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a t t NEW OLE ORLEANS SAFE ALDERMEN IN AUTO | "AFTER A NIGHT OF FIND WHAT CAUSES. MID FLOOD PANIC, STREET ACCIDENTS ‘ tmaferno of adios. Including | | Carelessness of sat Pa rians an | Rain, Wind and Hail, | Gripped City. Drivers Responsible for Many veaeauincite WATER 15 INCHES DEEP.; KIDDIES ARE RECKLESS Leyees Withstood the Severest! Children Scare ote Investigat- Test to Which They Have ing Committee by Darting x Been Subjected. | , Daringly Under Wheels. a | ‘With the object of studying et first hand, and fram the standpoint of auto- MoDdillets, traffic conditions in the Ta- Hous boroughs of the city, a committee of Ave Alderman took « long automobile Tide today. The committee wae com- pomed of Aldermen otk, Wilmot, Bec» er, Reterbrook and Shipley. ‘These gentlemen are to report to the Board concerning measures to reduce the appalling mumber of acclients and fatalities on the streets of Now York, @ue to automobile traffic. Bo many contradictory statements have been Gements gripped | made on the subject that the committer Rain fell} hae decided to make thorough tests of @ade, hail] traflo conditions, at differant times and river rose by| under Gifferent clroumetances, in all levees, and] parte of the city. tinuous die} Today's expiration covered the and rosring thunder.| downtown business @istrict, Williams to @ depth of! burg, Leste fh heger agcs ove upper fifteen inches, People in| proadway ede streets in the srasoraed FES: | traftie veaeumen Atstriote and the lead Hob tee were | (ng automodtie routes conveying out to ‘ Woatchester, None of the Aldermn little prospect of thelr homes| Would commit himesif about the in- rie ight plants| epection trip, but all admitted they Many parte of the city | new mere about conditions In the for hours, Btreet ar | streets after they returned than before they started, One thing that {pressed the members Of the committee je that the drivers of @tomodiles are not entirely to binme @or the heavy percentage of accidents of teamsters and pedestrians was found to Soores of drivers we found who turned thele teama in thronged thoroughfares, without even ee dehind or givi gna! of any WBW ORLEANS, Mey 11-—New Or fans woke this morning with the aun Bening brightly down upon last night's @eme of confusion when all of the ele @ente combined to give the city Gorm that, Because of the floof in the Fiver, wee the most threatening ever i fell during the latter part of and the cloude had vanished a‘ morning after hav- records here by F tf age me ci EAE £ i i apt itt i s a if elerm! towns up and sore CH towns | feat of further and fatalities, Tho oarelessne:) he levecs baekt the Mississippi torrent ie be emising. sod tevees in New Orleans ares ery ‘the tenement districts !t was found that children in general pay little er no attention to passing traMe, Trey Push into the streets regardicss of ve. Risles, and the Aldermen were in « cold perspiration mest of the time when riding through streets where children ere most plentiful, As for persons whe placiily walk across the etreet without looking up or down and with no regard whatever es to whether they are at a crossing or in the middie of the block—they were found to constitute an army, Careless- ness in this respect was found to be the rule, especially in districts where there were no traMo policemen, The police force in Williamaburg and "Queens alome main travelled roady wae found to be quite inadequate for proper regulation of traffic, Teste were made an to the efficiency ef brakes and tho abillly of chauffeuré to stop machines In the face of danger, These showed that the average automobile is well equtpped as to brakes, but that the majority of accidents cannot be avo'd- ed by any brake preasure, un! nome thing can We