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The evening world. [volume] (New York, N.Y.) 1887-1931, April 25, 1914, Latest Extra, Image 4

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY,
APR! L jt, tglf
ULSTER SMUGGLES
I
f
j POLICE TERRORIZED
)Home Rule Hoes tiet 5,000,000
Ammunition Rounds Mid
7o,00() Rifles.
I
BOO AUTOS CARRY ARMS.
li
Wires to Belfast and Other
Points Cut as Cargo Is Un
I loaded at Night f r m Ships
I BET. VAST. Ireland. April 25. - A
ojsnsstgnmcnt of about 70.000 rifles
aMl 6,000,000 rounds of nminwiHloii
trotn Oermany WM landrrl lit Isolated
Knts on the const of t " lt -r during
I night nnd distributed ly HUM
Of 200 automobiles lo th" various
headquarters of the l'later "Volun-
The I'lalermen who declare them
golvea determined tn offer a lifrn
anted reltunce to the Introduction
f Hum ttui were mobilised early
Mt Blirht ar.d guarded thn landing
place and the rnada until the dis
tribution of the arma had bean com-
The. police arc powerless to Inter
face and all communication were
latomipted.
The rifles and ammunition were
ghtaped from Hamburg on the steam -1fj
Fanny, a month ago. and were
Mated eureeeafully laat night. In
thro conalnnmenta. at lair i Hanger
04 Donaghadc. Karly thl morning
M automobile! were preaaed Into
garvtce, and 1heVnt1re volunteer force
af 10.000 men In the llelfnnt dlatrlct
to the taak of distributing the
throughout riater.
The Fanny had transhipped her
cargo on route to lielfaat to two email
tiers. One of Ibeae carrying So.tioo
arrived at ljirne at 10 o'clock
night. The unloading waa corn-
by 1 A. M. Tli town had been
ooaspletely cordonned. All wire were
at and the authorities were unable
communicate with Helfaat. The
ItM raven had established aurh a
hoavy guard that the police war help-
air
irtng thi time the unloading or
i and ammunition waa in progress
he other points Five million
Ida of ammunition were distributed
bar. At Bangor i.ooo rinea
i brought ashore In motor launches,
thousand volunteer were walt-
tn motor car and as fast aa th
I war brought aanor tney were
led away to the araenala eatab
a throughout Ulater.
developed to-day that the entire
nteer Sorce waa motiinzed at
eric polnta throughout lister
ng the night. Ilelfnst was closely
ounded. At Ltarne, euu volunteer
dad the railroad station, nnd oth-
faurrounded the homea of all cu-
ofllclala. One coast guard at
an drorped dead of oscltemcnt.
ARFUL HUMOR
COVERED FACE
I RESINOL CURED
t. Covered With Pimple and
: Unsightly. Instantly Relieved.
irson. N. J.. Dec. H, 1019: "About
' ago my lace begau to crack and
scaly In blotches. It soon got
ad my face was all spotted and
, and it itched me very much at
and caused me no end o( diacom
After a month or so, pimple and
apadl began to show, first in mall
an and than gradually covering
afire face. It wai awful. The
at were sore und the raah was
and my facs had a in oat un-
r appearance. 1 tried different
of soap., cream and massages
10 a stria diet, but I could get
diet. Resinol Soap and Hesinol
latent caused me instant relief. Uv
.time another jar of Kcainol Oint-
aad cake of Rcainol Soap were
I can truthfully say that it waa
plate cure. My face had assumed
nam color and looks, due to Kea-
Soap anil Resinol Ointment. They
1 1 think, the brat for any akin trou-
f Churned' Hober Iroyano, cut)
Hat St.
iaol Sonp and Ointmeut heal
and other akin erupt iona. stop
ioatantly, and are most valu
' pimplea, dandruff, anrrs, burns.
pifr. etc. Per trial aiao, free.
to Urainol, Dept. t II. Haltimore
A few unscrupulous dealers trv to
ahatitutea for llesiiiol. I.tx.k out
..them.
