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NEXT WEEK'S COMPLETE NOVEL | Ba ee etomrees Believe, In rooms once posed @ pociroem by “Jimmie” Purce! tm the death house at Sing Sing, galoon owned by David at No. 64 Third avenue Pur- “equealing gambler” who @ year ago sbot and killed (pwelve- year-old dauguter, Agnes QB attempt to kill bie wife io thelr apartments at No. 318 West ‘Tweaty-lret street. He recently was gemtenced to die in the electric chair. Yesterday McNiff was served with @ wammons to appear in Yorkville Conurt on a charge of maintain peblie culeance. The police ssid tbe been served because of Bung about the old parte of Kelly’ Pasrets wen bo ref iil! i i il ij iti 5 in the yaa done car ané vy iat to Bave been he gang to keep a tab other pursuers. bery, Kelly saya, he the men back to the old pool- the money was divided ven only $15. He complained hel treated “right.” im the gang roughly told him wes fortunate t ‘° be counted in on G@ivision at all. gine pian, the police learned, the robbery a week ago, Hesternecery was decided on { iy ip f hE piiits TF GE "t PZRRCESEE EE Gy i | t fi automobile slowly Fourteenth street ue while two men i lr ifs g f 5 with the money. blackjacked and the it was the wort of robbers to run to the machine and BY AUTO GANG UBLIC, become knowa until an morning that another an automedile fig- occurred yesterday. Five Malcoim Moorey, cashier of tects in the Townsend at No, 1123 Broadway, of going to the firm's (li i br ir 52 F g i i 8 Pr z & g H re . i F i ttt feist 1M PERSONAL PROPERTY ‘Schedule Filed in Lincoln Shows . Secured Notes for $3,800 and $500 in Bank. | Neb., June 6.—William Placed on Ble to-day with the county io an index, He will pay on "property. while the Commoner is " Mated as possessing persona! proper- r wv ‘worth $6,611 aan Bryan owns considerable real estate, principally lots in Lincoln, his east of the city, some farm land in Nebraska, « furm near Mission, and a home in Florida. His individual personal property aghedute 1 listed as follows: “Notes ogy Be eae other Bh ai in ar tn bank, #4 tees tick ae engra' se fed janot and other diamonds , household pictures and rum Udell baad SUDGE WEIL TO WED. McKenzie, Voorhees & | ration of |ministration efficials are confronted jwith ¢ a VILLA SUBMITS TD CARRANZA AS BEST FOR MEXICO Accepts Secondary Place in Fighting Force Rather Than Endanger the Cause. MEETS CHIEF TO-DAY.| After Talk at Torreon Car-| ranza Will Go to Set Up Government at Saltillo. TORREON, M power and authority of Gen. Venusti- | ano Carranza, who ie about to de- | clare bimeeif Provisional President | of Mexico, bas been increased by) Gen, “Pancho” Villa's bumbiy ac- cepting @ place as the mere com- mander of one of the four military divisions Into which Carranza has; @iivded that part of Mexico already conquered by the rebels, Villa, who has been the supreme military commander of the rebels, was to have met Carranza bere yes- terday, but instead remained at CBi- busbua and bad a long communica. tion with the Supreme Chief by t graph, ae @ result of which be ac- knowledged Carransa’s authority and | eald: “1 am ready to make any sacrifice for my country, provided uiwaye that making such sacrifices will aid the Greater cause for which | bave been * With the air thus clarified, arrange- ments were made for a meeting be- tween and Villa in this city Gen. Carranza is Fengements for setti vigional capital in Balu continuing ar- and those who will constitute his Provis- ona! Cabinet. —2—— NO “LAW” BEHIND EMBARGO ON ARMS. WASHINGTON, June 6.