Newspaper Page Text
FmruT, Jrcr 7, 1911. Dcrc-st and cooler to-day; probably fair to morrow, moderate northerly, shifting to easterly winds. VOL. LXXV1II.-X0. 310. PRICE TWO CENTS. NEW YORK FRIDAY JULY 7, 1911. CapyrieAf. 1MI. bv (,e Sun Printing and PvblMiHQ As.oeiaf.o. " SHOWER BUT NO REAL CHANGE I AOAIS, MKKCl n HIDES VP Tnov a u xot so HIGH. jttitnarton S?s Flatlj That It Will ne foot Te-da-nnfflelIM.t Tester. tli! nesponslble for I to rrostra. ' I tlon-rlntlnis In ihr Snbwa). TV fifth day of the heat affliction, the . .v.. v... v- . . . . . Merest that ha been recorded In this Mlghbcrhood since the unprecedented Jiae-Julv viitation of IMI. paaeedwith- rut civlinc -bower sensibly modifying t.e temperature The official mercury Imbed t M 5. just half a degree higher than I had gone on Wednesday. A b'wfr came at night from a black fsnU'tic ky that occasionally wa dimly ill';rr.d bv lightning without foroe. but .... t. ia! ram gauge anrt therefore wa . re.r.'y mentioned as a 'trace of rain The noud builder began constructing . it was such a little shower that it could 'T l "vl",u ".' rr , . , .,... . . j turn with hi:n within a vear Rradler re nd be dignified by measurement by the 1 ,,.a .J,,,. ,K ,.. .,., k, trrlr feflr-me deign at 7 o'clock, but' GoRRin Wft-R committed to Bboming it wa n..t until 40 that rain came The 1 d,lf M:ral "? ,h "PP'ition noud ft- icture w purely a Jersey bluff. pxturelA in pot. but from the titili-ttria-n viewpoint net worth much. At fD tlra while f.tiges of daylight still l.r.sered in the upper strata of air the l.jif ct":!ar cloud rim rising high over l'Wfr Manhattan wa trimmed with white and lvked like a pale rainbow. A wind that raised much dut! a dry s any ever s'fted into the eye of per-,-L-:r.S New Yorker needed the rising ' th- fane -torm cloud When the rain h'.rfu v gushed out of th cloud the rif.-i in- up to fc r mile shift'ng from ih outhwet to the north and sending th "' u-y down from . to T This , ompa.-ftive coolness did not last per ."-. "irn the ram itlf which wp r rn'y e fe minuu duration After tu-mc a whl all around the c3s?ps tf.r vmco: bbck to southwest, dnindling tr a ie zepnyr LatT it ctm out of th northwest at "v rat of about fourt-n mile The -rr'ure had ;umr"d up to r a few pinute after the pasinp of the clouds sad wa Mill there when the northwest brf strtvl at In o'clock Thi was Ely two dgree below the reading at th SA.xe hour on the night before Na'hingfc-n apparently regard the t& rll. so far as thi neighborhood j efn-"ne'i. a practically broken !' friirti-n lat nieht w rUtfo.jtj. ""vrrratt and cooler Krida". Saturday pre-iaMy fa-r. moderate nrh-rlv. h:fi ir.i tr eagterly winds " 1' is a sur thine thst jid he wmd from tlv eajt hr"ibout it i cvilr . brisk wind thlt blew from -n ou:h- est and west practically all day. varnng l.w-f.n ;Pn flnrl twentV-oight n-,le.. . 'r-.bined with th low humidity fluctua' .1? in the late morning and afternoon !.'(!) o end ;o degr. made the sir fc"-ra not so stifling as on Wednesday ij' the cumulative eflct caused many -sth and prostrations The street i'r-rometer went on their usual jam--f. one on Park ro exposed to th fj-j n-arking 111 degree The- were ten deith attributed t th j Manhattan. The Bio.ni and Rirh d ' :3 r"---onp were prostrated ?.ccord rs !' the ; -.lice reports 'rom the bor- Tnre were six deith attributed to the --. I.rrklj-n and thirty-one pro-tri- t rs T re were 'wo dea'hs due to the h"tt a v i"n and six prostration Ki- Kray linger 71 yean-t.ld. of TJ Orange Xewj'ii died froni ,h" nes wh t. 1. rinlir- in t rflvr r' lii . , . k, jjjc ' ' Ti r, ,,!.. .. .v.- .... far the Oracd Ce:.tral stitim and t Flower Ho-piu! and a dozoa "p. were cttecided by erabulince t rre ,n. yesterday morning a the re- ' - f the hejt ?iced bv a ticip n th ,r-e-gr.unn which kept the ruli hour I v jia:v -.i.'...-u ... mr m-a.n ui tr...-j-p-j tKeltermc in Vtill m- for i ,tB fntthr. He hid gone out in a steam 1 j, m.r JTM ' J whaler from Besverton and th teamer ! (V.e nf the-e r-R taken to thehoPital ',,ar' Kon I'-"' "lo" to thf whele just j Iv.-. Luttginen l voir old (f j;-.-;) a." the esrrt in the xrhalehoai fired th" "e ptree;. The Bronx. wa uncou- lt ' . wher. t-flrneW filit In th tlr... I f zh; she hid'only partly re-ove-wl orr and her condition re irr S seriou -ie .p was caused by the dropping of a ir -p from the roof of the tunnel over th .'hbound eipre- track at Iing Are .are This wire a circuit r.'f 'tr trl. .u-rn! system One of th" :&''t ' -r rolore-1 licht on the f ron of t -,riTnnT .niohlrail into the water. I lost my grip on 4."- - Times Square station at M:',h? ciiwra. and struck out for it Jut ! . .jek and broke thi w,re nd I thf'n 1 ,h" calf mg A whale calf t .' (,..)- signal svstern l-twen J twenty-five feet long loo as big as a t!0rti- central and Fiftieth street .JUt 1 rTCOrd breaking ull whale to a, man m ofb-jas. the water, and I got out of the way u W. - r. at that hour on 1 minute and : " 1 coM- but no: hringflttod with (' -.