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~ SOLDUNCLE SAM'S PIE AND STARVED, Transport Captain Brings Five Cooks and Bakers Here in Irons, “WIRELESS BROUGHT AID. United Clates Marshals Bring Ashore Men Who Fed the Hungry Soldiers. Five wan-faced men, holding petty Jobs in the Army Commissary Depart- Ment, were brought into port as pris- ners in irons to-day aboard the United » States transport Kilpatrick, which e@tled June 15 last from Galveston, Tex., with a cargo of 11% soldiers and © officers. A. Neil, a galley cook, one of ‘Uke prisoners, deciared to United States Commissioner Shielda that they had been on a bread and water diet for three days, and he begged for some- thing to ent. “Your Honor, 1 am starving,” he Neti and his four companions in mis- ery were sent to the Tombs In default of $1,000 bali Priated “property of the United States,” for which the maximum penalty |e 5,000 fine or five years’ imprisonment. They were given an extra portion of beef stew, and they will be formally arraigned before Mr. Shields on Mon- day, an the witnesses against them could not be produced this morning in court by Capt. A. J. MacNab, the com: manding officer of the transport. TRIED TO GRAFT BY SELLING UNCLE SAM'S FOOD. “These boys got into trouble because they tried to graft,” said Capt. Mac- Nab to an Evening World reporter. &m sorry for them, but the regulations are explicit with respect to the pun- ishment of any one who steals what Belongs to the Government. On ship- board the army feeds its soldiers at 7 A. M., noon and 6 P. M. From 1.30 P. M. to 3.30 P. M. the commissary Dement of euch soldiers as may want such extras as tobacco, sweets and eat- ables for which they willing to vay out f thelr private funds. “We had been out of Galveston only twenty-four hours when I began to hear of @ quiet little business in food- stuffs being carried on by members of the crew. William Davis, the second Dutcher, was selling small steaks to the soldiers, while Hane Bock and William Connell, two bakers, were found to be selling pies at 2b cents each. Neil, the galley cook, was ped- dling sandwiches and coffee at 10 cents ach, while even the cook, William Baunders, was found to be implicated, having sold 2 whole cooked chicken to 8a artilleryman. "Of course, if the property these men Were selling the evening had been their own, no ar- happened to belong to the Government. I suppose the soldiers got hungry and Wanted more than three meals a day While at sea, but their abnormal ap- petites is no excuse for the dishonesty of @eo ship's crew. i steak vendor, had 6.25 " or ship's prison, by others. Confessions from soldiers constitute the case against them. Capt. MacNab says that the soldiers’ purchase @f the stolen pies, steaks and edtbi ‘The transfer of the culprits trom the to court was spectacular, and one @tates Marsnal Henkel's best Wirel fa: from _ the 2. to Be Brooklyn Navy-Yard @ of the prisoners on the oe Rr iect was communteated to the office of the United States At- Storney and a fon of “Col.” Abe Gruber, who is an assistant wreneeueey, wi marshals seized the five prisoners, and hed them from Pier No. 12, By to the Post-Office Buitiding, wh! police Were on hand to quell any efforta. bas cate hen ar ned in court their counsel, ‘Willlam M. Byrne, claimed that two the five : e subjects of King George, but when asked which two, he said that he had not become sufficiently ac- inted with hic cliente to block out Britishers, ‘CRUSHED BY ELEVATOR TRYING TO FIX BELL. Roberts Pulled Rope Wrong Way While He Was Alone Under Car. Charles Roberts, elevator man in the four-story loft butiding at No, 633 crushed to death this j@ making an attempt ¢ , A large number of girls are employed tm the building and Roberts the heavy work of the day was ov Bround floor end crawied under the @er to get to the tube thet carried the Wires to the bell. “He desired to move the car a trifle ‘aud in pulling at the ropes that govern | the machinery let the car down instead | each for having appro-|, gales department is kept open for the (if Guring the early hours of | ™ Fests would have been made, But st | gy, Pepair the wirer leading to the elevator | d taken ‘them down for the half holiday. Tho| ‘Beil tn the car was out of order. When Roberts stopped several feet above the | WWOULD-BE JUNIOR CHAMPIONS TRY LOCKED IN BRIG) FOR NEW TITLES Good Sized Crowd Sees Am- bitious Athletes at Trav- ers Island. TRAVERS ISLAND, N. ¥., June ‘The most ideal weather conditions pre- vatled here this afternoon and the track, ‘instead of being soft after the heavy rain of might, was in splendidly firm shape, thus assuring #ome fine per- formances in the jun metropolitan championships, The crowd was larger than usually attends the junior champs, all of the seats being filled and @ fair sprinkling of spectators basked in the sunlight that warmed the grassy banks murrounding the field Word was received from both the Present track captain of Cornell, Me- Arthur, and Putnam, the sterling haif- miler who will captain Cornell's rext year's team, that they would not be able to represent the w York A. C. here to-day, L. G. Connor, the new star miler of the I. A. A. C., who was entered for the mile event but discovered only yeaterday that he had won a@ Southern championship six years ago and there- fore couldn't represent the club to-day, was satisfied to occupy a seat in the srand stand. in Tard Dash Tirgt heat, wan by A. ymerican tine.» 0 jeat--Wan by dod? Cote, Covumbte henectady : W. 3 nd; time, rie eat ¥ Arthur & £4 Ward, Paullsh A. C 0.4 Fourth Heat Won by Frank Stevhenton, ‘rin- sty) lu fever, Irie American A.C mi Fits Hest wan t K Conway, | Irieh merican ks: te ‘Tt ide’ Hovise, Mwine by FW. Coming, Irish C, Poster, Cuyler A, A., ‘ound Shot. M. with OF be fia + ‘american 4 ot ag ntan He Me ming iy Matic’ Mun ciest Neat won by Fit Pee vitae Henigha! ad Wo Gras stime A, ‘titth, “ime; Mod, Mela i Baan Min, Knights Mo FY sinctain, Si, Maya. Final heat won, by Arthur Mayer, 1A, 0. ©, KS. “Soaway, i. ALAS by 1 Gy 93 18,000 SEE GIANTS PLAY DOD BATTING ORDER. New York. Brooklyn, Burch, cf. Daubert, 1b. Wheat, If. Hummel Stark, as. Coulson, rf. Zimmerman, 3b. Hergen, c. Schardt, p. O'Day and Ema. ab, WASHINGTON PARK, BROOKLYN, Dune 24.—Ideal baseball weather and the fact that the Giants and Dodgers would clash again attracted one of the largest crowds of fans that thas attended a same at these grounds so far this year. (Long ihefore the thne scheduled for the tussle to begin droves of enthusiasts began to arrive at the park and as a Tesult President Bbets had to open up extra entrances, By 290 o'clock every seat in the grand atand had been taken and the overflow was compelled to go out on the fleld, where it took pos- session of the benches, which had been placed in front of the @-cent bleachers 4nd the grand stand. The crowd as usuul was divided tn its enthusiasm, ‘the Brooklyn bunch doing the most yelling as a consequence of the «1 victory which Dahlen's crowd had captured from MoGraw's men yesterd Manager (McGraw trotted out his star twirler, Christie Mathews son, and Dahlen ‘thought that big Schardt bad enough control to beat the Giants, Bridwell returned to the game Jay and took hts position at short. Whee the game began there was close inning, Devore drew four balls and went to second, after Bridwell had also got a free pass. Snodgrass was hit with a pitched pall, filling the banes, Schardt was then yanked out of the box and Knitzer substituted Murray drove a fly to Wheat, Dev scoring, Merkle hit to Zimmermi forcing Bridwell et fanned out ‘The Giants scored another run In the third, Murray lined to left for base, Wheat'# reat stop holding Red at firs, Merkle’ rap Was too hot for Zimmer- man to handle and went for two bases, Murray reaching third, Crandall struck third, Crandall | out Kly. Devlin drove a sacrifice |fly to Borah, Murray scoring, Meyers and atole second. | was purpevely walked si en ilaiiaalaillianidiammaas SAVED A BOY’S LIFE AND THEN VANISHED. | Driving north in Second avenue ast evening a man on a truck saw a boy at Eightleth street run in front of @ trolley car, The man leaped from nis | wagon, and as the boy, knocked down, went under the fender, the man reached beneath and yanked him from in front Then the car stopped. | of the whee! ik “This kid ain't Graham and Hunter Are Beaten to 18,0 fang present and they were sull coming. | The Giants scored a run in the first THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1911 RACIN HAMILTON WINNERS, FIRST RACK—1600 added; maiden three-year-olds; a#ix furlongs.