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» BILL FOR SEIZURE | OF ROCKAWAY POINT TS QUICKLY PASSED eceetpeanaae Shiplaroff, Brooklyn Socialist, Only Legislator to Op- pose Measure, (Comal from » Stett Pent ot Teo ALBANY, Feb, 21—The Brown bill euthorizing the State of New York to @eize the Rockaway Point property for fortification purposes was rushed through the Senate to-day under an emergency message from the Gov- ernor. The bill was passed by the Assem- Bly with one dissenting vote, Assem- Dlyman Ghiplacoff, a Boctalist from Brooklyn, opposed the measure, It went to the Governor for signature. Advocates of the secession of Rock- away from New York City, 700 of whom stormed the State Capitol to- day, received almost no encourage- ment from the Senate Committes of the Affairs of the City of Now York and the Assembly Cities Committes, before whom the secessionists staged the most elaborate hearing of the session. Senator Ogden L. Mills, Chairman of the committees, told them, after they had ignited all their oratorical fireworks in behalf of Rockaway City, | which they applauded vigorously at every possible chance, that would have to secure the consent of Mayor Mitchel before the Legisiature | would even attempt to act, It was pointed out that the first thing that would have to be taken care of would be the financtal rel tions between the Rockaways and the New York City Government, William 8. Pettit, Chairman of the Rockaway Committee of 100, seemed to know more about the real situation than any of the several previous} epeakers, who vervosed the record with all sorts of statements concern- Ing the sewaxeconditions with which the Rockaways were troubled, instead of talking about the real tasue at hand, as requested by the committee several times during the hearing, Plenty of noise and resplendency | marked the arrival of the 700 Rock: wayers, who reached the Capitol shortly after noon neaded by a local | brass band, former Chief of Police “Big Bill” Devery and Cassidy, The hundreds of men and women carrying flags and banners and wearing white badges marked “Rockaway City," made st for the Assembly chamber witho ceremony. Assemb! ney of Lawrence, L. L, introducer the bill, assumed the role of Major Domo of the crowd, who sald they represented every organization to be found tn the Rockaways. In order to at Rockaway fort would be of no use. McWhinney sald {t would permit, without any molestation, since It was & public park, the entrance of hun- dreds of German sples who would come and inspect the proposed fortt- fications, but the committee gave this no credence at oll. William T. Montgomery, a Rocka- way banker, attacked the Mitchel ministration as a “miserable gove ment,” but eventhis did notstir any one, as there was no tive represent present at the hearing directly r senting the City of New Yo he cause of this absence the secession- iste challenged the good faith of the city authorities, but some of the older legislative jeaders, speaking for the gity to The Evening World, said at tendance was “\nne sary,’ since there Was little possibility that Ko: Away could secede without the city being awake to the situation. Phere was even some confidential chatier around the Capitol by persons who yvefused to be quoted to the there was some desire to away @ “miniature Mon Pettit went even so far that Rocaway wou will back to New York City all it had invested there since nexation tn 1898 to the He sald the Municipal Bi subways, the Catskill aq other recent {mprovement have cost the city milllons of dollars wore paid for in part by the Rockit Waym who receive no benefit at ail, Senator Mills promptly rejoined “You whould pay your proportionate share, and you'll get another veto unless you have It out with Mitchel,” Then Senator Miil’” vigorously punched holes In the proposed pro Pistons of the Rockaway commission mink Carlo. as form of £0’ ment, “Where did you borrow this queried Mil Pettit admitted {t was @ stereotyped form copled from some other charters: Pettit Iaunched another attack on Comptroller Prendergast when he said the latter refused to discuss finances with the Rockaway advo cates when they came to