- ,r.adwav The train that did I tl. " r k sa. . tri-i its.-. ' ; tra.j u 'v ' v !; r Ut. Mef.' w - a--.- tS-. ent on without knowing wg it got no signals to xMV ar.eaa ana th nortnw.und i pea tor tne same reason rMs from tho r.ranrl r.ntral -.eertv-second stroK were 'or hut it took 'hem some -he source of the trouble . r..rrl. iinH i.-tnVi KtimH at. -r- 'oc.d still Then word , -. ai'.ng and guards got out and - r trams along from block to - while much letter than ' ! a tedious process, and a.f.s los ?7 to :9 minute on .eirw-en Brooklyn Bridge and 'J, strei ii trams kept running, but m rn-evp tr.i. congestion on tb 'a' s- express e were shifted to 'ra-k arid then these, too, Ik .ly loed'.id that there wa a f tjeiay on ts-ith local tracks -ilini-e call was sent in to ' " epiui when several passengers Thief Takes JI(o rrora tsrmlilman ' -d .r. tra.r.s running into the Grand Pole). . Miti..h The s.enger. wer, albant. Julv C Atsemblyman James I ' 'rst ori the pLitform and then; K Koley or Manhattan who has been work " "J lr(', " I mg on tho new charter for New York citv, "' rr'm weither sutions on , diw-overed to-dav that his wallet, con- i 'ox'.dine fJ; thw city showed , SpeJl w&h JettLlg lip H l)lt ianers The muxirauni of Dm r vetrday on the day be- nvfi tm Fourth Pcgt V m 'o tanoiaa bovin-lileyst loul' "isi 4 ofclo 1 traets at joth and - J-tcna, U. B, Tlc'ittoxre. - Att, OOOCIX IS SAXE IX 1 HE LAX I). Wealth) Bloomlnrdalr Patient May Br Restrained tf ne Come Bk. W'StTK Pl.sTVR. Jlllr . Info n.lUn M received to-day by David H Hunt. representing Jeremiah Goggin, a former inmate of Bloomingdale Asylum and heir '' a TRf w"t' in lwd. wh w momns ago got a leave ol aDsence irom the asylum for one rear, that Hoggin ha beendeelared sane in Dublin Intheview . . .i . . , .... , L" T w ' 'n nd should he return to this country he can lie taken back to Bloomingdal The temporary release of Goggin wa 'obtained through hi? brother. Cornelius 'ogpn, 8 merchant in Iublin. who applied to Supreme Court .Justice Morschauser for an order allowing him to be nway for one , year so that heco.iH viit hi relatives in i Ireland Several physicians at the asy lum said that it would lxne:lt hi health JuticeMorchai:er directed that William K Bradley, an attendant at Bloomingdale ftWUUnn.nt. . V. M.ii.Hi .j. t I .... .J --.J he said alienists in n.iblm rervinl m tK court that there was no ner.1 of an attend-. ant 'or Goggin of hi wife, who lives in Manhattan Aftr Bradley and his charge reached Ireland thy went to reside at the Four Court i l!tl in rti.Klin . . . rJ I guest of the place became interested in the guest who went around alwav ac companied by a younger man and it was on their complaint that the matter was taken to the Court of Chancery Th ostensible cause of complaint was that a lunatic was at lire The court ap pointed Sir Arthur Chance and Dr J 0 C. Donlan to make an examination of Gog gin. and they reported a follows 'Having carefully and repatily exam ined Jeremiah Goggin we are of oprr.ion that it is quite unnecfssaxy to have him Jf-rlk. d,ltv imonp ,h.m Cap, Dunn of under the ca-e of a special mental nurse, thf. Djttive Bureau Commissioner or attendant Som- time ago he wstWaido also got hold of a letter from the under treatment in an American f.vlum 1 .1 0..1. 1 t-i. for the insane, the chief ground for hi .detention then being that he entertained certain meas regarding m wire eharao- ter which were COnsiaorCd erroneous Assuming thes ides were delusional and that she stood in some danger at hi hands while thev were in th same neigh borhood, thi ris! no longer ex:t now that the Atlantic Ocean separate them, she being in America and he in Ireland " A PLAYOROl XII H ATED FAMIXE. ISIxt) Itilldrrn. anting to Know Hh). lr.ade Police Station. S'x'y children marchd into the l&ja streot ro-ce stt'ion and c7d apon Lieut McCr.nn with 'eprcachftil eyes vestprdav afternoon M first h couldn't t-o h m that neither Lieut. Klaslr. Duean make out what wa th nutter, but finally 1 nor I):eiine Valerian ) O Farrell had one voung'ter lra er thaa 'here?" teppd h",n aiirnd hr jo'i to strike dntr in cor.-forwa-d and anno mced tha' all s.xtv , ncifon r nh a cloak mnker strike in .sun were xerv thirty indeed and demanded to know wn. had omf ol their fo-in- ; lain c-osst wav 1'iere i a small piargr" :nd to- enn - dren di-ec'iy &ro the tre-: from the po!ic tr.!on. wheiv a drinking fountain usually plsT But it tv. turn" 1 fl yesterday and tb fam made dry t hrw - I.:e..t McCrjin tot snme .c land gave rll hard r. drinn Then he telephoned fa-i: Commiionr tve. and toW of the v;.t of the j'ieml dele, gation rid the rec-on The Commi sioner sa.q he won d rave a new nydrant pu in the fojntam and we thv le-e. after none of the cnild-en tlnrste-i VOl IXO PtrTFUES OF H IHI.IXO. Ilet of the Lot Sraiheil ti) s "lf ens Inc It Mother. Frans Carrnll. a moving picture