The evening world. Newspaper, May 23, 1914, Page 4

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WILL JUDGE. . it Amateurs of Thirty-five Cities Are in the Com- petition. of in the Great American Stakes. Under the di- of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle five pairs of amateur champion representing as many great ean cities, will glide upon the ballroom flour of Danseland, Square Garden, this after- and evening in competition ir we title of All-American One-Step Walts Champions. his afternoon tho Castles will judge Meld of New York dancers entered & qualification contest to decide ro couples shall represent this fm the big contest at night. ‘The -town entries are all champions respective cities, having been A of the contests Feld in town visited by the Cast’ is dur- et geod whirlwind tour of the ‘New Gnncers who will pe iis sBeramen for the honor . e almost any of the profes- | Couples mow appearing before earnestly have those New York pursued thefr quest for silver and other prises throughout the that they have become known the out-of-town champions i nak, Lael Rakpdiche oy) frpwhootere to-night are the fol- 3? Miss Jeanne Dale, Bt. Joseph, Miss Miriam Sears, Cleveland, Peart; MNjop Detroity Mich. Edna Shaufer, St. Louis, Mo. Lillian Vizay, Milwaukee, Wis. Naomi Shaw, Columbus, 0. Kroner, Omaha, Neb.; Miss _N. Y¥.; James! Springfield, Mass.; Harold t Buffalo; J. Davis Donovan, ore; John Dolan, Scranton, and Richard Wildberg, Cinein- and their partners. ILED BAYONNE BANK LOSERS 1M NEAR-RIOT amor to Call President Carrigan W Explain Cause for Collapse Starts Trouble. @ riot was caused at the last night of depositors of the First National Bank in the 4 School when it was or “We'd cause he concernin, trial the brought manner. don't understand the Social All the organising would ods. probably probably knows more about game than any man living. le ossibilities of t judge would Everybody would ha’ “We would turn t railroads, the steel mille and oth it industries over to the toile ut this TArDIng Over would not be|such restricted thoroughfares. revolutionary | commissioner anticipates that when abo: Who Dance in the Garden To-Day WOULD GES TO ROCEFELLER AND UGE CARY That’s What the~. Socialists Would Do, Commission is Told. Industrial Max Hayes, editor of the Cleveland| of Estimate as part of his pro- Citizen, Socialist, trade unionist and organiser, told the members of the safety crusade. United States Commission on Indus- trial Relations to-day what the So- clalist party would do if it got in| were ordered to-day to make a com- put etal, eto to work. where ¢! done in a legal, orderly wa IW. lieves in ho can't get | the stomach, the sour, undigest- es yaaa Alcea edad Tormenting food end foul geese; who have headache, coat- S TORAD—IIME AX the excess bi upset, | carry off and poison onthe Doe't zm CANDY CATHARTIC the consti . W., as opposed to ti ore radical methods which re not approved b: ¥ woci from the liver an: pat waste matter from the bowels. A Cascaret to-night strai out by morning—s 10-cent our head clear, stomach sweet, liver and Neat and you feel bully for forget the children, r pl Brother) the i Rockefeller at the head of the oll in- r dustries department, because he| playgrounds. Patrolmen are to be in- that] structed to interview principals of But] parochial schools, ministers and Brother Rockefeller would have to} pricsts, real estate agents and real work. He'd be well paid for his| estate owners and all others who may labor, Then, there's the steel indus- try. We'd put Judge Gary at the head of that, in all Ikelibood, be- |p Y y Mash te be Wall intctmed Evening World's plan of making the the market and indus- But] one-way traffic system through con- work, | gested streets and also on The Evening mines and the tt meth-| these plans are worked out the police be Th htens seony Ba 1h RS | PEARL MILLER 4 ORVROIT. mice POLICE’ WILL HELP. THEEVENING WORLD TOGUARD CHILDREN Woods Will Make Streets Safer for Playgrounds. The Evening World's crusade for |more playgrounds in order that the children of the city may be kept off the streets induced Police Commis- | Sloner Woods to take an active hand }in co-operation to-day. He issued orders which make the members of |the Police Department factors in the movement to save the children of New York from injury and death