GIANT WAR S
ORES
GOOD FOR ONE VOTE IN
Ritchie k Cornell's Free Popularity Contest
life free Kound 1
FOR THE MOST POPULAR
Flrranan, Letter Carrier,
SSSW I lir.HMii, kjVthVI VWIRI l O I V U laMIBHWSSP HI- V I
saws a of th itarilua oantaaiania will srlntad Is sr artlsi
vk. Tu aisy nt aa many uuai aa ou plaas u bl you
mil a rraa Tn te Europe
I empUr aiultl Oarsell U allowa to inlii thl oonloat.
- - u.h ..l.t. tm IT...... - IV . . . I Mummtmm luiirm.l
ira or aiacluo O Oarssll is
- aAoh nloht lo 1'b
ologtain L .t or loasiw siipoara In Xundar roiaarsm
i of tlos lor any of Ui aaiaoa. aaca wlnuar silt rose! I prloo Oost
. Ma aaar bo not la aaraos at aay
rTT Droodwar. N Turk. Stora
VOTE GOOD FOR ONLY ONE CANDIDATE
WCIIE
Itaagwar
tk A.
L 1 link Ok
4 A).
Iros4wof
Ik A.o.
IAS Willloaa aa.
IBI4 84 Av.
104 Ktotoo-b Ave.. BTklra.
18T0 aron4my. Ueaoklnt.
vat null be cast on or before
!MINE WAR TRUCE
BUI STRIKERS
'
KEEP UP SHOOTING
Clashes al DHTCTCnl Points ill
Colorado Riot Zone and
MblC9 Surrounded.
TRINIDAD, COIX)., April :r. -with
the Htuto triHips and striking oal nun .
em or Colorado nut' lit; on their arms
In the Ludlow district, In accordum e
with IB two days' truce agreed on,
In to real to-day Mtitrod in th outcome
of mi informal conference between
strike leaders and Adjt-Hen. John,
''hnm of the Colonulo National fiuard !
The union miners will bo reprcson- I
teil by John l.nwn, International
Ixtuiil member, John Meibomian, pres. i
lilent of IHstrlrt No. lo, Inlted Mine!
Workers of Atnerlcn. and Robert O.
Holton, International organizer.
All during Inst night union lendi rn
were engaged In an effort to enforce
the temporary truce agreed upon, but
notwithstanding orcustonnl shntn were
exchanged between the military out
posts and ntiikers
The centre of expected troubl In
the Wnlsenburg district shifted from
the Victor American nnd Colorado
Fuel and Iron propertied on the south
to the non-union mines north nnd
west to-day. The report reached her
to-day that the rlunnyslde mine,
twelve mile northwest, had been vis
ited by union forces, and that the
Jackson and Turner minus war aur
rounded. Every train I loaded with people
leaving the district
The visit to the HunnysMa mine
waa, according to Ita superintendent,
for th purpose of securing high
power rifles, supposed to be there for
use against the strikers. A there
were none, thn strikers said they
would protect tho employaoa In vnt
of trouble.
A despatch from Tenver states that
Oov. Ammona of Colorado, en route to
Denver, late yesterday, called on the
Federal Government for troops to aid
In com putting thn strike situation in
Colorado, and last night received an-
awer thnt the War Department could
pare no aoldlera for this purpose.
BECKY DECLARES
L W. W. "Won't Work" Ora
toress Says She'll Emulate
British Militants.
"I am wo glad, ao glad you're leav
ing uh," said Warden Hanley of the
Tombs prison tn-dny as liecky Edol
son. the Anarchist anti-war, anti
work nrutorraa was taken from the
gray building and started for the
HlackweU'a Inland workhouse, liecky,
who preforrod to post- as a martyr
rather than give $300 bond for her
good behavior fur three months, has
ktarted a hunger strike and Warden
Hanley dldn t want any of that aort
t buaimv in his establishment.
"I don't wiah anybody any harm
said Hanley a ftocky was escorted
to the prison van, "but If the lady
doexn't want to eat it's tny opinion
It would be brutal to Inject food In
her."
Last night Alexander Herkmun aent
liecky a fine trayfol of eat, but the
plump and explosive Anarchist put It
aside. "I'm on a hunger strike for
free speech," sho declared. "I'm glad
to be u murtyr.'
