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TWO WORE BOMB PLINTED IN WAR OF SUFRARETE One Found at Busy Railway Station in Liverpool, Other in Reading Post-Office. | BURN ANOTHER MANSION Parington Hall, Beautiful Resi-, dence Near Dundee, Is Laid in Ruins. | | LONDON, May 10.—Two more of the Rew familiar bombs with which the mill. | tant euffrageties are making an attempt te @care the British Parliament into gtv- | fog "the Parliamentary franchise to wemen were discovered to-day. One of them wae found in the passengers’ watting room at the busy Lime street refiroad station in Liverpool! and the ether in the sorting room of the post- office at Reading. In addition to the “planting” of the bombs, another country naion, Far- ington Hall, in the sub of Dundee, | Bootland, wae destroyed by fire early this morning and indications pointed to the militant suffragettes aa the authors of the outrage. Flames broke out eimul- taneously in half @ dozen places in The great mansion, whict was a beautiful | q@ecimen of architecture, belonging to Henry McGrady, a former Lord Provost of Dundee, It being prepared for occupancy during the summer by the owner and hin family. | The fuse of the bomb “planted” in| the Liverpool railway station had/ deen lighted by the perpetrator of the outrage but had died out before It reached the gunpowder. The instru- Ment of intended destruction consisted of a tin tobacco box filled with gun- r and iron nuts and long tuse was laid in the centre. DEADLY BOMB WAS TIMED TO . EXPLODE. ‘The Reading machine was wrapped in @ Dulky parcel to which the atten- tion of the postoffice employees was attracted by the sound of ticking. The Police were called in and on examina- tiem found that the parcel contained an electric battery connectod with ex- | plesives and accompanied by quantities | Of suffragette literature. The parcel | was addressed to a municipal official | ef Reading, who is now on his vaca-! tien. The police express the beltet | tat it was timed to explode in hie| ‘residence during his absence. The | clockwork arrangement was in perfect order, The Reading bomb was very much like the St, Paul's bomb and the Home oOf- flee experts intimated that they be Meved they were made by the same per- | @ons. The difference in thom was that the Post Office machine was in porfect working order, while the cathedral bom» could not have exploded ‘because of @ wrongly turned lever. The bomb found by the mail rorters| wae composed of dynamite, incloscd in 4 metal box about three inches square. Thig Was within another metal box, and | ENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 10, Two More Perfect Babies Are Discovered; Raised in Crowded East Side Tenements Eight-Months-Old : Daughter of Turkish Parents Finds Health in Home-Made Cradle—Sussman Stavisky Bats for 1,000, Though He Eats Sour Pickles—Each Gets a Prize. MEASUREMENTS OF TWO PERFECT BABIES. MOLLIE PALLAS—8 Months. SUSSMAN STAVISKY—16 Months, Weight . Weight « 20.1 Ths, Height . Height . oeee 88 ins, Cireumference chest.. Cireumference chest.. ....20.5 ina, Cireumfcrence abdomen Clreumference abdomen... 21.5 ins, Teeth .. Teeth . By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Two more perfect babies have been discovered on New York's east side. They are Mollie Pallas, who is eight months old and lives at No. 164 Allen street, and Sussman Stavisky, sixteen months, whose home is at No. 98 Essex street. Three-months-old Abe Edelowitz, “discovered” the other day, completes the trio of perfection which so far has carried off the honors at the Babies’ Health Contest now being held by the University Settlement in Eldridge street. ‘The contest ts based on @ score card arranged by the eminent child special- fat, Dr. L, Emmett Holt, totalling 1,000 Points, Each child ts judged by its development, mental activity, galt, and the comdttion of its skin, head, eyes, ears, nose, mouth, throat, teeth, legs, chest, and other parts of the body. The contestants are divided into three classes, those between one and six months, those between six months and nd thowe between one and two @ best boy or girl in the old+ est class will receive the sum of $0 to be put in the bank until the child's ma- Jority. The prize for each of the two lower classes {6 $2, because both these prise winners may enter for the $0 prize next year, when they aro