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i i @oad on Staten Island, 41,000 feet from the pier lines, This rule | ‘spoints in the East River where the a ae the confines of Greater New York, to ‘their arrival at tide-water and then _ to realize '@, to government anchorage, to be ) prompt as they , Mediately upon its arrival, but one of the excuses BELL-ANS ‘Absolutely Removes FROM DANGER OF NEW EXPLOSION cine Hire Prevention Bureau Keep-| ing Munitions Cargoes Mov- | ing From City. NO DELAY IS ALLOWED, Explosives Brought in by Rail- foads Are Hurried to Ships in Bay—Other Precautions, Bifarte are unter way to lensen the @anger to Now York City trom ite! Aetiy menace tn the form of tremen- | deus shipments of war munitions to! Warring Puroye, The explosion of munitions ot Black Tom leat | morning bas stirred the Hureay ot Fire Prevention to renewed ene for it to well realized that careless. fam in the handling of the tons of @mplosives being loaded in and about the clty might result in @ dieast @Uoh as that of Sunday, Joseph O. Hammitt, Chief of t Bureau of Vireo Prevention, eaid to- @ay that he was sending word to the Fallroads handling munitions within - @Bpedite thelr shipments from the _ ferminal points, He does not wish “explosives to accumulate at any place within the oity limits and will inaiet that they be tran barges and lighters, immediately on taken down the bay to the prescribed @overnment anchorages, “About a year agu, when we began that New York was be- Coming 4 great whipping port for nus) Aitions of war, wo drew up a set of Feguiations to govera the handling of explosives and combustit de- elared Chief Hammitt. “One of the main rules prescribed was that ex- plosives and ammunition arriving by Pallroad should be promptly trans. ferred by car tloats, barges or Light- there loaded on an outgving vearel. “There have been instances in which the railroads have not been as night in obeying this Pegulation. Fur example, twoive car- of nitroceilulose arrived at the ¢ Haven yaris yesterday and is being unioaded to-day. That ehtp- ment should huvo been unloaded im- off Were not suilic vred w&s that there lights availabie fast night. 1 am going to insist that in the future the regulations be strongly adhered to. *Anovher ratiroud terminal point ay whioh explosives and ammunition are Fecelved in New York City is ‘n the yards of the Baltimore and OF sone or ammunition will b ‘remain aboard the cars, but must bo! pisces at onca on tho barges and ghie and taken out to the anchor- permitted to “Tt ‘have arrange’ for the co-opera- tion of the Dock Departinent and the customs authoritios to inform the Bu- reau of Fire Prevention of any vioi tion of the regulations. Tho customs @uthorities are in touch with ail ship- nts, and the Dock Department em- yees on the piers know w hether it te being taken away promptly.’ Among the regulations prescribed for the handling of explosives and ammunition are that they be con- to vessels at anchor between sunrise and sunset and when there In ‘no dense fog; that all barges floats engaged in transporating ex- \Dlogives in water adjacent to the ‘ity, shall maintain a distance of} Makes an exce Be inthe case of} Rarrowners of the fairway makes it possible to keep the preseribed dis. tone. It Js also required that ves. IN THE SQUARE PACKAGE GRAND PRIZE Ask PANAMA EXPOSITION [ror it ANOTHER PROOF OF QUALITY Biprovenic ont One package pro esit, 25cat all druggists you go on your vaca- thon this Summer have your favorite paper mailed te you every day. lord, Ge per wool 12¢ por week Se per Sunday TES SVEMING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, Practitioner, and She Emphasizes Her Points With an Original Drawing. _ _ Res meant 1 —— Oe eee +4 we silat: We + SHEERS? ct ZotLt By Nixola Greeley-Smith. The love that you seck ts seeking you, | The job that you want te looking The treachery you fear t# being cr If you are jealous of your husband, your jealousy will soon fustify itsels | If you love and trust him, he will deserve your love and trust, e0ty Gate “I ahall nevor again make !l!lustra- tions which merely Mlustre Shinn told me y day in her apart- ment at No. 12) East Fortieth Street. “Last Sunday I gave my first ‘New Thought’ lecture and I illustrated my points on the blackboard. I told about two little boys who left Sharpstown, N. J., each