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BLACKMAIL HINT IN MARS. JENKINS’ SUIT DENIED BY LAWYER Mr. Marshall, Representing Mil- Honaire Allen, Says Client Was No Dupe. EMPTIED HER VAULT. Now She Wants $218,000 for Valuables She Says Were Stolen from Her. According to Lawyer Marshall of eee ee ee , mn, d ag Trays 2 CORR ” RRR Ne we TT THE EVENING WORLD SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 Girl Who Just Escaped Death By Gas After Rejecting Suitor O'Gorman, Battle & Marshall, No. % Wall street, it ts entirely untrue that milllonaire Nathan Allen, who recen‘ly paid the Government a fine of $100,000 for ugsling and who has just been sued vy Mra. Helen Dwelle Jenkins for $2i8,- 0, is a dupe. He also denies that the millionaire paid over a million In dlack- mati to the Jenkins woman. Mr. Mar- ehall, who ts representing the Wisconsin Yeather manufacturer, says his cilent le tm Europe. “Mf any one says Mr. Allen pad #0 much as a haif-cent blackmail to any me for fear of Aisciosure of any sort they say what 's untru sald Mr, Marshall. “The matter, of course, crops wp at thie time because of the filing of the suit by Mrs, Jenkins yesterday.” It was Mrs. Jenkins, for whom the fewele were amugsied by Alien and Jebn R. Collins, who exposed the smug- elers. Im her sult she says she once bed @ comfortable fortune, represented Dy her deposit in the vault of a Chicago bank. That was while she and Mr. dllen were friendly and when they went to Europe as a “family party.” ALLEGED ALLEN’S DETECTIVES TOOK HER SECURIT! Later, she alleges, Mr. Allen sent de- @ectives to the vault and took her se ourities away. They amounted to $218,- @0, apportioned as follows: Stock, $81,000, mates from Collins, $4,000; oll painting by Gchreyer, $10,090; pearl earrings, $10,000, and a pearl necklace valued at 972,000, How she got the property Sf Jenkins did not explain, She told how) it was removed and named the dete: | tive firm of Mooney & Boland as co- @etendants in the sult. ‘When the relations of Mrs. Jenkins and the millionaire were cordial, she Uved Im style at the Hote! Loraine, and) ‘when in Chicago at the Hotel Stratford tm Michigan avenue. In 19 Allen's brother learned of the relations and| was instrumental in bringing about a/ break. ‘Then Mra. Jenkins asserted that valu- able jewels had been stolen from her Qpartment. Government detectives! scented smuggling, and sinc he friendship for Allen was over she told| everything. { TRIP TO EUROPE COST HIM A) FORTUNE, Before meeting Mrs. Jenkins—or as she calls hervelf in the suit, Helen Fuld Dwelle—the millionaire was at- | w tentive to business and to his wife and | family. The trip to Europe has cost him ® fortune, outside of the possibtl- ity of blackmall, When he was sum- Moned to appear before the Federa Q@rand Jury a year ago Mra. Jenkins attempted to serve him with papers her sult. It was decided he was tr mune from service because hie hi jon of the Grand Should Mra. Jenkin @oquaintance wil! hi than $0,000. He paid a fine on his indictment for emugsiing, * gottled 4 suit brought by the Govern- Ment for $100,000, | The reason for settling the sult and! the attempt at seer w of hia mother, who did Win. at if ety-two, and her ignorance of the It ie now show the hand he and sensational pected at the trial a PIERRE LOT! COMING HERE. to See New Winy, will | to-day If America sings in as he expresses it, hing about \t, What t is the fortheoming y York of his play for New York liner La Savoie Mr. Lot's heart, he may write » interests hin 4 Production in } Lot! has In Paris only a fow days, and how d most of his tine to eluding ni He will stay in Amer two weeks, lens if he does noi tice his reception and and a longer tme if he does. alone, and after h American visit will 0 to Constantinop! Other newspapers are Bot printing anywhere near aus, cx The World. The World Jauion tn York City, mornings