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Re ee et aa TT ree enemas Darras 3.34 Sols TTS eee eet, exactly sntisfind because of Areparity in their ages, be Stnonry has been for years the king werstraw and the boss of Roc! County. Ile has been Town Rierk for fourteen years. 1 have al- Ways been one of his politi¢nt sup- Our relations have been | bis father-in-law. | Rew friendly at alt times. Coroner P. J. Leonard and District- time ago I spoke to Cleary| Attorney Gagean took depositions to- Vabout my son and Anna. | asked him|day from the eyewitnesses of the i | §€ be didn't think they were gotting | tragedy, Bernard J. Fox, Josiah Fel- Wo frien: he being older than Eu-)}ter, County Supervisor, and High ene and there being being @ differ-|Sheridan, a police officer, and from © ence in religion. Cleary said they|Mre, A. H. Kennedy, grandmother of Stores Worth $55,259,523.92, ) , were simply young people and would|the dead boy. This proceeding was want direct to the office of th Town| ; Clerk {n the Town Hall. Young New: man, as his father says, went to the home of his grandmother, where he get tired of cach other. preliminary to the inquest. | While Total Debts Are “Bugene @ happy, careless Iad)BOY HAD NO CHANCE FOR AN) "and never did much work, partly be- EXPLANATION. | Only $44,842,253.77. pause he was 80 young, partly because! Fox and Felter agree that young) he didn't have to work, But he went) Newman sald nothing to Cleary be-| to Savannah, Ga., some time ago and) fore the shooting. Cleary went to his oe) Worked in a hotel down there, 1 have! safe, got a revolver, and vemarking| WILL AID MMITTEES. | found leters in his effects from Anna! “You thought you got the best of me, | ‘written to Savannah in which she ad-| but I've got you now,” opened fire on | Vised him (5 save his money against) the youth, who was sitting in a chair. } “ | Head of Firm Will Work Free | their marriage. “I wont with Cleary to the District. LETTERS SHOW COURSE OF | Attorney's office,” says Fox in his! to Untangle Affairs THE ROMANCE. ‘Cleary acted like @ crazy | y “These intters show thet his love| man. He said Newman bad ruined | of the Company. bh sCit}e the girl was reciprocated, They | his daughter and broken up hia home| > Bad agreed ‘to marry. Only a few! and driven him crasy. He asked the Gays ago Eugene talked to mo of|District-Attorney if he bad any| More than two hundred creditors of fmarrying Anna. He said they could| daughters and said any man with a H. B. Claflin & Co, met to-day in the Hive with me in my home on the hill. | daughter would know what prompted| Park Avenue Hotel before ex-Judge pie” OGO2.0.2.5.2. 20. 2AM RAARRRAAARR AMARA RAD which a big house, If didn’t pay| him to shoot.” ro fuich attention at that time, Sheridan says that he met Cleary | 20°re® C Holt, special master, an va) “Bagene never told me of his mar-| wetting off the train from New York| heard a report from the temporary plage. 1 didn’t know of it until after| and Cleury was yreatly excited. Ac- | receivers, J. B. Martingdale and Fred- he Was dead. He came UD from Ne eine ene wore thaa(@rlc A. Julliard, which encouraged fi York on the 12.85 train yesterday af-| 4 coupic of minutes when the shoot-| the belief that every creditor would 5; ternoon. Cleary was on the same) ing bexan get 100 centa on the dollar. The a 4 train. didn't ride together,| dirs. Kennedy told of the boy com- ‘ a though. Pyne want to hie grand-| '28 lo her house abvut 1 o'clock yea. | threatened squabble over the selec. -—— THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1914. Despairing Depositors in Line in Front of 3000 CLAMORING DEPOSITORS LINE UP AT CLOSED. BANK Wrecked Bank at Avenue A and Seventh Street PPOTDEODOOOD DOOD ED €HOEOEEHEOE GOO Y HOO EG wee had dinner, It was mid-afternoon | qhen he reached the Towa Hall and f Ato