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NOT A RICH MAN, VS LLOYO-GEORGE THE EVENING WORLD, eae mAROR “| WILSON’S FIRST MESSAGE READ TO HIS CABINET. |Document Prepared for Extra Ses- sion of Congress Deals Chiefly With the Tariff. WASHINGTON, March 28.-President ; Wo \ j Wilson to-day read to his Cabinet his first message to the coming extra ses 5 It is 1,200 words a / Bhtish Cabinet Member Is Dra- matic at Hearing on Wire- i less Stock Deals. NDON, March 28.—David Lloyd. rge, Chancellor of the Exchequer, informed the Parliament Committee in- atdring into his dente in American wire- stock that the whole of his invest: | tin the stock yielded a yearly in- caine of only $2,000, Although he wan Feported to have mansions in various of Great Britain and France, he ed only a single house of the value $10,000, Lioyd-George, while admitting t Nig first sale of wireless shares, added riously, “I wish I had left it ere Was @ dramatic moment when Libyd-George with a trembling voice epbke of his early strugeies as a law- yer, his rise to the rank of Cabinet Min- feter an‘ the salary attached to that high office, ‘a substantial one to me hav- ing regard to the life I was leading at ‘hp time.” , Ldoyd-Georgo’a eyes filled with and he was unable to proceed for ry 2. sh Ministers of State were more than was at first thought in transactions at the time of the @@eoment made by the British Govern- t[§At with the Marcont Company for QB erection of « chain of wriciess sta- throughout the British empire. @ second deal by Lioyd-George and the Mageter of Elibank, the chief Liberal ot the House of Commons, an additional 3000 eharos faf an’ American wireless company, Tevealed during today’s meeting of Parliamentary Committee of Inquiry created great surprise among both eommitteemen and the gudlic. eal was first divulged in the nee of Sir Rufus Iwaacs, the At- - | River valley. n the Chancellor of the Exchequer plained that he had been very anzious ft the fact should be stated during sult for bel brought by Bir Rufus ca and Postmaster-Genera! Herbert two deals which were now known to Public he had never directly or in- ly bought or hed an interest in wireless concern. He asserted that was nothing about the investment pt what was perfectly reputable an¥ table for any one and took occasion mark that he was sorry, in spite of rumors as to his jous fort jt he was ac — poor maa. it he made a profit of about $500 on! sion of Congress. long and deals chiefly with the tariff, which draws attention to the possibility jthat a separkte message on currency feform and other questions may ve submitted when the tariff is dis- posed of. —_—p—— TRANS ARE STALE AND BROGES DOWN TROUGH VERMONT William Skinner Phones Eve- ning World of New Eng- land Dangers. By extraordinary efforts of the Rell LAWYER ACCUSED [ALLENS EXECUTED ‘Telephone Company, using roundabout -wires over the Green Mountains into the ‘White River valley in the upper part of Cenetral Vermont, The Fvening World| reached William Skinner of Royalton | and Marvin Hazen of South Royalton to-day and learned of flood conditions along that ordinarily sleepy, shallow | stream which runs along the tracks o the Vermont Central, the principal high way for freight and passengers from the Grand Trunk Railroad in Canada| to Boston. ‘There were reports of disaster all along the Connecticut River from points as far north as Colebrook, N. H. There were no reports of lons of life, and the force of the current seemed to be ex- beds of the streams. Mr. Skinner heard of no loss of life and no b except shacks built near the river and always danger of the spring Lap tied had been carried away. The officers in this city of the Grand Trung Railway, which controls the Cen- tral Vermont, said they had no informa- tion regarding trouble in the White The crest of the Connecticut finod reached Bellow Falls this forenoon with | deny under oath that he had written f convince me that Clarke did not write | probating the will pale into significance, nineteen feet of water pouring over|Which was written the falls’ dam. At pointe above the| hand, misspelled and unpunctuated—is ‘water was falling rapidly, while to the| Snother letter, introduced Into the evi- south it was rising very slowly. Numerous washouts typewritten, but it was entered on the tion of bridges have pers be orgtes records of the Court by Mr. Bennett plete suspension of railroad service in|*# “@ letter written by Clarke to the Connecticut Valley north of Green-| Childs.” It 1s dated Sept. 29, 1911, and field, Mass., and on the west side of| tes of an expected urtempt by ene- ‘the Green Mountains. ‘West Lebanon, N. H., across the river from White River Junction, lost