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MAYOR REFUSES TO ARBITRATE STRIKE WKATHKH Pair tn-olaht and Taesdayi cold. WKATHKH Fair to-alht Tinitri Mil. riNAL EDITION. EDITION. I " Circulation Books Open to All" " Circulation Books Open to All.' PRICE ONE CENT. OprrlgM. 1011, br TIm r IMMIshlag 0. (The New York Warld). NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1911. 18 PAGES PRICE ONE GENT. xm y m TOO UN AND BABY GIRL SHOT DEAD IN THEIR HOME; SLAYER HIDES IN BROOKLYN Mother, Daughter and Grand child Believed to Be Victims of Infuriated Relative. WAS ANGRY OVER A WILL Wanted Share in a Small Es tate Left by Husband of Older Woman. Mrs. Antonla Delano, a widow. fifty flv years old; her daughter, MM Mar cello Lefaro. thirty years old, and Mr, afarcello's daughter Rosle. three yeara old, were murdered In their (lit on the top floor of the three-story tenement at No. 73S Park avenue, Brooklyn, to-day. Adolf Lefaro. Die husband of Jura. Lefaro, found t ha three bodies when he got home at 12.10 o'clock this afternoon for lunch. fti two woman and the child were hot to death. Detective are looking for a relative of M s. Delano who waa recently put under bonda to keep the peace necaue of hostile deinon atratlona he had been making at the Lefaro home. Mra. Delano'a husband died three month ago. lie owned a houae In Humboldt a trees, which ha left out right to his widow. This dlspoeltlon of the property nroused the Ire of a male relative, alio demandeJ hie share and when It was refused visited th Lefaro harne and threatened M:. Delano and her daughter. He waa ar retted on their complaint three www ago. Lefaro loft hi home at 7 o'clock this morning to go to work In a clothing fac lory In th neighborhood. His mnther-In-law and hi daughter were In bed when he departed. His wife bad cooked tils breakfast but was only partially dressed and probably got hack Into bed whep he waa out of th way. FINDS DOORS ALL LOCKED WHEN HE RETURNS AT NOON. Returning home thl afternoon Lefaro found all i i doors of the flat looked and was unaulc to get any reply to hi knocks. The uuxt in the apartment was bmlnou and he called 'ho Janitor of the houae. Together they forced the kitchen door. Lfaro stepped, into the bedroom adjoining the kitchen and found hi wife, his daughter and Ills mother-in-law dead on the floor. Mr. Delano was lying partly under the fuot of the bed. She was shot twice, one through the head and once through the body. Mrs. Lefaro wus shot through tt right side of tlio head. The child ra killed by a bullet that entered the left lde of the head. Mrs. Lefaro had the little one' body clai-ped In her life less, BtlffMtJ aims. A doctor who was called ald th Iromen and th child had been dead three or four hours. Although the l ed bad been torn apart nothing of value In the houae had been toln. The. open window Indicated that the murderer got gway by way of the tlte-escapc. No one In the hou.-e heard the sounds pf pistol shots daring the morning. The Pat across the nan irom mat oi Lefaro waa not occupied to-day. tae PASSENGERS FLIES 73 Nil American Aviator Also Carries 660 Pounds of Extra Weight on Trip of 190 Miles. RIIEIM8. France, Nov. 13. Aviator Weymann, flying a Nlcupurt aeropluoe, completed the round trip between hc-o And Amiens to-day at an average speed Of aeventy-three miles an hour. The Lit at distance I 190 miles. It Is consul ted certain that he will take the speed te offered for the flight, aymanu carried two paasengers and to pound of additional weight to prove ate carrying capacity of hi aeroplane. ; he test wai made under Government WMPlca. . WEYMAN WITH TWO iS AN HOUR HE'S HERE AGAIN, IS OLD DOC COOK; NOTE HIS WINK! Il'hotofptphfd To !r by ttn Ewninf World BUff rhnU)frpIrtr.) Poor Cld Doe Really Thinks He Found Pole Returns crorn Europe and De nies the Danes Hurled Vegetable Bouquets. Old Dr. Cook, the Tcerles Polar I'eeker. 