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{OCAL BUTCHERS SUGGEST WAY T BLOC HGH RES {| ent x Mammoth Co-opera- five Plant to Buy Supply fai. . Ahead of Packers. MANY. HELPLESS NOW. Must Charge More to Keep Up With Increase Exacted From Them. fen thousand retail butchers of the f™etropolitan zone, under the lash of the ‘Meat Trust, have been compelled to False their prices to the consumer from @hree to four cents a pound. The re- Maller claims that failure to keep step with the advance of wholesale prices, and thus pass the extra tribute levied by the beef barons along to the public, means the bankruptcy court. A number of the leading retailers who have refrigerator capacity took time by the forelock and laid in a supply of meats carly in summer before the ad- vances were declared. These dealers will not find ft necessary to raise their prices to thelr consumers until they have exhausted their supply 'n 201d #torage. But the small butcher, under high rent, with no storage capacity, must raise prices to his customers to meet expenses. Many of these butchers dare + BOt protest to the repreventatives of the eet barons in this city for fear that they will be cut off altogether, for the wholesalers are said to maintain a black list, and to fall out with one represent- ative of a ‘Western house ts to cease Dusiness relations with all of them. This situation was made clear to @ re- porter from The Evening World by an officer of the Retall Butchers’ Asso- ciation, which holds {ts meeting at No. 465 East Fifty-elghth street. SUGGESTS MAMMOTH COLD STORAGE PLANT. “There are between 6,000 and 7,000 re- tall butchers in the greater city, the ma- jority of whom are members of the organization of thelr particular borough, while in the metropolitan zone there are no lees than 10,000 retail butdhers,” he ald, “If all should band together and majntain a mammoth cold storage plant, even the smallest retailer could take a4- vantage of the occastonal low prices and get in @ supply for the future. “Unell such @ time arrives the small butchers will have to ride the price wave absolutely at the mercy of the Meat ‘Trust, a sort of buffer between the pud- lic and those really responsible for the robbery. I regret to say that sometimes, when the wholesale prices are down, these Httle fellows try to losses and make their good cu pay the debit sidé of their ledgere. ‘A canvass of the principal retail deal ers showed that even bees eee are uneasy under the price advances. ad are ati holding to our old prices,” said a representative of Richard ‘Webber, Third avenue and One Hundred and Twentieth street. “But the coming week will seo an advance. The repre- setitatives of ic packers give us seemingly reas ‘fable explanation — hortage in the corn crop. Year tr and car out they always have some ort of an exctse to botist’prices in the fall” BUTCHERS NOT MAKING YONEY NOW, ONE SAYS. 1 pought very heavily three weeks ago and have not as yet been forced to make any advance," said E. Oppen- mer of No. 14% St. Nicholas avenue. jenerally the prices go up in the fall, and I have made tt a practice to stock up toward tho close of summer, This year the advance came very early and the magority of retail butchers appeared to have been caugh* napping,’ “Butchers are not meking any money at present,” sald the confidential man of Louls Oppenheimer, who operates thirty butcher shops in Manhattan and the Bronx. ‘I do not see where there ta | any remedy for the retatlers, The situ- ation {5 always so mantpulated that the t% e of the public kic' ts eventual die rected at the retailers, This Is wrong, put [do not know of any way to right it under the present system of meat distribution out of the West.” “Tam of the opinion that the publte will realize that the source of high prices 1s west of the Mississtppt River,” said a re tnotive of the Star Beef and Provision Company, which operates some twenty-five stores, “Usually the packers manage to shift the blame to the retailers.” ‘Of course meats are going hig ” sald Charles Welsbecker of No. %8 West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street. af ny of the retailers are selling below coat at