Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
two horses recently from Horion &|New York, who testitled at to-day’ AULS HIS VISITOR ) FAT TOGETHER False Report Spread That Po- lice Captain, Hurrying on Case, Had Been Shot. Mrs. Angelo Sorrentino, janitress at ‘Mo, 232 Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn, no- teed Phillipo Buonfigiio, with a man Phe understood was his cousin and a @ranger, enter Puonfigito’s flat on the *hird floor this morning, aad beyond wishing them good morning paid no, more attention to them until, about gn hour later, she was startled by the Reports of three revolver shots, She fan into the hall from her own apart- ments, in the rear of the third floor, fa time to ace Buonfigilo, with a re- votver in his hand, bolting for the otaira Mrs. Sorrentino grabbed him by the rm, but he fought her off. Then he Pounded down the stairn while Mrs. Borrentino’s screams aroused the tenement. i | The door of Buonfigiio's flat wan) and Mrs. Sorrentino entered, On) floor of the front room lay the stranger. There was a bullet wound) fn the right side of his head, another fm bis left choek near the temple and/ @ third in the right side of his neck. Mrs. Sorrentino notified a policeman, who called an ambulance from the Brooklyn Hospital. A surgeon burry- {ng there in an ambulance found the Strange man was dead. Capt. Coughlin of the Brooklyn De- tective Bureau rushed to the house and some one telephoned to Head- = __THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1914. %, % TO "BLOW OFF LID” Ex-President Wrote He Was] quarters in Manhattan that Capt. Coughlin had been shot and killed. Presently a dozen detectives arrived, The Captain searched the pockets @f the dead man and found papers whieh made it appear that he was Baked Lackashu and was a con- tractor in business with a man gamed Payona. There w: n ad- dress, No. [56 West One Hundred and Kighty-eighth street, also. There was @ receipt from Dr. E. Bauman, & deatist at No, 441 East Twelfth street, and also some papers indi- eating that Lackashu had bought Bros. in Catskill. — LOST $100,000 DIAMONDS. @ewels Recovered by Chance Arrest of Negre Otreus Roustabout. BAN FRANCISCO, May 2. Fest of a negro roustabout ling circus in Berkeley fighting led to the reco @f @iamonds valued ry of @ rope t $100,000 for which the police been secretly perehing fy & week. ‘The diamonds are the property of Mrs. ‘Praak G. Hogan of Pasadena, who lost them while attertiing the circus there, > Bhey were picked up in the sawdust ‘the roustabout and were found on when he was searched after his ar- fest. He admitted finding the diamonds ft Pasadena, but said he had no idea of thelr value. Every Why Hath a Wherefore | Poor Digestion, Torpid Liver, Bed Breath all cured by GET A BOX TO-NIGHT fer sale ot Droggists’, 10¢ and 25¢ the box Tired of Being Made “the Goat” in New Haven Affairs, 2 WASHINGTON, May 2--A. threat by Charles 8, Mellen to “blow the Id off” New Haven financial affairs: was read into the record of the inquiry b+ ing conducted by the Interstate Com-; merce Comminsio » former trans- actions of New Haven officials to-day. ‘The letter was written a few months ‘ago by Mellen to Walter E. Reed of| hearings*of transactions between the New Haven road and the Metropolitas Steamship line, which he organized In it the former bh of the New Haven declared that he was tired of being made “the goat" for all of- fenwes charged against the New Haven, and that unless this stopped hoe proposed to say things. Chief Counsel Polk announced be- fore the adjournment that when the heuring was resumed next Wednes- day, Mellen would be summoned as a witness and be given an opportun- ity to give his version of the financial transactions involving millions, of which the Interstate Commerce Com- mission can find no trace to-day John L. Billard, New Haven financier and business partner of Mellen in many transactions, also will be summoned on the same day Walter E. Reed, the chief witness to-day, testified to the organization of the Metropolitan Steamship line, the afterward absorbed by New brought the name the steamship case when he test ont Morgan and Mel from the presidency of the Metropoll- pany, as it would not do to man then serving in the Atlanta pac- have Tombs and