1 with u again. He arrived to-day on the steamahlp (leorge Washington, still glowing with the triumph achieved during his recent lecturing experiences at Copenhagen. According to the cable dispatches at that time the Doc's triumph consisted mainly In dodging over-rtpe vegetables and assorted Junk of s'.nillir character, which the Dams had been storing up for him. Hut Doc Cook says this was all malicious calumny and thut the tri umph was a real one of vindication. "The stories of riotous demons! rations agilnst me are lies," said th self-confessed discoverer of the North Polo. "Instead of making demonstrations against me the Dines were most rout to ous and attentive at my lecture, except for a slight disturbance at the start. "I have proved my claim to th dis covery of tbo Pole and am gOoeptad b a number of the wurld's leading scien tists and scientific bodies. I am now" going to continue my lectures in this country until I have convinced the en tire Atneilcnn public that 1 really reached the Pole." And giving his Interviewers the wink, a pictured above, the peerless one hastened from the dock and leaped Into a dcep-sca-golng hick. RELEASED FROM PRISON. ROBS HOUSE THAT NIGHT. Louis Philpott Now Goes Back to Finish Hirst Time Before Start ing Second. "Have you been before me?" Inquired Judge Rosalsky In the. Oeneral Ses- ions of a big negro, Louis Philpott, rni was orougni nerore nun this after noon on a burglary charge. "Ye. Your .onor sent me to Sing Kins for not leas than one year noi more than three a year ago," gniWrj the prisoner. Philpott then said he had been sen tenced on Oct. SI, 1910, and released on Oct. 31 this year. That night he whs arrested in the apartments of Charles it,. . o. ..-, iiuiiureu and ThlrtjMlfth street, which lie was robbing. Philpott goes back to finish out the two yeara of his lkrat sentence ;i.-u then he will be brought into curt fcff t.-n ttnee on the new charge. ,1-TaM aaaW MaSSL? UbsbbbW atAft' M 1 r SHOPPING CROWD SEES POLICEMAN CLUB A WOMAN Angry Men and Women Swarm Around Borgman at 6th Avenue and 14th Street. THREATEN TO KILL HIM. Other Bluecoats Rescue Him and Take Him to a Police Station. A giant policeman in full uniform and carrying a nightstick ran amuck near Fourteenth treet and Sixth avenue at ?.3T o'clock thl afternoon when the treet were filled with shopper. A woman wa knocked down and severely beaten and several men were made to feel the force of the nightstick. A mob of at least a thousand indignant men and women who witnessed the assault of the woman attacked the policeman. and It wa only the timely arrival of Other policemen that saved hi life A little woman dressed In Mack "and wearing fur wa about to aacend the steps leading to the elevated at trie southwest corner of Fourteenth (tree! and sixth avenue when (he wa con fronted by the big policeman. Without a word he struck her In the face with hi flt. and before he could recover from the blow he had hit her over the hand with th rdghUtlck, knocking hr to the ground DOZEN MEN STRUGGLE TO OET AT UNIFORMED ASSAILANT. In a moment a big crowd awembled and a daten men struggled to get at th uniformed assailant. He swung about him lustily with hi club and kept the crowd at bay and several citizens were cracked across the head and hands. Traffic Policeman Philip A. Wool, on duty at the corner, rushed Into the affray and was met by the giant po- lh einan with a night atlck and a re volver. Wool did not he-.'.!. it,-, hut pitched Into the Infuriated mnn, and then began a great battle. Several onlookers enme to the aselsUnee of I Wool, who had been blowing upon his 'nil' e n innoi. i I iiun lltuilieni live other policemen arrhjed nt the scene. An alarm had been -ent In from the patrol box on the corner to the f'harles street police nation. The mob hail been growing more and more angry and making threats against the huge police man. Patrolman Wool and bis brother policemen retreated before tiie mob into the Fourteenth Street Theatre, where they held the doors ugaiu! the crowd until the arrival of the patrol wagon bearing ("apt. llaldwm and two more, policemen. It was with great difficulty that the police fought their way through the crowd and got their prisoner" Into the wugon, which was followed along the street by hundreds of men. At the station house the policeman, w ho towers wi 11 over elx feet In height, said he was Joseph D Bergman, tblrty Bv yr old, of No. 4J0 Ka.st Klghty fourth street, and that he was attached to 1'apt tMdy'l command In the West Thirty-seventh street station Ho sal.l lie