present, for it Is an economte {act that hot weather does not produce | the maximum beef eating. I think tt a little bit too early to get excited over | the advanced wholesale prices, The packers may see a Went and drop back | to normal figures befor cold weather | sete in.” | ORGANIZATION MIGHT FOIL PACKERS, HE THINKS. “We have not made any advances as yet,” sald a representative of the Arron Fucksbaum Company. “Before we do eo there may be a drop in the wholerele prices." “It would be a great thing for the consumers of the city if all of the retail hutchers could be got into a single or- ganization,” satd a represetnative of Hisler's packing house, which operates stores on the west side. y come before the packers have any idea of {t. Then the retailers could erect cold storage plants in var- ious sections of the elty and do thetr buying in bulk and at a time when the prices were the lowest. I should say that when this time arrives it might well be called the millennium in the meat trade, for 1t would practically put the packers at the mercy of the retall dealers of the largest city of the coun- try instead of the butchers and pubite New York being at their mercy, ae THE VENING WORLD '22-Year-Old Girl, Mother’s Business Partner, Chiet Aid in Conducting Big Enterprise _—- Mies Mary Barry of Brook- | lyn in Four Years Has! Worked Her Way to the Management of an Im- portant Department. Mother of the Young Woman Declares That Their Association in Business Has Made Them Mutually Helpful and Cemented Their Love and Confidence. “I belleve that the present doy Gesoctation of mother and daughter tm business will solve a question that was becoming really serious—that of the eatrangement of mother and daughter resulting from tong houre of enforced separation. At No, ii Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, Mrs, Kathleen Elleen Barry manages one of the langest bookbinding establish- ments in Greater New York, For the iast four years Mra, Barry's daughter, Miss May Barry, has been learning how to work, under her mother’s direction, and now she holds the position of sec- retary and also manager of an tmpor- tant department in the establishment. Miss Barry is only twenty-two years old, but since her eighteenth birthday she has been her mother's business as- soctate. “You see,” said Mrs. Barry, swinging around in her office chair, “with the Present day conditions of work for Women, when the mothers are taken away from the home and see practi- cally nothing of their children, the onty ult that can be expected is an e trangement of parent from child, and that is one of the most undesirable sit- | uations that can be imagined. “I have known mothers who have not | @een their daughters save for a few hours in the evenings for weeks and | weeks at a time. And they wondered why the girls lacked confidence in them —why they were not more companion- able. WORK MAKES STRANGERS OF MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS. “If these mothers would stop to think they might realize that the: prac- tically strangers to thelr daughters and that one ts not usually given to confid- ing in strangers, This is the condition that has come about in many homes, due to the fact that the mother must work. At first {t was the daughter who worked and was not at home. When the daughter grew up, married and had & family it was the mother who still ‘worked to ald the family, But now we are coming to # time when the mother still works, and the daughter, growing | POPE RESTLESS, if point of view more than once es the inind that has become Jaded through years of work. In fact the younger mind, one might say, 1 more up to date, ‘The younger person ig full of enthusiasm, she has no lag- ging spirit and there ts little that can daunt her, “My daughter and T walk to our of- fice {n the morning; we walk home to- gether in the evening. Many a time during our little walks problems that have been worrying us are solved, and, j though we do not always ‘agree on a point, we can thresh tt out to our hearts’ content and feel that each is honest in lier argument “Such partnership stimulates love and confidence between mother and daugh- ter, I