. will be held tn the church, followed on | Monday and Tuesday by recaptions to| entries wero al! jubliee, the gues of honor. Raywood solemn high mass in the church at 10.90 to-morrow morning, Father FOR TITLES AT. | Daniels, cf. | Wolter, rf. Hartsell, 3b. Ci ‘ “400” in Interscholastic Na- | Cnaee.to tional Championships. Warne Warhop. a TRAVER'S ISLAND, June 11—Inter-| Angels. ames F. Raywood, rector AMERICAN 1 YORK, June 17. ithered here this afternoon compete in thelr national ciampior to hia host of the twenty: | high echool# trom all over the country | ent large teams to compete at Berk- Appropriate services | eriey Oval. witnessed the 1 tt was a The one hundred slaty individual fore the game. on hand wh Pa be given by the jubllarian's parishion- | Pligrin fred the gun sailing por pS finally had ere at which Father Raywood will be] to their marks for the first heat of| Were fuity 5,000 the century dash. The crowd was very Nght, will celebrate a onsidering the unu d by al interest tie local schoolboy ath- see the game. assisted by hia! Umplres—O' Loughlin | Attendance, 25,000. howling, to shut Delahanty, 1b. Mortarit. O' Lear: 3. Stanage, ©. Donovan, }. and au outside Connoily. (Special to The Evening World.) PARK, NEW! went on duty The largest crowd that! rene for the third battle hety ever assembled on the Hilitop since It ‘became the home of the Highlanders game between the} urday | Hilitopa and the Tigers this afternoon.) for the encounter. 1 pushing mob, numbered more than 2,000 an tour be- When Secretary the gates Dav! ther clamoring t get in and willing to stand any kind ofainconventence $0 tong as tiey could] out to oppose B that | BATTING ORDER. New York. Devore, if. Cardinal Huggins, Smith, its, If, y. db Merkle, | Crandall ivans.rf Deviin, 3, Mowrey, 30 Murray, rf Oakes, | Meyers, ©. Hresnah e Mathewson, p Harmon, p. Umpires—Kiem and nalie. Ate | tendance, 9,000, | 81. LOUIS, Mo, June 17.—O14 Sol at hoon and all was Ke- McGraw's han'e jants Yardinals, and One of Bresna- the banner crowds of Lie season turned tically all the stands were packed at game time, w Jate-comers pouring into League Park by the hundreds, Christy Matuewson | wax Johnny 0" MeGrs hing selec tlon, while Bob Harmon, winner of si of his Iast vt games, was trotted Six, | Bugs Raymond has drawn a $200 fir veen Jobnny | MANY ARE _ oS One Man Badly Burned and TRAPS EMPLOYE = HURT a n | Others Slightly Injured at | Williamsburg Blaze. “ss i} Sickowlts, aged twent e ( No. { North Seventh street, Williams: bu Was seriously burn and a num- v of other men slightly Injured at ” taday wien fi destroyed the brick building containing the Japanning deportment of tie Tuttle & Bailey Maenufa ring Co at North Tenth end y streets, Williamsbura, plant owned by the company | span entire olock. Various iron |preducts are turned out, and the Ja } panning w Ss te one of the impor | departments. One thousand men are } ei oy tie compan: 8h noon V ly ine Andro, . e1 n BO pect Every available inch of space pund | from Man: * M , . man of the jap ing - ke after the openin leas n 500 spectators bel pace arom iraw for getting gay nan je Jap ing department, } bo Fry Meg Boh lial segue? long-time friende and associates, the "6 | the playing field was packed with per-| St. Louls fans are positive t the the building and in @ few minutes Saat 1 9, 181, the Confederate ev. Edward L, Dyer and the Rev. fine! of the hundred-yard dash | *?!ting rooters and the batters Giants played a very listless game be-| tere came the excited cries of the em- on April 2, oth Francis A. Kiniry, as deacon and sub- ard dash | aim the ball at a solid bank of Jo | hind the 1 yesterday loyees that fi 4 t Congress had met at Montgomery, Ala, my ", Englewood 1. van @ of peoplo | hind the Ingect vesterday. Report has} Ployees that fire had started. The cause Mad’ ho made that city the capital of bones The Rev. Edward Pace, PH.D. | siendid race against G. F. Scannell jr, |! Whatever direction grey hit. [it that the s want McGraw to fire] of the biage ts ot known } the new nation, as they called the wulibacehy: ob thee had who looked an easy winner until the| 200 people saw the Kame, and the! Raymond, and, white it looked yester-| Materials wileh are used for japan- ‘ : ‘atholle University, é tuation can be realized when it