ph. TograrUV- e o.iloj-ed by a Ph ladelph.a I fitment I hliev the interen t.f aisci-oo-ntan-. . re: irnH vsterd.v from New- ! w II ! ' iff. eoir s-red hy rehevns ''npan jfoundland hr the Rod Cro liner Flonrel with a I it of films several of which derict 'he c.ipt ;re and 1: 'ling of whales en the Newfoundland co: H said h haJ made a better film of the dynamiting of . a cow whale, but tha film and camera had 1-ecn destroyed by the fluke of a twentr-five ' i.omn nurrwinn ji ru itwiitmii i..t'1. ni th" whale ea- I "Th" calf h"1 ,""n ,'a',n!: lwut the ' mothr. Mr Carroll said, "and when ''h" bo.mb exploded the cow learie-d. or breach"-!, "o that fter wnoie pcxl" wa cler of tne sei I was sitting on 'h,Cronfevt regime wrrn snt from the rail of the simmer grinding th" camera for all I was worth The whale. maddnd hy th' wound, made for the ship, butting it so hard that I was jarred from the propellers I was not o,uie swi t enough I v--... 11.- t an. fln.Asi nHrifl n ., . n ,"lu"" v" - from the stejmer Th calf whale did i - . . L. . . . i. V... t . a r j .1,1, nl no, p(.t me. but i' hi; mv camera with a - - --, - -- , .mithereen" i Mr. Carroll also got some film of , caribou hunting in the winter, ana views , of the spring mifjration of caritxw herds He said thousana of the animals moved across the country just as the bison used ""i"1 hunting in tn winter, ana views to do on thv plain here. . hermit Hoocielt's tss.iMMi l-gac). MlNi-Pl July h Accounting of the) guardianship of I'dith K Rocvelt, wife of Theodore Roocei elt. m tho matter of a Ji.ooo bequest left to h"r son Kemnt ' bv the will of Jam K Gracie who died amount is now alxut M.W tairung ICi. lid been taken from the in side jacket of hisc-oat while itwas hanging in ine .-.ssATiimv jianui i ir ritiiuj wallet was muiiu To lose aim at this stage of the session n almost as bad as losing an arm Go to the Waarabek, JeSerwa N. H sndsvold the ejfele fcesl they are sleeploi UEier blaakets taert tow. Aa. ou January n. lwio, wa niea in ine Mir- ,Iulv WP he was sent as a captain to showed" vesterdav The ship's ctbm pas- rogates Coun i o-da Ih . "r wa ni.hbrdge station Commissioner Baker sengers "wer taken to Hoboken by the WeT Twnt-sixtn strtSt Vu.nho tan ransferred him from this station to the , tug Millard in the afternoon Her ,W , he' nclme" o bpldTn'the Seaman's Fifth street station on March IS. 1010 ZVtZ lmei MQuaP Savings Bank. New York, in the name of on April 1. 1010. Commissioner Biker ' 1' on ,Mi0n aloard 1 1 QW Inucla Robinson as trUS'ee The total ..,j m .tlni- insnertr-r in rymrire nf ! . WALDO REDUCES RUSSELL' DETECTIVE HEAD SEXT AS A CAPTAIX TO STATEX I. SLASH. , . , ,, , . i Commissioner , lluuell Made F.Ue statement to II Ira Kxlwird Husne, an Inspector for lo D ow , Gets . a Third Boot Into nutsrll's Job. The Police Dertment a a good and Brooklyn bridg. which were author da! myttifiod yesterday by the announce- ' i?wl before the present Charter came into ment that Commissioner Waldo had 1ect. r.luced Inspector John I! Russell from I 'For ,n' M t,)' MaJor- ,hp pomlnand of the Detective Bureau to cP,i"nc' of the Nitiety-ninth pre- tinct. in Tottenville, Staten Island, and ptomoted Inspector Edward Hughes ot th First inspwtion district to the plao left by Russell The reason given for removing r.us.-ll are that he ma a fs'.s- statement to Third Deputy Commissioner Walsh and lter mH . f.t. ...i..m m ..m to Comm'saioner WMn the ...in. I meat of certain detective to duty during the cloakmakerr' strike in l;o The investigation by Commissioner Walsh was into the work of certain de- tective during the last rear, and in the .... course of the investigation, it is said, Inspector Russell denied that he had assigned Lieut William H. Kinsler and William Dug ati and Detective Valerian J O'KatTell to duty during the strike. Th dettive said that they had been assigned to trike duty. This conflict of statement came to Valdo ear and he had an investigation. The detectives had seven witnesses to show that thev had been assicned to Manufacturers Protective Committee 'tkmc fcr ,he RM1Kr4rof nt pf these men to nriUe dlltVi acrowl th. l!Pe of ,hich l,,lr is written in TI11cu.ll .SsnHirrilint. " . .... ...f,- it 1 rtateid, the name and addres of I A Silverman, who conduct a private dettive agency and to whom the de tective said Russell directed them to report and to whom they say. they did report Commissioner Waldo's letter to Russell read: Julv f. ton Vriir 'tt Hvfiu Sip I'unne the oourse of n inreMica tion conducted bv tt Third l'eputv Police i omni".onr .lohn S Halfh you tated 1 ns'-r r.aie a; .ii:n ran ma 10 me a valerian J. Karreli. formerlr .itached ,., ,h. dfI).,,;,, bureau. ,d not brn aJ J.fnM - tn strtTt-nv in t-onLection with lioak make-' -inkr Fro-n aJTidav lf-r me firned hy Valerian J e'Karr"ll. William Dncan. H'tthsm H Kmir and lir A Mlvernian it aw-sr 'hat Ktnlr. i' isan and ') Kar reli ne.-e -icr.ed to 'nke duty in '-on-neitmn n:i tv.' .'