under the wheels of vehicles. ‘The Commissioner said that he had been specially impressed with The Evening World's idea of turning the school playgrounds and school open spaces over to the children during the summer vacation. He will ad- vocate ¢! Plan before the Board gramme to use the police in the Inspectors and captains in the densely populated districts of the city dea of listing all open spaces which may be made available for be in position to help the movement. The police are also to report on The streets safer by the adoption of the World's plan of cutting off certain streets from all vehicular traffic except such as has a business destination in The will play an important part in solving the playground problem, In his instructions to the depart- ment Commissioner Woods calls at- tention to the report of the National Highways Comimiasion setting forth the great loss of life on the streets of New York and the high percentage of children among the victims. From this time on, irrespective of the out- come of the plans to take children off the streets by making open spaces for them, the police will be more vigilant than ever in the handling of street trafic and the control of reckless drivers, chauffours and motormen, Little children who are found by patrolmen playing off the sidewalks d | or darting across crowded streets be- the patrolman thinks it auch children will be taken home and careful about letting them out on the atreets. Commiasioner Woods intends to ex- tend the excellent work of the po- leemen who day to the guardianship of all child- day. rt A Ww at Pier 4, North River to-day. ——>_-—_ F Gives Up Twe Radies. body drifted into the ; Daughter of Ex-President of RULER DROWNS AT SEA. [But Don't Worry! All This can girl—the daughter of an ex- President of the United States—to marry a King of Hngland and be- come Queen? ere of Mrs. Everard Cotes's latest novel, “His Royal Highness,” which will give diplomatic circles here and abroad some food for thought as to the possibilities of a hitherto incon- cwivable Anglo-American alliance, if Merri Engiand would send her princes over here once in @ while, {ean readers as Sara Jeannette Dun- can. She arrived here on the Maure- tania, work out the destinies Lanchester, her heroine, and Prince Alfred, who figures as a third Prince in the royal house of England. She spent most of that time in Indi work on the novel. and Advocate School Yards 4 on canvass of each precinct with| Pe tween cornera will be warned, and if necessary their parents will be cautioned to be ‘uard children on school cromings during certain hours of the ren on the streeta at all hours of the KING OF ENGLAND — JUDGE LINDSEY DEFESMINSTES, WEDS YANKEE GL United States Becomes the Queen of Great Britain. Happens Only in Mrs. Ever- ard Cotes’s New Novel. Would it be possible for an Ameri It has been done—between the cov- Mrs. Cotes is best known to Amer- It took her three years to of Hillary at “Obatacles to a marriage of this kind? Why, in fact, there are not any in England,” said Mrs, Cotes. “Even with the rigorous unwritten constitution of the Kgglish people and the ban against marriages without the royal circles and the consent that a third prince must get from his sovereign before he can a nchester marries one ani comee @ queen of all England, and England not only likes it, but re- Jote It could be done in real life, t PRINCE MEETS HIS FATE AT PRESIDENTIAL BALL. Of course, the autnoress explained, there is one unforeseen occurrence and a tragic one, too, that would have to come as a preliminary royal yacht with both ar would give the third prince the throne. That is the way Mra.,Cotes has worked it out. ‘ Hillary and the Prince meet for the first time at a Presidentii it in tl White House, which she Is as the guest of the Presiden wife, who are the dearest friends of her father, an ex-Presidei The Prince {s smitten by Hillary’: beet 4 and her Yankee ways and she wit him. But he is a prince and she has no rank, He carries his love for her away, when, stricken with Illn: he is compelled to hurry to Canada. He ob 8 roy’ permission to spend a season or two in the Adiron- dacks in search of health. When Hil- y to the Adirondacks to pend the summei er’s estate, she meets the Prince again. There being Lovers’ aplenty in the mountains, the Prince and Hillery have many