soon to go to Penitentiary acting in such a a ity, Mellen, he said, also ob strenuously when elected a dire of the Metropolitan Company did not wish to appear in the As a result of an alleged attack Noir 11," the fa- pulldox owned by Mrs, ker Whitman, the Cali- ipon her Jennie Cr in the Supreme MELLEN’S THREAT DEMANDS $25,000. FOR INJURIES DOG PUT ON RECORD, NFTED AT SHOM Woman Fancier Sues Kennel ° Club, Saying Animal Was Vicious One. “Le Mrs. , MALCOLM WHITMAN @%¢ Oslo. 6 MARCEAL. United Court AFTER ALL THE War Map of Mexico Printed in Colors; 1414 by 19 Inches in size; a Map Worth Studying and Keeping for Ready Refer- ence; Double Page Feature in Magazine Section. In Metropolitan Section The “Uplifters” of New YorkK—20,000 of Them Are Trying to Do New York Good. “New York Is a Lonely Brick and Mortar Wilderness,”’ Say, ‘‘Bill’’ Elliott, Maine Guide and Hunter, on His First Visit. “Fun,” the Great Weekly Joke Book States, against Secretary of the Navy Daniels Contends That Mar- riage Makes Ablest Sea Officers, “New York's Pickpocket Syndicate,” by Judge Edward Swann of the Cour: of General Ses- sions, Golden Advice by Famous Operatic Stars to the Girl with a Voice, Remarkable Adventures of a Famous Hobo Who Tramped Around the World for Years and Now Pays an Income Tax, hat Morae should be ousted | fornia heiress, who is reputed to be one of the wealthiest young women Mrs, Jane Coughlin, a dog fancier, who resides at No. 63 West One Hundred and Monday morning. ;| Ninth street, to-day fled sult in the | Gametery, the West-lafior 20" minster Kennel Club for $25,000 dam-| aes, Simultaneously her husband, Jo- seph Coughlin, filed a similar suit! against the club for $5,000 for the loss of his wife's servic Both ac- tlons were to have been filed againgt Mrs, Whitman, but the lawyers changed their minds and decided to sue the lub. Le Noir IL, with a pedigree as long 144 roll of tleker tape, was brought to New York last February in a spe- designed especially for his » highness'’s comfort. He had pecial attendants from Mrs. Whit- man's California — hi and shown more attention t¢ dog Is known to At the Bench ah las) been given. w Le Noir TH. was . In the next vughlin's dog, bear- Mrs, Coughlin says sary In carefully | er her pet's welfare to jstand near Le Notr's stall. In her complaint: Mrs, Coughlin says that | Mrs. Whitman's prized became extremely vic! occasion, she says, he sunk his teeth in her fle and clawed her on the face and arms, Sho says whe has not yet recovered from her injuries, and she thinks the shock to her nervous system will be perma- nent. ing tag that it looking = @ he management of the club well knew that Mra, Whitman's dog was extremely vicious and feroctous, as well as iniachlevoux,” says the com plaint, “and in view of these fac they should have taken extra precat- tions to guard human beings from an attack.” | > DEATH TAKES MEMBER | OF THE WORLD STAFF Cyrus Brewster Tomlinson Was fl} Seven Days With Pneumonia in His Home, Cyrus Brewster Tomlinson, a met ber of the staff of The World, died of pneumonia at 10.85 o'clock yester- day morning in bis home, No. 550 Riverside Drive. He bad been til sovon days. He was thirty-eight years old. Mr, Tomlinson was conscious till the last, and insisted that the news- papers be read to him each day. The end came suddenly and unexpectedly. He was the son of the late Joseph Tomlinson of Stelton, Conn. He early took up newspaper work, and after service on the local Connecticut press he went on the staff of the Boston Herald. He joined The World staff in October, 1806, Funeral services will be held in Mr. ‘Tomlinson's home at 11.80 o'clock Burial will be tn the family plot in the New Shelton | Shelton, Conn., ek Monday afternoon, hirty-five shortly | COURTLANDT NICOLL FINED UNDER LAW HE FRAMED HIMSELF Pays $5 Fine for Driving, Smoking Auto Up Fifth Avenue. \ Courtlandt Nicoll, millionaire, so- clety man, lawyer and former alder- | man, joined the line of prisoners be- fore Magistrate Herbert in the York- ville Police Court to-day and finally got his turn to step up on the bridge | and explain why he had operated a amoking automobile on Fifth avenue yesterday. Mr. Nicoll was summoned by Po- liceman Malloy of the traffic squad while he was driving with Mrs. Nicoll at