The evening world. Newspaper, July 13, 1912, Page 10

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16 PLC CAPTURE MAN CALLED HEA OF COL CATCHER Think Arrest Will Solve Disap- pearance of $500,000 Worth of Horses. — Now to Grads. BY LINDSAY DENISON. In the arrest of James Wittnle to-day the police believe they have taken into ' custody the ringleader of the “Colt ' Catoher: & band of horse thieves, which have stolen and shipped to con- federates In other cities $00,000 worth of hores flesh, seized on the etreets of ven to Yale men and their friend ADI AERATED ida stie ae ones meat ae ae te ne Ree ee RR Word comes down from New Ha. | that Mory’s closed two days ago. With Towful relief which follows the news T it comes the sense of depressed, sor. HE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY Mory’s, of Hallowed Memor ry to Old Yale Men, Has Passed--a Victim of Freshmen and Beer Happy Days of Mrs. Mo- riarty and Eddie Oakley and Tobies of Ale and Silver Tankards of “‘Vel- vet’ Are but Tradition On the Spot Where Tem- ple Bar Was Famous Rendezvous for Upper Classmen of Old Eli in Years Gone By, an Office Building Will Rise. was In a condition to be helped toward the front door and a hack. Did a crowd of seniors at the centre table become stirred too vigorously to song, #0 that the street outside might be scandalized, Eddie had a way of smiling with sadly deprecating eye- brows uplifted which restored ord once, Now and then on occasions of at) AKLEY’S RECIPE FOR MORY’S WELSH RABBIT. Take as much cheese as you want for your rabbit and either grate it, siice it or break it, whichever is easiest; but don’t let any grocer tell you that a sharp cheese is best for A rabbit, Mayhe somebody told him that, but he doesn't know. I like fresh cheese. Put it in a saucepan or anything else that’s clean and pour in about two tablespoons of eer to keep it from burning on the bottom. Let it melt very slowly and put In a few drops more beer, but about half as much as you think is necessary until it ts like cream. Meanwhile make toast a quarter of an inch thick, with the crast pared off. Drop a piece of toast on ‘@ hot plate, pour enough rabbit over {t to cover It; put another on top, just Uke a sandwich, and be sure to have a waiter who can run all the way from the kitchen to the table. Mustard? Pepper? Salt? Why no, mr. At least my customers never VESSEL WRECKED ONROMER SHOALS; CREW 1S RESCUED Schooner, All Sails Set, Lost— Sailors Picked Up by Out- bound Tug. A \arge three-masted schooner ran | aground off Romer Shoals during the heavy fog early to-day and sank almost immediately, The six members of her crew were rescued from a small boat by @ passing outgoing tug. The schoon- BAILEY BLAMES DEMOCRATS FOR NATION'S UNREST Senator, Who Is to Retire, Says | His Party Men Exaggerate | Existing Evils. ' WASHINGTON, July 13. — Senator Ba of Texas in a farewell addregs to a score of his colleagues at @ private dinner last night predicted that if con- ditions in the United States continued to change as much in the next thirty years as they had in the last thirty the country would face a condition par- that a beloved inval!d, suffering from a hopélessly incurable aflment, has at last been blessed with the eternal sleep. Because since the death of Manhattan in the last two years. . Wiltste confessed the theft of five teams of horses in the Inst two weeks He was sent to the Tombs by Magistrate privileged rejoicing, such as football Corrigan tn default of 9,0 ball. He im expected to give the police Informa- tion enough to round up the gang here and in other places. John J. Dunn, a trucking contractor ot No, 618 Water street, complained to Commissioner Waldo's “horse thief aquad,” a detail recently appointed to corral the culprits, that hie team and | \ Wagon had tren stolen from Pier N %, North River, while he was at the pler superintendent's office, Detectives Londrigan and Vaughan traced the ' stolen rig to La'ght street, near Canal | Atreet, where they found the detached wagon. From ‘here information led them to Pier No. 2, East River. With Dunn they concealed themselves along the dock until the time of the departure of the regular boat for Now) Haven. They were soon rewarded by seing Wiltsie with two of the horses, minus the harneas, on the way to the boat. Dunn shouted that they were hia horses. Wiltsle did not remonstrate. ‘The horses had been curled and glosecd and tagged to “D. Cannon, New Haven, Conn. PRISONER CON ES TAKING FIVE TEAMS. In @ statement made to the detec- tives and Dunn, Wiltsie confessed that the five teams he had stolen had been shipped to allies in three diferent cities. He gave the police addresses upon which further arrests are expected, At Police Headquarters it was found that Wiltsle is registered as a general) thief. Last April he was admitted to $1,000 bail after arraignment for a theft | in an uptown department store He “jumped” hin ball. The Merchants’ Association, which has several