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DIX'S NEW ORDER FORMILTIA'S RULE CALLED ILLEGAL But Only the Senate Can Take the Command From 1 Verbeck. SOFFICE GENERAL’ NOW. ‘Major-Gen. O’Ryan and His Aides Practically Dismissed From Service. ‘The action of Gov. Dix in taking the cofimand of the National Guard from Major-Gen. John F. O'Ryan, an officer © fthe line, and placing the service un‘ler | the dominance of Adjt.-Gen. Willlam | Verbeck, an “office general,” has raised @ storm of protest throughout tie State militia, and it was unqualifiedly stated to-day that the Governor's action was | contrary to military law, but that no ac- tion could be taken until the State Senate convened. Neither Gen, O'Ryan, who was seen at division heaiquarters to-day at 280 | Broadway, nor his adjutant, Col. ‘Roma- lus Foster Walton, nor his aide, Caut. Edward Olmsted, would say a word other than to remark that it was strictly @gainst military ethics and discipline for any officer, active or retired, to indulge im any criticism of the uct or order of another office Others intimately connected wih the Guard were not so silent. The Gover- nor’s act has aroused a hurricane of anger, for it is apparently clearly out- Mned that it makes a precedent by witch any Governor could place any one he Uked in ©: of the State troops. The o placing Gen, O'Ryan, his! adjutant and aide on the supernumer- | ary livt was r ved in the morning mail at the division headquarters at No. 380 brozdway und tok eitect im- mediately, ‘The change, however, was | not effected without considerable ny tape. The entire stat? of officers in the division had tu be plac ute super wumerary list and reappointed to duty by @ second order with inst tions te | report at once to Adj-€ Verveck in| Albany, | On vet. 5 . Dix issued an order making Adj-Gen, Verbeck chief ot staff, placing him in tie me las P Whar What Makes FAA Happy Home Throwing a "a Plate of Fried Eggs at Hubby THE EVENING WORLD, Not Recommended as a Bliss Promoter “Keep So Busy That’ There Can Be No Time. for Recrimination, Even i If You Realize That: You Are Paying a Fool’s | Interest,” Writes “Stung” —-A_ Married} Man Is Entitled to u Grouch Once a Month. LEARN TO SEE THINGS AS THEY REALLY ARE. “Happiness Isa Relative! Condition to Be Found; Alike in Double or Sin- gle Blessedness, and Is; Not Affected by One’s' Social or Domestic At-' mosphere,” Says “Jo-| seph S. tion to the National Guard Gen, Woud ts to the regular that is, in command of the troo,s in the felt. Thus the Governor creator | 4 dval rank, como.ning the duties of & line officer and an adjutant—which is purely an office position—and ia his! order stated t he was conforming with the regular army code. GAY GOVERNOP’S ACT BREAKS REGULAR ARMY RULE. lt was protested to-day that the Gov- Masi amy ermor had actually gone contrary to the regular army law, Which declares | that the Adjutant-General, who is Brig, Gen. G e Andrews, can not be ¢ of staf, as that duty alone belongs to Major-Gen, Wood. Miliary experts to- day declared that the same law ex- fated in thie Siate, that an anjutant-gen- eral was purely a clerical position, that | he was appoined by the Governor, chat his office did not exist after the end ©f the Governor's term of office, and, further, iaat the adjutant-general of the State coulf be a civilian if the Chiet | , it Wouki be contrary to all and ethtes to allow the adjutant-general of the State to have | commend of the militia, which Gov. Dix | hag don hat Dix's eotfon had any po- Utteal significance was dismissed to-day, The statenent t : Wag a Tammany m ins purtshel by the @ med authoritatively nv. that the be in- niye two, sof the State in yan's office shortly after the suance of Dix's f ng Adgt Verbock Chief of to discuss the Governor's action, “The mere creation of Adjt.-Gen, Ver- deck as Chief o! said a mill ay, “takes away the com. ily from Major der ieft him without ‘There is mo necessity for ty anling offfvers of the line. As Mandamus aciion is possible ag Nernor nothing can be dome until to Benate meets ag vin SEES CAUSE OF TROUBLE IN VERBECK’'S AMBITION, ‘The whole trouble starix fom the ambitions of Ad. erveck, He has little by little usurped the function. én, O'Ryan, He wanted to Guar, «the Gevernor led to ve taat he Adjutant-General can be made the Chief of Staff, which is clearly against the military "The state papers that M law of the State, nt printed In Gen, O'Ryar morning applied for @ salary to jovernor is untru | f Major-Gen. O'Ryan was paid a salary only during his active service in the manoeuvers, Adj.