him, and “we'll do anything to get free,” he mouted, The hearing culminated in a storm of prolonged applay which wiseacres here sald was “wasted energy.” ub the Internal ayatern: this modern Ife {9 aggravating That is why halle a you find the wrinkles and crows’ and whenever so Tiere an't any outward. influence Rie MAINaUEE a fevkien the skin—you know that y 3 pina loreal caver you try lo remedy these outward sta make sts Mrantiostations. by ‘outward application, Gppearance, “ever Why dont you get right pack into the a0 tusivuificant. a rretem?” E2an upeholis and'ynu will snd apestion of Campbe! "Arsenic, Waters Oran contain a touch of & Soenlutel vow rina ther snd. ae doctors wit } aver to get nt the,stoma " pie tide & complaint. bave hs one t mover deep sea —harween Malied in plain cover for 50° and g thes they | “Curly Joo" | ightway , man Thomas A. MoWhin- | empt to prove that | “Fitting a Girl to Earn Her Own Living Is Tak- ing the Handcuffs. Off of Womankind. “The Woman With No Ideas Above Eating, Drinking and Sleeping Is a Cabbage.”’ ‘Tho world knows Richard Le Gal- Menne, poet and author; but ts less well acquainted with his elghteen- year-old daughter, Miss Gwendolen Le Gallienno, artist, sportswoman) and thinker on her own account. Sailing yesterday on the Morro! Castle to Nassau, the Bahamas, to Join her father and mother, Miss Le Galllenne paused to make a few pithy observations. For example: “Young mon’s faces are #0 insipid!” "A woman who just atte should be classed a a cabbage: “This ta an age of hustle, We can't Ne back and wish ourselves what we want to be.” “Fitting a otrl to earn her own iv. ing 4s taking the handcuffa off of womankind.” The Le Gaillenne programme 1s Long Island in the summer and the Bahamas in the winter, The summer |sofourn ts in thelr new houseboat, the Yohoho; in winter Mr. and Mrs. |L@ Gallienne rusticate In some re- mote corner of the southern seas, to be joined by their daughter when she can forego tho deadly serious: ness of the Art Students’ League Miss Le Gallienne declined to dts- | cuss submarines, the high cost of liv- jing or the war in Europe. She said she could swim, that living In the Bahamas was a thing to Itself, and that she preferred to think of Europe in terme of the knapsack tramps she | took years ago with her father, | What aid Interest her was Woman and Her Career. Miss Le Gulllenne admits a yearn- ling for the stage which ts not entirely | extinguished, that at fifteen she could recite whole Shakespearian plays and 8-84 9645-9:26-063¢ Hamlet. In art school, and there you were! “Above all things.” |woman ought to be self-supporting. To my mind, every human being should be independent for a living of every other human being. No woman ‘should be forced to depend upon what & man may desire to give her, upon |the whim a husband for every jcent ahe has. Even if I should marry I should want to be financlally ind |pendent, The woman who just sits |down with no {deas above eating and larinking and sleeping is nothing but a slave. She is vegetating. should be classed as a cabbage, | turnip, or @ head of lettuce, “Most girls aro given education un- tl they are eighteen or so, and then thelr attention turns entirely to the pleastng of man and the gentle art of getting married. As {f getting mar- 1, no matter to whom, only pro-| ot She or w vided he wears trousers, were the chief and only object of a woman !ife ‘Ag a rule, if a girl studies art she gots only a smattering of it, perhaps enough to adorn a boudotr or gratity & pissing fancy; if music, it 18 simply to add to her feminine attractions, not at all to be able to do things that are big or to cre At the art tio I ‘Oh, that ls! and draw is serious. a little st attend people come in and} What a pretty little thing | How nice to be able to paint) °y neldom soe oUF Work | most € them i. 1s only Ac) ompitshment tude exasperates On, That atti- My own work? | and draw old! nes and expre ces are so kt mo fer to paint with | men's I pr 8 faces, Young rding (o Miss Le Galileno, her | a andy rare wintering this | in A piri cave. She doubted | Capt. La much whether they evea know|ship Pearl of the recent war de