tasancensnana dente e embarked on his fatal intervi with | : LPOG LG LOLS IG LOST GOTO S ILE COON GOH O8 £3800000000000 § Nl dvn dt te tec rant otto oer” lerday afternvon and telling her he|tion of a creditors’ committee was M moth: Mra. Kennedy, and had din-| hug inarried Auna Cleary. He said| amicably settled by the appointment Ber. He told her of the marriage, and | irs, Cleary bad advised him to see A of a joint committee, giving Sapte Mr, Clear \ P she told him he must go and tell Mr. t Saat vor an ul ae 1a| seatation both to the Merchants! th Py office,” Mra. Kennedy swore in her|tective Association and to the Crea- 7 Rags» pdheng pend Tt alte pies deposition, Betore going he called {tors’ Audit and Adjustment Assoct f Grandmother was, ‘I a up Mrs, Cleary at her hoine in New Bed make good.’ He had his mar-| dork und usked bow Anna was. Mra,| “0% while o second committes was Cleary tuid Gene that her husvand| med to represent the note holding Hage certificate in hin pocket. 1 kuew of the murriuge, but udvised| creditors, Then the creditors made “E know how ho was killed. Ho went iin unat everything would Le all| permanent the receivership of Messrs, into the outer office and sat down. Mr./iight if be would just go to Mr. came out of the inner office| Cieury's office sud Wik bios to bir.” | Martingdale and Julliard, Cieury ls avout Lity yeurs old, and| The joint committee was composed Gnd called him. for yeuse bus Leen & power in Dem- | of E. H. Baker, John W. Bird, Rob- (Continued from First Page.) “"@o over and sit down near that] ycratic politics in Movkiand County typewriter,’ said Cleary. ‘I want to] iio hus a New York home ut the talk to you’ Grayione Apartments, No. 610 Weat “That was the preliminary, Cleary) One Hundred aut tifty-wecond ate went to his safe and fumbled @ few! there. Young Newman ulso feconds. He turned around with a re-| Manhattan with his mother at No. volver in his hand. 473 West One Hundred Fifty-eishth| Milo H. Belding, J. H. Lane, 8. D, | ness, ert T. Fowler, Lawrence & Co., Sam- uel H. Lummis, H. P. MeKenny, Will- fam A. Marble, F. C. Wakefield, Ed- |be read by me. Madam, do you wish mund Wright, Arthur L. Gotthold, |them beck?” from the Merchants’ Association, and Labor! extended his hand to the wit- holding forth the packet of let- street, ills father ts Fred M. New-| Conger, H. J. Corbett and C, 8,|ter# Paris had awaited so engerly. ree ua yeu man, ‘one (of the proprietors of the ; ’ Mme. Gueydan flushed and refused to aid, ‘but you have; Rockland Count: eager: Mitchell from the Creditors’. nty Messenger. ut a| The note holders’ committee con. | ®¢cept them. The crowded court-room Zhe boy had no other warning.| Young Ne a a month ago from Savannah, Ga., where| gisted of J. 8. Alexander, L. WL, |>us#ed with excitement; there were four shots. Three of them | for 4 yoar he had been a ‘hotel clerk. | art gobs of excitement all over the place. Clarke, Howland Davis, Charles W. plerced Eugene's breast. The fourth] it is understood he had been unsuc- Mme. Gueydan was firm in her re- Jo@ged in his arm. He fell dead to the| cessful in fading a position after bo| Falls, E. A. Hamill, Seward Prosser, “Moor. cume back, but last Saturday he and| Philip Stockton and F. J. Wade. fusal to take the lotters and left the Miss Cleary devided to marry secretly. ‘The meeting was a friendly one stand with great dignity—and with Th went to the hi ff the Kev. gave preven wureeee To Proketoe +e sane, Rome of the ev: | and all sides cheered the declaration | ‘he letters till in the hands of M, "hi ‘ Labori and Maitre Chenu, represent- “an Baptist Church, Hobok+n, at No. it was “I heard of the shooting and went | iif shipper strect, ‘Weehawken, and| Oo penalf of John Cladin that be was | ing Calmette's heirs. to the Town Hall. They showed me|were married, In ootaining a license | Certain & ” “Well, then, no one shall have them the boy's body in the inner office.