—The Wash- ington Government has about ocon- cluded that Gen. Carranza will de- cline to enter the A. B. C. mediation conference at Niagara Falls, Ont., under the conditions named by the mediators. | Administration officers are not alone | concerned about Carransa’s attitude. | They are troubled over the situation with reference to the. ahipment of arms to the revolutionists. Information that the American schooner Sunshine from Galveston had landed ammunition at Tampico | tor the Mexican Conatitutionalists without interference on the part of the United States or the Huerta gov- ernment was received in official qua: ters here without comment, Despite the orders which were is- sued several days ago to stop ship- ments from the United States, Ad- fact that only by force of in an i se Yad 9 1 has been fou y the legal ex- perts of the Admini Federal courts have cannot be denied c! Secretary Garrison admitted to-day he directed the st ppege of shipments bord ae he had th in the border orders and that whioh he is proceeding. STEVENSON VERY WEAK. Vice-President im Chicage Hi: CHICAGO, June 6.--Adlal B. Steven- | better to-day. ‘Weakness incident to his eighty years and the nervous breakdown he suffered after the death of his wife six months ago, told against the veteran states- Gets Licenses” to ake Miss Rene G. Levy Hie Second Wile. Municipal Court Judge David L. Well fend Mise Rena G, Levy, living in the Hotel Marseilles, Broadway and One Huadred and Third street, visited City Clerk P. J. Skully this afternoon and @btained a marirage license. The couple plan to be married at Sherry's, Fifth on June 17, by the Rev. Dr. Weill recorded on the oortificate been married to Ruth Heein jon May 77, 108. The couple lived @ year, and on July the wife obtained adivor © ix Nev, She charged extreme {a the complaint, lave her age an twenty- Jedee ‘etl ie thirty-e'ght sat N Md vest One hui (i aes, red and | Med, and American Gets Prise. LONDON, June 6.—W. L. Drock, an} ‘American, to-day won the London derby.” L, Noel, who finished “outting and ley pronounced her suffering with po: man. A critical turn tn his condition was |expected by the pavaicians in charse ir within twenty- % ‘son mb Ve of the family | Louts and other were at his t COLLAPSES IN “L” TRAIN, Wo By Guyrope May itave | Concussion of Brain. While on her way do: own to-day in & Second avenue elevated train, Mra. Sarah Styer, twenty-five yeurs old, of $11 Haat One Hundred and Fortieth Wl, COllAperG ANd vas FeInove ‘at the One Hundred fi wel alasion and irom _ th taken to Reception Hospital. Dr. Br jt Mra Styer she wan Koing to | her ah ble concussion of the brain, | told che ductor that a the clovated atauion ne | auvuck on the head One ‘Hundred nnd Thirty-elghh ree and Bt. Ann's avenue, where work is ing done on the subway, Thinking yh mie It ahe sald she went on to tho cle. vated station. She felt no pain sh til ahortly before #he coll pred," aia si aod ai FREE BATHING | Suit PATTERN, ‘The latest style 3 May M Manton Paper for the making of @ snappy rons | last night, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1914. WEE TOTOG: GIRL OF MYSTERY WANDERED WITH | DOG AND $1417 Young Woman Sent to Belle- vue, and Brother Comes to City to Take Her Home. A well dressed young woman, who had a handvome collie on leash and} who carried $1,417 in currency, ts held | in the psychopathic ward of Bellevue to-day, while the police are trying to Ond out about her, Her peculiar ac- tions in the waiting room of Grand Centrat Terminal attracted the atten- tion of Mise Helen Michaelson, an agont of the Travellers’ Ald ee) When questioned by Misa Michatl- son, the young woman at first gave incoherent answers, but Ginally said ehe was Miss Ellen Bushnell of Great Barrington, Mass. By her side trotted the collie dog, which attractel almost as much attention as his mistress, When asked where she was going the girl sald she did not know, buy thought she might visit some of the big sbips and get @ powition as cap- tain, After she had told many odd stories she was persuaded to accom. pany Miss Michaelson and was taken to Bollevue Hospital. Her handbag was found to be quite stuffed with money, . At the hospital the girl said she had a brother, Walter, living at Hills- dale, N, ¥. The collie wae lodged in the hospital stable, The brother was reached by tele- phone to-day, He lives on « farm near Hillsdale and will come to New York after bis sister, The girl, he said, has been living with an aunt at Great Barrington, | Mass. A relative