Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1911. FIREMEN TRAPPED Prominent Figures at Nassau Air. Tournament frequently to influence perspective cus- < tomers. Inquirers would be referred to Mr. “Morgan, who by virtue of his long ser- Vice as Treasurer of the United States WORLD, ‘ECZEMA CAME exerted a very «trong influence and had never failed to collect * promised dividends. Flagg is not a member of the Stock other exchange, « t-Oflce Inspector: Exchange or any ‘cording to the He claimed to do his business through brokers. The plan as he outlined It was the concentration of large sums money in speculative movements certain stocks, These movements, seid, backed by experience and insid Information could not fall to net 1 per cent. a week Neely, since his failure at a book pub- Neher, has conducted a brokerage offic at No. 2% Broad street. Higgins is al feged by the post office men to Deen the legal adviser of the outfit ‘The prisoners were allowed to have arted down States Com wating ne J to ask tha tuncheon before they were town in custody, United missioner Gilchrist was them at the Federal Bull tor Dixon said he intend bail be fixed in Flage’s case at and in the the importtaion of the prisoners. HERO NEARLY DROWNED AFTER FIGHTING FIRE. Boy Pull Policeman Out of th River After He Saves Burn- ing Freight Train. On Riverside Drive at One Hundred and Third street to-day, Patri ‘John L. Mullin saw smoke pouring from one of a string of empty freight cars on the tracks below, He ran down the steep ambankment and sumped tnto the burning car to put out the blaze. He found the car floor piled with biaz- img excelsior and pleces of erates and hurled the burning stuff into the river unt!) ne had the fire out With scorched face and painfully Durned hands Mullin staggered to the car door, nearly overcome by the smoke he had fed fo ihe Te |was too far gone to was ie wooden know what I idoing and’ fell fifteen feet to the rocks on the water's edge and then rolled overboard John Williams, thirteen yearsrs old, jof No, 833 Ams: enue, ard John McCave, fourteenyears old, of No, 1 West One Hundred and Ninth street, jrushed to the river's edge and pull the unconecious policeman upon the (rocks. On # yard engine Mullin was rushed to Ninety-Atth street, where an ambulance arrived from J. Hood Wright Hospital Jackson said he feared in addition 10 other Injuries the officer had breathec Jame and might not recover, ernie ot rand AW HOLD-UP MEN ROBBING, THOUGHT IT WAS “FUN. ‘John Mahoney, employed on a dock vat Fiftieth street and North River, ts fm Flower Hospital with a compound fracture of tne skull, received when he was attacked last night by four men in Fiftieth street, between El enth ‘and Twelfth avenuer Vebbed of $10.6, just paid He him was as The asenult was witnessed by several raona who thought the men were scuf- iin, until Mahoney to the side- wall ran. unconscious, ‘The injured man rallied sufficiently to Ml of the robbery, but was unable to Give 4 description of his assailants, It was said at the hospital that he will Probably dle. TE CONNIE MACK PICKS HIS WORLD’S SERIES ELIGIBLES. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 23.—Connie Mack, manager of the Philadelphia American League Basebell Club, to- day announced that he had sent to che National Commission the names of Awenty-orle players as eligible to repre- sent bis club In the world’s series this fall. The names of the players are: gpntobere*Thomes; Lapp and Livinge- on. fell and Pitchers—Bender, Coombs, Krause, Martin and Danforth. . « McInnes. Barry, Baker and [ Outflelders—Murphy, Strunk and Hartsel Last fall agains: Chicago there twenty-three men eligible to represent Philadelphia, howe not on this yea Met are Pitchers Atkins and Forest Baseman Houser Donohue. The new men this ye: Pitchers Danforth and Martin. The players who are eligible for the series this year and who played agat New York Nationals in 19 are Bender, Plank, Davis, Murphy, rick. Lord. Oldring, Lord ani Hartsel. (od