older. One of them may even win it! Certainly if little Molite Pallas keeps on the way she is going she is likely to cords passing through the fold of either aide. In the bottom of the blanket is placed @ foot-wide board, and a small Stick te inserted at elther end to keep the blanket taut between the conis, On the board is placed a Nttle mattress ang on the mattress the baby, with such covering as the season demands. The two cords are knotted together und hetween the walls of the two were an | alarm clock and a small battery. The striking of the clock’s alarm would have slowed the circuit of the battery and | heated to ducandesence a wire that! vould huve exploded the that would | e set off the dynamit “Dunbolme,” a large unoccupied house -on-Tyne, was set afire to- “arson squad" of militant While at thelr work they wore alarmed by the approach of pas- versby and decamped, leaving behind them cans of petroleum and fire light- ors as well as ot! flammable mas torlale, ‘The fire was son extinguished. In view of the possibility of further aitacks by the “wild women” on the churches, many historical edifices throughout the country which during the season arc usuaily visited by thou- wands of American and other tourists have been ordered to be closed except during the hours of service. FEARING PLOT BLENHEIM CASLE 18 CLOSED. Blenheim Palace, the vesidence of the Duke of Marlborough, is one of the bulldings marked down for destruction by the militant suffragettes, The news of the plot to burn the palace and destroy its famous pictures reached the Duke some days ago. Whereupon he immediately ordured that the facil- ities hitherto freely accorded to the public to view the palace be com- pletely withdrawn for the present, Blenheim is one of the Greatest show places of England, as it was frei to all visitors, when the Duke not in residence there. The picture gallery contains many valuable works, among them a magnificent series of portraits of successive Duchesses of Marlborough, including the present Duehess, On tle great gates of the park notices are now to be seen say- ing the public cannot be adinitted. The whole place is carefully watched. ‘The Mayor of Windsor has received an official letter expressing the King's sincere regret for the cause which ne- ceagitated the otosing of the state apartments at Windsor Caatle to vis- ltors. The Mayor lias been informed that the apartments will be reopened to the public when the militant activi- tles of the suffragetios cease. The following # the letter received by. the Duke of Marlborough, warning ie of the ptct agalnst Blenheim Pal- ace; “I hereby give you warning thet Bisphelm Palace has got to fall by the hands of the suffragettes, and being a strong supporter of the movement, but not. for any violence, | give you this notiee, The plot is heing prepared now and the particular portion to be dam- aged will be the pleture gallery, No will be spared to ruin the > win about anything, Molle {s the first and only child of Mr. and Mrs, Mishe Pallas. Both her parents were born in ‘Turk She wae born five fights up in a dark Allen street tenement house that josties eibows with the elevated road. As I climbed up the tnterminablé stairs I wondered how on earth a per- fect baby could come out of auch a Place, But I lost some of my wonder ax suon as I had entered Mrs, Pallas's three-room tenement, It is fairly shine ing with cleaniiness, from the immacu ate floor to the Immaculate pillow cas It's in the rear, too, and therefore somewhat removed from the noises and odors of the street. SHE NEVER FRETS ANY MORE THAN A KITTEN. Mollie ix @ plump, ollv brown-eyed infant, already grea sembling her plump, — oll brown-eyed mother, Mollie's almost continuous smile ts a fairly good index of her state of health, "She frets no more than a little kitten,” according to her mother, who is only twenty-one but capable young person. and attributes to that a large meas- ure of the child's fine physical com- dition. ‘Algo I give her a bath every single declared Mrs, Pallas, “I never let her wear soiled clothing. 