had been on the force more than live year. Inquiry at the Thirty-seventh street police nation revealed the fact that Qof grnan bad been sent out on strike duty, having been ttSOhed to a wagon lathering garbage. Polio Surgeon Jennings was sum moned unj said lb man was lntoxl--ated. He was charged with lntoxlca I in and disorderly ronduel. In the midst of the exi itement no one paid any attention to the unman who had been knocked down by Hnrginau. She arose screaming and disappeared ptO I he crowd. The pclICO have been unable to lenn her Identity. COST FOWLER NOTHING. Candidate Kile Their Hlrcllon pen ti in With oonly Clerk. The following sworn statement of the expenses of eandidales for various of flees at last Tuesday s eicetl m were tiled In the County Clerk's office to-day: Surrogate Itobert U Kowler, nothing: ! Charles I. Itok, Assemhlymnn-elect Thirty-fourth Assembly lilslrlct, VJ7; i John 0, Fitzgerald, Asseinblynian-eknt i Third Asemlily District, ITS; Frank I.. I Howling. Alderman-elect sHVMIIh Aldur ! manic District. I10U; Ke.tn Nelson, A- ambl) man-elect Twenty-llrst Assemuly District. 1!1.5'J. i Of Ihe $507 pent by Fleck, he say M for watchers at the polls, (printing, ppaiag and automobile hire; of the 78 ipeni by Fltxcerald, he says .Tnyir,1 foTlnS! I rtallasr: lion ilven him he a friend. waa divided bttween Tammany Hal! and a print shop. a II you W4at your feUfllicsg to uc- uiua :tte of the twn. teU about it turuflf i a World "WiU" l. K VAN VALKENBURGH NAMES LAWYER IN SUIT AGAINST WIFE Lauterbach Called Another At torney a "Blackguard" for Insinuating Same Relations. SHE SEEKS SEPARATION. Miss Van Valkenburg and Counsel Deny All but That They Are Seen Together. As a result of i tilt between Edward Dauterbhch and Alexander Stroua In City Court t Friday, when Mr. Laut erbach called Mr. Htrous a blackguard. It became known to-day that Mr. Lauterbach had been named a co-respondent In a divorce action Inatltuted by Phllkp Van Vaikenburgh against Mr. Nevada Van Vailkenburgh. The divorce action la In the form of a counter suit In answer to a suit for separation filed by Mr. Van Vaiken burgh, which I on th calendar of Part in., of the Supreme Court for trial Nov. If, Mr. I.auterhach waa counsel for Mrs Van Vaikenburgh In a suit brought against her to recover 12,000, th alleged value of work on a portrait painted by Samuel J. Woolf While on .the stand a a witness In her behalf Mr. Lauterbach waa asked by Mr. Strouas if hi relations with Mr. Van Vaiken burgh were not th real caua for the di vorce guff decided" some time ago In fa vor of Mr. Amanda T. Iauterbaoh. In reply Mr. lauterbach called Mr. Stroua a blackguard. BOTH HAVE PILED ANSWERS TO THE EUIT. ft would appear that Mr. Strouss had on1thn mol"e hn Imagination or aurmlae upon which to bale hi que tlon. Capers In the divorce suit of Mr. Van Vaikenburgh agalnat hla beautiful wife hive been served upon Mr. Van Vaikenburgh and Mr. Lauterbaoh and ,otn navo ,ubmltted answers. Th ,.. . - .... hi w . transfer of papers has all been between lawyer and there I nothing on the record of the County Clerk' office to Indicate that such a ault la nearlng trial. In her suit for eparatlon Mrs. Van Valk&nhutgh alleged tant her husband treated her cruelly and d aerted her She swear he 1 worth at least $.-., and ask for an allowance of t&0,OUO a year for her support. The answer. In the ahape of a counter suit, denies the allegations of cruelty and desertion and ak for an absolute divorce for Philip Van Valkenburji from Nevada Van Vaikenburgh on the ground of Infidelity. The paper In the counter utt were drawn last spring. Mr. Van Vaikenburgh alleges that hi wife la worth from IW0.U0U to ItiOO.OiiO n her own right and denies liability foi alimony. An effort will he made In the pressing Of the counter-suit to obtain from the Supreme Court an order unsealing tin papers In the divorce action of Amanda T. I.auterhach against KJward Laut r bach. The identity of the co-respondent In this action has not been revealed. Van Valkenourgh declares that the eo nspondent was his wife. CHARGES OF HUSBAND AGAINST WIFE AND LAUTERBACH. In the OOuntarsult Van Vaikenburgh i barges that his wife was on term of Intimacy with I.auterhach before he