The evening world. Newspaper, January 3, 1914, Page 2

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see TO UL TOMO, President's Danaher ws She, WSONSTANOSPAT BAKER ANT WM ROCKEFELLER lGRPOFTANNANY See WOMAN IS WED eetcecae rm a ON MEXICO AFTER | WITH JAMES catia Will ONSERVICE BOARD: aR aT £€ Hd sf ittalton chief, mounted It i ts x i E F ney for Mrs. Meese and her children, | ernment could not blocks “the families will be more deeply involved | °f Mexic> without destroying the value Monday, whi of the customs receipts mortgaged to —_. ve \ ween Nelly Wit ask re, These points of He grabbed Mra. Buguelln, to Fireman Bernard J. Gal- ‘im and started upward again — French girl's courage her. She climbed out of by hy de and, or ae te ponte we {Smashes Glass as She Sees Fees eet oe Rend oe ner| Flames Eating Way To- the bandoned hi er whole woleht, owed 0 ward Her Bed. Walsh's right hand. He kept arip on her ankle and her body flashed by Jeanth, the Cantein cheered’ ner nine | NEIGHBOR SEES PERIL. PIRE-FIGHTER FALLS, BUT CLINGS TO THE GIRL. The strain was too great for water, | Lies Unconscious From Loss of ‘Tho captain was swept off the ladder, Dat he twiated himeclf as he fell and Blood as Painter Makes ‘turned in euch a way that he toppled f hi Between the ladder and the parlor win- Daring Rescue. @ew,. from which a rush of flames had broken the glass and out of which fi and omeke was ring. Tere wee 8 ory from the crowe ao] un senm Cofenun, twenty-one years hls body disappeared into this cloua of |%4 living at No, S@ Second street, ree ‘and brown, but there was another | Brooklyn, lay in bed this morning, this time of wonder, as the crowd | happy in the consciousness of approach- that even in his fall he the girl. Bs 4 NOt} ing motherhood. Her husband had ‘ gone to work, and she was alone in her ee ey aan a to | apartment on the second floor when fire ee wade broke out in the front room, adjoining breath out of her body, Ut | that in which she lay. She heard the later Walsh appeared at the | crackling of flames and smoke circled window. His helmet W8*/ through her pedchamber, In terror, streamed down hie face | she tried to rise, but her condition made on the forehe Spi it impossible, hig clothing, and it was only A light well spans the distance of a ret of flame dighted the smoke | few feet from No. 887, the adjoining could be seen clearly, But he |apartment, the home of Mrs. Mary ‘there safe, holding the senseless| Ana Stanley. Mrs. Cofchur screamed and slowly drawing her up until be | for ald. She made a vain effort to raise eould get her in O18 arms. the window. She pounded on the pane, GALLANT RESCUER AND GIRL CARRIED TO SAFETY ‘Beneath him his men were working Mike madmen raising another ladder to him, and en instant later Galvin leaped | and jooked across the up the runga, grabbed the girl, whom he passed to men below him, and then 4 Ege pat " ri ay the glass with her fist, smashing it, and then fell back on the bed, exhausted. Mrs. Stanley heard the crash of glass ight well from PAINTER SAVES WOMAN THRO’ WINDOW. Mrs. Stanley te past middie ai ‘Rot active in her movements. Ti of the poor girl in h pleasn danger unnerved her. She tottered to the door of her own apartment and The fire started when Mamie Ham- | acreamed for help. Meantime some one eet the Christmas tree on the/ had seen the flames from the street parler to show it to little Gregory. | and turned in an alarm, Wiliam Man- ethers were upstaire and when & | gin, a painter living on the floor below, ignited the flimsy decorations | heard the cries of Mra. Stanley and the tree buret into Rame the maid | pushed up the stairs, unaware of the the boy upstairs, where Sh®/ fre, Mrs. Stanley, in her terror, could warn the others. So quickly | oniy point to the open window. fre Mangin caw what had happened. The girl was unconscious The painter bridged himeslf between the two win- Gow silts and tried to raise the sash. Ho realized there was no time to kicked the window in, The fell on the girl's face, cutting her severely, Mangia tore away the cash and, reaching in, grasped the girl in his arms. In @ few moments he had her FIGHT FOR GRAVE PLOT | [S%cceh.it* arinesr cf Mrs, timers KEEPS BODY UNBURIED| ses, ince ci. as ore ‘ there. Ti was tak path ~ Relatives in Court Over Ownership, | ,*8* firemen made short work of the fire. | and Funeral of Frederick —_——_>—___ “ NEW YORK BANKERS “> Meese Is Held Up. GAVE $930,000 OF She