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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBE The Horse Show and the Latest Horse Show Clothes LASTHORSE SHOW. INBIG GARDENS IFUL SHI Opens This Afternoon With Prospect of Being Greatest of Them All. WILL GO ON NEXT YEAR. Head of Association Corrects Idea That Annual Exhibition Is to Be Discontinued. )The twenty-seventh annual Ho BRow-—and the last of these famous ex- Mibitions to be staged in Madison Square Garden—was formally opened this afte: “Boon when eighteen light harness horses stepped into the arena and the military and started its programme with an In- eptring march. Notwithstanding the gasoline menace to the equine genus, the 1911 show started with a bigger, more varied and elassier lst of entries than ever befor: in the ‘history of the National Horse Bhow Association. The decorations were more elaborate and there was every Indication that soclety would turn Out with even greater splendor. 4 Alfred G. Vanderbilt, President of the @ssociation, ennounced that a mistaken Pression Lad gone abroad that this ‘Would be New York's lust Horse Show, Indeed not, said Mr. Vanderbili. There will certainly be a Horse Show next year, and the year after, and the y after aimand twenty-seven twenty-seven more shows as the ye pass. Next year’s exhibition will likely be held in the arena that Is to erected at Jexington avenue and Fort)- Meventh oiree! SOCIETY STILL TAKES GREAT INTEREST IN THE SHOW. ‘Phat society's interest ti the Horse @ow is far from on the Wane ts ra- Voaled in the fact that it was not ne @eeary to auction off the boxes this year. They were disposed of privately and hundreds of applications were turned down, A brilliant assemblage is expected to throng the Garden to-night when the first class of horses \n sing! will be judged. Among the entries for rhess Uils exhibition are he: dd Vander- Dilt's Silfield Lily, Mrs. Walsh's Honor Bright and Honor Joy, Juv William 11. Moore's Perfect Motion Charm and J. Sumner Draper's Bare fatire and Lady V nd et Those who atten ¢ the show to-day vnanimous in the verdict that the tions were 4 great improveme tions of other years. t over the A cream Ovid ored ROSEY “SNITCHED” ON HIMSELF AND | “COANE” RADED Inspector Hayes’s Hint That “Dan the Dude” Was Trim- med Was Resented. “Gee, but Herman Rosenthal sure ts @ gore guy. Under the monaker Harry Bernstein, he's pinched last night for a common gambler by Inspector Connie Hayes; they keep him in the booby hatch all night, and this morning he's held in West Side Court in $1,000 bail. What makes him sore is because he's his own snitch, He squawked on him. self.” The above paragraph ts concentrated Tenderloin gossip of the raid on a place at No 10) West Forty-fitth street, per= sonally conducted last night by Inspece tor "Connie" Hayes, Rosenthal, who Is considered among his craft about the wisest gambler in New York, was found in the building and placed under arrest on a warrant Issued by Chief Magis. trate McAdoo, He was ready with ball, but Magistrate McAdoo could not be found, so he remained ail night in a cell in the West Forty-seventh street station, ROSENTHAL SWITCHES DEFEND. ING ‘CHARGE OF FINN. What makes Rosenthal about as abo- able as a ticket seller in a Broadway theatre Is the fact taht the only evi dence Hayes offers was furnished by Rosenthal himself, According to the current story, It came about in this way. Inspector Hayes met Rosenthal, a couple of nights ago, in Rogers's res- urant sald, h Sixth avenue, Hayes, tt is 1 a witness along in the shape of « plain clothes man. ferman,” said Hayes, “when T raid- ed ‘Dan the Dude's" place, a little while ago, he put up an awful holler against you, He sald you were running a place in Porty-fifth street, and you trimmed n for $8 there." Ho's a Har, Inspector," Rosenthat $s said to have replied. “I haven't had a loser alnce T opencd. They always ea T had a bankrool of $3,100 to #1 and they've taken $2,800 6f | fn three days." You ought to get a ¢ old Hesper Club gang Y from next the remark attributed to the “Dr mnot after that play, inspector. it is alleged ed, “I haven't enough only two wheels and one jane nthal answ room. 1 hay faro layout What 1 am after is the elite trade-small, but select. If 1 ean get that play Iocan clean up some: thing.” Smiling and affable, the Inspector went aw n after he was closeted with Magistrate McAdoo, and the was issued. LOOKING FOR “DAN THE DUDE” warrant AUTO EXAMINERS | Examining Board : Two of the | ex: * ~ laminers were therefore dismissed Her- Shake-Up in Bureau Follows} vert H. Patterson of No, 2s Seventh he charge that professional auto-}mond, President of the’ Professional mobile eta have. bean’. ont Chauffeurs’ Club of this city, sald t Hf _ ane tice ie 4 bing day that he was not surprised to learn chauffeurs’ lcensen in New York \things were not all they should be in through graft, has @ automobil- |the bureau. {sta of the praise of 5 for his Investigation reta ment Meenses wer aminers, even though they were unable’ canopy covers thi thig are suspended AS A WITNESS. vontaining 3640 electric lampr, Tien| Rosenthal's dismay when fou there are 6 great chandeliers containing |that his arrest was based on his own 1% large lamps. Throughout the build- | stwlements was most acute. To add t ing wooden railings have been replaced | jis sense of ee with imitation marble balustrades, Wat erianhat hss mi The prize list this year includes $%-| ery they though vel Pam 000 in cups alone, Among the do vig, ato thought th ry to are Alfred G. Vanderbiit, Kh. ¢ Van>| 0 ABOD t derbilt, J, W. Harriman, Ambrose | Rosenthal to be arraigned tn the Glark, William H. Moore, Robert A | West Side wet fe mination on Valrbain and George ©, Holdt | Monday, Detective Meanvy ja er The most notable of the trophies of-|4 subpoena for “Dan the Dude," who fered by these donors is Mr. Harriman’s |is wanted as a wiines "$890 Nala Challenge Cup, for horses) It expected that the arrest of fauttable for gigs, to be won three times: | Rosenthal will lead to homb-thrawine {the Hotel Association of New sey’s | and shooting in a revival of the $100 in cash for officers’ horses shown , blevs’ war, Rosenthal’s friends—andh over the jumps, and Jay F. Carlisle's has Dt them—assert th $600 Challenge Cup, offered for four-in- the Dude ats ates ae hands shown to drage. ning activity of I TEAS The feature of to-day is the ial judging of thirteen militia mounts, enter cipally from Squadron A, from the New Jersey Nationa and from up the State. The entry ¢ ing from the most distant int brought here by Ideut. Hi Brown Married at 105, Is Now Dend at Age of 117. Abraham Kalisky, dead at the age of 117 at the Hebrew Aged Home at Ba more, is beHeved to have beon the oldes: sérson in the United States, He witnessed the burning of Mosec Baz in the battic of Waterine his third wife in America at ot 10, He the age has ix great-great-great was | BURDEN ON THE EMPLOYER, |The National Civie Federation's con ference tlon bill Commits! on the Workmen's Compensa on which the Congressional yn on Workmen's Compensa- tion will report in January, met yester day in the Metropolitan Building and agreed that the burden should fall on the employer directly In cases of indus who att the con. ate Suther- th minis aneis Lynde Stet Joseph P. senr thor “You are very foolfsh to waste all that time,” answered the stranger. “I can put you through without any trouble in a day or so. If you are wil ing to pay a small amount—say $2—It can be arranged.” The detective finally agreed to the Proposition and four days later was told he had passed the examination, although DISM SS D AF R many of the questions he had answered }in his own wa | Secretary Lanzansky, after hearing the report of the detyctive, deckled four |days was too short a ume for an appli pal rae cant to pass the depamtment examin: jtlon and concluded to reorganize the avenue, Brooklyn, and Char West One Hundred and Forty-second street. Both men had tyven taken from Ithe alvil service Ist, but neither of {them has made any protest against his | discharge, In speaking of the charges of graft tn the Automdbile Bureau, Louis Ham- Reich of Disclosure That Chauffeurs’ License “Cost” $20.