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THE EVENING WORLD, T [URSDAY, APRIL 16, 1914. LOCKED UP IN TOMBS [NINE DROWNED ON z 5 oy talk In absurd tones about the| hands.in my lap. I have not a boat, | ard Oi! barge ahe was towing while | Holwell New Secretary of Bridwes. a: QUOTED ON «PANAMA TREATY sahiainic ‘Speech and Letter Taken as > Favorable to Repeal of Tolls Exemption. ‘ > » WASHINGTON, April 16.—The Pan- )@ma tolla hearing to-day before the @ bitherto unpublished specch by for ) mer President Taft and correspondence Joseph H. Choate, American Am- Gettvered before the Canadian | be fn Ottawa last January was in- @reduced by Senator Simmons, who * geld he believed it to be authentic. In apeech Mr. Taft was quoted an “We shall doubtless have to arbi. @rate the matter untess Congress re- ‘verses iteel When you close your desk , and leave your office , do you réalize that your eyes | have, not is rel working? es Few le realize that’ they . work their eyes much longer | ‘and haptor than any other part of their anatomy. It is im- Wenate Canals Committees brought out! «| States and Great Britain je the con- | lrHeht of the United States to manage, ave one of the harbor, boarding-ser- | turning Bandy Hook to go down the) Joseph H. Holwell was appointed Bee: F "{ olwelt © appointed - or an [her own canal and her own property | vice tugs to send to her assistance. tem aienpes Se a tie te the retary in the Department of Bridges EASY he likes, no matter what she hae | “For a tong time I have heen atriv-| reached shallow water, and at last) (7 U"Y | ‘Pe sulary be $4,000, He suc | neteea to, but this is all froth. ‘These SCHOONER IN TEMPEST ing to get adequate cutter #erivice | accounts were still anchored outeide “CCd* Edear 1. MANICURE jare the explosivistas. The idea of Congress in parsing the bill and iy own in signing it wan that we were thus giving a @ubsidy to our conatwise ships between New York and | Francisco and Boston and Seattle, a« | we did In the early days of our tran- | continental rafiroads. “All L object to is being told, when f approve the putting on of coastwine exemption, that I favor breaking 4 treaty, [am not in favor of break. | ing treaties, but the queation in, what | the treaty means” | Mr. Choate declared tn a letter to Henry White, presented to the com mittee, that hin official correspon- | di entabliahed beyond question the intent of the partion In the negotia- |tions, that the treaty should mean exactly what it saya, and excludes the possibility of the exemption of; lany kind of vemsels of the United Btates. Equality between the I'nited | @tant theme. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER RUN DOWN BY A HORSE !Unable to Move Because Car Cut Them Off and Wagon Driver | Wasn't Looking. As Mra, L. FE. Jones and her nine- year-old daughter Rouhith, who live at the Hotel Cumberland, started across Highth avenue at Fifty-fourth street to-day a beker’s wagon bore down on/ them. A trolley was coming also and | ; Mra. Jones, leading the little girl by) the hand, tried to stand between the car and the wagon. ‘The horse ran into both, flinging (Mra, Jones aside and running over Rouhith, Dr, ‘Tobin took both to Poly- clinic Hospital, mying that the little «irl was internally hurt and in a seri-| [oun condition, Mra. Jones suffered jonly from shook and brutaes John Koenig, driver for the Franco- American Bakery Company was al- lowed to go, but after he had made FR ANS IN MISTAKE FOR ANOTHER. MAN It Took Habeas Corpus to Get} Coppenhaver Out After His | sacksonvitie, Ma, with a cargo of |yellow pine for the Heldritter Lum- ber Company of Milizabeth, N. J. The manager of the company said that whe waa expected to make port to- day. Searehlights ashore made It ponsible artinent | tor those in security there to see nome- payivania Railroad, did not) thing of what was going on about the Sintle ke apecial notice of the) schooner, They saw the waves thun- frosiiner® of the air when the doors) dering over her and once a great sea of the Tombs clanged and he atepped| towared over her and flung ttself into the atreet to-day, a victiin of) upon her mistaken identity. He was too angry| geen that the schooner's masts bad and altogether too deeply submergzod | been carried away and with them in thought about the lawn delay. |the men who’ were lashed in the Early this month Ruth Naylor, @] rigging. schoo! gir of Plainfeld, N. J.. dimap-| The schooner, which wan boilt peared from home and was miasio®| twenty-four years ago, had @ heavy