its ‘water supply when the bridge carrying | Princtpese acuta, 5 the aqueduct from the pumping etation | «4. a fs i sce | on the Vermont side was swept away, | Nev ‘ —->——. JAILED BY JILTED FIANCEE. Pret. Mo " Net Paying Heart Damages, Prof. Otto Moulter, @ musto teacher, was locked up in Long Island City jail, to-day, on a body attachment issued on @emand of Miss Lena Verderder, of Forest avenue, Ridggwood, who has a Judgment againet him for $1,087 Gamages, for breach of promise to marry, Oise Verberder’s suit was not contest- ed, Ghe asked for $2,000 and when the ry heard her story, they fixed her jamages at the emallé amount, She said that when Moulter wont to Europe with a choral society to sing before the German Emperor, two years ago, he promised to marry her on his return. When he came back he married another woman, The musician will remain in jail until he can secure bondsman who will , | Sarantes the payment of the debt. \orick Hf, Me incarcerated as well.” OF SENDING CHILDS BLACK HAND NOTE F. H. Clarke Tried to Get| Money From Young Mil- | lionaire, It Is Alleged. Fifforts made to-day to identify Fred- Clarke, an attorney, as the author of a “black hand” letter written to the late Irving W. Childy the Broad. way spender, when Childs was at Wolf- H., in September, 1911, demand-| .009 on pain of death, caused Sur- ato Cohnlan to adjourn the contest} over Childs’s will until Monday. in named as executor and! ry to the extent of $75.00) in the wil, which is being contested by Mra. Gertrude KE, Childs, the widow, on behalf of herself and her Ittle daughter, Late yesterday afternoon Surrogate Cohalan, who examined the “black hand” letter carefully, announced: “In my opinion the letter is in Clarke's handwriting.” ‘To-day Kawin R. Leavitt, counsel for Mr. Clarke, asked for an adjournment to produce handwriting experts to prove that the letter ix not in his client's handwriting. He aiso declared he would put Mr. Clarke on the witness stand to tho letter. “It will take a very strong denial to that letter,” | retort. “This case ‘s taking such @ pecullar turn now that {t makes the question of was Surrogate Cohalan's for Mr, Clerke Is a member of this bar, Mr. Leavitt reminded the Court he requested the adjournment “I agree with you,” the Surrogate re- Diled. “If Clarke is guilty of writing | that letter he @ scoundrel, and not! only should be disbarred but ho should William M. Bennett, attorney for Mra. Childs, opposed the grunting of the ad- Journment, but Mr. Leavitt was so in- sistent that the Surrogate complied with his request. The lnk upon which Mr. Bennett re- Nes to connect Mr. Cifffke with the authorship of the bdlackhand letter— in a round, full dence yesterday. It is unsigned and mies of Childs to hold him up. —————___ Lagttlens t0'f STEAMSHIPS. DAY, Hlenbere TT BAYS by food, ality always ference in Titerence in pees “With ihe tone you can't fore” has a musical quality that cannot be measured by price, The “as food as” piano always requires champion — with Behning you have pare. Soe evidence and unbroken record of over half a century, two AFTER GOVERNOR" ENDED REPRIEVE (Continued from First Page.) morning When, with Gov. Mann on his way to Trenton, N. J., attorneys and sympathizers of the convicted men ap- Pealed to Lieut.-Gov. Ellyson to com- mute the death sentence. Gov, Mann had at the last moment again refused to interfere, and the warden of the peniten- tary, doubtful of the awhority of the Lieutenant-Governor, called for an opin- fon from the State Attorney-General, but meanwhile delayed the execution, which was to have taken place at |sunrine. GOVERNOR'S SON WIRED HIM OF SECRET PLAN. Gov, Mann's son, hearing of the plan to urn the final decision of his father, intercepted the Governor by tele- graph at Washington. The Governor immediately crossed the Potomac River to Virginia soll and telegraphed to Richmond: “E am the Governor of Virginis ana x Virginia.” om in With that Gov. Mann hurried back to Richmond on the first train, reach- ing here about noon. The streets about the ratiroad station were packed as, led by police and detectives, he whisked off to the State House. he issued the following state- at five minutes to three this the action taken in the Allen cases after I left the city, T cone sidered it my duty to hurry back, 1 simply desire to repeat that after the Most careful examination of the evi- dence in these cases I have not the slzgest doubt of the guilt of Floyd nd Claude Allen, and I will not inter- fore. The law must take its course.” CLAUDE ALLEN COLLAPSED IN HIS CELL. Claude Allen is said to have collapsed | In his cell when told that the plan had fatied, and hin father, have been