one driving a load of hay. One of these boys let his thoughts flow in the high current of love, suc- cess, confidence. This boy went fl- nally to Philadelphia and became ita Breatest merehant—Johna Wana- maker. The other boy, with precisely the same environment, the same meagre opportunities, thought along the current of fear, failure and re- sentment, Every day he said to him- self: ‘All the opportunities have been grabbed. This {s not an age in which the poor boy has a chance; I shall always be ground down by those more successful than 1 “This boy's fears created the con- dition which tortured him. To-day he is an impoverished toothless old farm- sels, barges and fioats carrying viostves or aavnunition, sha! the bow and stern a At night when the anchor they must di ’ Chief Hammitt is also making a thorough inspection of all explosive magazines within the city limits. No dynamite other than that being used in city work Is permitted within the metropolis, These magazines are in- spected at least once a day and often- times twice. Munitions plants within the such as that of the Bliss Company in South Brooklyn, are being carefully regulated. ‘The Bliss plant has been built to conform to 1 id ordinances, This company manufsctures shells from which there is but little danger of explosions, Chief Hammitt sa, that the company's buildings are so separated that an explosion in one would not harm another. The Bliss Company and others are permitted to load shrapnel shells con- taining black powder only as a burst- ing charge—no propelling charge + ing allowed-—upon ships lying at thelr docks from barges on the day of ling only. It 1s also. preserthed at the to amount of black pow der in any one shipment shall not exceed 1,000 poun pL FIND ANOTHER VICTIM OF SUNDAY’S EXPLOSION olty The body of Alexander Peterson, mate of @ barge which was tied to the Black Tom Island piers Sunday morn- ing just before the great explosion, was found to-day at the foot of Chapel Avenue. This makes three bodies recovered yesterday and to-day within a few rods of the scene of tho exnlosion. Tho body of another man was found yesterday morning, and yesterday afternoon the body of Capt. Cornelius Leyden, Chief of the Lehigh Valley Railroad police, was found mangled under a lot of debris, The flnding and identification of ats body clears | the way for the prosecution of those found responsible for) who may be the explosion, The complaint sworn to by Tames M. Connolly, Inspector of Combusti- bles of Jersey City, upon which war- rants have been {ss4ed and served upon four sons reed with causing the death of Levden, is made the basis of the charge of man- slaughter, To make out the case tt was needful to have the body found and fdentified and every effort w: made to recover {t, None of others killed and id have Te atified, To preach this gospel, Mra, Florence Scovel Shinn, famous among women Illustrators, creator in pictures of “Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch,” “Lovey Mary” and other heroines of optimistic fiction, has turned her back upon art and become a practitioner of “New Thought," | which she told me yesterday 1s not new but merely | the practical application of the wisdom of the ages. Cnrsuse. Eton It Is a State of Mind Which Makes of One a Suc- cess and of Another a Failure, Is Mrs, Shinn’s Doctrine—Think Love and You Will Get It; Believe and Your Faith Will Be Justified. or you. ated by your fear of tt, er with the Jaundice. Yet that boy and John Wanamaker had the same} start—only one of them thought euc- cess, the other failure. YOU DOWNHEARTED? NEEDN'T) BE; ALL FOOLISH. “This summer I am substituting fo Mr. Walter Weston, I preach or demonstrate every Sunday at No, 301 Madison Avenue. I demonstrate suc- cess. When a man or woman comes to me downhearted, poor and without a job, I teach them to believe that the job they are fitted for is looking for them; that if they do not land the position they apply for, it 1s because wife who has reached the second blooming and who, defying all the of pre ety, expediency and hing e! blooms over the back for the next door neighbor, What do you tell harassed vic- tim of sudden infatuation “L tell her to examine hor own heart! and be sure that this new feeling bi | not been created in her by her hus- there is another and better Job | band's