found that will stop a car colt in itm tracks—and this would hurl the ooeupants out over the front, | The pavements of the main streets |{n Manhattan were found to be unt- versally bad, This adie to the diffioully of operating an automobile in the crowded distrieta, Ai 1S OYEZ! OYEZ! HERE IS CITY'S FIRST WOMAN AUCTIONEER. Woman's advance into politics gained Impetus to-day, whon Mayor Gaynor caused Mre, Elt Sobel, widow of the former City Austionser, to be notitied that there ts nothing tn the way of har becoming New York City's fret woman auction provided she pays the cus fomary feo of $100 and submits & bond of 99,000, After her husband's fleath, the con- | duct of his businens devolved on hi ay Unewiee were beaten by! tirely, 11 was necoswary for her to en- Lahuilo on the same day, @ auctioneers and to pay them foes. many of thelr dead 2nd! tq a ahort time Mrs, Hobel mastered {he Getatla of the auctioneering business | oa having # round, fesanant yoioa, the Gecided ta go on the block hersalt. Actomingiy she wrote Mayor Gayn: Asiing if th law which wo hinder her qualttying, | ‘The Mayor turned Mre, Sabel's letter Qn for hours the fieod ind inte the wholesale eonalderadle alarm amen; ef New Orleans, an of them looked upen the ourrent coursing AS flooring the en- of the ahed te being torn uy piled underneath. Furthe flooding several atreets hood no other damag —_—— MEXICAN REBELS BEATEN ALL ALONG THE LINE. Oromco's Advance Guard Forced to Retreat Twenty Miles Toward Escalon, 9 advance guard of rebeis Griven back toward Heosion, the base of insurrectos in Northern ot HEI Deing on the defense, the troops have, within the las Pushed the attack ing the rebels northward milea to Conejos, about | eouih of Chihuahua, other towns occupied by ! i i | i ‘ R F a ts to troope pre re hull ot QUipment Poult not be Latter, have twenty-five plese of heavy | besides many machine muns,| over ty Ansisiant Corporat! tion that would ime, $0F | Orawell and, after diliment Jatter wae able to report Tew, May i1.—limillo Vas-| povel’s ambition cannot pe impeded oy Gomes, Provisional President of | jaw, Mrs, Sibel, who IIver at No, 18) has disappoired. He slipped | West Ninetieth street, te prominent tn | ot Juares during the night and ts to he en route back to San 8 Bet Up lila provisional ago to-day in rr on of Gen, Pase women's club were PIMLICO WINN’ WINNERS. | | rinsT RAOH - ~Maiden two - year- olds; four and a hajf furlongs. -Tank- OT (Butwell), 2 to 6 aad out, first; | oucy, 107 (Burns), ¥ to 6 and out, d; Lindesia, 107 (Diggins), 60 to Wesleyan Beats sievens nt Nets, (er MIDDLETOWN, Conn, May 1i.—Wew- | Yeyen won tte annual tennis tourncy|f* sy to 1 and 10 to J, third. Tme— with Atevens Inathute of Hoboken, N,| 9'54 4-6 Sand Vale, Byoswet, Pop ! ing all of the ma.ohes! Chilton King, Star Gaae, Springup, Mar- | Jy go-day by 1 tee -@oth sing: and doubles, ‘The | tin, Amorous oO rei BWCONT RACH.—Three-yoar-oldy and | lark beat Wolff 7-5, 6-8;| apward; #x furlenge-Npeand, 10); Mo- Towel | (Taggart) 14 to 6, even and 1 to 2; won. beat Racsen 6-3, 6-1; Butler 6-1, 6-1; James veat 4, dames Mills, Masier Edwin, iM; (schutdnger) to &, 6 to 6 amt 3 tg 6; second, Canale | beat | Hargrave, 180; (Pickens) @ to 1, 16 to 1 and and 6 (0 1; thied, dime 1:16 8-6, Heather | 6-8.