The evening world. Newspaper, June 28, 1911, Page 2

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27 roe ee ee f ' ee he t ', Soe, € EP mucceeded like an easy day for flying. But It isn't. The alr is choppter toxtay than T have known for a long time, We had a littl Motor trouble at the start, but no serious. We meant to alight at tn Crescent Athlatic Club's grounds, that Meant the possibility of m tm e | BIGGEST CROWD - EVERSAILS ON THE EVENING WORLD, RACIN | tor trouble in making a fresh start and Wwe had the extra package with | Anyway, so What was the use? We jus LATONIA RESULTS. stayed up in the aire | | aT was afrak! we were late, but when | FIRET RAC ive furlongs.—Ros 1 caught the line of the bay ahead of | Jeddah, 106 (McTaggart), fret; Mere us and worked along the edge of the 1 (Thomas), second; Alpine, 10% (1 Narrows until f saw club, te big ship Just coming dow orts Wadsworth and Hamilton there w between fn h ‘i $2 Mutuels Paid—Rose of Jeddah, $5.20) [12 went right out over her headed fo elise 4 Saieanrite to win; $2.90 place show, Merode, | f ; Ner when sie was squarely between the| Fakes 2,330 Passengers On | iian'since; $440 show. Alpine, $3.90 show. | Hg. kage Ei forts. We were about six hundred feet = i. , SECOND CE=Five furlongs.Sas | utones abeve'her, I swooped down until when First Eastward Voyage. 10) (McCahey). first; Byringn, 108 | Billys 10 we crossed her decks we were about intain), gecond, Camellia, — 106 Malti Mi two hundrea apove the deck. Then ird. Time, 1 Commons | and upward, gin ion, 108, netatr ouch, Brig, e Mol 106 Jot; Beheis I dropped the pac sinctair tet 8°14 O99 VISIT THE VESSLL.| tu it: Brig Bist oh * rita eit ab h of letters ul ie, 1, Je named nite i “Don't know what wa the blamed ER [Bali nT ue 108." Park. View, package, but hope it was nothing break- 3.40, pla $2.50 to ae ar! 5, dereerperaiae able. And I'm sorry ¢or the little chap |Cost of Steamship’s Re # to show. a"'Hiseon, 06; Mary ‘Davia’ 1 UNC rip hit by it. I didn’t atm it at bim any- $175,000; Passage Money | Brtioe Belt 10n tyeee ’ 5 ; i | f ni. Re way. But he was game, All the other x - i} Wireman, 111) ¢ Sei 103: passengers were cheering and waving | ‘i handkerchiefs and he Ko is logs Is $325,000, and before we were out of sight and did the 300 Fence or, sam ‘Weather clear: track. fast “Phen I took a long sweep around and | The mammoth Olymple of the Wits | penned Ahad |-—— came back here to the club lawn, I've | Star line sailed on her maiden eastward jut bi having a nice long drink. | Voyage this afternoon, carrying the bie- y What? Woll, it was cool, anyway, no| gest passenger list in the history of| —— ter what wan trans-Atlantic shipping. There were 7% Sxciting incident? No. Just duet | first cabin paasenges 5 seeiet eee sae an erdesy iled at | Cat Cabin Daswenern, 6 second clase] BATTING ORDER. Had good luck and delivered the goo edly : | New York Be Next!" Counting the crew, there were more| Hevore, if Oar ib, o — than 5,000 persons aboard this newest | Doyl p. ‘Tenney, 1b. COURT NOW BARS AUTOS leviathan of the seas when the ‘ittle | Snodgrass, cf. Herzog, an. FROM BROOKLYN SPEEDWAY |.ireec, ifs,"aret, tet out from *he tomy tb, Ingenio, it Chelsea docks into the mid-channel of | priwell, ws Steinfeldt, ab Justice Kapper Upholds the Law! rho Oiympic's passengers began to| Meyers, ¢ Kaiser, of. Pace: ——e ‘, Which Favors the Har- arrive about noon and from then on te ten ia ee dnd Fray, | Daubert, 1, Paskert, cf. Horses. tI" sailing time-a o'clock—a river of| attendance, 15,00 Wheat, If. Lobert, 3b. _— ago humantty poured tn through the en- Bice mb, Mages, Lae tained some days ago by the lawyers nly the 2,900-o4dd passengers in this A GROUNDS, NEW YORK, June] z mmerman, 8b. Doolan, he ¢ " oR, ¥ ans, cl yoked ke 1 for C, Steward Kavanangh, in thelr ef-| throng, but their relatives and friends, paar n i Tae a Hage vel wis, Ri aker, ? Burns, 6. rts to test on behaff of the Long| @nd by the time the gangplanks were Party ug h | BUGKOr, Burns, 9. Island Automobile Club the validity of the law passed last year by the General Assembly barring a section of Ocean Bovlevard in Brooklyn to all but Ight horse-drawn vehicles, ‘The Justice hetd “What the right of the Legislature to set aside all or a part of any public thor ohghfare for specific purposes