LE Mee East End Club's Outing. The East End Club, which cuts a big swath in polities, will have its annual plenic to-morrow afternoon at Dexter Park, Jamaica avenue and Enfield street. Cypress Hills cars go right by the entrance to the par Prize bowling will be a feature of the day's fun. —_—_—_—————_____.. B B stands for Boats, Which, just at this season, Are oft’ sold at prices That seem below reason. , A “Boat Wanted” ad, In next Sunday's World Should find bargain boats On which flags are furled. Sunday World Ads, Ucually Bring a Diversity of Angwers gn Monday. Mr. “Morgan would assure all inquirers that he" was investor in Fiage’s enterprise he he have for $25,000 er cases in proportion to his assailants | HIGH IN AIR SAVED of less on Fourth Floor of Old Tiffany Building. e t Flee When Startled by Explosion. Twelve firemen narrowly escaped be. ing roasted to death on the fire-escap *| blaze in the old Tiffany Building, M-15 Union Square West, at 3 o' this morning. 1 pavement, shutting o| leaving them above windows that sen out scorching sheets of fame. A cas cade of water from the tower covere thelr retreat, but before they r the street a shower of thick glass fel upon Dante! F. BY WATER TOMER |Broken Hose Leaves Men Help- TWO SEVERELY HURT. Thirty Police Prisoners in Park four stories above the street at a $190,000 Nos, k e hone burat near the the water and ched Long and Charles Lang | | | | . G AATORS HAVE HAWK EVES; SHALL, SCOUS NTHEAR HUNT FOR HN FES AT MASSAU Soldiers Deploy Into Woods on Long Island as Airmen Spy Upon Them. THER. BIPRICULT CUMBIN; y= MiAQ GETTY WRIGHT W le} | | GREAT RIVALRY SHOW Aviators in the Army and Navy Are Trying to Out-Do Each Other. (Special to The Kreniag Wo NASSAU BOULEVARD, 1. 1, Sept. %.—Good flying weather, a few clouds every now and then obscuring the sun and a steady wind blowing at les than thirty miles an hour made the SAMUS. ATWOOD, aviators and ofMfctals out here to-da HARRY PATHE?! hopeful that the initial flying of the HELPING. sa meet would result in a few record amashes. of Engine Company No. 18. Both were | severely cut. A number of detectives trom Wert Twentieth street had been through the | park and were on thelr way with} thirty or more vagrants to the police Pres. Tim ation when there was an explosion WOODRUFF BUSY that seemed to rock the neighborhood, followed by the glass from all the win- down In the fourth ‘yo oon the teenth street side crashing to the straet. The prisoners made a dash for | erty, partly through fright and partly through @ desire to ¢ 6 the work house, and only twelve were recap- ured. One of the detectives sent tn an alarm and when the apparatus arrived the west side of the fourth story was burning flercely. Acting Chief Martin had a tower put up and men from Engine Companies Nos. 6 and 72 were working it in Fif- eenth street, when a dozen members of Engine Companies Nos, 12 and 18 went "up the fire escape tn the centre of the Fifteenth street side to pour water into the flames from the windows, | Were forcing the blaze back into the | building with @ stream of 150-pound | | pressure when the hose burst on the | sidewalk, STREAM FROM WATER TOWER SAVED FIREMEN. Instantly the water stopped and a cry of alarm went up from the thousands of spectators outside the fire lines, A mo- |ment later the flames darted out the | windows with still greater fury. The | fremen were Just above the fourth-atory | windows, and, with the blaze shooting out below them, could not get down, and there was no way to reach the roof. The tongues of fire were curling about | thelr legs when thelr comrades oper- \ating the water tower succeeded tn turn- ing their pipe until it directed its stream against the cornice of the building. The deluge of water formed a curtain that stopped the flames as they came from the windows and enabled the firemen to descend the fire escape ladders to the floors below. Before they reached the street, how- ever, the heat in the ffth story, to which the fire had climbed, caused