—At Once, 110 (Musgrave), 12 to 1, 4 to 1 and 6 to %, won by one length; Mattie Kernan, 116 (Burns), 11 to 6, 7 to 10 and 1 to 4, se ond; Flint Rock, 115 (Arehibald), 4 to fo 8 to Band 7 to 10, third. Time—1.15 1-5, Curlous, Andy Chisholm, Madrigalnn and Halley's Comet also ran and finished as named. SECOND RACE year-olds and up sixteenth miles $500 added; three- selling; one and on Ite, 111 (Aroht 6 to 1, 2 to 1 and even, won by one length; Tanunda, 191 (Gordon), % to 1, & to 1 and 4 to 1, second; Sandrian, 101 (Sehuttinger), € to 6, 7 to 10 and 1 to 3 third. ‘Time—1.17 County Tax, Sou, #upervisor, The Golde Huterfly, Semi- Quaver, Salien, Robert Coover, Macias and Sir Kdward also ran and finished as named SHIRL RACK added; two-ye nd @ half furlongs. olds; selling; five Benex, 108 (Pickens), 6 to 5, 1 f 2 and out, won by @ head; Miss Joe, 9% (Schuttinger), & to 1, 3 to 1 and 6 to 6 third, Time—1® 2-5 Koray, Hil Lamb, Florida's Beaut Winkee Lotus and Monsieur X also ran and finished as named FOURTIT RACE,$600 Added; Burling Handicap Steeplechase; Four-Year-Olds; about Two and a Half Miles—*Ticket of Leave, 158 (Kermath), 13 to 10, 2 to 6 and out, first by four lengths; *St. Abe, 138 (Dupee), 12 to 10, 2 to 5 and out, second; Terrible Boy, Stalker, 125 (Ryan), 6 to 1, 7 to 6 and out, third, ‘Tis Steve Lane ran; aW *Parr entry -e| TRAVERS VS. KIRKBY IN GOLF FINALS AT APAWAMIS in Well Played Semi-Final Round. RYF, N. Y., June U.—Wagering was in favor of Walter J. Travis being a finalist in the annual golf tournament of the Apawamis Club when the semi- final rounds of match play waa begun to-day, but opinion as to whom his rival would be was sadly divided. Travis's partner js Sam J. Graham of the Greenwich Country Club, a youth of many « hard fought battle, while the lower half of the draw brought Robert Hunter, Chicago, with Oswald Kirkby, Englewood. Travis beat Graham 5 up and 4 to ¢». Travis played out the bye holes and really made a 68, but as two short putts were conceded, it could not be called a new record. Cards first half: 24443949 4 BaF + 664483385 3 6—3e however, ‘Travis’ pace in- and his rival was able only to halve three holes. By playing the bye holes, Travis really scored 3, but be- cause of the two conceded prutts that 1a), | Fh ‘SENT TO BROOKLYN | tributing centre for great quantities of RESULTS ENTRIES LATONIA RESULTS, FIRST RACK yards.—Ben Me One mile and weventy Jaren, 119 (Ginas), first; Kler, 110 (Wilson), second; Rompt (Ganz), Time, 1443-5, Discon t, Hob F Startier, Sweet Owen paid: Ben Las 44.90 win, $2.70 place, $2.50 show; har Jer, $2.80 place, $2.60 show; Rompte, $8.90 alow. APCOND longs —— Winning wien le slo Startins | second third. Toeamover i wlhontine Witch: 84080. ; Requin, #4 pince! 4:10 ‘yrings, $4.70 show pt a; LATONIA ENTRIES. Ky, June 24.—Kntries for Monday | | colts Domino, aes 1125 Menther = 2. BCOND TACK and geidin 04; shot; | Jack Weaver, 107; Dun’ Camp: | U1 ellis furl six a reevear-olds; ome ent, Os, Korma Bell Hi Me! for: a) er ein “Ue Rey ee Sister Morence, 100 Sian nit a ech tie $e, Meret. 308; Prine at SMUGGLED OPIUM TOBE DISTRIBUTED Borough Across the River Cen- tre of Big Contraband Traf- fic, Trial Discloses, The disclosure that Brooklyn is @ dls opium smuggled into America from | Canada and Mexico was made at the! trial of Walter Funk recently in Binghamton, N. Y. Funk was con- vicied yesterday of snuggling trom Canada and is trial disclosed that « syndicate is engaged in the contraband vj cated th GREAT MUSIC WEEK AT GARDEN WILL Evening World Readers Have Chance to Hear Best Works at Nominal Price. CUT OUT THE COUPON. \Wage Earners and Children De- | & lighted With Opportunity Given by Festival. The Hight Days’ Musical Festival be- to-morrow night in Madison Square Garden promises to be a great | success. Certainly, among the pupils of the grammar and high schools, the wage earners and the vast army of Music lovers tn Greater New York who have not been able to attend the operas, this carnival of music has aroused more enthusiasm than any enterprise launched in recent years. Thousands of pupils have communt!