|he wave bie a one As twenty-one and| Day everyone in full and that he except myself,” said Maitre Labori > Disttict!Attornéy Gagan arrived. He Fn AE LwOOLY. ne to the} Mmmid sive his services free of chArE® | 6, ine sessed him. “If you ever heard 5 old me he didn’t care anything about| home of his mother and his bride| UAtil this had been accomplished. | 06 me being caught in a trap you are D :Gleary's standing or political influ-| went back to the town house of her| The report of the receivers included) mistaken,” and the man who freed x parents. They said nothing to any-| the accounting made to them by Mar- fs pee bg tredt the crime as} oro of thelr marriage until Wednes- | wick, Mitchell, Peat & Co,, aoouatante| Creyfus smiled. it had been committed by &/ day, when they began to feel uneasy, 4 : EVEN CALMETT! LAWYE The bride fi ally told her mother and | °f No. 79 Wall street, and it showed “Mr. Gagan ordered a policeman|Newman confided in his mother,| that the asscts of H. B. Claflin & Co.| WANTS LETTERS DESTROYED. "gamed Coyne to arrest Cleary. The There was a conference between the| were $55,253,523.92, of which $2,383,- Maitre Labort appeared to regard i folks id tl mothers, it {i . Policeman said he had ‘something else| understood, and Newman wae ad. | 16%81 represent notes of controlled| Mme, Gueydan's seeming reluctance to do. Gagan insisted, but in the] vised by both to go over to Haver. | Companies not yet discounted. Against | of yesterday and her imjulsive con- heen time Cleary and some friends| straw alone and make peace with his| this are liabilities, exclusive of notes! sent that he should have the letters had gone over to New City, where | ‘#{herin-law. hot discounted, and capital stock, of | as a device to place him In a position “I'm going to show him this,” Cleary tried to give himself up to| proudly ‘said’ the young bridegroom, | $#48¢2,268.77, siving an excess of as-| either of suppressing the letters or 100.86, of reading them to the disadvantage the Sheriff. The Sheriff wouldn't take| ‘lisplaying the marriage certificain, | sets of $8,0! ‘m. cain Ex-Judge Morgan J. O'Brien, coun- | of his client. Mme. Caillaux. Bim and he came back to Haver-| H® can't be very angry, @raw, where he was arrested. Policeman Sheridan sald he bh sel for Mr, Claflin, read a atatement| “Again I ask you, madam, tf you ots, What happened with. | from him which was greeted with!want these letters?” he asked, and no sounds in the office preceding the “That's about all there is to the Terolese a iar + itn aa ate enid that Me, Clatin ti rime. To excuse himself he will be- |!" pay no e fully tol until the ir. in be- | Mme. Gueydan refused. | amirch the character of his daughter | ‘"! eve rete rector could be paid) “Give mo the letters to tear up." "end my sun. Well, I feel worse for MOTHER Saye SON WENT TO! minated quickly and the "creditors | interposed Maitre Chenu, who seemed the Clearys than I do for myself. My » operated the stores, to know there was nothing damaghug ‘boy is dead and gone. Their troubles| , noth. men and both families were} “The records of the stores in the] to either Caillaux or his wife in them. popular in Haverat: last ten months,” are just beginnin: tragedy has caused gr “show that they can ped fuauatets ProcuratorsGengsa Jules Herbaus murder of young Newman has| When told of her son's death, the! pay every creditor 100 cents on his | reminded Judye Alvanel that he could roused Haverstraw and Rocklana| ther, who is now Mrs, Charice! dollar.” reject any testimony not pertinent to ~ Appleton, was prostrated. — Gounty. Cleary's personal popularity |" “He hid no right to shoot my boy,” the case. Political power are widespread, |she exclaimed. “Eugene was un-| ton on the part of the