the windows to blow out. They were all 3 by 4 feet of plate glass, three elghths of an inch thick, and the frags ments would have killed or badly in- fJured the firemen when they showered down on them but for the helmets. As It was, one plece cut through Fireman Long's thick clothing ike a knife and buried itself in his shoulder, while pieces cut and brutsed Lang's hands, Aw soon as they | they hurried to New York ital, where thelr injuries were dre: They were ordered back to quarters by Chief Martin. The firemen meanwhile atta “jacket” to the broken hose, fron clamp pounds. reached the streot Ho: hed a It Is an ng about twenty-tive water was turned on parted, as if cut by @ knife, Just above the “Jacket.” ‘The crowd had its thrills for the second time, FIREMEN IN PERIL FROM SNAK- ING HOSE, The “live end’ of the hose, about thirty feet long, through which flashed 4 180-pound pressure stream of water, ‘snaked about in every direction, Was not long enough to endanger the crowd, but every fireman was In peril of being killed by a blow tn the stom. or havin le ; a tn ae fe OF arm broken, | 19 turn if he loses his leadership. winite of the threehige enatus were in|“ wHe wan never elected to the leader- bers 5 venty five pend etins hose | snip. Haffen seated him when the dis- Pee oe he eng. verpound Iron biud- | met was split, His district has got no Oehias WAtaa” WA patronage; he's never around; few of Cape ateeaten bog before the! the voters here have ever seen him, tuoatitas a. By thig thine Cotee stake | but he manages to stay simply by the \t pine ae ne Martin, | hower of the party whip. Democrats, | (rere pie Ree: WON) meh. away from especially those who enroll, want to more apparatia, The fee wee reuse | be regular, and up here thie ts pare ined to the two top ioore of the dua,| ticuarly true. Why, his captains have stcry ding Water did. congeiersye, condemned him, and dozens of them vidi %y did consideranie atl ng 4 to building and occupants being | Balster up his brol nated’ at fineoe. a “| “san of us are mindful of what Al | The guests in Hotel Churchilt at Pours velo Mea Ra died at the Mbenau teentn Co nt Brom ail at Four: <gsociation ball last winter, Yet we many visitors from the ‘osuctey a find Libenau with Morris this year. were roused bY the Nrat exp.os eed) Wh Becauss Haffen directs Libenau. the glass broke up the “huoo’ oieata Because Haffen, while sitting in the |and many rusned into the lobby, but ali | Shade of his old fx tree, treasures the | were by Clerk Lewis that there @elusion that he may be a Congres | Was no danger and those who did not go) MAN yet. You know that despite h to the fire returned to bed. ‘Th Was a past offenses against the organization |mimilar sc at the Union Square Hotel | they have never been able to get him in Fitte nh street on the east side out of the State Committee.” Isaac & Co., manafacturors of cravats, EXPECT MURPHY TO GIVE THEM occupy the fourth floor, where tue fire SHOW AT “COUNTING.” started: M. Stern & Co, manufacturers) Last year when ard V. Handy, of w * are on the fifth and the Star former Alderman, sought Morris's scalp, | Skirt Compa y the They | again, but In a few minutes the hose | it} OPENING HOME RULE CRY RAISED IN BRONX | TO BEAT MORRIS Marrin, Son of John Kelly’s Old Adviser, Believes Issue Winning One. “Home rule for the Brona,” {s the slogan for Charles C. Marrin's insur: rectionists, comprising former Haffen- ites, Higgins men, Berryites and Miller officeholders, who are enlisted in the sixth annual campaign to topple “Billy” Morris from the command of things Political in the Thirty-fifth District. Charley Marrin is a tall, light-hatred Vermont farmer Jooking man, gifted with @ personality aud a manner of speaking which 1s earnest and carries conviction, Out of the melee of Bronx embroglios he has emerged an accom- plished politiclan, He knows how to shake hands and to samile—two indis- pensible things for a vote-getter, His father's long association with John Kelly as a confidant