The evening world. Newspaper, July 16, 1912, Page 16

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PRESIDENT CABLES CONGRATULATING OLYMPIC VICTORS “Greatly Pleased at Fine Showing Made by American Athletes,” Taft’s Message. WINNING NEW HONORS. Americans Rouse Applause in Military Events, Taking Second Place. U.S. OLYMPIC TEAM LEADS ALL OTHERS. teams i ra WASHINGTON, July 16. ‘Taft to-day cabled his congratulations to the victorious American athletes at | Stockholm, following receipt of a mes- | sage from Commissioner James B. & Mvan, officially calling the Executive's | attention to the winning of the Olym-_ pic meet. Sullivan wired: ‘and track section, Our men benind the | guns, rifles and revolvers also lead the world, and ‘our cyclists and swimmers scored heavily in their respective events. Riding competition not conclud- e@. In this great rii's exhibition, where each nation enters its best type of men representi: apeed, strength, agility, aceuracy, endurance and cour- ‘age, America again leads the world.” Taft replied: “Greatly pleased at fine showing made | by American athletes in fifth Olympia Heartiest congratulations to Commi sioner and athletes. “WILLIAM H. TAFT.” ‘The Stadium, in which most of the field and track events of the No frames were decided, underwent during the nist complete , transformation. | ‘To-day 1t wae found to be planted with hydrangeas and other bright flowers and studded with hedges, barred gates and walle which had displaced the cinder path, the, Jumping pits and the symnasiic ratus. A brilliant gudience compris! any members of the royal family, the leadii rep" of noclety and Swe: cavalry and artillery oMcers with thet wives packed the banks of seats round the arena shortly before 1 o'clock. The fourth event, the prise jumping, | in the military Hiding competition can: | @ @istance ride, a cross country | ride, an ¢mdividual steeplechase ride, prise jumping and prise riding, was completed in the afternoon. Germany occupied first place with 118.20 points, the United Statge second with 117.49, and Sweden thir@ with 117.07, The American ‘oMfters showed @ great improvement over ‘the form they had exhibited at th@ iast London Horse Show and when it became known they ‘iad replace. the Swedes and taken oeene piace they were greatly ap- plaud The funeral services for the dead Marathon runner, F. Lazaro of Portu- gal, who died from sunstroke, was held to-day at the Catholic church here. eee AMERICANS SHOW OTHER NATIONS HOW TO PLAY'BASEBALL. STOCKHOLM, July 16—The Ameri- cans showed the other athletes of all nations how to play baseball this eafter- noon, They did it in the Olympic stadium, and probably two euch nines were never gathered together before in the whole history of baseball. They were divided into Kasterners and West- ermers and the Eastern team beat the Western one by a score of 6 to 8. Among the Eastern players were ©. E. Brickley, the Herverd bop ep-and- fe Asnociation’s ff, another 100- University Chicage rinter from enport, still |. I, Morine, high Jumper from the Pacific coast; I. Courtney of Beattie, and J, A. Manel the C. A. A. all-rounde It was perhaps the fastest collection of players seen on an amateur field and they demonstrated the game at its very best to the throng of international athletes who watched them, the ntified man slipped and fell the rear yard of No. 637 Y One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street Preparing for a Pageant | wn |show grown-up New Yorkera what a “The representatives of the United| fine lot of children he ts turning into States have again scored a glorious vic- | Citizens Mr. Lee han just arranged for | Fourt tory In the Fifth Olympaid in the field a trem: €reen in Central Park, and will be o1 of the features of the big Children's |140 Miunte: PANISH DANCERS on Aug. 3 on the Sheep Green in Central Park in Which 2,000 Children Representing All Na- tions Will Take Part Dressed in National Cos- tum Marguerite Mocers Marshall. “Z believe that the playgrounds of Mew York