te te-| day as if they had mate up mind | ming iron products are highly ‘ o jeracy € ° nh t 7 men ared the tape el ‘ard ne a Wp thelr mind | Ls y inflan Confederacy: & city tn the vary heart and editor of the Cathollc Encyclopedia, | rn Garcin nema tnreney ards ie cated that the total seating capacity | not to apport tim any longer, It ts |mabie, irned rapidly, of the South, far from the Nor Will preach the sermon, Vespers will be n came through with @ fine lin only 14,40. The alse were jammel! of course impossible to prove this} Two Gre 4@ frontier, and well adapted in geography sung at & o'clock, at which time the |“T!Mt finishing a good yard ahead of |in defiance of the laws and many fist! charge re depart; for a capital. Dreacher will be the Rev. Alexis Cun, |S:8"nell. ‘The quater mite run was a| fights occurred when wen tried to force | ‘The avening papers have it that Rives tan ceca But Virginia had not yet Joined with heen, w widely known missionary of the| YT’ “lore affair until the last turn |thelr way down to the lowest sea Golden will ve a, NEw ker by morns ||)? oyes had masned them, and they wanted Virginia, They Passionist ordei was reached, when B, Story of Curtis] Warhop and Caldwell both warmed | ing, and that Roy will leave with ther: own s id started a priv had vital need of that State, Virginia - Extra musical services wit! be heid |! %. Staten Istand, took the lead from | UP. for New ieee Serta tua ten, Mare va es eusiday evening. Alea t vA ae ha iene ae Becount upon 4 2 ai ' ; 0 tia he Jungle | De a or fed! d Ames | the blaze. So rapidly did the 4 areas wares Beit eral Wavian aeeke ei, on both these occasions, with spectal Harsiaeee Ma. Newarle by Pine fig Folks, At the last-minute Wariop| wilt be.” persy ot ate Brean han jin the japanuing house tat the em. ite Richmond the eapit siledtloun by Golelota and & quarter, abe or H. 8, Newark, by yards, !and Donovan were decided upon ny. Roth managers continue to d yes were barely abl 0 " { Mhenceforth, they said, the heart of Vir- peo . iad HU GebnIon of De Le baile Insts Utne. chon, } h mang | ployes were barely able to escape, ; . “ panied by an Pitohers. umors, though McGraw admits | ivan ‘ Kinla would be the heart of the Con-| quickly decided that the Confeders Instrumente nn ehentra of stringed | ity Anished w good third. ‘Tho Tigers were unable to score in| that he would like to plok up a strong, |, tt te MRNE Sckowitn was so bemy federacy, and 90 it was, The Confeder-| President was in error, Johnston On Monday the child hi 100-Yard Dash-—First Heat the first Inning and Dantels gave the| young pitcher of the Golden stripe, paaaed that ho had to be sent to the fy ate Congress adjourned to meet in Rich-] 6000 men. Approaching to attack A iy children of the parish » De La sali crowd a thrill when he sprinted for! while Bresnahan states he has room for | Eastern District Hospit.i. The other t tnond on July 2. In the mean time| Wa® General Patterson with 15,00 men. will entertain the fubilarian and in the [ii ge-qo™t, Cobb's long drive and fell headiong tnto| an outfleKder, and that both Dontin and |employes who were burned were rubbea V@ = President Jefferson Davis and his cab-| JOHNSTON EVACUATES HAR: 2 pla fge al Set Mls Lanrencer ie: woud. (Time, 10.48 | the crowd of people as he caught the| Recker look like live ones to him. So|with itnseed ol! and other first aid © » inet removed northward to Richtnond. PER'S FERRY, CAUSING SUR. | ia St @ reception to be given by the Holy fomegter aoedeear, sooend; 3. ball. In the last half of. the open-| there you have it. | remedies nad sent home, iain: Gr caktuashes te ich inend, ab the Phisa Name Soctety, The jubilee will come to Hated, Time am 8 ing round Hartzell got a single, but| In the first Inning Devore and Doyle) ‘phe only means of entrance for thi crow files straight south, is but a hun-| ane Contedera iit Se-wechanend Grbtaninon a conclusion on Tuesday evening, when | yi, 8 a esttc, Wien ab? OR. Ger | there rete two out at the time and|struck out. Snodgrass fouled to Bres-| semen was through @ narrow wago! po miki eo outflanke Father Raywood will Ay = | De" Ta Institute, second; H. Richardson, | Cree lined out to Shaller, nahan. lway and erie the inten penne’ Ao Wollete 1s | ees pig «asa gel Mh vel . loners and’ other