hunts for the “Colt they are known, was rep- resented by counsel before Magistrate Corrigan. It was stated that the depre- { ations of the gang left no driver horses wafe and that the pollci been unable to get the slight of the vandals, It wan explained that ‘beer was sold in Mory’s in the g! which the vulgar call “shells, end of Mory's was in sight. ger. queer, isolated trade of the little white house on the corner of a back street and a back alley. To his practical German soul there seemed to be a very simple solution. It was the pollution of Yale tradition by admit- ting members of the freshman class to the privilege of sitting at the tables in Mory's and the marketing of mere lager beer in a spot held sacred to ale, stout, wines and strong liquors. New Haven real estate experts will say to you that there was something they call an “economic renson" for the closing of Mory's, They will tell you that the simple little white, Colonial two-story dwelling, sitting in a corner right back of the most valuable real estate for business purposes in New Haven, surrounded by big brick and stone blocks, cannot possibly return a revenue to the owner of the ground that will approach by one-fifth or less the rental value of the land when it has been improved with a steel and terra cotta and magonry structure, It may be so. It may be go. TO OLD YALE MEN IT LOOKS \ LIKE SACRIL! But the graduate of Yale who has work on the case, Deen in possession of his diploma for more than ten years cannot be persuad- ed to any other belief than that Mory's Ss WILL DETERMINE SAFETY |ints been deatroved by sacrilege raninet OF WGODEN TRAILOR CARS, |t:stuo i fede wihe - Rihith ‘The late William G. Sumner, whose in- +, stincts for knowing the heart of the Public Service Commission Will |*i" \ ‘ boy were like the stethoscope of Hear Complaints. Against Long | the surgeon in searching out the varte- Island Railroad. tions of the surgical organ, was fond of The Public Service Commission to-day saying in his rumbling false-sa\ volce that the college student wa: served upon the Long Island Railroad | most sentimental « snservative animal in Company an order for a hearing on July | al) g00-ol-om: 4, 1912, to determine whether wooden! Once let the college youth get the no- trailer cars now operated by the road/tion that anything had been as it was are unsafe and whether the company © ‘should be required to retire these cars | from operation. Commissioner George t V. 8. Williams will conduct the hearing. matter was brought to the atten- tion of the Commissioner by members atic Avenue Business Men's Taxpayers’ Association of East New York and others. It 18 suggested that the road be made to retire the wooden trailers as fast as possible and substitute steel cars. It this would cost $1,254,000, the system was to drive a team away from a pier a short time before a boat for New scheduled to were able to t conventent place of the city before the police began to Aisgust or rebellious rage, ‘Thus, though the good Linder’s chan of Mory's customs in putting lager b on sale w custom, And right then and thi Poor Eddie Oakley and the beginning of the era when plain, common lager es the Louis Linder, a kindly, tactful per- son of Teutonic descent, not without @ Nttle glamour of Yale romance in {his soul, such as an outlander of real heart and soul must always catch from keeping company with a romp- ing, over-serious, over-humorous com- munity of college boys, took the place when Eddie Oakley could not keep the business of Mory’s in order any lon- He looked over Eddie Oakley's neglected accounts. He studied the since the beginning and to the end of rded old age, he asserted, any proposal to change that order of things would arouse only deep r a move in the direction of real temperance and of profitably larger Dustness, it marked @ change in Yale ace cording to the bellef of Yale men of ten FROM PAINTINGS BY TR WAITE. or fifteen years ago, the tradition of Mory's was mortally stricken, ‘The admission of Freshmen to the sa- cred precincts which had ever been free from that form of pest was but another sign of the times. If beer, why not Freshmen? Linder doubtless pros- Dered more than his sainted predeces- fora by catering to this unhallowed traf- fic ani these unbaked traffickers. But f the walt has lost {ts savor, what's the use? If the real estaters want the soggy residue, let ‘em have ft. When traditions have died of dry rot, why not let the tide of mercenary gain wash away the mournful reminders of the glory which once was? THERE WAS HEALTHY HYPOC- RISY IN THE OLDEN DAys. There wae once a time when not the most impudent eon of an upstart mill- fonaire dared own up to the fact that he owned the saddle horse he rode about iNew Haven's suburbs; he indulged in & pleasing fiction that he hired the beast from the Hvery atable man who took it to board. A healthy hypocrisy blinked at by all in good natured patriotism on behalt of the Yale spirit. And now! Brazen