ostatation of afraDera Mote] MEXICAN BOND LOAN. Aled in the Supreme Court by He jeese in the etead of the late ‘Meese, her husband, disclosed in @ re Molidowney and two girls known fred and Anna, who had come his morning and whose names coud not be learned. They all escaped ‘the back door into the yard, ret i PARIS, recently arranged here by an inter- national group of bankers for the sole use of meeting the January interest on the Mexican Government and the city of Mexico bonds amounted to about ronducted by Albert Turrettini, plaintiffs father and his | Paris et des Pays Bax, who was assisted the dead man, purchased two/| by the Mexican Minister of Finance, plots in the Lutheran Cemetéry, | Adolfo de la Lama. ‘simer of Frederick Meese died and,| Home curious points of view developed the bankers here pen in the event to Henry Meese, he loaned | St the senterense @s to what might fon Gurlod.. "Thon, the “tamity | of the, imercit of the stexican debt ing defau view which wa arose. Frederick Meese and | strongly supported wife claimed that Henry Meese! disapprove of Washington's pol ‘hie family outright. Henry Meese | that as the loan uit in June, 1913, and in Sep. | @ per cont. of the Mexican ci 7, 1018, while the action was ati! | {he loan of 1913 by 3 per cen European government hold the bonds to houses by inter and to collect the interest themselves. + “Recording to Joseph D. Kell affirmed that the United Court Justice Gavegan to com- sereiga bond hol Jew will arise again when the ne: a leg easied iting encanid Iments fall due Melly alleges that the burial plot purchased with money furnished a! ther, sisters and brothers, —_—_— Tine eka Vic aus, |WAR PANIC STARTED SPAAABBLABAALAABBALLLAALBLABLAL AAAS CLSSLLAA ALABLALAALAAAAALALAALLAAAALALABARAR EEEEEESE SEES EEE EEE EEE EEE EEE SEE EEE EEE EEO E TES EEL EK ELE EE EE ESE ESE EE SEES E SEE EES eKererKrKerrrrKE KEKE KEK KEKE KEE Kee Performance at Hotel Astor) Will Be With Same Cast as at Cornish, N. H. nce at the Hotel Astor. Since the Cornish production there have been repeated efforts to have the pretty masque put on in this city, but the President would not consent. He has now withérawn his objections and are under way for the Miss Eleanor Wilson probably will ap- New York on Feb. 24 in the lead- of the bird masque in which @he was applauded at Performance for the beneft of the Sanctuary of Birds at ‘The cast will be practically the ‘as at Cornish, Including, besides Miss | hhitely. Wileqn, Joseph Lindon Smith, Percy Mackaye, Ernest Harold Baynes and| President was very much pleased with | Gepogits, his lortg conferes with Lind. Where ; for the tast two or three days he has| WILLIAM hig dghidind ont pila seemed much concerned, to-day he was TY-NINE DIRE! Juliet Barrett Bynner, who took the part of the plum be able to . %—-The foan to Mexico in the forthcom! planned to have the N MITCHEL SAYS HEARST IS STHLL HIS FRIEND Hasn't Any Report of a Falling Out —Ellison Calls to See (95,000,000, of which total New York Dankers took $990,000, London $3,465,000 and Paris $1,805,000. The negotiations RUINED FIRM SUES HORSE-POISON BOSSES Ask ‘$15,000 Damages From Men Now in Tombs—Driven Qut manager of the Banque de Mayor Mitchel was on the job bright and early to-day and callers were as scarce as on hin first business day in He had plenty of time to devote nd routine business, which he expects to clean up before As an aftermath of the horse potson. Harry owners of K. Ico Cream Company, th two partners to-day ‘filed a $15,000 dam.| ships before Christmas, age suit against by financiers who Y to aiven the burial plot to Frederick | ward Provisional President Huerta was M0 is secured by it would | to correspondenc Frederick died. Henry told be the duty and the privilege of the Swireky and who are now in the David Kalhofe: charged = with of the gang that polsoned the Mr, Mitchel was asked about @ re- port current In political circles that out with Willlam Ran- dolph Hearst becauses of his failure jain of Mr, Hearst's The rumor origt- nated uptown last night and spread fonal landing partics The section holding this opinion also The complaint discloses that the gang wor Wecker and Weiss had to give - thett businesa when they found their horses dead and crippled and the machinery in their plant ruined. the ports] to take care of political favorite ine lens changed in the ich Foreign Office Government has ‘mpathy whatever with these views. ere In any trouble betwe I haven't heard any> * sald the Mayof, Mayor Mitchel has not heard, he sald, Swiraky and Hearst and m thing about it, Samuel Freedman and Thoma: plaintiff's busin campaign began In March, the complaint recites, when acld was spilled upon two In June poison tered to several horses and one was been offered the position of Corporation was adminis- ~TALK WT! LIND President Declares There Is No Change in His Policy or New Plans in View. HUERTA MUST GET OUT. Special Envoy Returns to Vera Cruz at Once to Continue His Mission. GULFPORT, Miss, Jan. 3.