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STEAM KILLS FIVE WHEN PIPES BURST ABOARD BIG LINER HIS ONLY REWARD | Principe di Piemonte Reaches Charley Was Rich for Fifteen Port After Explosion in Her Boiler Room. AID SENT TO INJURED. | FINDS OWNER WEEPING Tt was a tale of grim death and the heroism of common men Lioya Sabaudo steamship Principe di Piemonte brought into port to-day with the bodies of five of her crew, scalded to death by the bursting of a 6 early last Wednesday morning. man, grievounly wounded but more for- tunate than his fellows in the fireroom, Was hurried to @ hospital the minute the steamship tied up at her dock The accident occurred when the Prin- sipe di Plemonte, out of Naples with eighty-six cabin passengers and #07 in the steerage, was in latitude 89-18 North and longitude 67-27 West, about 760 miles from Scotland Light. The ship wa thirteen knots in fair weath everything was working easily in the tong fire room far down in the depths a ‘Twenty-seven firemen and water ten- ders were working streaked fire room far down under the and high looming boll- fret assistant Tate of ladd ers. Philippo Roncallo, engineer, was in charge of the watch and was at his place near one of the boilers when at 5.46 a big steampipe blew out with the noise of a bursting cannon directly over the heads of the Instantly the fire room became an in- ferno. Jets of water so hot that it dis- solved into blinding steam the minute it struck the cooler air aprayed over the protected backs of the firemen. There was a roaring and buszing of the tre- mendous head, of steam suddenly re- leased. All of the firemen but six managed | But the firat thing he came upon was to grope their way to the ladders and up to the clearer air, They left behind | dropped the bag. Further search re- @ blinding, scalding cloud, which | vealed another #00 bill, and as a “filler into the lungs and clouded the | for this costly “wrapper,” two additional yellowbacks, each of $100 denomination,,| Dear Fashion T have eight yards of very pretty pale green and with a quick asphyzia. CAPTAIN AT ONCE ORDERS EN- There was also 6 cents in change, but GINES STOPPED. at the Meo Seasd toe can eee rich, he told him: and immedi- der for urried Gown into | ticket agency up the street, and the and called for | Pictures of many-funnelled ocean ateam- i g eH i 218% te i 5 i forward, ‘They| travel, to nee the world which te out- laddera into the| side the somewhat narrow compass of white, which swallowed them| Brooklyn. And here was gratification and then, one by e rescuers appeared Bach bore in his fi- fe ie Esde Hie 4 5 utes every one of the overcome in the blast fas laid on the one, the first engineer, and one was only severe! steam, but not in danger of 2k ee ait i vib ft <8 were Phillppo Roncallo, Wrencisco Perri, Arindo Leone, To- ‘was burried to a hospital on shore thie morning was Pietro Tariminuccl, STEAMOHIP HAS HAD MANY ADVENTUR |} Phe Principe 41 Piemonte was built by Laing & Gons at Sunderland, England, | 4 4g 2907, and on her fret trip across tn) age passengers. worews and has a speed of M% xuots @he has been tn troubl Guring her career. pI arrived in New York, having had a su: d, eordbro-spinal meningitis, The f July she was again held in Qu: for five days on suspicion that there was cholera on board, Tue vessel. how. ever, got through with @ clean bill uf health. There were then 657 paeseagers in the steerage. ‘The faliowing December the steamship was several duys late tn arriving in this In coming from vountered a terrific gale and lost one of her propellers, Just before she wailed on her last trip for Naples her commander, meniconi, pleaded guilty tn District Court to Violating section 4 of the Passenger act of 1882, ELOPES WI aples she en- en HW CHAUFFEUR; [ier i! WER SECOND EXPERIENCE, "rine woman Daughter of Wealthy Stamford Man Sends Word of Marriage a Month After Divorce. Ce Sa STAMFORD, John BH. his head. Philips, Treasuner was married Thomas N. Kngtish, a chauffeur, on July | ®, The marriage took pi N. ¥., and was announced to-day by the Mr. Phillips declines to | . Make any comment, . ine ge of seventeen Phillips eldped with Andrew J of Harry bel, National Bank Here and they w ried in New York. Mra. Bel) obtain ce at Bedford, | Prestdent of the Firet About a month ago da divorce for all was wied in # It Was unconte: hefore a referee. Guatody of her four-yenr-old daughter ‘# Bell, Was awarded to Mrs, Bell's yr eee . Bell, a laborer of Aweaty-fve years oid, ‘BOY FINDS $1,200 | PURSE; ‘THANK YOU! | Minutes, Then