friends at the rectory, | Lae "Beto Lawrencettiie. thitd, "Time, I Sam Crawford opened the second with| In the second half of the first inning | "2¥ A” Ny ite dansss manele hang taking the beaten roads, the distance 1s | confluence of the Shenandoah and Poto- No. B17 W 4 + | soca. sided ciate a two-base hit into the left field crowd, | ® pitched ball grazed Huggins and he | °% ‘ a about 19 miles. mac Rivers, thus cut off from thelr }] | Father Rapwera Gea born ie Now Terhune, hamtaper Wan Sensol: ft" slatiery, ps [and went to third on Delahanty's sacri: | took his base. He stole second and|that came from the burning butiding, In alt history of all nations, ancient * fase od ~ they were not in condl- | York City and was graduated from @e Wit Pantene oe 4b. gg A Bie fice, but Morlarity and O'Leary both| took third on a bad throw by hltanel |The department saw that there was ton to hold 01 nt a KleKo—Ko . . , dot R smith lis out, Matty to |iltde ¢ : a8 motors, tunes, 00 pacalit nS Mau Aantaton With he cheat of Francis Xavier's. He was ordained in| Sci,,> Ojaham, De Ta Salle Institute, sv aexo RUN inion aas elite Horeue Mota, Korey oun, patidlieg B08, (inaea tes Auteation ote t heigliees ear | Pretident Davis, to the astonish Rome at St. John Lateran, “Mother of | | 440-Yart Run Won by B, After two were out Shaller was hit by | Doyle to Merkle. seving of the other bulldings making capital of @ vast territory, each near) ment of the public North and South, he! all the churches.” Hig first appoint. | #00) 7) lear, Barringer 1 ‘tel oonntt iiss | he big plant, Ag the extreme frontier of its territory, | evacuated Harper's Ferry without firing ment was to the old Cathedral, then the| Time "Rite A Mule 4 tice cet aa AQHA Nic Nasdaor tuetieg ne ‘ire we 2 confined to She be ane \ 4 ers ry 1 ir ime, 4 slaring at each other in deathly hatred | a shot, on June 14, and rereated south-| "I church of the Holy isniers tal poeiye 390 Ya “irae pace Bann, Ft et B the bell for saeta ata iow tateed nab ROBBERS KILL CONDUCTOR |where it farted. nay | Sanaa across @ little distance overland, ward to Winchester, twenty-five miles. | J [second sree. Next nc went to the| Witt cunt fi iP. Fethuye, | made a bad throw to third, allowing IN FIGHT ON TRAIN. | CREE Ta Bing a ACCEP ED AS A F:NAL CHAL.|, Gen. Patterson at first could not de-| church of St. Columbus Epiphany, in | Bartoger High, Scho time, 0.18 Shaller to score and Bush to take third ‘LA FOLLETTE IN RACE INGE TO THE NORTH Neve that the Confederates had re- —_—+. Twenty-Atth atreet, aa igcum |< eee ound § By Tegt’ G78 | Cobb fouled out to the catcher. \ . treated. He and his subordinates sus- or acting pastor, inches. D. W. Maloney, St, Peter's Prep, ye i jor by Two; ‘The radical leaders of the North ac-| pected some deep plot in strategy, Thi (Continued From First Page.) In 1898 Father Marweee was sent as| School, apd a. Nomag 4 De ta sale fe Se IaiCHAeee hee ee ee in| Sheriff Fatally Wounded by Twi | FOR THE PRESIDENCY. cepted the removal of the capital to took no pursult of Johnston, though the pastor to St. Peter's Church in Montl- |{uies’ pol ” ot T 281 agree walk and Sweeney aingle Thugs After Escape They | { Richmond as the final challenge to n| Sutnumbered the Confederates two to| the few remaining seamen needed were| ello, N, Y., where within « period of —-_——- did no Kood, as the others petered out.| Make Their Escape cetera demt reeves gt, ) death straggie, and 0 the bate cry | Me. The radicals of the North bec: Las slgned three months he built fine church of NEW DELAY IN SUIT The Hilltope falled to reach Aree in| zal vig | Robert M. Follette is @ candidate for j gathered from Kansas 0 Maino, and in| SxA*Perated at Patterson's Inaction, and Pee ae Catt gut granite and brown stone, seating 700 thelr half of the third. SALT LAKE, Utah, May 17.—After the Republican nomination for Presi: the third week of June it rolled down to| fut Sathrruk ‘cf imputicane® of the COASTWISE ae 20,000 | persons. The same year Father Ray. DRAGGING SINCE 1909.