| Urvom, Belle Nelson, Henock, Robert | Oooper, Big. Acton Remarkable Geo, 6. Dasiv und Monty Box ateg ran. and May ll-Dashed, THIRD RAQM—~The Agateur Cup the roof of a house this after-| selling, three-year noite and wp: A a0 Bay View avenus, near Meudow | furlongs ~-Apac 4 (Mr, J. Tucker), Ms Paraciuce failed to/ 3 to 6, out end ont ‘ea pation Maid, Ara four drop from @ baie 161 (Me, Chedonnier), bi 19 tot I ©, C, Bonnetie, Bt. Jobne- and ¢ to 1, on Roya) ee 168 Vermont. leat cond (Me, Binol), bt third, by wap, War! GREENWICH AFTER SKE SKEETERS, nes ‘Minnie Calinhan, tHE EV PRINCETON’S PRESIDENT WHO WAS INDUCTED AT OLD NASSAU TO-DAY. | | | | PRES. JOHN G. ae HIBBEN TAFT SEES HIBBEN INDUCTED AS NEW PRINCETON HEAD | | | (Continued trom First Page.) butld himself into A and brain, will find hin work, TRANSFORMING THE BOY INTO! A MAN. “The resulta which by the four years! Of training we hope and expect to pro- duce I would characterise in a angle semtence: It te transformation of the school boy into ® man of the world-- @ man who can move more freely and mae in the midet of the world's) the work of his ake @ man and a fore who ite can interpret ite ugh “Our fathers lear: the leeson of the Great ‘Teacher, that the iaw of life fo a law of iibertya Iberty which finds expression, however, tn a law of service and a taw of sacrifice, Our| hope and our prayer is that thelr sone who bear their names and who are of thelr breed and blood may keep faith with the past while moving forward to poreses new lands of promise and Dlenty. After the conferring of Doctor of Laws on & ceremony which he many 0} inatitutions—the benedio- tion over the induction of a President in the prinotpal Presbyterian strong. hold of the country wae delivered by Bishop Lines of the Protestant-Bpis- @opal Diecese of Newark, There was an undergraduate junch- eon In the [cas ach at which Prosi- | od Taft, Chief Justice wre fe ident P Ht Hadley jas undergone at pean arranged ‘noon, one of the most notable be- ing that given in honor of Chief Jum tloe White by Mra, Grover Cleveland, ident Hibben will address the Informally to-night, | when they march to his house after dinner, SUNDAY | BALL PL PLAYERS ARE HELD IN BROOKLYN. Preachers. Started Crusade Detectlves Pald Admission to See the Game, The Nov, Orville Fisher of the New and Utrecht Reformed Church, Bath Beach, | and the Rev, L, 0, Wellwood of the Protestant Episeopal Church of the Holy Apirit are crusading axainat Bunday ball In thelr nelghborhood, At their Inetigation Inspector Dooley went two Aetectives to the West End Athietto | Club grounds at Cropsey and Bay Twentieth street Inst Munday to get evidence. Before Magistrate Reynolds, who gave them warrants for John MeCarthy, mat keeper of the club, treasurer, and Albert Schaefer, secre: tary, the detectives sald they sought mission to the enclosed fleld of the Jub Sunday to witness a terson team, ‘They we to purchase membership twenty-five cents and then adintss on | ‘0 the «ame, as members, for twenty: five centn more, Magistrate Reynolds het all three In $100 bail and inter posed technical objections when bail they Were locked up Town Forms Org Destrey the Last One: {Rpeclal to he Evolag Worlds GREWNWICH, Conn, May 11—Al- ways proud that it had not as many mosquitoes as other Sound shore (owns, this muntetpallty has mined ta get ‘ARCHBALD HEARING) ARE WASTED DALY’ asked similar questions by members of Albert Michaelaon, | jame with | ENING WORLD, BATURDAY, max “OPTION” WILLIAMS 2,000,000 000 "|S TANGLED UP AT | GALLONS OF WATER jin a Maze of Contradictions in byavectlahae chaste bed | ‘Testimony Before Judiciary storage, When th» reservoirs aro filled | the remainder gues to was ‘Then in Committee. summer, when rainfall is light, the in-| creased demand draws froin the stored supply. Last summer, as the water | * Mine dropped foot by foot, the water ve- q 5 ; HIN ABOUT A PLOT. | came tout and ruddy. Comptaints rose on every hand, but no louder or more forcefully condemnatory than the odor| Counsel for Accused in Cross] Suits, “tne ary sna Soroned’ green : jh . Tet. absorbed the “extra” supply f: the Examining Witness Tries disconnected reacrvolra Letore. they | reached the Croton. | to Implicate Boland. To-day the water golng to lone over Croton Dam Is as pure as crystal, On| the top of the spillway, where it seems to constantly polse curled for the down. | Ward plunge, it looks like a huge tele @cope lens that breaks into powdered crystal on the coping, sending up sho ers of fine glass i Halt a mile away from the spillway | the sound of droning reaches the ear. Coming closer, the waterfall is fare splendor. Under the steel bridge the broad white cascade out against the background of and th WASHINGTON, May 11.