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'THE EVENING WORLD, 8 * SAYS ATTACKER | Tedtale Fi ingerprints May Solve OF MILLERAND A Series of Mysterious Robberies HAD BRAINSTORM f= Bouvet Atel “To-Day— Conviction Will Carry Death Sentence. PARIS, July 15 (Assoclated Press). ~—Gustav Bouvet, the young Anarchist who yesterday fired at Police Prefect Naudin, mistaking him for President Millerand, presented an unprepossess- \N& appearance in his cell this morn- ing as he awaited araignment on 1 charge of “attempt to commit pre- meditated and willful murder,"’ con- ‘ietion for which carries the death sentence. The assassin is a tall, skeleton-like figure, and in an advanced stage of tuberculosis. He was employed as a draughtsman in an automobile fac- tory, but himself printed the weekly Anarchist Youth, which he founded, as well as writing it The keeper of the hotel roomed gives him a good character refereges, declaring he was ulways quiet and regular with his payments. He lived alone, receiving neither vis tors nor mail. He was introduced to the hotel by the notorious woman an- archist, Germaine Linthauld, who was arrested in October, 1921, when a bomb was thrown after a Communist meeting in Wagram Hall, wounding several policemen. She was suspected of throwing the bomb, but was sen- tenced only for inciting to murder. Anarchist pamphlets and copies of U'Action Franca'se were found in Bouvet's room, together with some post cards from “comrades. The Communist organ L'Humanite ways: “The act, which was purely individual, should be considered as a reflex and as a result of the sudden reaction sometimes occurring with over-sensitive, overworked brain: Referring to the military review at the Longchamp race track, from which Prefect Naudin and President Millerand were returning when the attack was made, the newspaper says; ‘'The theatrical display of a military review, the sensational ex- hibition of troops—white, yellow and black—and the sight of Perfected en- gines of murder cannot be expected to awaken instincts of pacific sweet- ness in the@ouls of the spectators. WHIPPING POST NEEDED, SAYS COURT Park Mashers Held Without Bail for Sentence NRARSeMENr Talis NOICATED By Arrow. Reporter Found Them, Eve- ning World Photographed Them, Detective Sneered At Them. In robbing the Jung Razor Corpo- ration of 114 dozen {mported razors, worth $2,000, Thursday night thieves made haunt in where he thelr third and most successful 149-161 The thieves not only carted off more than loot, four days at Nos. Chureh Street. 200 pounds of but spent several hours remov- ing the razors from their boxes. According to Mr. Jung, a detective came from Headquarters yesterday, about fifteen minutes after he haa first reported the theft. “The didn't even look around,"* Jung said. ‘He said, ‘Get up a list of, the stolen property and I'll try to find it in a hockshop.’ Then he went awa When The Evening World reporte: entered about half an hour later the 4rst thing that struck his eye was the white woodwork of transom and door covered with black fingerprints. With Mr. Jung he went into the hall and on the newly painted wall outside the door saw a perfect impression or the full four fingers of the left hand. The dust on top of the transom was marked with fingerprints, The con- clusion was obvious that entry had been through the transom. This was verified by the fact that the door in one room was protected with a police lock which had not been disturbed, and the door in the other room had been bolted and a roll-top desk placed against it. ‘There was not a sign of a jimmy or any other Tr Pein book PRAME GOULD AND BRIDE INTEND TO LIVE ~——NENGLAND AFTER ONE TRIP HERE (Continued From First Page.) porch. Mr. Gould, the bride-to-be and Beatrice Hosken, an employee in the Sinclair home at No. 823 West 7éth Street, got out. The chauffeur remained at the wheel. EVERYBODY NERVOUS AT THE WEDDING. Mr. Gould and the Judge, who have been friends for more than a quarter of a century, exchanged greetings and the party went into the parlor. Judge Newman went upstairs aud called his wife, and J. Scudder Fisher, Town Registrar and Assessor of Lakewood and also a personal friend of Me. Gould, was summoned as one of the witnesses, the others being Mra. New- man and Miss Hosken. Judge Newman admitted to-day that all were a little nervous. While the formalities necessary in filling out various documents lasted almost an hour, the marriage ftself required only detective Mr. Mrs. Sinclair had stated any previous marriages in obtaining the Heense by replied: “I don't remember." His attention was called to a cop) of the license filed with the Bureau of Vital Statistics of the State Health Department. In that document ap. peared the printed words “Numbe: of metriages,”” and opposite it Mrs. Sinclair inserted the word ‘‘one."