City make more American citizens than any other single agency. playground does away with the ga doy! 4 the secret society amon; the girls. Waterloo was wou on the fiolds of Bton and Harrow. In American playgrounds.” That ts the enthustastic conviction of mn J. Lee, Supervisor of Recrea- | tlon for the children of Manhattan, To ? we J LEE Guild is located there. of July three policemen hal 1t| dled a trowd of 12,000 and there wasn an accident, On the eame day at lumbus Park, in the Mulberry Bend nelgrdorhood, the Five Points of famous memory, @ couple of policemen easily looked after 6,000 people. “Over in the Hudson Guild neighbor- hood they've organized a Citizens’ Pro- tective Committee, and they never think of locking up thelr basoball and basket- ball equipment. Each persen realises that he fs part of a community, and wit! be judged by his fellows, not by eome usurping higher authority. Those folks jous Children's Pageant. will take place Aug. 8 on the sheep Festival arranged by the Human Wel- fare League, of which Robert C. Auld 1s president. MANY ORGANIZATIONS TO BE IN THE PAGEANT. Representatives of the Public Schools Athletic Leag the Department of Beteok? (oe wemientd oeantapat angus] Ore (eRtrine, (No lemon ot self-govern- 2 t, child dal the Boys' Club and many other organi- |'"*" gues tures million chfidsen wore Sations are co-operating with Mr. Auld made happy on the city play- in arranging the Festival. But he te grounds last year, and how much particularly elated at having secured the| 4o you think it cost? For super. Pageant, and didn't wonder when Mr.| Yislom, instruction, recseesion ang Lee told me about it. malatonanes, exagtiy: . “It will be called ‘Around the World in| cme Pee cmt ae ott he sald, “and It could be cal advantages of the playgrounds, | given in no other city in the world, For | think of the phystcal benefits they offer! | ‘The children are kept outdoors, and, every country will be represented by more than that, skilled instructors di- children once natives of that country rect each individual toward the sort of exercise that is moat needed by him or her, There is no aimless activity. From | the cradie-ewing for the tiny baby to | the parallel bars for the full-grown | youth, the playground offers health for a and now good Amerjoans. More than two-thousand boys and girls eched- uled to take part, THEY CERTAINLY INTEND TO FEED THE KIDS. “You can understand how elaborate the affair will be when I tell you that) the Festival Committee must provide 100 auto trucks to transport children from | the city's recreation centres to the West Drive at Sixty-elghth street, where the Pageant will be held. Also there will be Fequired 2,000 bricks of ice cream, 4.0 CHAUFFEUR LOSES BRIDE, ae eae deen lot eandy, and 20 PROCEEDINGS DISMISSED. ‘Wo had ten playgrounds two years ago,” concluded Mr. Lee. ‘We hav over forty now, I hope we're going to have a great, great many more in the next few years. We need them in our ) of making American men and dren of half pound boxes of candy, and 2,000| packages of popcorn, ——_ “Ono sroup of children will represent | Conrad Eysoldt Ends Effort to Re- ‘native dress,’ which includes Indiana, Ke Wi Ii cowboys, ‘tennis girls and baseball play- | cover His Wife by Writ of ers, Then in succession will come chil- Habeas Corpus. ngland, Scotland, Switzerland, | Gonrad C. Kyaoldt, the chauffeur son- may Italy, Spain, Hawall, |injaw of John W, Lushear, a director Greece and Japan. All these | of tne North Want Bank of Newark, younggtgfs will wear the costumes of |x 3 abandoned his effort to-day to ites they have: left for the cover his bride by habeas corpus fex, and they.will dance the | 1°” Geis, Proceedings. i: “Unie 'the supervision of thetr teach-| The chauffeurs bride tenes ie sy ora at the Varioun recreation centres, the | Parents’ home at Mount Tabor & childrey are already at work making|{9%# after her marriage in the New Koldt began habeas ther OWA) costumes, — Five-thousand | York City Hall yards of.egeterial will:be used, * corpus proceedings before Vice-Chan- |cellor Howell in Newark. ‘The test! GREAT, OBJECT LESSON IN | mony was taken in secret, To-day It PATRIOTISM. | was announced that the bride had left “Ot course, after the passing of the nations there will be a g the chauffeur of her own ‘volition and that she was not kept a prisoner at her when all the children will wa -\home, Vice-Chancellor Howell dis- | can # and sing ‘America,’ ‘Dixio'| missed the writ and Kysolit's counsel | and ‘The Star-Spangled Bannor.’ It) abandoned the sult . will be the finest object lesson in| - = patriotism ever given, both to the boys SAVED FROM DEATH BY GAS. and girls and to the audience, But patriotiem and playgrounds always 40 | Neighbor Find together,” Mr. Lee ended, with a cheer: ful smile, Would- Juat in TH Sutcide 1 TEP TET NTS RST HE ARENT 1Rish DANCERS OSCAR UNDERWOOD VISITS WILSON 10 Belmont of New York Also Among Callers, TRENTON, N. J., July 16.—Oscar W. Underwood, Chairman of the Commit- tee on Ways and Means of the House of Representat met Gov. Wilson for the fret time shortly after noon to- day at the State House and went im- mediately into a private with the nominee, with lunched later in the afternoon. whom he Mr. office Perry Belmont, Thomas J. Ryan and Charles P. Donnelly, the latter two Democratic leaders of Philadelphia, ‘The meeting between the Governor and Leader Und: ood was cordial, “I feel almost if I had known you @ long time,” said the Governor. “We both went to the University of Virginia, although you entered a year or thereabouts after I left. It seems strange when our trains were #0 close ogether that they did not collide, but now that we have come together with- out accident I trust that we will run along on parallel tracks.” Mr. Underwood smiled and said he was sure he quite agreed with the Governor. Mr, Underwood was met at th tion by the Governor's secrptar: his way to the State House Mr. Under- wood said he came up from Washing- ton chlefly to pay his respects to the Governor. “If the Governor wants to discuss leg- {elation before Congress,” he added, “we'll do #0, I have no special subject in mind to take up with him,” Gov, Wileon motored from Gea Girt to Trenton to-day to devote the day to State affairs, meet Lieut.-Gov, Cownay of New York and take duncheon with Mr, Underwood. Mr, Conway arrived dn Trenton at 11 o'clock and was warmly welcomed at the State House by Goy, Wiaon. Wh le | ov. as talking with Mr, Con- way, Perry Belmont, with whom the Governor also had an appointment, ar- rived at the State House, Mr, ‘Bel mont in an Interview sald “Publieity of campaign contributtons ts only one of the geveral things [ wanted to talk with the Governor about. Ido not care to say more now, |but may make a statement after our tall." Mr, Belmont had less than five min utes to walt before Mr. Conway left. "1 called merely to felicitate Gov, Wilson on his nominatton,” Mr, Con- way sald Jated, and I wanted to tell him so and to pledge my support.” “Pid you discuss with him your own prospective candidacy for Governor of New York.” “T did not; not_a word," ho replied, “Then you think the Immigrant younge| Mrs. M. M. Dagian of No, 298 Fast asters can be made good citizens?” 1/Twenty-sixth street tried to commit asked, sui by inhaling gas to-day, be- ;| “Sure they can," asserted Mr, Lee. | cause she suffered from sheumat “Z think x know somethin; | Mrs, Daxlian ts over sixty years c and the mother of four sons, For the last week or two she hasn't deen fe tog very well, and more than once she that if you treat young folk fairly | talkel gloomily of the trials of an old they'll treat you fairly, 2f you | woman who had outlived her day, dark cellars, The playground, open to ir and all wholesome in- Is the soctal centre of the neighborhood. man who fe lance to Be was taken. wvue Hospital, _ Federation of Labor, second time in the Distr: Court, with President mpers Secretary Morrison of the F exist, are simply the results of mis- directed energy. Provide proper chan- nels in whic the energy may expand le was killed in- The body, that of a man old, was taken casledehaadl and you do away with juvenile delin- quency. ‘Dake the Chelsea Park neighborhood, | hessed inhi dpe had « reputation of its own not Siitenen ie a el ial New sha Hugeom lecture tour “tn ‘the: Week, Roe eateneneeliiieaeniaaeE res et of contempt of court, hi t in a call for an ambu- | where she | “There isn't one boy or girl in one ‘alves Right. thousand who ts naturally vicious, Their! WASHINGTON, July i6.