Fifty-first street and the avonue. “I knew that the machine was! moky, Your Honor,” explained Mr. Nicoll, “and I was on my way to the garage with it so that the trouble! ‘could be remedied.” “If I accepted that excuse from one I would have to accept It from many,” replied Magistrate Herbert. “I fine you five dollars. I am sorry, but the ordinance reads in this way"—- “Don't bother to read, Your Honor,” exclaimed the millionaire, “for I know | it very well. I drafted it myself when I was an Alderman, and when | a fight was made against it I got it put in the sanitary laws,” . Mr. Nicoll parted with five dollars, bowed to the Magistrate and left the courtroom. pees La CLARINET HIDES PLOT. a Drown Notm Saw Jail Bar: ROBINSON, Ml, May 2.—For thr nights John Griffin, a prisoner in. the County Jatl here, played a clarinet with much «usto until midnight. Last night the concert stopped about 11 o'clock and to-day It was learned that ( two other prisoners had n the jail by sawing through th The sawing | te while Griffin d clarinet solo with burglar: tured. R NEWS, READ: IN THE MAGAZINE: “The Most Wonderful Dog in the World,” Who Solves Intricate Mathematical Problems, &c. Food, Tie a Necktie, Button of One's Wedding Ring, Awakening of Spring. “How to Improve Your Dancing, lowa, “Cana Man Bea Good Hush Talks Business,” The Sumner Girl and What Shi Page for Women. Mn and | getty How Wooden Arms Have Been Made to Box, Cut And Now Character Is Being Read by the Studying Little Romances of New York Life Incident to the Anna Held and Billle Burke Answer the Question: Fv waa GR FOL RA OL RO HC HE JUL URUOD GGG UTI GUO UOL SURI INU. 008 FOG: UDG UIIOOC ODEO RUNS IOI SURG IOC RIS 5690 90 OC I RR WRIA CAUSE. IT IS MAY % JOCTIOIOOIIOUO COD: OOO OUOOUCIIIEE II TIOOOOC ISO nO O COU ORION TIE OCIOTE IOC UCC IO FONOE rg rer rr rr ro rt rae Oe OO Hie HE INR HSADNE OER TORCHTAOO ORT ICeCEAGOT BOO GOnr Oa oCogA, $0 +) JAPAN STARTS INQUIRY. ON FALSE REPORT OF THE SIBERIA SINKING: Wireless “M. B. S.” Read as “S O S” Believed Respon- sible for Alarm Spread. TOKIO, Japan, May 2.—Great re- lief is felt here at the news from Manila that the Pacific Mall steamer Siberia, reported yesterday by wire- less to have been in great peril off the coast of Formosa, is safe at Man- lla. No satisfactory explanation is available in Tokio ‘as to how the alarming reports of yesterday came to be = disseminated, The Japanese authorities have decided to investi- gate the matter. Japan has recalled the warships she despatched yester- day to the ald of the liner supposed to be in distress. A despatch from Manila, received last night, sald the Siberia steamed into port at 11 o'clock this morning after an uneventful voyage from Nagasaki, which port she left April 29, Capt. Zeeder of the Siberia said FOR UNSIGHTLY COMPLEXIONS USE RESINOL Pimples and blackheads disappear, unsightly complexions become clean, clear and velvety, and hair health and beauty are promoted by the regular use ob Resinol Soap and an occasional nol Ointment. These do their q ttle cost, en the roost expensive cosmetics omplicated beauty treatments f 8 have prescribed Resino ineteen years and every druggist Resinol Beep (25 inol (50c and 81.00). i stitutes” which a few ealers offer, they are e and ee. even 1S) , an ‘for itt be positively Up a Collar, &c. ,” by Anna Pav- and If He Always ¢ WI Wear, A By Eleanor Schorer he believed the reports that his vessel , |Old Remedy That’s Always Best For Liver, Stomach and Bowels | was in distress and had sent out calls lfor help arose over the confusion in the call ie with which vessel he had been in com- munication, These letters are “M. B. S." and they doubtless were mistaken for "8 O $8," the marine wireless appeal for aid The wireless operator on board the Siberia added that the atmospherte conditions had been bad, making dif- ficult the sending of wireless mes- sages ‘The first erroneous reading of the wireless calla from the dently wireless etation in Japan. the Osezakal They were were made at [steamer had met with an accident jand was in distress, Other wireless | reports were responsible for the be- Nef that she was sinking. On receiving the news the Japanese Government despatched cruisers and merchant ships from formosa to where the Siberia was supposed to be; ja British warship steamed at full speed to her assistance, and the American naval authorities at Manila made hurried preparations to send help. ‘The belief that the Siberia was in any trouble was entirely dispelled last ‘night with the receipt of despatches in this country from Manila saying that she was safe in that port. !PERSIA’S ‘“‘MBS’’ READ ~-ASSOS” FROM SIBERIA, “SAN FRANCISCO, May 2.