* Mr. Fisher said he did not know whether “‘one’’ referred to a previous marriage or to her proposed one with Mr, Gould. However, as the license was made out, It would be taxen that it was Mrs. Sinclair's first mar- riage. In the certificate it is recorded that Mrs. Sinclair gave her age as twenty. residence, Lakewood and No 328 West 74th Street, New York. It is further recorded that she ts the daughter of Alexander Campbell Sin- clair of Dakota and that her mother's maiden name was Litia E, Moell eed a few minutes, though two forms|Atkins. instrument on doors or windows. uescay: were used. 1 RECEIVED ONLY THE $1 LEGAL! jyquiry among other tenants of the “We could use a whipping post for| Tne only explanation of tle two FEE, huliding soon revealed that this was your kind," commented Magistrate ceremen les was ‘ By pees None ot| Resister Wisher explained that the} the third robbery since Monda in Brown in the Gites Avenue Court Wei aot vee at his office and the| reason he did not recall much about|one case a man had been observed 5 ‘ 5 riag a eo didn't} led his office to mail a letter and Brooklyn, to-day, when two yi i S}the marriage was that he “didn't] leaving men. pleaded any to annoyine wee ener ve ne poe te babe Renee consider it was very important."'| while he was away some one had i AE WEOU SO Rey Baa . When asked if Mr. uld slipped] stolen a watch from lis desk. The men in Tompkins Square Park, i 5 y was em- Brooklyn. They were sent to Ri The single ring ceremony wa him anything,” he said if anything|other time a masterkey inserted mont Street Jail and will be sentenesd|DlOved- When Mr. Gould attempted |iiore than the legal fee of $1 was|in a door but it broke and the thief Tuesday. enced tg place the wedding circlet on the} icant, "No," Wan tolled. For several days complaints have| “n&er of his bride it proved to be so} «7 should lave considered it an in-| The detective had ascertained nono " ve | Small It went no further than the} suit for him to have offered me any-| of these facts, In the afternoon the Sorte Poona the ae tii middle joint of the finger, but it aN-}tning extra,” ie explained. —‘The| reporter returned with a photographer insulting remarks. Last night Police-|®*ered all purposes of ae sion ay | Register continued: to get the pictures printed with this man William Faure was sent there|.,A¢ the conclusion of Ltyeleaestior ak But I want yon and every one]Story. The detective had not returned and alleges he saw two men approach | {it Gould mined, ea ornate niderg | cise t0 Understand that we in Lake-[and Headquarters had not sent a man women on benches and make com-|check. Judge Newman yes . re bride's | wood think a great deal of Mr, Gould.} around to make pletures of the ments, apparently in the hope of en-|°%e3 filled With tens Irs. > hia I have known him for twenty-five or] fingerprints. as they had heen re. aging in conversation. pest OILS uh mi the Juke Vthirty. years. He pays the township] quested to at 10.20 At one bench one of the men said: | T#!ved bis privite 1 avhio the | 535,000 in taxes every year, and he is] About 2 o'clock the detective “Hello, sweetie: nice evening, May [couple received (iy wtutotions Offa greet man. turned to get the list Mr. June had I sit alongside of you?" Faure then those presen v at adie ul When he first came here there]drawn up. He glowered at the re-| arrested them. They gave their|!t in thelr automobile. soe | 28 RO road to the south. And dof porter and photographer and said to names as George Engle of No. 61] THe bride wore a corsaxe bouquet off you know what he did? Everybody | the former: hids and carried a bunch of roses. Floyd f ee \ says that he paid half the cost of a] “This ain't a burgiary, it’s lave be als Eat aa yrds Judge Newman couldn't :eeall exactly |ten-mile road out of his own pocket.