-Gen. Ve to indorse part of his salar time he spent in preparatic field duty commenced, but did not op- | ome any y salary for o'Ryan made no » DIX GUEST CF PARKER, married and stiil optimistic (and 1 daecekad Diagk WG: deans hope you are) keep the thought of Reh iticuen Hane Fesmertaw, happiness always before you and ALBANY, Ort % eGov. Dix lett toe| YOU WL wradually create about you day for Exons to attend a dinner to | 4° Mir of fain imitation, It will help Se gINe. tonight by Alton B, Purkes | You adiust yourself to environment The Governor will go to New York to-| 34 unconsciously you will become morrow where hee will remain uni | "del of patience and toleration— Wednesday to attend the ceremonies in|, for Deeks On SOnueee eomnection with the christening of the) at the areas NIXOLA GREELEY SMITH acteristic one’s social or religious atmosphere,” declares ancther. one servative allowance, and their wives must certainly envy the possessor of a prize whose temper gets out of gear only once in thirty days. There! are really only two distinct varieties eo Copyright, 1912, by The Preas Publishing Co. (The New York World), “The antidote for domestic discord is work,” writes one philosopher on the happy home, “Happiness is an individual char- and is not affected by Still another reader, a woman, complains because her husband has one grouch a month. nice he is the best of all, but he hag a terrible temper, and when he is bad he is a perfect devil.” “When he is Some husbands would consider grouch a month a very con- of grouch—the grouch that arises Arnold Bennett discusses it in a rec Bennett gravely accepts this incident in New York. Tie prescription of more “work” plied as a cure for discord is ob- viously unsuited to those husbands wh eccentricities of temper spring om their having worked too hard. In other cases, however, it might be advisable for the warring wife to take aly and violently to the sewing ne to work off her surplus ener- sy, while the enraged husband has- tens to shake down the furnace as a/ sate outlet to violent emotions. A modern amount of Work tends undohbtedly to the development of poise and peace, There is no wom- an so unbalanced os the social idles, whowe life makes the cat parsult of ‘ts own tail appear a serious and purposeful occupation. sudd: mac | from too much work and that which results from mental idleness. Of the iatter women have a practical monopoly. from work-drained nerves is so much a characteristic of the city man that; But the irritability which comes ent analysis of New York life and | grows rhapsodical over the incident of an irritable man whose tantrums | resulted finally in his wife's throwing a plate of fried eggs at him. Mr. as typical of apartment house life arain of gray matter, you realize you are paying @ fool's interest. “STUNG LEARN TO SEE THINGS AS THEY REALLY ARE. Dear Madam: A popular notion in regard to Iymen's bond je that within {t is to be found surely and absolutely the key to happ! Happiness {3 a relative condition to be found alike In “double or in single” blessedn: is an indi- viduai characteristic, and ls not af- fected by one's social or domestic atmosphere. It has its degrees of heat and cold, as has the liquid barometer in weather forecasts. If the average human being would learn to s€e things as they really are and not as they seem to be, or as A senre of mutual reapon:tbility, of! Gthera would strive to make them mutual service and helpfulness 18 @8-] Qpicar, 1 then only, would ) to the happy marriage and] 4’ snoine happy” be attained, is no way in which a an can JOSEPH 5 rd his marital responsibilities the extent which is possible to a tisa and consclenceless wife. For t merely puts wives on thejr humor to do thelr part While it pur-|dulen Goodman's Play Stratned, sues the husband with a court officer Unreal and 6 vious. Font