and adviser has Deen @ rare asset to the rising young leader, for old Joe Marrin knows and has taught his favorite son tricks of the trade which a generation of poll- ticlana might not acquire. Marrin and his confederates meet tn the Tammany Club—a name chosen originally to impress voters with the insurgent leaders’ fealty to the organi- zation, Without Marrin the outfit would be a sorry one, Indeed. Two years ago he got 2,200 votes against Morris's 3,200, and tX\is year he claims he is better equipped with war sinews. Dissatistac- tlon with Morris clique methods, he as- serts, has forced hundreds of party Democrats from the North End Club's influence HAS FOUGHT FIVE YEARS AND CAN'T STOP. WITH LAsT Few DETAILS FOR THE SCOTT, OWE OF THE FOUR WOMEN AVIATORS AT THE MEET HEADS OF TRUSTS ARE HIT HARD BY WICKERSHAM (Continued from First Page.) fous to ride on the popular wave, de- scended on Charles F. Murphy in the Fourteenth street wigwam and demand- ed that he support the measure. The boss has never been caught giving up any of his political domains and he only smiled and shook his head. Forthwith Leaders Arthur Murphy, Gene McGuire and Morris tendered their resignations. Morris, however, succeeded in getting his general committee to re-elect him. Last year Morris had valuable ald from the McGuire and Murphy guerillas, the Marrinttes claim. It was a reprisal almed against Handy because the latter and the Haffenites were blamed for the defeat of Murphy when he ran for Borough President. Handy remains op- posed to Morris and ts ined up with Marrin. “You may state for us, aid John Carroll Edwards, Marrin'’s campaign mat r, “that Surrogate Cohalan and for prison sentences for all convicted violators of the Sherman law. ‘As to my being forced out of the Cabinet by threats of powerful corpor- ations oF trust magnates, I should like THE MACHIN Several of the flyers had their ma- chines out of the hangars early but none of them took a preliminary fight before noon. Lieut. T. DeWitt Milling, U, SH A., who is expected to do some © fthe best flying for the army, had his Curtiss out in the field and with a couple of mechgnicians went over every inch of the big machine, Harry Atwood, the St. Louls-New York flyer, was also out with his new Burges-Wricht and several of the for- eign filers wree wheeled out of thelr hangars. Following is a lst of the prominent de aviators now here: Harry N. Atwood, Lieut. Henry H. Arnold, Thomas §. article on the Harvester Trust. Then | Bakiwin, orge W. Beatty, Capt. Paul Mr. Bancroft, th counnel of the/W. Reck, Harold A. Brown, Helene International Harvester Company, came] putriel, DP, W. Dyot, Lieut, ‘Theodore to me and assured me that if I would/ 5 Ejiison, Eugene Howard Gill withhold the filing of the petition be | Cinude Grahame White, Lee Hammond, would present a plan for the dissolution | (aiie5 Willard, Andre Houpert, of the Harvester Trust in conformity to the law that would meet every re- guirement of the Department of Justice and would satisfy me. I consented to this, but only on the understanding that after the details gf the plan have been worked out #o satisfactorily the Govern- ment, as petitioner against the Inter- national Harvester Company, will ap- ply to the courts for an order incorpor- ating the provisions agreed upon, and this order will not only compel the dis- integration of the Harvester Trust into its several different original compani but will contain a permanent injunction which will prevent the separated com- panies from ever combining again or entering into any kind of an agreement as to Lieut. Roy L. Kirtland, J. A. D. Me- Curdy, “Bud” Mars, James V. Martin, Lieut. T. DeWitt Milling, Matilda Mois- ant, Ferdinand DeMurias, » ye Mes, bech, Earle L. Ovington, Ha et Quin- by, Abraham @aygorodsky, Lieut. John L. Rodgers, Ignace Seminouk, Fred T. Schnetder, Ensign John R. Towers, and T. O. M. Sopwith, The machines these filers will use include the speedy Nieuport, Moran, Blerlot, Duperduasin, Queen and Mois- ant