1 let her sleep all she wants, and that is all night and many hours of the day. I keep the win- dow open, except during the very cold weather, but 1 take care not to leave the baby in adraught, Sne goes out at Jeast once a day, sometimes in my arms, sometimes in her carria, eo has never been ick a day since she was born.” One of the particularly Interesting things about Mollie's tringing-up is her cradle, Mrs, Pallas says that all the babies in her own country, Turkey, aleep in auch a cradle, But it ie not known in New York, though it deserves to ‘be, for it is cheap, comfortable and convenient. WOMEMADE CRADLE MADE FOR NOTHING, Its framework is two cords, the con- aletency of clothesline, about five feet in length, A Ddianket is folled over end pinned together in the middle, the hung on hooks o the bedposts or any other convenient and solid support. Such a cradle costs practically noth- ing, can be made at home, takes up lit- tle room and can be moved easily. And fort. VisIT TO ANOTHER PERFECT BABY. The other perfect baby found yester- day i# the older son of Dr, and Mrs. Simon H, Staviaky, and lives at one of the buslest corners in New York, Essex and Delancey streets. Hoe ig <n un- usually beautiful child, one who would win a prise anywhere on looks as well ith. He has great, dark-brown own, waving hair, a cupld's bow mouth and @ finely shaped head.* His mother and his exceedingly affec- tionate young aunt have been “Univer sity Bettlement girls” since they wore children, and it auntic who came to the flat and did the work sg that mother could take the baby to th tloment contest, “If he isn't p said auntie wisely, beforehand, doctor's examine him and se t the what's the matter.” Not that anybody in the Btavieky family had any real doubts avout Sussman’s perfection. Now their one regret is that they didn’t also enter his five-week's-old baby brother, Mau- rice. "lL nureed my child until he was eight months old,” said Mrs, Stavisky, “and then I gave him bottled milk, very carefully diluted with a little boiled water. He has never drunk any water that Isn't dolled. Now he has his bottle of milk every day, and he is just begin- ning to eat eggs. Also he has nourish- ing broths." And then—shaden of dietary hygten Mrs. Stavisky confessed that Sussman had an unquenchable affection for green pickles, “The more sour they are the better ho Iikes them," she declared. “But 3 really attribute his health to his being outdoors so much,” she added. ‘Mere in town he goes out every day for hours, and last oummer, when he was at the beach for four months, he stayed out from nine im the morning til] four ! | i im the afternoon, We're, going to move into the country c00m om the children's "Of course @useman hes his daily Miss Mollie's smile witnessed its com-| bath, sleeps alone in @ room with an open window, and never wears clothes that are not clean. He goes to bed at morning, takes a long nap between times and as for crying, you'd never know there was a child in the house.” TWINS THAT GOT HONORABLE MENTION. ‘Two other babies achieved honorable mention in the contest, the twins Solo- mon and Jack Gerbe, of No. @ Willett street. They are eight months old, and though they didn’t quite come up to the perfect baby measurements, they showed remarkgble development for twins. Dr. Stafford MacLean, of the Rabies’ Hospital, did the judging, assisted by Dr. Shattuck. The doctors said that the one hundred and fifty-nine baties examnnied “fell down" moat frequetly on defective tonsils and skin eruptions. The ‘eaponded most yingly to the Idea of the health gratl contest, according to Robbins Gilman, head worker of the University Settle- ment, ia sR SIXTY-NINTH REGIMENT IN MOVING PICTURE SHOW. Films of To-Day’s Parade to Be Exhibited at tne Benefit Enter- tainment Monday Night. * Moving pictures of the Sixt; nth Regiment on parade were taken thin afternoon while the regiment was being reviewed preparatory to taking part in the exercises connected with the dedica- tion of the Carl Schurz Monument in Morningside Park. These pletures, with many other filma, will be shown on Mon. day night at the armory in the course of an entertainment for the benefit of the wives or parents of deceased or in- capacitated members of the regiment who took part in the Spanish-American war. Through the courtesy of the Motion Picture Exhbtbitors'’ Association, the prominent players of the Vitagrapn, Kalem, Pathe and Edison Moving Vic- ture concerns will appear at the benefit, ‘Those who attend wili #ee in real life the actors and actresses who figure in the films that furnish entertainment to iniiions y day throughout the United State Among the perforiaers