for nearty a week. Hor father, John | deckioad of lumber. Karly last night, Naylor, auapected that his daughter | of the Jersey const, she became un- had been abducted, and wae told bY| manageable in a gale that blew at friends that Coppenhaver, who knew | igagt seventy iniles an hour. When j Ruth quite well, had been seen in her) an attempt wax made to anchor her, company on a train headed for New| ine cable broke and she was at the York. T father immediately noti- fled the New York police to arreat the! j1 was about haif a mile from Sea- young draughtaman, and he Waal prient that she first struck. ‘Then Picked up on Weat Fifty-fourth street | ihe wind took her In charge and car- and imprisoned to await extradition | jeu her down the const by the Plainfield suthorities, The ar- reat took place on April 4 A few days after Coppenhavera! stricken sel, signal rockets and arrest, & young man closely rew -| Coston lights blared Into the night! ling Coppenhaver, who Kave hin name| and hundreds of villagers hastened it ttl Lyon Walpole waa arreated In. New Jersey | down the shoro aa the achooner went driving on. The terrific sea made and placed in jail for enticing Ruth the launching of life boats an im- ay, and was later held for trial. | Nothing wan done to release Co} penhaver “He knew nothing of the) Dossibiltty. They could not have lived In the sen that was running. Life ines were shot across arrest of Walpole and although he stoutly maintained his innocence he schooner from the crews on beach. was kept in jail. Coppenhaver's brother learned of the young draughtsman’s plight yes- terday, and immediately retained At-! For a time there was no sign of life board the schooner, Fully three bu dred persons remained on shore around bonfires, and residents of the torney arlen La hue of 148] Nassau street. The lawyer went to neighborhood supplied the life savers with coffee and food. OFF JERSEY COAST (Comtinued from Firat Page.) Innocence Was Certain, Thomas A, Coppenhaver, « twenty. one-year-old drauxhteman employed | in the civil engineering of the sea's mercy Plainfleld and got a letter from Pre- secutor Stein ozonerating (Coppen- haver, This letter was addreased to District-Attorney Whitman, Lu Rue ied it wan) An the life savers got word of the! the| the| ‘portant, therefore, to know ey are straining your » if the ones you are now using are suitable. Harris ects cost ne or more, depending entirely upon dog kind your eyes require, and ut he Vous . frame or mount- re ‘OU select. y wear ‘Fourth Ave, Heth ta won wear Lenox Ave. ‘ W. S4th 6t., bet Sth and Gth Aves panes ‘olambus Ave., Sist and 82d Sta, 4 a0 asesau St. near John St . romcis ar. Willo'by, B’klyn, Fulton St., opp. A. & S., B'klyn, EXT time you buy candy to keep in your desk * drawer for eating, ask for iefw As- y sorted Small Choc- olates. ‘you an entirely new idea of how ~ Ritchie & Fe Cornell’ ws or not. tieth street and David Brennan of ur Oculists (Registered Eighth avenue told Policeman t Koenig had been rtand- a | ieperaba) will tell you |ing in his wagon with hia back to glasses are —or | the horse, assorting his packages, GOOD FOR ONE VOTE IN Free Po ularity Contest Free Fane wo hte cera Tours jore appears in Drizes, each wi SUM Were Yee a7 ow ~, VOTE Goop FOR ONLY ONE CANDIDATE Dawson of No, 231 East Fif- off Kh and so had not seen the predicament of Mra. Jones and her daughter. | Had he had the reins in his han the least turn to the side would hav avoided the accident the witnesses sald JUSTICE O’DWYER WON'T QUIT DEMOCRATIC CLUB Says He Has Just Begun To Make Things Pleasant For | Murphy. | | Justice Kdward F. O'Dwyer, Presi- | dent of the National Democratic C! notified all “interested parties” ¢ day that he has no intention of ra linquishing his office in the club, be se of Charles F. Murphy's re atement by the Hoard of Gover- | . Ama matter of fact, the Justice said, he had “Just begun to make things pleasant for Mr. Murphy.” | The Justice stated that the Board of Governors in restoring Murphy and other Tammany men to the club had done so because they believed that the dinminsed members had some sort of “property rights” in the club and its belongings and also because some of them thought that not suffictent j time had been given the expelled mbers to pay up their dues. 1 eno Intention of renigning, } you may be sure," said the Justice earnestly, “We are going along tho | programme mapped out and vou may elopen. post- Brown, who is also the Rroce liven next di not dine as opened To Write of