had al ways been Inherent. ‘The decision was a victory for thoes horse fanciers who have for en using a mile-long stretch of the great highway leading from Pros. pect Drive to Coney Island as a speed- way. J: was this group of men who in putting the bill through both houses at Albany. Under the law automobiles and heavy wagons are now turned out of the Boulevard at Twenty- second avenue and compelled to use the narrow west roadway until they reacn Kings Highway. ¥ automobile elub called tt class Mr. Kavanaugh was selected as the man to make the test. He insisted upon -# driving his car over the forbidden ter- | nw Sears mare ritory, was urrested and sued out @ writ with a view to appeal on the ground that his arrest was an abridg- ment of Section 14 of the Constitution of the United States, in sending the case k to the Magtstrate’ Court the Justice says Mr. Kavanaugh ts Hable for a misdemeanor. Bed Bates 2s ai DAUGHTER OF A SENATOR SIDE STEPS ON POLITICS. Miss La Follette, Who Is an Actress, Sails to Complete Her Studies Abroad, Miss Fola La Follette, the pretty Dionde daughter of Senator Robert M, La Follette, has the caution of political ‘experience and the gift of daintily side- siepping political questions. Miss La Follette, with the approval and consent of her Senatorial! papa, ts an actress. She sailed to-day on the Campania of the Cunard Sane, with her instructor, Mra, Bertha K. Baker, @ dramatic reader of New Brighton, 8.1. They will tudy at the .ducational theatres of for- nds during the summer. Durtn; the last season Miss La Follette was a member of the “Scarecrow” company with Percy MacKaye. “Do you think that your father will be President?’ asked an interviewer with @ political bent. “Our family has lived so long in the atmosphere of politics,” she replied, “that we never anticipate anything of @ political natur: Having thus made it apparent that even a wise child cannot keep a lne of political information on so active a citizen as the Senator, she said that he was passionately fond of drama, and that it formed his chief recreation, She addeg that he was fully in sym- pathy with her stage ambition: “Will you remain on the stage if da President?" she your father ts el was asked, far, in advan: jauga, —— -GIRL SAVES COMPANION AT RISK OF OWN LIFE, Rieking personal dnjury her life, Miss May MoG ‘ust Sixteenth street, crawled ing machiné dn a print vent at No, % Vandewater str she {# emptoy is afte dragged from beneath the Catherine Connors, sixteen years old, No M Fifth street, Brooklyn, hoon dragged under the maghine hair. Miss Connors was machine while it was in operation 4 noon and e o by 2 and stooped to the floor to pick up a plece of paper. The girl's long ‘back hat wght in one of, the cogs of the ma- chine and she was dragged beneath it As her body disappeared under thi machine and soreams filled th ‘Let # not make any speculations so he said with @ merry and perhaps der a tablish: t where machine who had working near the a |New Giantess of the Sea mass of people packed on the wharf, #houting and waving goodbys. Two hundred policemen and firemen, marched to the pler in the morning un- der the impression that would sail before noon. were compelled to on thelr tours of Speyer arrived MRS. VANDERBILT SAILS AS “MRS, VINCENT.” ‘The oMcers of the camp remained and made the presentation, Mra, Speyer expressed her delight at the beauty of the bouquet, tut added that the sent!- ments that inspired the gift gave her vastly more happiness, Mr. Speyer companied his wife abroad. Mra, Wiliam K. Vanderbilt Jr. was on the passenger list as Mra. Vin- cent, satled with her three children and half a dozen maids and governesses. ‘The press of carriages, autos and bag- gage wagons about the entrances to the White Star line pier was so great that @ dozen traffic policemen had all they Many of them leave to get back duty before Mra. could do to keep open a narrow lane through witch one vehicle at a time could crawl. departing voyagers received tons of flowers, tons of candy and tons upon tons of other merchandise of the sort that kind friends are wont to speed you overseas with, even the Brobdingua- gians of Dean Swift's fancy could not have sneered at the immensity of eyery- thing about the departing Olympie. Since the Olympic has been in dock, more than 