—John Mit. toughness and hoodlumism, when these | chell, Vice-I’resident of the American found guilty a| t Supreme noe Money, 80,514, | ow N 16.—The stil! | small volce of conaclence, pleading with | Americans who {n various ways had de- | frauded the United States Government, | brought to the Federal Treasury during year of 1912, Just closed, a TALK OF CAMPAIGN, Lieut.-<Gov. Conway and Perry conference | Underwood met also at, the Governor's | HOTEL IN STRAITS. Owner of Hollywood Gives Liabit- | attes aa $228,018; Asneta, $208,250, Murtel V. Spencer-Stadler of No. 350 West Eighty-fifth street, owner of the Hollywood Hotel and Cottages prop- t End, Long Branch, N. J., 'y petition gives HabiMties of $228,613.23, with assets of $203,260, Included in the assets are hotel, cot- tages, laundry and homestead property of the late John Hoey at Long Branch valued at $197,000 and the hotel furnt- THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1912, Recreation Schools Making Americans Of Best Types from Lively Youngsters (AED FOR TRIAL | shop at No. p was | | Play ards with 2 B | known as Rocco this afternoon. Sev: jeral customers were standing about | JUDGE ARCHBALD wal Summons "ares by Cere- mony in Which Each Senator Is Sworn to Special Duty. hit mo: WASHINGTON, Suly 16.—Judge Robert crimes and misdemeanors was sum-| moned to-day before the Senate to stand trial upon charges made by the House. Foljowing strictly the rules and order tata down in the code-begin more than & century ago, the Senate took up the formal proceedings. The fall of the gavel cut short other business as Sen- ator Gallinger, acting President, an- nounced that the hour for the trial had arrived. ‘There was a moment of confusion as the Senate, unable to interpret rules out of use since 194, sought a method of administering oaths that changed the body into the high court of im- Ppeachment contemplated by the con- stitution. Acting President Gatiinger had first to be aworn tn as presiding officer, but none could say who should do it. Sen- ator Shelby ‘M. Cutom, the oldest mem= ber, was finally designated on motion of Senator Smoot. Senator Gallinger then ewore the Senators to their duties as judges. In | parties of eleht, selected alphabetical they came forward to the bar and swore to ‘do tmpartial Justice.” ‘All Senators took the oath except Bankhead, Brown, Chilton, Curtis, Davis, Dixon, Du Pont, Kern, Penrose, Poindexter, Rayner, Richardson and Watson, who were absent. ‘As the last retired to his seat, Sen- ator Clark of Wyoming, chatrman of the judiciary committes, presented the formal reaolution, to inform the House that the Senate now sat as the “high court of impeachment” and was pre- pared to recetve the House of Repre- sentatives and ite committee of man- agers. "When the court of tmpeachment re- mumed after 3 o'clock this afternoon a surgmons for Judge Archbald, return able on July 19, was tseued. Whether the trial wil Immediately go on or be postponed until fall or winter probably ture, &c,, worth over $5,000. Habélities, claims aggregating $204,- 626.28 ure secured by mortgages on the Long Branch properties and claims of $19,778,381 are unsecured. The bank- rupt owes A. Lincoln Stadler of No. 435 Fifth avenue $1,000 for money \Toaned. CASTORIA will be decided then. The court then adjourned unttl 12.30 P. M. Friday, oo ston Post.) “What proportion of your s your wite permit you to keep “The envelope.” For Infants and Children, STOPS A GAME OF CARDS Stranger Enters East Side Barber Teanardo Roman, A