"It won't be wanted." the prison
guard informed bei " got a good
appetlle ineself."
Thin morning Hecky declined to tvtt
hroakfuM, and Hanley began to wor
ry. Hi had never faced any such
cantankorousness In hln life. "The
attempt of the police to prevent free
npeech guaranteed by the Constitu
tion will not succeed." Hecky an
nounced "1 will not eat, und I won't
work '
rip Luropean lours
Railroad Employee and Citiieo.
rtisoansats
rosr
allowa to onlar tnio oonion.
Kvaulno Wmtd Evtnlnl Jourssl Ul
I sua te alorsa se aaa
Maie
to Ueasore
lluy 2
1C W., April 23.
HUNGER STRIKE ON
HER WAY TD ISLAND
d Ar hortIlaK8.: . .
flttf "2Yie Road" Holds a
V , r , , t
MVIVl'MMVVtN
N YOU S
THE A TK fv
Although New York, in
Manager W. A. Brady's
Opinion, Doesn't Care
How Early It Leaves the
Theatre to Tango, Other
Towns Demand a Full
Evening's Entertain
ment Authors Have
According ly Been
Warned Against Turn
ing Out Short-Weight
Drama for Next Season.
By Charle Darnton.
AVE you ever gone to the
theatre at 8.30 only to And
yourself out on the pave
ment again at 10.30 or
thereabouts, wondering what und r
the itara you could do to round out
what even the most sober of u might
call a full evening entertainment?
The neaaon that I now finding It
way beneuth the daisies has certainly
boen distinguished for plays that
may be clasalllod a tho short-weight
drama. Moro often than ever before
the curtain has gone up late, throuirh
no effort to bo fashionable, mind you,
and come down early nlmply because
the play couldn't hold out any longer.
This haa been particularly true of
light comedies and slim farces.. Long
waitn nnd short act go to make up
one of tho tricks of the theatrical
trado. For example, let ma tell you
what I wan told not long ago:
Tho actual pluylng time of a farce
that ran for months at a liroudway
theatre wa one hour and forty min
utes. How's that for two dullaru?
While It may seem grievously sordid
to put a play on a time schedule, the
indisputable fact remain that the
public demand quantity as well un
iitmlliy. As a rule it expects to in
entertained for two hour and a "half.
and If it Isn t It feels It bus not b
given ita tuoney'a worth. The skilled
playwright known thin and works ac
cordingly. I he inexperienced uulb
often fulls abort In this respect,
else hln pluy Is cut ntiort by the pro
ducer whose expertnenn with the blue
pent II In by no meunn equalled hy hln
facility with too fountain pen. Dia
logue In destroyed. Put none In turn
Is created. The result In a play that
leaven a groat deal to lie desired hy
putrons who have an unfailing nense
of proMjition.
Now, all thin In taken connrlen
tlnunly Into t onslderallon In Kngland,
where u no-culled curtain rulsur
1 "pleOOf out'' the muln hill of the eve
ning. Hut our manugern seem to live
In horror of the curtain miner.
Occasionally one is put on more in
I despe:utln:i than In hope. And if
ever u ;da needed one that phi)
1 was "Bollov Me, Xantlppe," a farce
bright enoiir'h in itself, hut not long
' enough to stretch through an eve
nlng. BaoaUM U wan the tlrnt of th
I short weight playn ot the aeanou
I made It the mean to an end In a
t;lk yesterday afternoon with its
' producer, William A. Hrndy. Hln
! contemplative eyebrown raised at th
, nuaatlon as to whether the public is
, givOD full value for its money by
: plays distinguished i Inefly for their
brevity
'The answer to that question," he
replied with dclttxrutlnn that ul
lowed tor a smile of natlnfactlon, "in
that already word hit been sent out
to uuthor to write pluy running
two hours and a half. Thl means
there will be a change. You're quite
I III BSTJ m , II Ml III I . rlca Alcssandro. a tenor aald to have
mw I i w
tight In thinking that aomo of tho
wwt,.Ve I
light playn of the yeur have been loo
short to satisfy tho general public
Kor my part 1 prefer to m to the.
theatre at S.30 and be out hy 10.20.