Jealousy. Many so-called in- searching for tui t fatuations are implanted tn us by ‘ . fol ‘ ees If an applicant | jealousy.” Mrs. Shinn added: "Tsay or a job secks the employer with|to any and all women suffering from this feoling he conveys at once an| love, requlted or unrequited, Ie Impression of poise, self-reliance and | OUtltwed: "The love you are sce confidence, These are the qualities of | {2 S¢¢king you. it will find you. success and the employer recognizes slen¢ them. “Thi “The person who thinks construc- tively, who is a scientific optimist, is a super employee. Employers are all looking for him, by “Sometimes, do you know, peoplo come to me who believe that they are entitled to larger salartes than thoy receive, They tell me that @ certain man stands between them and this Increase, ‘He could give It to me but he won't,’ they say, “Try dropping all resentment toward him and send- ing him love,’ I suggest. When they do this the employer turns around and raises their salaries, ‘Forget the able personality, ‘That is, the If it is the right love Do you know,” the er spiritual Mrs, Shinn observed, » seen women change the ob- Ject of their affections in twenty-four hours under that treatment, “We cannot take our happiness at Mra, Shinn . Shakespeare ‘A thing ill-got has ever bad success.’ The woman who takes a man from an- other will never get any joy from him, And do you know, it js a strange thing, women always do eventually the thing they criticise in other women? WHEN THE CHICKENS COME HOME TO ROOST. “If this year I say ‘What a dreadful creature Mrs, Jones is; she made her husband divorce his first to next year nit the very h A wile polled off have critich 1 som ‘Salute the divinity In} woman is fs cisely the ne him. When you do that you have] thing about me. Heir creates evil. If acuuuersd une we would be thought well of we must think well of others, Adam and Eve EFFECTIVE IN BUSINESS AB) lost Parad Use they admitted WELL AS IN LOVE, | the existence of good AND EVIL, In at tb nS tioal ti {the Garden of Eden there way only _ Just t mal z Practical teat of tho| ota “In any Hden tocday thers constructive “New Thought" whicn| only good. So 1 say “Think love a Mrs. Shinn preaches, I saluted the} you will t love i ve an divinity of an absent individual, and| fith will be Mate Doubt then I sald your de ube will take form and sub. But suppose I am not @ person ed to nee king for a job, Suppose 1 am a ry? For as she woman Who loves her husband very Rare ae much and wants to keep him, can you| thint current of success tell me how? and love dd confidence and the sad tainly," Mrs. Shinn repiied.| fie In store for those who thiak 1) failure. Think fove, think trust and you cre- And as she drew I thought, [ honed, ate these qualities in him, Great love|that that drawing would be done at in women, unfortunately, entailn | 630 80 I could catch my suburban great fear, fear of loss, The terrible | tain. la, that this fear creates ne And, behold, at 4.20 It was dona, es. Jealousy in the — oe end invariably justifies itself, Lane SALESMAN DIES BY GAS. Heury Levy Had Quarrelled With a young love with a man, 1 woman who is very much in cently, she went away to the seashore. When this man Went every Sunday to call on her, his unreasoning jealousy prompt- ed him to any, ‘I suppose you seo a a Writer, In Report. Henry Levy, a tobacco leaf ealeaman great many other men.’ she had not |<, ¥ wy ance h beet ay ; Up to Shae tine, Aa who enjoyed a large aequaintance In the almost immediately ott aus | (ease Wea found Gand. of Bae to-day in rounded her. ‘I supposi furs | hia apartinent at No, 1295 Madison Ave- take you motoring, he remarked on | PUe bis next visit, She did not know a] A number of letters were found on man with an automobile, But that|the dresser in his bedroom. Among them very week one turned up and began |was one addressed to his wife, who to pay his court to her, ‘This man's|tived in apartments on floor Jealousy summoned the very things! aceording to the manage Ley ho feared, gave life to the phantoms | i yica for separate apart: vera) of his own brain. In the same way, |°* * he had had a wives who fear inconstancy in thelr | ily a who ly 4 maga hush, | f dread —>- —— mony with the universe.’ § aot ae ica love to your husband and [rive taatoven ri “ae y B me other woman whom you fear SAN yi Av ui Ing this you will des ny evil nts charging murder were voted to !thing that stalks your by the Grand Jury against five | A SURE CURE FOR A QUESTION. |." P00" Pedicrery ABLE INFATUATION, b explo ng to “Suppose, then," I said, | Seomning’y eo Bald n love wit nd. Youve dis ‘\ posed of the jealous av ving Wom- | Pena jan. What bave you to say to the ward d GUAROWEWYORK [J You Think Along the Currents of Love me eee ee ee ee ee eee COnrriOENCEe — Se ee eee eee FEAR —-— ' ‘ ‘ ' a GREAT EXPLOSION _ yen <a st ew AAD NO EFFECT ON RIVER TUBES — Not the Slightest Dev | From Shock, Careful In- vestigations Show. Considerable | felt either tube. ‘stand up W. Meir i { spect. i their safety daily been found. A aimila | Frank Hedley, “The our tu Mr. Hedley's tubes are ins; that the has not mad. ence in the cor ersonal munities: cant ufacturers or ra hot store explo can we specify Kitchen in the 1 Jand Forty-ffth Street and Lenox Ave- nue to-day made @ great de but caused Ittle put out by flreme run ‘The do not since the explosion morning by persons who have been In | tho habit of using | the Hudson and East Rivers. feared the possible effect of the ter- riflo shock upon ridges of rock under | the rivers which might in some way | Weaken tho tubes. |nounced by the managers of both |companies operating these that the explosion has not made any change whatever in the condition of rrifie shock mite explosions only a few miles a particle of diff n of tho tunnels, aeamaneae COMMERCE BOARD HIT IN EXPLOSIVES. BILL uneasiness has been of Sunday he tunnels under it ts officially an- “Tho awful explosion has settied the question of how our tunnels would inder suoh stress, Vice President and Geuera' Manager of the Hudson and Moaahat- tan Railroad Company. jengineers go over our tubes lor fore daylight last Sunday morning, and they found that there was not one particle of deviation in avy re- This proved that we were right in believing that no shock of ture could hurt our lines or affec: in any way. Inspection has been made as usual ever since and no devialioy hay statement was given to The Evening World at the office of Manager of the Interborough Company, as not been any change in under the East River,” sa representativ ted every day by en- gincers, and the inspections made on eral of th est dama nA DwAy, amounted to @ jon his pr tin ex TAtiOn | tice, Ansistant Prosecutor Jamen Mo- They tunnels anid R, “We hod our be- thls na Regular BURSTING SHELLS SEABURY IN RACE CRESS And Success You Create Those Qualities (PERIL MANY AT FORGOVERNORSHIP 10 CUT RELATIONS So Declares Mrs. Florence Scovel Sinn, Famous Woman Wustrator, Who Has Become a New Thought Labo Sugar Kept Busy All Day Dodging Shot RAILROADS TO Lehigh Valley, Ba Others, Will Ask Court to Litt Jersey City Embargo. | ma hundre i me ofy Naliane employed by the Lebigu Valley Mat worked today in the | road intense Theat thrown off by the debris of Bun # explosion, whieh etill burned on tremely southern end of Hiaek Island. tn places they walked | knee deep in meted sugar from burn |e Warehouses There was 63,600,000 worth of sumer stored in nearby | Warehouses when the explosion and | |fre took plo Chanels have had to be dug tr dirt plor to drain th suga rom to-day At brief intervala all day there were shell explosiona in the wreck age, Two carlor of shells were still Duried tn debris to-day and two! » ha cavated, ch time a shell went off the work- n broke for safety and threw j the iselves flat on the ground, Their jwork finally became #0 dangerous that fifty of them were taken from the Job Inepector Campbell of the Interstate Com ommission, five detectives from Prosecutor KR. 8. Hudapeth's of- been only partly ¢ Carthy and Inspector of Combustibles James M. Connelly of Jersey City dt- yd the efforts of a number of ex- ts to get the cars of shelle away from the fire gone to barges, Inspector Connelly said the fire might burn for & month yet Munition cars have accumulated tn the raflroad yards until it te esti- mated that there are at least one hun- dred here. A meeting of the general counsel of the ratlro having terminals in Jorsey City was called at the Penn- sylvania Railroad offices at Exchange Place, Jersey City, this afternoon to work out plans for a legal fight on the embargo placed on the shipping of munitions through the corporate mits by