died recently and \ieft her a little more than the eum of | money found in her possession last night, She ts irresponsible at times and was closely watched. Mr, Bush- pell said he could not understand how she eluded her aunt, —— | FRANK VERDICT | UPHELD, ATLANTA, June 6,—Judge Ben H. Mill of the Fulton County Superior Court today sustained the State's demurrer jto the motion to set aside the verdict by which Leo M. Frank was found gutity of the inurder of Mary Phagan, a fac- tory girl. The motion wae based on the claim that Frank's conatitutional rights were violated when the verdict wag returned uring the condemned man's absence POLICE READY WITH CLUBS AND HOSE TO FIGHT THE REDS (Continued from First Pa, real furious Red movement should develop, the ofl magnate will be able to meet bis end of it with an ample force. Berkman did not seem frightened | by the display of howe and clubs, “Threats of bloodshed and ducking do not alarm us,” he declared. “We are in & great movement and the Constitution is greater than any vil- lage ordinance, It guarantecs every man and woman free speech and we) mean to have this, If it costs blood and imprisonment and the peace of the Rockefellers.” All kinds of threats have been made | to the village authorities, One is that the $60,000 greenhouses of Village President Pierson will be dynamited, Another is the throwing of vitriol and another is that the great slab of stone being rolled to the Rockefeller grounds to be shaped into a fountain will be fractured with dynamite. stood about all that law-abiding peo- ple may be expected to stand and they are determined that the An- archiate and 1, W. W. people will not use their streets for meotings which incite to murder and riot. A feeling of uneasiness runs through the population of Tarrytown and North Tarrytown, but the natives are ready to repel the threatened inva- sion, The roads are being watched, and those having no special business in the villages are turned back, All trains from New York are met and firemen are kept ready with the hose to souse the undesirables. Francis J. Lowe, of the Live and Let Live League, made an effort to get @ compromise with the village, but it came to nothing. He offered the services of a commission com- posed of Inez Milholland Boissovain, Amos Pinchot and Attorney Hiram Mann to act on the question of per-| mitting public street meetii ‘The offer was refured point blank by the village trustees. ell no A REMINDER OF THAW. Judge Benjamin H. Cardozo of the Matened for more than of Court of Appe: two hours to-day to the argument attorneys for John N. Anhut, the la yor who was sentenced to serve from two to four years in Sing Sing for of-| ing @ bribe, to rel Thaw, who are making 'AT THE EARTH’S CORE A Wonder Story of Another World, By EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS, Author of “Tarzan of the Apes” Etc. suusunasnanennabanenmnennneeemmmemmeeen Seventh Regiment Starting on Trip to West Point and Boarding Trolley Cars for Ride to the Boat BANK IN LONDON lests have been working for some weeks Peaceful Tarrytown people havelto re-establish Grenfell | | | Earl Grey Reported a Loser in several Canadian and other compapies CLOSES. DOORS OWES $5,000 00 Failure Due to Grand Trunk Speculation. LONDON, June 6.—Chapl!in, Mitne, Grenfell & Co., Ltd, merchants and nankers at No. 6 Prince street, aus- pended to-day. The company was registered In 1899 to take over the business of Morton, Chaplin & Co, {formerly Morton, Ross & Co.). Its authorized capital ts $1,750,000, The firm has had a high reputa- tion and excellent family connections. It conducted general and private banking and a company promoting business. The directors include Er- nest Chaplin, G. Grinnell Milne and R. W. Skipwith, | The unsecured Habilities, it !9 aup- | posed, amount to $6,000,000. ‘The failure ts belleved to be the result of large operations in Grand Trunk by Arthur Morton Grenfell, who was formerly a member of the firm and whone dealings recontly have been the| subject of much gossip. It 1s sald | wherein was interested are tn- volved, Earl Grey, whose daughter was Grenfell'a first wife, is reported among the heavy loser Powerful banking and other Inter- affairs tn the Interest of the many stockholders of the companies he controlled, The firm recently issued a notice that Grenfell had not been connected there- with since Feb. 17. ‘The affairs of the bank were largely involved with those of Canadian Agency, Limited, which ts controlled by Arthur Grenfell. He and the Canadian Agency had been engaged in a campaign for the purchase of a controlling interest in the Grand Trunk Railway. The total of the deposita is under- stood to have been kreatly dimin- ished in the past month and the amount outstanding is believed to be about $1,250,000, Arthur Grenfell recently formed group for the purchase of a con- trolling interest in the General Pe- troleum Company of Californ: Barl Grey has been visiting Cal lin connection with the negotiations, Grenfell is retiring from the transac- tion, which will now be carried sarees by other members of the The Grand Trunk transaction at- tempted by Grenfell ts considered as one of the most daring stock opera- tions launched here tn many years, SS eee THAW CHAUFFEUR KILLED. Drtver of © Vietim ef Acctde: NORTH STRATFORD, N. H,, June 6. | the WEST PONT WITH ARNY OF GUESTS Sails Up the Hudson Thousand Strong, Band Playing, Flags Flying. ‘The Seventh Regiment, N. G. N. ¥., , one thousand strong, not to mention the regiment’s veterans, resplendent im their eld uniforms, ealled up the Hudson to-day to take West Point. They carried 3,500 guests with them, among the number numerous regular army officers with their wives and families, eo that there should be a Proper audience to the Point's first invasion in history by a fully armed militia regiment. The Seventh and its veterans are mighty proud of the invitation to West Point, as the honor can be ex- | tended only by express permission of |the Secretary of War, and no other | militia regiment was ever so honored | before. Col. Daniel Appleton and his men boarded the Washington Irving of | the Albany Day Line, especially chartered for the occasion, at the Pier at One Liundred and Twenty- ninth street and the North River. The regimental band played a quick- step, and the old-timers as well as the youths of the regiment, strode up| the gangplanks with snappy steps. Already there were on board more | than 2,000 women in brilliant summer costumes and their escorts, the guests of the regiment. They had boarded the river liner at Forty-second street and they applauded as the regiment marched aboard. AFTER REVIEW THERE WILL BE A BASEBALL GAME. t West Point the regiment will give @ dress parade and review, and then regulars, guardsmen and veter- ans of the Iatter organization will swing out in a united parade across drill grounds, Then tnere will be a baseball game between the ca- dets and a picked team of guards- men, Former Corporal J. Angus | Shaw of Company H, wno is one of the most enthuslastic veterans of the Beventh, declared in no uncer- tain terms that the score of that baseball game would be tn favor of the suardsmen—a prediction confi-; dently shared by every veteran and active man in the regiment. The Seventh will be entertained by a polo game betwen the cadets and the team of Squadron A. The game was to have been held yerter- | day, but was postponed because of wet grounds. From Army Headquartera here came these guesta of the Seventh: Col. W. 8. Sage, Major William We! gel, Captains G. HL. White, H. J, Wat- son, J. B, Mitchell, D. H, Biddle and W. D. A. Anderson and Lieut. T. L. Crystal; from Fort Totten there were Col, and Mra. A. Cronkhite, the for- mer commandant of the fort; Major and Mrs, H. H. Rutherford, Capt. and Mrs. E. R. Tilton and Mrs. Rol- | ly Tilton, Capt. and Mra, P. P.