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eee to lay dare a story of corruption In Albany. The Senator, who {s well slong in years, was almont tearful he rr fused to say anything about che matt “The newspapers are not entitled to, know anything abovt my client's inten- tions,” he declared. During the morning three lawyers be- | wides Genator MoCleliand called on Btii- well In his cell in the Tombs, They were Robert M. Moore, who conducted Btil- Well's defense in court; Robert Durland, and E. 1. Brisach, Mr. Bris Boh ts a Bronx lawyer with an office at f)No. #1 East One Hundred and Forty- Rinth street, and has been associated with Stilwell in practice. Neither the Diatrict-Attorney nor Jus- tice Beabury would discuss the over- tures made to them by Stilwell through +) @enator McClelland, It is known that ¢ Btilweil's confession has been outlined -=to them in a general way and that jw they considered it of enough importance _ te warrant a stay of execution. “BURNED ALL HIS BRIDGES BE- MIND HIM BY THI8 ACT. In making a bargain with the Dise “triet-Attorney Stilwell has burned hia P bridges behind him, for it is an admin- sion of guilt. He is a man of some fobrains and it is not considered likely 8 made promises of revela- IN HEAT OVER Belated Trains, Sleep Last N: Tents or ew < 180 about the methods of partic Pdegisiators, There ia every prespect story will be sensational. ser had not been reached News late this afternoon. posed to be on his way to Undoubtedly the Gover- ermor will hall with jjoy anything from Fe@tllwell that will serve to discredit Jegisiators who have defied him in the # matter of the direct primary legisia- The Governor is likely to make @ bargain extremely favorable to Btil- Seat if the convicted Senator is able * te implicate any of his former fel- ¢ tows in fraudulent transactions. George H. Kendall notified Gov. Sul- Ber about three montis ago, while the _Legiolavure was in session, that Btil- had demanded a orive from him. : Governor sent for Stilwell and 4 gaked him to resign, Stilwell refused, Sand the Governor sent Kendall's { @harges to the Senate with instructions £%0_ invest! this afternoon registered more than The regular army officers and Department of Health in charge of longer conceal their anxiety. ‘The heat was intensified by the can- vas root and walls of the @reat as sembly tent, where thousands of the aged soldiers packed themsdlves this afternoon to hear the opening ad- dresses of the celebration, Many faint- 4 and had to be carried out. Several ‘thousand veterans, none of them under the age of seventy, had to leep without tent or blanket on the field last night. More than 6,000 veterans, for whom Provision had not been mado by the regular army officers in charge of the reat reunion encampment, are now on the ground, and there are more exe ected to-dey to swell the number far beyond the maximum provision made by | Major Normoyle of the Quartermaster's Department of the Regular Army. It fs not the fault of the army officers, who had butit a perfect tent city to ac- commodate the number which the G. A R. and the Confederate Veterans’ As- sociation had forecasted, that they are now awampod by extra thousands whore Presence was not looked for, have tents blankets fatled, comminsary iu sorely strained, RAILROADS ALSO UNEQUAL TO TASK OF HANDLING CROWD. To complicate the wituation the rail- roads have begun to find themselves unequal to the task of landing all the excursionists who are heading toward the battleficld as for @ veritable Mecca of fervid nentiment. Ins due to bring their pundreds of tires faint old soldiers to the Get- tyaburg station before cundown did not erawi into town In some instances until near midnight and the old men aboard them di4 not know where to tura to find food or shelter. It was thene belated ones who had to find a place to lle down under the Just night before the opening of the great strugsle Atty years ago. A regular infantryman patrolling the camp on sentry duty early to-day and noting the forms of the old men stretched out on the wet grass, without | tent or