—Presl- dent Wilson announced to-day that his conference with JohW Lind had devel- oped no change in the policy of the Washington Administration toward Mexico and that no new plan or move In the situation had been decided upon. Standing In the eun at a railway cross- ing in this city to-day the Chief Execu- tive made this plain to newspapermen @athered about him. He halted stories that he had decided to change his meth- Ode and to eubstitute force for the pres- ent method of diplomatic and financial boycott, JUST A “GET TOGETHER TALK,” WILOON EXPLAINS. ‘The President referred to the confer- ence as a together talk.” He ex- plained that although Mr. Lind had con- stantly been sending full despatches, « conversation of a few hours had been deemed worth gore than weeks of tele- graphic communication, with the added value of affording an exchange pointe regarding the situation. President Wilson added that ther had been no special occasion for M Li viait—no advices, excitement or new questions, ‘The President said that his conver- sation with Mr. Lind had covered the whole field of conditions in Mexico but that no particular measure.or plan had been dwelt upon. When asked if he was more hopeful for @ speedy settlement of the trouble Mr, Wilson made it clear that his per- of the situation hed not ly be: ing crushed, not only by the Constitu- tionalist forces ut ghrough incesant {selation and thet inbvitably it must were there.” . DISCUSSED. FOLLOW LEAD OF MORGAN More Money Trust Heads Plan to Get Out of Interlocking Boards of Directors. POWER IS TREMENDOUS. Prepare to Withdraw as “Banker Directors.” ‘The retirement of J. P. Morgan from his position as King of Directors leaves three men still in the field as leaders of the interlocking directorate system who are expected to follow his example. These are William Rocke- | feller, representing the Stendard Oll | group; James Stillman, bis right | hand man, chairman of the Board of the National City Bank, and George F. Baker, representing the First Na- tional Bank interests as chairman of its directors and also president of its investment concern called the First | Securities Company. Mr. Baker has, in fact, announced his intention of quitting as many director- ates as will allow him to do #0. ‘These three men meet each other round the directors’ table of numerous corporations. Their interests were in many instances closely allied with those of the house of Morgan. All of theis, in particular Mr. Baker, were assoct ates and lieutenants of the elder Mor gan in his greatest nancial coups. ‘They belonged to his set and were his intimates in friendship as well as in business. Trio of Leading a credited in the Directory of Dire importance. Among these are tweaty-| nine railroads and nine banks and’ York Central and most of its subsidl- aries, the Reading group of railroads and coal companies, the Jersey Cen- tral, the Lehigh Valley, the Lacka- wanna, Northern Pacific, the Burling- ton, the Northwestern and the Erie. I @idn't see them if they| In New York banks he is most potent. In addition to controlling the First) Centra; Lines, New Haven, Reading, EMBARGO ON ARM6 WAG .NOT| National, he is director in the Astor Trust, the Chase National, the Farmers ‘Trust, the National Bank of Commerce, The ‘President Igid emphasis on the) the First Securities and the New Jersey Statement that nothing Healagd Such 84| gecurities, Besides these there are gas the removal of the embargo on arms Yes, électric companies, the Tele- ‘of similar moves had been dlecussed. presage Trust, the Pulkman Company and He said that the Chester would leave Gina beat eres afternoon, and that| ir, Baker is a common director in me the Steel Trust. Mr. Lind would remain there’ inde@-| the six railroads which haul © per plainiy in high spirks. ‘There was no question but that the cent. of all anthracite coal marketed and own & per cent. of