—Kdward J. Wiittams of Scranton, Pa., testifying to- day before the House Judiciary Com- | mittee in the hearing of charges against | Judge Robert W. Archbald of the Com+ merce Court, entangled himself in @ maze of contradictory statements that |atmoat baffled the comm! Williams, who was a partner with Judge Archbald in an alleged effort to procure culm bank property from the Erle Raliroad, was particularly confused about an assignment contract executed last September with W. P. Boland of Scranton, in which Judge Archbaid was referred to as a “silent partner.” He first denied that he ever maned such a contract, then admitted that he 4id, but asserted a copy of the contract before the committee was not the one he signed, and finally deciared he had ho good recollection about it. Wiliiame was vomburded vy questions by differ. ent members of the committee and Judge Archbald's counsel, A. 8. Worth- ington. The witness answered questions put to him by Mr, Worthington, and when nile, gray cement structure, which 203 feet above the swollen The roar of the water over pillway js like nothing but Niagara, Tt te deater’ The form of ‘the dam sloping outward with two foot stone coping like the steps up the face of the Pyramids ts lost in the thick curtain of water, The Dreaking of the water on these steps) increases the roaring and throws out @ fine mist which floats on the wind, wetting the observer on the bridge. Halt; way down an extended stone foun: tion, jutting out Mfteen feet or more catches the crashing volume and tos: ft high and over the edge, where tt Grops another hundred feet into the lit- tle Croton River. Above the dam t river {@ little more than a brook, below | {t Je now a turbulent,” rock battling the Hudson the committee he contradicted himself repeatedly. a DEFENSE TAI! TO SHOW , THERE WAS A PLOT. Croton Dam Itself can hold no more When Williams took the atand to-day} water, nor can it be built up in any for crose-examination, A. 8. Worthing-| way. It was constructed according to ton, counsel for the accused, attempted | specifications for Just the height it now to show there wae @ conspiracy against | 1s, and in order to incroase ite capacity Judge Archbald. the whole dam would have to be recon- “Who first euggented to you that you | structed, get a letior from Judge Archbald when| POURING IN MORE WATER TO you sought to purchaye the Erie Ratl- THE LEAKY BARREL. 4 culm banks?” Mr, Worthington| “The city is going to spend §300,000,000 Neediessly, and nv far ft has apent $140,- 000,000," sald a prominent engineer to day. “Eight years ago the city was) confronted with a water fainine. There | were two aqueducts, both very Inade- | quate and old, One was bulit tn 1843, with a capacity of 85,0W,000 gallons 4 day, The second or New Aqueduct was | built in 1885, and could deliver £20,000,000 gallons a day, Meantime, with the city | population increasing by leaps and bounds, leakage kept growing, Soms of the water pipes had been laid since 1890 and were wasteful, Mlectric cur- rents from etreet cars and telephone and telegraph conduits began wo eat the Iron pipes, An Investigation showed more than half the water from the aqueduct wan lost in transit, ‘There Was a per capita consumption of water amounting to 126 gallons a day, In Lon- don it is only twenty-nine gallon: “There were three ways of solving the diMculty—cut