underclassmen go careening through the streets in auto- mobiles, while the theologues back of Divinity as of old, atill play tennis in white duck trousers and derby hats and patent leather Congress shoes and their undershirts! The Yale life of old in *prung, somewhere—perhaps the closing oe te but an outward and visible ‘There is no dowbt these disagreeable things will straighten themacives out, College faults correct themacives; the automobile is already becoming a laugh- able plaything and not an ineuit to de- Mocracy. It may yet come to pass that the owner of the machine and the funny studen: for the ministry will ride to- Sether in the millionaire's car and bat the ball at each other on the gravelied court. Even at Harvard it ie no longer @ necessary custom for the captain of the football team to call his men to- gether to introduce them before the flanl ralty at the second half so that they may become socially acquainted before the supreme effart. duced by the funeral of Mory’s 9 their way. It te true that the lonely old grad who curls himself up on the corner of a bench on New Haven green, envying the brave young epirit of the fellows with silly hate and stout hearts who are where he was fifteen or twenty years ago, can- it, down at the bottom, help own- ing up to Mmaelf that the Yale etu- dent of to-day (a just as healthy in body and mind and soul, juat as gen- erous and just as quick to laugh or to be angry as the man of '92 or '97. And yet he has let Mory's die! It ts better to look over the kindly, gentle spirit of the place on which the wreckers are about to fasten their s| hooks and to remember how tactful and how helpful and how good and simple they ware. Nobody knows just when the ancestors |* the husband of Mra, Moriarty first WE GIRLS WHO FLY And What We’re Afraid of Written by HARRIET QUIMBY Two days before she was killed in an aeroplane fall Two Other Interesting Aeroplane Stories r ANNA KATHARINE GREEN’S Marvellous Mystery Story “The Little Steel Coils’’ A tale that will hold every reader spellbound finish. till _ Say to Your Paper Man To-Day: had the sign Temple Bar gflded on the doors of the little house in Temple street. It may have been way back in the daya when “ye ungodly Dutch,” according to the ancient records, sailed into the harbor of the good Congrega- tional settlement and polluted its good Congregational morals with their rum, But then came Mrs. Moriarty and the beginning of the Mory’s tradition, She liked Yale students. She did not care for the business of the people of the town. She fed her young patrons ess on toast, whether acrambied or poached, Welsh rabbits and golden bucks and sardines, She served them ale Jn little brown Toby pitchers, from which the amber stuff was poured into slender, thin glass Persons of authority in college life— because they were seniors, and notwith- standing the fact that they were but twenty or twenty-two years old—told Mrs, Moriarty that sho should exclude freshmen as trivial pests. She did. It was suggested to her that the big round table in the middle of her front room was a fit place for members of the Sentor clags and for them only. She ap- proved. All afternoon and all night until mid- night Mrs, Morlarty, with a shawl about her shoulders in winter and her ample throat generously bared to the cooling breezes in summer, sat in the corner of the tap room, where she could watch nearly every table in the house, see that service was prompt and the con- duct of her guests decorous. She knit- ted continuously, Did one laugh too loudly or raise his voice too high in the telling of a tale not fit for the proprie- tles, she rapped on the side of the door with her knitting needles, And there Was no more unseemly conduct—unt!l the next time. THEN EDDIE OAKLEY BECAME HOST OF TEMPLE BAR, Moriarty was gathered to fathers, Eddie Oakley, most tactful and quickest moving of her helpers, became the host of Temple Bar, to which the name “Mory’s" elung. Eddie was a human marvel. Did a careless youth's tongue become sud- denly unloosed so that he babbled for an hour or more of inconsequent noth- Ings, while his friends jeered and at last left him, Eddie would stand behind his chair with a non-commital Mrs. its the quietest, | ‘THE FRONT ROOM AND THE SENIOR TABLE Victories and the Iike, favored patrons Were permitted to sit in the back sit- ting room where song allowed more freedom, because {t could not be heard from the street. Eddie Oakley never undertook to en- force the rule that freshmen must not enter the place or that only seniors must sit at the front. He let his stu- dent patrons enforce them by strength of opinion in his own little community. During the time that Eddie Oakley was the head of Mory's !t was not every senior who had th rance to ¢ his intttals In the surface of the centre table. Men did not go to Mory’s and buy a single toby of ale for the pur- pose of cutting thelr monograms. Such degradations came later—with beer. THERE WAS $20 CREDIT