al) anthracite Next to Mr. Baker in the list ts Will- Lind will not go to Mexico City on his| iam Reokefetler, with forty-nine direc- partment oy cable. pel Ta CHESTER A CHRISTMAS SHIP. From Mem in Siexican Waters. GULFPORT, Miss, Jan, %—The com wing Crash Aute Proves Fatal. WORCESTER, Mgss., Jan. 3—Aftei Charles D, Wheeler, died to-day in th City Hospital. The hospital physician: frightened to death when an qutomodii by a trolley car. in her brain. return, but will remain in Vera Crus ‘land de in constant touch with the de- | roads, inoluding the New York Centraf Crateer Brought Belated Letters! torships. At most of the meetings Mr. torehips, of which thirty are of ratl- system, the New Haven system, which he ruled jointly with Mr. Morgan; the Lackawanns, the Milwaukee and the ‘e| Union Pacific. In addition he holds @even gas and electric company direc- Rockefeller encounters his friend Mr, Baker and the interlocking reationahip ia made effective. to this port of the scout cruiser ‘Third Chester, bringing John Lind from Vera | sues tien, wits hirsostoue SEP gave the vessel's officers @ chance ? Crus gate credit, of which twenty-one are rail- to Gispose of @ great deal of delayed > mall from the warships that have been reads and seven danks and trust com: in Mexican waters, Muoh of it, it was said, was posted by the men on the war- panies, There is much in common be- tween Mr, Stillman and Mr, Baker. Each was president in earlier years of @ great national bank. Each laid down the active direction of a purely bank- ——$—<—_—_— GIRL FRIGHTENED TO DEATH.| ing business for the benign influence of chairmanship of the board of direc- ‘Tralley| tors. Each organised # holding com- pany, of which he became the head, In order to conduct financial operations rlon @ broader and more unrestrained lying unconseious since Christmas Day, | scale than banking laws would permit. Misa Anna Wheeler, daughter of Dr.| All three of these men are members @ | of the New York Central system boards. S| They touch elbows in gas and electric are of the opinion that the girl was| companies and they have common in- le | terests in the chain of banking interests in which she was riding was struck up and down Wall street. Stillman and Rockefeller are regarded almost as ‘The physicians believe that fear of | identical by reason of common financial the blow from the approaching trolley | interests and family intermarriage. car caused a rupuire of @ blood vessel! Keen analysis of the community of their interests and {gation, as he was in Europe and did not testify, But that one Is significant. His 47,498 shares in the National City Bank Are worth about $18,000,000, Mr. Jacob H. Schiff aptly described this as “a very nice investment.” Of Mr. Baker's investments we know More, as he teatified on many eubjects. His 20,00) shares in the First National Bank are worth at least $20,000,000, His stocks in dix other New ork banks and trust compaines are together worth about $3,000,000. The scale of his invest- ment in railroads may be inferred from his former ho¥iags in the Centra! Rail- road of New Jersey. He wae its largest stockhokier—so large that with a few friends he held a majority of the $27,496,900 par value of outstanding stock, which the Reading bought at $160 per share. He ts a direc- tor in twenty-eight other railroad com- panies, and presumably a stockholder in at least as many. The full extent of hig fortune was not inquired into, for that was not an issue in the investiga- But it is not surprising that Mr. saw little need of new laws. ‘You think everything is all right as it ts in this world, do you not?” He answered: m POWER OF THE ALLIES’ WEALTH 18 DYNAMIC. But wealth expressed in figures gives & wholly inadequate picture of the al- les’ power. Their wealth is dynamic. It is wielded by geniuses in combina- tion. It finds its proper expression in me power of the a we must try to visualize the ramifications through which the forces operate. Mr. Baker is director in twenty-two Corporations having with their many subsidiaries aggregate resources or cap- italization of $7,272,000,000, But the di- reot and visible power of the First Na- tional Bank, which Mr. Baker domi- GROWING TRHTER i Commissioner Maltbie Shows How It Is Increasing Salaries Without Just Reason. In the New York City Public Service Commission radical differences between members have developed on account of charges made by Commissioner Milo Ry Maltbie