And so far aa New York In concerned
I don't think It cares how short a
play Is If It haa a new Idea that's
bright or tha 'punch' that mean no
much. Hut other cities bitterly re
sent the play that falls short In time.
A protest has gone up all over the
country against the play that la over
almost us soon u It begin.
"The public wants something more
substantial In the way of an eve
ning's entertainment. While Now
ork In reudy to dance off to tho tango
halls ut 10.30 or fifteen minutes later,
the road, as we call it, virtually holds
a stop-watch on play and call them
strictly to account in the matter of
time. The successes that have gone
on the road In the past two year
have been play of length and 'punch.'
If moving pictures have done noth
Ing else for the theatres, they have
brought them to the point where per
formance of gencroun length aro a
necessity. And before long you will
nee plays that arc a ccuniunaiion or
picturea and actor. Two or three
novementa of thla sort ure ulready
on foot"
Mr. Hrady shook bin head at tho
suggestion of a reduction In the price
of tickets to a play that Is merely a
light, amusing trlflt.
'No. ho objected. It wouldn t do
at all to bring down the price to $1.S0
for such a play. The public would
immediately ay, 'Thero muit be
something wrong with It," and stay
away. The only thing to do l to
bring the play up to the requirement
net by the public. An for a curtain
miser It would be regarded as a sign
that the main play was weak. Kvory
manager in New York ha learned
from experience that this I the pecu
liar attitude of the public toward curtain-rulnera.
That's why we have
done everything possible to get ulong
without them. Tho producer of a
short play can -aneak' ten minutes
In raising the curtain nnd fifteen mln
uto at every lntorm!lon--that is, he
can do It In New York. Hut ho can't
do It on thn rond. There audience
manifest their Impatience by stamp
ing and whistling- they simply refuse
to sit still and wait. And, r course,
the prospective ntlce of a play on
the rond In alwny kept in mind by
the producer. That's one reason why
authors, beginning with next season.
will And themselves obliged to write
plays with their eye on the clock.
And, take my word for It, they'll do
It."
MUSIC NOTES.
The Hoard of BdOOatlOQ will bring
Its season of fre lecture recitals In
public schools to un end next Thurs-
day. The programme for the week
Is: Sunday afternoon, nt the De Witt
Clinton High School and at the Mor
ris High School, organ recitals. Sun
day evening, ut Public School No. 101,
' The Story of tho Opera." Monday
evening, ut Washington Irving High
School, "Dance Form"; at Public
School No. 62, "The Story of th
tlpera," and at Public School No. 119,
''Composers and Music of Russlu."
Tuesday evening, at Public School
No. (0, "English Halluds " Wednes- says he found s stained Knife In Uog-
day evening, at Public School No. s7, j ' pocket.
"Franx Elsxt " Thursday evening, at .. ., "
Public School No. U, Robert Schu- Tw" Brakemen llasrl by l.ars.
mann," and at Public School No. US, TWO brakemen were badly crushed
"Russian Folk and Peasant Songs." In similar accidents within an hour to-
day In the yintla of the Eastern Dlatrlct
Patersoii. N. ., In to hold it nn- , Terminal Company In the Williamsburg
nual music festival on Monday, Tile- , .citn of Brooklyn. The flrat wa Jo
day and Wednesday of next week In srph Carey of No. 331 East Twenty
its Fifth detriment Armorv. Amnnir i third atreet. Manhattan. He fulled to
the soloists engaged are Frances
Alda. John McCormack and Orvllle
u,....ia TV,.., in 1,. .,,f.rf .
the i'aterson Festival Choru and the
,,,...u. . ... , - -
PatOrOOn Symphony Orchestra, under
the direction of C. Mortimer Wlske.
1 .
There la lo be a concert at the
Waldorf on Wednesday afternoon to
raise funds for th enabling Of Kn-
Stop-Watch
been approved by Caruso and by him
promised free lessons next winter to
continue hi studies.
John McCortnnck's farewell for the
neaaon la announced for Carnegie Hull
a week from to-morrow night. He
sails on May 5 to sing at Covent
Harden. -
OFFERED HER POSITION
AS SERVANT GIRL
Mrs. Rita Provost Tafel Sues
For 050,000 For Alienation
Of Affections.