nts. docks, Bayo “They are too their | barrels of ¢ work, I suspect,’ explained Lous Goerks Most of Miss Le Geiliene’s art work | Manhattan, has been portrait pair In olla, al- | day. Ls though she Is sald to remarkably ; Sault, was t good at chercoal drawing and to show | Metals promise as an Mlustrator, Sho ts tak. | une Hosp! ing several canvases with her hia w ted in Nassau, among the sho ized portr ofa uid man, ¢ res Col, Samuel Nicholson, char. | had coal sketches Mr. Doubleday of | €44 Doub} Page and Mrs. Doubleday, | and several p pa Body in the Bahamas lest wint © Perhaps | shall go ¢ the stage, AM after all,” she reflected, “If so, dray A Budape ing and painting will be a gre cording in the por human expression ¢ stage, On t hand, the of dramat s in the conn en are such 1 peonl They inaist on goiny io theatres SdbtdGooe by $12 that she adorad Forbes Robertson as | House, Put @ Boston aunt put her! Bill— | Carries j i 000 Si WASHTNGTON, Feb, Inc 00, the a 0494-304 Daughter of Richard Le Gallienne, Artist at 18, Loves to Paint Old Men; | Young Men’s Faces Are So Insipid FP 9OOEFOEDDOD Miss GWENDOLEN LE GALLIENNE, 000 since MONSTER NAVY BILL | REPORTED 10 SENATE Nearly Half a Billion Dol-| cased by $128,000,- 44d orO-O64 © ince It Passed House. —Increased it passed Administration's © biggest in the history of the th Naval | country—was reported to the Senate of nearly @ half bi! authorizes the she declared, “a| this afternoon by airman of the Naval Committee, Senator Tillman, The bill, as revised, carries a total n di ollars, and President to comman- deer private shipyards and munitions plants in time of war gon and Secretary of the Navy Dan.| Sale of the steamer, ordered for April jela appeared in person at the dapitol| 11, Upon petition of the Guaranty while the bill was in commit Trust Company and the Nattonal The biggest item of increase 1s|City Bank of New York, which $115.000,000 for the immediate com-| brought sult to recover $2,300,000 dam- tion of war vessels now under! ises for failure of the vessel to de- construction, This ts a reduction ¢ ver a shiproent of gold to European .000,000 from that asked by the| bankers at the outbreak of the war, avy Depar it. tl 8 stipulated that $85,900,000 pel expenied for competion “ot -auhs | MUST CONFINES 0 S CALLS marines. The naval ncaden onnel will bo Increased by 614 ¢ The $128,000,000 appropriation after greatest press Department and afte ad incres t or Pr di ¥eS waa ud m the N dent Wil an BIG GAIN IN CO COAL ourPur. PinusasCanteiaint GainahOsenave! xouse for Shortage. ALTOONA, Pa, Feb. Although | mine owners in this section pleaded inability to get men eno to work their mines as an exc shortage during tho p: made public to-day { put for 1916 was inc tons greater than in 1 WASITINGTON, F eorge Dewey left an esta DEWEY LEFT $255,000. according to n petition filed for probate in the District to-day by his widow and « The son renounces @ clair ecutorsh!p a tion a no real prope st remains ‘Tren Ship Captat Call OS | bo appointed of Austrian ship of the buy them, a Wataen, Pre fi theory of anoth t me Wiison had er nd dministra th that. th i - st f th moved that trix A no Court the ox- he widow he. petl ral left steam, ater oll ne, with @ cargo of 55,000 England, shot , th Street n the risf Kk yes urged us as ned ove Sta taken to the Bay 1 she was hired a filled, demanded the Captain then Were ar the 1 sael all —_ (via 1 aten rar Arco Women Put Dove of Lowa 1 potat heing hi sident. — ‘T ~~ fertains at hin a adon Emperor of Ttaltan Moved Vire, Feu 14 have ti order of + the town w notre. Ti yun Aveo ia in th Twist REPAIR THE DAMAGE TO KRONPRINZESSIN GECILIE. Owners of Ship Disabled by Ger-} man Order File Bonds to Cover Cost of the Work. BOSTON, Feb, 21.—The man Tioya Steamship owner of the steamer Kronprinzessin Cecilie, whose machinery was dam- aged by her crew Jan. custody of the court, to-day tiled in the United worthy, who States District Court @ surety bond for $200,000 to oover the expense of making the vessel sea- Capt. Charlies A. Polack, ordered the estified last week hi 5) From now on Willie Eckhoft of No, 195 Court teen-yeur-old youth who sent out the fulao Jan hurrying to sea in search of a sink- | ing ve: will confine hia calls to | yelling up dumb watter shafts. Willie, who combined the duties of @ grocer’a errand boy with those of an amateur wireless operator, was] found guilty by United States Comm. | missloner Mick of Brooklyn to-day of ending Comm bassy instruct tW 1 automatically atays the ns shin, TO DUMBWAITER SHAFTS | Willie Ec 8. 