12,00 persons have paid fifty cents each to inspect her, The money went to the Seamen's Orphan Fund. More than 4,000 other visitors are ex- pected to-day, The Olymptc's highest priced suite ts the “Regent,” on the bridge deck abaft the information bureau. One trip costs $2,250, The round trip expense of the vessel from Southampton and back ie $175,000, and the passage money amounts to $225,000, An immense amount of food has been provided for the return trip. MANY WELL-KOWN PERSONS ON OLYMPIC'S LIST. Among the Olymple's passengers were Mr. and Mrs, George B, Baer, Mr. and Mrs, 8. R. Lertron, W. C. Biddle, Rest- the Hamburg-American Line Emil L, Isaac Gimbel, Mr. and Mrs. J, B, Greene hut, Loomis Ilavemeyer, Col, and Mrs, William Jay, J, Freder! Capt. Philip Lydig, Mra. Moore, Mrs. H. Mrs, Clarence J, Shearn, Miss fea Stern, Mra, Mok H. Twombly, Mr, and Mrs, ‘The Olymp! deck officers, 83 engin 2 pursers, 825 stokers, cluding chef 0 | baker ewards and st wireless operators, ardesses; Turkish bath attendants, 2 4 ant. od GIRL KILLED BY AUTO. Wagon in Front of Macht Pight-year-olt Catharine started across the street in the tenement where she lived ge West Bleventh stre n, just as an auto orge Boyden No. 4 ir at e e povile, driven. b; 2 West Sixt hauled aboard there was still a dense the Olympic who It wae estimated that the dent Director and General Manager of Boas and Mrs. Boas, Frank Nelson Doubleday, W. H, Du Puy, Mr. and Mra. Stuy’ nt Mish, Mr. and Mra, Kernochan, Alfred F. 8 Redmond, Mr, and Louis Stern, A. Kinnaird Tod, carries one captain, seven surgeons, men and 403 in the commissary department, In- assistant cooks, butchers, 2 telephone opera- tors, 4 elevator conductors, 3 pages, 8 gymnasium (endants and 1 racquet court attend: Darted From Behind a Passing t late this after- third, ‘Tim Triahtow Helle Hampton, Mamita and Sauce alse § ran 1m 9-5, were present at the opening of the new Polo rounds this afternoon. There was no roof on the grand stand and the Intense heat of the sun beat mercilessly down on the heads of the faithful who members of the Abraham Lincoln Camp] had come to wish the Giants well, The of Spaniah War Veterans, marched to| UPPer stand will-not he completed for the plier to present Mra, James Bpoyer, another week. It was an auspicious the wite of the banker, with a mag-| Parte; ‘ust the same, Matty was given the honor of the nificent bouquet of roses. Last winter! pitching the first. game on the new Mra. Speyer presented them with two] grounds, and it was but fitting that the flags and a banner ‘and they were re-|greatest pitcher in the world ehould paying the compliment. The veterans| twirl the first @ame in the greatest baseball stadium in the world. ‘The ac- cldent to Fre@ Merkle marred the hap- Pines of the opening and prevented him from taking part in the game. Dur- ing the early practice Merkle was hit in the groin by a pitched ball and had to retire and allowed Gowdy to take his place. Just before the game began the friends of Mike Donlin in New York Presented him with two or three wagon- loads of flowers. Joe Humphreys made @ speech and then all was ready. for the pastime. The Boston batters went after Matty and hit him hard, but failed to ecore in the first. Sweeney opened with a clean aingle in left, but died stealing second. Tenney popped’ out to Gowdy. Herzog hit past third for two bases, but Miller grounded out to Gowdy and retired the le. In the second inning the Bostons were retired on three grounders to the in- field, Ingerton, Steinfeldt and Kiing Provel the easy marks for Matty. half of the second, but there waa one to help him, oo CALLED A BAD “CITIZEN” AND GIVEN A YEAR IN JAIL. “Should Be Kept Out of the Way of Honest Men,” Says Judge Rosalsky. John Rogers, who was the principal witness in the prosecution which ended | with the acquittal of Col. Robert J. Hat dean of the criminal bar, fro the charge of having offered to procure perjured evidence, was sentenced to- day to a year In the penitentiary (lack- ing one day) and a fine of $560, which Ro must pay or work out at the rate of a day in prison for each dol- 1 : Rogers was in the Tombs awaiting trial for having picked the pocket of Bernard Tomsing in 1910 when he charged Col. Haire with offering to pro- cure false witn tor him. For his services to the State