- wi to attend the con+ certs with their parents to their teach- ers and many of the principals of the schools have personally visited Jullus Hopp, the managing director of the ven- ture, smd expressed their indorsement of the plan of popularizing music with th masses, The Evening World to-day prints the firet of its admission coupons. This coupon with twenty-five cents will ad- mit an adult and @ child to the con- cert to-morrow evening. Without these coupons a general admission of fifty cents will be charged. This coupon may be presented at any of the Garden box offices. Similar coupons will ap- pear in The Evening World with the Programme of the night's concert each |day next week. These coupons will be 00d for use the evening of the date «1 which they appear. The concerts will be given by the Russian Symphony Orchet . The) Movement to create popular interest in high-class music has enlisted the active Co-operation of many prominent educa- tors, public men and women and officers of wage-earners’ association. A com: | mittee hae been named from among the festival. Gilman, worker of the University Settlement, has been named treasurer. This com- mittee will handle al! funds derived from the low-priced concerts. “MUSIC WEEK” 8 ONLY PART OF GREAT PLAN. trade on an expensive scale, Government inspectorw have located | at least a do places in Brookiyn | that are use. distributing stations | for this locality, and are parts of the smuggling system which has connections in Seattle, San Francisco and Montreal. | Funk's conviction was the first victory | in the warfare on this syndicate. Frank T. Lowe, a Japanese, living at No, 21 tekford street, Brooklyn, was called as | 4 witness and testified to writing letters | to the defendant | Lowe first said hi packages of oplumat avenue, Mant that he had re d received twenty | ‘0. 411 Amsterdam | ttan, where he then lived; ipted delivery sheets of Adams 5. pany for them, | nd that lie had personally delivered the | packages to Lee Fong Wing at No, 12) Pell street, Chinatown, He said that he | had never spoken to Wing, but had | nerely delivered the packages over to him, the total cannot be recognized, a matter of universal regret. At that, on the home hole, Travis missed a two-foot putt for a 3 to the strict 40. Travis—In .4 4 884495 4 Graham—n, 448 45 44 5 6 Hunter was able to hold Kirkh going out, but after the turn, th man did not win # hole, and lost 6 down and 4 to go. Kirkby Out. wee 4 8463448 6 Hunter— or - 4684935643 6 rkby— Hunte In.. 45 Beaten eight. White, Oakia Princeton. 6 up and 4 to go; FP. H. Me- Adoo, St. Andrews, beat C. P. Rddy, Princeton, 1 up W holes. Second set first xe beat D. W dner ls Houston, Ralph Carroll, Greenwich, beat M. J Condon, Wykagy!, 1 up: O. H. Jian, beat G. EB, Mo Rutland, STOKES RETURNS AFTER WIRELESS SEARCH OF OCEAN Arriving here to-day from Liverpool, aboard the steamship Campania, of the | Cunard Line, were Edward C, Stokes, former Governor of New Jersey, and his father, Hdward H. Stokes, both on r Way to Millville, N, J., where y have been summoned by the death Jof the wife of the elder and mother lof the younger man. | Father and son left | weeks ago on the Amerika, of the| Hamburg-American Line, when, after |the vessel Was at sea but @ day or }two, the wireless began to hum with |the message that Mra. Stokes was at the point of death and wanted to @ her husban] and son. The call was relayed from vessel to. vessel all over the trans-atlantic patas, in the hope that the Amerika would pick tt up. Not until that #ip was within half a day of Plymouth, Eng- land, however, did her operator get the call, whtoh was delivered at once, Both New York two | value |HELD FOR SWINDLING It was alleged r the tat the defendant, Ste! expressed | 1 persons from Al- one of these persons | less than y-one of | axgregating a Mttle nds, are said to have been Lowe, alias 1 to sevel that ° 800 po! to places in Brooklyn are is said. In these a| the drug is carried | comparatively speoking only a | buck room on, small proportion of the opium smuggled into this country finds its way te} Brooklyn, dn the last seven months of this year, according to official figures shown to- day by & high Government official, no! less than 89,905 pounds of opium hay n inported into this country, the| the whole being set at 3980, just a Httle short of a million dolla According to ernment oMecials, the bulk of this eplum has been brought in here through the operations of the syndicate Which the Government is try+ tng to