stranger appeared tn the doorw: Roceo took a look at the stranger and Jumped to his feet @ revolver and fired three shots, One tered ft. Rocco in the aide. Peared up the street, ved to Bellevue Hospital unconscious, Nothing is known of the wounded man except that he has been @ hanger-on about the , ths. Romano w: unable " y. bald of the Commerce Court, | Mon! pad wate ¥. arene ae ot inthe Matory” of the | explanation of the shooting. He is je nin | certain the shots were intended for Manufactured only by Tnited States to be impeached for “hiSh | Rogeq and not for him “Tam glad he was nomin- | & wales sheen in health a0h enitramm, To-day es a woman was passing Se | trol they'll grow up healthy, self [tnrough the hallway she detected the | controled men—in @ word, g904 | odor of gas from Mrs. Dagitan's apart-| At Fountains & Elsewhere citizens of a republic, ment, Foreing her way in she discov. | Ask fi “We don't have any trouble with) ereq the sick woman with @ gas tube jor | | Gangs in neighborhoods where we have) in ner mouth. She was still conscious, 3A) Playgrounds, And we don't have the|qnhe rescuer snatched the tube away, ' Uttle girls forming Gubds that mect 19) turned off the was and called. a police- The Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. n “Oh kood-bye to ithe Kind You Hav Kind You Have Always Bought (OT NARCOTIC. ATG mouth 35 DosFs—} ous. poison, edies is uncertain, nt Eve anid again they may not. Are absolutely guaranteed to cure. gives * you back your money. © pain ceases quickly after aj » the corn, root an: ut in every case the cure 3 try Pierce's Corn PI ink can’t be cured, in store for you, we take the lake not you. 10c and 28c per box At all Druggists (or by mail) Remember, The Safe Way to Remove Corns Paring acorn with steel is danger- slip of the blade means a gash which may result in blood Treating a corn with unguaranteed rem- They may cure--but And if they don’t, you are money out of pocket. Pierce’s Corn Plasters If they don’t, the druggist plying the first Plaster, all, can be removed ere on that painful THE A. F. PIERCE CO.. Springfield, Mass, Master ry or |mint candies holds such a lot of . |headaches, coated tonguesy eta aie bowels it will set AY a chance to prove this. to-morrow that irregularity of the di; all straightened out. gestive organs ewill be 25c., 50c., $1.00, at good drug stores, or Partola Co, 160 2d Ave., New BY SHOOTING A PLAYER. Fine Laces and Linens Pearline AY, aves Wear and Tear Shop and Wounds His Victim Twice, who has a barber 261 East Tenth street, was ying a game of cards with @ man Sev- tching the play. ‘The stranger drew & big mirror in the reat and ahat- ‘The other two shots struck ‘The stranger disap- Rocco was re neighborhood for several PYLE & SONS, New York. dames McCreery & Co. 23rd St 34th Street 4 On Wednesday, July the 17th LACE AND CHIFFON VEILS, 1m Both stores, White Lace Veils. ..vatue 1.25. .85¢ Double Chiffon Veils, various colors. value 1.95 1.50 Chiffon Veils with stripe borders. An assortment of colors. value 4.75 3.50 WOMEN’S HOSIERY. Fine Gauze Lisle Thread, with double tops, spliced heels, soles and toes. White and Black. 35c pair, 6 pairs.....1.85 White Lisle Thread with double garter proof tops. Cobweb weight. eee Py.) 45c pair, 6 pairs... Discontinued lines of Black Lisle Thread with lace boot or embroidered in- steps. value 1.00 t02.28 5Oc pair sorays SEMI-ANNUAL SALE In Both Stores, The latest and smartest styles in Women’s Pumps, Colonials and Oxfords. Made of Tan and Black Ruzsia Calf, Glazed and Dull Kid, Suede, Patent Leather, White Linen and Buckskin. 3.25 and 3.85 pair values 4.00 to 6.00 Men’s leathers. Sorosis Low Cuts 3.95 pair values 5.00 and 6.00 James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street in all “So Much ® Relicf YEcln Such a Tittle Box!” Wonderful to think that the little box with the Pepper- How mi troubles of the stomach ro Give MM Las In Candy Form Eat a PARTOLA candy to-night and

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