monoplanes and the following bi- Wright, Curtiss, Henri Farman, Grahame-White and Maurice Far- The prize lis: for the meeting reaches nearly $40,000, man, Justice Brady have promised us their jupport. All we expect from C, F, Mur- phy is that he give us the same chance nothing better than to go to the country with such an issue,” he said . In the course of his talk he said he of trade or in violation of the law. PATENT OFFICE SHOULD BE ritory or prices or in restraint Shortly before 2 o'clock twenty soldiers from the Twenty-ninth Infantry #1 tloned at Governor's Inland, under com- he gave Handy. He allowed Handy to| noped to bring about « readjustment of have one inspector, gave Morris the other and these {wo chose a chairman | °@dltions without the severity it was in each of the forty-two districts, With | once thought would be necessary. He that arrangement this year we will} said after chec: ing off a sist he thought win." there were about 100 corporations of- fering prima facie evidence of being SOME OF THE WORKERS IN| toMaMions of conceran tat once .-mpetitors 11 ition to those Marrin 1s president of the Tammany | against which suits have already been Club. His brother, Joseph jr., 1s ser-| begun. geant-at-arms; Bertram L, Kraus of @o not ask anyLody to agree with Wesselman & Kraus, Benny Ladnaman, | me," he said, “but I do ask credit for George W. Hohman ‘and Danlel J. Mc- faving honestly done my best to en- Cormack are vice-presidents, Samuel 8. Marcus has succeeded Arthur J. Meyers | tre the law without fear or favor. THE LAW, NO as secretary. The treasurer ta C. Aux-| WILL ENFORCE ust Hogrefe. Minor official re Thomas C. Larkin, Harry C. Butts, James J. | FEAR OR FAVOR, Lyons, Harris Goldblum and Joe Barton.| “So long as I am Attorney-General ‘The Bourd of Governors {s headed by | of the United States I intend to en- Mr. Edwards. Other members besides force the saws, and to enforce them re- tho officers are Bernard Hartman, Henry | gardiess of what influence \s brought Price, Francis J. Kuersi, Isaac Dobro- | "ee ezynski, John J. McAullffe, Joseph A. Nae said Sky Wha sal sarporations Dowling, Charles W. Berg and Michi | a. Lyons. ean avoid prosecution !s by | sey Many of Marrin‘s captains are experi-| complying with the law, an ey are enced in primory warfare, Buch men as) fools if they do not see that. Marry = Pr! Charles Arman, Aaron) “] @m enforcing the law as conserva- Lientbiau, Sam 8. Marcus, Elsey Brink, | ayely aa is consistent with my duty, Tho Savage, mes J. Lyons and) he award Martin have eworn eterna! op-|vecause it is to the Interest of the Position to what they term the “clique! country to bring about a readjustment rule’ in their district, Captains like| of business conditions in conformity Isaac Rotchschild, Peter J. Brady,,to the Supreme Court's interpretation Nenry Franklin, James H. Marsh, Henry of the Sherman Anti-Trust law with as acherre, Frage MnO. Hi, Jackman | ii¢tle disturbance to lawful business and and John J. McGowan revert i neavor| eeitimate enterprise as possibl posing of Congressman Goulden in favor It was suggested that the way to | ive years ago I openly rebelled, | I've fought Morris each G ince,” declared Mr. Marrin to-day. “I'm not leading this fight as a matte’ of choice. Morris's enemles, represent- ing all factions, urged me to again run, |and I submitted, We'll win this time | with the great stlent vote of the dis- trict. There isn't a man in the Bronx who does not consider Morris politically incompetent. ‘Old Billy’ knows tt him- self, but unfortunately he has no place . F. W. Dade, Frank H. Murphy, Ae W. Domand, John J. Crilly, | make the trusts obey it ie to send some of the rich offenders to jail. Frank Stafford and John J. Eg&n resent “And if I continue to serve as Attor- the return of “Old Man" Haffen. Tiaffen, they say, should be ruled out! ney.General till the end of Mr. Taft’ of Bronx politics and removed from the term, I intend to send some of them to Male Comptlttee, prison,” was