smash. The per capita consump. tion of oplum in the United States ex- ceeds the per capita consumption in China Itself SAREE SERGE AND ROBBING YOUTH OF 19. Pretends to Find Diamond Ring Which He Offers to Sell and Then Steals Watch. loxkowltz, aged of No, 13 Allen street, was held in| $2,000 ball for court by Magistrate Steinert in the Yorkville Court to-day, on a charge of larceny, He is accused of swindiing Meyer | | Mordkowitz, aged nineteen, of No, 127 | Cherry street, out of $2 and stealing @ gold watch and chain from htm It was alleged that Moskowita dropped ® pocketbook at Fourt street and First avenue and then picked it up, telling! Moskowitz he had found It. It contained | &@ diamond ring. | He offered to sell it to Mordkowitz, The latter said he had only $% This War accepted, and as the youth held Morris twenty-one, | of Greater New York. Excellent artists | will be It t# planned to devote the proceeds of the festival to np os open alr concerts, Shakespeari@™ plays and other classic performances &t the playgrounds ed to enact famous roles, and prices will be arranged low enough to accommodate everyone. This plan | for educating the masses to the high | standards of art in mu: and drama / is now well under way and Is in the, hands of a commitiee of which Mra. J. | Borden Harriman is chairman. To thi committee were added to-day the names of Mrs. Egerton L. Winthrop, wife of the president of the Board of Educa- | on, and Mr, leaac Seligman. The concert Drogrammo for Sunday | night, known a8 “Russian Night,” is follows: Mareh ‘bach a, ihe Me,” b, Mussian Dace, jst, | oy Tschaikowsky "Topan”* gud Finale Ssmpbony N ence ine ‘teqplazunow ene al ‘ead Eiward B | ‘Tecdaikowaky | To add to the attractiveness of the OPENTO-MORROW = sagnatecness | Secretary Phillips of the American Em- y| GREAT FLEET WILL BEA BLAZE) jarmament was the American battle \Senday General Admission, 50 Cents cou Mune cig! 25, at Madison Square Garden. THE EVENING WORLD the Garden entrance or at the No, 1416 Broadway. - WARSHIP FLEET OF 17 NATIONS HONOR GEORGE V. (Continued From First Page.) waters and showed the way up and down the lines of the fleet. Ae the Vic- torla and Albert approached she gave @ signal for a salute and immediately the guns of the warships thundered a welcome to the sailor-King. ‘The King and Queen and Princes ‘were on the bridge as the royal yacht entered the water highway between the lines of foreign warships and British Dreadnoughts. ‘The American battleship Delaware, the fourth im line and the biggest) Dattleship im the huge fleet, carly focused attention. The vessel was Gressed overall with great arches of bunting, thrown from stem to stera over @ trellis of masts which pro- claimed the American nationality. The sides of the proud craft were manned with cheering biuejackets and her band played the national anthem com- mon both to America and Great Britain. |The big visitor gave Their Majesties rousing Welcome. Aboard the Deiawaf® was a lars party of Americans, the guests of Capt. Grove and his officers, These included basy at London and Mrs. Phillips; Mrs. Robert /Bacon, wife of the American Ambasador to France, and family; J. Coleman Drayton, Mrs, R. C. Bolling, Lefand Harriton, Sheldon Crosby, Mrs. W. Hooper of Boston; Henry Harrison, | W. A. Drayton, American Consul-Gen- | eral and Mrs. Edward Sampson, American Naval At- tache at London. The King and Queen, accompanied by the official envoys of other countries, came from London in a special train, The King wore an admiral's uniform, with @ tiband of the Order of the Gar- ter, The Prince of Wales was in a midshipman's uniform. Te Queen, Princess Mary and neariy all of the! royal ladies were dressed tn navy blue. | With Thelr Majesties were ail the other members of the tmperial family, | Many speciai trains were run from| London carrying Indian princes, peers and peeresses, members of Parliament, Lords of the Admiralty and diplomats, The reguiar and the excursion train arriving during the morning added great numbers to the thousands already nathered here from all parts of the ‘world, OF LIGHT TO-NIGHT. In the great fleet were ten battle- ships of the Dreadnought class, from the British Navy, and one visitin Dreadnought, tne German Von der yann, First, however, in size and ship Delaware, The