think that it is a natural out- growth of the conditions of work.” SMOKE POISONING, CAUSED THE DEATH OF ACTOR FINNEY Coroner Finds Flames Did Not Reach London Fire Victim Until Life Was Extinct. Famous Toe Tappers Great Athletes to Figure in Firemen’s Outing AY, AUGUST 1 SCOTCH AND IRISH ~ TO COMPETE IN IES AND FLNGS and LONDON, Aug. 12—The Westminster| Tt will be one long day's round of “This business relation between them Coroner opened the Inquest to-day into| fun and pleasure when the Eecentric peeved LE ert dl Cee & eat the death of Jameson Lee Finney, the! A*soctation of F of Local Union racing se even St pay bad ; - American actor, who he No 9 which comprises the men wh home would not produce. It 1s vastly | Violent Storm Also Depresses| carton Hote Are Wades cyt sunish the fast tr the biye enterpriaes different and the mental change that it POLE Wal EOURURT ES Tere | GHA otie AeanLiCreiainctcreeeante Drings about {t hard to explain. How- the G as Intention to inquire | Of Ne i A sede eee oe Cron their intereete are pombined for| ile Pontifi—FeelsSure He | thoroughly (ato the cause of the nre|and’aporta at Celtic Park on Sunday, the good of the home and busine: Nine and the means taken to oxtinguish it,| Aus. 20 There ts no Mippancy about the offic Will Get Better. about thirty were called,| They have a fine big programme and their pleasures take on a certain | while the hotel management, Mr. Fin. | mapped for their annual display. There tone of dignity and hold » mutual in- ney's friends and the fire departmans| Will be dancing competitions between terest that 1s delightful. They have! ROME, Aug. 12—At noon towlay the| Were all represented by attorneys. Scotch and Irish men and women, in things of greater weleht to tall of than | generat condition of Pope Plus was de-| Howover, the tostimony of the free] whch the reel, Jig and Mighland ing gossip and dress. RDF A ORR aes ‘ety | Man who found the body, of the doctor| ll be contests. A team of four of the “E think that the association of the | Tide! by his physicians ax “relatively! 22) “Getermined the cause of mea best Scote tn Pittsburg will Gaughter with the mother in business | *#tisfactor The Pontiff appeared) ang of Miss Ada Dwyer, the New York| meet a crack team of Irish dancers in ls also of @ decided advantage to the |#mewhat stronger. His temperature re- | mained slightly above normal and the actress who made the {dentification, | tis event 1 also ec WOMAN WHO DIED ANXIOUS TO WED, | BY POISON IN SURF, THEY HAVE WEARY ONGINSANE HUNT FOR LICENSE an Wife of Wealthy Oruggist Even Justice Spitz of Union| Hill, N. J., Who Performed Ceremony, Couldn’t Help. Was to Have Returned to Asylum To-Day KISSED HER DAUGHTER. |. Before “Nick Wells went tnto the) fiehting game, way back about the time of the Spanish-American war, he and Henry Spits usee to solder and wipe Then Went to Her Death as She Planned at Rock- Jolnts together ac Journeymen piimbers, Henry also left the plumbing business, but he went to Union Hill, N, J, and a later began to take & hand in politics, away Beach. Last spring he war elected Justice of | — | tit Peace over there, and “Nick,” who Family explanations to-day furnisned Rad gone back to (he plumbing business, the reavon for the aulolde of Mra. Paul. called him up on telephone te con: Ine Diugagch, who walked into the surf | «ratulate hin at Rockaway Beach yesterday and took ‘Just to show you how giad tam that tablote. Mortis Diugasech, her you are now a judge, Helnie,” sald hueband, is A wholesale dealer In druge Wells, “I promise vou tnat if I over get M No. 1 Cedar street, and has a chain married you'll have the job of soldering of retail stores throughout the city. the joint—T mean tying the knot. When the Dlugascher came te this Laat night, Wolly whe supertn- country they were not rich, Hoe had tendent now of © big plumbing con- Just enough to start a Mttle drug stors cern and lives on Haat Seventeenth near their home at No, 96 East PIfth | etreet, took Mise May Murphy, who ts atreet. It prospered. Mra, Dlugasch | ewety-one, @ brunotts and stenographer, picked out places where there would |yying with her parents at No. 214 