the waste, butld big Pipes or get more water, Commls- sionér Thompson has cut the waste #o | per capita consumption is now ninety- | six gallons, stfil a tremendously high figure, but the actual consumption of water in @ er New York {fs about 650,000,000 gallons datly, and about 2, 000,000 gallons are wasted through leaks, | You may increase the water in a Joaky barrel by stopping the leak or pouring in more water, and in tho latter cas you must keep on pouring. Certain city officials insisted on pouring, and the Ashokan Reservoir is the result, — | “They will be pouring for many years and the city 18 woing to find tt costly, “As The Bvening World pointed ont, there was uo need of the new da: and costly aqueduct, It @pending $300,000,000 for what could be dome for $15,000,000, suggested it," Williams said, 4 that originale ly Boland was to have an interest in the culm if Willams succeeded tn gets ting it. “At that Ume I had no dea of have tng Judge Avchbald share in the prop- erty,” he ead. “But John M. Robert son refused to Jet mo have an option on his part ef the culm if Boland had anything to do with tt," Q. When you signed a paper anaigne ing some of the culm before you got the options to Boland and a “silent party” did you think that Boland was sotting » trap for Jutge Archbuld? A. No, not at all. Q. Well, but afterward, when were brought to Waslungton Holand tell you that te hy Archbald to get thone letters of introduction tn evidence in omer that he might get a case against the A.T think he id, OP GEEING BRIEFS ON JUDGES’ TABLE, Q. When you were talking to Judge | Archbal! about the Brie culin deal, just what did ho aay about the lienterage conse? A, Well, I saw the briefs on his table and agked him about then and ho sugt sald that one of them was the Ughterigy case. Q. Did ho say anything about whether the case had been decided or was about to be « 4? A, No, nothing about that. ‘The witness was somewhat confused whe presved for further {nformation jabout the “ellen party" assignment paper, and he declared he never had consented that such a term be tnaorted » the assiqnment, although his name ow, you didn't went you TELLS aaked Representative Floyd, “that , ugh a stored, The you did talk: to Judge Arehbaid about | 62 ag Met FA agg iy faoili- | referring to him as a ‘silent party, and) gio gor going the work quickly. Jaian't you tell this committee you had ‘veservo! the Judge's name kept » because | 32 five such gue od $3,000,000 apiece enough water could stored to make the ton supply aqueduct for the one hundred years, “Vhe rainfall ts not equal year by year, but it is safe to say that every you thought it was unlawéul for a Judge ‘te be in wuch a dealt’ "Perhaps 1 aid," sald Willams Attorney Worthington demanded that Holand, who was present, show the original of the paper, Boland promised to do #0 to-day and sald Williaa had | Seve? years the fall equaltxes iteelt. a copy. ‘This Williams emphatically de- | Therefore provision must be made nied, against two or three years of low rain- fall ting down the waste. Commissioner Thompson has tried to do and in some measure bi 01 “The plan of erecting new reservoirs cheaply above the preseat Croton Dam, consistently urged by The Evening World, was rejected by the Water Board in favor of the tremendously costly scheme of the Catskills, Yet engineers One provision, of course, Is cut- This is what “Did you ever sign any paper assign- ing any interest In that culm bank to auked Holand and a ‘silent Representative Rucker. “L have no recollection,” | Q. Then why did you #0 swea line Attorney-General! A wan so excited and was like a wild |man, Q. Were you still wild—stlil in party’? that rid of every jact one of the malartous little pests. Urgod on by the Greenwich Prews, an organization backed by Board of ‘Trade, the qual Franchise League and Various other clubs of wo- clety women and b ese men has been formed, Youterday twenty-five automotties wn. | Allied with members of the vrsanization | | toured the tawn and the putskirts, Dr, . Bigelow, the naturalist and writer | extravagance, ny thy head of the anti-mosquito| osetia jmovemest, went with the party and| 920,000 Vive at Relmont. |tectured on the mosquito breeding mpot , . 