that the majority of the board 48 trying to Tammanyise the service, In crease wages unnecessarily, put on the payrolls employees not needed and rusa, through snap contracts. Commissioner Maltbie is supported in hia stand by Commissioner Eustis, Sut opposed to them is a majority, conslat- ing of Chairman McCall, Commissioner Cram and Commissioner Williams, who override the protests. bway advertii have not seen It,’ only information I have cot in what I have been ablo to learn from outside sources. I presume the con tract is in possession of some mem- ber of the commission or its counsel. but it has not been shown to me, nor passed through the secretary's office. ‘What has been done in this case 18 lar to practices in sever th 8. At meetings of this commit sion measures are brought up by tho majority and passed which I did not even know were under consideration, COMMISSION REVERSES VUTE WITHOUT GIVING NOTICE. 8 of control. To comprehend the) «1 nave in mind particularly a case where a meeting of the commission was called and a previous vote re- versed on a certain question without notice having been given the appellants in the matter. Naturally there ts much indignation on their part. “I suppose it was their plan to rush through the Ward & Gow advertising nates, extends further, ‘The Pujo report | CoMtract before any one knew about It. shows that its directors (including Mr. but I heard of the contract and pro- Baker's son) are directors in at least | tested against hasty action.” twenty-seven Other corporations with As the commission now stands the resources of $4,270,000,000, That is, the| Votes usually are three to two, On George F. Baker hokis more director’ ‘ rirgt National is represented in forty- ships of large corporations than any |tire' corporations with aggregate, Fe- ether man in the United States. He {8 | wuroc cy capieffisation of $,642,000,000. Feb. 1 the term of Commissioner Bustle expires and a new member will be appointed by Gov. Glynn. Efforte It may help to an appreciation of the | #re being made by each side to have the instance, Mr. Baker's influence is ex- visibly and directly—as voting|four to one, thi trust companies. He is in the New trustee, executive committesman or sim: | ple director. 1, Banks, trust and life insurance com- panies: First National Bank of New with being director of fifty-seven com-| i145 to name e few of the more| NeW appointee favoradle to its policy. Danies, any one of which ranks of high | Siven, Dovel © Devions tn which, for|Chairman McCall wants good Tam- many man @o as to make the vote overwheling Mr. independent stand. Stillman and Mr. Baker) ace quired together by stock purchases and York, National Bank of Commerce, | voting trusts control of the National Farmers Loan and Trust Companys MU-| Bank of Commerce, with its $190,000, tual Life Insurance Company. 2 Railroad companies: New York Erie, Lackawanna, Lehigh Valley, Southern, Northern Pacific, Barlington. 2. Public service corporations: Ameri. | P&ny can Telephone and Telegraph Company, Adams Express Company. 4 Industrial corporations: United States Steel Corporation, Pullman Com- Dany. Mr. Stillman is director in seven cor- Porations with aggregate assets of $2,476,000,000, The directors of the Na- tlonal City Bank, which hg dominates, are directors in at least forty-one other corporations which, with their subsidi, aries, have an aggregate capitalization OF resources of $10,664,000,000. The members of J. P. Morgan & Co. 000 of resources; of the Chase Naf tlomal, with its $125,000,000; of the Guaranty Trust Company, with $232,- *] 000,000; of the Bankers’ Trust Com- i ith $208,000,000, and of several smaller but important financial insti- tutions. They became joint voting trustees in Breat railroad systems, and finally (a8 if the allies were united in a single concern) loyal and efficient service in | the bunke—like that rendered by Mr. Mr. Lamont in the First rewarded by promotion to membership in the firm of J. P. Mor- gan & Co. ‘Thus equipped and bound together, J. P. Morgan & Co,, the National City and the First National easily dominated the acknowledged leader of the allied | America’s financial centre—New York.’ forces, hold seventy-two directorships in| BANKERS’ COMMISSIONS Of in the country. directors of ir controlled trust com: National City Banks together hold: ‘One hundred and eighteen director- $2,679,000,000 and total deposits of §1,983,. (000,000. (000,000, capitalization