who will appear are the great favorites Jon Bunny, Mra, Maurice, Kayo Prive, Edith Storey, Flora Finch, Lean Baird, Allee Joyce, Gwendolyn Pates, Courtenay Foote, F. K, Lincoln, Ralph Ince, Hughey Mack, BY) Shay, Paul Panza, Crane W and Edward O'Conner, The show will ve given on the stage and with the settings used in the Irish Pageant, —ioee YOUTH INSANE OVER “SIN.” ke “Devil” Sent it Him, MALESTER, Okla, May 1. — MoFall, seventeen, was adjudged 1 sane in the County Court to-day, His hal} sination is that he ‘haa committed “the unpardonable ain,” that the devil ts snake to tempt him and be killed the snake. He has becn attending meetings here held by “The Apostolic Church of the Gift of Tongues.” His fatier testified the boy was normal before attending these meetings. He will be sent to the Norman Asylum, sos enn ete sas apg RA Ns et SPURNED BY THE GIRL HE PICKS FOR A BRIDE six, wakes up at seven thirty in ihe AND LANDS IN A CELL Paul De Kilduchersky, Who Claims Ambassador as Friend, Waits for Bondsman. ROT 19138. THE CRY OF “NEXT,” BUT WANTS IN VAIN SAS SLONG'T ‘DE GANS AND DS Took Last Stroll to Old on Mondays. Haunts Before Death. Organized by 1. W. W. They| Old Croni Expect Manhattan Barbers in Last Call and Doctor to Join Fight. Comes Too Late. ‘wait in line for the bess barber to hold| Dover atreet died in that tetitution up a beckoning finger. Only one chate | ¢*fty to-day lies the news that New tn each shop was being used. The bar-| York has lest “Chuck” Conners, The ters’ strike of the 1. W. W. had tied up | hospital report states that Connors was the whole borough. The organisers, |*!Xty-one years old. Persone whe have acconiing to thelr chief, Frank Can-|*nown him most of hie life say his cellicint, will start a campaign to extend | “1Sht name te George Connors and that the shaveless era to Manhattan at a|"* was about fifty-six yeare old. meeting to be held in Arlington Hall in| For @ quarter of @ century Connors, Bt. Mark's place in Manhattan to-mor- | DY reason of a personality and consider row afternoon at four o'clock. able common senso wit, wase New York The atrike is not for higher wages. It] Character. He was born near the Bow- fe for shorter hours, The proprietors | ¢TY Sm lived his life on the Bowery tell everybody who aske them that it te | £04 'm Chinatown. He toured the United aino for @ higher price for hatroute for | States playing himself in “On the Bow- men who tse enfety rasore or shave| cry and plays of {hat character. themselves with any other instrument at home than for those whe reader ther ives up once each day to @ man with a white coat and a witch hazel young men wearing biue flanne! shirts, spray. But the journayman barber says | jamie breseled conte with pearl but- the safety razor idea docs not interest |(one, (gmt trousers and low-crowned the barbers in the least. What he wants ta more time for social pleasure, Billy Norv, @ newspaper writer, made | Ce MOUs, anore DEMAND MORE TIME IN WHIOH| wasn Cuinatown “lcburgow™ or erred | TO ENJOY THEMSELVES, runner for Chinamen. He had « quaint Of the five thousand barbers who are | dialect and a humorous view of Iife the headquarters at Myrtle avenue and | the writings of newspaper reporters ang ‘Willoughby street, Brooklyn, to-day. | Sovelists enabled him to pose as o ‘They. were all apick and span, carried | natown authority. He made i ' te moment's notice enjoyed a good inc ‘Tt la not the wages,” said Canoelitoini. | very IHtle benefit. Poe a eee plenty of money. They ress well, Look at them. But what WITH THE “THE BUNOLE.” Connors exploited the “aptel” styte of called “The good are good clothes if one has no chance to show them offf No man Ought te work more than ten hours a argument of Alessandro Mellic! at a Joint meocting of the Borough Hall He recalled the historic cocasion when bg & bad man of Palermo took to the hills | ‘ales were almost c & century ago and declared himncit «| Sry be told of his experiences bandit and en enemy of the State, The|'? Osivary Cemetery and coming beck uthorities 1: as one of a funeral party made he te ith hiss Ghsa marieiites Gane jearers laugh until they were weak, first wife, Nellie Noonan, rms with him and permitted him to|™ to his home on a subsidy, Im-| , Connors mediately there were a hundred ban-| 4/4 peony its seeking the same eany terms of | “ules. btn : the ium bed Bhe