| In the fourth Delahanty natied a sin-| they had been arrested on an Oregon | dent. the Potomac—On to Richmond!" North. | a cone ite Waals Saline: tanan gle into centre after Crawford had flied | Short Line train at Hizh Bridge, Idaho, | ‘This statement was made to-day with At Washington and its. cuburbe were |: Tho’ largest army shat Warteth'| ary GriMin said he did not think |Couney’ where, este save dltneelty tt| May Cha Lawyer in Case] Sttettt, Daniel's great catch robbed | to-day, two bandits seized @ gun from | his knowledge and consent. His frieade Goto Union soldiers, already called "The | Continent had ever ween was gatherod |e Momus or (HL Cid could all to-day. | wan *aome experience” to serve ea Das ay inges. Lawyer in Case Morlarity of a hit and Delahanty died the hands of Deputy Sheriff Jones of | say that he is inthe field, prepared to Army of the Patomac,” under Gen, Ir-| &t Washington. For two months rexi- bdedhP cnet blogs © general | tor, ‘ yia McDowell, a brave and experienced West Point officer. Fifty miles away to the northwestward beside the Potomac, at Harper's Ferry, was Gen. Robert Patterson with 15,000 Pennsylvania Further westward, in West Virginia at Grafton on the Baltimore and Ohio Rall- road, 175 miles from Washington, was Gen. George B. McClellan with 15,000 men. Opposed to these three Federal armies were three Confederate armies. The largest was at Manassas, twenty-three miles weet of Washington, numbering 2,000 men, under Gen. Beauregard. Fifty miles northwest of Manassas, the Blue Ridge Mountains, at ester in the Shenandoah Valley, was Gen. Joseph E. Johnston with 11,009 men facing Gen. Patterson. Fur- ther wost a hundred miles, over the Allegheny Mountains, was Gen. Gar- hett with 6,000 men facing Gen, Mc- Cleltan. It was known all through the coun- try that the Federal armies were gr onward and crush this rebellion in a fow ments from all the Northern States h. been pouring into the nation's capital. ‘They were Cio tf Ag the flower of the young manh ofthe North. They hat " " left thelr desks and workshops and Are 8 betas Barber ore farms and had marched away from |SITike breakers, but not enough to home buoyantly, bravely, even gayly, Bao My ba op dan tO Our Gauae believing that they would swiftly # 1 | secret ry of the Seamen's Union, “that ‘the Morgan line will be able to move boat 1 next Thursday or ore days, 2 month perhaps, three months at the outside. Very few had trained as soldiers, able to endurs jand PMs and to prevent thelr congr the street# so that the twenty police: ei en Would have no need of doing any- | phyAicial hardships of weather and feld |thing™ more than Kill time. ‘Those, sis MPATIENT. NORTH will be relleveg by another six and so woutp | BROOK NO DELAY AT FiRsT. | on, day and night, tn 4 this public sentiment which “We Will call a general strike on all the t and vigorous acti twise lines at every port on the Mr. Lincoln knew, best of all, the im: Stlintlc from Kastport, Me. to New menaity of the undertaking of crushing Orleans. the rebellion, but he also knew that he| He sald that the other cbastwise lines was utterly power! opinion to back him, without public He must not all- had been given to reply until next Thursday to the demands made by the From ‘ating on| wood had bull ts five on. to keep the strikers moving, | city of ex-Gov. B. B. Odell, Father Ray- | @ xchool and rectory within a period of few year From Newburg Father Raywood to the Church of the Guardian Ani in which 1910, DOCTOR DIES OF INJURY. Six-Year-Old Tommie King, Run Dver by Train, Begged Paysician to Let Him Alone. as oftentimes to was necessary to ford raging torrents from the mountains, or plough throu; snowdr 2% below sero, depending upon the Sullivan County Father Ray- | He said that he had detailed six men| Wood went to Newburg, in 193, ae pas- ? \to do patrol duty from noon to four|tor of St. Mary’ k t to service tt Brought by Partner to Re- cover Funds, Because of the recent substitution of Horace E. Varker of No. 100 Broadway for former Congressman Herbert Par- sons, as counsel for Lewis A. May, one of the defendants tn a suit instituted by Eugene F. Enslen in the United States Cireuit Court, Judge Ward to-day granted an order temporarily staying proceedings to allow the new counsel to familarize himself with the facts and circumstances of the case. put It over. feet deep in rdner both per: There, in the home beautiful church, with | Alexander parish in the last | ‘To-morrow at one o'clock there will|elghteen months he has had constructed| ‘phe action was brought by Enslen on Gen. Beott, the commander-in-chtef, |e a meeting between officials of| practically a new church and achool.! yerch 25, 1903, against Lewis A. May fifth street st fad early foreseen the impatience of the Seamen"s Union and the Long-| both fireproof, and a new rectory to re-| 64 witam 13, Summerville to secure | charge of assault. patridtic Union supporters in the North, #boremen's Uni to determine upon | place the former modest butlding. i usa ebacdas ot tie an rr These eager ones would not walt to t!