| They got In with a kev. It's nn inc Street, Brooklyn. what she wore. Whenever a bie project for Lakewood] side job." When arraigned both pleadea| “It Was brown, [ think, or maybe it} ia talktd about, Mr. Gould wants to] “But look at the ma on the} gillty and’ the Magistrate said. was something blue,” he said. ‘Per- He i at man, transom," the reporter vouchsafe “I intend to make Brooklyn safe|#ps it was purple. Anyway, I beliove remembet hin. when he was a] “That's nothing. ‘The transom's nd decent for married women and|!t Was what they call a thavellmg oy, Fle used to rite his bicycle on] Mailed." itis, ‘Thin thing has gotito etop, dress—whatever that is." Judge New-lihe sidewalks and tho sidewalks in| He saw ‘two nails between 1! ——_—- man @ontinued: those days were full of mud holes.| transom and door and concluded STRIKE OF ARABS “I filed the certificate of the mar-}And do you know what he used to] they were for protection. In fact, riage that same day, May i, with J./do? Why, he used to get off his|they had previous!y held a curtain ON IN PALESTINE|Scudeer Visher, the Town A: or, | bieyele whenever he saw a woman|The detective left, after hagglin designated for that duty, and he fled |coming and he would stand by the] With Mr. Jung as fo the yalue of th it with 1 loot, and Terms ofa: the Bureau of Vital Statistics Trenton prior to June 10, the repofter then mounted the roll top desk wheel with his hat in his hand until the woman went by. That's the kind Protest Against having and easily pushed ; . until the 10th of the month next fol- Jof man Mr. Gould 1 open the transom, which Is large British Mandate Also in lowing to file such certificate. Of the ceremony Itself Mr. Fisher] enough to admit a*stout nian Transjordania. “Until to-day," the Judge continuea The names of three persons fre . “no one ever asked me if | had mar- I] weddings look alike to me,]atently seen im the office building at LONDON, July 15.—A strike Of}ried the Goulds. I told the first one }and it would not make any differenco| ail times of day and night, two o Arabs throughout Palestine and} wno asked me, a newspaper man, that | to me in my officlal position whether it] Whom are under suspicion hy ¢ Transjordania, which began yester-|( had done so. as soon as | was asked. |wus Mr. Gould who was soing to be| tenants, are in the possession of day in protest against the terms ot rs. Gould after the wedding|marricd or some ditch digger out of| Evening World. Se far as could } the British mandate, has given rise] sked me not to volunteer any infor-|the cranberry 1 comply with| ascertained the detective had mad ta @ serious situation, says a Cairo) mation about the wedding, as they did|the State law right down to the let-|N0 attempt to question occupants deapateh, records to Trenton on| the building not want to be bothered by the pud- ier, 1 sent the While the strike is general, order} jicity which wouk ensue, She sald] May 6, and I don't have them o:| === —= has been maintained thus far, but./to me. however. ‘Judge, If anybody Jeven « duplicu If it was my own . with my old friend duc the correspondent addp, the merest}asks you if you married us, you need | brother 1 couldn't remember the de n offieiat! dy wife was Mi bark might set_the country ablaze.|not feel that you must deny it. ‘Teil | tails fot Men, Guinevere @insikin, nivee ae — ——— aes = them the truth and we will have tol ‘Mr. Gould present Mrs | ling London and Paris we motored to ST, SWITHIN’S got along as best we may.’ Geuld came to 1 ny office on] IN Tes ya etnies ee Judge Newman has known My |May 1, He made out \) tion, Will Hot be Anished until then. DAY, WITH FAIR jould practically all his life, he sald.Jbut 1 don't remember the name of the visit to Alx-ies-Rning Mr THE FORECAST and was counsel to Mr. Gould as one|ithe bride ex t that t think it was nd his wife will fe for Par of the executors of the will of his|'Guinevere, or something like that, aid efter a moter tour will pass - —— first wife, Edith Kingdon Gould, who] ‘sinclair’; 1 don't remember whether | mainder of 1) tn Mir Curious Searcher Already |died suddenly late last autumn. |is was ‘Miss’ or ‘Mrs. ” eaere ip Seatiend. At Gould F ~ | When Judge Newman was appo Mr. Fisher w sked if he coult| iit le touring over the count i ITas Disproved Ancient |to the bench, Apri 1 last, he had to remember how tho bride looked, and TRIAS he Wife and son-in-law, Lord Decies, ive up his attorneyship for M Who arrived