His Wealth | Dwindled to 10 Cents, | Chief Engineer, Chief Fireman | Bejewelled | Woman's Tears and Three Stokers Die of Scalds. Over Loss in Fulton Street Cost Him Yellowbacks. For a quarter of an hour to-day @leo serves as n| een pattern Mertle had a stunning vii of @ trip to Burope, of a taste of all th ind Joys of London and Paris | and Bertin, of a luxurtous voyage on some great ocean liner, of the admiring attention of friends and relatives—the kind of attention, you which is showered belongs to opulence But at the end of the fitt the law offices of Ruger Bros, tn the Germania Bank Bullding, Brooklyn, clutching the lone dime in his pocket isconpolately and wishing he had thought to ask the name of the woman with all the diamonds and the weepy voice who had established her right to his new found wealth and had then gone off with only a half sobbed “Thank you." Whoever she was, Charley thinks sho ought to be ashamed of herself, Charley Mertie—he is really Charles Hertle jr.—lives with his father and mother at No, 37 Hill street, Brooklyn, He is seventeen years old and ho works in the office of Ruger Bros. To- Charley waa sent off by the chief clerk Ured into a nearby doorway to examine his find with casual interest. tone, would not like to buy a new coat if YELLOW BOYS GREET CHAR. et this one would do, LEY’S POPPING EYES, in his exaltation, Charley hardly peld any attention to that. He was rich, pif we heard af the “di: but he had just passed a steamship ships and quaint Kuropest capitals one ambi- ton of Charley's heart had been to of his ambition. Charley thrust the purse into his Docket and swaggered out into the street, moving with the free and in- Gependent air that became his new station. He walked half a block, riot- ing in a swarm of new sensatio viewing the passing stream of mi fons who knew not Dame Fortun that he found tloe, Suddenly in t crowd he noticed a woman comin from the direction of Bond street—a question to the people she met. All) of them shook their heads, but many | clustered about her and as Charley | rhe could hear what she wan 2h, 1 don't know w T shall do,’ ot ashe w exclaiming. e lost all my money out of my bag, and T was fust| going to meet my husband, I don't know what he'll say!" } “THANK YOU," WAS THE ONLY h the crowd toward Charitey, ing right and left along the pave-| ment. Charley paused. Here was somes | thing he had not reckoned on. Hel turned and followed the woman, pre-| sentiy came abreart of her and contl- nued to walk at her side, unnoticed, w he thought deeply Suppose thi mor should be hers? There would be} no trip to Europe-at most a trifting! reward, trifling, of course, when viewed | in comparison with $1,200. \Vhat should he do? What would he expect a fellow to do, If his mother had lost $1,200? “Madame.” he sald, quietly, “how | much money did you have in your! purse?’ “Two five hundred dollar bills, and two hundred dollar bills, and some change,” she sobbed. | “Here it madame, aid Charley, Newh purse, | Jewellod fingers flew he satd | thank you, thank you!’ s gone, without another | excitedly. And she wi word, the lone dime tn his pocket, and shook | "Gee, that’s tou His Own Surgeons May Die. ‘ Marki hy farmer liv. | ar Birmin J, 9 dying at | his home from blood polsoning as a ree ult of an operation in which he used a| to remove @ bullet which | had accidentally mhot into his left te Marks cou!d feel the bullet and dec! not to call a doctor, #0 he operated him- welt, | Tack Man Drown | NPW ROCHELLE, N.Y, July 9— The body of a man found in the Knick- erbocker Iee Company's pond on North |AVenue between this city and Tuckahoe was identified to-day at of Samuel ‘uckahoe, Coroner siivh, ty about Livingston to-day rendered M,verdict of jeccidental drowning, anther ena tenn ai neg Tinta tenet cate ce Ces THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1912. An Effective Design for a Bordered. Chiffon Voile Dress, Kimono Style| RACETOSHP. TURNS | HERINA SCHOOL, SAYS IT INTO RELAY RACE REBELLIOUS MILDRED Mrs. Langenwalter Was Speed- | Wilful Daughter of Pair Seek- ing Separation Defies Court’s Order. 