-iKe I a'so have before me a i'er "-.sned M-cretarr of the cloal. uit and skirt manutact'.rer. 1 -o-teit i f mm 'tee re-u?f'inr tee t'irn :rnt .f Tiese ien to- strike dun This let'e- us r."en on tt.e tnc or it m your hxn1 r tine. it. nam and addre. of I A iiernihn. " "torn tlie.e detective i'e -sat ou d'rer'ed them to rerrt and to x honi thev did Tepert I t.irr -lie-e facs it rpfxrf that vou made fd'-e fi.-'frent to the third depu'y pol ron;tT!iionr and later reudeiei a false reiKif in w-itinr to te rommi.ioru In 'e f ? oir !ac rvire in 'lie de yo'i !rom Munnanl Ue detente bureau am rediniijs ym to the cra'e of oii'mn I nave a.-'-ordmeiv direttod t'i' action The mj..r.? of fa'se report cannot b retarded I n a . mo-t eriou Tnre and one Mni' ' a' no t.nie c An be aPoed to pa- vtithout tie jtronsejt cottdetnnition. Following ;ae announcement that F.us- sh ciij wrii m lapmin came the nf.w tha. Inspector Hughes would take tv,, command of th" Detective Bjrcau Ii'er i' wa &nnouncl that Iuieell would go to Tottenville and that ! t.t i nryntit'k, I. m T nn near West Twentieth street sta'ion would 'succeed Hughes a inspector of the First j inspection dirrict The throe detective. Dugan. Kmslcr and O Farreil. shortly t.elore th end of Detective Bureau. Dugan to de' duty in a precinct and Kinsler who had been a first grade detective, and O'Farrell to precinct duty a pa'rolmen No official explanation wa given for this shift It wa rumored a the time that the thrw men had furnihed Magistrate Comgan with ammunition The thr strongly dented tins Inspector Kdward Hughes is 31 year old and perhap the youngest man ever to take charge of the Detective Bureau He wa appointed to the force on April ihx. during the C'ommirfionership of 'J??? , th 1 111 appointment of Rhinelanrier waldo to the i.otnmiior.ersnip ot tne I'olice wepartmeni me Lcnirni wmce srjuad was reorstcnired and enlarged and cap; Hughe was put in charge of it w Inspector Hogan of the First in- i ,c -,.ti. , - "Paction disinct was retired ten days ago Cap: Hughe was put in charge of , Hughes was made nn inspector to succeed Hgn nugnes i a orotner-in-iaw of VoKe captain William A Coleman ("apt John H Ru"ll i a nephew of a former Chief of Police, John McCullagh jje became involved in the case of the Imffy boy and Mayor Mct'lellan ordered him reducd to a captain On the Detect ive Bureau, to replace Inspector Cafferty, who was sent to Hat - James McC bush a inspector As a captain Ilusell cleaned up a bunch of notorious dive and resori in hw district, the Wet Thirty-ssvejith street station Bingham then made him in spector of the Second inspection district the West Side south of Fourteenth street Then lie was put in charge of the First inspection dltrict. tho lower East Side He aided former District Attorney Jerome ,n raids on many notorious resort riavor .. jj-. ..- . . I BITTERS. dtllcJous spptiliet and tonlt. A4. BRIDGE TOLLS TO STOP. Tmu Bridge to Be Made lYrr at Once and the Ret Verj soon. Mayor Gaynor wrote yesterday to Bridge Commissioner Arthur O'Keeffe tha lhre is no legal warrant for col- lKt ion of tolls from vehicle on the Queens- fla(i Mlnh,tlan brid? Th(. juon i,v stopfwJ at one- The Mavor also ask sl CommisMoner O'Keoffe to consider whether the city should not , cease to collect toll on the WilliamsbJrg ' lhu fpf toll sat(., on nfth aVMnu or jiroadway Toll gate- been abol- ifhd all over the country, and I see no reason why they thou Id b retained lir- Tlie ne! revenue oollfctel from these four bridge is in round number f IT 1.000 a year Tl.is comparatively small Kim can be more justly collect e4 through the annual tax levy than hy mean of toll The toll are oppressive to many people and inconvenient and irksome to every one If we ned a little legisla tion for safety I dare say we can easily gt it in the new chater Dea let me hear from you at your earliest con venience .1.4.V1 t.lFTS OF Mlt.s. DODGE. Vaar and Uncoln Hospital !el Cash and 1 rge C'ontlnRrnl Interests. The will of May Cossitt Dodge, widow of George Fgleston Dodge, leave KS.onO to Lincoln Hospital and lfi,Ofi to Vaar College, and gives one-fifth of the residu ary rotate to e?ch tf her daugnter Catherine. Mr John Hhillito Roger, to whom the income of the residuary estate cce. leave no children Mr Dodge died at Tuxedo PArk on June ;s, leaving an estate valued at more than $1 ,000.000 Otl.er bequests mad" hy Mrs Dodge are tin vi each to the Santa Clara brantJi of th- Working Girl Vacation Society, the Children's Aid Society. St John's Guild and the Adirondack Cottage Sani tarium, and to ( to the New York Bible Society The Children' Aid Society and St John s Guild each get a contingent be quest of one-fifth of the residue, and the Working Girl Home and the Adirondack Sanitarium one-tenth each To her daughter Mrs Dodge left $100,000 in cash, the house and lot at IT West Fifty-seventh treet. adjoining Mr Rogers's home at ra West