¢ advisability f a strike of long- VV ° 09 i ° vestment by May with Sommerville's Gant have the raw soldiers instructed in, *horemen. ° ve! Gravely had he and Mr, Lincoin| “If necessary," sald Secretary Grimn, BOY WHO COULDN'T PAY knowledge of partnership funds which, | father, Policemi It ix alleged, belonged to the firm of Lewis A, May & Company, of which the complainant was a member. Enslen alleges that his partners appropriated and divided among themsgives the sun of $2,000,000, ‘The litigation was delayed by Mr. Par- walked, twenty - one years old, of No. 200 Hast Thirty-third street, was locked up in the East Thirty- fon this afternoon on a The complainant was seven-year-old Elizabeth Ryan of No. Thirty-third street, whose Patrick T. Ryan, of the East Thirty-ffth street at Tested Padadasky. Mrs. Ryan eald @he was looking out of the window at Elizabeth, pushing a baby carriage containing her one-year-old brother, James, when she saw the man cross the street, strike her The Highlanders had a great chance in their half of the fourth, but could not With two down Chase and but Sweeney fouled out to Moriarity, who ran into thé@ crowd and made a great catch, eee SAVES MAN FROM WOMEN. Policeman Prevents Attack After ttle Girl Ie Struck om Street. Padadasky, who was tion, ar- Pocatello, Idaho, fatally wounded Jones, shot the train conductor, William Kidd, to death and escaped. Jones had arrested the two men and taken their revolvers from them. He was endeavoring to handcuff them when gne of the prisoners seized the deputy's n and “shot him down. Conductor Kidd, who had assisted the deputy in making the arrests grappled with both robbers and was shot to death. ‘The bandits then forced the engineer to stop the train and escaped. A posse is in pursult, eh anette inadll Bg COOKE IS NOT GUILTY OF STEALING FROM BIG FOUR. Jury Returns Quick Verdict Acquit- ting Clerk of Embezzling Railroad Funds. CINCINNATI, June 1 Edgar 58. Cooke was to-day declared not guilty of embezzling $2,000 from the Big Four enate the mfidence of the people of men sons's engagements in Congress and the daughter, shake his hand and utter an|Ratlway. The jury was out two hours. ly superior tn numbers to the Confed-| the North, he must prepare his S. Ira Cooper, of counsel for the Mor- | Six-year-old Tommie King, who Wa8| interposition of a demurrer by the de-| oati at the baby. Cooke was the last to be tried of erate armies. Yet, at this time, fifty | armies in th , common-| Kan Line, sald to-dwy that the strike | run over and crushed by @ Long Island | tendants. But for the timely arrival of Police-| those indicted in connection with the years ago, both sides seemed to be % ay. n rs in Was not directed against the Morgan! Ratiroad train near the Seaside sta- a man Ryan many women who saw the | $643,000 Cerinke of Charles L. ‘ inact! watching each othe: vy the North were denouncing him a: Tine, but really against the Old Do-| ton at Rockaway Beach on Thursday act would have pummelied the man. riner, Condinnat! treasurer of the road. Oe we tie ch wer Nowe, {ncompetent and some openly ac ininton Ine and he proferwed to have | twentng, died to-day in the St. Joseph's| TEXAS BOOTBLACKS HELD. petal asec Firat Warrtner, Indicted on numerou im of double dealing. What was ho tnformation that the men on the oid|° , charges, pleaded guilty to one charging j trA and Western people, who were| doing with that magnificent army at) Dominion. Line steamship Jefferson | Hospital, Rockaway. Man Away to Go Home to Greeces| TRAIN GOES AFTER RECORD. Leal 1 anxious to have their armies march forward at once and quickly suppress the rebellion. So the cry began—"On to Richmond!” There had been several skirmishes, and one small isolated battie at Great | Bethe! (colloquially called “Big” Bethel) which did not