German-Americans, Hofrat Horst Weber, editor of the Illustrated Zeitung, published in Berlin, arrived in New York to-day on the Hertin of the North German yt Gerr ‘On his return to Herlin he. will ¢ # apecial number of his publica. tion showing the progress and atta thelr homes here. legrare. Fecsive the prise tied ree, er cam be matted to then applied for a writ of habeas cor- pus, and to-day the draughtaman was taken before Justice Weeks in the Finally those on shore could see a man, apparently exhausted or injured, Supreme Court and released standing near the broken foremaat tying one end of their breeches buoy ine around his waist. When a wave washed him overboard he was hauled ashore through the breakers. It was not believed there would be any life left in him, but he was found to be still alive but unconscious. Many women joined in cheering the life- savern. When the Italian Line steamship Stampalia reached port to-day from Naples anid (i the suicide of Domin- tco Caleei, x years old, who boarded the ship at Genoa, wan report-| REVENUE CUTTER SERVICE ed. On the third day out be was missed o from. MMe place. at the breakfast. table | CAN'T GO TO RESCUE. and a search of the ship waa made. | Captain J. &. Wild, in command of Nome of the steerage passengers sald! the revenue cutter service in this port, complained to-day of his inability to fore they had sven « the upper deck into the givé any help to the wrecked achoo- ner. ade no report of the sul- ‘ag not until they were nbout the missing man that they ' 10 mention the matter | somed @ man of good family. | ; hundred doting, ‘was “found” in 'a | her and ull of them could be saved by coat pocke the’ Ttailan "immigrants “there "were | tb@ Prompt dispatch of a revenue cut- love affair in Genoa ter, Td 4 to sit here with my Vf —- ARI Wit. | “Yes: Serve Campbell's Tomato Soup.’ “Prepare it as a Cream-of-tomato, please.” And this is done as easily as said; and almost as quickly. Simply heat the contents of the can and an equal quantity of milk separately. Bring them to the boiling-point but do not let them boil. And when ready to serve take them from over the fire and pour the hot soup into the hot milk—this prevents curdling. ‘ The whole process doesn’t re- C——— > quire over three minutes. And ; you have as fine a cream-of- tomato soup as you ever tasted. Why not enjoy it for dinner today? 21 kinds — 10c a can g “If there were fifty people aboard of | in the storm. Thi to the bi Perfection retur: y until daylight. Ne Reviving the Glories of for this port, but have been unable ad to accomplish anything. 1 have only three going cutters at my com- mand, and not one of them is now available. The Mohawk in laid up at Baltimore undergoing repairs, the Itasca is on her way to Baltimore for the same purpose, having sailed on Tuesday, and the Seneca te on ico | off the coast of Newfound- ‘arrolia of told in the i Section of next pgine, other ateiking thle is not the first time we ha been confronted by @ncy. All winter long cases in which a big, ocean-| ter could have. done. good “work. have complained ‘- Washington about the condi don Newest of all trent ‘plane for a new New York. t “Silent* serge ‘iM; cole je; ways of Ju grandac od. Plerpont Morgan, “en Another instalment of “Dark Hol- rey A oo nae romance by | jarine Gr thr a Thiet at, Sea. y vietor timer. Hea Rover, Champion new by any we need ts worthy ot Just such emergencies as th George Marsdale, a fireman, and Wallace Hodges, a deckhand, both of New London, were drowned when tug Aries of the * bona Sigel Company, New London, C sunk by the barge Pequot in Rarhan my late yesterday. ‘The tug bad four beLbe| Jaden with coal, ‘and’ the wind turned the barges completely around. A steam pipe broke as the tug was turned over en her side and W. E. Griswold, the en: gineer, and John Ballet, bis Sesietant, | Fy were severely ecalded. id five others were rescued by the Fr Mer- rill, an oyster dredger. ‘The tug Perfection lost the Stand- fons,” by Katherine a be haa ht tani barred | in a New ¥ wer Fined 9100 for Contempt. Daniel Goldstein, a lawy: fices at No. Brook the Bronx, to-day fined $100 by Judge @ibvs in the Bronz County Court for wilful contempt of court. Goldstein, Seriirnied aren for bag Bobo ie ge) vou a eullty James McGreery & Go. | 34th Street 5th Avenue MEN’S WEAR | Special Values on Friday and Saturday Negligee Shirts of Heavy Imported Silk in a wide range of novelty and neat stripes. value 6.00, 3.95 Shirts of Imported Cotton Crepe or Silk Mixtures in a variety of patterns and colorings; also new “Mushroom” pleats in Silk Mixtures in plain Blue, Tan, Lavender, Pink or White. values 4.00 and 4.50, 2.85 Gray Silk Gloves for Spring wear,—plain or embroidered backs. Special 1.00 | Folded or Open End Scarfs of Imported Neckwear Silks in stripes or neat figures; also Pure Silk Knitted Four-in- Hand Scarfs in Accordion weave,—a variety of colors. 