° “It has been known for some time among automobile drivers that ma of the men turned out with licenses are not qualified to drive a car,” said Mr. Hammond. “All one has to do ix to walk a few blocks in Fifth avenue small sums of money those|any day of the week anid watch the who made application for chauffeurs’! way some of the chauffeurs handle Passed b ythe board of ex-| thelr machines, Tt Is an outrage to who are loud in their eretary of State Lanzansky Complaints have 'y Lanzansky th 'BAMBLING CASES R 18, 19131. DROPPED FOR LACK Busteed Freed When! “Mar- shall,” Said to Have Lost $40,000, Fails to Appear. In y H. Busteed, arrested threo|tne lowest of the day at closing time will days ago as the alleged proprietor of a| Losses 188 West Forty-| points, with all the prominent issues , with W. J. Fennell, John| displaying some amount of loss. | gambling houee at fourth © Vvggerty and Frank Wells, charged| with being aids to Busteed, were dis-| charged by Magistrate Barlow to-day in the West Side Court. The men were re leased when Frank Marshall, who gav h’ address as No, W2 West Seventy- sixth street, f cuting wt led to appear as prose- | | | Pass such drivers and {s a menace to © questions put to them, | Public safety, ermined to fivestigate the charge, | ‘So far as the examination the Au- cretary Lanzansky cngaged @ private | tomobile Bureau requires 1s concerned, to answer Dy detective, who appeared as an’ appli: | !t 18 @ Joke, Among the fifteen ques: tnt for 4 chauffeur's He tlons asked there are only thre that The « ive had. sc started the, deal with technical automobile sub first lesson when he was apprc cts. The rest could be answered by by @ smooth-speaking individual who| 4 schoolboy, asked if he wished to become a chauf- | If competent examiners were cho- four | such a tragedy as occurred the “I certainly do," sald the detective, | other day, when the body af a small but 1 fear I will have difficulty in| child was found in the road, run d nswering! the questions, It will take by » reckless driver, would weeks to do it.” thing of the past. a —— seems Croker, Ex-Boss, Telis How Boss Should Rule. “Any Tammany Hall leader who tries to make himself State leader makes a m stake. The moment the farmers up-State think Tammany is invading the interior they resent it at the polls. “A holy cry goes up in Brooklyn the moment Tammany attempts to step over there “A Tammany leader ought to stay in New York. That's what | tried to do, although the papers oftentimes charged me with trying to extend my power throughout the State. “Everything is so mixed over here now that one can't tell a Demo- crat from a Republican. When a man in politics nowadays doesn't want to be either a Republican or a Democrat—and when | say Repuls lican or Democrat | mean a straight out and out machine man who is loyal to the party—he calls himself a Progressive. A Progressive is generally an ingrate. He usually trains with the party leaders— actually depends upon them for his election—and then turns against them, “When | was leader of Tammany Hall | expected to remember any one who did a favor for me. And if | helped others | expected them to remember me and return the favor some time, That's nothing more than gratitude, nothing more than playing fair. “All this talk of deposing Murphy is ridiculous. Men In Tammany aren't ingrates. When | was leader of Tammany Hall they used to start the same story about me after every election. | used to be the mark. Now Murphy's the mark, Mr. Murphy won't be put out. Tam- many might get a worse leader, Roosevelt wants to be everything, He'd like to be Emperor. “1 never met Gov. Dix. He's sprung up since | quit the game. | never heard