Surprise nearly overcame Txiula O
Tafel and his wife. Mary Tafel, an
aged nnd wealthy couple, when At-
torney William B, Murphy called at
their home, No. 212 Park place.
Hrooklyn, lant night and served them
with papers In n 180,000 suit brought
by their daughtor-ln-law, Mrs. Rita
Prnvnlt f'.-tfel who chnrireH that file
, , ,, ... ., , laet message to the people of the coun
old folks alienated the affection, of ,ry w,.n for -d tnat ....
her husband Dr. Charles F. Tnfel, a
well known young phynlcian of Urojg.
lvn.
The young wife, who la the daugh
ter of a church orguntnt In Patchogue,
L. I., decided to bring the damage
suit when she discovered that her
huabund hud given up his practice,
and hud gone west, according to Mr.
Murphy. The lawyer auid to-day that
he suspected that Dr. Tafel had gone
'eai to Institute divorce proceedings
In one of the Western States.
In the papers, which will be tiled
In the Supreme Court on Monday.
t mm T .1 1 ..M......W I Yi O I Iter mn.rla.l
j,f(. ha)1 yary hui py until her
husband's folks persuaded him to go
and live with them. When she asked
the aged folk what wn to become
of her, she alleges they offered her
a position as u servant girl In their
home. This arrangement she refused
to accept, thus calling down the wrath
1 of her husband's parents, who told
her, she alleges, that their son ought
to hare married n woman of wealth.
STABBED FROM DOORWAY.
Special Offlrer of l.ndalna Hoaae
Valla- - r-rmf Is Made.
Charles Tiny, one of the special offi
cers detniled by the Department of
QiarltlM a, the Municipal Lodging
House, No. 2 East Twenty - fifth
street, was walking down Twenty-fifth
atreet late last night when a man
leaped out of a doorway and slashed
him twice across the fnce and neck
with a knife Day fell to the sidewalk
and the man fled. Detective Masaan,
who had been on the watch, expecting
trouble since the recent lodging-house
, MvatlgatlOa, pursued.
In a saloon at Twenty-fifth atreet and
Klr-t avenue the detective arrested
llert llogery. thirty-two, a lodger at
the lodging-house, and locked blm up
on a charge of assault. The detective
make the coupling between two freight
.'' ana 7", "T" ,7'' ' ';,
n to the. Eastern Dlatrlct Hot.pl-
,i ttffr.,'lt,L? ri.titi tntereol o, io- ....
Thj second wa James Oreeley of No
! NhkI aiieet. Ui Uu.nx. who angered
similar Injurlra and was taken lo the
Wlllamaburg Hospital.
"kl avtBV'a uric WAS SAVED
By Vl. J.i&n'. ModTcino. a food tonic, at). I
Brill. U3 KaaaesuBt al.. AtbaL Haa. Mr
Ufa.
Adrt.
I
000 WITH BANDS
SEE CARDINAL SAIL
10 VISIT THE POPEj
Head of Catholic Church in
New York Centre of Great
Demonstration.
Cardinal John Farley, with a nnrty j How Harry Cotter of Helena, Men ,
of dlKiiltnrles of the Catholic Church. s;ot hi brother-in-law. Volney I).
nailed for Italy to-day on the North , Williamson of Hpoknne, Wash , In an
Oerman l.loyd n'enmnhlr Merlin, to elevator In the Wnldorf-Astoria Hotel
pay n visit to the Pope at Rome. All : )aR, Saturday and gnvo him n thor
the Cardinal. Archbishop nnd Rlh- oll(rh waJ, ,oM to-dav In
op of the church nre to vlnit Rome vorkvllle Police Court by Wllllnm
durlng the year ItM to pernonally , ,on wh.n ro,,r .. .. ,.-,,.,, mm
report to the Pope the condition of
the Church in their various Jurlndlc-
Mom
Cardinal Farley is the first of the
three American Cardinals to go. The
venernble Cardinal Olbbons, with a
large party of clerics, will nail from
this port on the Prlnresn Irene on !