and Bundayes, exceeding that of the Heraid, Times, Bun and Tribune COMBINED, 33,872 World Ads. Last Week 17,819 More than the Herald ‘The World's ONLY competitor-— @,O0T More than ALL THE 5 OTHER Kew York Morning and Sunday Kewepapere ADDED TUGETHER, A CIRCULATION THAT CIR- CULATES*-ADVERTISEMENTS THAT ADVERTISE. SUICIDE OF NOG | produced | other province in Japan, «| the palace Gen. PARDONED!) macniricenr” ph AND WIE MAKES —— a) (Continued from First Page.) Jor t th thin more great men any was t ATTENDED FUNERAL, Ti1EN AR- RANGED SUICIDES. | ‘The Countess Nog! was dwughter of Yuchi dayuki, 4 Sainural of the Kagoshima clan. She knew the | outside world from her experiences at vi th ing the late ‘The couple had attended the funeral ceremonies in the Aoyama Palace yes: terday and then withdrew to thelr hom at Akasaki, There they serenely ma preparations for the crowning act thelr lives, Both dressed th the ancient Japaness costurr ceremoniously of sak! from them by the dead nperor, left a sealed | letter for the new Emperor Yoshohito and then sat down beneath M shrouded picture to await the that meant the old Emperor rting on his last Journey, leaving | Toklo forever, Gen. well known, Hie training began when asachild his ta him to wee @ decapitation. could not repress an involuntary shud der at the guan ¢ J which fol lowed. For tiils exhibition of weaknens | he was severely reprimanded, and all| the reat of the day was spe minding him in a hundred what he had seen, Even the fruit he was given to eat sireamed with reg Juice. In the Russo-Ja awa vt Ie breatiing Ww! the fal this end r carried | | for K xole mor day uh anese war Gen, Nogt Drayed for death, He was deeply) tou ebagrined when the sublime honor of | in dying for the Was bestowed | yar only on his two sons, but thetr heightened the intensity of his pat is only | ¢ tot phac veya When the first gy reverberated fromm > nd hin wife p formes thelr sacramental act, He con: | here aidered it his duty to the 1% her duty both to the Empe husband, London had not ahaken the General's bellefs, nor Vassur those of the Count They fell dying and wer Alacovered, by a stud who Hoth wer * Aull gasping, 4 with them, ip arrived annualia, an vm, the xialy in fi Jana Irleht ubmit ale the to capt rack Gen Jap Jot the dead Em the dest ot J \ehipped 4 Nowt ts now ACT ATRIOTIC DUTY, JAPAN’S VERDICT OF FP. | TOKIO, Sept. 14.—The dramatic death! 4 Of General Count Maresuke Nogi, the ge soldier-hero of Japan, and that s , the Counters Nogl, who yesterday th i with What Was considerca °°" of the volorous Forty-seven Ronin, ‘To-| believe bankers should take an in Under ‘the law Gibson cannot be mage the suprame moment of the nation the day Ko to lay offerings upon! est in the caso In the cause of Justice, | te seiner, aoe Le. Bee Meyer departure from the capital of the body room J with a the ancient #hrine at Shiba, on the| The investigators have heard that about |@use un ae Me! ren aver 93 sxnsiiter, the lato Emperor Mutsuhito for tts tt oH , RAS age oF qulabinia. Of ana, where the the middie of August Gibson bought a | fF one year aft tert ieee naing ane me ao eet celinton take and ue! "pve Nontn or gentlemanly brigands, |S: automobile, ‘They aro Inclined to} acy 'wicr he cannat by made io repirt me 1 Be: tT otered. With Walle Aik Phe | were followers of a certain feudar inca, | think, however, that he may have de |iofure next Auanst to the Surrogate 4 af uf A. ba a yosted on 4 low J raised two who was Killed by trickery. Immediately part of it, som | it tly for the purpose at wetting | caidiera ©: cual Gann f foot above the fowr. me tho Forty-seven became outlaws and med name, They |the estate out of i bande thas i ans oldlers of Japan and hy the Censral'e! ‘The party of mauitnere which accam- | for alx y Tove to avenge the death | hope to find out through his widely pubd- | Menachik, the brother, is coming