Fifty-seventh lwtre-t a house in Tuxedo Park, picture, silverware, wearing apparel and the tes tator's pearis. To the testator" sister, Mrs Helen Cossitt Juilliard. wife of A D. Jullliard are left Jtwi.non and a large ruby To Mr Juilliard i left ioooon. "a a slight token of my appreciation of th careful advice and assistance which he has for many year civen me in the manage ment of nr affair To'John Shiliito Rogers.the son-tn-law. $00.ro is Wt, toa niece, Lillian Stoke (iiiWpje. US.ooo; to Mrs F.lizabeth Stone Vatible. wife of JuW J Vatahle j:s i0; to Kate Kennedy, described a a long time and faithful sr rant. $: cv to all servant of more than ten rears ervice $1 000 each: to servant employed more than three year MD each STEIEltT. SPECIAL SESSIOXS. rrcrhl and McQuade MagUtrate -Don't Plaj smart. Major's s.dtilee. Mayor Gaynor ha appointed Magis trate Henry Steir.ert to the Court of Speoial Se-Mfin for a full term of ten years at JI0 (i a yar to succeed JuMiee Wyatt. whoe term expired on June jn. Th Mavor ha named John J Fresohi. who has Lrf-n serv.ng a a temporary Magistrate for ii-srly a ytsr past, to fill Mr Steinen s unexpired term of ihree vear- and even mon'h nt $T.fi a year At the same time the Mayor selected Assistant Corporation Counsel Francis McQuade to serve as a temporary Magistrate to do the work of Magistrate Crane, who i- disabled by illness The Mayor, when he sent for Mr McQuade and swor- him in. said to him ci are till a io-.ee man. but you have ervrd w.th eredi' for ix ers a an A 'Ati' t.ort.o'a'ion l'iiun-e!. and corpora tion i o-in-el Usuin hi- tecommendel you n the lnehet temi Ihl at.ro:nt rpnt i oniv 'emporarr. but it cue ymi i hanre o -how ha' i In von (If n'l M ini" do rot t-e (ihusive to poi'temen or Z:,"L .w. w ; ,.; .mlV try Maciftratef I y lettunns pople and -how- ice teir Take advipe i'h the Chief Macis'ra'e. Mr Mt dii. nnrt you w P come o it all neat CLIXTOX SCOLLAI'.D TO TEACH. Poet nettirm 10 Hamilton College as lrofror of l'ns;llh. Utica. N Y July 6 Clinton Scollard ha accepted the professorship of English literature at Hamilton College and will begin hi duties thi fall He was gradu ated at Hamilton in the class of 1S.M Afterward he studied at Harvard and at Cambridge University He was pro fessor of English lierature in Hamilton College from l1 to lSdo. resigning to devote himself to study and to poetry Hi poems re known to all readers of American contemporaneous verse. He began with his "Pictures in Song" in j , . .snclt of Sunrise Land 'The i ... - .-h -niksm vt.ht l"empter Sherman, whose profession is the teaching of 'architecture nt Co- lumbia University 1. . -V. 1... -nll.k.A. iV. 1 ' I . MOLTHF. HAD A CHOLERA CASE, Cabin Paenger Ijindrd, but the Rest Held Mllh Ihr Ship. The firemm who was taken from the steamhip Moltke. which nr.nved on Wedne.dsy from the Mediterranean, ha cnoiera, a- a u&cicriio' riuia- d inlkrif iguaird Out of a 8.S(M , , Vrar Jot)i HacKtsfiAiK. N J . July 6 P 1 . . , r.OlTri A. O......U f II..I, 1)1 i o r.r.vo.a oiiiu-tu u . ...-S.V .j- ..- " ' -- Clll7eil ." 111" lsi m-vrwn ie- .-s , . n-... I 1,-A Mil,., r,.,.. V... tlu.lth 1 W rr Ilnr'- .ir.nrlL eieci .(i.s, ... - ''" "' '-'" tyn made under ihe most severe condi-A-i a year Before the election he ' .ht ir eWied he would trv to have 'n!sl,rhhe office because ' was unnecessary Partly through hi efforts such action wa taken - JJgfM'S"?,? '."Vr".' Lout via Hoek Ulsod Une best trains to . i.n. l. frp sad tKMkS. .01 nrOSQ i .-. 'NEW CUBAN REYOLT RUMORS Iff HALES OX THE .It MP COM EX ACCt SED OF t: It A FT. epaper Talk ot jii.iion.-iir . r Jh( d&v , a (juion and it H.dMone) Before He Was Prrsldcnt lM now n h Charles. nrjnU DarJ Stafffi Bad Btt - Telllile BeeUr.llon-.Wabe Hf ' . .. i.lUrl,,R DdU OldJtB DOU, BBl Won! nun Bln-Polllle In Turmoil. r'oi' CMt Dnpnit to The Sr.v Hava.Vi. July C - Rumor are rife of revolutionary conspiracies in the prov-j vince of Piftar del Rio and Santiago The Government denies the rumor, but there i unwonted activity among the . rural guard Politicians are gathering in groups and are to be seen talking to- gether in low voices in the cafs and on ' thetreet comer. The agitation i chiefly the result of news;per allegation that President Gomet ha grafted million of dollars ince he became President Replying to the newspaper accusations, he ha pub lished an open letter declaring that he owned property before hi election. Thi statement, however, does not accord with the fact that in IK he made himself proof against judgment by declaring that hi only asset were debts amount ing to 9,000 Soon after he wa Inaugurated Repre- entative .Armando Andre sought thel approval of hi party to impeach the President for graft, but the executive committee refused conent. Thereupon Andr started a nwpaper, Ei '". de voted to -exposing the President The Speaker of the House. Sefior Ferrara, publiehed a letter declaring the Presi dent's purity and saying that E 