his name mentioned when | was head of Tammany. Sen: tor O'Gorman Isa fine man, He ought to be Governor, But | don’t see how he could be Governor. The time hasn't arrived, | fear, when a Catholic man can bo elected Governor of this State, Justice Cohalan is a pretty fine fellow. He is bright and likeable, | am glad he was elected, Marshall had been represented as young man who got an inheritance of| $40,000 and squandered ft trying tol guess where the little ball would final- | ly seek rest along the horlzon of roulette wheel and the arder of prece dence of the cards from a well sanded taro It was necessary for him to appear and sign the {dentification warrants. Lieut. Charles Bi box. e Police Department, testitie that the police had made an effort to find Mai- all, but had failed, ‘Terence J. Mc- Manus, represen the defendants, sald Marshall was not sur anyway, h could jake the identifies ons, i rned good Nar hink then,” said #0, too," replied the | cllents wer fain | 18 Who could be Taunus sald his ly respectable cit ind anytime they were wanted, led Assistant District Attorney Su n say that the District Attorney's otic ught Busteed for weeks and was not able to find him until the raid vecldentally brought him to Heht. referred to the fact that the Dis Att d_ Busted to treks to 1 Citv and explain, to Justic r about the $2,000 he got frou Walter, Jr, after t, after Willett tle nominas | Walter got it from W started out for the Demoet 1 for justice of the Supreme Court | or the Second District. Rusteed ix) and. subpoet to appear Monday ip the Willett investigation The agiatrate «le led ta Gischarge the defendants © promise that the counsel would) produce them in the event the elu Mr. Marsh ne to! earth and could be indu ourt and tell about his dalliance, with | the chips that pass in the night, | Florence Burns Falla, | Supreme Court Justice Stapleton of Brooklyn dismissed yesterday the pro- to oblain the res ceding begun Burns Wildrtes apathy witir the % botler- | makers, but the matter wll be taken up mediately by the executlve boards of} the Various evatia, Union and Southern eloped moderate strength need fractionally above yester- and Copper ja was in good demand, the stock moving 7 —- ~~. —- up over Toward the end of the first hour the early buying movement simmered down, and prices commenced to sag from the top range, but subsequent trading con-/| y, m, although not very active. tocks began to waver In the last half! get a marriage license and the girl was appear- e volume, In a rather sharp reaction In progress du: tin ance in } final figures | Am! Toe Following a quiet opening, Pacific, day's closing range. hour when realizing made tts minutes ranged from frac Tonday's or he! Am: Can Am, Car RY Xin Am, ha Amicoude Mi Wii ta hia Brooklyn R. T, Inter, Inter, Ml,’ Gent Inier, Pumiy Kan. Cis Tet, Vali fowls & Sashes) South South. Third Vnion us ts Vy. 8. Vial Min ¢ Wat W West ACTIVE SECURITIES. United States Stee 1H) shines 14 and St shares, Services for W George Whiting Hebard, vice-president | » of | of the Westinghouse Electric Company, Union League Ciuo tent of the Sawyer M and director of inany others. vived by @ widow aad Wvo sons, G lions to 1 +i+ll! WALL STRET Steel, | ding Copper especially ing the last feW| was @ baby, and she did not know her the list tumbled down to about! exact ag: last, lowest and last prices of stocks pared with yeste Women Jurors Defy Order of Judge, to Acqatt Prisoner. A jury of women that tried G@. W. Sears at Tropico, Cal., for withholding wages from an employee, was ordered | | by Justice Melrose to bring In a ver- dict of not guilty, but they found the de- jfendant gullty just the same. “We were impanelled to hear and de- jclde the cary, and we're going to do tt," declared one. ‘What did you bring us |here for if you were going to decide it?" | The court declined to accept the verdiot, and finally the women brought in the verdict ordered. | 250 Widows Wanted by the Miners i