Clearys, unless| Judxe Albanel then questioned Mme, y bas many friends and the|#"med. He went as a gentleman with | It was that the pene people were not | Gueydan as to her wishes, @ee@ boy was a general favorite $0 Leabortans Frnily marmot one naa st Naan comedies afi wolsnotiow unie Sing, -Cueydan! ok Senans thal Mice Souae pecvle ef the town | eon uictaiee it be u {ference in religious faith,| Maitre Labori may do what he likes, and county. Mr. Appleton attended his wife all| Mr. Cleary was a devout Catholic and|!n connection with Maitre Chenu, F It ts beloved in Haverstraw that |‘hroush the night, Her condition be. I can imagine the knowledge that his! with the letters.” a vs came auch that @ physician had to|/daughter had been married outal Maitre Labori called M. ia Cleary's wife had told’ him of the/be summoned and early to-day Mr.|the church, angering him as scarce! Caillaux M@srriage of their daughter. Cleary |Appieton said that he anything else could. I ha: a | to the witness stand and asked him gaw the girl in this city yesterday |‘Y" Bava lose her reason his views on the matter, Ho sald morning, it is believed. Their con-|°""We have no particulars of the af- a : to him: "I suggest that you confer _ Versation at that meeting may have) fair yet," sald he. “All I know elf di with Mme. Gueydan on the subject.” ni bead a bearing on the tragedy. that Eugene's mother advised him to M. Caillaux turned his head toward » to Mr, Cleary and that he ex-|gene to Mr. Cleary, She guessed that| his wife i hy ners enc! ‘ Cleary uaa Saverdivaw £0 n x fe in the prisoners enclosure “When Hee iy rene red, Aver eins pected to be i recelved. | I don't | something had Yappened when hel and she made a gesture Bf assent. ¥_objec-|seemed so happy on Sunday, At last jhe confesned that he had been mar-| ™M: Calllaux then sald: until he got work but when my wife | heard of It_she advined him ‘at once the letters would be confided pro- vistonally to Maitre Chenu, as repre- ate ela eee | phe Judge took eccasion to an-| e jay nothing on their behalf until ho| nounce that tn accord with the jurors ava n a 1 £a r AY {had conferred with Mr, Cleary./and the attorneys, the arguments | Women’s voices sounded within the} would not be finished to-morrow nor An eleven-year-old son @: the nounced to the Court that he would What the government loses in customs tolls the smoker saves in cost. - dan a communication he desired to ‘Two-Thirds of the House Willing | make to the jurors | Vo, Saye Nepresentative Fess, CAILLAUX'’S FRIEND ENTERS WASHINGTON, July 24.—""Two-thirds INTO POLITICAL SPEECH. |of the members of this House are willing} Pending the arrival in court to-day . < to eat out of the President's hand, with-| of Mime. Gueydan, Pascal Ceccaidi, Asize to try, the Perfeccionado protest." declared Rep-| yhe most intimate poltical and pri } publican, to-day In| ate friend of M. Caillaux, was called -for-, the House. jane i 1 | at 2-for-25c. Box of 50, $6.00. WHAT ik @ Galatniteun! sitet he! to the witness stand and thrilled the added, and quoted from President Wile | oo ity i n ia y (secre uiitings ta whow that the Fieek court by beginning tm mediately an | dent took the view that the legisiative impassioned defense of the Calllaux | branch of the vernment should be family. He deseribed Mme, Call- dominated by the | laux's efforts to restrain her husband from resuming political life and | power, as ahe was of the opinion that NEW ORLEANS, July 24.