'wave of mud was sweeping Cuba With thi Gen Loynaz Castillo, Minister to Mexico, at home on leave to boom his own campaign for the candidacy for the Vice-Presidency, published a reply saying that Gomer. must keep the promi he made to Iovr.az as the price of hi support in the last campaign, and not go in for reelection Then Col. Piedra. one of the five first eonsDirator arrested in August. lBOB. formerly chief of the Havana police, but at the time chief of the Census Bureau, wrote to Loynai reiterating the newpaier accusations of Presidential graft, where upon Gomez dismissed him from office. Thi caused great indignation as being against freedom of speech, and the anger wa intensified by the captain ol ponce publishing a letter threatening Repre sentative Andr. All theOpposition paper declare that a revolution isimminent. while the Adminis tration organ and El Mvndo, the inde pendent, declare that there is no danger. At the ame time they ridjure the Cubans to.Hipport the Government and save the country l.oynar spent two hour thi rooming with" President Gomel When inter viewed Ijoynax said that Gomer. had 6worn bv all that'h-j hold roost sacred and by the ashes of hvs fathers that he wont run again for President It is rumored that Washington is being fully informed as to the graft charge and that the Vnned States Government has intimated that it will not consent to the reelection of Gomez Ramors of due' fill the air LET SMOKERS Yon HF.H AltE. There' National Crusade on to rrow Their Borders. A national crusade against tcbacco moker which is launched under some what distinguished and learned aupice came before Supreme Court Justice Giegerich yeterdar for incorporation, but the court rejected ihe certificate on the ground that the Inoorpcators failed; to Stat- that they had made no previous application The association is to b- called th .von-5moKet rroict.i League of America , , . The list of incorporator is neaaea "y)ei0,d from Birminchani with John Beale. Chancellor Jame R Day of Syracuse. President David Starr Jordan of Iceland Stanford. Harvey W Wiley of Washing- ton. U l . r roi nun w iuueroi v-nrueu. the Rev Dr Jetikin Lloyd Jones of All Smils Church. Chicago. Prof Thomas B Stowell of the University of Southern California. Prof Wtnfield S Hallof North western Univorsity and Charlos G Pease, tne aentiet. wnse ns.m 1 io.nn. iui uiv other incorporators has been gained in frequent encounters with smokers in the subway The Mated purpose of the organization .. tr. -iiirr anrf .nit nn the enforfv.. is to wiw and JiMst on lT - '" l" ' ana reuisw"u-nkr-4iisi si.iwr...iK in i'ui'ik - ami r.-K-M- JIT. ' w.,,.. r-U tViA Rrvarvl rtf Hltn ivtlirA p.nri rtthwr .u r ";", law The organization also wants the coopera- tion of all person in control of buildings. hall, restaurants, hotels, theatre street cars, railway station and car sleeping r , ', ' V L . Li ' . " The league want "to prohibit tobacco ' smoking therein, or so limit and restrict j it, that only those who may indulge in that I habit will berequired to inhale the tobacco fumes It intends to "create a whole- some public opinion and protect the rights s of the public to the fullest extent as guar- . wa the Mayor s query aildres-ed to no ! rjiteed under the law of the land " ! bodv in particular "I will hive to send 1 Tliu nrrsmraticn will conduct WMiie. iu2U, publish book end magazine &nd establth auxilinrie in all parts of the country , Tf ABOLISH PXEVMA TIC TIRES. C.rorgr W et!nchoue Has lnented a New lr spring. PlTtBiil'na July. Announcement wa made here to-dey that CVeorge Wtstmg. house has porfe-ted an rt- spnnr. device which it is declared will do away r,th ..n-n...in lira. nr i-i.Amnl.ila. f)t,U.U.tV - ............ c-. ., rtlr.r.V,n.in h.s Ion "' ""ill"".'-" e-"h on thl ,nvention for severe 1 ye.v It is U-f.B,.-,. i,. v ..." ... r.,.,.,, ,10.s .1 1.- A .Una .1,. .at. a! ...a , V. .. Mr WeMtnghouse ha orRmud a com - pany for the manufacture of the dvicc 'and has started negotiations for a plant in New York State to employ ,rj men. T" . . . rienrlf tans ae wore ihsti they cost Utgejt tacn. lowrti pnrr. nuairt m i .i.ti sot j Murrsr si. 4 VSt llh av. Tel. WM Parrlay Att. J. H. HATES IX A BAD HAY. lon Ma Rrirh Parts Too l-te to 1'lnil I'lninrlrr Alle. p fipmat C(t: btipatt to Tnr St-y Tari. July 6 -The condition of John W Gates i extremely serious. He passed 111 7 UU IVH it 1 iJ- .1 J Alii Vlniaiti liKH i ' ' to Europe win not reach Pari(l ln Jllnfl to find him alive Mr Gate went to Iondon to put I through a deal with lord Cowdraywith regard to the Pearson interest in Mexico J at a lime when he should have remained . in Tari for the operation that he was told was necessary for the removal of a tumor. Since he returned from London. Dr loyen ha performed seven slight i operations for the removal of the tumor. which in itself wa an almost harmles growth of a non-cancerous nature, locate-d in hi throat. Coupled with a