ove! a ba ewy ‘ ‘ panied the late Emperor's by n ite! of their mast inally succeed a ore sci of patriotic duty Journey to Monoyama. |n A repre: | # tn Mehed photograp! > Hut the nation being in the deepest forced into seclusion by the death of his father, tt le a wubt At Letters left by Gen, Mogi, it is under- stood, explain his deea and also contain | to whom the Japane: Nogi's contempt of death was po arson Mo ‘and Countess will be sent ——— awn ne child! M7KADO LAID TO REST IN THE IMPERIAL was \ pentative | mourning and the new Fmperor being mortt, impossible to confer the of officials. al TRIES TO KILL FIVE [GIRLS IN PARADE. [SW SE BY ASPHYXIATION | TOSHOW SYMPATHY 7) AT LONG DSTANGE, WITH PRISONERS Man Had Lost Arm After Poison- ing and Fellow Patient at Bellevue Offered Help. Socialists and Labor Union | lieve, Leads Gas to Flat by | Radicals March by Thousand Fifteen-Foot Tube. in Lawrence Protest. Harry Ritchie, twenty-five years old, a private secretary of No. 1593 Morris ave. | Bronx, died in Ward No. 13 of Betie- vue Hospital half an hour before Fri- | tay the 1th became Saturday. He was lteken to the hospital Aug, 9. Amput tion was necessary, and surgeone Inst | night exprevsed the opinion that only the transfusion of blood would save his life. Jn nies Nedrey, twenty-two years old, S61 West Forty-ninth street, who was taken to the Institution on April 3 lasi, suffering from burns, volunteered 0 supply the necessary blood. Dr. Werne had just connected their arm's MOTHER WAKES IN TIME. The parade of Socialists and radicals! from the ranke of the labor unions or-| with @ allver tube when Ritchie died. ganized by the Lawrence Defense Con- es Leer ine cantina Tapriseanene at| ANOTHER AMERICAN VICTIM et weit Th OF MEXICAN RAIDERS? re and Glovannitt! In Lawrence, Mass, moved two divisi 7 wee davars Wad aflerhoun, 8 Edward Haymoor, Member of Mor- mon Colony Across the Border, Union Square this afternoon. Sev thousand men, women and giris were tn the lines. * One division formed in front of the| Believed to Have Been Killed. Labor Temple at No. 43 East Edghty-| WASHINGTON, Sept. 14. — Edward fourth street and moved oy way of 8 Haymoor, an American, Is belleved to have been killed yesterday by Mexican rebels near Modelos. He was a member of a Mormon colony. The finding of ond and Third avenues to Fifth aven thence down to Union Square. ‘The aec remnants of his property and his cloth- Ing was reported to-day by Mormons East Thirteenth Street Beau- ty’s Brother Has Been Ejecting Youths. | Recause he was not permitted to pay jhis attentions to pretty twenty-two-year- old Caterina Raffo of No, 64 East Thir- teenth street, the belle of the neighbor- hood, an unidentified admirer fs sus- pected of having attempted the death of the whole family early to-day Oy gas polsoning. The Raffos, who are well to @o and thrifty, live in @ flat on the top floor of the aix-atory building. Pasqualo Raffo, HILTONIS BEATEN — MERCHANT KILLED ON 19TH HOLE IN. AT CROSSING BY GOLF SEMMFINAL, FLYING EXPRESS | Julius Harris, a wealthy retired merchant of No. 39 Cleveland street Orange, N. J., was instantly killed to- day at the Lincoln avenue crossing of the Lackawanna Railroad when he got in the way of the South Orange ex press, The gates were down when Mr. Har tis attempted to croxs the tracks, Twe trains were approaching from oppo site directions, ‘The crossing is on @ sharp curve, and as the man stooped and went under the gate he could not see either of the two trains, The South Orange express had passed the Orange station above the crossing @ a thirty-milesanshour rush. A jogai train was heading for the station ad had not begun to slow down. Mr. Hare rls crossed the westbound track and had stepped over the rail of the east- bound track when the express turned the curve and struck him. He wat picked up by the cowcatcher and hurled through the air, striking against the aide of the locomotive of the local train. His skull was crushed, his right arm torn off and his back broken. Death came with the first shock. Inglewood Veleran Player and | Herreshoff Now Finalists in National Tournament. (Special to Tle Erening World.) SOUTHAMPTON, L. 1, Sept. M.