Judge Rosalsky accepted his plea of guilty and sus- pended sentence, Two weeks ago Rogers was arrested in the @eventy-secord street subway station charged with picking the pocket of Edward M. Burnell of No, 2% John street, He was taken before Judge Roralsky for violating bis parole, “I will give you the longest sentence possible with the maximum fine,” said tho Judge. "I have also ordered you reindicted aa a second offender for your W. R. Wheat, James H, Stack, the | atest Heft and when you Anish this cous s Ee *| sentence you will face another trial courteous manager of the Hotel Kaleks | det ohare convicted T nope t0 be able to sentence you again for jong as the law allows, You are @ bad citizen and should be kept out of the way of honest men,” —<——__ Mallan Gets Place, but State Civil Service Board May Block Appointment, Police Sergt. Benjamin Malan, is stationed at the outer Police Commissioner at Headquarters, was to-day appointed superintendent o! the Catekill Aqueduct Police by th Commissioners of the Board of Wate: ),| Supply, Malian in new position must apply to the whe y of absence, ‘The position of superin- Gowdy hit for two bases in the last, out et the time end the others fatled| SERGEANT OF BLUECOATS IS) AQUEDUCT POLICE CHIEF. | } had his arm around her and every now oce of the! S order to take his Police Department for an indeterminate leave RESULTS ANDO ENTRIES LATONIA ENTRIES. (Special to The Krening World.) RACK TRACK, LATONIA, Ky., %.—The entries for to-morrow's races are as follows > PIRST Ita sand ge Umpires—Rigler and Finneran, Atten- dance—4,600, (Special to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 23.—The Brooklyn Dodgers arrived here to-day for a four-game series with the Phillies, and some pitchers’ battles are looked for while they are in this city, The Quakers have beaten Dahien's team seven times this season, while the Dodgers have defeated the former three times and one game w a six-inn'ss tle. Two of the Phillies’ victories, how- ever, were extra-inning affairs, one be- ing of ten and another of fifteen, Burns, who pitched to-day, has done fine work since joining the Phillies, two of his victories over Chicago and Boston being 1 to 0 contests No runs were scored until the fifth, when the Dodgers got one. Zimmer- man hit to left for two bases. Bergen June | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28 MORSE LOSES " NEWFIGHTFOR ~PRISONA REISE! i] Banker’s Sentence to Atlanta Penitentiary Says Court—He Will Appeal. Legal, ATLANTA, Ga., June 82.—Charles W. Morse, the New York banker, serving @ term in the Federal prison here for vios lating the National Banking laws, day failed in hls effort to obtain his ree lease on a writ of habeas corpus. Without passing upon the validity of that portion of Morse's sentence of fif- teen years beyond ten years, District Judge Newman dented the petition for a writ, declaring that ten years of the sen tence unquestionably was good, and as Morse had not served out that time the Court had no right now to enter further in the matter. Morse's attorneys Med notice of an ap- of Appeais of the Fifth Ctroult, Judge Newman ald he had no dout of the legality of Morse's confinement in the Atlanta prison, although it hgd been erected for “hard labor” convicts. He sald Morse might be able to obtain a transfer to another prison by applica. tion to the Attorney-General, but he be- Heved conditions here were probably ae good at least as would be found in a prison elsewhere. He did not believe, he said, that there was a prison any-| where {n which prisoners did not have would be bad for them if such was the case, In closing his argument in behalf of Morse, Attorney Arnold sald he wanted the Court to determine the exact status of his client. He contended that a Morse had been illegally sentenced to fifteen ars’ imprisonment, when ten| the maximum on one count, the entire sentence was void. He sald there was no doubt that Morse could obtain his release on a habeas corpus writ after he had served ten years of his sentence, but argued he was entit- led to know in advance the legal length of his term, because, if it was ten years, he was privileged to apply for parole much sooner than he would if it was fifteen years. singled to centre, scoring Zimmerman. Rucker sacrificed, Moran to Juderus. Paskert