married her; that during their short married life at the Hotel St. Rgl I.auterhach fre iuently called on hD wife; that after he separated from hi wife she resumed her relations with I.auterhach; that offenses suffi cient to warrant an absolute divorce have been committed by the pair a the St. Itegls Hotel and at other hotels, that LgUtarbaOh and Mrs. Van Vaiken burg'ii ure almost constantly In each other's company at theatres and res taurant, that they walk and drive to gether and that both have stopped at the same halel. The answers of Mr. Lnuterhaeh and Mr. Van Vaikenburgh constitute a gen eral denial of the charges a mi speeltle denials of each and every ciargu save that they are frequently seen In each other'! oompgny, Mrs. Van Valken.turgh alio denies that she Is worth as much as j I' '.'. 'i Van ValkeniMilfh Is on his way to New York from Kurope. He If due to reach New York Nov. 1 the date et for th I trial of the separation ult. It Is hi intpntlun, his friends say, to push bis : Uvn.,. rUou to a speedy trial regard- 'H of whether the .eparatlo it I, ! t"1 llP on " et "r no- T1,u i" ln ,he ult uf Woolf, the rknliiter. agalnat Mr. Van Vaikenburgh iiiinounced a disagreement to-day. Mr. itrau said th case would b restore' jo tH cindr and would niovad far 'j-il again within tno wtkv Wife Slayer Doomed to Die in Chair lay 1 l U X -HE NUT N V ' f l BEAM DENIED A NEW TRIAL BY IA COURT Convicted Wife-Slayer to Die in Chair Nov. 24, Unless Governor Intervenes. RICHMOND. Va, Nov. 13. The Su preme Court of Appeal to-day denied Ihe petition for a writ of error by Henry Clay Deatil Jr . convl :ted of murdering his young wire last July. Thl decision on the appeal fr jrn th Judgment of the Chesterfield Court, which sentenced him to die In the elec tric chair Nov. 24, Is final. Clemency ir reprieve by (Jov. Mann only can sava th condemned man. Beattle eounael had little hop of succe before the Supreme Court and now all the Influence of the defense will be brought to bear n the Gover nor to induce him to grunt a commu tation of the sentence or at least to issue a reprieve. It la not burd that 0)o. Maaa will Intervene.. Th Oovaraor, who la In Petersburg with Gov. Fos at th afaaachntt monument unettUng, wired her that h would lssus a atat aint to-morrow. The Kupreme Court onnouni-ed that the "trial court waa plainly correct in It ruling and the appiml Is, there. 'ore, denied." No further Bom 010 1 I .va made upsm the cuse. All five ludges were seated when President i. iin.-s Keith bonded the decision to I the Clerk. ! fathar told talm this aftr- I noon of tha oourt daclsion. ti, .,i I nan wa trambllng and In tear. Th condemned waa unmoved. H lighted a clgarett and tbn proceeded to dl cuae th possibility of Bxacutle la .rfsrsnc. Heiittie h father, who has gold out his lusluea here, has failed in health rapid ly since bis son's ennvletion, and the de cision to-day was a severe shock to nlm. The prisoner Is now confined, In 'Death How" at the Jtate penitentiary. MRS. TARKINGTON GRANTED AN ABSOLUTE DIVORCE. Wife of Novelist Wins Decree in Indiana Court No Alimony Asked. INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. is. -a decree or slisoliite divorce to-ilu) was granted In th Superior Court of tills ounty to Mr. Loulsi Tnrklngton, wife uf Booth Tarklnvion, th novelist and ulsywTlirht. Mr. Tsrkln;ton had not iLsked for alimony. In Its decree, the COUfl said the matter uf compensation to Mi. TarkltiKton bad heen satisfactorily arranged ln a piivatu Sfteemenl The I ustody of Mi . and Mrs. TarHlngt in's live-year-old daughter lven to Mr- Trklngto:i, bill Mr. Tarklnglon I permltteri to have the child for one month each year and "at sjih times us the court may approve after applleatlon has been made to It." Mrs TarkliiRton In her complaint had alleged that the defendant treated her with cruelty and thut tiny had Uvnd irt for ti .. laat (tvaral months. Mr Tarftlngtou 4M not enter resistance to th suit. hank mivnux VnM llliLUiu.ll u iifir.mii iiimiin nr W W AN WN h aVaT aVaV mJT mfT aVaV NO HIDDEN FUNDS Former Mrs. David Rothchild Worried Over Statements Attributed to Her. George W. Glnie. eounsul for lteclvr Leo Schleslnuer uf the defunct Federal Hank, for the wrecking of whleh