the Municipal Commission yesterday. The Lehigh Valley ts to seek a tent cano by asking for un injunction against the Jersey City police, The law staffs of the Pennsylvania Cen- tral Railroad of New Jersey, Erte and West Shore roads will Join with the Lehigh lawyers in drawing up the papers and making the arga- ments, The Lehigh Valley and the Central Railroads had nothingto say to-day of the statement which came from their offices yesterday, apparently of- ficlally, that they would voluntarily discontinue munition receipts, except to say that in the present condition. of the black Tom Terminal they had little choice in the matter, The Jersey City cfficials hang thelr contention of their rights to keep ntu- nitions out of the city on the phrase in thelr resolution which declares ex- plosive munitions are @ public nul- sance, The police power of the com- | mission, acting us a Board of Health, gives the Municipal Commission all the extraordinary powers It needs to protect the lives of citizens of the y Commissioner of rank Hague served order for Public Rafety notice of the the re- the embargo and Congress Asked to Transfer to} moval of all explosives on the rail- oy agi r is Inst kht by telephone. The ties, Power of Regulating railroads inded written notices. unitions Cargoes Commi Ha announced at Munitions Cargoes, noon to-day. that written notice had WASHINGTON, At 2—Attack-| now been served on y failrond, erstate Cokmerca Com-| #4 the execution of the order woul ing Ipteratate Commerce Com. | and the execution of the mission as having virtually turned) “ji. plans to send platoons of twenty- over to the du Poots and other pow-| ¢ " men to the bridges of the der manufacturers its duty of regu-| various railways over the Hackensack lating explosive cargoes, FambDERs | Suhre RAT RD ER ME tne BUEN ere ie tive Hamill of New Jersey introduced | frwyex and Bergen Counties to Intere 2 DILL this afternoon to take such aus | cept all freteht traine. thority away from the Interstate | - ror Commerce Commission. WAR OFFICE “SCANDAL ‘This bill gives local authorities practically unlimited power to regu- | crap Aare FORESEEN IN LONDON Hamil ured the Commission re- sponsibio in part for last. Sunday's NE merciae~e . disaster at Black ‘Tom, The com-| George's Bill for Court Martial mission's expert, who fixes tho regu: | lations under which munitio Stirs Both Commons and shipped, he said, is Col, Beaver the Press, Dunn, ‘a nd army officer, raed venier of Dunnite, and often em-| LONDON, Aug. 2—-Much tnter- ployed by the munitions firms as an shown in the House Dunn writes all the Commis- lobby in the bill in- ations for the David Lioyd George, of explosives,’ Secretary for War, empowering him al court martial “to gations which have t a high official at to set up @ HIGHT, | | County Cler& Wititem ¥. t EXPLOSION RUINS IN'TWOPRIMARIES WITH THE BRITISH s Knee Deep in Melted Judge Will Seek Nomination | Representative Gallivan Makes by Democrats and | | Move in House Over the sives, It Is Announced Exclusion of 4 Kelly, WAGNER BOOMED, 100 WASHINGTON, Aug 2—epresems ° sven of Massachuseiie thie od by the, Up-Staters at Meeting of Dem . noes © oe ee . . relations with ocratic State Committee " ' f te refused, Favor the Senator july to admit Thomas Mushes | K t ‘ew York and Joseph Smith f Movenchusetts, two Ameriean eit. tor, : fternoos,| sod wilh funds and relief wing @ eonference z | supplics for irish revolution eufferere, with Judge Bamuel sbury of (hel Cellivan's resolution lared that Court of Appeals, announced N View of the Ameri Passports 18 personal letter carried by them H Heeretary Lansing, Great Brit- \e's conduct woe “Insulting.” Judes Reabury Democratic and Progressive would prim Ime for the nation for Governor onme @hat y” Hie etded, “in view of this ineulting Mr. Hebneider sald that petitions | {e8tment and of other incidents and for the nomination of Judge Seabury | (S*"!U ng Gotion of Great Britain.” the were already bein aviroulated in Che| Heuee ragommend to the President the Htatoe and that| that be break off friendly relations, at least ooo votes| Sheuld the Foreign Affairs Com- stronger than bia party mittoo attempt to bury hie reselt. Unanimous indorsement of the Wil. | UM declared Gallivan, he will make son Administration and the selection | *® Persoaal Aeht for tt on the floor of