May 5. and Cardinal O'Connell will i
sot nut from Host on
The visit of the Cardinal I in the
nature of a pllgrimHge. Formerly It
was the cuntom of cardinals to visit
Rome once every ten yeara to confer
with the Pope The gathering of dig
nitaries In Rome thin year li due to
the belief of Pope Plus X. thnt he has
not long to live and hln desire to meet
the com-. mnilers of hi religious army
for the laat time.
The departure of Cardinal Farley
wan made an ocraalon of much ills
play. Slor than l.ooo priest and
prominent laymen enoorled him from
the palace at Fiftieth atreat and
Madison avenue to the foot of West
Fiftieth street, where, the steamier '.
Hrldgeport waa
In wittlne Two
band of inuilc accompanied tha -
BOTl and went on the boat to th
North Oerman Lloyd pier In Ho-
boken.
Tne pier wan profusely decorated
with American, German, Irish and
Papal flag and the Berlin was com
pletely dressed with flags and bunt
ing. An Immense crowd gathered to
wltnesa the departure of the llnar,
and when the New York delegation
with It music and bannecg arrived at
lo o'clock the capacity of the great
pier wu taxed.
Cardinal k urley was escorted to th
suite of ('apt. Harraoaowitz, which
wo turned over to him for the voy
age. There he held a reception to
hundreds of priests and laymen who
wished him a safe trip. Just before
sailing time the Cardinal went on the
bridge and woo photographed by the
moving picture camera men and the
newsph.ier photographers. From the
bridge the Cardinal bestowed hla
t leasing upon the great gathering
aboard and on the pier.
At the solicitation of an Kvenlng
World reporter Cardinal Furley con
sented to speak briefly of the state of
affairs existing In respect, of Mexico,
lie said:
"The situation In which we And our
selves Is deplorable, but I have no
loubt the President nnd the ongress
1 r acting for tho best
They should
1 hnc the united support of the people.
1'he President and hla advisers know
the real situation far better than we
do, and In what they have done they
have been guided by the highest
motive.
"I hope and trust tha'. there will be
no declaration of war. I shall pray
that peace be speedily reached and my
I difficulty in Mexico may bo nettled
Uong before rrrj return to New Yo.k."
in uie t aruinai s parry are toe ivigm
Rev. Mgr. P. .1. Hayes and theAlght
Rev. Mgr. John Edwards, chancellor
and vicar-general respectively of the
Archdiocese of New York; Right Rev.
John J. O'Connor. D. D.. Bbbop of
Newark. N. J.; Rev. Thomas J. Car
roll, secretary to the Cardinal; Rev
Wllllnm J. tJulnan of Newark, Right
Rev. Leo Haid, D.D., vloar apostolic
of North Carolina, and the Rev.
Thomas Oesterlch, D.D., of Richmond,
Va.
FIREBUGS SET BLAZE,
POLICEMAN STBPS IT
Fire Started by Candles Thrust
Through Holes in Floor Is
Quickly Extinguished.
Detective of the Weat Thirtieth
street police station are Investigating
an attempt made laet night to burn
the office of the Luxemburg Patrol
Company, on the second floor of tho
three story building at No. 128 Weat
Twenty-ninth treet. The fl waa
dlacovered before much damage was
done and was extinguished by Pat
rolman Dnotaky of the West Thir
tieth street police station, without
the aid of fire engines.
Dnotaky aaw anoke coming from
the place and ent to Investigate. He
found that three amall holes had been
cut In the floor of the office and a
candle bad been inserted In each of
the hole and lighted. Ono of the
candles hud burned out and the wood
waa Just taking fire when the s.noka
attracted the attention of the pat
rolman. Detectlvea were assigned to
Investigate and the 'Ire Marsha; was
notified
felTto his death.
Otto Hallman, twenty-eight yeur old,
nf Fishklll Landing, N. ft. was killed
laat night by falling from u window of
Alexander Sinner's Mm pie Hotel al Wee
hawken Helg.it. N. J. It Is believed
hal death waa the reauit or an urddanL
Hellman was employed In putting In
embroidery machinery for a New York
He firm He Installed aome machinery In
w est Hoboken yesterday nnd was k
so late at the work that he went to
Maple Hotel lo stay for the night.
tie reiiieu adoui m o cities
Some-1
lime afterward man in the barroom
heard a thud on th sidewalk outside
and on going out found Hallman dead on
the walk. He married only about
month ago. The body wa taken
to 1
Wuinn a morgue.