the late David Rothschild wa cent to ting Hln, where he died, had a conference with IMstrlct-Attorncy Whitman to-day re yarding the reports that hundred of thousands of dollars rightfully belonging to the depositor In the hank and th Olohe Security Company had been oreted. Mrs. K. C. natten of St. Louis, Roth schild's widow, was at first quoted the source of tha report. In St. Louis despatches to-day Mrs. Ratten denied till knowledge of hidden money. Hut Mr. Ulnze showed Mr Whitman a telegram signed by Mr. Ratten saytnic his wife was 111 In bed worrying over statements fu.sely attributed to hr. "Our only information." the te'egram continued, "was that the will had neon probated. Have every renson to bellev fund exist, but have no knowledHe where. Kntlre story originated In New York." "The most significant part of this trlcKr.wii," said Mr tllase after the con ference, "1 the admission that a will of David ftothaotlUd has been probated. This fact was not known to me or ther persons here. Wti shall look into It at once, liecause where there is a grill put to probate there Is certainly property to be distributed." Mr. Olgaa is oeoUaulM bis Inqulrlaa of banks, dust companies and safe de posit concerns here und ln New Jer, y In tbe effort to find out what became of the Kothc.blld telings. H asserts that .i"i.""" of the Kederal Hank and an even lurger amount of the (llihe iaeUlitf fund have yet la be accounted for. NEW YORK FLYER WRECKED; ONE KILLED, NUMBER HURT. Passengers AnionR Victims of Acci dent to New Orleans Limited From Thll City. OKKKNHollO. N C. Nov. 1.1-The derailing of (he fat New York, At lanta and New nrliins express train Ion the Southern Italian, fifteen miles i north uf here, this njorntnfc resulted iti the death f Bnglnaat W. A. Kenney I and tbo Injury of a number of pas- gaosara and trainman, Bd Town, colored, the tiretnin. was erlously I hurt. The limited left New York st 130 i- if, unj Washington at lo.ij :. m. ! Sunday. It was running at a high rate of speed when the accident oc curred and the engine and seven car were thrown from th track. Th cause of the disaster ha not been as certained. World Bulldlne Turkish ttaib. always open. Il.nh wltb trivuu rooin. St, btr slid mnlo ,r riiirul. ejlsl la ' Taao. J'ark How. MAYOR SAYS CITY WILL FIGHT STRIKERS TO THE LAST DITCH I Gaynor Makes Personal Inspection of East bide Streets and Declares White Wings Who Quit Work Will Not Be Taken Back. CITY CLUB MEMBERS SAY THEY LL HELP IN S TREET15 Department Claims 1,810 Drivers at Work in Three Boroughs, Against i Normal Force of 1,844. After announcing that the city would not consider compromise for a minute and that the White Wings with every resource at the command Gaynor turned General Organizer hood of Teamsters from his door i see him or talk to him or accept any The Mayor sent out word to not recognize him in any capacity. door Organizer Ashton threatened that a sympathetic strike of 20,000 coal wagon drivers would be called. II' Og r"rldr Irit Ashlon at aha, 47 FACING DEATH OFF OREGON COAST Two Men Washed Overboard Trying to Catch Lines Shot tu Vessel by Life Savers. ASTORIA, Ore., Nov. 1.1 With two eu ners of the crew ulready washed wrbonrd to their death, forty-seven persons on the tnipwrecseu sieaiu schooner Washington are la -Ing death off Cape lHscppolntment to-day. In tarrlflc northweat .ale K 1 timent life savers fro.n Astoria have been working :i in'Cssfully .'or hoars trying to get a lifeline to the steamer With the life igvt this nfternmm desperately ren .vlng their efforts to effect a res ue, the schooner In nan to ',: ak up. Included In the parseniters on the ves sel whose lives ure In peril are M. M--Vlttle of New York, Kdwln J. Williams, Chicago, M irtln llrunty, i'ltisburgli . Bdward u.nie. Chicago ; John West, Denver, and Wallace Wai ren, Cleve land. Of the forty-seven persons aboard twenty-live ure passengers and twen y two seajgl-n. The iraaaal waa en route from Portland to San l-'ranciseo. when siie ran into u gale late last night. For an hour she was BUaTalad about ut the mercy of the wind before she sr driveii insuie tbe break rs off cape Disappoint. merit and ran upon the bar outsltiu uf the mouth of the Columbia River The Washington's