West be business for additional stores and | |One Hundred and Forty-sixth street, |to see Lew Fields in “The Henpecks. Strangely enough, the adventures of M ler cholces were so good that several years ago there were twenty-four stores her husband's management and » had bought a wholesale drug estab-| Henry Pock «ave Nick courage to say Hehment to supply them. In all thia | to the charming stenographer the things work Mrs, Diugasch had an active part that had been in his mind for many Two years ago the strain told on her and she became Insane, She had delu- ons that bankruptey was staring the business In the face and that she wanted to Kill herself before the wreck oe curred, TRIED SUICIDE AFTER RELEASE FROM THE A.YLUM. Mrs. Diugasch was sent to Hlooming= dale, A year later she was brought home as cured. She took her place in her husband's business and again broke down, She tried to kill herself with gas, almost succecded, and was returned household was months. “Leta get married,” Miss Murphy agreed. Then Nick Jumped to a telephone and told Justice Spitz that he was coming right over to make good on his promise, HUNT FOR MARRIAGE LICENSE BEGINS 2 o'clock when Nick and the place and rang Justice Spluz's doorbell, Spitz had gone around to the Hudson Hotel, leaving word that he could be found there. ‘The couple hustled around to the hotel, and all was he said. And It wan aft May got t to Bisominenale apparently in readiness for the cere- broken up and Mr, Dhigasoh went to Wetveds Cie Wantion gavad cto sbeees live with his brother, Dr, Louls Diu- kasch at No. 206 Fifth street. swan)he Heenae: a Ten days ago a pitlable letter came eaay,” declared ‘the Justice, to hi from his wife saying she was ‘aiied up Town Clerk John Mc- suffering terrible pains because of the | yap That ts, he called up McMa- condition of teeth. He visited her! hon's home, but the Town Clerk was ould not find that any real trouble existed he brought her to New York to a dentist. It developed that she was feigning the pain and Mr. Dlugasch made arrangements to take her back to the asylum to-day. His wife begged to be allowed to go in bathing Just once more at Rock- away Beach. With thelr six-year-old daughter Mr. Diugasch took her to the beach. Mra, Dlugasch took the child to the bath house after their swim, told her to dress and walt for her father, who was also dressing, and that she herself was going tn for an- other dip, and though he out of town, So Town Treasurer Wil- liam Egan, who ta authorised to Issue Was telephoned to, but he wae too bury making good a bid of 40 in auction pinochie to bother about so trivial a thing as a marriage Ucines. One official after another in Union Hi! and adjacent towns was tried with- out success, but finally “Big Jim” No- lan, town assessor of North Borgen, was reached, Would he issue the license? He would. So, at 4 o'clock thts morning, all hands trooped into Nolan's parlor, on North street, and—well, that's about all. They are now Mr. and Mrs. Nick Wells, —————_—__ ‘The father and daughter waited un- tl they were attracted by « crowd] WILLED ALL TO FAMILIES, down the by It had gathered around Mrs, Diugasch's body which a| Ratates of Ottenberg Recs life saver, William Brady, had brought in from the surf. She nad dled of poison, not drowning piahhe eee FOUR CHILDREN HAVE FALLS, 4ND TWO VICTIMS DIE. Nearly Million “ach, Deputy State Comptrotier Jullua Har- burger to-day filed with the Surrogate the Appraiser's report of the estate of Adolphus Ottenberg, who died at his home, No, 285 Central Park West, April 5, 1910. The estute, which ts valued at Fire Escapes, Window and Tree | #4051, 1» divided between two sons aikin e i" end four daughters. ‘ne Points from Which Young- ‘The Deputy Comptrotier also filed the older woman. The mother begins to was suMctent to enable the Coroner toi! the famous sters Take Tumbles Appraisal of the estate of Charles H. think in a younger vein, while she still depression which has characterized his| issue a certificate permitting the ore- MMe fe danced id Keed, who died Jun 1008, at his rest- has a restraining influence over the Iliness at times had not been entirely| mation of the body at Golder's Green| Y twenty ¢ isly Two children were killed and two) « <0, Bathgate aveny The daughter, I do not mean @ severe oF overcome. Crematorium on Monday. There will kreat of the day in the| others badly snjured by falls yesterday lestate, which tw valued at $897,386.24, tyrannice’ control, but an influence that | ‘This afternoon, the Pope, in a con-| D¢.