died tn November “fo,” sald Meliic!, “if we give in to opium . She jovember, these fellows within a week, without]! of an overdose of morphine taken making them hungry and uncomfortable, |‘ Télleve pain caused by @ herolc effort | they will be demanding partnerships, or |'2, free herself from the hold of the & share of the profits, or commissions | Pum pipe. Army Man Began Gay Time on strike, nearly one-half called in at] The notoriety thet accrued to him 1®| an4 she optained her decree ey canes and looked ready to pose as|of guiding awe-struck visitors throwg® | of Clearing Ho! Easter paraders on Fifth avenue ‘at «| Chinatown's resorts and for many years! panies pod peas CONNORS MADE “SPIEL” FAMOUS | 95,004,000 over last ON HS VEDONG NGM BRE GETS ADORE. {Is the daughter of the of the Bellamore Bqutpment Company avenue and renides with the Paterno on Claremont avewsa, After a more or lees in the Victoria, Cahoon up to his bride's home next with the explanation that “the fellowe—you know what devils are,” kidnapped him and kept him his bride, Mrs. Cahoon and her accepted the Heutenant’s yarn. Roon Cahoon departed for Ha’ Cubs, to inspect a business A month later she sailed Hardly had she set foot than she learned Cahoon can girl hed occupied @ the city and were known and wife. His bride hastened Her father began an investigation disclosed the incidents of the Vial tit pitti Cahoon did not defend his wifes hi ‘The statement of the acti hold $19,008,000 reserve in eneees of requirements, This is am tmeresse of Prevent SKIA for particular customers next week. Let us not be too easy with them.” HERE ARE THE DEMANDS THE Paul De Kilduchersky, who says he ta a close friend of the Russian Am- ‘Up to the time of the death of his second wife Connors hed confined his Grinking largely ¢o “suds,” which was his name for beer. Under stress of bassador and scion of a great Russian STRIKERS MAKE, trouble he took to whiskey and it wasn't family, is in the Went Side prison, and| ‘These are the terme which will be of-|iong until he was in bad physical shape. unless «ome one shows fatth In him by producing $40 ball he will languish there until Magistrate Krotel opens Night Court about 9 o'clock to-night. De Kilduchersky's position te made doubly unpleasant by th court last night and later plaosd be- hind the bars, And the renth lawyer of No, 610 West Forty street, and his pretty, dark-haired aix- teen year-oki daughter, Margaret, say that De Kilducheraky selected them as father-in-law and bride without their consent. Mins Bennett says she met the young Russian when she was nearing home at No, 9 Livingston p! months ago. She doesn't know how he learned her name. Having obtained her address by following her to her home, n to bombard her with ardent ers. Ho asked permission to call and, though it was not granted, he rang tho bell one night and pleaded 0 hard to be allowed to enter that Mr. and Mrs, Bennett had not the heart to refuse him, But the young man's wooing was of a mort eo wild and violent that the parents and the daughter grow afraid of him, and te avold him moved to Ho- | voken. He followed, and last Fevruary they took the place in Forty-neventh street, De Kikluchersky followed, and told that his attentions were no longer aceeptable. He would not be de- nied, and appeared at the house at 11.6 o'clock lwet night and demanded ad- mission, Mr. Bennett called a police- man and had him arrested, Then he was taken to’ Night Court. Paul refused in court to tell anything about himself or to give more than his first name and Magistrate Krotel post- poned his case until to-night so that Mise Bennett and her mother might be in court. Not unt!l today was the young man's identity discovered, and then it was found that white he may de @ friend of thy Ambassador and may come from ® | striped pole avon ceasing to be @ movk- noble family, just at present he ie hoad mechanic in the Peerless Electric Com- pany at Ne, 43 West Twemty-seventh Wreeked Meamer WELLINGTON, Ni Zealand, 10. ~The o1 1 the steamer ia gaat breaking up. fact that it was the man he had selected for a father-in-law who had him taken to in Hes De Kilduchersky's whole trouble, for James J, Bennett, « some DIn® | how barberously they had been treated. | 4, Twe besatiful Fhetegravares, wew of the British pipers fomeue peietingy Cares sita"eent wee saved when the vesee! ndrabarah