got Burch's fly, Daubert fanned. UNKISSED HUBBY’ FRIENDS SHADOWED HIS PRETTY WIFE (Continyed From First Page.) turn later in the evening. One night in last November he received a tel gram with the address on the envelope blurred, He opened it and found it was intended for Mrs. Gambier, Judge Van wyck objected to the wit- ness giving the contents of the telegram, but Justice Pendleton allowed it. | “It sald ‘Have dinner with me shortly after 7 P. M." sald Owe wes from Philadelphia and w: ‘H. C, 8! I gave the telegram to Mrs. Gambier, and later on a gentleman came and asked me to announce Mr. So-and-So to Mrs, Gambier.” Mr. Who?” asked Judge Van Wyck. “The ‘gentleman of the suppressed | name,’ answered the boy, repeating | the Judge's own characterization of Mrs. Gambler's alleged admirer, “They had dinner and went out together.” VICTOR AUGO, PRIVATE SLEUTH, TAKES THE STAND. The next witness was Victor Hugo, a private detective, whose demeanor on the stand im every detail denied any mental resemblance to his great name: sake, Mr. Littleton had the greatest diMculty In having him answer ques: tions and part of the time he seemed to have entirely lost his voice. He is @ young man with a long, wavy fo jock and a scared-to-death manner. Ie had been detailed by a detective agency to trail Mra, Gambier, Hugo's testimony brought out the fact that Gambier had had his bride fol- wed almost from the day of the nep- aration, for the detective said he first located’ Mrs. Gambler at the Prince George Hotel, where the couple went after their honeymoon. On the evening of Sept. 29 Hugo saw Mrs. Gambier and a man leave the hotel together and go to dine at Guffanti's |restaurant In Seventh avenue. “They walked across Twe \street together,” said Hugo, jand then he'd lift her from the ground.” | ‘The detective produced a schedule of |notes he hed made while he was trall- ing Mrs. Gambler, It showed that on Oct. § another man drove to the hotel in| 4 automobile and took Mrs, Gams | bier for a drive, that on Oct. % 11, 12, 16 jand 22 there were Grives, dinners, thea- {\tre parties and late suppers at Chure i's and the Madrid, Some {lumination | Was shed on the methods of private de- tectives by Hugo's description of his! Jattempt to follow the red car on a cle and of losing sight of them | because his bleycle broke down, | “On Oct, 2 T followed them to No. 1 NEW DEAL IS ON IN SUBWAY MATTER (Cominued From First Page.) “L" roads as they are now, before there was a rush of population to outlying dis- tricts to be benefited by the new lines. “It the B. R. T. is allowed to reopen negotiations with the city upon this point it has ralsed as a condition of its acceptance, would it not be proper to reopen negotiations with the Interbor- ough, which company has taken the McAneny report asa final dictum of the city?” was asked. “Mo company will be shown any favor by the city as against any other company,” replied Mr. Will- oom. “Z do uot want to discuss eithet reply for I have sot read the letters from the companies carefully, But I have no hest- taney in stating that if any new proposition should come from any company it would Pata be thrown out of the wind INTERBOROUGH “WouLD LIKE TO RUN THE TRIBOROUGH. ‘The claim i# made that the construc- tion of the Triborough 1» just what the Interborough now seeks, as it would give a chance to bid for itg operation. A member of the commi@ion sald to- day that the edge could be taken off the desires of the Interborough tn this direction by the insertion of a clause in the operating contract compelling the Interborough or any other existing company which secured such operating contract to give transfers between the Tridorough and their present lines. In the event both declined to do this, the city could operate the new independent system as is now advocated by Mayor Gaynor. As exclusively forecast In The Even- ing World of June 2, the Interborough rejected and the B. R. T. accepted their respective allotments of rapid transit routes. The city now faces the first alternative of the McAneny report—the submission to the B. R. T. of the routes whioh the Interborough has declined to accept under the city's terms, The second and final alternative of the Mo- Aneny report 1s the Immediate con- struction of the Triborough. As has been pointed out in Th Eve ning World, 17.2 miles of the Inter- borovgh allotment cannot by any stretch of pencil marks over the mapa be made to hitch up with the B, R. T. This much of the Intérborough allot- ment is Gropped out entirely by the re- fusal of the Interborough and these Mnes might just as well be put down as Jost Mneg for the present. 