'Evening World’s Original Fashions for Home Dressmakers seaside Ait questions com | and materiale of | dreasce should be) addressed to the Fashion Editor of The Evening terns for designe in this column can but with the descrip tion furnished it is a simple matter to work out patterns. A new und distinctive feature of hte department ia the illustration Of the different pieces of the pattern Secessary for the making of the gar It shows how easily the at tractive design can be executed and uide in cutting one’a ff euch ts needed, —_—. ANSWERS TO QUERIES. Dear Fashion Raitor How can I make up a 11tt}@ pale pink silk mull having an oval silk figure in aay aan ae ft for a dress suitable for small tupon an 4 wealth, and of the self-stisfaction that poy tai Fey HEAOPES Minlnes WET TE am elghteen yeare of 4 Do you think lace like enclosed Charley found himaeif hurrying back te! sample could be used on the dress? ‘Thanking you, Miss ELINA R. ‘The dress could be made with a be obtained, | to the pler at the foot of West Twenty-| and into a taxicab which she command- ed to make all speed to the pier. Some- ran to another.street car, which took and her time was growing less with nm minutes! small, street. From there to the plier she to run, and run fast. stairway and was speeding up to make the ship, which was even then blowing its whistle in parting, her foot caught on a hose line and she fell sprawling, | her grip flying one way, her umbrella) the other, Porters rushed to the rescue, | but it was too late. The gangplank of | the Kroonland was withdrawn and the} ship waa backing into the Hudson. < walter imple to get her aboard by a tug, against the rules of the company and she had to wait. But rescue was at hand, for the Oceanic, of the White Star Line, was to steam away to South- ampton at noon and the White Star and the Red Star are members of the In- ternational Mercantile Marine. | jay | Dear Fashion Editor: Kindly advi me if you think a cult {o serve a summons. As he etarted| Coat of Copenhagen blue crash would back for the office, swinging through | be suitable to wear Fulton atreet, near Bond atreet, he no-|OVer summer dresses and white linen tlced a allver meah purse lying on the]ones. The coat is made something like sidewalk, Charley picked it up and re-|a N separate coat ‘orfolk, but with a turned. le. the bottom held with pearl but- the same as close the coat. the Oceanic and will be sent to Ham- burg from Southampton, aftey which she will go to Antwerp, ~ HIGH COST OF CLAMS fancy white. and becoming way to make it up? may never/Am forty-eight years of age, rather of short, with stripe voile, ai | Colonel Adds That He Will; Sleeves with a cuff of the all-over rect 1 Roosevelt with th immediate connection between the hizh| cost of ving and the tariff, or that the trust question ts closely affiliated with elther, The Colonel said he was| \m. very carefully investigating the cost| A@ ¢ of living problem, and that he hoped | Sm the National Progressive party, when! Am" it adopts its platform tn Chicago next | A@ month would deal with it in a acien-|am 7 of the skirt down to he knees. Wear # crush antin at the belt, ‘Trim the dreas with yellow glass buttons down the front grace with a graceful condescension | of the waist and attach a straw color | yellow satin Robesplerre collar, of yellow satin could finish the sleeve above the lace frill, Dear Fashion Heiter: What kind of an evening wrap would woman richly dressed, whowe hands! you suggest for ine? 4 wleamed with diamonds and who car-| make it myzelf. ried an open handbag, while at inter- ago, almost Slack hair, blue eyes and vals she stopped and addressed some | quite some color. PATTERN SAnED cn around with the blue, is held with a very large oval} © skirt, slightly gathered | around the belt, has @ small peplum of the bordered part of the goods, while a band of the lace puffing ts inserted) with blue satin cording DESCRIPTION. A delightfully simple way of making bordered chiffon volle dress Is shown here, the waist cut the all-over figured part of the ma- with tiny puffs of ring-dotted ed with a pale T would like to Am twenty years of kimono style, at the knees, Anishing tt on each edg Vet belt drops a long end on the side| UNION DELEGATE HELD FOR HIRING THUS T0 BEAT STRKEBREAKERS Man Charged With Assault] Says He Was Paid $10 Day as Union's Strong-Arm. lace for sleeves, fint blue cording,and loops of ribbon neck, which is slashed open in the ma with « medium: weight silk cord or @ satin covered containing the bank book and money| from under her arm, Miss Leberwitz felt the tug and en- eavored to hold the parcel b: ch OF S600 WRILE ON | HER WAY T0 BANK; ently misrepresented as to my r The girl whirled about and caught the robber by th he pulled away and darted into a base- He was seen to emerge from the the basement, plain tn liver in the convention, Aug. 5." were Herbert Knox Smith, who has just retired as Commissioner of Corpora- tions; Charles H, ‘Thompson of Connec- ticut