decide any ques- tien of relative strength. Also there ha@ been one campaign of marching, strategy, advance and retreat, engaged im by the armies of Gen. Patterson and Gen, Johnston for the possession of Harper's Ferry, This had been de- | cisive. { KARPER' FERRY MADRE FA- MOUS BY JOHN BRO. N, John Brown first made Harper's Ferry famous by his raid two years before the war began. Because of that rald| and the torrent of discussion which fol-| lowed, the public of North and South got the notion that Hary ty WAS & natural fortress Uke Gtbraltar, a gato- way to the South lke Thermopylae. A Handful of Virginians had captured it in April, only because they needed the Washington? Why did he not order it| to advance and destroy the enemy in- stantly?—they demanded to know. the bitterest critic) ration, The New York! ‘This me the mouthpi of th Northern radicals, On June 5 would go on ftrike this afternoon, | “STRIKE FOR LIBERTY” IS CALL OF SEAMEN. ent Was denied by Secre- tary Griffln, for the strikers. He said the strike was not directed against the Old |" Washington correspondent of the | Dominion Line and that he believed that | bune wrote: “I know that any brave/the trouble with all other lines | man with an ordinary head can take) would be soldiers out to Richmond in ten day® tie declared there would be no nd disperse the nob of treason.” This the Old Dominion Ling to: (rusted correspondent wrote a sarca y other line except the Morgan, min the ttled without any difficulty. trike enemy? Let them (the Administration) | thety fanil Bee to ft that the national fag floats) mast subm over Richmond before July 30." but to get to the system, The demand of the stewards on the work they ms and ammunition stored there. President Davis hurried his regi-| nts there as fast as they were re- ulted to be ready for his contemplated tack on altimore, Naturally, when Patterson was ready to ‘march th his Pennsylvania militla, he ad- eed toward that Confederate army | Ferry, Then Presideat Gen, Johnston—his best then thought—to take Ferry. So, by a hain of simple event ‘war seemed to cent! about Harper's | | Ferry. Gen. Patterson wrote to the Secre- tary of War at Washington: ‘“Remem- ben I beseech you, that Harper's Ferry is the place where the first great battie will be fought, I canpot sleep for think- ing about It." He was sixty-nine years old, He was altogether wrong, ax the event proved, But Jefferson Davis was also wrong. He had strongly impressed upon General Johnston the great import- | ance of Harper's Ferry, “e@ natural fortress, nding the entrance into the valley of Virginia from Pennsylvania and Maryland. He ex- pected Johnston to hold it to the last ‘But General Johnston, who was every- where admitted to be an able com- mander, carefully inspected this fortress and the country near it and ying it was) Dr. One of the boy’ below the knee, oadly crushed it had to be amputated. Immediately sentence addressed to the ‘®) "Most of the men employed on_ the ear greyed 1 "It yo 1 binding “ Uy Texas. early to-day. Genet en un war beurielt taviie penn rine. vewsaiey tare Deere inty or WGRAW FINES RAYMOND Louis and James arrived in New York posals to have it done on contract! | will not y them except through FOR BREAKING RULES, | Weanesday, and a telegram reached the] Advices On June 27 Greeley, in an editorial! snipping agents, ald the. ahippine police Friday saying they had run away. | run wrote: “Why fs that gallant and ener-| avonts will"not get them jobs unlear Heing Ont the | Detective Howry of Central Office, ketic soldier, McDowell, condemned to) they stop at thelr boarding-house bddied found whem in a Greek lodging house eww inactivity in the ® of the! Lots of men would prefer to live wit St. Ls at No, 183 Weat street. They hgped to ‘Twirler $200, LOVIS, Schenck of Rockaway arrived to | tld the boy, the lttle chap cried out to im: ‘Go away, doctor, I've no mon has no money. the ambulance man. what he could to relleve the little chap's suffering, and then the ambulance came io take him away. legs was cut off just nd the other waa so Brother After Th: Touls and James Gravios, tiny boot- blagks, who were arrested yesterday for running away from hard work in Texas in an endeavor to get back to their father's comfortable farm in Athens, have made their home at the