27 MILES CAN BE MADE PART OF B. R. T. The remaining 27.7 miles of the Inter- borough's allotment of new subways can in a pinch be made @ part of the B. K. T., which alone got 41.4 miles under the division of the McAneny 1* port. But as @ part of the B. B. T. system the entire cost of its con room, many of the other girls in the| fo cot came along. According to | tendent of the Aqueduct police draws a) West Sixty-elghth street,” sald Hugo, with the | tee eheemene the child darted ayn salary of $3,000, ‘and they went in bY bout 9 P.M, th, hecam hind @ passing Wagon right in his path. | Mallaw’ figured in several of Bing-|@nd stayed there am Mouse beneath the mach and re-| phe car struck the little girl and flung | ham'e raiding equads, He was sta-| V0EY Mn oe lois in the monthe “ mpanion, dragging her 0} ner, unconscious, to the sidewalk, Boy-| tioned at the City Hall for M® | af October and November, for which he floor of the shop. it, den jumped from his #eat, picked her | Weeks after the Mayor wag shot was pald® $3.60 a day and expenses, His Dr. Savage of the Voluntecr Hosp ita ee seen ng and ran with her to at. |, TN@ State Civil Bervico Commission! testimony throughout Was corroborative found that Migs Connors # 6c a eee oon eee ut the next corner, | 2M# Yet to confirm the action of the! of that ymes and Robinson a been torn from her hea ‘4 v4 “1 ; Municipal Ctvil Service Commission in) wit) another detective that she had been badly crushed. but the victim died of a broken neck | making exempt the position of Chief, who had) folle rs, Chainbler, was took her to the hospftal. @he ts in aj a few minutes after he arrived ‘The of Aqueduct Police. It im not quite! called after Victor Hugo. Me had critical condition, Mise McGrath was| machine belonged ta Willlam C. Sheu | certaim that the exemption will be ap-| worked as a partner with Hugo sod net injured, f of No, 1777 Broadway. | proved, SP FB BME re his testimony was along similar ines. | struction will have to be borne by the city, If the Interborough had acepted, half of the cost of building this 87.7 miles would have been borne by that company. It te estimated that this 27.7 miles will cost $09,000,000 to build, nd now that the city is stuck for its entire cont, the loss to the city ta turning 10 over to the BD, B. T. vo operate is just $84,800,000. In order to At the Lexington avenue to-| gt peal to the United States Ciroult Court} some work to do, and thought that it/ 1011, & ——— corer SHAKE General Admission, 50 Cents THIS COUPON, WITH 2$ CENTS, will entitle the bearer and one child to admission to one of the 1 eight International Education Concerts, beginning Sunday, June a Ke 25, at Madison Square Garden. | as THE EVENING WORLD Ps bed the Garden entrance or at the ‘as No, 1416 Broadway. jae THIS COUPON GOO NORWEGIAN (WEDNES! fubway into the proposed B. R. T. new system It would have to be continued south to Ninth street, which would tn- crease the extent of the mileage to be built by the elty from 27.7 to 28.9 miles, ‘This, added to the 41.4 miles of the B. &. 7. regular allotment, would make a of 70.3 miles against 08.3 miles which the city would have got had the Interbor- ough accepted the mandate of the MoAneny report. The contract for this 70.8 miles would probably be the greatest ever presented by @ municipality to @ single corpor tion, The working out of such a con- tract would take weeks and no end of study, The very best legal and en- @ineering talent would have to be hirud by the city to draw it up, and there 1s some question whether it would not be necessary for the city to have the legislature make amendments to the | present Rapid Transit law, which now “The said Public Service Com- mission before awarding any contract or contracts shall advertise for pro- posals for such contra ONE CLAUSE GIVES LOOPHOLE TO CONTRACT WITH B. R. T. In thé same section of the new law a modification of such a contract ts allowed which officials of the city say will cover the