badly shaken, showed some effects from the announcement. A fold medal, subscribed to by sympa- thizera, which was to have been pre- sented to Claude “for defending his father,” was unpresented and in the Warden's safe when the boy went to tho chair. One of the lines of his de° fenne was that he shot while defending his father against attack by court st, 1918. he * otoing «lett the Allens, Claude especially. Attempts to have the Supreme Court review the case were futile. ‘The execution of Floyd Allen and his |son Claude to-day marks the first blow lof justice upon the notorious Alien clansmen, whose lawlessness for years, held the natives of the Virginia moun- taina in terror and culminated early last At in the shooting up of the Carroll County Court, when five persons lost their lives, On the morning of March 14, 1912, Floyd Allen stood before the bar of thé, Carroll County Court House at Hil's- ville to receive sentence for his part in| eer from the custody of the Sheriff. A crowd packed the little courtroom, for the character of the prisoner was well known. Members of the Allen family were known to be in court and trouble was thought imminent. FLOYD ALLEN LED IN SHOOTING & verdict of gull fentenc mer to one year at hard labor. With the last word of the sentence @ crash of firearms broke from the spectators’ benches, Floyd Allen, the prisoner, with a smoking revolver in his hands, leaped from the prisoners’ dock and joined the rush of the gang toward the ‘door, When the court-room was cleared the ody of Judge Masete, riddied with bul- lots, was found lying over his deck; Commonwealth Attorney William M. Foster and Sheriff L, F, Webb lay dead on the floor; Augustus Fowler, a juror, and Elizabeth Ayres, a spectator, were dleeding from wounds which proved fatal the next day, and Dexter Goad, clerk of the court, lay ehot through the neck. Goad was one of the principal witnesses for the State at the conviction of the prisoners, When the court room was examinet later It was found that more than 20 shots had been fired. Twenty-seven shots took effect upon those killed or wounded. ‘An army of detective and newspaper For the Skin Use Glenn's Sulphur Soap to disinfect, sweeten, whiten, purify and remove ‘blemishes whose nerves Glenn’s Sulphur Soap Contains 30% Pui Iphur. Double 2 Trading Stamps Mornings Stylish Suits Ponsa de ce arta obit Co sab tree u a. The Men’s Suits$ Are Worth $25 = NoMoney Down $1A generations. STE eswese 425 C FIFTH AVENUE Rotrance 38th St, | LOTHING | $10 WITH Not to over WEEK) Boys’ site Now $5.96 look the wants of the boys, we are offering these stylish simeres and serges, all cae cheviots. Norfolk and doublebrested vile TRA PAIR re included and | Wounded by Sheriff Webb In the court aiding the escape of another mountain-| Ken Thornton I. Massie | pondents soon was scouring the| Nov. 11, was found @uflty of murder tn for the prisoners. Floyd Allen, the} cause of the shooting, who had bern | room, was taken the day of the crime, together with his son, Victor Allen, and his nephew, Bird Marion. Sidna Edwards, a nephew of the Al- len brothers, was captured in a hut in the mountains March 2, Edwards, who is tame, had eaten nothing for sever: days and was very weak when found. ude Swanson Allen, loyd Allen, walked up to a posse in the! mountain and surrenderea himself on |March 28. The next day Friel Allen, youngest member of the gang, was ta- |ken at his father's home. |. Floyd Allen, charged spec the killing of Commonwealt Foster, was found gullty of first degree | nan le ee. The jury recommended | of Afteen years in the penite ‘tate demanded a now tria dict of guilty in the first degree was returned on July 27 and he was sen- tenced to death, Friel Allen pleaded guilty of murder In the second degree and on Aug. 14 was sentenced to eighteen years in prison. Three days later Sidna Edwards*plead- ed guilty to a like charge and was given @ sentence of fifteen years. Victor! Allen was acquitted of a charge of hav- ing participated in the murders, SIONA ALLEN, LEADER, THIRTY-FIVE-VEAR SENTENCE. | Sidna Allen, brother of Floyd Allen, And recognized leader of the clan, and! his nephew, Wesley Edwards, eluded | Dursult for many weeks and eventually | escaped out of the Virginia Mountains | and made their way wet They were captured at Des Moines, Ia, Sept. 14,! as the result of a love affair of young Edwards. A letter from him was lost by Maude Iroder of Mount Airy, N. C., Jand detectives followed its information and captured the two men. Sidna Allen, whose trial was begun! Massie and sentenced to fifteen years in the penitentiary. Later he was con- victed of manslaughter and given five years for the killing of