severe attack of kidney and liver trouble, the patient' condition ha become alarmingly grave He is at Meurice's in thi city. . STRER.ED CIIEITLESS BOAT. Schoolmaster ln enu Craft to Be Oper- led l Wireless. Vena! ra&.'f Dupattfi to Thi srx rlREI.l.v. July 6, Ex;eriment which V n a lun r- rr rrt f Ae LAVot-l M W1 - . . . . Wannsee, about twelve miles north of Berlini have proved remarkablv succes fuk The boat was towed out two miles in the lake and her movement afterward were directed altogether by mean of wireless apparatus ashore The lioat threaded her way unerringly through numerous craft without the slightest accident The inventor of the crewlees boat is a school teacher named Christian Wirth. E. L. UAHPEtt IIASXT A CEXT. 4ntiod Want to Hu fffi.non.onn .lodg ment foraSimall Advance Oxer SMIOT Kdward L Harper, who tried to corner wheat In 1SST and succeeded in breaking the Fidelitr National Bank of Cincin nati, for which he wa sent to prison for ten years and had a judgment for nearly ti.OOO.ooo entered against him, wa examined here yesterday in supple mentary proceedings on a judgment for K. obtained by Herman Cohen last November for money loaned Harper attempted to float a 4000,000 combination of iron and steel foundries after he got out of prison, and recently has been doing business as Harper A Son. iron and steel commifsion merchants, at 30 Church street The $.9,000.(00 judg ment was bought at auction two years ago for HWand the buyer ha since been trying to dispose of it at a email advance Hanper testified that he ha-n't a cent now and that even his cuff buttons and hirt stud are pawned IVERXIA HELL PATCHED. Steamer Sunk In fork Harbor N'ow on llrr til) to Utrrpool. ,-f-ij; cal.t Degpiti'i to thf srv QrtEXStnw.v, July ft The Cunard steamship Ivernta. which wa badly Injured when she struck Daunt' Rock some weeks ago and wa afterward beached to prevent her from sinking m deep water, ha been o well patched tip that she left here this morning under her own steam for Liverpool. She will be placed in dry dock there and repaired El.OPEMEXT CI T IX TWO. Daughter nccoxered From One tramrr and Taken South b X not her. A man who said he was John Wilson. a rrtirt-d merchant of Birmingham. it v.nl i tli P..itt.arv at nftnn v rV, . i.,.,... (nr n , Ia. him th; steamshm Uranium, saillnc at 1 ,(.oc."i. for Kotterdam Accordins to ith(J vftnj ,ha, re.lcIled the Rettery later ! Mr ' Wilson's daughter, who is 1. hati aged ;o and came here yesterday morn Ing by the Mallnrv liner Rio Grande from Bninw;ck Half an hour later Mr. Wilson got here and learned that hi daughter and young Real had (.ought tickets by the Uranium He was anab'e. to get a tug anil charterer! the eight seeing yacht Halcyon He boarded th liXr a few minutes lefore she wa sched- ..rj to faj nn(j ler1,Uadel his daugnter to po witn nim Tn Morj. dlc not tr!1 hrt hers. me ef the vounc man 1 h I -i and her father were landed at the . .ml IAok a ,.Ticb to the foot ' . . . , , , , .at Spring street where thev boarded j the savannah une steamsnip t ity 01 - Montgomon- and sailed lor .sr.vatiUHn, wnrncv mo Morj' saia. me.v xn wht i ram . vo iJirminpnam XOBODi sPEiKS FOP. DE F.HY . Or galntt lllm- Major lo sk lllm hat He Wnlof a PrnHoii. , There was n huaring scheduled at the ' 1 "J " "- """-",'., , have f.,r two year mad up your , relief fund to William S Devery. once - chief of police Nobody apjK-ared to i oppose or favor the mecsute Under it ' Devery would get I3. a year for the last nine vears and from now on "What does Devery need of a pension"' fn- him nnrl find ho he got (KKir dll oT n ' sudden " ' ' $100,000 FOR AI.BAXIAXS llrmarkablr (ilfl of tnerlean llucplilli , -t lenna Humor, -pa.il rjfc.'f f)ii."1 t Thi Sr Vienna July 6 It .1 reported here that an American manufacturer who is an ardent admirer of Russia ha r-eiu siinj.oii to Scuta-i lor distribution among the Mahssor: tribemen of Albania, w 10 ate in tevolt against the Turk- I , Si, Judge In Milrt Sleeic. Judge Archbald sat in l.i shirt slecvm in the United Staiee Cncuit '"ourt st-i-day and plied a palm laf fn. Ho -r- mitled tne jurors wno ate iiedriug a J-ny ' white slave case to do th like. Tlit altogether' in striking conlrasi with UMUal summer sweltering dignity of tho Federal triwniRls Here rlrridlltt ltn make thirst r b.r'lir I'l rtlsrulse-mooth, dry dlsllacltvt or Mir Unci's roatrlbutloa to our t-nimcr beieiaict j A I leading boieU. tic. Aflc. STOKES, PILOT TO THE CHORUS LADY ter to Marry, but Not to Marry Me. naaj- rmn DCAfl LtllERS HE CAfTlt rUK KtAU He Tells a Dramatic Tale of the Meeting at Which Sister'n'l Shot His Legs. Some of the letter that W E, D. Stoke expected to get back the night he a shot up by two ladle cf the chorua in the Varuna apartment house at Broadway and Fjghtieth tret were introduoed to evidence last evening at the close of the hearing iefore Magistrate Freschi to de termine whether or not the markswomen, Lillian Graham