— Harold Hilton, the British golf cham- pion, who was supreme on the Amerl- can links last year, winning the > tional champlonship from Fred Hoer- reshoff, met his second defeat for the season of 1912 to-day when he was beat- en on the nineteenth hole by E. Mor- timer Barnes of England. As Her reshoff took the measure of his man, Watson, 3 and 2, in the semi-final, he was bracketed in the final of the in- vitation tournament at the National Golf Links with the vanquisher of Hilton, Hilton started at a killing pace as if he was determined to snuff out Barnes | at the outset and on the first four holes| equalled the eeemingly impossible par.) Barnes lost the first four holes in suc-| cession, being carried off his feet. He} fifty years old, and his wife, Cristina, forty-six, occupy @ bedroom whose only| window !s @ 8x3 aperture into the hall. In an adjoining room asleep Caterina and Josephine, the latter nine years old, and in a third room the big brother Paulo, who Is twenty-two. Caterina hag hed dozens of sulters, which did not please her father and mother, and after a family conference recently Paulo, deputed to eliminate the undesirs ‘ This Paulo did, Some he fought with Thuraday morning, Dior (on the street, and two or three he threw ed | down the stairs, One, according *- the family, was so Persistent, and several were so violent in thelr threats that they would spoil the girl's good looks that for ten days as com- ‘ond division, comprising almost exclus- ively Bohemian, Russian and Slavonic workmen, formed at Seward Park and foined the firet division at Thirty-second | 4 rrivin, street and Fifth avenue. . * ppl’ It was announced that John A. Wall, | 4 ” @ wealthy candy manufacturer and TOMMY DINNEAN VERY ILL. cousin of District-Attorney Whitraan, favetite Mb wis to be Grand Marvnal of this) * “10° Favorite Mas me parade, organized by the Industrial Sheepshea Workers of the World, but at the last! Thomas P. Dinnean, Justice of the minute Mr. Wall changed his mind/ Municipal Court, friend to all in need) and Peter J. Frey took his place. Soljon the east side and commodore of the Bromberg and Lewis Mazolla served| Sheepshead Buy fishing fi an assistants to Frey. mander of his yacht, the Nomad, wit, PRETTY GIRL SECRETARY THE! raconteur and known everywhere as BUSIEST PERSON THERE. “Tommy,” is grievously {1 at his home Out in the street before the Labor |In Sheepshead Bay, Ags discreet as he honors and, conse- Temple was Rose L. Lewis, a pretty |!§ Merry and as wise as he is tactful, his icgitolally 14 Hot aend, young girl who ie secretary of the ‘lines brings concern to thousands of Lawrence Defense Conference, the his friends and neighbors. busiest person of all those organizing| Judge Dinnean was taken {ll several the unwieldy divisions of the labor | months ago and took a long vacation in untons into line before the start. the South, He returned a few weeks The second division, forming at Sew-/ ago looking thinner than anybody re- ard Part, comprised the United Hebrew membered to have seen him before, but tographer to his home in Aka » of Tok din the garden of h his wife while ng taken, terward {he nd the Countess ‘Trades to the number of several thou- cheery and apparently quate recovered. nda ny at the | Pretty a rina has been accompanied! sang, and the womer. of the Ladies'| He had a relapse last Phruraday, ace perial palace and subsequently the Pack and forth to work by her brother | pajiors’ Union and the Shirtwaist Mak- companied by a hemorrhage, and this al the Ry chariver, | oe eho bagicd leave her shirt waist ers’ Union. So! Metz headed this