& brie service and the ashes will ba| Stenuus line Will be the Gaeile foot-] afternoon, woes to the widow and @ son, Edwin prevente the daughter from becoming . ‘ te the United States during the |»! between Cork and Ktldare. Peter Rogers, four, was playing on|Keed. Mra. Reed gets one-third and! Ribsant versation more prolonged than has bee 0 nla ay fifth floor fire escape at No. 200) | the son, Who ts not yet of ag: reall ; \ on ae en a nimutions Lave b ifth Moo No. 2005 on, who 0, recelvel MProu ail axparaGeS/Gah thas wo Bese a is ws i PaeE dst ae < 3) Miss Dywer, who wa sociated with | Ric rd-tuck Mehth avenue when he dropped to the| two-thirds. | have become more like gocd chums or | yrAed Cardinal terry de {ne Papal Finney professionally and is charged| i!" S80 and the follows the| street. He died Instantly. —_-—-— | work fellows than mother and daugh-| 7) 08 Oh oe Monte. pee Min his will with the disposal of his body |sPOrt Will be there in thelr tousands,| Four -old Caterina Di Crosta died | xed-ost Policeman, | ter, Tam certain that my daughter hag| Manned to his villa at Monte Mario t0-) and belongings, testified that the actor) uth and Armag Will also compete, [in Bellevue at night, She had fallen nP. J. Mlh was injured by none of the fear of me that many hold |i nucent from ome for the on hina had tea with her at 6.90 o'clock on the hletic events there will be al from the fire escape om the fourth floor xington avenue trolley car at} for thelr mothers, We discuss all mat- | 0 absent from Rome for the remainder! evening of the fire. Althousch the bode special” In whi eppard | of =) ast Thirty-first atreet aev-|Porty-first street early to-day, Bligh | tera that appertain to business openly | 1 the Summer and His Holiniss wished! nad been badly charred there was no| iM te other fleetfooters ary red. eral hours before was on fixed post between the car ane trabuly, We are von intesstea (a (° tnko a seat, saying that ao “or| dount inher mind aa to the lenin: | AR added event will boa mile] Peter Schwamenal, three, pltohed out] tracks. He stepped from in front of a the samo character of things at and | ymMelt He felt sure of recovering from! witch way made sure by Jewelry worn, | StePlt Includin water jump, | of a second story window at No. Wi /wourhbound car and wax atrick by a away from home, and all inal! Teannot | no KMese In answer to « question by the attors)! tacular and exciting event] BAe Pity aie tower tlopiter {northbound car, ‘The policeman was think of a better arrangement in view |). 00! ee ies sr bales morn |ney for the hotel management thu 9tt. | the are ¢ John Duly, | *ArMter Brendel, thirteen, of Nor 4g3| Cut Over the right eye and on the back | of the present necessity for womer +9 |! explaining that he folt better In his | ness said that she had never heard +nat| wer of the Irish-American| west One Hundred and’ Sixty-thirg|0f te bead, and his shoulder and arm | eg red than in the chair whieh he oocu-|tinney suffered from asthma }A, Cy 18 the first satey recetved. street, fell from @ tree In Highbridge| Were Melly brulsed “Aside trom this, in business there is M01 Mt times yesterday, He thought! ‘The physician who examined the deaq| There {8 & big bill of other #tandard | park, fracturing hla right arm and both & trust between ua that ts diMoult to| {st he rested better In a rectining post-|man sald that he had found the walt) atiletie events, ga. He Was taken to Washington fatabiian ‘between ‘tranigora ‘or with a tion, ‘The pains in hin knee entinued |quite naked and blackened by heat and ————— FAaten ta) HOI man, now that when I go away [Dut were less severe, The swelling, |smoke. It had not been in contact. with salle IS from the office and leave my daughter | Which diminished y day, nas since|the flames during fe. The