eter” Co cers ers caoen wal capresens fered by the bose barbers at the con-| Then came the closing of Chinatown and ference to be held to-night at the|the practical wiping out of Conmors's atrikers’ headquarters: means of livelihood, All shops to be cloned all day Mon- PLA’ day, oo that every barber hail have FOX GAVE bd ee ba r @ full day off. Shops to be open Tuesday, Thurs- He Hved in a three-room apartment in and Friday from 8 o'clock in the |the Fox flats at Nos. 6 and 8 Dover morning until 8 o'clock in the eve- | sircet, under the Brooklyn Bridge ap- ning. ‘ proach, When these flats were com- Shops to remain open until 9 | yieted some dozen or Afteen years ago o'clook Wednesday night and until! | Richard K, Fox ¢f the Police Gesette, 11 o'clock Saturday night. the owner, gave “Chuck” a free life Shops to be open on Sundays and | icase on three rooms. There Chuck lived holildaya from 8 o'clock until 1 | ulone, An o'd negress, known as Mra, o'clock in the afternoon, Ching, took care of the room and iooked Several thousand of the strikers} irter him. headed by their band invaded Manhat-| Connors was not able to be about tan yesterday, They marched up tBe| inuch the past winter, Several times Bowery and stopped at Ufiion Square,| nis Hfe was despaired of. The recent where they told in passionate oratory| warm epell braced him up and yenter- ing he announced his intestion ‘The speakers called upon the barhers| of going up to Barney Flynn's at Doyer to put an end peremptorily to the in-|etreet and the Bowery to eee “the congruous situation. The appeal was} gang.’ that no consideration be shown elther| Painfully he mage his way up Park to the man who has a private mug on| Row to Chatham Square and to the the shop shelf or to the man who| tack room of Flynn's, the scene of shaven his own “mug” and only drops| many of hie occasionally for @ haircut, EXPECT STRIKE TO & THROUGH CITY. Police Captain Adams observed that the red flag was the only banner of the assemblage and he called a halt until EDSIDE. the Stare and Stripes wore raised sloft.| Mrs, Ching helped him to bed, A On the lower onst side, as the parade | midnight Connors complained of sharp | of barbers passed uptown, several jour-| pains in his left side. The old negrese noyman shavers were taken bodily from | hurried up to the Chatham Club and / thelr chairs, leaving customers with | cold the crowd there that “Chuck” was | lather on thetr chins and profanity on|dying, Half a dosen of his old cronies their lips, But an effort to entice away | went to his flat and found him almost ithe workmen in a Union Square shop | unconscious and evidently In a very bad 1m ara Frisina, an LW. W, Mier & Leonard ri ~ f. ig A policeman oe ne ee ee bore every, |24mmoned an ambulance from Hudson where will demand shorter hours and| Street Hospital. The doctors there walk out !f the demand {s not granted, | Were unable to do anything fer Con- This morning the boss barbers of| nore, Brooklyn think that the strike will be] The remnante of the old crowd that speedily settied. They have appointed| made Chinatown ite home in the days @ committee to confer with the men|when everything was wide open took who are oUt and think the diplomacy a ff thet committee will result In the] pp, eee ete oe Best i ery acrom the Kast River, Harlem and will probably look But meanwhile the low, strange moan |Sfter bie funeral. of wind sighing through whiskers grows steady touder in Brooklyn. arted home at 10 weak and tired. OLD CRONIES GATHERED AT HIS was notified and he —_—_ Te Probe Ruftale Strike ALBANY, May 10.—Senator Robert F. Wagner, Chairman of the Wagner Smith Factory Investigation Commis sion, which the Legislature authorized to Investigate the minimum wage ques- Ras ordered the membere to Dreceed to Buflalp to inquire into the Gegertenet gieve cists thawte: 4 ail oka 4 eure ean ——— FREE YOR THE COUTOX, -” By Using Cuticura Soap d Ointment Isn’t It a Pity to Stay in the City ? Merrily we dash aloag, lash along, along; Merrily we fis Ser the deep blus seu Thanks to World “Motor Yachts, Etc.,” ads, which find bargains in a hurry, ‘ And this is the season of the year that boats of various kinds Ss bought, sold and oa “must sell” or “must buy” desis, Use a ‘‘Boat Wanted” or ‘‘Boat for Sale” Ad, in SUNDAY WORLD’ {| TO-MORROW} Which will have a circulation York City than the Herald,