| Bishop, Capt. and Mrs. O. G. Collins, | Capt. and Mra. C. H. Paterson, Capt. jand Mrs. H. L. Steele, Capt, and Mrs. A. G. Cooper, Capt. and Mra, C. L. Fenton, Capt. and Mre. M. A} Cross, Lieut. and Mra. C, G. Mettler, | Lieut. and Mrs, W. K. Duan and Lieut, Stanton; from Governor's Is- land Col, and Mrs, W. A. Simpson, Col. and Mrs. W. G. Haan, Col. and Mrs. W. G, Maus and party, Col. and Mra, J. 8 Mallory, Capt. J. W. Beacham jr. and Mrs. Wright, his sister, Capt. and Mrs, G, H. Scott and Captains W. B, Baker, A. H. Hughuet and R. H. Halstead. Gen. Batley with a party represented the Coast Artillery. SENATE CLEARS WAY FOR CANAL TOLLS VOTE ——— WASHINGTON, June 6-——By de- claring that to-day, legislatively speaking, was atill yesterday and, figuratively, turning back the hands of the clock, the Senate to-day pre- vented any business from obstructing unlimited debate on the Panama telle exemption Dill. When the Vice-President called the 0 to order at 11 o'clock the floor was given to Genator Cenmine to finish t peech he began day before yest Beveral Senat ore declared that no adjournment will be taken until the| tolla bill on S08 been passed, which will mean that 1 be ne business whatever vote, ——— BUZZARD OVER CAPITAL. 1912, when Dey street was widened, IN DEY STREET IS TORN DOWN Terminal Building Owners Take Action After Complaints to Post-Office Department. Bhortly after noom to-day workmen removed the big steel and concrete platform used by the Post-Office De- partment in handling mall for the Hudson Terminal Station tn Dey street. A gang of men working for Thomas Quinn, a contractor, used pick and axe to such good effect that the platform, which was thirty feet long and seven feet wide, and ob- structed half the busy sidewalk, wae ebaved from the building. The removal of the platform was the resuit of a notice to the owners of the bullding that it would have to be torn away before Tuesday or the Hor- ough President's office would bring about the desired clearance. Ever since the middie of February, the city and Government officials have quarelled over the abutment. A dozen or more letters passed be- tween Postmaster-General Burleson and Borough President Marks, but there was no real move made by the Post-office Department to comply with the hints from the borough oficial that the law forbade the ob- wtruction of sidewalks with plat- forma. The actual removal, therofore, 1s due to the owners themselves, who hired the workmen to chop off the platform rather than have the men of Borough President Marks’s de- partment resort to a dramatic attack. Somewhat ruffied, the men in charge of the Hudson Terminai branch of the post-office nevertheless treated lightiy the demolishing of the platform and sald that it would make no difference in the mall re- moval. MILITANT FURIES SET TORCH TO-DAY | TO FINE MANSION Historic ‘hertat at High Wy- combe Said to Have Been | the Real Objective. l LONDON, Jone 6—The cuipaign of the “arson squads” of the militant, nuffragetten. was continued to-day | when the women set fire to and de-| stroyed a fine manajon near High Wycoinbe in Bucking’ hire, about thirty miles from London. The mausion was filled with valu- able furniture and objects of antique art, but the members of the family are away. The usual suffrage Mterature was found about the grounds. The house adjoined the historic parish church which is believed to have been the real objective of the women, who were, however, unable to obtain ad- mittance. This incendiary fire te considered part of the plan of the militant or- ganization to give the people of Eng- land no rest until the Parliamentary vote is granted to women, Sylvia Pankhurst, borne to the plat- form on an invalid chair, made her appearance last night at @ suffrage testing in Canningtewa, and re- peated her threat that she would lie on the steps ef the House of Com- {mons without food or water until Premier Asquith consented to receive ® deputation of her followers. Last night's court ia Buckingham Palace, the last of the seasun, was not disturbed by any euffragette demonstration. No royal gard party, however, will be given thi year through fear that some of the “mad women” might get in. In consequence of euffragette a! tacks, churches in many parte of the country are being closed except for Gunday services. _—_—_—— | WILSON CHAUFFEUR FINED, Justice of the Peace Puntshes Him fev Speeding. WVATTSVILLE, Mé., June 6—A ten Gellar fine wae paid to-day by a White WILL BEGIN MONDAY “/SEVENTHCAPTURES (MAIL PLATFORM {SAYS AMERICANS House chanffeur to a justicn ef the 9 relense pendin, ~Frank Cantin, the chauffeur who nhut las been ‘in’ the| grove Harry Ky Thaw in wild filght| WASHINGTON, Sune ¢-—¥er severet ‘Tombs since his conviction. N Mills, Vt. @ the | hours to-day a large bussard heveret The Appellate Division of the Su.