opportunities to tell eac! other the sweetest story. MARRIAGE 18 KEPT A SECRET FOR FIVE YEARS. Here the plot begins to thicken. Prince Alfred’ the Princess Georgina, has planned a mi - tween the Prince and a German Prin- cess. She takes Alfred back to Eng- land with her, but he frowns upon his aunt's propositiot id obtains royal sion to revisit the Adirondack: to complete his treatment. When the Prince joins Hillary in he tells her of his plans to marry her and go west to Colorado. So they sail up the rivor in @ canoe and are married. they thus them that the royal yacht has ¢ down. Ho was, therefore, Ki! England when he married! England day rushes back to Bi ny ak For five long years he reigns. ele n, Finally, he sounds the has made, without his own romance would be impos marry beneath his the consent of his soveroigd. NOVEL MAY BE DRAMATIZED FORM But Alfred, rising may the occasion, do not prevent a sovere! ing himself permission to them he 1s gol: 'y, Whose father to the Presidency. Instead of frowning upon t the great heads wele and, take it from M. me the mal Sotes's de: follow: From here on to the finish @ marriage. pani Russell la trying to have Pa) pla: ton & Co, 2 re clothing was that of @ poor person, Thi who has completed hij of must not be without a King for a and Prince Alfred, now land on the taking Hillary with him, r not to tell any one of No one save a college chum knows his chums can we mier and the Cabinet as to the pos-. sible effect of such a marriage as he telling about ell him it Prince to nk and without N HERE IN telly the Premier and the Cabinet that the laws of England from giv- marry whomever he pleases—juat as.tt hap- pened in his case. His listeners ure dumfounded at this possibility and in he midst of their consternation he H 8 plan, tion, it Is some regal wedding that rs, Cotes reveals the gigantic political and international importance of such It is highly probable New York will see the novel dramatized, since Miss er mould the romance into ‘a The novel 1s now on D. Apple 0 ad epee goes PLANS A CALL AT NO. 26 BROADWAY John D. Rockefeller Jr.’s Sec- retary Wired Colorado Jurist He Couldn’t See Him. John D. Rockefeller Jr. has re- fused to see Judge Ben B. Lindsey of Denver and talk over the mine situation in Colorado, Judge Lind- eey at the Hotel Imperial to-day showed an Evening World reporter the telegram which had come to him in Washington in anawer to a letter and @ telegram sent to Mr. Rocke- feller asking for an interview. The telegram was as follows: “Mr. John D. Rockefeller desires me to say in reply toyour telegram to him of May 20 that he regrets that it will be impossible for him to arrange the interview which you suggest. “H. D. SIMS, PrivatwSecretary.” Judge Lindsey said that he was nat to be daunted by this message. On Monday he and Mrs. Lindsey will vall ‘upon Mr. Rockefeller at No. 5¢ Broad- way and see if the Standard Oil mine owner will not see them and discuss the troubles of the Colorado mine: MOTHERS OF SLAIN CHILDREN | %, TO TELL STORY. In Washington, awaiting word from him, Judge Lindsey has three women he has brought from Colorado, who have stories to tell of the mine troubles. They are Mrs. Pearl Jolly, whose hushand, @ miner, was killed at Ludlow; Mrs. Mary PePtrucei, whose three children were shot to death, and Mrs. H. H. Thomas, whose two children escaped death by a miracle, the Judge says. The stories of these women have already been told to President Wilson. And in order that the people of New York whall have a chance to hear them, Judge Lindsey is arranging for a mass meeting to be held on Monday night at Cooper Unton. “I cannot conceive,” Judge Lindsey waid, “that Mr. Rockefeller has had ig| My letter and telegram, as it does \d | not @eem possible that he should 4 cline to have a talk with me upon a subject of such vital importance. Surely he will be willing to extend to me the same courtesy President saw fit to extend, =e BRONZE TABLET PLACED ON OLD COFFEE HOUSE as Former Centre of Ac- tivity of the City. building on the aite of the M of the American Revolution, present. ing. At a little after 1 o'clock the mem. bers of the Lower Wall Street Busi. tavern, led by President Charles Mc: per which now occupies he It was curtained by a bi American flag. Seth Low, Wiiberforce Eames an of the festivities. Takes Up Quarters pal Bi I} city