Children's Sootety rooms for an indefinite period, Justice Hoyt, sitting in the Children's Court to-day, committed them there to await the arrival of thelr brother from after the accident, when | y. Ma Go away; I'll wait for Dr, Schenck did eal] on the Athena to-day. When ar- rested the boys had about $136 between Covers 148 Mile BOSTON, June 17,—An attempt was made to break all records for the speed of @ passenger train between Boston and Chicago when & speci members of the Ohicago Association of Commerce, who have been visiting this city, pulled out of the Back Bay yards of the Boston and Albany Railroad The train left here at 1 A, M. and reached Albany at Chtoage jm 148 Minutes, from Albany to Syracuse, miles, was made in 148 minutes, train was expected at Buffalo ai when it was to be transferred to the Lake Shore tracks. The Chicago Association of Commerce carrying 06. received here said that the 148, the embezzlement of %,000, He was sentenced to six years in prison, Then Mem | sire, Jeanette Stewart Ford, accused 0! rriner, was February, 1910. ‘The jury in disagreed. Finally, after many delays Cooke succeeded in having his case brought into court and the most sen- sational trial of the eeries ensued tried ir her case Alexnader Hyslop, twenty yeara old, a chauffeur, living at No, 226 West Seventeenth street, reported to Lieuten- ant Walsh of the West Forty-seventh street station this afternoon that while he was driving the car of his employer, Dr, Joseph Converse, of No. 42 West Fortieth street, through’ West Fiftieth street he knocked down a thirteen-year- old boy who was crossing the street. The little fellow, Max Sarbon, of No 879 Sixth avenue, was not badly in- st. June 17—For breaking | them. lees ae dias ‘he lead) bite e per « ine boat: or <1 e —— olal arrived via the New York Cen- | jured. His severest injury was a BREE? ung Cees ate Morgan Ine boats is for an tncreade | training rules and not. eing tn coat DIVORCE SECRETLY tral Raiiroad at 1132 4. BM. Jocation of the left shoulde: city auving, Gckemam of aomne can for| oh tial epeal agent of th | Yen to pitch eftectively In yesterday’ |TQ HEAR 0 ed by the Michigan Central aera TT moment dot at this much-ado-| pepartment of Labor of the State of J r Note. ‘The leading Chicago paper said ®t) who has cha of the strike, and said,| New York National Baseball team, Case. 4 : b t Ree RaME APE ceeeh lee way this hee | Latin imal teat ae aan inane aren Maw LATONIA RESULTS, — Jar toacner, and a brixht pupit wrote: war of the West. We can fight tho| the General Manager of. the Morgan HAMILTON RESULTS. Justice Glegerioh in the Supreme Court ark Tene eee Nh es battle, and muccerstully, within tWo OF| tine, wan willing 0 evant all the de 5 to-day appointed Charles L. Hoffman of] FIRST RAGE—Five furlongs.—Pre- | (#8? three months at the furthest nands of the strikers except the ine No. St Nassau street referee to hear] sumption, 100 (Taplin), Arat; MoCreary, | Wee what ar bamap oe tet Would thunder | crease in the minimum scale of $0 to! FIRST RACE—Three-year-olds and | ng: determine the action for divorce| 103 (Loftus), second: High Brow, 108 peotnessnveebeidiad wrth, the tramp of mighty armor, fr 435, and the additional twenty-five cents| upward; 0) added; "Ix furlongs | Sraugne py Matilda E. Hawking against | (Koerner), third, | Time-060 2-6. # day per man while in port tained years. That road, would be Novelty, 115, (Shilling) 1 to 8 and out, Nathan F. Hawkins, ‘The men so far affected by the strike] won: Lawton Wiggins, 107, (Sweenc-) | ber husba sodden with the blood of those brave) are about L2& from the Momus, 120 from| a to 1,6 to 1 and It to 5, second;| This action was agreed upon by the! “Mutuels boys of the Army of the Potomac whol the Antilles and about 7 each from El] Martin W. Littleton, 101, (Warrington) | attorneys for the husband and wif In late June, iis impatiently awaited Rio, 1 Cid and Bl Norte, 3 to 1, 6 to 1 and 9 to 6 third. ‘Time, | Henry V. Poor represented Mrs, Hawk- the comman orward to Richmond)" | —_—_-—— 11285, Also ran Sidney R., Herbert |ins and Henry W. Kiralfy appeared for| Brow §% show. >. Ss. Turner, Stillright, Owanux, George 8, | the defendant. PHILIP J, BRITT TO WED, | MORGAN LINER SATES | iitvin’ Resiouche gee FROM NE RLEANS.