0. Streot, khoff Promises to Send No More Distress Signals Over the Seas, sent ha mossug ner } from | orth Ger- Company, 1, while tn engines disabled, that he received the Kierman ton, rooklyn, the six tireless signal revenue on cutters kk nald ha w | postpone puntshinent wnt! Mar Lewis ef radio inspector of | eral $1,001,000 for ¥ Price A Cotlene of Hogs Mt Vive Ct ut and sev testified | com, Barnell ea Willig sent nused all the if he sent out| unwitting with the Ad him tt heat Sinoe Civil War iy Lon amashe 8 1 — Hit by Car, Diew Tae Hospital t a Concert at Plarn | York, the | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1917. 1,000 TAMMANY ONLY 15 IN FALLING BRAVES WILL RELP ELEVATOR, HE SAYS, AT INAUGURATION BUT 24 WERE HURT Led by Murphy, They Will Operator of Car at New York Participate in the Coming | Wilson Ceremony. Tammany ts going to Washington | to help inaugurate Prestdent Wilson, A meeting of the executive commit- tee, composed of district leaders, was held to-day to arrange plans for the trip. It is expected the deloga- tion will number between 800 and 1,000 men, with Charles F. at their head. In his immediate par- ty will be all the old-time district | 14 leaders and captains, They plan to leave New York Sat- | the court that at the time of the acct- urday, March 8 and will etay tn Washington until the following Tues- day. Tho leaders will atop at th Raleigh Hotel, while the rank and file will be placed mostly tn lodgings. Murphy was particular to potnt out that Tammany t@ going to Washing- ton. not to represent the tate of New | nor the city of New York, but! solely the Democracy of New York County. If Brooklyn or Queens or) Bronx or any other borough is send. | ing @ delegation to the inauguration, {t will not be in this party, Tammany | is from Manhattan Island only, the “Uittle old New York” of bygone days when the Tiger ruled from the Bat tery to Harlem. In addition to inauguration bust- ness there was much discussion of local politics at to-day’s meeting. The braves rejoiced over exposure of mu- nicipal scandals arising out of Rock- away land deals and attacks made on New York Central west side con- tract They were unanimous in de- elaring that the Mitchel admintetr tlon was getting some hard knocks and that the political horizon was r Tammany success tn yoralty election, was remarked at the Wigwam It conference that the Dock Department, seems now to have supplanted the Police Department for scandals, Deals in lands under water and contracts with corporations for water front | property have taken the place of old |t!me police methods of doing bust- ness, ‘There was general agreement that watchful waiting 's tho best policy Just now. No prospective Mayoralty candidates are to be trotted out for the present or now booms launched. The Tiger's strategy contemplates re- peated attacks upon the Mitchel ad- ministration, with the object of weak- ening Fusion and Inciting the Repub- licans to break away 500 DIE IN A, R. WRECK; REFUGEES IN AWFUL PANIC Men and Women Fight as Fire Adds to Horror and Ammunition on Derailed Train Explodes, BERLIN (Via Sayville Wireless), Feb. 21.—Two thousand persons were victims of @ ratiroad accident near Chirurcha, northern Roumanta, the official press bureau asserted to-day quoting the er Russkoy« Slowo. Tho news dead were all Roumantan refugees, with many of high rank among them. Five bundred were killed on the spot. The train Jjumpot the tracks and the cars telescoped Fire broke out at several places. “The pante was tndeserthable,” the newspaper asserted. “Fathers and mothers pushed thetr ehtldren axtde in order to save themselves. pushed women into the fire, Wor and men were attacking each other with thetr teeth and finger nails Others, who lost thelr minds, Into the