blanket, tried to commandeer some blankets from those who were in the tents and in the course of his tour of mercy found one veteran from Penn- sylvania who was sleeping under three blankets and with nine more stowed under bin cot. They wi for his friends, the plained. But they were not saved long, The rush of veterans who are leaving after an experience of several hours in camp ‘# 80 great that apecial trains are being made up for thelr accommodation, Bo 7 ‘The Benate tried Stilwell and acquitted g Bim by & voto of 27 to 4, Stilwell made an impassioned personal appeal to ~ evidence to District-Attorne; yefhe Grand Jury promptly found an in @ictment and Stilwell was hustled to Pinal. He was convicted on May 4 and has been in the Tambs ever sinc In the course of Stilwell the Senate and in the Criminal Branch 4/@f the Supreme Court, Mr, Kendall $00 to report a bill in which he was the Codes Commit- Assembly. $ Stilwell said, according to Kendall, that certain members of Ber Codes Committee would have to have +$2,000, and certain members of the As- s’gembly Codes Committee would have }/ to have $1,500, No names were given pana Mr. Kendall said‘it was his opin- fom that none of the committee mem- bers had made any demand on Stilwell for money. 7.18 view of Btilwell's offer to confess, thle testimony of Mr, Kendall becomes Of acute interest just now. The Ken- 1 bill, which Stilwell had Introduced, from the American Bank Note USompany the monopoly of engraving the Certificates listed on the New York J Btock Fxchang: | wemeens OF SENATE AND AS SEMBLY CODES COMMITTEES. The members of the Codes Commit- ee of the Assembly are McGrath, A, reenberg, Carroll, J. D. Kelly, Cottllo nd Sufrin of New York County; Deits Hamtiton of Kings, Schwara of nssolaer, Dox of Schoharie, Pemble- of Tioga, Richardson of Allegheny and Knight of Wyoming. On the Benate Codes Committee at the time when the Kendall bills were in the Legislature wore Stilwell, chair- men; Anthony J. Griffin of the Bronx; Herman H. Torborg of Kings, William Brown Carswell of Kings, Walter Her- riok of New York, Gottfried H. Wende (@f Buffalo, Herbert P. Coats of 6t. Law- ang George F. Thompson of *,Aitilwell served in the Senate in 1908, Ot than Ace Wan he Nave, ba: B) |, 1912 and 1913 up to the time the his conviction automatically | CMe Il! Because of the heat and lack of accompodations the great camp. Others are Pennsylvanians who had been jast wegk attending the an- hual encampment of the Pennsylvania Department of the G. A. R. FOURTH VETERAN DIES AT THE GREAT REUNION. Otto L. Stamm of Almond, N, Y. member of the Twenty-neventh Mas: ch ts Infantry, died of apoplexy dur- ing the night. His was tho fourth death. Licajah Wetsa, who said he was 110 years olf and a veteran of the One Hundred and Forty-fourth Pennayl- Vania Infantry, living at Beaver Brook, Sullivan County, New York, was brought to, the provisional hospital at head- quarters suffering from heat prostra- tion, He was brought in by an autor mobilist_ who found him lying beside the road, Mr, Wetsa was at first sup- powed to be dying, but Major Hess, In charge of the hospital, sald he would be all right this evening, About four hundred other heat prostration cases among veterans have been cared for to-day. To-day marked the formal opening of the ceremonies of remembering, for it was on July 3, 386%, that the Confeder- ates fret beg: to drive the Union forces out of Gettysburg and back to the hills where the pride of the South was fearfully crushed, Ca, J. M, Schoonmaker, Chairman of the Penn- sylvania Gettysburg Commissio! the presiding officer in the ing tent, and among the speake: were Secretary of War Garrison, Gov. Tener of Pennsylvania, Comman- dor-in-Chief Alfred B, Beers of the G. A. R., and Commanderdn-Chief Bennett H, Young of the United Confederate Veterans. GOV, TENER WELCOMES BLUE AND GRAY AT GETTYSBURG, Gov, Tener in his address said in part: “We are to-day on the greatest bat- Mefield of the clvil war of the world, not to commemorate @ victory, but to rather emph: irit of national brotherhood and national unity which, in