1.00 values 2.00 and 2.50 | Attractive assortment of Silk Neckwear in a variety of fancy Colorings; also plain Rainbow Repp or Moire. 55c value 1.00 Pajamas of Scotch Madras in neat stripes; low cut. 1.10 value 1.75 | | Pajamas of self-striped Madras or Mercerized Fabrics; also “Soisette” in solid colors; trimmed with silk frogs and pearl buttons. values 2.00 and 2.50, 1.30 Bath Robes of Austrian Terry Cloth in fancy colors, value 4.00 2.95 Raincoats of Fancy Scotch Tweed in Green, Brown, | Gray or Black and White Mixtures,—Balmacaan model; suitable for Top Coats. value 22.50, 12.50 Raincoats or ‘Top Coats of Imported Knit fabrics in conservative mixtures, -—— modified Balmacaan model. 22.50 value 30.00 Mackinaw Coats in the new Scotch Plaid materials; Raglan shoulder and slit pockets. valtse 12.00, 9.50 Blunt Plan Nz ~Natur re Shoe What ‘Nature Made should not bemarred. If youcrowd -your children’s feet intounshapely, ill-fitting shoes of doubtful make your children will suffer and you through them. Blyn-Plan Shoes on nature lasts insure freedom from future foot troubles,andtheirdurability makes them more economical to buy than the other kind. We are Sole Agents in Greater New York for the Style | 1284 Gun Metal Calf and Patent Colt Hines 5 to 8. we BY to 11. Bixee 11% to 2. ices 6 to 11, Sizes 11% to 2, 2.50 ReCrgue It Bends With the Foot Red Cross Colonials of Patent colt and gun metal calf—leather covered buckles, narrow recede toes, light weight turn soles and new kidoey heels. One of the charming new Spring models that yields the extreme of comfort Red Cross flexibility of sole gives buoyancy to the step and grace of carriage to the wearers of Red Cross Shoes. The daintiest styles are as $ 50 comfortable as the old fashioned 3: broad toe shoes that were so long thought necessary to comfort. Ten Big Best Family Stores. Easy to Reach. Shoes in All Gra WEST GIDE STUMED: aA gO wan; trottery —Advt. | Belmont ¥ Maryland’s Historic Manor. How @ young bride will revive the| August Ww Orleans seized. He where his deebires We bow has heen at hig bonking At All 235 James B Not in years have we been ordinary value the cost of living as these: Very Choicest Quality, Ib Your Dollars Almost Double in purchasing power this week or such pronounced reductions in This Season's New Butter, fresh from the Creameries. Vo More Cutting of the Cuttele Softens and smoothes away all tagged cuticle twice as & ae ordinary foetheds. and a great deal RETTER! » utier Inc. Stores able to offer such extra- Triumph Oats Largest 10c package of the [ @| highest grade of rolled oats..... Force Package Cut to Baker’s Cocoa Se" 17° Peerless Cocoa *’"“" 13° Best Teas, Ceylon-India, Mixed, Formosa-Oolong and English Very Best Coffee Nothing finer at any price, lb. Choice Coffee Fresh roasted; splendid “cup Cheese, Flour, Best N Regula Tomatoes, Essie Milk, Babbitt’s and Gold Soap Your choice this week, Messina Lemons, At All 35 James Butler Inc. Meat Markets Mutton Chops, Choicest Loin or Rib, b.. 1&* Boneless Roast Beef, sotia meat, ». 16° Legs of Canada Lamb .. Canada Lamb, short Forequarters, b.. [Je At All 131 James Butler Inc. Licensed Stores Guinness’s Stout Allowances of 14c per doz. empty bottles and " per doz. empty oj We Give aac Green Trading Stamps Bottled to Perfection; the lowest price ever offered; dozen bottles............ ‘. Y. State; from whole milk with ALL the cream, Ib. Pride of St. pene 6 Su- perlative XXXX.. Alaska Salmon, * Tall 1-Ilb. can... No. 2 can, Evaporated Milk, (oir: Condensed Milk, Condensed Milk, nee? Richest and Best Condensed; tama a memereaamarima Faia Kirkman’s Borax Soap 1-35 Triumph Cleanser, tare cs. Crosse & Blackwell's Mixed, Gherkins and Chow, bottle Crosse & Blackwell’s Marmalade World famous for quality; large stone jar Colman’s English Mustard, Lea&Perrins’ Sauce, Liberty Catsup, in bottles, each 10° and §¢ Large Bottle Salad Oil, ..2%... 15° Breakfast, oo 21° 17% Be 10° Yh pte 7 10° quality,” Ib. r Large 5$ No. 3 can, Belle Brook Butler’s, can viberty can Pickles 15° vores 14° Yéerlb, 10° can,. vor. LO® The famous Worcestershire, Rien 12 ow 15S eb, 1§¢ 25 Dozen splits,