de | Municipal Building, brok: transferring ite offices ‘thie morning. Ale true! | the furniture, Hex short); began hauli records and office s that the BY WALL STREET MEN Historic Site Commemorated ‘Wall street and aome of its contig- uous streets were all decked out with flags to-day to celebrate the placing of a bronge memorial tablet on the chants’ Coffee House, which was a centre of the city’s commercial ac- tivity one hundred and fifty years The members of twenty-five civic and patriotic societies, including the Chamber of Commerce, the New York Stock Exchange, the Sons of the American Revolution, the Daughters the Huguenot Society, the Society of Tammany, the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, the Merchants’ Association and the Holland Dames of America gathered for luncheon at Fraunce's Tavern, at Broad and Pear! atreets. There were many women among the one hundred and twenty-five persons ‘There was no apeechmak- ness Men's Association, who presented the tablet, formed two hundred strong jat the site of the old coffee house at the southeast corner of Wall and Water streete and marched to the of the second story win- William Bayne jr, made speeches. The City Hall was decorated in honor yes Hh SE PARK DEPARTMENT MOVES. New Munici- The Park Department, latest of the te to move into the records in id equipment y SUss MAN OUT OF WORK SHOOTS, FOREMAN | AND KILLS HIMSELF Lost His Job Through Illness and Was Crazed When He Couldn’t Get Back. The Spiro Michael Company, clothiers on the fifth floor of the loft building at Nos. 7 and 9 East Thir- teonth street, employed a young Italian youth, Michael Lasurda, of No. 630 East Third street, a@ & sewer of linings in coats, He was a oheerful worker and & good one, but when he became ill some weeks ago his place had to be filled, #o he returned to find himself out of work. Again and again he ap- plied for a chance to work and re- peatedily Hyman Blumenthal, the foreman, assuured him that he should have the first vacancy. Blumenthal had repeated this as- surance to-day and had turned away | Then Meet and fired two shsts point] Blache at the foreman. The first! him, but the second at up, Tony SRP ieee cee ee heard the reports o' @ shots an seoing Lasurde, asked what had happened. tat me alone or I'll shoot you,” jponse, and Amato, ter- cy he heard the report of another shot and redoubled hie 3 , thinking Lasurda was shooting at him. Others who raced after down the stairs found that he had ut the revolver to his own head and jown his brains out. ‘The police took Lasurda’s body to the Mercer street station. No one knew anything about him except erased breaking the skin. "foward La-| 4 WALL —_>— Market Closing—Trading quieted down in second hour after a lively spurt of bullish activity, but relapse into duiness did not result in a material diminution of strength, stocks holding their gains pretty well to end. ‘Weekly trade reviews of commer- cial agencies were favorable, indi- cating increased retail distribution and in well infortred quarters it was sald that stocks of merchandise of Practically all kinds on hands of dealers were unusually low. This manufacturers for delivery of goods. While there was a more hopeful feeling regarding Missouri Pacific matter it was conceded that the market was likely to wait for definite news on the subject before develop- activity on a Lek ad ecale. ning — ulative conditions were unc! in the early trading, business be! mall in volume, but pce demand was sufficient to tab! & number of issues at ni ‘The most interest was shown in Common, which re- nded to the hopeful statements of bairman Gary. Steel advanced *. to 62%. Market showed fair st: and advances occurred in ir of issues. Union Pacific, at 167%, was a8 Missouri Pacific sold at Lary of 6-8, Erie, at 29 1-8, was 1-3 higher, and all the copper stocks gains and trading became more active in contrast to the ex- treme dulness. “ that handed next few days. t a o An. oo. te Pee y wesses. setest™ that he apparently had been crazed because he couldnt get work. WILSON, GARRISON AND STONE VICTIMS N NFDENE HE Prisoners Accused of Imposing on President, War Secretary and U. S. Senator. ST. LOUIS, May 323.