cause it ADOLPH VON CLAUSSEN DAVID FERGUSON HURT. | GREAT LOND in charge everything will be done prop- ined str.tionary. Jdeath, he suid, was suffocation and | DIES ON SHORE WALK, * x yl Rail aleice trust her! Last evening the physicians were op- | Smoke Polsoning, | — Clty Record Supervi Gete Brok co ora, for |) 2 - ——>—___ F eccord the has learned what loyalty meane to | Umisti saving that the patient showed | Father of Woman Who Had Con-|""* js Broken Ona han Oe WE en ee mprovement, and predicting a| FETE DAY IN HONOR OF troversy With Roosevelt Col Arm When Porch Halling Hreaka, would never think of detraving # -onfi- recovery barring unforseen ) oe i 4 David Ferguson, Supervisor of the| aN dence. tions, within ten days. The! OUR LADY OF THE HARVEST lapses af Manhattan Beach. City Record, i# in the Seney Hospital, | ae wines freien slowly in a ever, had a rather restless | Mrs, Ida Von Claussen, who is spend- | Brooklyn, with @ broken left arm re. | Aeaertse whee ahe ees to wor with /night, and toward midnight was awak-| Great Catholic Festival Is Tol ing the summer at Manhattan Hoach, [ceived when the ratling on the porch | Pruat be done ie ee caeome thing that Jones by a return of the buming sensu- | Be Established i wan taiclng her aged father, Adolph Von | of the Hotel Bensonhurst, in Cropaey | on a business basis. My ughter Is bes {Won in Nis gouty Knee. The doctors meee tt unsen, along the boardwalk to the |4venue, Brooklyn, collapsed, elae ts, and it le ‘or her to do her work | later he Was sleeping well, ‘Phe p! Fifty divisions of the Ancient Order. night when i Before a phy- | sons were, Pyne aN pare conactentiously and thoroughly with no|sicians thought the heat and overexer-|of Hibernians In. Greater tog clan could reach din leads [ee eine Bate See Gd these aoe unusual concession If mothers injtion o! afte her he! will take th Initlatiy nt bis * _ ni x ‘ : . wht M ‘ she ee ra bo oi oe ww Me business lot thelr daughters have some- | fait. so much er, sponsible | eowing toward the cesagnitnn ic ee Sarit ees oe MULE WEL DROP hace Tite thing to work fe partnership will for his restlessn mie | OBI DS: eee ne ssnomnttOnvot Lady) Claussen tind Plad-OF apoplax Me ee near seitated ian cane be a success, safternoon the aj Day, Aug. 15, 48 4 Roman Catholic woti-, Mr Von Claussen ‘ wil be Incapacitated for sev. MOTHERS NEED THE AID oF t electrical storm caused a headache | (4¥ 4 ihe United States a Alety thind areas aca 2 THEIP DAUGHTERS IN BUSINESS 874 4 {orllni of oppression on th Mother, 1s alteedy a rocounized helldae | Last nlght he went to Manhatt “If men are aasoctated with their song (Of te Pepe. The storm broke oy orien) ae ier Cal osereoA gE th his d / tn business why should not mothers | ity With # suctossion Of terri thunder | in many European countries and Lay oket tartare e hs ve Bic Da at! Minding ghtnine, m1 o pont! Celet n Appeared ny eller A | |eare thee daumiters. Sirosl it ft ta Al ccetaed go. pasa directly before the Ue" |ctee held th auvardl Wott anal Aire, Vou Claussen 19° the ‘ who | good thing for a man to have his s: cate hte ei re the w wo sovaral fern and Ne oe AAR whe. Get the ‘inal enw near him in his work, it Is a thousand |WOW* of the room oecunled by Pp putiiorn cittes, The day as well ay siétned notortety Ms Orig! and Ine times more desirable that a motie aed the is to abs 4 mark in th 1 its us significance com. With # 1 e | , and her daughter work together. vtioan gardens. However, no damay ating the Assumpt @ to ‘ ave : | ‘ i ‘ating the Assumption of | ‘Phare never waa a git who did not | War done and when the sky cleared the 4 Virgin has a further inter ? ase Mt ° | Reed a certain amount of maternal alr ‘sits nuch better and the nattent| being Recdecliat an Pe ete ' | 3 | guidance. This she cannot have with we 20m refreshe giving for the bounth : a — | the present condition of the homes om Pe ‘Tits yoar In taking tho lead th Aviator Falls 500 Beet, ('MALTED id , eveey ae ve a day, She " no Takes Lite, mians will attend th pecia. CHICAGO, Aug Jo 1 Joyce. an| open ave this much needed Influence shin eal as 18 a of the feast in teil in fee ‘ piing an often TE Uae GL CHURN Na