—Willtam| his keeping out of the Coverninent \— Ernst, employed in a saloon in was the only way in which they could the centre of the bubonic plague | ets t to have peace in their liv Trae the tenth person to be axpte' Stuacked by th to glance about the courtroom as ‘eae! his keys wero placed in an envelope meamuring the effect of the witness’ | bY two other members of the Figaro staff and given ite ‘ked them in the safe. Quintard sald, Herr, of the Figaro, opened the en- taking out a copy Ton Jo” letter written in ¢ Mme. Calllaux in the prisoners’ en. closure presented a sorrowful figure. @ look cf bewilder- Sho did not |; but she had had a long talk with her husband in tho prison before the hearing was begun, | M. Ceecald! amazed thos by giving his testimony in the form of a speech, tn which he reviewed the | political and newspaper attac former Premier. The auditors meanwhile kept up a continuous murmur of protest and ap-| ‘The protests caused M. Cec-| culdi to shout; In her eyes w: ment and seeming terror. speak to any on and given to Dr. Albert Ca , Which was pro- | duced in court Dr. Calmette, dered editor, brother of the mur- was then culled, wallet turned over to him, he sald contained some thirty papers which extended beyond the two ends of the| A bullet bad pierced them. “There was in e in the posse ton told me the day before. 1 had told him 1 was uneasy because of his campaign against Cail- He repeated that h as he had agreed > Fabre report. j@ said he was working for the jood of France, involve the country in a | war on account of his ambi ‘DYNAMITE BUILDINGS TO CHECK FLAMES JASONVILLE, which started shortly after “THEY SEEK TO KEEP A WOMAN IN PRISON,” HE SAYS. - Those in the court room soon be- | lished all Cecealdt's speech wd, gan to tire of M. interruptions which brought from the witness the trous Prevented right to talk here because they seck | to keep @ woman in prison.” This occasioned a clamorous uproar and Judge Albanel, who hitherto had ‘been impassive, pounded his desk to restore order. “1 will continue my deposition,” then sald M. Ceccaldi and he proceed- ism of former Pre- mier Berthou's course in reading in the Chamber of Deputies the docu- rawn up by Victor Fabre, | connection with the Rochette swindle. . Ceccaldi had :yoken tor an hour, former Premier Barthou was called to the stand and defended his making public the Victor Fabre documents. M. Caillaux also spoke briefly be. . Gueydan appeared, Maitre Labori then explained their ideas for and against the publication of the le! placed in Maitre Labori's charge by Mme. Gueydan, Maitre Chenu remarked that the let- Ind, July 24.—Fire, ed with a crith Heture house, . spread to a score was unchecked. the further spread of the 18, practically en asked from t © Departments 4,000 residents ——$ $< which Maitre thought three of them did, returned the letters to . Gueydan and ask her wishes Were in the matter and sho “1 do not care what you do, Publish them all if you want to do port retorted that he Ps —A windstorm and surround- killing two men, dozen otters and levelling J barns and on Behafer, a fa the county poor farm were ‘luted by ‘iys| Labori then swept over part of ountry to-day it was thereupon decided to place three of the letters among the papers but to read only one of them after the recess, ‘Etienne Grossclaude, of the Figaro} | staff and a closo friend of Calmette, He testified that he| dreamed of ubliahing personal letters written by Raynouard before parts of ther elt during the storm. = eral head of stock in the suburbs were {Killed by lightning. was then called, Caillaux to Mme, have published haonaantit jother portions of t i ried and that he and his wife had Judge Albanel disposed of the ques- | planned to keep the match a secret! tion for the time being by saying that! remed of political Import. Henry Bernst noted playwright sly defended the clared that from Imette had told him, 1 that Calmette did not offer . Estradere 30,000 francs, amount, to arrange a |view for him with Mme. i SAYS CALMETTE HAD NO OTHE? OF CAILLAUX’S LETTERS. To substantiate further the conten- tion that Calmette did not hold other stters he intended to publish, , sporting editor of Le Figaro, | He