there carly this week Legend. ease : er wus a tull; handsome woman nispa i ESO went Vo-day {x St. Swithin's anniver- | AD MET THE BRIDE BEFORE =a stunner pues: su eaten “| DENY MRS. EDITH GOULD sary, and there will be no rain, WEDDING. Rian. MWhAt Gd abe weur? Well, DIVORCE SUIT APPEAL according to the weather fore- “After the wedding the party lett} you got me. 1 never sy any atten. — | Phis expert adds that the Jin the automobile which had brought | tigy to those things rebody told] Disminsat of Petition In Uphetd hy about forty consecutive them and § think they. went to stay |merthat it waa a travelling: dross; Appellate Division, daya of rain, should there be @ J|at Georgiancourt, the Gould place|that’s all 1 know. about it The Appell Division of the su wT on od out ein hae [here Judge Newman sald. Tho! Misa Ethel Sickles, Judge New-| prema Cauct today decinog tats: never worked out, so if there | wedding was arranged with him two| man's secretary, looked as if she had| ¢6 i a han should be rain to-day there is no was performed, he suid.| known the secre rear pe: with: Suppers Court: 3 Mut cause for alarm Judge Newman sald he had met the ——— Yan's disposal of Tidith Kelly Go oh RUTOUR partes: searching pride some time prior to the wedding. | MR, AND MRS, GOULD sult for divorce from Frank 3. G ew York weather records, dis- | 176 smiled broadly as he seemed to a Mrs, Gould, who was covered that never have forty recall the incident of their meeting} ON MOTOR TOUR, HE peal, moved aga days of rain followed a wet St yut he declined to go into particulars TELLS OF MARRIAGE Jetaiming that» + | Swithin's. On the other band, ezistur Misher, to whom the re = the Freneh cour re some of the driest spells we have marriage as turned over, Jily 18..-Gvorge J Goulds nf her husband had followed a wet St. Swithin's 4 memory was vasue concern| ech diterviuw ul Atgelea-Bamne, sald) éme tmit pi Litgie year it rained tard on the | cuntents of the license and other clr noarr pellate Dlviste wat J j waint's day, but twenty-two ¢ cumstances of the ceremony Was not married in London or jan's dismissa frs. Gould's cor the following forty days were dry, Asked if he remembered whether Paris, It happened May 1 at Lakewood, plaint s:ands, JATURDAY, JULY MINNIHAN CASE | TOBE DECIDED BY CARILL'S DEPU Will Make Decision After Funeral of Late Borough President of Richmond. A decision in the case of John FE. Minnihan, Commissioner of Street Cleaning in Richmond, charged with neglect of duty, incompetency and absence leave, will not be rendered until after the funeral of the late President Cahill on Monday morning. President Cahill heard the last: Thursday and, under Acting Commis- sioner of Tublic Works Robert BE. Dalley, who attended the hearing, can make the decision. . There is much speculation on Staten Island as to the successor of President Cahill. Among the candidates are John E. Bowe, former Commissioner of Public Works; Anning 8. Prall, Tax Commissioner and former President of the Board of Education; John J. O'Rourke, Deputy Commissioner of Public Works and for twelve years an Alderman; former Borough President Calvin D. Van Name, and James Vail, Commissioner of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity. The appointment rests with the three Democratic Aldermen from Staten Island, and they will meet on Tuesday afternoon to make the selection. Arrangements were completed to- day for the funeral of President Cahill. The honorary pall bearers will be the Mayor and the members of the Board of Estimate. For two hours on Monday morning the body will lie in state in Borough Hall, St. George, after which there will be a requiem. mass ut St. Peter's Church, New Brighton. Interment will be in St. Peter's Cemetery, —— — SEEKING MACHINE TO MAKE MAN TALL withont Borough testimony the law, Japanese Believes Instru- ment Is Popular In New York City. A letter from Tokio, neatly written in Ideograph on green-ruled paper, has been recelved by The World, and as no one In the office could read {t, s. Fugita, chief American correspondent of the Asahi Shimbun of Tokio and Osaka, was asked to ald. Mr. Fugita’s office is in the Pulitzer Building. His translation, which 1s purposely literal, follows: “To tho Manager of The World, Row, New York City. “Dear Sir: L am very glad to hear that all things are prospering with your paper, “EL beg to pardon to ask you to give me the name and the address of the store at where the machine to make men taller Is selling. 