| from Norton’ 8, Vtw across the | ee the Capitol, Congresamen coming prone Coane 5 nay" an Bree Lee eee | ie i to Colebrook, paler) H., ter ork | fe the House Office building wa ion and segwe Fad, eee from pecs ask for oo So ant through the air them speo- fie of reasoned abt on wi the lea he A a instantly thated on the meaning vulture’s 4 that from | “Capitol “weosted” wo “Gecialon some asl es te celsereay, we | geet Bt the OO a the peace for speeding while driving Prest- dent Wilson's daughters, Mise Margaret Wilson and Mre, Francis B. Sayre, frem Baltimore last Sunday, SLEWEACH OTHER IN NIGHT BATTLE __— Returned Sailor Tells How Forces Mistook Each Other for Enemy in Dark. PHILADELPHIA, June 6—Detalle of @ battle fought tn the dark be- tween forces from the American war- ships occupying Vera Crus, in which two men are said to have been Killed and three seriously wounded, have just been received here from two sources. Lamont C. Fisher, who returned from Vera Cruz on the Prairie, told the story, and it has been corrobe- rated by a letter received from 4 marine still on duty there. According to Lamont, the battle occurred on the night of April 38, three days after the Americans oo- cupled the city, The engagement took place between 450 men from the New Hampshire and an equal ferce from the Minnesota. The men from the Minnesota, it ts declared, had been ordered from the centre of the city to the outpost, three miles out- side, to relieve the men from the New Hampshire. The fight occurred near the out- posts, It was pitch dark and the Minnesota's battalion was making ite way along slowly. Suddenly, with out @ challenge, there was shot from a nervous sentry, The Min- nesota’s men, thinking they had been attacked by a superior force of Mext- cans, deployed in skirmish order, threw themselves on the ground and opened a spirited volley fire. In an instant there was hot firing on both sides, ench believing the other to be the enemy. The Minnesota unlimbered a field plece and got into action with it, but y the range was oniy 160 yards and the gunners were unable to depress their gun to do effective service, In ten minutes Ensign Lannon, through night glasses. discovered the mistake, Regardless of his own danger, he dashed along the line, biowing the whistle to cease firing. in so doing ho was drilled clean through with a steel jacketed bullet just above the heart. Ensign Lannon, still critically wounded, was in- valided home on the Prairie, the ship on which Fisher returned, Fish- er claima the story was told him by the wounded ensign. ‘SAY REAL ESTATE MAR PASSED BAD CHECKS John D, Ireland Indicted on Com- plaint of Atlantic City Hotels. John D. Ireland, who is in the real estate business at No. 122 Liberty street, was locked up in the Tombs to-day to await extradition to New Jersey. Ireland was indicted by the Grand Jury in Atlantic City for con- spiring to defraud, by means of bad checks, the Traymore, Marlborough- Blenheim, Seaside, Shelbourne and Chalfonte hotels last summer. Charles Stewart, who was indicted with him and arrested in Atlantic City, was released Ay $2,500 ball and is now awaiting trial According to the hee Ri thorities, Ireland drew the 4 a bank in Little Falla NJ. where he bad a small bee rtae though where near adequa! mest bis checks. ——————. STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. Perima, 8t. Thomas....... SAM. P. Fred. Hendrich, Gonaives 8AM, Quit Thinking You Cannot Eat fy Ste SAS nt orate we