of §2,160,000,000, capitalisation of $22,246,000,000,"" $22,000,000,000, sum—so lar; forty-seven of the largest corporations PROFITS. The Pujo Committee finds that the| The operations of these bankers are 60 members of J. P. Morgan & Co. and the| Y##t 8nd numerous that even a very reasonable compensation for the service nies and of the First National and the | Performed would, in the aggregate, Pro- duce for them incomes so large as to’ | result in huge accumulations of capital! ahi in thirty-fo banks and | But the compensation taken by thé sersanles uaving total recources of | bankers as commissions or profits is far . | from reasonable. Occupying, e8 they se frequently do, the inconsisteys position “Th! torsh! ance | Of being at the same time seller and cornette having total assste of Sammon | burer—the standard for so-called eom- pensation actually applied is mot the “One hundred and five directorships in| ‘Tule of reason,” dut “all the trame thirty-two transportation systems hav- | Will bea: ing a total capitalization of $11,784,000,009 | ‘here and @ total mileage (exoluding express | ees Of human nature prevents men companies and steamship lines) of 160,200, | from being good Judges of thelr own “Bixty-three directorships in twenty. | deservings. four producing and trading corporations| The syndicate formed by J.P. Mow having @ total capitalisation of $3,339,-|San & Co. to underwrite the ‘United * And this is true even where 0 sinister motive, The weak- States Steel Corporation took for their “Twenty-five directorships in twelve | services securities which netted 963,600. public utility corporations having « total |000 in cash. Of this huge sum, J. P. Morgan & Co. received, as syndicate “In all, 31 directorships in 112 corpor- | Managers, $12,600,000, in addition to the ations having aggregate resources or|shere which they were entitled to re- celve as syndicate members. This gum of 962,000,000 was only @ part of the fees monopolising WHAT YOU COULD DO WITH| Due for the services of the steel industry, Twenty-two billion dollars is a large| In addition to the commissions taken that we have diMculty in gragping its significance. The mind | States Steel Corporation, large sums” realises sizo only through comparisons. | Were paid for organising the several specifically for organising the United | , | Willan 8. Ellison, Corporation Coun: BY HERD OF GOATS. | sei in the Mocichan saministfation, was a caller at the Mayor's office, Mr. Bille n Was “Big Tim’ Sullivan's idol Hi an executor of the * tate, The Sullivan int ‘on the outs" with ‘Fourteenth Stre 8 strong odor of gas coming the two basement rooms at No. %4 ‘Thirty-Mfth street, occup! by| MEXICO CITY, Jan, 3—Such « stu! Dunn, a truck drive: of excitement has been brought about Bilisaveth, Mre. Anna Hauser, the|!n the city of San ules Potos! by the entered and found Mrs, Dunn, orted imminence of au rebe! attack | * “wpe ai years old, lying dead, fully |{"&t ® panic br mong the in- With what can we compare twenty- | companies of which it is composed, For two billions of dollars? instance, the National Tube ‘Twenty-two billions of dollars is| Was capitalized at $80,000,000 of stock, more than three times tho assessed | $40,000,000 of which was common stock, vi of all the property, real and per- | Half of this $0,000,000 was taken by J. sonal, in all New Engtand. It ts nearly | P. Morgan & Co, and associates for pro- - pled: zu the, canine were crippled of their methods n y any's delivery Louls D. Brandeis, the trust buster, in bi ee ¢ le ‘ Ze" faba "ha" wat sg] CIAMOND CUT DIAMOND, [sare reas, Semrd, were Welsa were compelied to retire, Ever hear of blood red diamonds? | for which permission to repdblish has hea. Not rubies. Red diamonds. The cost been given by Editor Norman Hapgood, WALLACE BRUCE DEAD AT 69, \) Mr. Brandeis pictures them as follows: —_—_eo ligst stones In the sorld. three times the assessed value of all | motion services, and the $20,000,000 stock ‘fon the floor near = gas tube!" Day, when a Sev th Amony the allies two New York banks ry rT so taken became later exchangeable hed : en of them are worth $1,000,000, | _| tlonal City and t Nation. | the real estate in the city of New York, had een disconnected from a| cording Nona. cooreamecete luce, we ACTOR DIES IN HOSPITAL. sritast, seven of them WERE worth | athe Nations! City and the Firat Nation | 12°" mora than twice the assessed | nto #2500000 of Steel