1 have ever heard the machine {s now popular in New York Cit: "An early prectated Park reply will greatly be ap- and oblige. 1 enclose ‘here- with two Japanese five-cent postage stainps for your answer. Youis very truly, GINZO MORI, Salwai-cho Japan.” Kiobashi-Ku, Tokio, BANK SHARE TAX UPHELD BY COURT Appellate Division Decides Suit Involving $8,000.- 000 for City. Corporation O'Brien Counsel John 1, as received an opinion from the Appellate Division by which city wins the Hanover Bank tax wid sustains the State jaw the se on bank aves. He made the following state ment “The decision unanimously confirms tle assessments and taxes for junk shares in the suit of th \inst the Tax Commissioner of the ity of New York, the sments mounting to more than $2,400,00 in excess of $240,000, by the bank to be ille is typical of a large number of similar 1 in bunts uits involving taxes amounting to nore than $8,000,000 for 1 essments to be made a FRENCH WAR VETERANS KEEP BASTILLE DAY The neh War V etion with the prone ane, pal Fverich 0 ties of New York cel roted Bastille Day—the Fr nie onal bollday—last night with ree ition, patriotic tableaux-vivants and janee at the Tat Regiment Armor ity Strect and Fourth Avenue. T vu" of the ev Juction of the he cabaret of ening was the repro Sabaret dela Madelov he poilus ond of the Awerican soldiers while on (i Franee, Tauflied, who retirement from the Breach presents the Department of the Rhin of Alsace in the French. 1 impassioned speech French population in the ss to work — unremitting! nontonsly for the closest re een France and the United sta 4) General Liebert and Pre Amiot of the French War, Veterans also > POLICE SERKING SCOTTEN, ACTRESS, + police of PaRland, Ore, inn ) to the Missing Persons Bureau at 4 to-day, requested Helen Klein seo supposed to be employed here her that her father died ' Ark. on July 18 Je The p live! tall of tleewhere now, ELEN KLEIN soy it is?" Mr. Fagan was “Indeed, yes, The cha ur very much affected by thelr game It Is easy enough to build charart when they seek play in ¢ the public playgrounds wh provided for them. Here they are | supervised. But take, for Instance. «| boy who lives In 45th Street. He w take lis skates and walk up 6!) Street to the park. Here he thin ne can put them on. Na. He my 15, 1922.) _ Boys’ Games of the Olden Times Are No Longer Seen in New York And Probation Officer Mourns “Run, Sheep, Run,” “Cowboys and Indians” and Other Good Old Timers Have Gone for Good—Character of Male Youth Is Affected by Environment, By Ruth Snyder. "The boy of to-day has a hard time of it, of twenty years ago—‘run sheep-run,’ He ‘cowboys and can't play Indians,’ the games ‘cops and robbers,’ ‘red rover,’ &c. He can't, and he doesn't know how to.” Bernasd J. Fagan, Chief Probation OMcer of the Children's Court of tals city, was talking on a subject of vital Interest to him —boys— growing bovs for playing boys which boys seeking an outlet for that human instinct play js innate. “Yes, si! Um sorry for the of to-day, We‘ is handicapped on every side Hiltie giri—she will stay put. She'll find a qulet spot and play by herse'f, The boy’—an appreciative smile spread over M Fagan's face—"the boy will get a tin pan and ® —-—~~ ~e = start banging on it. His nother will]a lot of credit chase him out of the hous He will} such that Her environfent is it really surprises me there go down In the cellar or up on the are 80 few delinquent girls as there roof, and the janitor will chase him are What, with dark halls to du ’ © ja thelr spoontng in, dance halls for H> will go out In the street and start] recreation, &c, they deserve a lot to play bali und the cops will chase] of credit for being as good as they aha! ‘Buty aa L bald before, tt-ail ut, as I sald before, tt all comes A pair of arms browned by the]aown to u question of environment. sun and suggesting the love of the|In the city to-day the boy can’t play outdoors were raised in eloquent] the games he used to play, He hasn't ality the space. Naturally, he will eek fu amusement elsewhere And it ts up i to the people to see that the places wenty years ago”’—the tone be-lwhere they do seek amusement—the came reflective—'Twenty years ago] pool parlors, the dance halls and the the boys went out in the lots, dug a] Movies—are kept morally and men- cave and played ‘cowboys and In-|tully fit for them dians.’ They can't to-day. Their ees environment won't permit, The boys] “Yes, sir. The boy of to-day has a used to build snow huts and have] lard time of It” street fights. That, however, Is one thing we can be thankful for: The old-time gang fights, when one street of boys would go out and battle an other street of boys, have passed away. But the environment of to- day—the growth of the clty—won't permit of these old games.” Atlanta Plumes Itself on Its Resemblance to New York. “What games do they play now?" was the obvious question. “It Is hard for the boy who seeks individual play.” Mr. Fagan replied “As T sald, he Is handicapped by en- vironment. But maybe you have noticed how many are the boys play- ing with pigeons on the roofs. There is keen rivalry in the taming of them in thelr different calls to the birds in the tricks the pigeons are taught &c. Then there ts the boy who has an inventive turn of mind—and you would be surprised how many boys By Roger Batchelder. There 1s no city in the country which 1s more like New York than Atlanta, Ga, in the opinion of J. 0. Wood, Chairman of the Streets and TraMe Committee of that city, who is at the Pennsylvania. have. Do you know that nine out of} “Our trafflc laws in particular are ten boys who come in here, when ‘ fl : d patterned after those of New York asked what they Intend to be, will] Patterned after those of & 3 reply ‘Engineers’ ‘That is a large} Mr. Wood remarked, “Our streets percentage. It is thelr {nstinct for| are long and narrow, and, as a result, play demanding an outlet. They] congested. We also have one point want to Invent, to discover. ‘That ts which is not unlike tne corner of Fifth Avenue and 42d Street, in that thousands of vehicles and pedestrians must pass in a short time, When your police tower solved the problem here, we built a similar one at that point In Atlanta, with equally satis- factory results."* Mr. Wood mentioned the unfailing courtesy of New York's police und assertea that only one feature of this why they are turning to mechanical toys, radio, &c,” But that is only for the boy who ts properly directed. ‘The other boy"'— and the hand of the speaker, which had started to come down with a vehement pound on the desl, paused in midair and came gently down on the wooden surface—"the other boy, the poorer city boy, will go to the pool parlors, to the dance halls, will steat out in the alleys and play poker and] city——-the absence of home life—would gamble, Not that I have anythin} make ~esidence here displeasing to against pool, Not that [ disbelieve In] jim. dancing. They are all right, But che rear atmosphere of the pool parlor is alll LUNN STILL ON THE FENCE. wrong, The dances are not as they! Despite the fact that he was men- should be. They should be super- | tioned for Governor at the recent Dem. vised and made to suit the play In-| scratic con © up-State, and that stinot of the:boy his friends have opened headquarters in Syrnenae and are hooting him for “Don't you think the bey of to-day arpa DOnmoniahe Senator, Mayor ¢ nectady, who has been in town look- ing things over, merely smiled when asked what office he desired or ex- pected to obtain in the fall elections. “The conference of last week was unofMfcial and informal, and not, as 1 first belleved, a meeting of Chairmen empowered to speak for their dis- tricts, I really haven't dectared my- games?” was the Fagan is playing ‘older* next question put to Mr. “Yes, they playing — ‘older’ games because they are ‘older.’ Why the boy of to-day—to use a slang ex- pression—can ‘buy and sell’ his. father, Just to-day I saw a group of swearing: youngsters playing marbles, I heard some swearing dur- are Ing the war, but the words out of the|selr as a candidate for anything.” mouths of ‘these boys would shock (nas you, And the younsters of to-day] NO UNEMPLOYMENT THERE. Play poker, Yes—and smoke. They} 4 shortage of labor exists in many start to smoke when they are very : young. Twenty years ago a boy would stay up until all hours of the night reading a book which he had walted PADEREWSKI SAILS, DONE WITH POLITICS quite a while for. To-day there are ove 1,000,000 ders in N York, and if you visit the public lbrerles you will be surprised to find ont how boys there are from seven