and several Massachusetis ad- mirers who called mer respects. friends had taken a mistaken position in urging him to make alliances with certain professional politicians. Such action on his part, he sald, would be preposterous, as he is now Interested in aiding the working man and woman of Third street. Lebarwita first k to stop payment on tue ¢ reported the robbery to .the police of the East One Hundred and Fourth “T never saw the rober before, but I believe that he and that he followed me from the store, watching his chance to take the money away from me MORE MEN THAN NEEDED ON BOARD THE NEW YORK. American! & Co., Charley rose to the altuation | Fighis Desperately in Street as Thief Snatches Money and Checks, a delegate of Was arrested to- lay on a charge of hiring thugs to beat up strikebreakers working for Thomas shoe manufacturers, 1 between the up in brown string, war snatched from under tho arm of Miss ; Tho charge as; inst McDonald is based on a sworn statement by Frank Mu: who muy# he Ives at the Mills ixth street and Seventh and who is charged with attack upon Harry Harmon, one of the strikebreaker Harmon was set upon by two men us vie} he was leaving bis work, and was 4 Agents of the Burns Detective Agency, hired by Thomas & lo, to protect its non-union workn walked out and refused to sign when) arrested Murphy and charged him with preparations were made on Thursday | the assault, for the vessel's departure. Capt, Willtam Luckhurat, marine superintendent of the American line, secured other men from ind also brought up seventy- from the South. 0, the regular veral dozens more hands than are usually carried were taken in from floats down the Bay. Most of the places filled were thone of coal passer: tenders, oilers and firemen fale of the line believe thy: efficient crew than the whole done perience With Strikers, last two Saturdays, when M Charley stood for a minute, tumbling | delphia and the St Louis were held rikers, took precautions to- lay | to have more men than they need: hoard when wailed for Cherbourg and Southampton, | verely When the New York got into port just week all but ninety of her crew of wholesale grocs st One Hundred and Second street, jat No, 39 jearthquake shocks y Dorman’s account | One Hundred a and Third avenue, For some time past {t has been Miss Leberwits's custom to #h to deposit, and also checks to be cashed, to the bank on Saturday morning, She believes that the robber who took the money from her to-day knew this and was on the watch for 1 Sixth street or so ago Murphy signed on affidavit in which he declared that on June 98 McDonald offered him $50 for expenses and $10 a day w would hire ten o} to slug the Thomas sarikebreakers. Murphy sald he began operations on the next day nome more of the same kind of “work” if he had not been arrested. McDonald was arraigned before Mas- N Bhe was on One Hundred and Second street between Firat and Second aver nues. There were few people on the » described as about and wearing @ blue suit ard cap, silpped ‘ge of aiding and abet- fp bemind her and jerked the parcel gfused to take him back. [SHE LOSES OBSTACLE NOOLD JUDGE CAN PUT ing Till She Tripped Over Hose, but She'll Win Yet. | wer, when she essayed to inake her way to the steamship Kroonland of the Mrs. Langenwalter has been visiting In New York and her farewells to her friends wero extended to a time wher there was eft but half an hour for her to get from Went Seventy-second street | first @treot. She took a surface ca which got in a tangle of traffle ani stopped. Anxlously she jumped out thing went wrong with the taxteab and it stopred at Thirty-fourth street. She her as far as Twenty-third stret, whore ft Loo got into trouble with the traffic, rapidity. So she jumped aboard « crosstown car, which got her to West Just as she had gained the top of the} With tears in her eyes, Mrs. Langen- ed the officials of the lHne ut this is So Mrs, Langenwalter was put aboard NOT DUE TO FRUSTS, $0 ROOSEVELT SAYS Discuss Tariff at the Bull Moose Convention. OYSTER BAY, N. ¥., July 20.