—George Michael and Joseph George are held by immigration officials bere and will be recommended for deportation on the ground that they worked a confidence game on President Wil- son, Senator Stone of Missour! and Secretary of War Garrison. The men were arrested here after soliciting funds from the Business Men's League for an orphanage in Van, Syria. They showed letters of recommendation from President Wil- son, Senator Stone and Secretary Garrison. James R. Dunny, immigration in- spector, already had been informed that the letters of recommendation had been given to two men who had 2g collect funds for the orphanage Investigation, tt was stated, re- vealed that letters the men deci: were written by church officials in Syria were bogus, that the orphan- Bo one had been authori: to solicit funds in America for it. RUNAWAY HURTS GIRL AND JUST MISSES BOY and Fireman Stops Horse in a Jump. ond avenue this afternoon, ing on the trol the found later, the bit was broken. Samuel Belaborn of No. 20, Fifty-eighth atreet, riding a bicycl¢ him ten feet a ay. McCauley, caped without a scrate! is h, Guidano Byaa of No. 215 Wes! id bowled over by the runaway and re. ceived injuries which required he removal to Flower Hospital for treat ment. Hurton, a fireman of Hook and Lad. stopped. the ca pilin Sainietats Diplomat Dead. PEKING, May 2%.—Kokohi First Secretary tion here and formerly Consul. New York, died represented themselves as authorised | ¢ Sa ig age, wae supported by taxation fave | Policeman Saves Lad on Bicycle A big bay horse attached to a de- livery cart of the MoCreery store ran away in Fifty-eighth street near Bec- starting west. Michael Mahon, the driver, and Robert Inslee, his helper, both pull- ins, were unable to con- nimal because, as it was At Third avenue eleven-year-old East was directly in the path of the run- away when Policeman McCauley of the East Fifty-first strect station grabbed him by the shirt and tossed oyele and the cart wrased over he bicycle an e cart ari But young Belaborn es- At Lexington avenue John der Truck No, 2, made a jump, Inslee was thrown from the seat of between Lexington and Park avenues, but escaped serious injury, Misuno, | Rates. 6 Amalgamated Copper 7 10 Lehigh Valley .... & New York Central i Ehetaatd Pacific . ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. Between 700 and 800 men will re- turn to work an idleness of three weeks, when Bessemer plant of Re- public Iron and Steel Company will, Every, department. except’ 0-\seh" very e e 5 mill of Brown-Bonnell plant will re-* sume, and other mills will go on later. in week. A_large number of railroads are working to put every grain car in condition to be used in preparation for big grain movement. Railroads gay indications are for record break- ing crops. é Additional receivership suit was filed at St. Louis Friday against St. Louls Francisco road National City Bank, and N. A. Mz Millan, trustoes, as result of May 1 general Interest default on $69,524,000 Hens. A cable from London to Harris, Winthrop & Co. says that important French banks are loaded with un- salable South American securities, and assistance must be given. California Petroleum Leet A re- port net earnings for April before depreciations-—$192,573, compared with $188,641 for April last year. For four months net earnings are $21,646 less than year ago. ‘There was net surplus of idle cars on U. 8. and Canadian lines of 238,643 reported as of May 15, an increase of 9,763 from May 1. ia f TEMA IN WATER BLISTERS slustelusuie. SSPE FEES CFIA EF $+ ttl tei ttt ttt tHe tHItlt tt+tttoL = Se ot +t lttttel] t+ + tte tHe tlt ++ Le ea PEER FER PSFE ES gatiotste8.vers + +4t+ +++ —_—__ CHICAGO ‘WHEAT AND CORN oo MARKET. teh R's FE ‘Wheat opened firm on Net Cage, change, = nS Net Close, iM winter wheat belt. prices sagged off from the early ad- vances and closed irregular 1-4 ad- vance .to 3-8 decline, Corn was quiet and firm at openy ur ing, showing advances in first and closed unchanged to 6-8 advance. “BLOOD PRESSURE” Ask Your Doctor or Read This Qleed through ‘The circulation of polsened he system irritates ‘of the vital const! aches, follow. Fellet ¢ RG Pl Get a Box To-Night. + 10c and 25c the Box. a A ~ jimination. Headaches, Fil are first consejuen trouble is not remov. mon ailments. Better brighterspirits, it ally this time-tested home remedy. ' ae + dry weather in Central and Eastern districts of i eg ad eg stream, ie _bioed is poisoned. 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