ate WOE ottnes on tha” astoenaut tit i foot wie The Food-drink for All Ages. Complete Co; office (fae important as the Colburn: & widow, thirty-elght yenra, {lr Wives and gona und da oe tvkok 1 1°*"" Forlofants, Invalids,and Growing children, Sent by the home. A mother should have q ood, old, drank carbollc ackl while walking Mij,T°RME to, Sulzer s Harlem Whe sire Pure Nutrtion, up building the whole body, clean place for her daughter to work in, |on the street in Je City last night and Second avenue, where there w! ‘ fe icine suc | Wovigorates the nurung mother and the aged. It is In the office that {® not morally |and died before an ambulance arrived, ail gaines and. sports poss 't Land th ane i malted ia powder form, Jclean that many girls are lost, but with |She had been visiting Mrs. Colton at found at # plente A trolley chock , Bicd call, mated ney the mother there things will be different, |No, 183. M street, Just a few min- All the Roman Catholic dignitar! d the avila 1 os | A quick fanch te o minate, “THE SPRING MAID”’ ‘There 18 another point that is tm-|utes before and had told the latter that in the clty and men prominent in officiat (eaping broken rained | The pe enbetitete, a of the ahs was sick of life because of her and business life have been invited to|ankle and cuts about the face. The b ne for HORLICK'S, | rtant and that 1s the opinion Gaignter om business affairs, ‘The fresh |troubles, She had no regular home. attend " I plane was completely wre * | Not In Any Milk Treet | WHICH WAS REQUESTED BY KING GEORGE V. of England EMPEROR WILLIAM of Germany les at All Music Shops, or Will Be ublishers on Receipt of 25 Cents. JOS. W. STERN & CO., 102 W. 38th St., N. Y.c. ——oooeO l= ATHLETCPASTOR TLS COURT OF POCKET PIN So Impresses Magistrate ~ O'Connor That John Harris Is Held, Despite Denials, ‘The Rev. Henry 8. Watson, rector of the Church of St. Michael's in Brook- lyn, appeared to-day fn Harlem court as the principal witness against John Har- Mis, @ painter, who Ives at the New York Hotel, Seventh avenue and Thirty- ffth street, and accused him of picking the pocket of \.fIllam i. ‘Truesdale tn the One Hundred and Sixty street subway station crowd on Thursday. The Rev, Mr. Watson captain and Tight end of the Hobart Collage football team in his time, Mr. Truesdale, who ts Superintendent of Publle Schools of Gen- N Y, was a classmete and was & the Rev, Mr. Watson on hits vacation. They }oth retain thelr Intereat In athletion. By the mintster's story of vedings in the subway sttaton, substantiatgd Hugh thore we @ litte while. When the Rey. Mr friend's wallet risin, out of his hi pocket In the fingers of a man he be- lieved to be Harris he leaped at Harris and threw him with a football tackle it Is alleged, gave the wallot y that of Polleeman Me- thie in plenty for Watson saw fis another hand, which disappeared. Po- Heeman Hugh, who was in. plata clothes, Jumped into the fight. The Rev Mr. ight he was the con- federate and, tea Mi. Truemiaie io hold Harris, who was In a comatose state after the ministerial right bad landed on his face three or four times, and caught McHugh by the throa “I'm a policeman,” shouted McHugh. mme go." 1 it to ybur grandmother!” roared ter. "We're not both from the country.” The policeman's coat was torn off and hin shirt was on the way before he could persuade the athlete to look at als shield. And even then the Rey. Mr. Watson waa doubtful. Magistrate O'Connor was impressed with the minister's story. Despite Har- ris's denials that he was the pickpocket the Court held him tn $2,000 bat). >—- Veteran Jeracy Editor Dies. James D, Flynn, who for the past forty-four years was editor of the Bor- dentown (N. J.) Register, died at his home to-day, aged sixty-nine years. Flynn, with George Suydam, the gon of the late Peter L. Suydam, purchased the Register from Suydam. Fiynn and Suydam ran the paper for two years and then Flynn assumed entire contre! of It and had conducted it ever ance. Here’s the per- fect BEER! PALE RIPE RHEINCOLD Beer, brewed by S. Lieb- mann's Sons, Brooklyn. Sold everywhere, In Greater New York only 81 a case—24 bottles. ON MUSICAL HIT Music Is Delightful,