letting of the wpole 70.3 miles to the B. R. T| This point ts contended by the Interborough. The law says that the Commission “may accept any of such proposals as will, in the judgment of the Commission, best promote public interes and award a contract accordingly The construction of the Triborough as originally laid out would set at rest all these contested points with respect to the latitude given the Commission by the present law. While its construction carries no aa- surance for @ larger five-cent zone for the people living upon the present B. R. day for the concert of that evening. Coupon, with 25 cents, admitting adult and child, nay be exchanged for tickets at either CEL IL ELLER ECL RT COUPON HGHT DAYS Days’ MUSICAL FESTIVAL al MADISON SQ. GARDEN te: Children, Half Price will print a similar coupon each Wage Earners’ League, offices, D FOR SLAVIC AND DAY) NIGHT, JUNE. 28, YANKEE YACHTS TAKE TWO CUPS peror’s Trophy and Prince Henry’s Goes to Beaver. tured sonder class competitions. The ond. time of the Bibelot Beaver 2 hours, 18 minutes, 8 seconds. The winner of the cup is owned Yacht Club and R. W. the five races, the Beaver and American yacht Cima each taking one. The German yachts Tilly XIV. following the three Americans to which the Seehund III. got third place, with the Cima fourth. er, second in to-day's con- the Prince Henry cup. race furnished the most ex- with heavier wind and sea than had been encountered by 1, and Interborough lines, there are members of the Public Service Commis- sion and the Board of Estimate who do- clare that it gffers the quickest solution of the whole question. —_—_——_ TREE LIMB FALLS AMONG MOTHERS AND CHILDREN. One Woman and Her Baby Hurt by Unusual Accident in Mount Morris Park. ‘An unusual accident caused a panic among about 20 women and children seeking relief from the inte: heat in Mount Morris Park this afternoon, The women and their bables were scattered about under @ big oak tree near Madi- son avenue and One Hundred and Twentieth street, wien, without warn- tng, one of the lowest and largest of the tree's branches crashed down amongst them. Mothers, children and baby carriages were sent sprawling and jumbled In a shrieking, walling mi while, to add to the terror, the roof of a nearby milk stand, which waa also hit by the big limb, came flopping down on top of the other debris, ‘Moat of the women scrambled to their feet and, selaing thelr babies, fled from the scene as fast as they could, When Policeman DeWitt, who heard the screaming a block or two away, got to the ecene he found ral women still pgostrate, most of them more frightened than hurt. Mrs. Daisy Oxenberg, however, lay still and un- conscious, with her three-months-old baby David clasped in her arms, also unconscious, with blood atreaming from a gash in his head. by ‘Oxenberg was carried to @ near- rug store, where she revived. Meantime a neighborhood doctor wai working over the baby, which was seri- ously hurt An ambulance, arrived froth the Harlem Hospital, but Mrs. Oxenberg refused to go to the institu- tlon herself or to allow her baby to be taken there. She insisted on going to her home at No. 1 Hast One Hundred and Ninth street. The baby ts said to be dangerously injured. 7 who — write Test essay on Wroape Bed, wend for pataphlet, | ial ah 1907. Th Cima retired at the end of the first round when it was evident that she had no chance. The course was triangular and a wind of twenty-three when the miies an hour was blow!ni boats, heavily reefed, were —————_—_ ‘MURDERED MAN’ CAME BACK. Story of Killing by Children Had Pat Three Persous in Jail. BIDDEFORD, Me,, June %%.—Instead of his body being found buried in the Maine woods, as had been expected by many persons, Charlies I. Weymouth, for whose supposed murder two men and a woman have been under arrest for several days past, returned from Sherbrooke to Biddeford to-day.’ When the two young daugh- ters of Mrs. Maude Snow, the woman arrested an alleged accehsory to the imaginary crime, told th authorities that Weytnouth had been beaten to death at the Snow home in Dayton in September, 198, and his body buried nt away. nearby, many residents of this section | were sceptical. While the search for the body ng made, persons who had known mouth declared that he had been geen alive in Canada, and the Investi- gation which followed led to the discov- ery of the Dayton butcher yesterday in Sherbrooke, where he is employed. To- day Weymouth visited the county Jal! at Alfred, where Mra, Snow, Joseph Buzzell and Orion P. Meritt have been held in connection with the case, The three prisoners were liberated as soon as Weymouth’s identity was officially established, ——_ VAN TUYL GOING TO BOTTOM OF UNION BANK AFFAIRS. ALBANY, June °8.—Tnvestigations of led banks shall be complete and thor- ugh, and no guilty man shall escape it I can unearth evidence against him," waid George C. Van Tuyl, State Super- was b intendent of Banks to-day, following a| where he! five-day trip to New York, went over the inventory and schedule of aaseta of the Union Bank of Brook. lyn, “This applies with particular force to This Is Not A Folding Bed Yet the Troupe Bed can be instantly converted from an artistic and space saving cabinet into a lux- urious bed, indistinguish- able from the conventional type of bedstead. In Priaht position the Troupe Bed rich, handsome draperies is an ic addition to the most lus- urlously appointed room, ‘The Troupe is the only vi bed eayinped with a box spring ma tress. Which Is conclusive proof that it Is Ret @ folding Artietio s every aay thy dially Invites Thomas ManufacturingGo, 40 West 34th St, New York in Troup Bpectal dem: Wee! as Hons You are cot ieee IN KIEL RACES Whitney’s Bibelot Wins Em- KIEL, Germany, June 28.—The Amer. fean yacht Bibelot won the fifth tnter- national yacht race to-day and so cap- the Emperor William's cup of- fered for the winner of the series of The American yacht Beaver was sec- was 2 hours, 18 minutes, 1 second, and of the | by Harry Payne Whitney of the New ra Emmons of the Eastern Yacht Club. She won three of the » Wann- and Seehund III. were badly beaten, the final in every race except the third, in citing finish of the series and was sailed the yachts elther in the present series or In the races of | ive and well | the Union Bank, sartinn BR has been so much go ee been wrongdoing ther know It, and if Assemb who has asked for a teg | work with me. } 40, not believe t will be disappointed: | subpoenaing witne: timony. < | the office of Kings County | quiry. | No Comp: (Prom the Pittsbore “Dilate on the fact tha ined by Newport vised the'euffragette leader, worthy cause.” “TL know, But a worthy cause it alongside of a fashionable fa RONG GLASSES WILL INJURE your eyesight. Fitting by experienced ‘oculists is the only way to be sure that your glasses are correct. Eyes Examined ‘itec* By Registered Physicians, Oculists of Long Experience. we ae hk at bins 60. Oculists’ Opt &dons 350 Sixth Av., 22d St. 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St. |CLEARANCE SAL AT VERY ECIAL PRICES Couch and Cotton Woven HAMMOCKS Specially Priced to Clos» Out Stock. 150 and 152 DUANE ST. Cor. West Broads . EDDYS Old English ftyle Sauce should be in every kitchen | for flavoring soups, gravies and salads, and it should be on every table as a rel- ish for meats. At Grocers’ and Delicatessen Stores. VICTOR AEOLIAN HALL 362 FIFTHAV. Victor Talking M ‘and Records, and th for personal demonstration in Greater New York, DOES THE KEST Price $2, formerly 63 At Dri <,' ty ) anes ment Fier Ob. 1s-15 We dav ek Wek York No Cheesy cloths % Blip Covers, ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food All Grocers and Drugstets. HM, Deloved hu of Margaret Smith, nee McSherry. native of Belfast, Ireland, killed’ by horse car, Funeral Thui from his y. June 29, 2°. M., late reatdence, 480°. Wew She ee Boing to man Goldstein, lative invests gation of this bank, has any evidence of the facts, let him present it to me and I expect it of him and Supt, Van Tuy] has been authorized by Goy. Dix to make an investigation for the benefit of the depositoPs of the Union Rank and ia working to that end He says he has full authority for nd taking tes- ‘The superintendent says he i being assisted by the full authority of the Distriet-Attorney of in his conduct of the in+ “Why should we do that) Guts is a 223 Sixth Av., 15th St. 217 B'dway, Aster House 101 Nassau—Ann St 17 West 42d—Bet. Sth & 6th Aves., New York Brooklyn MANUFACTURERS’ U.S. FLAGS | HOFFMAN-CORR MFG. CO. PULL THE BELT AND A ‘ y

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