Mr. Wickersham's an- awer. CLAIM THEY HAVE MORRIS ‘The men under indictment in thi BEATEN THIS TIME. m Greenbaum, Thomas Fleming, |peet ‘Trust cases in Chicago will also go to prison if I have my way; so Victor Bernbaum, George Blettbure, Max Bendit, Henry Neidhart and Fred) wi an others who knowingly, wilfully and deliberately go on violating the Mauser from the section# about Wen- vel ri venue reflect the oa a arione districts, they. say, |lAw now that its meaning has been in stating that thelr people will rise al- | made so clear." most to a man on next Tuesday The Beet Trust case has been set for Nov. 20. I know all about the effort ade to stop It, but there {sno inter- est In this country that can stop those cases, They could no more stop those cases coming to trial than they could put spokes in the law of gravity. The Reet Trust men have exhausted every possible dilatory plea they or any one else could think of, and now they must face @ trial of the case on ite merits, | WILL URGE PRISON TERMS to emash the “rusty, broken-down, old ma- | chine of the man’ who was never elected but planted In the place of leader.” Other captains whose reports to Mar- rin have Muoyed up the hopes of the revolutionists are: Robert Auerhabn, H. C, Butts, R, T, Wilson, Lewis Frettard, D. A. McConnell, Peter Reynolds, Al- vert I. Alchorn, Wiltam C, Martin, | Thomas ©, Larkin, Joseph W Barton, Arthur F. Cerrutt!, Perse. 4. Reld, Charles Schave, Marlin Larkin, Will- tam Reilly, Jim Walsh, George W, Hoh- IN man and Henry Van Wax ‘All I find voters want | clean, BIG TRUST CASE progressive, intelligent lead SACOG |" sip) ang oun esta dupe in asaviet and Capt. J. J, Lyons, one of the brightest young men in Marrin's command, "Mor- in all urge, tho: Morris has promised it to twelve mer fobacco Trust decisions, He sald: nth street has shown no dispos!- tion to do tht Jumped to Hie Death, Edward O'Sullivan, thirty-three yea: | do anything, “The facts of the Harvester case 1s as follows: T! | dite. he had most of the ant!-organizatton Lora Per ey factions with him, including Lidenau LONDON, 2%—Lord Strathcona, | TM WAS before the popular ery for Hiah Cor er for Canada, ater Bronx County independence arose, Had for home to-day by Way of New York, té Bronx bill gone through Mr. Hat- It is expected that bia successor wilt f@0'® political days would have ended be appointed soon after his arrival in Sbrupuy, they say. When the bill was ontreal. at Albany tho four Bronx leaders, anx prepared a sult for the di | he International Harvester Company, old, of No, 388 W nth street, committed sulelde to-day by jumping from the fifth floor of his home to the eireet. te a trial judge to impose the prison sen- men will go in compliance with the Standard Ot! and give permission to any corporation to Trust ‘tment had olution of | snd our petition was already in galley proof when The World published its PROBED, HE BELIEVES, “Do you hope to bring about—in the words of the President—'a readjustment of conditions without the severity it was once thought would have to be used?’ Yes," Mr. Wickersham answered, ‘'I hope and believe it. It will be best for the country, but those who wilfully and deliberately and knowingly continue to evade the law will be prosecuted.” Mr. Wickersham was loath to criticise the Patent Office, but he did say he considered it would be a fitting subject for a Congresstonal inv: “There 18 one thing th: in favor of, and always strongly in favor of, because it is the only Way to prevent pyramiding of cor- porations,” Mr. Wickersham concluded, “and that is a Federal law to prohibit any corporation owning stock in another corporation. That should be one of the fie" fons of a Federal incorporation jaw.’ mand of Lieut. C. B. Hodges and Lieut. Jacob Fickel, left thelr tents behind the hangars and started to deploy into the woods. The {dea was for them to conceal themselves in order to test the value of the aeroplane as a acout. The aviators will search for the troops and then return to