British Dreadnoughts were the opening night, Mr. Hopp has enlarged | the programme to include the following | soloists: Jat Sokoloff, violin; Jacob | Altschuler, violin; Edw.rd@ Raho, Eng- Mun horn, and Mme, Rossini, celesta | solo, The designation of the different mu- sical nights next weck follow Monday, French musi enday, Italian music;. Wednesday, Slavia! (Dvorak's "New World”) and Scandin- avian music (in memory of the recently deceased composer Johan Svendsen); Thursday, German and Wagne symphony night (Tschalkowaky’ thetique”; Saturdi popular Sunday, International night. psn. FIGHTS ARREST FOR HAVING A ROBIN IN CAPTIVITY, Bay Shore Man Resists Game Pro- | tector but Keeps Hold of | Caged Songster. Pupino Monse of Bay Shore was taken | from a Long Island Raflroad train at Jamaica to-day by State Game Pro- | tector Charles Lee. He fought so hard | that several Long Island Ratiroad po- leemen and Patrolinan Edward Cum- | help, and a big crowd gathered and fol- lowed the prisoner and his escort to the | police court. There for the first time Monse learned | the charge against him. He was dw founded when told that his crime w having a robin in captivity, He had the evidence there, for through all the muse he stuck to @ cage with the red-/ asted songster in it. He waived ex- amination and asked to be sent to Bpecial Sessions, He was asked to fur- nish $900 bail, eceaunadiinmammmee Outing of the Kerrym | nought, { cruiser Hamidieh, China by the crat | Hai | cruiser Olfert Fi mings of the Newtown precinct had to | © Colossus, the C the St. the Vanguard, the Bellerophon, the Tem- eraire, the Superv and the Dread- With these were the four British cruisers of the Invincible class, the Indéfatigable, the Inflexible, the In- domitable and the Invincible. Other foreign naval powers sent ves-| rels of the pre-Dreadnought type. France was represented by the Danton, Japan by the armored cruiser Kurama, Austria by the Radetsky, Italy by the armored cruiser San Marco, Russia by the armored cruiser Rossia, Spain by the cruiner Reina Regente, Argentine by the cruiser Buenos Aires, Chile by the cruiser Chacapuco, Sweden by the armored cruiser Fylgla, Turkey by the r Denmark by the armored the Netherlands by the arreored cruiser Jacob van Heemskerck and Norway by the arm- ored cruiser Bidsvold, Greece sent the armored cruiser Georgios Averof, In addition to the official representa. tives of the seventeen visiting nations there were secondary vessels from | Japan, Italy and Chile, Various types | of warships added to the British unite of Dreadnoughts and Invinclbles made the total British contingent 170 ships. | Cal, All the vessels in the roadstead, !n-| cluding the foreign warships and ex: | cursion steamers with spectaors, wi e! moored in lines supplem: 1d by short- | lines of submarine and tospedo- ‘The fleet occupied an area of! ghteen square mile will be illuminated to-night. er boats, about dent MaAneny and Com- missioner Maltble of the Public Service on went to Brooklyn to-day and made a physical inspection of the |} neighborhoods through which the pro- posed South Brooklyn portion of the subway is designed to run, In Brooklyn | the offciais met Borough President MADISON SQ. GARDEN THIS COUPON, WITH 25 CENTS, will entitle the bearer and one child to admission to one of the ht International Education Concerts, beginning Sunday, June day for the concert of that evening. Coupon, with 25 cents, admitting adult and child, may be exchanged for tickets at either | THIS COUPON GOOD FOR RUSSIAN (OPENING) NIGHT, JUNE 25. PLELELELEEILLEEL ELISE ELL Griffiths and Commander | ! PON Days’ MUSICAL FESTIVAL Children, Half Price will print a similar coupon each Wage Earners’ League. offices, é ROOSEVELT, ROOT AND LA FOLLETIE IN LORIMER CASE (Continued From First Page.) conversation to Victor F. Lawson and to Mrs. Kohlisaat. “Did you believe what Mr. Funk told 7 the witness was asked. AS implicitly as if my wife had told me," was the reply. Under examination by Attorney John H. Marble, Mr. Kohisaat gave his opinion of Senator Lorimer. eter,” declared Mr. private Ife I admire He has beautiful children and his home life is ideal. But I have always opposed Lorimerism “What is Lorimerism?" Kern. “It Is an affiliation and co-operation and cohesion of Democrats and Repub- licans for party pelf—for private pelf.”’ Roger Sullivan, Democratic tional enian from Tilinols asked Senator Na- 8. Conway evident of the W w. Kimball Pi Company, and one Welerhacuse were referred to by Mr Kahlsaat as mentioned in Whose names were converration ilines regarding vente any contribution, Whether Hines mentioned them as men he would see about the Lo: contri- bution or as poasible contributors or as interested in the election, Mr. Kohisaat did not recat! men While detailing the Funk conversation the entire membership of the mi Mr. Kohisaat to give all the names mentioned. [Finally Mr. Kohiseat ded, “i have faced one entence,” said he, ‘but T give th now with the explanati nner were reflections that st upon He then mentioned Sullivan, Conway and one of the Weyerhneusers, but which one he could not say. He said that Conway later denied to him any knowledge of the $100,000 fund. The committee excused him from mentioning the name of a man now dead, Mr. Kohisaat said that Mr, Lorimer | once ran for constable a4 a Democrat; that he resigned from a position in th Chicago Water Department “because of some irregularity In the payroll,” and that Lorimer’s candidate for Alderman | in 1892 against one of the “Gray Walt Democrats” was paid, according to r Port, $1,000 to withdraw from the rac: Mr. Kohlsaat said he did not consi himself biased against Lorimer added he “wiped out the slate” He when he returned to the Record-Herald in 1910.” —>—- FIGHT FOR MORSE’S RELEASE MADE ON TWO POINTS, ATLANTA, Ga, J a wrt ne ication made AD habeas corpus wa for of evs for Charles W United States District Judge Newman on the grounds that we Was Co) 1 on @ misdemeanor rge and cannot be Incarcerated fuily Ina prison erected solely for felon: and also that the fifteen-year sentenc is excessive Referring to Morse as most thoroy tried mi who ever had hi in court,” the here ably the dan a opposed ‘8 ‘tay pil A SHIPPING NEWS. INCOMING STEAMSHIPS, DUB TO-DAY ne, + Mayti, hoes.” Hand ring Willem 1 rom, nile. San diarcos, Galveston, OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS SAILED 1 rervooh, Victoria, and, Autworp, Hamburg, Minnenahs, once, gt Laura, Azores Cherakee, San Dou Oceana, wu a. ay Wash-Day Wonder-Worker ee ENN NOS a gy. HERKEN AEEREAHERS MERUNRUNNEEESENES SHIP'S SAILING DELAYED: MAN TAKES LIFE BY GAS. Commits Suicide, With Ticket to Austria and Letters From Sister There by His Side, Henry Orlita, Fifty-nine years old, waiter, who had been Jiving in a fur nished room at No. 820 Kast Forty-first street, committed suicide by inhaling gas in his room to-day, Mrs. Edno who runs the furnished-rooin Pe Policeman McKeough of the Eait irty-fifth street station called Dr. Wilde of Bellevue Hospital. On @ table in the room was @ can half-filled with stale beer, and beak were half « doen bank books, repre- senting an account of about $1,000, Per- sonal letters showed that the man had @ sister living somewhere in Austria. There was xiso a telegram from an Austrian steamship line which read “The wailing of the Laura hag been Postponed until Monday at 3 P. M. On the table with the telegram was a ticket to Austria by this Iine, > BRICK FALLS ON CARPENTER. Henry Middle Village, Grossman, aged ropolitan avenue, caused the arrest morning of Jona: three, of No. 1 aged twenty-five, or Queens and Frederick forty-seven, of Met Richmond — Bilt, at Jamaica this Odelo, aged twenty- Douglas street, J matca, on rge of attempted @ it, and he preferred a charge felonious assault against them Odelo 1s 4 hod carrier and the othe: are carpenters, In going up a ladder this morning at a new building in Ja- maica, where ali are employed, Odelo dropped @ couple of bricks and one of them struck Snelder on the shoulder A quarrel resulted and Odelo is @ald to have seized a hatchet. Other’ car penters interfered, and Odelo claims then that the two men he bad t1 ith beat him and lacerated bis Sneider, of trouble w skull, DOCTOR PRESCRIBES CUTICURA REMEDIES Says: ‘I Have Great Faith in the Cuti- cura Remedies Now that | am Con- vinced of their Wonderful Merits, “I wish to let you know of a couple o fecent cures which I have made by the us: of the Cuticura Remedies t August, Mi ——— of this city came to my office, troubled With @ severe skin eruption At first I coula not understand the nature