the years since the close of that war, has enabled this republic to move forward and upward until to-day she leads the nations of the earth in all thet makes for the advancement and uplift of the human race. “To-day soldlete of beth oe a ari°98. age Le ended his career as 4 Senator, So bin Tevelations to the District-Attorney cover his knowledge of trans- ‘ections in the Legislature during five lar session Be as Careful in Selecting ——— a Place to Spend Your ;Vacation_as_You_ Would Be_in_Choosing a Gem First, decide whether you will go the seashore, to the mosniaieh pal forest where game abounds, quiet country village or take a re trip Le lake or ocean steam- ig Sf by rail. get a copy of * The World’s Summer Resort Guide for 1913 “9 distributed FREE at all Wore ott es and by mail, and con- { OVER 2,000 ANNOUNCE- MENTS OF RESORT HO- TELS AND SOARDING HOUSES, STEAMSHIP CRUISES, RAILROAD ROUTES, ETC. the bie handsomely printed and He lhustrated Vacation Guide (if ordering by mail, Inclose in stamps, for postage only,) ADDRESS “WORLD SUMMER RE- ORT BUREAU, PULITZER BLDG., YORK CITY, N. Y.” get: ‘tol: 99,000 VETERANS SUFFER By Lindeay Denison. (@ratt Correspondent of The Bvening World.) GETTYSBURG BATTLEFIELD, July 1.—The best that settled | down upon the heads of 55,000 aged veterans on the battlefield here 100 DEGREES ON FIELD OF GETTYSBURG Thousands of Aged Men, Arriving on Were Forced to ight Without Blankets. 100 in the shade. the physicians of the Pennsylvania the thousands of old soldiers cannot diere in some instances journeying from Southern States and Confederate soldiers in some instances from North- ern Migr g They come from homes they havi and where, through the influ the fireside, at the school and church, they have helped to knit together all sections of our country in fraternal comradeship and perfect unity. “The great heart of the whole people of Pei nia goes out to you as honored guests of the nation and State.” TALKS OF PENSIONS FOR THE co DERATE VETERANS. Gen, Bennett H. Young, Commander- In-Chief of the United Confederate Vet- erans, in his address discussed the question of Government pensions for who fought un- “It may be," he sald, “that the sug- geation lately put into furm to xive Con- federate noldiers the same privileges in national soldiers’ homes as Federal sol- diers may lead to the establishing of thin right, or that peace in its de. mand for the obliteration of all the bit- terness of the past may demand that the nation shall pension surviving Con- tederates, “I do not even sug or in the name of my people say, that it would be accepted, but this Republic ls a great Gestroyer of the cherished ideals of the Past when they stand in the way of completent justice. “For nearly fifty years the people 6? the South without complaint have con- tributed millions for the pensions of Federal soldiers. “William McKinley reached the sub- Mmest heights of stateamanship when he allowed a little daughter of the Houth to pin a Confederate badge on his «i when, gifted men, power of forecasting political events, he urged that the graves of the Confederates who had died in Northern prisons should have, at the cost of their nation's treasury, a stone to tell who they were, whence they came, and where they died, “The scenes at Gettysburg to-day aro the completest evidence of the Kreatness as well as of the perpetuity of the American Republic. his col No man who loves ‘try can fall to read in the clr 4% surrounding this celebration ulating and uplifting power of a government.” CONFEDERATES COME AND SILENCE THE CROAKERS. Bince yesterday morning the old Con- federates have come in. The croakers who sald they would stay away from the anniversary of the battle which marked the climax of the hopes of the South have been confronted by thous sands of them. By the United States Army authori- ties, by ft Pennsylv old comrades, the enemy, tn blue, with » distinguished attention, dignified | if official, but nolay if from the grey whiskered ranks. The long travelling cheer was louder when it quarters, under ¢ Pickett and his thousands in their fearless sally 4 whelming odds, The name of the band leader of the Fifth Infantry is not known in The Evening World tence at this upiere Teepectfully put forward for attention us a real American, With the rising note of the cheers over on Seminary Ridge the band master shifted to “Dixie” without the break of a note. “Ray, Woo-Ray-Eh-Bh-Eh-Ah!”