di- afternoon his condition was reported as the Emperor was) factory In the evening until he came to tl ith the one critical, idier kneeling be> | escort hei tnterpose bis big ahoul- | Ton until It mereed wi ee uptown. Near the head of this portion | of the parade marohed twelve young amen, holding @ large canvas square be- tween them which was designed to catch the offerings af the crowd for the | defense of the two Lawrence agitators, Coins were not pléptiful. When the merged parades reached Union Square the speaking began. Addresses were made by Leone Mutchi and —— ee tony Ttallan kers 0! ote. en there were rer Saran trem Berhad Welnstein, secre. Possession represented atolen good tary of the United Hebrew Trades; | Into the group stepped Detective Fay, Meyer London, Socialist candidate for | Who ded the little inan back before the | jecturer, an Lad. | Magistrate again, al minutes ofterti ders against any display of ugly temper by the one-time suitors, MOTHER WAKES IN TIME TO SAVE FAMILY. About 2 o'clock this morning Mrs. ce, When hoe reached his home the| Raffo awoke with @ choking sensation. 4) sat down and wrote « le:ter to| She was barely allve enough to arouse Yoshiito, and then| her husband and help him stagger nd of ¢ around a Wall! the girls’ room. The whole apartment Mutsubite, Summoning his) was filled with gas. The mother ai couple care tage eon At | father were almost fainting, and the : two girls were in only slightly better time that would be coincident wiih) departure from the capital of the) condition, Paulo, awakened by the | Kroans and confual POOR PEWEE! HE’S IN AGAIN Nicholas Speranza, known to the un- derworld as “Pewee” because he is a midget in size, was receiving the con- Sratulations of his friends in the Wi | Side Court corridor to-day on being |turned loose by Magistrate Cornell | after detectives had been unable to | Drove that pawntickets found in hi: yturning home’ ‘dat the conclusion he ceremony, Count Nogl called at palace of Price Fushiml, where he a member of the Reception Com- ruler's body. fired hte revolver | Congress; J. Geldn | hey were in Japanese cortume and| from a window wig Lor, editor of @ German news-! Fay had a warrant charging “Pew: ted the boom of the gun from the | Carrick of the Fifth street statiun. paper. | with leading Oscar A. Nanson, @ former | xrounds telling of the departure lior of the United States Navy, peror’a body. an ambush of thi wel 8 on the night of | Sept. 4 and helping them rob him of | |$265—his discharge pay. Magistrate | Cornell held the little man, who has lived much of his life behind prison walls, in $1,500 bail, ——— ASSASSINS SHOOT DOWN RUSSIAN POLICE CHIEF. LONDON, Sept. 14—Col. Lupakon, |head of the Russian police dopartmen:, | was shot down while waiting for a street car to-day with his wife and Gaughter-in-law at Pyatigorsk, Ciscau- | casia, according to @ despatch received | here by @ news agency from St. Peters- burs. ‘The Colonel tried to draw his revo | ver, but fell mortally wounded could reach the weapon. The ase While the family were being resusc!- Then they took | tatea by a neighboring doctor, McCar- nd his wite were| Tick found that an attempt hed been made at murder. | An intruder, gatning access to the hall, had cut out a small fragment from the little window and Inserted end of a plece of rubber tubing fi feet long, the other attached to bracket in the hall. He bad then stuffed the aperture with rags, turned on the gas and fled. Both Mr. and Mra. Raffo are recover- Ing, and neither of the girls was found to be In serious dan Detectives from the Fifth street station are cata- loguing Catarina’s admirer HARAAIRI, Hier a foun gi home, but ed their lives had ebbed away. | oth the se FLAWS PICKED IN THE DEFENSE MADE BY GIBSON ° a apology to Prince Arthur of Con- ght, the special Ambassador of at Britain at the imperial fuseral, | oldier was spe-— Mo messages of co} ly attacked. connection with the sulci several days. (Continued from First Page.) TOMB AT MONOYAMA) what tall, who wore eye-giasses. I was not Introduced, but 1 recognize iim in 10TO, Jay M.