Huratoga and Aug. 11 an the piace | °F He House | And time for the next conference otherwise the unoiticiat convention |WINS MOTHER'S BIG ESTATE. wee the formatly offers satiors Cut Off Without a Ce which engaged the Democratic State eet Oe aor Soe Committoo at ite meeting thin after-| qhoman skahan. tries 018 Noon at the Hotel Knickerbocker. The} son of the late Mra. Hannah Bkahal most interesting matter, and thatlof Two Hundred and Twenty-seventh quite unoMcial, was the talk in the|Street and White Plains Avenue, ie lobby about the next Gubernatorial je the sole heir to “a consider candidate, And the new phase of M nat fd 2 decision which Juatice this was the insistence with which |) Jan banded down to-day tm th Iron nty Bupreme Court the pame of State Senator Robert F.laside a pert Be} fv Sent a Ga Wagner camo {nto the chat o# A} Mrs. Skahan left all her property to possible opponent of Judge Seabury, [a sister, Mra. Mary Lamb of No, 3990 So far as Senator Wagner himself |Hronx Boulevard, No will was left. Mra. Skahan diet Aprtl 18, 1915, the day after she deeded to her an of her real estate, bank account and personal property, notwithatanding the fact, according to testimony from pri t she was worrled concern- ing the future of her son, wa cerned, all he woukl say was "Tam in no sense seeking the nom- ination.” And there he put a period It was the up-State members of the committes who brought the talk of Wagner into the lobby. They seemed to think that he had much more than @ mere chance. Those who were par- Ucularly enthusiastic about Wagner were John Pallas of ltochester and Committeemen Kelly of Syracuse and Brewater of Steuben, ‘There was no marked opposition to Judge Seabury; it was rather the be- Hef that, as had neve organization man, the orgs men could not be counte follow bim. When Charles F, Murphy was asked his views about Wagner he sald “L am surprised to hear of this sentiment. I'd not heard of It before. W Wagner would make a good And there ho also put upon to} Thia Model 86,75 Governor.” & period. It was the friends of former Gov- ernor Glynn who were ng to find a candidate who -w prevent tha nominat! Seabury But the sent generally, of the State Committee was that a victory could be had with the Judge. Vetl- tlons In his behalf will be circulated at once in Erie, Alleghany, Chau. tauqua and Cattaraugus Counties and later in this city, | he woman suffragtats were well in at the meeting to-day, Mra do RK. Whitehouse, Charles 8. Leavitt and M: Suffern of Brooklyn paid call upon Chairman Edwin to put in a word for their He told them that thera would be no resolutions or anything of that sort dealing with suffrage presented at | meeting. BE ATTRACTIVE BEAUTIFY THE COMPLEXION, ‘Sur boa ie (dmnbelt'e reenie Fou hank waat feel hale ste Harris sid During July, 1916 The WORLD printed 75214 col- umns (210,630 agate lines) more of advertising than in July, 1915. This was a gain greater by 69114 columns (193,550 agate lines) than that of the Herald. It was 210!{ columns (58,870 agate lines) greater gain than that of the American, It represented a greater gain than that of the Times by 75), columns (21,070 agate lines). The Rule of Cause and Effect Is Here Exemplified A newspaper such as the WORLD, having the great HOME circulation of the city, is bound to steadily increase in its advertising patronage for the very patent reason that it PAYS ite advertisers. Every morning The Morning WORLD has over 100,000 greater circulation in the city than any other newspaper; more than the combined city n subject guardedly. st saya: rT) “It is a simple to rning newspa n@ Morning king measure, but doal behind tt. The Malet Kilahaas ved concern civillans chimney of the employees* a" bway at One Hundred News says: ho altair t# causing a great atir al of smoke i litary circles. before tt was!) Among the cations against the we of b was olficial is that his action in certain the cook's army matters has bot always beer {twas all ‘over, | Intuenced by national considerations puut $200, | alon A ! 8 discuss | circulations of the Times, Herald and,Tribune, THE EVENING WORLD, with its circulation of 425,000, is the pre-eminent HOME evening paper. THE WORLD'S Circulation is among people have tremendous aggregate purchasing power, who ewe wee we ween nnn nena se oon nencencceooes, >> <> > Oo x > OD oe ss \