* And “Wee-E-Owoop, Ye-Ow!" came from the whole camp at once. North and Bouth were wide awake and to- wether by then. YANK AND JOHNNY CHUMS ON BATTLE FIELD. ‘The one-time Union men worked along the roads to the observation tower after arguing re- garding their positions along the lines, they headed out for their one-time posts, In the mean time the Confederate vet- erans had moved over to the long line from which Pickett's started. The men of the army of thera Virginia worked their down from Bpangier's Ridge across tl hallow valley. They met at the “bloody angle,” they met in the “peach orchard,” they met all along that tragic ground which was once strewed with crumpled corpses dropped ee grim reaper, But this Not with stabbing bayo- nets or flashing sabres or pounding tuers or muskets Ored at short They met laughing through their lips, out of eyes centred along wrinkles, bat smiling, meeting with short steps. “Hello, Johnny. Heen going over your route down?’ “Hullo, Yank What commané was ama AT. - -. to wh rereran- termes antes TITLED WOMAN ACCUSED OF UNDUE INFLUENCE IN $5,000,000 WILL SUIT. “Ninth New Jersey.” “Why, you cussed old fool, wonder if you the one that got me?” “Don't know, Johnny, but if I was I hope you got my ear, Let's go see where we were first hurt and find out if we were near together,” Two, three, four, a half a dozen would wander up and do the lines trying to find fn farm houne gardens, made- over fields, new grown woods, the exact spots where they escaped death, ‘The reception of the Sixth New York Cavairy to the Ladies of Gettysburg, who greeted them June 2, 1853, with ee und white dresses, seemed at first ‘as though It were going to be a fissile, but turned out half teary, half laugh- Ing success. NEW YORK’S RECEPTION TO LADIES OF GETTYSBURG. Only about a thousand were gathered about a stand at the end of the arena, The Gettysburg newspapers had not re- sponded to the appeals of the Hon. William Muldoon (Honorary nbder of the Sixth Cavalry Veterans), and other regular, but no less insistent, mem*ers to ask the more elderly ladies of the town to attend. Major Jerome B. Wheeler of the Fit- teentm Federal Cavalry, however, rus. to remark that it would be a the reception came to nothing. He sired to know who of the company of blushing and beautiful young women | Who stood on dry goods bo.:es along the | streets of Gettysburg and welcomed Buford’s men with singing, were pres- ent. “I can remember,” sald Capt. Owens of the Sixth Cavalry, “that when we first went into town in squads scouting | to see if any of the enemy were there we were met by a@ lot of children, little bits of things from seven to ten ye ‘old, waving paper flage and singing “John Brown's Body.” ‘Then Major Wheeler, who had beon canvassing the women present, called to the front of the platform and pre- | sented Mrs, Salome Stewart, Mrs. Sally | Hearns, Mre. Rupp, Miss Carrie Young, Mra. Shields and Mra, William Tawney coming of Buford to the town, “T think it would be nice,” he suggested, “to have @ talk from them.” “We want to hear them sing!" cried Blue and Gray alike. ‘The band played “Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys." “WE WANT THE GIRLS OF 18631" OLD MEN SHOUT, “We want the girls of 1963!" yelled the old soldiers of both armies. The women | Pose and sang the words of the song. The band was silenced almost forcibly by the veterans nearest {t, as were one or two veterans who tried to join ta. “Lady, sked an old man with a bald hea@ and red nose, going to the plai- form under Miss Yor ‘8 fect, “ain't you the young lady that Was on that dry woods box singing that song when our troop came into the square? 