common. Com iatove. Dunn left for his work | the Federal capital, The writer says the fm the morning Pre eee Atlee rumors of the proximity of rebel. col- Leslie Kenyon W umna, the news of the dynamiting of Lam! to think the death | trains and the bringing into the city of value of all the property in the thir- | missioner of Corporations Herbert Knox teen Southern States, It 1s more than | Smith found that: the assessed value of all the property in the twenty-two States, north and south, lying west of the Mississipp! | OF indirectly (through exchange) for River. more promotion or underwriting ser- Care was taken by these builders of | Vices. In other words, nearly one- imperial power that their structure | seventh of the total capital stock of t sbould be enduring, It has been but- | Stee! Corporation appears to have been treased on every olde by joint owner. | 'ssued directly or Indirectly to prow ahips and mutual stockholdings, as | motere’ services, chen at the $1,000,000, And those seven were the | with the Morgan firm the inner group a . Watlace Bruce, author, and Conaul to| cause of some of the most exciting | of the Money Trust. Each of the two breil Edinburgh, Scotland, under President| adventures that ever happened here in| banks, like J. P. Morgan & Co, has A number of wounded Pedurale hot |, Wesile Kenyon, the well known English | Harrison, died yesterday of paralyais,| New York. been dominated by a genius in combina- worked the peome up to a high pitch of oplexy 4 sixty-nine, at De Funiak Springs,| These adventures are told In a thrill-| tion. In the National City it is James expectan ate Tuesday afternoon in the Lambe’ health. | ing yet irresistibly rollicking way in Stitiman; in the First National, George | Buddenly on Jan. 1 a cloud of dust ap-| cud died ut Misa Alston's private wife, Mra. Anna Bruce, telegraphed ae nd Cut Diamond,” by Ji F. Bak Each of these gentlemen was peared on a #uburban roadway and vir-|sanitarium, No. 2% West Bixty-firat daughter, Mre. G. H. es ot i y Jane | cormerly president and is now chairman tually everybody in San Luis Potosl bec | street, this morning, He was attended| Abernathy, of No, LA Hancock street, | Bunker, one fe tunniest, most stlt- | 6° the Board of Directors, u the hour of attack had arrived, | by Dr, Oscar M. Lelser of No, 263 Weat| Brooklyn. ring romances of the decade, RICH THROUGH CONTROL OF ind houses were hurriedly cloned | Forty-ffth street and removed yester-| Mr. Bruce was graduated from Yale tn amond Cut Diamond” will begin i al and the doors barricaded, detachments | dgy morning from the Lambs’ Club t Monday's Evening World. MANY MILLIONS, well as close persenal relationships, —_—o ‘ Sa roops and armed police with eannon | tre sanitatiam. bbe | in Mondays a word of this big fiction | The private fortune of the chiet actora| for directorehipe are ephemeral end| Greece Wants 910,000,000 Lean. y) na aed through the streets to the!” kenyon had been appearing in proml+ ans | sensation it lant Just like any other | in the combination have not been ascer- | may end with & new election, ATHENS, Greece, Jan. 3—A- dill png 4 for the and on the acenery of the Hudson, The! book you've read. tained. But sporadic evidence indicates| Mr, Mo and his partners ao-|Suthorising the Greek government to he] nent musical comedy roles In this coun- Saunea | {FY for several ycars, and at the time he stricken funeral will probably be held at his| / orp nse, love—all are the poss! ills, laughs, suspe 1 | how great the bilities of accu- Brooklyn home, No. #7 Btuyvesant ave-| 1.04 together and combining to make | mulation when one has the use of other money. Mr, Morgan's wealth y\— —_——— a Ct that WINS. Peopl FILES CURED it, became proverbial. Of Mr, Stillman's peti el eg cide Remember, “Diamond Cut Diamond® | many investments, only one was speciti- races sella Monday's Evening World, the stock of the|‘seue s new loan of $100,000.00 was pre- made ted to the Chamber of Deputies to. 100,000 Investment in stock of the|day. The loan, which is to be redeem. National City Bank, Then J. P, Mor- in fifty years, is to bear 5 ge: gen & Co, the National City and the | cent’ interest, end the minimum’ griee Firat National (or thelr dominant off-/ of issue has been fixed at #7, Y rela: The New Year’ parade and other estivities then pro: ae usual N will begin in cally referred to during the Pujo invest-

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