| sycoxp Rack—Three-year-olda; $500 SPAIN EXPLAINS TO FRANCE. Miss Evelyn St, Clair Turnure, dauga- ter of the late Mr, and Mrs. John Ture| h 4; mile aw nd a_sixte h.—Denham, time on A POOR LEA (From the Central Law Journal.) ‘The negro boy was up for the fifth » ORLEANS, June 17.—"The | 114 GShilling), 11 to 5, 2 to 5 and out, won | ynstary O¢e f Towns in rare tli be mmartied to PRL ge Wet | threagened local atrike of enon | 08 tW0 lengta: Caper Sauce, 119 (Gold. BB sealed ay ae peal to the boy's father, Westminster Cathedral, Washington, | the Morgan line did not interfere with | Stein), 12 to 1, ¢ to 1 and 3 to 5, second; June %, ‘ [the sailing to-day of the “steamer [Sti Bass, Hb (ovwgam, 1 to 2 and outs! SADRID, June 1.—Spain has sent to % | , x Yow | Comus ork. Offic of the | third. . wl Emad, Frolic in which the] In court 90 wife having dled about two years ago, ryan Ine, say there has been no | named. Alegaar by the Spanish troops in Moroc- | Hens” a em apprehension of a strike here. THIRD RAC “#600 added; two-year- 7 ory (ale: goed ihp Mulat Hafid’s Kick, |“ANTWERP, Belgium, June 1%.—Not-| kia; 5 furlonge—"Priggins, 13 chil. |co 1s Justified and expla’ the fath FEZ, M o, June I.—In protesting | withstanding the efforts of the striking | ing), 2 to 1, 3 to 6 and 1 to 4, first by | Spanieh standpoint. here too.’ | against the occupation of Fee by Span-| seamen to Ue her up the Finland |length; *Little Pal, 116 Gordon), 2 to 1,| PARIS, June 11.—-A despatch to La teh forces, Sultan Mulai Haid says ha| sailed for New York to-day on sched-|3 to 5 and 1 to 4, second; Yorkshire Boy, | Patrie from Tangiers saya that Spain | will appeal to the signatories of the Algeciras treaty and meanwhile he will refuse, as long as the occupation lasia, to fulfl any of the clauses of the vied time, She was manned by non union men, ‘The tsrike leaders appeared discouraged at the attitude of the Germans, who are arriving here | year. otrtkers, It (Rice), 12 to 1, 6 to Land 2 to 1. third. | has concentrated 10,000 men with an Time, 1.01 2-5. Yarico, Nottingham, Ore-|enormous quantity of war materiale at mar, Lad Tipsand, Dr, Watson, Tro-|Cadis for use im Morocoo should oo- in| palolum, Florida's Beauty, Monsieur X.|casion arise, The forces now occupying Meged Bpanish-Moroccan agreement of last| great numbers to take the places of | Frog Lege also ran and finished os|El-Araish are to be increased ¢o 4,000 i but he somehow ki comin way wid dose } Fillibes, Working Lad and Floral Day also ran and finished as nemed. paid: Presumption charge of-chicken stealing. This time the Magistrate decided to ap- ow, wee here, AB,” said he to the arkey, “this boy of yours has been up many times for stealing chickens thet I'm tired of weotng him “Ah don't blame you, sah," returned “Ah'a tired o' seeing him “Phen why don’t you teach him how to act? Show him the right way and he won't be coming here,” h has showed ‘im de right way, declared the old man earnestly. “An has euttenly showed ‘im de right way, Gettin’ chtokens.” 9.0 straight, $2.80 place, #50 show; Mc- Creary 5.80 place, $8.60 show; ‘High meen ak entices the bugs from reeding places; they tanderd ¥ eat it and die. Si 25 yenrs. Peterman’s Discov. killa Bed oure pre- (Odoriess), Killa moths, Ai'Gealens, Ratusceabotitutes, battle to the end with “the urmy” of President Taft, Claiming that they ure already assured of of the delegates in the Republican Con- vention, they declare they wi intrenched 4 one-third MM go into the contest with the ery: “La Fall and a chance to win, or Taft and sWe Without money, without t he organd- ration characteristic of machine palitics, without a legion of office hold ders or the far-reaching Influence of tae interest,” ) ay, “but on a pro H gre: in the light of hie achtevements in Wisconsin and the record of seven years in the Senate, he will appeal to enlightened public opinion.” a few drops keep teethcleanforhours You use so little of Odol each time that a bottle usually lasts six to eight weeks. A few drops in a little watér—used with tooth brush-—~does more good than most lavish use of dental pastes, creams, powders, etc. Keeps teeth and mouth surgi- cally clean—words off trouble, At all Druggiste Geo. The Sunday World's Want Directory makes more “Ofiers of Positions’ than any other two medi- ums in the, universe mer