rs of Artzona, | AS a unit, 250 miners of Oatman, Mo- j have County, Arizona, members of the | Bachelors’ Association, have proposed to 250 widows of Santa Montea, Cal, Announcemynt gone out that 200 fair widows in the place were marriage- able, and the miners are now awaiting a reply. After 19 Yeurs She Was Gind to “Obey” and De M After the minister came to the word “obey” in the ceremony to unite Miss Annie E. Geary, of Hillard, O., and Mor- gan Pawling, nineteen years age, she ob- Jected and the ceremony ended, ‘The near-oride remained single until a day or two ago, when Lawrence Woerner proposed. This time she was glad to say “obey,” and they were married, Girl So Truthfal She Lost Her Pros- pective H a, Truth proved stronger than love when Ida Lorenz and John F. Osborn of |O'Fallon, Ill, went to Clayton, Mo,, to ed to swear she was eighteen, sald her parents ded when she ted. | Ways of Women in the News| of her flance to swear to {t anyhow, and the marriage was dpolared off. Snakes Coll Around Nee Soclety Beauties. Miss Gladys Hinckley, called the moet beautiful woman jn America by former Russian Ambasador Rosen, has intro- duced in Washington society the fad of wearing jewelled snakes, Some adorn the necks, some the watst, and many are worn outside one's coat sleeve. The snakes are 90 realistic look- ing they are startling. of Many Gets vorce Beran: n a idn’t Want “Kiddle: Mrs. Martha Felkner of Centrevi Ia, has been granted a divorce for cruelty, on the grounds that her hus- band frowned on the prospect of child- ren, and refused to speak to her or take her anywhere when one arrived. The Supreme Court sustained the lower court In the opinion that this was cruelty. —pe———— LEGACIES TO 27 KINSMEN. Cunningha: Left’ $50,000 te Ge Charie! The will of Dantel Cunningham, leay. Ing $50,000 to general charities, was fled for probate yesterday. The entire es- tate is given as being worth $500,000 and tho charitable bequests are abso- lutely at the discretion of the two ex- ecutors, Father Louts J, Sloane of Sen Cliff, L. L., and Dante! E. Mahoney of 2284 Loring place, the Bron: Mrs. Margaret Flood, a sister, of Muy County Down, Ireland, |e le $110,000; Catherine Cunningham, a niece, living at Seventh avenue and Fifteenth street, receives $15,700, and Father Sloane $5,000, The balance of the ais vided among twenty-five nephews and nieces, mostly lving in Iveland, who get amounts ranging from $1.500 to $20,000 each. So she resisted the pleadings Cunningham died at Blauvelt, N. ¥. on Oct. § last. 23rd Street aces oF SILK DEPARTMENTS. rorepite Complete and Dress Goods. assortments | fashionable colors and black in Plain and Novelty Silks, Velvets, Velveteens, Corduroys Black Dress Satin. JAMES McCREERY & G0. 34th Sireet ' On Monday and Tuesday, November the 2oth and aist. In Both Stores, “McCreery Silks” Famous over half a Century. of the latest 36 inches wide. | 1.15 per yard value 1.50 Superior Quality All Silk Marquisette A in white or black. 42 inches wide. ih goc per yard * value 4.50 | iniporied Black Dress Velvet. 40 inches wide, 3-50 per yard value 5.50 jie was vice-pres- npan: He ts sw- DRESS GOODS. inghouse Vice- eaident to Re Held Monday, Imported Black Dress Velveteen. inches wide. M rence rom | who died yesterday at Bronxville after Auburn Prison, where she Is serving 9 gy fliness of several weeks, will bo wf from reven to. fftean yours fo ‘| on Monday from the Tompkins A . victiniaing Charles pa a nue Memorial Church, Brooklyn, th: 54 inches wide. Mahe poe dual 4 “ |'pre#ldont of whose trustees he had been OR ea 3 | for twenty yeurs, ‘ etle Strike, | Mr, Hebard was ® heavy contributor 4 ‘The stikelto the Jerry McAuley Mission, the which contr ean | salvation Army and to Volunteers of ive Company Peary He Was a member of the Af haber of Commerce aud the Brookly: 23rd Street {n Both Stores, 32 1.75 per yard value 3,00 Black Broadcloth, sponged and shrunk. 1.75 per yard value 2,50 JAMES McCREERY & CO. 34th Street