1 think you was.” Miss Young shook her head and said she couldn't remember, ‘ell, anyway,” sald the veteran, “here's my card. Some time it may come back to you,” Everybody laughed, but not loud. Miss Young blushed as she might have Diushed in '@%, A confederate started the retpl yell. “That's go yelled a union man “Let's m @ che And@ the men in,blue shouted in approval and choered. “I'm from the Bighth Illinois, My home is in Aurora,” said another man coming forward. “I kinder just won- dered If the little bit ofy: me the purple ribbon I have box back home was here. She ran out in front of my horse with some flowers. Kind of @ nosegay, but she couldn't reach up to my coat when I bent down over her, So I got down off the horse and she gave me that purple ribbon out of her hair and asked me to wear it ia the fight. 1 laughed and toid her there ‘wasn't going to be a fight, but she told me there was because the piace was full of rebels only two day was right. I wanted to tell oo. I'm sorry she ain't here, Ghe was a pretty Mtue girl.” He looked ground wistfully end clam- dered down. ‘The touch of pathos was thrown into ugh in a moment by a man who sald ag known as the fighting Quaker of Conshohocken and belonged to Buford’ Pennsylvania cavalry, and that the Eighth Mlinols wasn't in the frst fight | ‘and couldn't have been, Mrs. Steward rose tactfully and broke up the dispute dy telling of the fear the women of Ge! tysburg had of the Confederates and; how they were in terror until Buford | ried water to the wounded men of Arch- | Confederate brigads she found them gentlemen every minute, dM SS, MONASTIR (GREATER HEAT DUE arrived, but afterward when they car- | HERE. BEFORE RELIEF COMES, PROPHECY General Fh Has Been Less Evident, Neutralizing TherMometer’s Ambitions. | SWEARS SHE DID NOT INGITE ROT Miss Flynn at Her Trial in Paterson Says She Advised Against Violence. GIRLS AS WITNESSES. The official thermom of the Weather Bureau stood at 92 degrees at 3.30 o'clock this afternoon. hot wave is due te continue until to- morrow night at the earliest, accord- ing to Forecaster Scarr’s predictions, Sixteen-Year-Old Carrie Tor- ello Makes an Especially Good Impression. weather, howe: eran, old Gen, Humidity, is down at Gettysburg attending the reunion and is not on the job hereabouts. His absence ‘a not mourned by the thousands whu Elisabeth Gurley Fiynn, an organiser for the I. W. W., took the stand in her own defense late this afternoon at het trial in Paterson, N. J., before Judge Klenert and @ jury, Miss Flynn made a sweeping denial of the charges that she had attempted to incite the strikers to use violence against the men in the silk mille who refused to go out. On the contrary, she sald, she had advised her hearers at the first meeting of the strikers to use only persuasive and tact- ful means, “IT told them,” @he sald, “that the po- lice were ready to arrest any of them who used violence, and that we would be playing only in their hands if we used anything else but persuasive and tactful methods.” ‘The defense began the day with its denial of the charge that Mise Flynn told the strikers to go to the silk mille and drive out the recalettrant workers— “kick them out, club them out."’ The first witness was Mrs, Adolph Lessig, wife of the president of the Patereon Silk Workers’ Union, She testified that she heard Miss Flynn's entire speech and there were no suggestions of v lence whatever. “She told the strikers to picket the mills and to keep their hands in their pockets to prevent the police from put- ting in rocks and revolvers so as to have evidence Inst them as they did in New York, id the witness. Assiatant Prosecutor Force harangued the witness bitterly, but could not shake her story. He was equally unsuccessful in his attempt to entangle Otto Sayer, Le xt witness, who corroborated Mra, e's story. ALL TELL THE SAME STORY IN DENYING THE CHARGE. One by one the witnesses for the de- fenne, all stanch I. W. W. supporters and astlk strikere—several of them showing the pinch of poverty and star- vation from the nineteen weeks’ wage- less strugsle—told their apparently straightforward and convincing story of what happened at the