burninis cars, ‘Then the am munition aboard the train began ex Ki ploding, ling numoroua persons. rd to Tax Stock . ft The Bre ALBANY, Keb Assemblyman Coffey te prepared for tntrody a bill w » for a tax of nt. upon all commissions charged t t York 8} x b the Curb, the Produce Pxcha e inatitutions The broker the Btock Exchan t ) fort ah 1 tal sales n f Jur int Do Vash Pood Sha O, Ket I ' f b I 1 graphed 1 ‘ i ' 1 that t nin v \ Placed on all 4 t 1 out ux { f t ft oo PANAM \ th r _ Morgan Gets 835,500,000 More Gatd Murphy | charge of felontous assault jhad the nam fons who were injured in tho fallin |elinto Hospital with both legs broken, jand Mra, Theatre Held on Charge of Felonious Assault. Eugene Johnson, who was tn charge | of the elevator whioh fell eighty foot | last night from the root of tho Now| York Theatre and injured twenty-| four passengers, was to-day held in| $1,000 ball by Magistrate Corrigan, in| the Wost Side Court, on @ technical Johnson, who te twenty-four years and Ives at No, 166 West One Hundred and First Street, stated to dent there were only fifteen passen- | sora In the car, the carrying capacity | of which waa 2,500 pounds. Pollee- man Fuchs of the Woat Forty-sev- | enth Street Station testified that he of twenty-four per: car. The most severely hurt are Mrs. Lucten de Martini of No. 254 We Fifty-fourth Street, who ts in Poly.) Thornton Motley of the Hotel Biltmore, with a broken leg. | The other passengers suffered sprained anklos, brulses and shook, Another feature being investigated 1s the grim story that the tnjured passengers were robbed as they were being extricated from the debris of the splintered car. Joseph Hisman of No, 175 East Seventy-ninth Street reports the loss of a wallet containing $200, and clares she saw a well dressed youns man tear a jowelled necklace from an un- | conscious wi an, | The list of the injured, atxteen of whom were attended at Polyclinic | Hoapttal, ts as follow Miss May Arc? Avenue; Matthew Bindell, No, 403 West Ono Hundred and Fifteenth Street; M. Rernhetmor, No. 104 West Sixty-ninth Street; Mrs. Mary 1. Bruns, No, 601 West One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street; Mra, 8. Bu- sont, No, 254 West Fortloth Street; Attilio D. Cresenzo, No, 201 West Forty-first Street; Mr. and Mra. Francts Cuomo, No. 254 West Forty- fourth Street; Joseph Eisler, No, 2100 Fifth Avenue; Joseph Iteman, No. 175 Kant Seventy-ninth Street; Meyer Fetnman, No. 623 Weat One Hundred and Forty-third Street; Rudolph Flathow, No, 75 Went Ninety-fifth Street; Louis Goldberg, No. 186 Cly- Street, Brooklyn; Mre. 8. B. Mar- 1ez, No, 12 Fourth Street, Weehaw- kon; Mrs, Lucten De Martini, West Fifty-fourth Etreet, noth legs broken; Mr. and Mrs, Thornton Motley and daughter of the Hote! Biltmore; J. A. Munyon, No, 127 Old Broadway, son of J. A. Munyon, Philadelphia, patent medicine manufacturer; I fle Schu enverg, No, 80 Weat Fifty-seventh Street; Mra, Morris Spitzer, No, 521 Market Street, Philadelphia; Clarence nother passenger ¢ 96 Fighth H, Wenner, No, 27 William Stroot; Louis Williams, No, 801 Madison Avenue. ‘The elevator waa inepectde on July 29 last by John F, Dempaey of the Department of Bulldings and was cc tifted to carry 2,500 pounds: rhe bullding Is gwned by the Klaw and Krlanger syndicate and 1a leased to| Marcus Loew, tana, some According to the physi ¢ the Injured we part of! their hurts to thetr t Sev. |! eral are guffering fr arches On the floor of tho car were found a r of Khoe heels and some loos Is, Jansen, who lives at No. West One Mune and Pirst St required the of a co surgeon t © was loc BURTON MUST STAND TRIAL. t of Curb Charge J Mulqueen t ted a me alker, attorney for J rt Burton ft a Wal t n Andiet. | lust Ma uns A > on, Pershing Appotnt ened 1 r th peelal Boll ' hokaw Dem ~ vo Hoss Enter tee Resened rs | now In the «i ELSIE DE WOLFE ILL FROM INOCULATION WITH TYPHOID GERMS ELSIE, DE WOLFE. Miss Elste de Wolfe ts seriously, though not dangerously, Ml at her homo, No, 123 Hast Fifty-fifth Street, from inoculation with typhold germs while preparing for duty as a Red Cross nurse in the event of war, Miss le Wolfe belongs to the Presbyterian