T
HIM IN ELEVATOR
AND BEAT HIM UP
Wife's Brother Was After Him
and Spied Him at Waldorf
as He Was Going Up.
charge of assault Magistrate Nolan
held Collar In $loo ball for trial in
the Court of S lal Sessions.
lloth men arc wealthy mine owners
and were formerly In partnership.
Wllllnmnon. who In fifty year old,
married Cotter's sister The William-
MM separated some time ago and
there Is a divorce aotlotj pending In I
Spokum
Wllllumsoti told the court he had
been In New ork fur two months,
stopping at the Waldorf. His brother-in-law
came to New oik about ten
daya ago and put up at No. 226 West
Heventy-necond treet. The two had
some acrlmontuus conversation which
culminated In the fight of laat Satur
day. Cotter, according to the tentlmonv.
waited In the Waldorf corridor until
he saw Williamson enter an elevator,
and then popped In after him. A
the car started up. Cotter, who Is
thlrty-alx Man old, and tnuacular.
Jammed Williamson against the wall.
blacked hla eyca, manned hla face.
and choked him. Hy the time the
"i""'"' S" mr car Hack IQ
the ground floor Williamson was In
bad shape. Cotter hurried from the
hotel.
Williamson went to the police court
last Wednesday with a lawyer and
got a summons for Cotter, which wa
not served until yesterday. Cotter put
In no defense to-day beyond saying
that he had eom to New York be
cause he had heard that Williamson
was making slanderous statements
about Mrs Williamson, hla slater.
VILLAGE IDLER KILLS
WIFE, HER DAUGHTER
AND NEXT HIMSELF
Good Woman Supported Him
and He Was Enraged When
Girl Offered Reproaches.
Salvatore Caruso, an Idler In the
village of Carlstadt. N. -J., shot and
nilitru tun woe, tor. miwvM-,wv.
tepdaughter and himself to-day. The
double murtier and suicide waa the
result of the protests of hla wife and
her children against hla constant
loafing and failure to aid In thn up
keep of the family.
Caruso paid court to hla wife when
ahe waa the Widow Epolto. Her
former husband had left her In the
poaaeuton of a good market garden,
the tilling of which brought her In a
comfortable living. She had aeven
chUdren to care for and ahe waa a
buay woman. After marriage Caruso
Inatolled himself In her home and be
come the head of tho family. Work,
however, he would not do, and he be
came a burden on hla wife and ber
children.
HI nineteen-year-old stepdaughter
worried over the labor bar mother
had to perform to keep things go
ing, and. In high temper, reproached
her stepfather thi morning for his
Idleness. The girl waa to have been
married to-morrow and the final ar
rangementa for the wedding hud been
made. Caruso turned on her with
a snarl of rage and when she per
flated In her reproaches he picked
up a revolver and ahot her dead. HI 1
wife, entering the room at thn sound
of the pistol shot, wa nent to death 1
with the second bullet. Caruso then 1
turned the weapon on himself und
the shot went true.
The little children of the family
ran screaming to thn neighbors, and
the village constable was summoned.
He found 'he Idler, his wife und her
daughter 'ying in a neap.
NEMESIS CAUGH
Millions Thankfully Praise
Carter's Little Liver Pills
JsWiW
Constipation
Buaotunese
Sick Headache)
Torpid Liver
Indtgestioa
Dizziness
Nerrvousness
Loss of Appetite
Sallow Skin
SUPPOSED DEAD MAN
1EPH0NES mf
AND HALTS MOURNING
Similarity in Mustaches Led
to Supposition He Was
Train's Victim.
A aandy-mustached man. walking
on the Iong Island Railroad track!
at Far Rockaw ay yesterday waa run
down by an electric train driven by
Motorman Harry Ashmead. Aahmead
saw the man and sounded the wblatla
hut he failed to get off the track.