firet etriker meeting. They differed only in minor details, and they were tmpregnatle in their stand that no violence was urged by M Fiynn or any of the speake: it that meeting. Beveral witnesses said they heard Police Chief Bimson order Miss Flynn to get out of town, When she refused they said Bimaon told her he would send her to jail. One of the most impressive of the witnesses was sixteen-year-old Carrie Torello, the militant little striker who has been put in prison five times by the Paterson police for her activities on the picket lines, She is an orphan, brought up by a family of some means, and although she has not worked sinc the firat day of the atrike she wan able to make a neat, almost fashionable picture of herself Ina pretty pink dress and velvet hair band. She was a clever witness, anewering all questions and cross questione with sureness and dex- terity. Another girl witness, Annie Kanova, made en equally favorable impression, She too ts a striker and active picket, and, for her years, remarkably self- possessed and intelligent. Both of these girls withstood the rather harsh methods of their croas-examiners. pallsacall issn MAIL AUTO PIERCES WALL. and factories early to-day. At 8 o'clock the humidity it 80, but on the run downward; at 9 o'clock It was 78, at 10 o'clock, 7% and by 11 It touched the 70 mark. Noon saw % and at 1 o'clock it was 2 degrees hotter The temperature, wever, showed early a brisk bullish movement. Start- ing with the conservative figure of 70 at o'clock, the frisky fluld began to march up the column of figures with steady purposefuine: At § o'clock it had Passed 72; at 9 o'clock 77 was left be- hind; at 10 o'clock 80 wi ertaken, and an hour later the top of the m cury column was kissing §% goodby, The secesawing of tho temperature and the humidity during the heat Increasing and the moisture in the atmosphere mercifully decreasing with the advance of the hour in the following table: Meat. mumiatty. 8 o'clock ® o'clock 10 o'clock. sgesessas or It Is the hot wave from the Central us on the way out to melt the icebergs, says Dr. Scarr. It was 10 in Chicago yesterday, and it will be hotter than it is here to- before thunder showers bring relief sometime late to-morrow afternoon, During the day the heat resulted in great distress and several prostrations. Among the more the fol- lowing. Brooklyn, nue, icken at Messerole street and y avenue, Taken unconscious to Catherine Hospital, Unknown man, twenty-two years old, found with one arm impaled on a picket fence In front of No, 27 Quincy street. Dr. Stevens of the County Hospital sald that he had undoubtedly gone insane from the He) te) Ave. fest, fou Inahee. tn height and weighs 1: is pit wears a dark sult and a triped shirt. —_ STEERS MAGISTRATE AGAIN. Wil Resign To-Night. Borough President Alfred E. Steers of Brooklyn will resign his office to-nignt to resume hig former post as a Magis- trate in Brooklyn. Mayor Gaynor an- nounced the appointment to-day, Steers was Magistrate !n Brooklyn for expired Mayor McClellan named How- Nash to succeed him because of w forbidding the appointment of Steera's term would have expired next January. The appointment fs Magis- which allows the reappointment of a whether or not he be a Public Works Com- loner of Brooklyn, will gct as/Bor- ugh President until Mr, ra's wuc- r is elected by the Brdoklyn Al- dermen. Louls H. Pounds, Plain Engli (From the Toledo Blade.) By the extraordinary contortions of her neck he concluded that she was try- ing to get a glimpse of the back of her new blouse; by the tense lines and acin- tillating flash about her lips he con- cluded Sha her mouth was full of pins. ‘An auto mall wagon of the heaviest type, driven by Qrato Toarmine of No, 512 Bast Tweltth’ street, was passing east on Fifteenth thi when, at Avenue B, the went wrong and the chau Not control the ponderous vehicle. It swerved, crossed the sidewalk and went right through the brick wall of Ray Joon on the corner. ak of No, 590 East Elgh- A emnpeiea thé “ and Charan Cardy of the (nieces eee eens satin at same address, who were playing