1-1 | ana ‘old how they could be ma HORNELL, N. ¥., May 21 re to: quitoless. $100,000 for Two Mosplials, One hundred thousand ¢ to two he is by the ‘Of the Inte | ;JJohn ‘orrance Vannock, who died on fev, 23 last. ‘Toe Now York Pow {Graduate Hospital et $0,000 land the Montrend General Hospital also to get $10N. A fund of $1,000,000 ty left in trust for (he testator’s son, Joun Vanneck of No. 5 Bast Heventioth @ etreet, A former servant in the family, 8 to receive the in- @ome from 912,00) for ise moa- vilacs ts given | who have etudied the matter know that | all the present billions of gallons of good | water flowing to waste over the Croton Dam Spillway could be saved and stored up if caught fret by the upper duns and their overflow taken up by the last dam at Croton.” ‘Tho beautiful waterfall at Croton ts 4 municipal tragedy—a study in municipal conditioa—when you were befo committee the other day? A. No | & Then you did sign such # paper, as | you swore before tle Attorneyeneral? | A. Well, 1 quose 1 aid. “Puen the words ‘sient p the; | arty’ | referred to Judge Archbald?” asked Buoker. & thought tt was Dulawfal day destroyed Clark Brothers machine shope at Relmont, Allegany County, en- tailing @ loss ostimated at £200,000, The fire etarted in the engine roow NEW PRESSMEN’ S STRIKE, | atlanta Workers Out tn Sympathy joawonns. oad with great rapidity, The W - ire Department was tukn i} ATLAS A, Ge, May 1 weene on to assist the {| mon employed by the Atiants inadequate | we on strike to-day tn s: ~ > the striking presen in 107,000 Files Killed, | three newspapers CLAN BLAND, ©, May lo=Plier nat | Agreed to stand together e mat-|ly packed tn saveopes are being ter, and as the Georglan was unable to wet oul Its noon edition to-day, the | tt Journal, the other afternoon paper, also refreined from publishing, ved ay headquarters crusade, To de: | been swatied and for wale i $07 has beer paid the crusaders was the bannter athletic day at Yale, |time in many years, upon Its competitions against the Orange | bouslble 4d, 1912, TER ATHLETES BEAT OUT ELIS ' Princeton Runners Sweep MAYOR PUT IN JAIL FOR ATTACKING REFORMER. | ig’ ot Noonachie Breaks Livesey’s Jaw With F Blow, Struck From Behind. (Special to ‘The brening World), HACKENSACK, N. J., May 11.—Rob+ ert Craig, Mayor of Moonachie Borougi, battered James Livesey, member of the reform element in the borough, # badly to-day that Livesey is in Hacken- sack Hospital with his jaw b Board at New Haven eut and bruised about the face. Dual Meet. Constable Hageman arrested Mayor — Cradg and Justice of the Peace Jobn- son committed him to jail, Craig re- NPW HAVEN, Conn., May 11—This fuzed to make any statement and bail will not be fixed untd) Monday Both men are about forty years old, Livesey 18 much the smaller, Ie de- clares that Mayor Cralg came up from behind and struck Mm in the back of the head, knocking him down, As he got up, Craig hammered aim with his Gsts, breaking his jaw. Livesey’s sister, Miss Mary 1a iy @ member of the Moonachte for nearly all her representatives In the va- rious branches of sports had contests to carry through. The most important 1s the annunl fleld and track meet with | Princeton at Yale field. For the first | the Blue entered es Board and Black with the Ilkellhood of @ de- feat, owing to unusual weakness in the | wprints. Lack of material, poor