—p1- ue was taken to-day by Col. claim that there Is John W, Hutehinson, a silk salesman Ing haturo atrewed the path of Mrs. | for Reiling & Schoen of No, 97 Greene Gertrude Langenwalter, lately of Ant-, St"eet who Is being sued by his wife ‘for a legal separation, Justice Benedict of the Supreme Court, 4 Star Line, which Jeft hore for tie |!8 Brooklyn, that, pending settlement of Relgian port this morning. | the litigation, his daughter Mildred, six- teen years old, pretty and wilful, should be sent to a boarding school, Where she can be propertly cared for. would be all very well If It were not | J and discourng: | has persuaded boarding schools. She has been to two already, and at neither was her stay | of any protracted duration. Mr, Hutchinson thinks this was due to| his daughter's wayward dispositicn and | lack of proper control at home. Hutchinson thinks it was due to @ crav- | ing on Mildred’s part for her mother's | companionship. Mildred declared to-day | she hates boarding schools, none of them, and much prefers to stay The Judge has signed the order, but, according to Mildred, it for the simple reason that this isn't boarding-schoo! pointed out triumphantly that, no mat- ter how many orders any old Judge signed, he couldn't hi | to school for a month and a half yet, at And Mildred has much falth in her mother's ability to think a way out of the difficulty before that time. “The last time Mildred was sent to school, at the Lady Cliff School, High- land Falis, N. Y.."" said Mrs, Hutchin- son, “I used to get threo telegrams a the mother superior begging me to come and get her. blo she made everybody else She just wanted But she didn't run as her father told the Judge she She was sent home because she was unhappy and wanted me.” “And I didn’t run away from the Col- Hacketstown, “They wrote Mrs, | with her mother. her sent away She just was That was all. elther, asserted and asked mother to take me away be- I was so unhappy, to be unhappy {f I'd rather stay with and go to school here in New York." WALL STRE ‘Transactions in the eatly stick mar- ket to-day were decidedly aninteresting. Lacking an Incentive for partic! traders unloaded small blocks of Read- Union Pacific and Copper, jonal concessions at m sent off to which caused fra: the end of the first hour. The list still inclined toward lethargy In the subsequent. period dulness developed curred were mostly toward lower ranges and closing sales were made at practi- Small losses was the rule at ¢ Today's bigest, changes as compared with res are as follows: tific manner. “If the tariff were to be wiped ntirely " said the Colonel to-day, do not think it would reduce the cont | Chie of living more than ten perecent. That! is a question which 1* influenced di- rectly by other considerations. Wor) instance, I don't think the trusts are responsibte for the high cost of edu-| cation, or of hay, or even of clams, none of which it has even been all were controlled by the trus' “T have been misquoted and pert tude on the tamff. I hope to imake my post- tion on this most important problem speech which I will de- ago on the first night of Among the Colonel's visitors to-day ¥ to pay their Rooosevelt sald certain of his the nation.’ Roosevelt dented to- the report that he wi ay soon to start a weekly newspaper and retire from the) Outlook. He said he had no contract with the Outlook, but that he had no intention of relinquishing his position | Contributing Edttor. see aa FEAR QUAKES, DESERT CITY.) ajara, Mexico, for Railroad Tickets, GUADALAJARA, Mex. July 20.— ully 5,0W people have left Guadalajara the t twenty-four hours, The iy Were the most severe since the disturbances be- gan‘several months ago. More than 2,00 men, women and chil- dren left by train yesterday, fighting for tickets. ‘Thousands more are camp- ing with thelr household goods outside the town limits, Lost Job and Kil . John Sams, thirty-two years old, @ chemist and lngulst, out of a job for two weeks, cut his throat with a knife KSeeeS FEE | Batt. * wee fearee. oF Fees Piss FALL KILLS TWO PAINTERS, THEIR FOREMAN ARRESTED Scaffold Breaks Down Fifty Feet in Air and Men Die In- James Kennedy, forty years old, and Gus Mulls, thirty years old, their ad- dresses unknown to the pol and William Moyer, their foreman, is under arrest as a result of tho breaking of @ rope supporting @ acaffold on which the two men were painting a new fac- tory building at street, Brooklyn. ‘The scaffold was fifty feet in the alr when the rope at one end snapped, pres cipitating both men to the street. ‘They were killed Instantly. . 