w.reless operator Daahed a dlstiess signal to Altorla an ) Portland bafor Mi apparatus was put out of commission by IrtagaJ Th Uf. savers nei e immediately liurrli'il Id th i the 1 soar), bui owing la tb bigb wind ! high sea were una big 10 appi I i I enough to leJll off t ie imperil, ed sons ' .. ..I . ..... l.A.,l.l.,.. .... ... , K -t.t rial. os ins urwiiia t kJi , mop, Ihe lire-savers ailempted (o shoot a life line across the vessel, but each attempt fgllad, TWO members of the crew were washed overboard t1 drowned whll ultetnptlng to reach fie life hues I. ate tn-di) in kVaahlnflon was IMygrda ott tiote, a i 'i lh surf breaking clean over her. Kvery effort to reach the te.im schooner Wa.liltigton. with foil) -seven pi: sous on Iniaid, has fallcsl. The anchor are slowly dragging, and un der tha eye of the halidaag Ufa aa vara the ship Is edging steadily nearer the . belch There Is ' tn-rUms ... Kossler Itracbr Kl I'nao. Yil. t'.VSn. Tex . Nov. 13 After being Htntnde ln the sand fifteen miles west o? Kl Rush .'or eight days Aviator Rob ert r'owier flew into town to-lay. Ha will rumslu here to-night with tho Itt liuUoii of pructtJltg tu-morrow. ON WRECKED SHIP 4 . t ! strike would be fought to a tiaUb of the municpjl government, May Ashton of the International Brother at the City Hall to-day, refusing tt communication from him. ihe fumin? strike leader that he 9d Turning away from the Mayor's I ' "' ""'I In company with the pi ine coai arivers' uoI.i, and at tt llnia ihe strlk leader intimated thata gjfit nine; c strlks might be called flgr the purjios or freedng th city to tei xr.t. few momenta after lb a ...... ,,j oeen turned m mm v Majsir Oaynor's ofM e to-day th Maytr rclvesl President Henry J. Town at 'it - MerebanlM i.....in,in . . a - M I'rlce, Chairman of t , PnnnitHai on Streeis of the City Club. Thy ooth assured the May ir thst th organ!. 'Ions they represented wer back at htm to a man. CLUBMEN READY TO VOLUN TEER AS STREET CLEANERS., W, can aaiure Your Honor," Mr. lownn, "that If the situation be comes arave we enn supply y i rtl an army of men to cleat th stratta. ami in that army there will be ciuiniien ami other patrli .lo clt who admire you for the stand you haja taken." Before defining hi uncompromising attitude In tho strike situation Mayor (Jay nor made an excursion on foot through tho garbage-plied streets at the lower east side. He was unattendai on his rounds of Inspection and mlnglaQ 1 wuu i in. crowns mat followed ths strlg lire ikers and their cart about. H that the police guards hd been doubts and that violence, for the time being At lead, hud been entirely checked. Returning to t i City Hall, h re plied lo the queatlon jf whether ha had received a letter from General Organiser Aahton of the International ltrotheriiuod of Teuansler susgealtog an armistice and the submission of th striker' grievances lo arbitration. '1 hate nothing to do with Ashton at all.' aald the Mayor. "The driver who uult are not in the employ of tha city. The Street Cleaning DeparinaMr) Is now being reorganised. It may t.Bg consKlerctiln time, possibly two months, and 1 am certain taat the household of tho city will be patient. The bi oa,g, Ing In of new men is no easy Job, hut we. have to do It. There will be no mllltU called out. The police can haa)le trie Mituailnn." MAYOR WALKED ALONE THRO EAST SIDE 8TREET8. Uefore setting out to Investigate sir, jt-cleaulng condition a the asst si le .M.i ii i lay nor male an addreaa at Public, School No. 3. at No. .14 Henry streut, on Hit occasion of Its hu:idr4h ann vet -ary. He went without escort le the school and left unattended. Than h walked through Hester, Ludlow, or chard. Stanton and Surfolk atreet. Con cerning what ho aaw ther he sold: ' "In this district, which Is on of list worst In th city, there ha bean scarcely any removal of garbag. I f mud con, I. lions very u.ulul Hud a force of men busily engugsd Pa removing refuse. There were large crowds all about, but 1 was treated with nothing but respect Ther were no symptom ui iotui and .uc puiio guards seemed entirely capable of protecting l ie men ill liislr wo, a. in my opinion moat of lh disorder baa been du to ostuulers." Wherever tu Mayor encounter4 stotped