—The last | tne photographs printed in the newa- | escaped. my function dn the funerat cere- | papers. ae arr lek which began at Toklo yes Ml “@he told me that she had decided to| AVIATOR CLAIR FALLS morning of the late Emperor Mut- sell out her flat and to move back to ON HEAVILY CHARGED WIRE. | ite when the Vienna to be with her brothers and = y , was buried alters. ly gentleman wasMr.| LeTrONTA, 0., Sept. 14—John ft. the Imperial mausoleum at Mono- William Schumann, who ts now dead.!,-),1r, @ Hoston aviator, fail white mak- | 1 ” TO THE JAPANESE «Continued from First Pa Mr. Schumann paid the funeral expenses of Dr. Szabo. Samuel Leavitt also gave out a trans lation of one letter written by George Teichmann to the Menschiks In Vienna der date of July 9 which read: "Your $14 an exhibition Might at a carnival here day and allgnted on a naked electric rrying 2,40 volts. The wire broke his fall, He was placed on a train and hurried to a hospital in Pittaburgh — —<—— DYING AFTER A FALL, Though | win tam Parker, forty-et Monoyama the coffin the train and | “| palanquin for con- Imperial tomb by from the rival at veal re ed on a funer to the bearers of Vise vie nite editary te village tative of Em- th ‘ning the tong wing sleeves under his Knees so that there would be a strain wate it and report in a few 4 al times she told us about a lawyer with sresenting the other mem- | o¢ the garment upon bis body sufficient | who was a fervent sultor and wanted to] .¢on, worked on but’ the Tinperial family, and Prince to throw him forward upon his face|aceompany her on her trip to her reli-| thirty-f) high and wa wl, headed the procession which | when he lost consctousness. Then heltives, whom he wished to mee! feazed, he fell early to-day from a thirds 1 penind the patanquin. ved from the hand of @ servant a Me hort, story window at No, 24 Fulton SEEK TO TRACE $7,100 HE TOOK Hid freriox yers and the keen edged dagger, wrapped in FROM BANK. Brooklyn. He hi roken left leg and ty was then | clean white tissue paper, ¢ the AustroHu {internal Injuries which may catise death, 1 ‘ amt placed | tapping the handle of the degger| Agents 0 ° saan iow he came to fall {s not known. toni with cloth so that there should be no|Conaulate, which is trying to Joseph Zuckerman, another lodger In « i. the sulctte then plunged the|Gibson as executor of Mrs. Szabo’ the house, heard groans about 3 o'clock de to the hilt in the lef: side of the mon, drew 't slowly across the front y to the rigit ide, then gave twist and oF Before 1 in hie 4 would t bind up the geping the name of Gibson deposited § funds as executor. sccount Aug. 7 un- Ger the name of “Lstate of Ru. und with @ clot that the contenta| ema Menschik Sabo” and made the abdominal cavity would not gush three deposits—one that 4 one vt next and one Aug. 12, Mo with. ‘yn occasions when the Emperor or the| @gew @7,100 of it-—200 Ang. 7, learned the; and found Parker at the bottom of the airshaft, Dr. Morrison took the injured n to Brooklyn Hospital. tate, have vacant bank in whic! early to-day Impressive all | hy Kreat funeral to thie afte mile Journ wt K al Consulate has found @ man who 4 be knew Mra, Szabo from the day she arrived inthis country, and!s able to prove she Is the Austrian woman, the w ' hast 4 hoeun ae he Mrs, Menachik who Shogun sent a Seppuku dagger to an of-| 999 Aug. 8, $2,800 Aug. 10 daughter of the conde gat fencer as @ gentle hint thet {to use ged Py ode, Mile d died two years ago, He knew “Count” ywed thott would be the honorable expiation for J Seabo, and is ald to be able to tell An linperi political criine, the one who com-| %he credit of the account $297, Al) | TT’ Gitson's triendanip for