weather | and induries to some of its promising | men have been given as an explanation for the gloomy forecast | ‘The Princeton team brought a constd- erable number of supporters, who had rony hopes of a wide margin in point bag ogi Toe Yang tae Teh won by Harland of Bi rincetan, ore Barlow aie, pee eee td Pe Yoon raat, ited pete zara & Meats Atick- board. had been leaders in a reform movement | #8 ago Craig was declare for neglecting alimony. > FLOYD ALLEN ON STAND SAYS SHERIFF SHOT FIRST. | Takes Witness St Stand in His Own) Defense at the “Outlaw” Trial. Tre Me fun —Won yr Nem ray of Etna, pervnd Une, ® imiuufes n't Mile Won by Ou a rneeton 7 Carre! jah it Priceien” ‘Surte CE ecutor William M. Foster In the Carroll Pritceion, thin, ‘Tine, 4 Minule BL seconds | County Court tragedy at Hilleviiie. in his own defense and charged that Sheriff L. F. Webb fired his plato at him, and that Clerk of the Court Dexter Goad aleo shot at him before he, Allen, reached for his pistol. “I happened to pels Aorta RICH YOUTH ELOPES WITH A WORKING GIRL. Jesse R. Ross of Torrington Takes Winsted Girl as His Bride. stand, “and I saw both of them take | - _qy| Out thetr revolvers. Then I rose up TORRINGTON, Conn, May IT) rom my chair and sald: ‘Gentiemen, I'm became known to-day that mt mide renee iad a paper in my hand | night Thursday night Mise Mary Cor-| ang 1 sturted to put it in my do bat of Winsted, and Jorae R. Rose | coat pocket. Then Sherif! Webb ‘fired, | of this pla married by Rev, A.|He missed me. Clerk Goad fired next, B, Todd tn the parsonage of tho Cavairy | hitting me in the hip and I fell on Baptist Church, Neither the parents of | Judge Bolen, my counsel.’ tho bride or bridegroom knew the, “Allen declared he did not get his piste tage was to take place. out of his pocket until aftor he bad h ALA Pai shot himseif, ‘The only man he shot Misa Corbat hag been employed the factory of the 6treng Manutao! tog Company at Winsted, ant 2 “Ain the court room, he eald, was Deputy- Clork Queensberry, Allen denied he had made any threatr has just reached hie majority. Rose | againat the Court, {e quite Wealthy, having Inheried «lations with various men who have fortune from his father, ‘The couple | wstied against him, Allen rald one of | attended a dance Thureday evening, | them owed him money, which he could til ft i supposed that at that time /Not get. and another was angry with | they compleed thelr plana to marry, | him about the shooting of a reven pe dase hs Ra mental joftiver, Taking up the reprimand give: BURGLARS GET CHAMPAGNE. |"! by Judge Massie for keepin nesses away from court, Floyd —oo | waid he told the Judge it was not true Burgiara broke into the wine « of H, Moquin, at Seventh avenue and | Judi lavnirty-meventh atrect, last night, They | tatin took six casos of champagne and other | — wines, worth In all $00, wot the stuff out ts tery to the polices, Ji seems im- to have carried away boxes of ao much bulk unless they were loaded into @ truok, yet there are polloamen on duty all night on the corner, who saw nothing of any robbery, | They can only account for it by the theory that before the hours of the fixec post, men who acted and looked like regular porters, loaded the stolen wines into & Wagon, as though It were an emergency order—and nobody paid the alightert attention to them, Judge Massie, who told him the man pread the report of his intimt- witnesses was Dexter Goad. — Harvard Wine at Teante, BOSTON, May 11.