Commonwealth's Attorney Foster, and by agreement of counsel pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree and received another ft- teen-year sentence for ¢he murder of Sheriff Webb. Thus the penalty of the gang leader is thirty-five years in the penitentiary, | practically a life term for a man of his age. “Three indictments against Wesley ¥wards were compromised, the prisoner FRENCH AVIATOR KILLED. undone to save muddy roads of the mountains in search| the second degree for killing Judge Lieut. Brossard Felt 20bo Beet When Meter of Plane Burst. VERDUN, France, March %—Lieut. Bressard, @ French army officer, was Killed while making a fight in an aero- plane here to-day. His motor burst when he was at a height of 2,500 feet ‘The machine crumpled up and the avia- tor was found dead among the @ebrix. ———>——_ pleading gullty and receiving a peni- tal words and tentlary sentence of nine years on each. the Ah Correct diet is essential. -waste producing uric acid must be arrested-and the blood purified. Abstain from tea and anything containing alcohol; eat meat only once a day and take SCOTT’S EMUL- SION after every meal. oe SCOTT’S EMULSION is rich in blood- making qualities and makes new blood free from the poisonous products which irritate the joints and muscles; its wonder- ful powers relieve the enlarged, stif- ‘fened joints; and more, SCOTT’S EMULSION re- places body-weakness with sound body-strength by its con- centrated nourishing properties. Physicians everywhere prescribe SCOTT'S EMULSION for rheumatism. Scorr & Bownr, Bloomfield, N. J. BROOKLYN 2s OPPENHEIM, GLLINS 3G Fulton and Bridge Streets. Brooklyn Special and Exceptional Values Misses’ and Juniors’ Smart Tailored Suits Also suitable for women to 36 bust measure Misses’ Norfolk Suits Smart Norfolk Coat, new model, draped skirt, of navy blue serge and shep= herd check; Peau de Cygne lined. » 15.00 Vatue s22.50 Misses’ Whipcord Suits Smart blouse model of superior quality, silk finish whipcord, revers and cuffs of silk bengaline, large lace collar. 20.00 Value 827.50 Misses’ Eponge Suits New blouse model, just received, of Wool Eponge, in navy and new Spring cole ors; coat trimmed with moire silk. 28.00 Value $37.50 Girls’ Coats, 4 to 8 years Smart belted Checks and Stripes; collars and cuffs of batiste or silk. models of Serge, 5.50 ‘ Value 87.50 Girls’ Coats, 8 to 16 years Full length models of French and Ribbed Serge, Norfolk and straight effects, white sailor collar and cuffs. Value $13.50 PANTS goes with each suit. NO MONEY PaRN $1.00 A pate 53 to 57 West 14th Street 50 Feet from the Gth Ave. L Station and Hudson Tubc 9.75 Norfolk Suit $15.00 Needle Cord Suit $20.00 Eponge Suit $28.00 Special Sale of Girls’ Wash Dresses Over 100 smart and exclusive models of Ginghams, Madras, Repp, Linen, Lingerie, Cotton Voile, Lawn, Chambray, (Sizes 4 to 14 years) etc., in white and colors. (Values to $5.90) 1.25 1.50 2.00 2.95 3.95 Girls’ Lingerie and Repp Dresses...... 1.50 3.75 Misses’ Lingeric and Linen Dresses .... 5.90 9.75 Juniors’ One-Piece Serge Dresses...... 7.90 9.75 11.75 15.00 Misses’ Aftergoon and Party Frocks... 11.75 15.00 19.75 25.00 Complete Showing of Misses’, Juniors’ and Girls’ Spring Coats The Largest Millinery Store in America ILGOX'S ‘ MYRTLE AVE. AND 2 MYRTLE AVE. AND BRIDGE ST. _| ST. Money Saving Specials Saving Specials for Saturday Saturday is always bargain day in this store. For to-morrow we offer lues in both trimmed and untrimmed hats for ladies amt misses. t ‘onceivable shape and style will be found here in the colors and materials wanted. Our factory-to-wearer Soicy noticeable in every de- Aihese ha by the e ely low price—$5.98 Trimmed Hats at $3.98. hese hats all le to sell at $4.98 or $5.98 each, and consist of far iobby shapes in He, best ey and hemy EWo toned and solid colors, vandsomely ‘trimmed with numi fancy ribbons, flowers 2 Ss if » $3 98 urday.... 8. Attractive pes for ladies and mp and hand m hats, trimmed in sold readily 2.50 7.50 5.00 428 rele, 11.75 for ealy MEN’S $26 Dov ON CREDIT A =$15. a Women’s New Spring Tailored Suits at $25. ee ee GS The Smartest Suits Ever Offered at This Price, Over 25 exclusive models produced by New York’s best suit tailors in all fashionable materials such as French and Tailor Serge, Eponge, Whipcord, Bedford Cord, Checks, Stripes, etc. Superior make and lining. (ACOH AMO CA RTP: Poteet & ering | head, 69 inches by Select your choice of cove | (Qyens full length; ample mi any Hut Wwe 25.00 Values to $37.50 * lot of shapes in the id hair hi The ilar wholesale price on these hats is more than we are asking Y tat Z9C Sth Ave. Corner 9th SL. BROOKLYN Included are all black suits for mourning wear