and Ethel Conrad, should l held for the Grand Jury for attempted murder. Including a few telegram, there were a dozen messages from the proprietor of the Hotel Ansonia to Misa Graham, written mostly in 1907. They were made a jwrt of the court record at the close of an eight hour eio In the Tomb police court in which Mr. St ike, lidding down the witnesa chair most of that time, told with considerable dramatic effect his own story of the thing that happened o him when he called cm the choru girls on the night of June T. Occasionally he jumped to his feet and enlivened his narrative with energetic gestures and pose that made the sweat stream down his face. All the while the two women giggled and tittered and simpered. When Mr. Stokes told the Magistrate that Ethel Conrad threatened him with death if he refused to sign a check for K5.o) and added thst he re plied "If it's a choice between a check for one cent and death gixe me death'. the young women curgled with laughter. Stokes looked grimly over their heads, and went straight 011 with his ;ale Tiir. ansonia ror.vp the LrrTE( The introduction of the letter and telegrams was unexpected It happened that Robert Moore, one of the lawyers for the jrirls, heard that Afisistc.m District Attorney Sullivan had" got the letter from A H Glea"n of the Hotel Ansonia. wh had them from James Cummings. tn Arsonia house detecthe. Cumming found the batch two days after the shoot ing in a Ioet of the sitting room the girl had r.t the Varuna Si Moore leading up t them in hi cross-examination of st ikes vtme fir.ai ' 1 their ad-tm-wibihty. and Magistrate "-"-chi ruled that they should co into e to us. Stoke- wrot-' biws.Jy to l!.e- . aham on a variety of u pi"S He t !. pon many thing- fr'-m the undesirability of tho stage as a career for young and sh&pely widow t drnk n bad for the complexion, mu-ed upon the pcsibllity of finding h widow or a divorcee who had had her till .f matrimonial experi ences and with whom, though not a mar rying man. he could Rr travelling and .vitomohihng and !? jut ,ood friends. Once he wrote dryly that lie didn't blame Lillian Graham for not taking hi advic ,iu,, ,1,, futility of theatrical work. sinre he had tild Maude Adams when ne wa a little girl that sh was sur to fail if -he went on the str.ge AS 1 SAW TO MAVPn APASI - One nf th tir.M letters that Mr Stoke trained hi- eyogU on before it wm gatheied up by the court stenographer wa datd Det.nibepai tf-t a the Con gress Hotel. Chl'-ago. whore Mis Graham wa then It re,vi. Di M. M"- (.i:mioi I have lust cot kiit Itttr 1 urn triad )ou are ell and bappv. I .it the most crtishiiii: part of vour letter 1- fcr me f gi e ; rrur love to Clarence. 1 1 in ver heard if ui h a 1 ru'l hi t In my life, I I'o 'ell in v hen vo.i r.re 1 omin hack a-i l v i.nn cm .ire coin,' on the tace Now- t,at ou re m for it I wlh vou the greatest -.me in the orld 1 don t blame you 1 f"r not takmc n,v adM. e, tnr I told Maude I rian"' ,, ,"" tl1." 1'ttle cirl that he w a sure to make n 1 allure 11 she w ent on .,.,. -he had not the ronst.tu- )l0n atl,j ha, a oef, Nh b3H mil(1. ! y0,ir sun erelv. w l: I stosr.s. Ther wa a Pttfr of iwmber 2, IWi, 1 with more ad vie about tho stage, letter prttmarked New York. Stoke wiote : URBT. Ht'T NOT ME Mv I) n Mis' l.r.Aiun My advice to in i I- not to irn in with nnv vaudeville. -how. m fe.et not to co on the state You ,inu n no 1111. n.oi ou immu in rra urse!f to the stace and trv to liecome an artit I ke itrs t arter or Lillian llussell .mil to imtush inarriacc forever I am oier twue a- old vou are I hn e had a lot of experience it h the world. My ndvite to vou i to lroi all sudi Ideas, If I were a oune. handome marrying man but 1 am n duorcie, forbidden to niArrv hv t- e ilm ree nf the htnte. nd anv ' man "ho trilled to make h woman happy ' would he n foul to trv it nn another, and i lie-idesthat 1 nm tiait the ace of marrlace, and you ran reiv uikui my nilvkii as (oiriirou ense and If oii follow it you will not rrcret it You marry some rich young fellow whose t onifMnionslilii will he worth more to you thiin ll the worthless admira tion nl a iheji stni-e or i In-artless aoc-lal lite iiu snv no innrrlmje -the ataa? our wrv siiKi-n-lv V I, l HtiiKM Kill MK ONI! WI.AHV Ol- MATRIMONY At on time, apparently at about thn samo period of I ho corn-npomlenc-ti, Lillian Graham wan enjoying un npartiiiont at tli Aiifoniu suite I .'it and Hlokon waa in Chli-aKo WlduwH with nwarminK and it s-i-li-ct Ion was inipeiiillliK Hlnkna waned soimi udvit.it liliuwilf anil outlined the situation fix follows, Mr In. in MiriH I, ii. I. ian I nm ii cross, rahbed. ucly old -ove.mid am-lt nice lsllr Irom ui-h a pM-tly Klrl ban liinied mv head. in ih- 1111 iinu.it vnu miuw i iuii u (iivornea man, forhlddrn to niiirry mid. any twin wool, mlmli-il In H'lii'll llui lo.i-of tliu woman ,. de.oeintely in Iuii- villi him would count ii a r.iiiii t,, try m.itrlinony uu girl JSj g gk