—H. wireless operator heard the at m. Liver, Stomach and Bowel give this old, gentle, sure consti; ARAERERRRRE ERR RRR RRR REE REESE SERRE EEE ES | WA Pg thib or point eeooe New Styles for “Grand Stand” and “Summer Wear’’ Gowns; Edited by May Manton. In Editorial S Simeon Ford, Hotel Keeper, the Last of the Landlords. What Colorado Men in Congress Have to Say of the Great Mine War. 24-Page Illustrated Magazine POCOOVE: In the Big SUNDAY WORLD To-Morrow! PAARARARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR RRARARRRR RRR { Siberia evi- interpreted as setting forth that the] Going for 50 years, but Carter’s Little Liver Pills keep right on giving health, strength and happiness to millions. Lay aside the harsh cathartics that act violently on liver and bowels and | It’s really wonderful how speedily they banish headache, ind!- | gestion, biliousness and nervousness and clear up sallow, blotchy, | pimply skin. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price GENUINE must bear signature ship Pei ign her code signal “MS B 8" after giving her latitude and longitude and misread it Into “S 0 8," the signal for assistance, was | plained to-day by those familiar wit® the International code used for wires less work, ‘The mistake probably caused the report yesterday that rcific Mail liner Siberta was in dlee ess off the cowst of Kormona. The aymbols for the two sets of letters are as follows " | s o |) A steamer In giving her longitude | and latitude sends her own code name | thereafter twice. Lt ts considered ‘probable that on the first send some loperator failed to receive the “M” at the firs the distress dashes of the “M i started sending her code’ Hate” the | second time, and overlooke@ he@hight | puuse between these two dashewand the fi of “B." runatmms the three : thus he had: ose oO 7. | And the tina! three do'm @g, the “B" made the third “S." The opesate:, ‘having the location of the vessebaud |whot he thought was "S O "re. flayed the call, The Persia, baviog Vyiven her location and na pro- fed, ‘This explained why sething © was heard from her. FINE RED RASH BURNED INTENSELY | Spread Rapidly. Crust Would Drop | Offin Scales, Slept Very Little. ;- Cross and Peevish, Cuticura Soap and Ointment Healed. —_— 268 Nassan Ave., Greenpoint, New York City." My daughtor's trouble first started with @ fine red rash back of her ears which | burned inten: «1 caused her many sleep- less nights, she scratched and Is | spread very ly. She continually vieked and scratched the affected ears until »/ hey became Inflamrd. Later it became @ rust which would drop oft tn scales and ven become inflamed again, She slops ory Little at night and was always very rosy and peevish. Her halr also became MTooted. “tried many other remedies that heated er ears but only for a short while and they would become affected suon after, At last I trled Cuticure Soap and Ointment. 1 applied the Cuticura Ointment at night and washod Ler cars in the morning with theg Cuticura Soap with the greatest success. Now her neck and cars are perfectly healed." Signed) Mrs. A. McGuigan, June 26, 1913. In eelecting a tollet soap why not procure one ponsresing delicate emollient properties sufficient to allay minor frritations, remove + Fedness and roughness, prevent pore-clos- Ging, soften and sdothe sensitive conditions, | and promote skin and scalp health generality? | Buch a soap, combined with the purest ef mponaceoun ingredients and most fragrant {end refreshing of flower odors, ts Cuticura |@oap. Cuticura Soap 25c, and Cuticura | Ointment 50°, are sold by dealers throughout ‘the world. Liberal eample of each mailed | free, with a2-p. Skin Book, Address post- | eard ""Cuticura, Dept. T, Hoston.”* {27 Men who shave and shampoo with Cu- | eure Soap will find tt best for skin and ecalp. remedies have been coming and pation remedy a trial. Purely vegetable. en ection \