AND THEN CASH. Every member of the sentor, junior and sophomore classes of Yale Univer- sity for many years had twenty doll credit. His name in the college ca‘ logue was his only necessary referen When his bill exceeded twenty doll he pald cash. He always knew when this point was reached because the mo- ment the amount of the bill crossed $20— complain about not having them. Paprika? Cayenne? Worcester- shire sauce? This is Connecticut |] this ts not Borneo, air. financial ability to fill it and also their physical ability to empty it. Each year the holders selected six men in the succeeding class who were to take up the burden. Any cup man might call for the cup and let his guests drink out The schooner, er’s name {s unknown, & vessel of 400 tons, was tacking in against the wind. She carrying full canvas and was mak- allel to that of the French Revolution. The full text of what Mr. Batley said 41d not become known until later, He charged that members of Congress b¥ \ ing good time when her keel touched bottom, The outline of the sailing ship was barely discernible from Sandy Hook, aa the fog was just beginning to Uft. The schooner's captain made a frantic effort to put about and slip off Tee ate Shaman Mience’ a |the shoals, but his craft had grounded Strange things come out of | solidly. champagne i stout and are better | Five minutes later it was evident she worth witnessing than any Poll vaude- ville show. The day came when Eddie lost his He never sent a bill to a gradu- ate’s home—at least not one with @ mark on the outside showing whence it had received serious injuriés, for sho began to dip at the bow. The crew immediately went over the side in a amall boat. Ten minutes later there was nothing showing above the water but the schooner's poop deck. their own cowardice were responsible for a condition of unrest which prevails, He virtually charged the Democratic party with exaggerating the importance of existing evils, “This republic is near a crisis which j!s greater than the wisest men think,” said Senator Bailey. “I do not forget that the French Revolution came while the Governors were at the theatre and that they arose from their banquet tables to come face to face with vio- lence and bloodshed in the streets of Paris. “I do not say the United States 13 facing such a state of affairs, but I do SEG, HO RIWAYS HAM TRAD OF trove maintain that if within the next thirty eit tn dable aun. Be his business | An ocean-going tug, bound out, wit-| years the country should continue to methods slackened, he could not carry|nessed the schooner's mishap and| change as it has in the last thirty we his burden of credits. He reduced the| turned toward her. She had no diffi-| will find ourselves face to face with Umit to $10. Then he abolished ft.| culty in picking up the crew, After! such a condition at the end of that Mortgages were foreclosed. The day|making her rescue the tug continued| t! came when Eddie left Mor: “You Senators and Representatives,” Louls Linder, who had pleased Yale men in a gilded cafe near the campus, took hold. He had a wife as friendly and as tactful as he was himself. But instead of only the four dishes allowed on the ancient menu, hung on the wall, he sold steaks and chops; he sold beer, he admitted freshmen. He made a new Place of Mory's. It prospered. But It was a mere drinking place now and not a Sacred Temple of Friendship, apart from the town, Very pleasant old associations. GARVAN’S PLAN FOR A SYNDI- CATE FELL THROUGH. Former Assistant District-Attorney Francis P. Garvan who greatly admired the earnestness with which Fritz Linder and his wifo tried to throw themselves into the spirit of traditions to which they had not been gradually initiated, sought a nunrber of years ‘go to have Mory's bought by a syndicate of Yale gradu- ates with Louis as dem manager. The plan fell through. It may be that the scarred tables (the walls are hung with those so deeply cut that no more room for initials could be: found on them) and the dull old tank: ards and the pot-bellied Toby pitchers and the silver-plated beer pumps in the tap-room and the quaint ruby glass of the front doors with “Temple Bar” cut white in their panes qili be moved to | terday tl the patient became slumbrous and| The cup-men were selected for their |at that. on her way without making a report. WALLSTREET It was a saloon with! ‘The stock market to-day was again unsettled. Liquidation continued in a numbeer of securities, ‘The result was that the Hst pursued an irregular downward course at the outset. The selling pressure was heaviest against 8t. Paul, Union and Northern Pacific and Bteel. A great deal of interest was attached to St. Paul, which broke through par for the first time. Much of St. Paul's weakness was reflected fn Northern Pacific, which sold off briskly on poor crop receipts. Trading improveed perceptibly tn the final hour, The initial pressure was withdrawn and the list recorded advances that finally gave the market & Somewhat higher appearance at clos- ing time. follows another plac Net the total of all checks was indorsed on Laat. Chiges, the latest check to be placed in its al- hous tek Prag Path eae elbhgd ir | bit: + % phabetically arranged pigeon-hole—one | £074" tne serves beck of the nid tine Wh Th 17 of Eddie's deprecating, sorrowful wait | stuineg tables 4 Na SOURAC Awe Sie bite Shh era would place the excessive check be- | stained tables is to be found nowhere By Bs By + fore one and vanish, The wi else. Perhaps it never could have heen ie ant tid Mory's never wore uniforms or aprons, |f0Und again-even in Mory’s. But all 285 ah HY — They dressed lke the servants of | Ch8nce of finding it again is gone now. rs sore ere * broken-down aristocrat in an eighteenth | AD office bullding ts to sit on the place 196 age” dom = century English novel. They would take | Where tt was. a m4 ot t a tip If one shoved it at them, but were HERE’S CHANCE FOR A coox. we iB? Bs shamefac ly embarrassed, + pEiidle was always law-abiding, He pi iy we ist = ad most delicate manners in urging hi it muests away when the law required hice | wote?! Mae Will Give Hor Private iy arty ra to cloge the place. He would go into an Bath and Auto Rides, iy i” in + adjoining room to click out the electric IBS 113% 1a figioining room to cllck out the electric! UNIONTOWN, Pa, July 1&—Georse Py ao Sk y dow to window, sending up the shades, |T: Tetlow, a wealthy hotel proprietor, bit ited ae He would cough gently. He would wash | Wants a first class cook for his summer 189 1H ae + out and set the tobles and kards on |home in the mountains back of this | {ou bs ig 168 + the taproom bar with moderately In-|place, but he finds they come high. In By we Sy — creasing vehemence. And at Inst helfact, he has had so much trouble he Be toy Se Would. aay, with: & tenderness ff Feeret |makes the following special inducements oC a ay +. which none cou! resent: ‘'! is twelve o'clock, gentlemen." And everybody |!9 #@ Advertisement printed ip @ local a RH Ki = Dushed back his chair and went home. |M@henenen’ oa cook for mountata| i iy B Hy iy + SILVER CUP DEDICATED SOLELY |iome, Good wages; room with private {2 HBR tite > TO “VELVET: bath; private dining room. No laun- Py pry Py The kings of the centre table were |4ry work nor milking to do; use of back ae 108% 108" the Cup Men. Once on a time seven|porch and half acre of lawn. Lots of 185" 88h me — 4 went bought a silver oc It was |flowers to look off one afternoon at “4 ty dedicated to be sullied with “velvet” and [each week. Seventeen mil to ride : uh WBR uy ~ nothing else. “Velvet” is made half of |once a week.” Sh OR ile un-| champagne and half of brown atout.| At last accounts he hadn't found her| ¥ 4” 3” at t Q ® Price any one of nine saloons the bartenders, and last, prices of | if asked for a “Judge Hanford Martini” compared with. 3% weer ee eee OFF SESETESERSCE OF continued Mr, Batley, “can prevent this great crisis, and you will do so if you have the courage to KO out and tel the public the truih. Every evil which ex- ists {n the country to-day can be éor- rected without danger to the principles and policies upon which this Republic was founded, and tt should be done. The impatience of the minority, of | which I myself have been a menvber, has been largely responsible for the state of mind of the people of the United States to-day, for they have grossly exaggerated the evils of the country. > — TO MIX A “JUDGE HANFORD” | USE ONION, SAYS WITNESS. | Bartenders Knew the Recipe, He Asserts in Inquiry Into the , Federal Judge’s Habits. gaan? SEATTLE, July 13.—More witnesses testified yesterday before the House Ju- diclary Sub-Committee, which is inves- tixating the record of Federal District Judge Cornelius H. Hanford. One said he had won a wager thet in would substitute an onion for the cus- tomary olive. After a witness bad testified that Judge Hanford was an “intense pa- triot,” the committee placed im the record @ copy of a letter written by Judge Hanford on Oct. 20, 1896, to an torney of Mt. Vernon, Wash., who ha recommended that the judge appoint & leertain man to office, The letter says in part: “I will not regard Mr. Weppler (the candidate recommended) as @ suitable person unless I am aseured that be fe not a supporter of the Chicago platserm or of the candid for office who eub- scribed to its 4 tions.” DYSENTERY DIARRHOEA, CHOLERA MORBUS, toa of SOLD BY DRUGGISTS, ‘“‘ALONE IN A BIG HOTEL”’ perience Series The Second in the Real E of Girl Drummer Stories terest. By FRANCES M’DONALD Amazing in incident, rich in color, gripping in human in- “Save Me To-Morrow’s FUN The Only Joke Book Is- sued by Any Newspaper Sixteen Pages of Jokes, Pictures Funny and Puzzles NOVELTIES James Robert And Don’t Miss Seeing “The Ocean-Going Lots of Laughs SUNDAY WORLD” . WORLD Features Flagg’s Kitty Cobb Montgomery Picture Edgren’s Sport- ing Print in Color Tea-Tray”

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