of the case until I had made a careful examination, I finally traced it 10 hls occupatio a inter and decorato..” It was detmatttte i s Worst form. It started with a slight erup- Hon and wouldeaffect most parts of his body thighs, elbows, chest, back and abdomen — and would terininate in little pustules, Tis Mehing and burning was dreadful aid I Would almost tear his skin apart, try! relief recommended ait the vartous atments I could think of and he spent about fifteen dollars on preseriptions but Hothing seemed to help hin, “Tn the meantime my wife who By @on- tinually muftering with a» slight trouble and who had been trying different ‘phase fons and methods with my wesistanc i ue she was goine to get some of the ¢ atte Remedies and give the Would thicken, break ad | ble rhsts La ape’ 0 =f c hs her permanently warm baths of Cutten Soap and applications of Cuticura Oiutt @ saw a decided improvement and in ® ‘3 she Was completely cured, T lost no time 4y recommending the Outt- | cura Remedies to M nd this Was two months ax. If wash with warm baths of ‘the ( and to apply the Cuticura Ointment generously Believe me, from the very fir ‘suse of thie Cuticura Remedies he was and to-day he is completely their use, [have great faith in the Cutieurs Remedies aiid shell always have a yood word for them now that 1 ain convinced of thelr wonderful merits.” (Signed) BL, Whites hee 108 Dartmouth St., Botan, Mass, July 22, 1910 Cuficura Bosp and Ointment sold tisrot out the world. Potter Drug: & Ci Sole prope., 19 Columbus Ave., Boston. BP Mailed free, samples of Cuticura Soap and Ointment with d4-p. book of shit treater; P LGER ae POR THE HOME fe he $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 years, at whiow ¢ LOL West Funeral Sunday Lutheran Unde SIMMONS,—Suad ATCHL ral servi Eighth ay P.M. Interment pri by Washes Clothes Clean Without | Rubbing or Injury | At All Grocers. 10¢. per Package. | dealer camnot, supply you we will sen | yout 2 ree tauaple pecknee VEE for bie’ a vine | don address Heware of imitations and substitutes, Insist on Having VAN’S NORUB VAN ZILE COMPANY, jote the knowing smile, He is off for @ véce- in, ¥ dead, but he came pretty near it, Get | were terrthly shocked, as by this time| out his hand for the ring, Moskow!ts| The annual outing and games of the| steers, who accompanied them on the Ho knows just exactly WHERE he {s going. Ts POP Rae s0 “erushes bint to |e oer. Mrs. Stokes had died, Rrabbed his watch and chain and ran, | Kerrymen's P. and B. Association take | trip, ‘The subway situation as affecting | $08 WALNUT ST. WEST HOWOKE. Last Sunday ‘The World peated 1,688 “Sum. ie man's body wi founs, by Jor aul Then he went back to his truck and! As soon as they left the Amerika at| He was arrested after @ chase of a| place at Celtlo Park toemorrow. T Brooklyn was gone over fully by th aw bigtl nt tivemente—about FOUR TIME man of No. 435 Kast Sixth street, f. No one thought to ask hi! piymouth they hurried by train to| block, ‘The watch and chain were not following events are on the programme: | three, and changes and modifications | ee ee athe wins Vansaas A pame fato the building enorty he boy wae Samuel Morgen | Tye ogt and caught the. Campania | fund on him, One-mile relay race for the members of | were discussed. gy ea ry APR x, Rew the accident. He had a police- four years oid, of No, 26 Eas es be rv —-————————_ the football teams, @-yard dash for erenident “Tim" Williams of the B. R, | toer'e outing 40 confidently ao the oretinmeanan, mm call Dr. McGovern from St. Vin- eth street. He had merely « cut| there, coming once home, a4 PORT OF nw YORK, 100-7, talked subways late yesterday with Pieted above. sealed "s Mevmital The doctor pea oes ot wgeeE i q 7 trate could we beled eo hee h fomen a President Mitchel, Comptroller Prend man had been Instantly killed. eo} “I wis! knew the name of that big| that he coul Tg yy 4 speak, and, with | jump. The feature of this outing will tt and Borough President McA: was sent to Mercer street} man Who saved Sammy,” eajd Mrs, | hie f jeft for their hot yy the tire ia the football games, Cork vs. Kerry, The passe ‘of the conference were not They Will Know Best Where toGe police station. Morga: te-dsy. fret tran ages he chip docked. ‘inate and Kildare vs. Kilkenny, made pub! t t 4 : , '