to six Jan Paderewskl, who sailed teen who belong to the library, No Kurope @his afternoon on La They go to theMovies. Aguin, I have daclareilAhne NOCRAE Anlahod ne fault to find wit) vies—Dbut politics tn Poland they must be the right sort alt wa thereto) OCTANE Unger? a © added iverything t3 going well PNG Dov Oh tO sOHy 18 i mule me here now and if Fever have anything Alfficult proposition than the boy of],o go with polities It will be in ad twenty vears ago. Then we had toldigory capacity only.’ handle a mischlevons boy. And that) When asked whether he intended is where the parents ginke a mist eippoRrne uoine tine or GENRERR to-day, They misdirect thetr parenta:}yianist, he replied “T don't know." suthority, In fact, they have so inis- [ite iq going to his chateau on the directed it that the hoys are prac-|take of Geneva in Switzerland tiewlly leading their own lives, 9 father will make the mist ‘ spanking his boy. Spar the boy of to-day no gue must study him, Find it is his boy ts seeking nmACING Empire City Course (YONKERS AND MT. VERNON) MONDAY $3,000 MELROSE. MORTISANTA HAN “The trend of the rames of to-da must have some ef! acter of the boy. ton t ha What STAKES walk to the Mall be he Perhaps by this tin and he will seek pla way. He will apples, If he stent ny. In Bie POMPEIAN (OLIVE OIL "And what [say | good for the gil ways. The New York girl Sold Everywhere ' AUTOKILLS WOMAN "| Hair and Skin Beauty RETURNING FROM CHURCH SERVICE Her Daughter, Also Struck By Commercial Car, in Serious Condition. On her way home from ths Chureh of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, 115th and Pleasant Avenue, Mrs. Lena Lenzzi, fifty-seven years old, of 6. $01 Fast 119th Street, was struck tly Killed by a commercial 1iith Street and First Her daughter, Mre Millie Guartano, thirty-five years eld, of the same address, suffered possible internal injuries and shock and was taken by Dr. Sala to Harlem Hospital in a serions condition The truck which struck the women was driven by Louis Arzonett!, No. 2015 First Avenue, and belongs ta Henry Faller, fruit merchant, Me. 2021 First Avenue. At the time of the accident the atreeta were thronged with persons who had attended the church services, , being the opening day of # three-day feast, and fearing the angry crowd would attack Arzonetti, Patrol- man McGoldrick of the East 126th Street Station sent for additional pa- trolmen to keep back the mob. The crowd followed to the Pollos Station, where Arzonettl was made # prisoner, charged with technical hom. clde. Street und inst rute truck at Avenue to-day Georgian districts, Robert H. Moore of Culverton at the McAlpin tells us. “The bad cotton conditions prompted many Negro workmen to go North,” he asserted, “and thelr remittances home Indicate that they are making money. The Injury to cotton and pecan Jands by the boll weevil has caused the farmers to turn many such sections into peach orchards.~ The mild winter, which caused the trees to bloom prematurely, will restrict the size of the crop to some extent, but it will be about two-thirds of the yfeld of our most prosperous years. In many Instances, however, the farmers are wondering where they can get labor to pick and pack the peaches."” eee MAINE FULL OF TOURISTS. “At this time of the year the citizens of Maine give over the State to the tourists of the country,” sald Henry F. Sheppard, at the Commodore from Portland. “It 1s Interesting to notice the variety of license plates on the automoblles which pass through Port- land each day on their way to the summer resorts. A traffic officer told me recently that In a week he had noted representatives from at least thirty-eight States of the country.” rr) FARTHEST FROM HOME. “New Yorkers for a Day or who are farthest from home to-day are Mr. and Mrs. A. O, Smith, who are at the Pennaylvania. Their home town, Buenos Ayres, ts about 8,000 miles from Broadway. Leen EE PreservedByCuticura If you use Cuticura Soap for every~ day toilet poses, with touches of Cuticura Ointment needed to soothe and heal the first pimples or ecalp irritation, you will have as clear ‘@ complexion and as good bair as it is possible to hav Semple Hash Freaby Mall. Address: Bee ee ‘Cuticura Seap sha: AJ ARONA i Geachaurte A eb ilis 10811 Notice to Advert'sers ony and release andere tr Meruing World or Toe fred aftee | 1 3 the day ee (ifn Se