the ‘ed hara-Kirl occastonally would have] *&e Cor Mi Bard pezatie | omen | ri Kalshaka,” of second, at hand who,| “Burton We m, Executor.” man. , eee soma sce : Hee Me ‘This witness's evidence 1s expected to be waey were reese “aatee of Bu- | + great Importance, for the prosecutors | rewiize that there will be difficulty to proving that the woman drowned In Greenwood Lake was the daughter of Mra, Menschik of Vienna, it 1s doubt- ful if even her brother Franz, now on his way here, will be able to identity her, He was a boy when she left home eighteen years ago. She hae changed greatly with the years, she hai D buried two months and an autopsy has been performed on her body, It is to be taken up again after his arrival, however, to see if he can identity It, 1d jump forwa: im's head with a fa the a importal | sword. Slunto ritual sof Lis Matesty ain been built | NOGI AND HIS WIFE REVERSED HARA-KIRI CUSTOM. Av a rule the abdominal wound w exclusively by with the money, Aug. 19 Gibson left the book at the bank to be Dalancea and got back with it the cheoks, go they cannot be traced. Lawyers for the Consulate have asked | all banks to advise them if Gibson hi eposited money in them. They will ri gard the information as confidential and | selves in the throat, Gen. Mogi and hin wife seem to have reversed this | order for some private reason. most noteworthy exmple of cation of “Beppuku™ of Japan has the in the an-| th the tale! MAN WHO KNEW ALL ABOUT! WOMAN 18 FOUND. | of the holders of orders of Ministers of State, of the Ronin met toi ppuku. ‘The story of ther death to SUNDAY WORLD WANTS a ithe third. |tallied par 4 to Hilton's 6, squaring |thoroughly alarmed over being 2 |braced himnelf ‘accountably into the group of choco- jie drops and lost that hole 6 to par jreaching the green he was leas than a Only two days ago a woman was killed on the save crossing. It is known as the “Death Trap Crossing,” and there has been much agitation in the Oranges recently to have the Lackawana Rall- road compelled to abolish all its croms-+ ings. ‘The latest victim of the grade cro: Ing slaughter in the Oranges fs @ was two strokes more than his rival on) Hilton, however, Kave way under the strain, after halving the! fifth In,a tolerable 6 to prt 5. j Barnes got a birdie 2 to the regula- tion 3 on the sixth and that started Hil- ton down the toboggan. He lost the next two in 6 to 6, they being par 6 and 4 respectively. Both made a botch of the ninth, halving it In % to the aj-|Vived by a widow and four children. i . | There are two sons, Myron Harris, a lowance 0: ft Hil I, i ft & That left Hilton only 1) vowark lawyer, and Dr. A. B. Harrts up at the turn FE. Mortimer Barnes, who defeated Hilton has been @ member of the Engie- wood Golf Club more than a decade, | being one of the governors of the organ- {zation, He playa more or jess in tour- | naments, but this season has been less active than usual, He told the writer before starting he had not played over his home links for three months. Iie is a silent partner in one of the largest The daughters are Mrs. Tillie Davi Miss Mabel Harris. and The father was sixty-five years old. PIMPLES WOULD ~——TTGH AND BURN banking hous on Nassau street, New York. Cards: “Out | On Hands and Arms. Then C Out vee 4 443.6366 7-48 | | On Hands and Arms, Then Came in In. 5553445 4 641-8 . ‘ f . Blisters, Broke and Sometimes 625 6 i H H : $546 eti-s7| Bled, Nothing Cured Until Used nes, 4; Hilton, & Cuticura Soap and Ointment, Watson card follows Herreshoft— Out 44434366 538 Rushford, N. Y.