Hin head wan sevrr.d from hla b f
and cairled IWC hundred fret before
the train wan ntopped.
Hot Oct I VOI from the Far Rockaway
station ne.irclied the body and found
In the pockets a btWlMM card of H.
H. Crawford of No. L44 Cooper street.
Hrooklyn, a contractor, together with
a letter ntgned by Crawford.
Detective Little of the Fur Rock
uway station went at once to the
Crawford home In Hrooklyn and
asked to .see Mr. Crawford's phnto-
graph. It was shown him and h
Identified It without hesitation aa a
picture of the dead man. Then ho
broke the news to Mrs. Crawford,
who swooned. A physlclun was culled
and neighbors summoned the eight
Crawford children and notified thera
of their father' deuth
Mr. Crawford was building a houao
In Far Uocnnway and an apartment
house at No. 223 West One Hundred
und Twnnty-fourth atreet, Manhat
tan, and his family believed he waa
at the Manhattan address. A hurried
telephone call there failed to reach
him und then the family became con
vinced that ha had gone to Far Rock
away to look over the work there and
had been killed.
Just u Mr. Crawford's brother and
aona were preparing to go to the Far
llucknwuy station to Identify tho
body they were ntnrtled by a tele
phone message from Mr. Crawford
hlmadf. He was at the building In
Manly Han and had not been to
ll.ook.Viy. He Jumped Into tho
neared taxicab and ruahed home to
find hi wife in a state of nervous
collapse.
Luter Mr. Crawford went to Far
Rockaway and Identified the body of
the train's victim as that of Jamea
Finnan, a laborer he had employed
to work in Fur Rockaway. The OJO
tectlvea explained their identification
by aaying that the only mark by
which they could Identify the dead
man was the sandy mustache,
which was cut exactly as Mr. Craw
ford's waa. Finnan lived In White
atreet, Brooklyn.
American Diplomat Weds.
iOXDON, April 3 Hugh R. Wilson.
Becretsry of the American Legation at
Guatemala, was married at St. PotaC
Church, Eaaton Square, st noon to-dy,
to Minn Katherlne Hogle of Ann Arbor.
Mich. '
SB-a J
1 Of tCZemaaTO Salt nheUFD, AnBCtod
Ends of Fingers. Cracks Would
Appear. Caused Many Sleepless
Nights. Used Cutlcura Soap end
Ointment and Wu Cured.
' 41S Wait OsaracOar At., g
T.T.
" for a east bar of yean I waa
ad nlt raoaai. It
I
kelp bat aerstch hv II
ao hear ny1htag rasa.
toaayaUa. Tk sail raaaasl
affected the anas of aay
anger ao sadly aat eras
would aopaar .-4 atari to steed. Waoat
always mad axy aaada aiaoh wen esga
telly If I used soap that natalail tyo to
do mf wrk. Th
alafcta
telaod a laNaf oatfl I ban
aura Soap and Ointment Isolds af o weak
I aetlood a bBpravaaaeal and InaMe f
Iferw aoataa I waa unmetair cased.'l
(llgaod) Mr. Lena Blalok. Be, as, IM.
For rod. rougk. eaagpad sad bosadhog
hand, I tenia;, buralaa pal, and palaful
Infer -enda with bapoiaaa nails, a
CuUeura treatment work w oast era.
hand, on retiring. In hot water and I
Boap. Dry. anoint with Cutlcura Ota
and wear soft bandage or old. loo
during the night, (tempi of each
free, with 3-p. 8kla Book. Addra pss.
earn "Cutlcura, Dept T. Boston."
nrMfln who ahave and shampoo with On
Soap will nod It best fno akin and ecah
BURNING
AND
THING
INTENSE
a a rash. Tk karasaa aaxt
Itehtag a aar ialaa
alga, ao that
A vigorous stomach, perfect work
intf liver and regular acting bowels
belong to all who are wise enough to
use Carter's Little Liver Pills. Purely
vegetable.
Imitations are numerous look out
for them. Insist on Carter's Little
Liver Pills if you want good health, a
clear complexion and freedom from
dizziness, biliousness, headache and
indigestion.
Snail Pill, Small Dose, Small Prict
GENUINE must bear signature

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