198 West Ninth After Moyer was sted he sald, “I am at a Joss to ex- the accident. The rope was in good condition and had been 04. no unusual weight on conv VANCOUVER, , duly 20,—Kat'- mates to-day at midnight in ehouse district place the 000. ‘Three ware- 8, pach valued at $250,000, were de- stroyed, as well as a amailer blocks. main street W: damage at neafly $2, umber of other on stock was in hia room at 508 Clinton street, Brooklyn, early to-day, Sams had been employed by Dr. Rubin, No. j84 Colum- bia at » Brooklyn, Dr. Rubin dia- charged Sams because of his ha‘ weeks ago, Yesterday Dr. Ru! jam: Mayor Gaynor went to St. James terday morning following his custom. He stayed more closely to the house than usual and received no visitors, Ap- parently he received no communication fwem the city. STATE MACHINE REE PLEDRE TO SUPPORT THE Arranges for a Convention-at Saratoga on Sept. 25 and Indulges in Hope. ‘The Republican State Committee met to-day at the Ropublican Club, renewed its pledge to support President Taft, declared no other nomination could have } been made at Chicago and decided, Hike heroes, to go down with the ship ia | November rather than budge one tah in the direction of the Bull Moo The committee chose most of the forty-five candidates for electors, ama named a sub-committee of five who will select a chairman for the State conyen- tlon to be held Saratoga Springs Wednesday, Sept. 25, at which @ o@m- plete State ticket besides twa Associate Judges of the Court of Appeals will be med. Pleased by the expression of Presl- dent Taft's belief in his political skill, Chairman William Barnes jr, passed among «the yetive committeem spreading words of cheer and hope From every section of the State Mr. Barnes said came renewed pledges of support and indorsement of the Cbi-, cago ticket. ‘The visiting committees men chimed in with further Joyous predictions, those of Fred Greiner's friends from Buffalo being the most extravagant. THEY ARE ONLY WORRIED ABOUT GOV. WILSON, “Do the up-State defections worry the leaders?" the Chairman was asked. | “Defections?” he repeated. “None here, ertainly; the only man who ts wort: ing about that is Wilson. worry we have is Wilson, and there yo are.” “What about Brooklyn?” “Well, we mourn our los Mr. Barnes in laughter. ‘The Old Guardsmen of two yeats ago are back in line. Woodruff was the only conspicuous absentee. Hendrick Aldrich, Greiner, Dunn, Collins ai others of the old machine were ajl present. Out of the meeting came assuranc that at least three well known Repube cans are openly in the field for the Republican nomination for Governer.- The first is Job E. Hedges. ‘The second ‘ia William S. Bennett, who wanted the nomination when T. R. forced Henry | 1. Stimson on the ticket two years The third is the Old Guard favo! James W. Wadsworth jr., who wi thought a candidate until to-day. The Taft Presidential electors chosen to-day are: Former Mayor Charlés A. Schlieren, elector-at-large, and the fol- lowing from districts: Firat, Judge Har- rison F. Moore; third, Stephen J. Byr-, rows; fourth, L. W. Schwenk; seventh, R. Ross Appleton; ninth, William ‘ade; tenth, Baruch Miller; elevent ward R. Stetinius; fifteenth, Will Henkel jr.; eighteenth, Cordon Bell; nineteenth, Samuel I. Flebersy twenty-first, Willlam H. Rose; twenty- second, A!fred B, Simons; twentyzeigth,: Silas Wodell; twenty-eighth, Eawerd Of McKinney; twenty-ninth, E. Ciuett; thirtieth, Willis Tracey Hansea; thirty-fourth, George A, Kent; thirty- James D. Rashford; fortieth, Ans- llcox; forty-first, Edward G. Boake er: forty-second, Baird T. Couch; forty- third, IT. C. Iich. -— TOMBS KEEPER FIRED + FOR PRISONER’S ESCAPE, Cases of Night Warden Fallon and Two Other Keepers Not Yet Decided. : Commissioner of Corrections Patrick Whitney to-day dismissed from. the department Francis Kelly, night keeper of the Tombs, who, Mr. Whitney finde, was guilty of negligence in not pre- venting the escape on the night @f George answered July 7 of a burglar named Whitson, Whitson was supposed to be cdn- fined in a cell on the eighth tier of prison when he made his escape to the cellar by sliding down # service pipe. Reaching the cellar, Whitson knocked out. the aged yardkeeper, Hoolfhan, took his revolver and then climhed over the yard wall and vanished. = Warden Fallen and H nm and Hoolihan hi up on charges before Commissioger Vhitney. Of the evidence ageinag Kelly the Commissioner sald to-day: “He failed to inspect the prisoner's cell and he failed to report that : grating over the utility court Se | had been missing two hours, The dence was such as to leave no goubt, that the prisoner received inside @i@ te escape.” No decision has been announced ‘i ‘ the case of Night Warden Fallon gad Keepers Curten and Hoolihan, pocieah-ei Bank Reserve, #191 F The statement of the actual conditlony’ of Clearing House banks for the week shows that’ the banks hold $18, cess of legal require . This ts an increase of $8,469,250 ip the proportionate cash reserve as compared with la ar.