fowpital unit of the Red Cross, and when the national organization sent directions recently to be prepared the voluntear nurses were tnoculated to protect them against diseases that might be encountered in military ser- vice. Miss de Wolfe was inoculated on Saturday, and on Sunday became much more severely {ll than ts usual, | Tt was @atd at her home to-day that | sho was still wook and might be con- fined to her bed for overal days, but that her condition wag not dangerous. ALLEGED LEADER ON TRIAL FOR MRS, NICHOLS’ MURDER Mulholland’s Offer to Plead Guilty | in Second Degree Rejected by Prosecutor, Joseph A. Mulholland, alleged lead- er tn tho robbery plot that resulted in the murder of Mrs, Elizabeth Nichols in her home at No, 4 East Seventy-ninth Btroet on the night of Sept, 8, 1915, was placed on trial for his life before Justice Tompkins to- day, The work of selecting the jury and the opening address of Assistant Dis- trict Attorney B: @ will occupy to-day and the taking of evidence will begin to-morrow. Mulholland, through his attorney, Prederick Ware, offered to plead gullty to murder tn the aec- ond ¢ with twenty iprisonment as a penalty, ea Was refused by District Atte Swann Artuur Waltonen, land's confe one of Mulhol- rates In the rob! ath house at Sing Bing awaiting execution. Onne Talas, the hallboy who admitted the burglars to the Nict home, 19 impriso for $275, 000 To “AID THE JEWS. Ambassador Penttela York Ce ands New fon to Vienna BERLIN, T b, 20 (By wire- Sayvil 1).—Frederte C. tho United States Ambassador Austria-Hungary, has handed to the soelation New York 4s to Penfield to Vienna Jowish A sted tte by the the Jow tricta of Houmanta State © Bun Cw Someta na ALMANY, Fob. An emorgency dcfictency appropriation bill was Intro duced to-day carrying m total of $1,331 Of this amount $916,065.78 Ls divided between th ¥, State hos sand notitutton y of t ait te sald for innty r and dollara 1 the mot ‘OLIENT SHOOTS SELF DEAD | IN OFFIGES OF LAWYER Fearing Auto Suit and Ravages of Cancer, Joseph Jud Com- mits Suicide, | 7 | Unbalanced by worry over an auto- mobile damage sult, in which he was | defendant, and also over fear that he had cancer, Joseph Jud, @ retired merchant, fifty-six years old, who lived In Benedict Avenue, Woodhaven, | L. L, killed himself to-day with a bul- | let In the head in his attorne | fices In Long Island City. The —automobil damage brought by Frederick Reith Jr. on to-day’s calendar of th County Court, and Jud, a by his brother Jacob of Kidg went to the office of William art, in the Masonte Building, adjoin- ing the court house, for a ¢ my | During the talk Jud left the room, | and @ moment later there was tye sound of a pistol shot in the waeS- jroom. He was found dead on the lor. — B. N. DUKE IS RUSHED HOME. Sart Nervow lorida, on Health Quest. DURHAM, N. C., Feb. 21.—Benjamin N Duke, Durham‘a wealthiest citizen, and brother of James B, Duke, head of the tobacco industry, was rushed here fn a private car following @ nervous breakdown at Jacksonville, Fla, Mr. Duke, his wife and nie Lucy Stokes of this city, were en route to Palm Beach, Fla., and other South- ern points, where they were to spend several weeks on account of Mr, Duke's health. Immediately upon arriving Duke was hurried to his home, Duke stated to-day that her husband was resting comfortabl, kdown Mine HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD Says Cream Applied to Nostrils Opens Air Pass: Right Up Instant relief—no waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up; the alr passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawke |'ng, snuffling, blowing, headache, dry- |ness. No struggling for breath ag [nights your cold or catarrh disappears, Get ‘a sinall bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, aatoantin. ‘healing cream in your nostrils. It pen: ctrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and reliet comes instantly. It's Just fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up with @ cold or nasty catarrh.—Advt.- unkist uniform; Gee, Seren Feces California today and every day. Phono now for asupply. 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