—By a bare margin of one match in doubles Harvant won the tennis tournament with dinceton ‘on the courts of the Longwood Cricket Club, Brookline, to-day, The feature of, the tournament was the defeat of E, H. Whitney of Harvard, the intercollegiate champion, by Dean Mathey of Prinoe- ton in straight sete—T-5, 1-5, The matches were the best two in three, B. Altuam & Ca.! NEWLY EQUIPPED STORAGE ROOMS ARE ON THE PREMISES FOR THE SAFE-KEEPING AND CARE OF FURS, FUR GARMENTS, RUGS, PORTIERES AND CURTAINS. ARTICLES WILL BE SENT FOR ON RECEIPT OF MAIL OR TELEPHONE REQUEST. ‘Hitth Avene, 34th aud 35th Streets, Nem York. SIGK STOMAGH, INDIGESTION OR GONSTIPATED BOWELS—CAOGHRETS, ‘That awful sourness, belching of acid and foul gases; that pain in the pit of the stomach, the heartburn, nervousness, nausen, bloating after eating, feeling of full ness, ess and sick headache, means iudixestion; 4 disordered stomach, which cunnot be regulated until you remove the cause. It isn't your stomach’s fault Try Cascarets; they cure indigestion, because they immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the decomposed waste matter and poison from the intestines and bowe ‘Then your stomach trouble is ended forever. Cuascaret to-night will straighten you out by morning 10 Cefats. Never gripe or sicken, “CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.”’ | gi Borough, Head ‘Nurse in ¢ sharge of G | ken and | | State Horpttal Commission hag INSANE ASYLUM SCAND: CAUSES TWO DISMISi at Poughkeepsie Instif tion to Go, ALBANY, N May 11 of an ation. into cumstances surrounding the tft child to a patient at the Hudsot Siate Hospital at Poughkee; ant investi mended to the superintendent a | of managers of What inetitution tl head nurse in charge of the cott the porch nurse ja charge of t of the cottage in which the wo: cared for, be dismissed from t foo because of their failure te exercised sufficient care in look! the woman. The commission has also sent of Fducation, and Craig is clerk of the| accused a former employe of b Miss Livesey and her brother | ponstble for the birth of the Ii raged Craég and Me followers. | jeaving the hospital servie contempt of court by Chancellor Howell | =————— to pay hie wife 88°) THOSE DREADFUL ODG | @ Sinks, drains, | removing, dirt dissolving WYTHEVILIUE, Va, May 11.—Floyd | Allen, charged with the murder of Pros. | Mareh 14, took the witness stand to-day | | and the difficulty will stil see Clerk Goad wink | fresh, at Sheriff Webb,” aaa Allen on the! mosphere—and you Meare rtp iad bed LY DISINFECTING 60. ae East 42m and he later had @ conversation with! remedy—your bowels will | th | your liver stimulated ; | district at of Dutchess @ transcript of the testimony t such action as he may deem ‘This was the second child born woman during the ten years im she has been in the Institut! This man denied the char garbage and toilet basins all odors into the house, ey are kept clean wi active germ destroying, 4 | That is what CNis. It m everything so clean that a cannot exist where it is © Scrub, scour and rinse day long with soap and main. { Put a little CN in @ pail of and use the solution wherever odors are. Then you will hay healthful, Invigorating germs, for CN is a great dist tant, strong but non-poisonous. Get "The Yellow Package Gable Top.” a DISINFECTANT ite, 28e, 60c, $1.00 Gentle and Su You, also, should give proval to this efficient fa regulated so surely and sai | digestion so improved 4 BEECHAMS | or everywhere. bees 100. RELIGIOUS NOTICES, | yl eaPOR! 1A CONGR ROT conn 2018 ot, Men. Albert The “Maid Marlan” Song fi “Robin Hood” with col cover, A James Montgomery drawing in tint, showing “Kitty Cobb” incident, A wonderful photog showing what Women of Paris The very latest pictures of Panama Canal, depicting nearly it ts ready for the wi IN TO-MORROW’ SUNDAY WORLD MAGAZINE STOP! ca't rob yourself! Don't lose the best jaugh year. ty New life based on farce of the name, it will begh The Even World next that will you forget rent, toot! and the ral didn't get. Read it! Don't forget t day after to-r date: Monda: DOG GON’ IT— ‘That “FUN” ya j given aver