said that on tho Sun. shooting he left jot Calmette, ¢ in your trunk for one or m: 1 COMBINATION JOY PACKAGES, or, if fash trunk is cramme: ‘At the Greyleno, @ young man who| senting Mme. Gueydan, and to Maitre |. e¢ indie attached to the package, making’ Fl d M : paid he wae Mr. Redmond, lawyer for | Labori as representative of M, and conv 4 . rs. , oT é Uurtas | 4 YOUNE Bree Nowncy | Mme, Caillaux, jammed full, there isa ita 4 y to carry asa suit case. Ib, Box Special Assorted Chocolates, }i-Ib. Box Ital- apartment and to a question as to whose they were Mr. Redmond re-| Would the Court sit on Sunday. 10c. to 25c. each plied: ‘None of your busines: The instant the court had convened | | searlet-robed prestding Judge, | |day night before the Jay the debate | Doth mother and sister were at home, | “ ; | put were prostrated, while a belihoy | Louls Albanel, called: “Mme. Guey The famous Imported brand of | said that both had left early last eve-|dan, to tho stand." ‘Tho pale-faced ‘ . . \ning In an automobile and had not vc 0 created sue! en: cigars now made in Tampa just areas Abeba baller eaik dine little w oman wh created such a sen- | J pa } Cleary, had returned, though her |#&tion yesterday, however, had not | as they are made in Havana daughter I absent arrived. Maitre Labori then an- 1 should like to publish It, mised not to," Reichel sald ——>__—_. ‘EAT OUT OF WILSON’S HAND,’ | deter untit the arrival of Mme, Guey- | ri i “It iw all T have . 1, this statement nded to establish that ¢ mette did not have private letters Reichel denied 1 y one or offering iMons on Le MENICAN SPY 5 r he fanclnuting flavor of thin sweet ti produced by 0 skilfully blended com the Caillauss. ettloment of the De puties reportel Avril made the remark that the and that others id it was his Avril's statements. iments in ques eof a political Instead of 1 were to follow rani Kk ROW NASBAD BT. Pr inmodiately after the shooting of |Calmette all. papers in his pocke' ere removed, according to the tor ony of Lucien Quaintard, cash! lematte'e wallet hie mememe ant at h neoeeal an| M. Caillaux followed attentively his | w friend's panegyric, nodding hie head w ip approval und occasiouuily casting a hd taal €i a Men, Women Tr Even Small Children Mourn for Their contac SHUT DOWN BY STATE. Grochowski’s at Avenue A and 7th Street and Branch in Brooklyn Fail. Three thousand fearful, weeping and excited depositors gathered about the branch bank of A. Grochowaki & Co., at Avenue A and Seventh street this morning, while several hundred depositors sought to storm the doors of the Willlamsburg branch at Bed- ford avenue and Grand street. Both | branches were guarded by the police ‘ves were held ready for and re: trouble in two station houses. The gatherings were the result of the action last night of Eugene Lamb Richards, State Superintendent of Banks, in taking possession of the business affairs of Ladislaus W. Schwenk, doing a private banking | business under the name of A. Gro- jowski, with branches in this city, iliiamsburg and Jamaica. The Su- perintendent closed all three banks. The mob about the Avenue A. branch refused to disperse and kept |wrowing more turbulent. Threats were made against Schwenk and his , cashier, Julian Strzelecki. Tho lat- ter is @ brother of Father John Strzelecki, pastor of the Polish Church, @ few doors removed from the bank on the Seventh street side. |The Poles in the crowd cried that the priest had urgea them In church to place their savings in the bank of his brother. There was a wild rush for the par- |sonage adjoining the church. Policemen under Capt, Sweeney pre- served some semblance of order and the mob from attacking \the parsonage. Women shrieked for |Father John to come out and get | thetr money for them. The priest denied advising his parishioners to bank with his brother. Schwenk