He a ronupear duty Auta Whether “The Plont of View," brought port. the Forty-elghth Street Theatre Love, loyalty, common sens afternoon, ever sees the ight lauohter, taleration, a determina. jof night depends entirely upon Manager tion te make marriage a success ®t |W. A. Brady's faith in Jules Hekert tua cost of everything sve honor, | 6; cyan ey le © haa ura the essential foundation of a ear ils Get kn eaar inal PY Beek RE ae may be an intelligent sign of the a portent of happy hom to cone that 80 many young men and! “mes when a girl refures to marry the woner fave been sufflciently inter: | of her dead child because he asks este! tv contribute their views to this simply from a sense of duty, and Giscuseion of Ite possibilities, Two be better for her to pursue a ealers of ‘The Evening World hav stible career In opera than to become the privilege of the last word of this |the wife of an honest man from her discussion, Here are thetr letiers: |'*home town." But if this sort of thing KEEP 80 BUSY THAT YOU HAVE|!* & be done ina play it must be done very well to be convincing NOTHING TO DO BUT WORK. The Point of View" proved to be Dear Madam: How to be happy | strained unreal and obvious, It sug. thougn married! Happiness, will 0° | gested little more than the old Ruined the wisp! We all seek it, yet tt | Lady with modern improv. At constantly eludes us Just as we | times, especially when labored attempts think We have it wfthin our grasp, |to introduce comedy were made, the we open our hands to gaze upon our |treatinent was amateurish, At other » and we find they are emp’ me of the more eager ones have ‘There 1s but one antidote for that. WORK, Kerp so busy there ts no for recrimination. If you are times the play became mawkiab. made even more trying by Miss Emily perhaps closed fingers upon a nettle. |§ the role of the unhappy heroine. of Mise It was evens's highly nervous performance of Relief was to be found only in the skilful work larille Watson as the level- headed, generous-hearted sister of the youth who was responsible for all the trouble. “The Potnt of View" was often lost in eiily talk by unimportant charac- tera Woman Killed by F Mire Annle Carvarella, wife of a bar- ber living at No. vard, the Bronx, was killed to-day in a fall from ¢ fire escape outside her They Cure Colds in One Day. Kitchen wind@p to the rear yard, two ‘Bek Cou + Cough Deoge, Ss. per box, °.? stories below. 1111 Southern Bowe- | ‘THe ANTIDOTE FOR FAMILY DISCORD wont" “JMis" HUSBAND NAS ond GROUCH A MONTHS LAST ARTICLE ° OF A SERIES SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1912 SLTED SUITOR | ‘ESCAPED FROM ASYLUM, SEEKS DEATH AND SHOOTS RESCUER Bergossi, When Revolver Is Fired in Struggle, Takes Poison. After an ardent courtship of several months Leon Bergossl of No. 167 Bloom: | Melt avenue, Paterson, N. J., won the | heart of Sadie Alaian, a high schooi girt Of sixteen, who lives at No. 908 Sussex Street, same city. Mergoss\'s age la just double ners, For several months Sadie was aw lov. Ing as a eweetheart should be. Then the | Novelty wore off and she found that | her wish to go out and play with other Girls her age had not been smothered in the contemplation of marriage. MOTHER FROM FLAMES BUT WHEN HE WAS, HE WAS HORRID | LEAVITT AND GRANT'S. | SUSPENSION SURPRISES WALL STREET BROKERS) |Firm Declared Insolvent and | Temporarily Dropped by Consolidated. Considerable surprise was mantfeated in Wall street to-day when the suspen- sion of the brokerage firm of Leavitt & Grant of No. 5§ Wall street, from the Consolidated Exchange was announced from the rortrum of the Exc ange at the opening. President N. E, DeAguero de- clured the firm was at present insolvent. ‘The Consolidated President stated from the rostrum that word of the unstable condition of Leavitt & Grant came to the earn of the Consolidated board short- ly after closing hour yesterday, and that members of the Ways and Means Comn- mittee of the Exchange had spent a large bart of the night going pver the broker- age firm's books, It was upon their re- port that the suspension of the fiem was ordere: | Peter Geddes Grant, the vrandeon of Peter Geddes, once prominent figure in the street, and