poot| “I've asked you twice to raise the tn the saloon, were knocked down and |blinds so that I can get more ligh covered to their chins with brick and |James,” she explained. n't you un- plaster; the other men in the saloon and plain Engl fled shrieking to the atreet. Amia Great excitement in the neighborhood an ambulen pital, The pool players wei up. a When Brains Are Not Brains, (Prom the ‘Chronicle, Loudon When are brains not brains buteh reply would probably be “When they are sweetbreads.” Except in the form of sauce served with the | head to which they belong, brains ha jot been thought much of an English | fiat, The French hem ext lin that delight? | miato." The ordinary householder nas! diMculty in obtaining ox or cal wheep's brains at a butcher's. They can be obtained only on o: {The explanation ts that cunnin, able to doctor them tn eu: so that they can be breads, which they | tein tent. An exp ht not to be deceived, but on that ‘all sorte are so tooks very nice. — Wun—#o — g#—ph — mf— ugh ~ was her next remark, did that," he nodded nicely as it 1s. HE Glorious 4th made more glori- ous than ever. A box of te Bonbons and Chocolates will make the holid complete. eld by Lending Druagtets Everywhere 20 <Gigde Sieres to Grocter New Tork erhape it would look better if you and “but It fite very | Harr! to get a cup of coft MOTOR SPEEDERS IN JAIL, -FED BY FINE MONEY NOT PAID IN Only One of Spends Vacation Fund Satis- fying Chums’ Appetites. All winter long twenty; Leo Wall It was | Strahle, twenty-one, young machinists 100 easily in the atreets below and the | employed by the Bosch Magneto Works In Springfeld, dia to spend a week Coney Island, Whon vacation t'me rolled There is one saving grace in to-day's| around they had $9 between them. That worthy vet-) gtotmar owns 4 tandem miotorcycle and Walsh @ single one. Night they started fro. Sprivsfeld. Stamford, Conn., began to tuck their handkerehiefe in| dent, and %0 went to repairing Stolinar's thelr shirt colars on the way to offices| tandem, on which he and Strahle were riding. hour on the Gra driving. Tremont station Levy to do but with the alterna days in the city They had only the] and Walsh insisted that Stolmar take pay his fine, and go out with thi Strahle and mar. And he refused meagre purse Strahle, with th the: each, fone, He got a States that has begun to slip down on |the Harlem Prison, and made good at once by “When noon, the youth: down to Coney over, spend,” ending fifty years old, of | tory to “have the laug! Tammany Is trict The West Side Forty-third and and planned for receive the atter boomers of a Whitma: Tenderloin district and the display of illuminated transparencies throughout Manhattan, The Irish Amet ten years prior to 199. When his term} roague, with headquarters in the Hotel Aator, was also is to support William Crowley, jare Men's Association, President of the Tammany was Last night Motorcycle Policeman Jack Haggerty timed them at thirty miles an rested Stolmar and Walsh, who were They spent the night In the day before Magistrate Levy in the Mor- risania Court. Stolmar and Walsh plead- #4 guilty to speeding, and under the new law there was nothing for Magistrate in three days for him. “I'll do no such thin, “If you go to jail, 8o will 1.” have as food a t did their sentence of th Strahle accepted, but deolared he ex- pected to spend most of tne money | providing good meals for his compan: | e get out Thursday after- 4, en if we don't have They declined to appeal friends for assistance, declaring they HANG WHITMAN BANNER. ment of Frank Moss for Dis- ation, to boom Whitman for Mayor, en- | j tablished general headquarters in the Putnam Bullding on Broadway between ters in Kings, Long Isiand City, Flush- ing and Jamaica, in due time. were also made for the swinging to-day ed King Angeline Trio Not Arrested Elabor isationa cess, TI! Stephen Stoimar, agea| 19 A. M. ish, nineteen, and Lewis the sived thelr money jew York City and of July Last Saturday | Pedy, In athletic they met with an accl- concert. carnival the crow! nd Concou and ar- and were arraigned to- climbing to fine them $25 each, tive of spending three prinon. $30 left between them, the sights, returning | Thea replied Btol- atre, to be moved. So thetr stroyed was turned over to fe Injection that he ime as he could, while days one of t furnished room near in @ big lunch. a deci pf ‘we'll ride look it cent to id to their did not want their ste AS fac- clogged bowels without eed siping. WEST SIDE MERCHANTS Sones Every Considering Indorse- -Attorney. hegee Business Men's Assoc!