filed an in favor of his creditors. Notices were posted that the banks were closed last night, and when the + & motion deposits of four men were refused at the Avenue A branch the news vering a radius, quickly spread among the Lithuan- of four blocks, an@ late this afternoon |ians, Poles and Slavs of the condi- rsons were tion of affairs. stitution, In the crowd were women with children in arms and others toddling by their sides, Little children held bankbooks representing thelr $5 and | $10 deposits. Inside the bank were James J. Ken- TWO KILLED IN WINDSTORM, neay, a bank examiner, and two other representatives of the State Banking Department. Mr. Kennedy sald that the bank would never open Its doors again, that the conditions of Schwenk’s business had been found such as to make it unsafe to permit its contin. | uance. In Williamsburg about a hundred depositors were in line in front of the main bank at Bedford avenue and . Bok Kan las Co- Checola COMPLETE EBICR COMPLETE... 5 ! for em a urde feian ast ate, tat CHOCOLATE © “Dy PEANUT AND RAISIN CLUSTERS—Ti 7 cholcent Virginia Peanuts, roasted to w nivety and carefully selected large Kaiains clustered ial our fa- ine Elght janment to-day to Robert P. Lewis, No. 170 Broadway, As early as 7 o'clock this |this morning men, women and chil- 1k building |dren began to gather in front of the bank. Before 9 o'clock, the usual flames and {opening time, the crowd extended for -|two blocks on either side of the in- [Grand street. A. hotioe pra k | them saying that the bank would sgt | open. ‘The depositors grew excited ind the crowd grew as the botr of ! Spain approached. Nearly ail the depositors are em- | ployees of the American Sugar Re- finery, Brooklyn Cooperage Company and the Cordage Trust. A run bed started on the Jamaica branch, No, 292 Rockaway road, on yet Fed but was withstood by who took $10,000 to the fe By snontly in dollar notes. The run wan started on, account of the de- arture of Cashler Walter Loreck for fis vacation, He loft early and closed the bank. The depositors thought it |i been closed for good. Mr. Richards says that sixty-five of the seventy-five private banks fn the city have been examined since | the new law went into effect In April, | and that all of them were found jn pretty good condition. ST. GEORGE'S BRINGS SUIT AGAINST MORGAN ESTATE Wants Interpretation of Will and Funds That Seem to Be Due Under Its Terms. St. George's Episcopal Churoh, of which the late J. Pierpont Morgan was the senior warden, filed a sum- mons and complaint in the Supreme Court this afternoon against the trus- tees of Mr. Morgan's will and the trustees of tho estate and property of the Diocesan Convention of New York, Mr. Morgan provided trust funds under his will amounting to $600,000 for the benefit of St. George's Church, These trust funds were left to the care of the Diocesan Convention, and | the Income from $500,000 of the trust | funds was specifically bequeathed to the support of the ministry of St. George's. Although more than passed since Mr. Morgan's death, HK $1,385 has been pald out of the ”) a year Income due the church, The sult is brought to obtain a proper construction of the will LOOK POR THIS TICKET OM EVERY Palm THREAD HEELS GTOES VV ATEVER your “walk” in life, it will be made smoother by Gordon ROUND TICKET ji; Socks-25° FOR MEN t Tapering-in ankles, snug tops, perfect fit ! All colors, three weights, in silk-lisle and lustrous fibre-silk. EXTRA Read This nt fo think that Pa have mare nnd tell mote Waites ais Watches than ti « fenton. en LOOK FOR THE NUMBER 180 OVER MY ONLY ENTRANCE 1 have no connection with the stere mext doer, whieh was made to imitate mine, CHARLES A. KEENE Watches, me s 180 Broadway, New York Oren _U & p'Clock, All lost or found articles ad~ vertised In The World will be Usted at The World's Informa- r