Rufus ¥. Leavitt ec Prise the firm, which was estab- lished In 1. he business of the bro- kerage house has been large and branch JoMces have been matntal at Hroad way and ‘Pweaty-sixth Pat- | erson, N. J, and in Tart im, Tt j has always been unde Wail et that Grant is \ nd for that sed all th > have been of the ¢ Ino notice of {the Consolidat sald at the ‘frm had $ vault to tlde ove med main was of sted at the where there » Ingolvency or J board's action Away office thay the O cumh in a safe deposit would have been temporary embarrassment at had it been immediately available, and {it was added that with a litte time | $940,000 could have been ratsed No statement Habilities was x! on admission f the firm's assets and n out and there was the Consolidated's of charge that the Leavitt and Grant con- cern is insolvent. A few customers made demand for stock which the firm was carrying for them. —_——_— MITCHEL VISITS COURT. Interested in Charge That Follews Poelroom Rat John Purroy Mitchel, President of the Board of Aldermen, sat on the bench Side Court to-day, an interested ap: tor at the hearing of Edward Muckey, who Was arremted yesterday In @ raid on @ poolroom at No. U2 Broadway Detective Slattery of the West Forty- seventh street station testified that on ination and the man was held in $00 ba Tt was | nougn | henide Magistrate Herman in the West | Oct, 17 he went Into the poolroom and | Placed 1 with Mackey on @ horse called ty, running at the Laurel | meet. Mackey's lawyer waived exam: Both Go to Hospital in Serious Condition and Father Is Also Hurt. Mra, Sarah Garrison, sixty-four years old, dk not take the trouble to dress when the went into the kitchen of her home on the first floor of No. 374 West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh atreet early to~day to light the fire for break- fast. A puff of wind carried the flame from the stove to her nightrobe, and | she ran screaming Into the room of her daughters, Sadie and Ella. While Sadie was tearing off the burning garment Filba ran to the street to get help, Ber- nard Garrison, the husband and father, heard the cries and hurried into the room. ‘he nightdresses of both women were then blazing and he had to take turns about tearing them off and piling bed- clothes on the Victima By the time Bla got back with Polfcemen Lehman and Dawson Garrison's face and hands had been badly burned. The fire spread to #ome boxes, trunks and # lot of unpacked househpld goods, the family having only recently moved in, and the policemen first oarried Gar- | rigon and the two women to the strest Somedoly had sent in an alarm, and the firemen put out the blage after it had done a damage of %0, but not un- ti) It had started @ small panic among the other tenants of the five-story | butlding Dr, MeNeill took the two women t the J. Hood Wright Hospital, Mra. Gar- rison suffering from burns all over the |face and body and Sadie from burns bout the face, hands and arms, Both lure in a@ serious condition. Garrison Was treated at home and remained there. = ae {LITTLE GIRL’S STRANGLER CONVICTED OF MURDER. Credit for Capture of McKenna | Given to Ex-Policeman Dis- | missed by Bingham. Joseph J. McKenna was convicted |yesterday in al Sessions, before lau Rosalaky, of murder in the firm e The jury took one hour and fifteen minutes to find their verdict It eT lust strangled #ix- lyewr-old Sigrid strom and stuffed |her body tnto a coal bin in the cellar of her home at No, 1077 Ogden avenue, | where he lived with his married sister. lHe confessed his guilt when arrested |two days later, but his nae at the trial was that the confession had been forced from him by Capt, Samuel Prive by une of the “third dear In thanking the Jury Judge Rosalsky said: “Aa the defense attempted to at- tack the integrity of Capt. Price I wien to say now what I could not say in my charge. I have known Capt, Price for many years, and in my judgmont his honesty and integrity cannot be ques- tioned. I do not know a police officer who deservedly enjoys more fully the | [confidence of every one who knows him.” { Capt. Price gives the credit for the arrest of McKenna to Peter Hird, « }former pollceman, dismissed from the force by Gen. Bingham, who