Gen. Frederick Grant at the aerodrome as quickly as possible with an accurate description of the party. RIVALRY BETWEEN THE ARMY AND NAVY AVIATORS. Lieut. Hodges took his men about four miles from the field. He did not hide so completely as to make it Im- possible for them to be seen from above. There was a keen rivalry in thia contest between the army and navy aviators. The army folk were pulling hard for leut. Milling, one of the beat of the ffty filers in the army, and his friends of the navy were root- ing for Lieut. Ellyson. The country for several miles around the Aerodrome is being closely patrol\ed by twenty-five private mounted police. ‘Timothy C. Woodruff and the company of which he is the head controls all the mpeta and ifthey are not able to ‘patrol it the crowds outelde the Aero- drome would be so large that few would think it worth while to buy admisst on. If a man ts discovered anywhere near with a chuckaluck apparatus or a shell and pea arrangement he and his pai phernaita will be loaded into an auto- mobile Black Marla and turned over to the Sheriff aaa TRUSTS THREATEN PARTY AND DEMAND WICKERSHAM’'S HEAD. The big trusts will demand the head of Attorney-General Wickersham as the price of loyalty to the Republican Party In the campaign t year, ace cording to reports, The Attorney-General has defied them and announces he will not resign. Presi dent Taft in his recent speeches has = made it equally plain that the cam- paign against corporations that seem to| BOY BROKER IN AUTO CRASH. fe the anti-trust law will be un- Jerome Kennedy, the "boy broker of abated, no mater how strong the press- | the Consolidated Stock Exchange,” son ure brought to bear by the financial in-|¢r Jonn Kennedy, banker at No. 74 He has told the business men! p-oqqway, turned up in Wall atreet that competition must be restored. The workings of the money power are revealed in the story of their action after the Standard Ol! and Tobacco to-day none the worse for his autom: bile accident of yesterday, when his car was hit by @ trolley at One Hun- dred and Thirtieth street and Madison sions. Meetings of trus: mag. | avenue. nal ie Held in thevathees of Jee. | Mr, Kennedy received considerable Morgan & Co. in July, Some wanted | Joshing over the fact that in the news- to “take their profits’ and readjust | paper accounts of the accident he was business to conform to the Supreme| referred to as “chauffeur” for the Court decision. Others said the Taf | party. net was divided on the trust ques- ——.———— as ‘and urged a fight. No decision was| Died om Arriv reached and it was agreed to await the| Mrs, Eunice Perry Stanton, return of J, P. Morgan from Europe. | nine years old, died to-day just atter ‘On Mr, Morgan's return from Europe he at once devoted himself to the prob- em created by the Supreme Court de- cisions and he made it plain that he wi willing to assist In a readjustment of business conditions to conform to the Standard Oil and Tobacco rulings. Mr. Morgan was of the opinion, howeve that if this were done all the criminal suite now pending for violations of the Bherman Anti-Trust law ought to be dropped, To this Attorney-General Wickersham 1s absolutely opposed. The attitude of the Attor! '-General her arrival at the Cunard Pier on the Campania, The Coroner found she died of heart disease. Her body will be cre- mated and th hes sent to her home at Yakima, Wash. ris 18 never n the district, He in the National City Bank case has also! Purely regetable, can never be found when wanted, Only but I can't send them to Jail. | greatly displeased the financial inter. | ths, Liter tnd, Digutly last y he pledged himself to restgn, |That ls up to the court.” ests. After 4 personal Investigation Mr, CURE but did not do so, Believe me, if the The Attorney-General was asked if) Wikersham took the position that the of this district ever reach the |there was any truth in the published | National City Company formed by the] ¢i all, diaries of the, Stomach he will be beaten five to on