- Forty-fourth streets, opening branch quar- at once, When Other boroughs tion of the Whitman Arrangemen banner in the upper at night wean Good Government organised to-day, and Whitman and Blake. President of the was elected League. discussing to-day the trate was possible under @ new law | advisauility of indorsing Assistant Dis- trict-Attorney Frank Moss for District- Attorney. the prosecutor a Moa it was he, they the ough Whitman MORE THAN BACK TO PITTSBURGH, At one time in the better —>_—_ Ask y nd are now saying that ndidate, beoau declare, who prepared | rel Rosenthal murder t oases and successfully prosecuted them, al- got the full credit. 200 VETERANS GO PITTSBURGH. Pa., July 1.—More than 200 veterans from Allegheny County who went to Gettysburg to attend the semi- centennial celebr: day because t ation returned home to- could not secure sleep- {ng accommodations or anything to eat on the dattlefe ‘The men walk ond Park Row, Cortinnd trying to find a place to eat; id or in the town of KING AND QUEEN FOR WOODSIDE CAR Parades, Concerts and Other Exercises Planned for the Fourth. Tellers in the contest ivr the Kili and Queen of the Woodside, L. L. « bration and carnival announced tod that Henry Steinmann had Ween ole 18,540 votes, the Woqdside clubs dren, political lodges and clubs, ercises will be held in the grounds Catholic Church. Dennis O'Leary will make the Fou be Maurice Connolly, Postm: afternoon there will be,band con Saturday night there will bé ——ee SIZZLING UP IN ALBANY, Street Temperature Goes Over the ALBANY, July 1—With the official’ thermomet joxrees, and with thermometers in thi Albany to-day experienced th day of the year. The first case of héat prostration was reported during the morning. ee , GAIETY IN ALBANY BURNED.) ALBANY, July 1.—The Galety Thee an Albany landmark, smouldering cigarette or cigar left by last night 1s supposed to have started the blaze. cupted to-day. CHILDREN LOVE OYRUP OF FIGS. Sweetens their stomachs and © cleans the liver and waste- after giving hi Figs that this is the ideal laxative and physic for the children. regulates the little one's stomach, liver 4 and 80 feet of tender bowels so prom, ach sour, | has stomach-ache, | tull of cold, tongue ¢ preted, gi coaaset ours uP waste, undigested cpralpate. wet be wi puligesty ese move on and out of ‘aera Games, Orations, with 39,628 votes, wille 3 Alberts became Queen Plans have been niu a social to make the carnival a he carnival opens Fridvy with @ parade of achool « and civic soviet Fourth of July Congrena! address. Other speakers Will Borough Prési- an, Commissioner In the corte, fsamée, games and baseball while at night there will be another band and Mardi Grae, toget! th ning of the King and Quees. 100 Mark. ” registering up well above the 1 test Was a Landmark im the Capital City. was de- by fire thia afternoon. A he apectators at a boxing bout The building was unoc- mother immediately realises child delicious 5: of Nothing else they dearly love its delig! tal te, fet our child isn't feeling wath rete aleely eati acting naturally it is insides need a gentle, thorough cleansing regularly. jure sign That ite jitele Geo feritebe, feverish, stom breath bad or your little one hoes, sore throat, a let Fall directions fer ek for childrem of all and grown-ups ur druggist for Pally ‘of Figs orale a i te Rep red by the California ja.the delicious tasti Refuse hort ald Take Plevatne ta Third ed around the grounds then took a train for bey uemees nomy. —— it tapas at 4 125th mete Rares Biotes, HELP WANTED—MALE, x aa! overs, oy opening, at 11 e’clook, 208 BROADWAY ener Fi Street