—"My trouble begas 4544464 “| about twenty years ago, by breaking out in litte red pimples and running together 8 AR as just on my hands and arms. It would ftch and but a MATCH WAS SQUARED THREE | sospou'esst took s ditlersnt form, comiag TIMES. on my face and hands in biisvers. The Hilton had done 43 to 37 by the over stfict rating and 43 for Barnes. The plot | thickened on the tenth, where Barnes bilsters were on my upper lip and chin aad wore filled with water, would break and then: sometimes would bleed. They wore rather unsightly. ‘They ratsod in blisters on my fingers also, They itched and emarted and burned until I nearly went wild. I used ——— Salve which seemed to cure for a time, and then it would return. I tried several remedies but nothing seemed to cure until I used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. I used them according to direo- tons. I have not had any sign of the trouble since using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I can surely give them a great recommenda- tion.” (Signed) Mrs. O. M. Persons, Des. 28, 1911. ‘The regular use of Cuticura Soap for tolint ‘and bath not only tends to preserve, purify and beautify the skin, scalp, hair and hands, but assists In preventing inflammation, irrt- the match. Fired by his chances Barnes tore off the eleventh and twelfth in par 4, while Hilton took 6s | on each. Then each halved the thir- teenth in an excelient 3. Hilton, now down, d squared matters gain by winning the next two holes in regulation 4's. A stymie cost Hil- ton the sixteenth & to par 4, but Barnes on the seventeenth pitched un- 4, making things even for the third time going to the home hol: Barnes was twice on the brink of dis- aster at the elghteenth. On his drive | tation and clogging of the pores, the commen he came within seven inches of the | cause of pimples, blackheads, redness and edwe of a deep trap. While upon | roughness, yellow, oily, motby and other un- wholesome conditions of the akin. Cuteura, Boap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32p. Skin Book. Address postcard “Caticura, Dept. T, Boston." Se-Tender-faced men should use Outicure Boap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free, foot from the edge of the sandy bluft that towers above Peconic Bay. Less than a foot more and the sphere would have plunged over, probably {nto the | blue waters. The hole was halved in 6 to par On the extra holes Hilton got Into the crevice at the rear of the terraced | Green, a miserable piace to escape from, | =n Barnes at the side of hd green ee yy. where he had an uphill stroke, Hilton | Make the I 1 needed 3 more for the ‘hole, while | e iver Do its Duty Barnes by great deliberation and stead- iness holed out on his second, there- | after by getting a reven putt ENGLISH CHAMPION NERVOUS | Nieo in ton when the liver be: Poca Lyre flonan heysloeg “ned AND WEAK. Forty-one back for both under such | Pres ure was going some, Hilton, as at} laet week, was nervous ant shor! putts, often maling | Sn impatient exclamation when ting went wrong, fomething unknown to | season. Hin direction, w Detter than that at ¢ ako, Was | jof stellar calibre. Naturally he was} crestfallen, for his whole season has | a wart nd Distress after Eating, been a failure after cutting a h lant Saal Pi, Small Deve, Small Price Genuine mabu Signature CARPET, 4, 6 J. W. WILLIAMS i {hit r sane. | qruw counters, To: und Sor renter of |G. Fergusoa Cu., box 0%, 429 oth i l Hi Sel. is “t 187 K i (0 \ ‘anand "353 West ath St, Oreo. Bopt. 11 ! GUY—Syddenly TAM JAME (Runer E, Sth ate, 1912, WILL- ‘ All lost or found articles ad The World will be Informae Kullding 1. North went and Broadway Oftlee, and W 2 Harlem eat 125th St. Brooklyn Offte ton Bt, Brookly following advertisem: at rea’ ani, tited dagpuns | 14 "y {eet ‘tin bolt “on lite FF a being oe ae wlll’ ss andation. Nu for 30 daye wre test so the printing ef the ent. Another bit of newly discovered evi- co ie that the Austro-Hungarian my, of the navy, and various grades famiitar classtc in Japan to-@ay, though | | occurred several hundred pease ago WORK MONDAY WONDERS 1227 8 RA CR RERERRRE ERIM PT NO tes ERS HORT Da. W, MAYER, 97 Ful St Brook | 1 ‘You Bpectalies for the Physelane of