statemente that he had offered the Har- | Natlonal City Bank, was Mlegal. The | peri tend che,’ Constipation, Costireness, In¢ |" Scouts of the Marrin ca have ter Trust and the United States Stee} | question 1s to be decided by the Pri e peuenee, Gover, latte) marion of be learned, they whisper, that open rebel- | Gopporation immunity if they would |dent in November, ie PERFECT. D ON ith he Hon against Morris will follow this a : 4 ze |. The Rockefeller-Morgan. and other {Michel by taping RADWAY'S PILLS,” iy” 40 vear's selection of the three Aldermen, | VOlUnLArIIY disintegrate and reorganise |. ving interests are standing together | going }in thia matter, and it has been made DYSPEPSIA pow, they say. They say, further, that plain to Senator Penrose—who {8 slated | gicx Headache, Foul stomach, Billousness will be Morris ix anxious to retire if the or- | “It ds not true. I have no authority |by the Inter for Chairman of the | avilet as the food th ates It kantzatton will “place” him, so far|io grant immunity to any man or to| Republican National Campalgn Commit peri for ort of the natura Four| . tee——to Postmaster-General Hitchcock and to other leaders of the Redublican arty that if Mr. Wickersham 1# upheld In this, the National City Company matter, and 1s allowed to go on with the criminal prosecution of individual trust officers, ho funds will be forthcom- ing for the re-election of President Taft in 1912, At druggiste or by mall, RADWAY & CO., New York, LEGAL NOTICES, fic RAC TRO Viana Na: wit i a woul, Nda herding tale he wil Wt ‘oe reaponibie for any Sabie’ contrasted ae € "EDWARD LEVY. FROW TEETHING Watery Festers Dried in Scale: Would Dig and Scratch Her Faces Used Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment and Was Cured, “When my little girl was about eight months old, ehe was taken with @ very | irritating breaking out, which came | her face, neck | pack, When ebe first me cown with it, it came in little wal like festers under eyes, and on her chin, then ofter a few on it would dry down ly, white scabs. In laytime she was quite worrysome and would dig and scratch her face nearly all the ti I consulted our physician and found she was suffering from eczema, which he said b ba Liga teeth- the ointmen: gave me relief at all. Then I on Cuticura, and |chased some Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment at the drugstore. I did as I foun: directions in the Cuticura Booklet, | when she was one year old, she was entirely cured. Now she is three years and four months, and she has never been troubled with eczema since she was cured by the Cutioura Soap and |Cuticura Ointment.” _ (Signed) Mrs. Freeman Craver, 311 Lewis St., Syra- |cuse, N. ¥., May 6, 1911. Cutioura Soap and Ointment are sold | throughout the world, but to those who | have tried the usual remedies and found them wanting, and who have lost faith in everything, a liberal sample of each, with 32-p. book on the skin, will be sent post-free, on application to Potter Drug & Chem.’ Corp., Dept. 2A, Boston, Mass. ing, I used and without any wrate for a boo! Keeps the teeth white, the breath pure and the mouth clean and fresh. Geo. Borgfeldt & Co. New York. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE Genuine outa: Signature + hy Shea K Gord. RELIGIOUS NOTICES, CACHCH oF tab BELOVED Discn oe ge pear Madison ave. Ra gr dh re D,, rector. 8 iO, . rector preaches at 11. Hots Y,, Sept Funers Sept. 25, 19. from ht rosidence, Belleview. a and Lew High mast at St, Joseph Church at 10 A, Interment Wood- lawn Cemetery DEITENHEIMER.—On Sept. 22. CAROLINE DEITENHEIMER, service at THE FUNERAL 241 W. 28d st. Frank B, Belore Selecting Your Apartment CONSULT THE Apartment to Let’’} Advertisements in THE WORLD IT WILL SAVE You Time, Energy and Money The World’s ‘Apartment to Let" Advertiscmen te offer you Greatest variety eclection. # wilt ve te Waurid's Luorues 1M. Puliteer tur ows Ww nuribw ‘ ortiee Das st. Brooklyn, following the. orinth advertisement COOOOOODOonO ROOD nO D2r0