charged | ham with extortion, On that charge he Was acquitted afterward in General Ses- will be sentenced next also realized how much older Ber, | t he finally became | though he sald nothing. | approntensiv: A fortnight ago the girl reakzed that | her love for Bergoss! had vaniahed, She eaw him several times, thinking the lost affection might return, but it did not. Bo ran away from home and took a furnished room at No. 256 West Twenty- | second street, Manhattan. Her money gave out Thursday and whe went to the home of her brother-in-law, Lowa Tamantan, in Rutherford, N. J. He took her to her parents, Rergos called at the house that night and r newed his avowaln of love. ‘The girl told him tt was useless; that ashe did not and could not love him. ‘Why, he would be an old man when she Was still young! Her parents, too, want. ed her to marry a man ¢' lected for her, she said, Beside: wanted to go back to school. | TAKES POISON AFTER HIS/| FAREWELL TALK. He seemed to become reconciled to the situation and it was arranged that all the parties should meet yesterday at the Tamanian home. Bergosst prom feed to return all letters the girl had written him, When he appeared in the afternoon he said he wished to talk alone with her before they parted for- ever. Then for an hour the man pleaded, coaxed and begged the schoolgirl to marry him. She was so agitated that she could not speak. She could only hake her head. Then he threatened her. She sprang up in terror and screamed. Bergossl pulled out a revolver and a bottle of poison, crying: ‘I will kill myself! Bho fled, shrieking. He followed, wav- Ing revolver and vial, Tamantan, think- ing the rejected wooer meant murder, grappled with him. In the flerce strug- gle the revolver was discharged. Tao bullet lodged in Tamanian's abdomen and he fell. For @ moment Rergossl gazed horrt. fled at the wounded man. Then with ery he drank the contents of the vial. A second afterward he reeled, then fell heside Tamanian. An ambulance took both men to St. Joneph’s Hospital, Tho doctora said last night Tamanian was dying. There is a slight chance that Bergoss! will reco’ come aenenntanmceneinn ALL IRELAND TO DANCE. Dig Ball for Mallowe'en Planned by Irish Socteti The United Irish County Assoctations of this city will hold thelr big annual Irish ball on Hallowe'en, Thursday, Oct, M1, at the Harlem River Park and Casino, One Hundred and Twenty-sixth Atrest and Second avenue. The Com- mittoe of Arrangements consists of deie- wates from twenty-six county bodies, In @ communteation issued by this committee they say: “It is now eight years ainpe the United Irish County Aasociations decided to inaugurate an annual function, one such as Would ap- Peal te and receive the support of our follow countrymen wnd women, by rea- son of the plane upon which tt would be conducted and the consequent cherwoter M woud gain. It was felt that much gould be done to popularize the beautiful natlve step and figure dances of Ireland and thue lend to the annual ball thy distinctive attractions which mark th social aftairs of the Mag: the Czech, the Tyrolean, the Pole, the Calabrian and the men from the Khineland.”* The ba!l this year will excel any for- r effort. One of the special features will be a met of Irish figures by the combined dancing classes of Greate New York, which will include such sj trotulur effects as the “Waves of Tory aad “Che Walls of Limerick “Honey Bui cree Upheld, Mra. Josephine Clements, author of the “Honey Bun" letters, who nted a separation fr ents, & mining engin Je gevlogist, by Supreme tioff, had he aMlemed the Appellate Division of the Supre Court Yesterday, CERTAINLY ENDS OTOMAGH MISERY. “Pape’s Diapepsin” Cures be ode Gas, Sour- ness and Indigestion | in five minutes. | | | Sour, gassy, upset stomach, indiges- ion, heartburn, dyspepsia; when th food you eat ferments into gases and | stubborn lump aches and you feel sick und mi bat's when you reali sin, It makes such mis minutes : | If your stomach is in # continuous re- volt-~if youcan’t get it regulated, please, for your sake, try Diapepsin, — It's so | needless to have # bad stomach mak: yournext meal afavorite meal,then tuke | | alittle Diapepsin. There will not be any | distrese—eut without ar. It's because | Pape’s Diapepsin “really does’ late | weak, out-of-order ston | it its millions of sales annually. Get a large, fifty-cent cuse of Pape's Diapepsin from any drugstore. Itis the quickest, surest stomach relief and cure known, It acts almost like magic—it is a scientific, harmless and pleasant prep- aration which truly belongs in every \ home. | during one FIND AGNES CLOWES, INBARN AT WHITE PLAINS Glad to Go Back After He Experience With Cold and Hunger. After eluding svores of men who were looking for her for three days, Agnes Clowes, the young woman who escaped from Floomingdale In- sane m last Wednesday, was found early day in the barn of John Thomas at No, 18 Lake street, White Plains, She was utterly exhausted, having eaten nothing during her period of freedom, but the hospital authorities fay that her exposure will have no ef- fect on her physical health, Miss Clowes, whose mania fa of a sul. cidal nature, haw luctd periods, of these that she reveale her preson in Mr. Thomas's barn, She fald she left the asylum because she Wan lonesome and homesick, but after her experience with cold and hunger she would be glad to go back, The young woman ts the daughter of Fred 1. Clowes of Garden City, L. 1. When she was missed on Wednenday it wan feared she had killed herself. Ponda and lakes in the vicinity of the asylum were dragged and the woods were hunted thoroughly. It appears that Mine was at no time at any distance from the asylum, She travelled und White Plain, keep- Ing off the roads. Mr. ‘Thomas dinco ber in his barn after midnight t when he was investigating notw day that had aroused him This was Mis Clowen's second es- cape from the asylum, On May 31 ahe Maappeared and was found three days later In the home of John Miles, on Old Mamaroneck Road. She had installed herself on the upper floor without the knowledge of the Miles family and be- trayed her presence by taking a bath. Filth Avenue, 34th and can be relieved by a lit this renowned and efie stimulate your liver. tude, and nervous depressi vetale their youth! omen wither, te sein Mele penthl /\ Beld everywhere, No Suffering Yets! The unnatural suffering of so many women at times Beecham’s Pills give just the assistance needed. They act gently but surely ; they correct faults of the system so certainly that you will find better conditions prevail Amongst Women Who Take Pills will help your digestion, regulate your bowels, Headaches, backaches, lassi- less after you take at times—whenever there is need— BEECHAM’S PI Chairman of the City Retet of Camden, died this afternoon of pmew- monta, following a cold contracted Walle helping persona affilcted by the torgado Which swept over Camden last Jaume | Al- [though fll at the time, he insisted ‘pm taking personal charge and’ Worted ka until all the homeless hed found rmanent shelter. He was ffty-stz amd i survived by a widow. Boys’ and Girls’ Rubbers a Problem. It you are in the habit of | boys’ and girls’ rubbers, you how quickly they go to pieces. Nine times out of ten it's you bought a second grade rubber— perhaps without knowing it—when |ten or fifteen cents more knew if anyone to buy second grade rubbers for active boys and girls. We recom- mend the Hub-Mark service Standard First-Quatity rubbers, are made of best materials with | soles and heels. When properly | they give generous service. Bervies Morm for all purposes, and girls, “They ‘ome a Teles "ko Fan The Wub-Mark Ie Your Valee-Mark. If your dealer cannot supply you, write ws, BOSTON RUBBER SHOE CO., (B. Altmant & Wal WILL COMMENCE ON MONDAY, OCTOBER 28TH AN EXCEPTIONAL SALE OF MISSES’, JUNIORS’ AND GIRLS’ DRESSES SUITS AND COATS AT GREAT REDUCTIONS FROM FORMER PRICES SPECIAL SALES OF HOUSE GOWNS AND MIL. LINERY WILL ALSO BE HELD ON MONDAY BAltman & Cn} ANNOUNCE FOR MONDAY, OCT. 2m A VERY UNUSUAL SALE OF REVERSIBLE VELOUR PORTIERES AND UPHOLSTERY SQUARES SUITABLE FOR PILLOW TOPS, ETC. AT UNUSUALLY LOW PRICES AND ALSO DIRECT ATTENTION TO A SALE OF SELECTED ORIENTAL RUGS NOW IN PROGRESS 35th Streets, Nem York. tle care and proper help, Beecham's, tive remedy, on will trouble you less and | to fool os looks aad Sigle best wide eee In bones 10s, 38e. 3