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— TT^ent jokes: That there are tens r^TL, m sixteen miles and that th« '"' fiajr**r I** 3ll * tf> the Clow is *S th^ Thirty-" lf* Article. %L innkeeper vrill apologize for any *** & modern as a #o!f course in so rt^ted a district, and th« masons restoring the last of the dilapi ••'"^jjgppls win chatter wildly in •*! 7 4, fa a superfluous question is a tt«n i- English. There' will be •'-pot byplay and Interesting: «x '"^ce* for the tour st corning from \-l\ri2& sad man bracing air he will 'ffi-d la the West of England; and ***■ t \j S returns to ship or railway he sta^ an inspiriting: reminder that -re exceptions to the modern rule attaining the largest result» at the fj^t cost and of making what Is use \^ni necessary the primary test of Sjexsrve of St. David's i* used as a '•A church, and one of the chapels jSlif for early communion services. Teater part of the structure is of rrsctical •v*':;*'. and yet every wall trefc has been repaired, every c&pl •«c<3 liMCri hap been repainted and •*_, chap*"* ''■' shrine has been. re •»4 The Bishop is seidorn here; thera to jnflupntlal cathedral chapter; there 'iaoi a 0 wealthy landholders with large and th*r<? are only a few scores . r 2lage worshippers at the English g« Welsh services. •wade after decade th*» money has '-» from one source or another for' this beautiful temple and — tarjjtfr a.: v* w-astr places- and the eu?ps find finials. Not a chisel crake is pared: no refinement or orna jctitlon is condemned as unnecessary; « «crifice of time, labor or money is LLonted too dear. The ravages of — f fcave been repaired, and the cathe £il has been gradually perfected as a «"-ions monument over one of the his- '^ shrines of the ancient British rj2rch— a useless but precious offering »«•«*■ cf utilitarianism. I. N. F. <GHAMT£CLER 1 SATIRE FIRST fSUiam Morris Imports Berlin Comedy for Roof Garden. £nos?»>rs irtH crow and hens will cackle 18 (teßUfalhr in New York this year that OKfiy will seem like- a barnyard. The j^fft to announce a "Chantecler" or •tssmeclair" production is William Mor- it wi!l be given the first week in jsa» at One roof garden above the Ameri aa"Mt3«ic Ha' Mr. Morris uses the spell ♦^"ChanTfclair" to name his play of fifty cSil-peop:". which is a satire on the Irs* famous -and play. "Chanteclalr" 1 k4Bdsred to be a "satirical comedy of j finryaru domesticity, set to music, dealing i «ih the loves and hates, the quarrels and Sjkafic- marriages and separations of is* asis:a!? who live there." Tfc€ little play will occupy one hour's is* of th? regular vaudeville performance cd «ill h p imported in its entirety from Berlin, irliere it has been running several MthF Mill Mizzi Haios. a Hungarian vstss, v.-. "i play Poupole. the hen pheas cu_. She is due to arrive on the Cam pa* Us* ', •-'. part of this -week, and Barry Isjbir who will play Chanteclalr. win ar- SfUaasday on the Majestic. "Chante iair" KtH be staged by Herr Karl Tuschl, 'tis proflucefl It in Berlin. He will bring ■i scenery, costumes, etc., with him on » PpuiFchland this -week. \ IN THE BERKSHIRES. IBy Te:e«rapn to The 'Tribune. ] jesox. May 13.— Mr. and Mrs. I.vman Ken- H, cf Ncr York, -a ho are motoring, have cwd at the Curtis Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. &a4£ll are making the ideal motor trip sire going to Holland. ! !fr mfl Mrs. .W. A. A. Brown, of Brook .T. ar^ in Lenox to inspf*T the new estate asy ere creating on Richmond Mountain. Its. M. E. Chase and Miss Chase, of New lerfe, have arrived. Auchmutv wM arrive at - country estate, on Tu*>s ILu Gforgiana Sargent is at Lakeside, hr country place. Bs> Emily Tuckerman. has returned ten L«nr Inland, where she was a guest r. the Roosevelt wedding. Rtf Ofr?,r lasigi, of Boston, will open Is.s&untrT estate in Stockbridge to-mor- Kersha:: R Kemochan. of New York, *law ?nrage?nent was lately ! announced t> Mis* Constance De C. Edson, has of ter4 his Lenox country estate for sale, l*3Kt takes thir to mean that he will not bSfl to the Berkshire Hills. Mr ar, . Mrs Robert G. Shaw. M, and EiTflen Channhig. of Brookline, are at the tea* Hotei. SOCIAL NOTES FROM NEWPORT. ; [E> T«'eeraP" ** The Tribune.] Newport. May 15.— The invitations for the *tiu£g of Miss Marianne Fullam and Sands on May 2*- have been E. Carter, after -arranging for * E rp«>!iinj: oJ bis summer home. Quatre m. Tin return to Sew York to-morrow. ■j and Urs. Gporge Henry "Warren and *^ "frarren wfl] arrive for the reason the *Ser part of Jun^. *-" ; Leonard M. Thomas entertained at «s*r this evening] v *.£ PROFESSOR FOR STANFORD. *■«* Have-, May 15.— Professor Rudolph ~ Sf^l, cf th» department of Spanish and literature a* Yale, has re 53-*' J? - 5 announced, to accept a pro -■tEKrrstip 5a tn * £ame subjects at Inland *^wfi Junior University. ' He expects to *****!!!£ work there next fall. * R-GRISCOM'SR -GRISCOM'S GIFT TO QUEEN. I** GRISCONTS GIFT TO QUEEN. * <•■ ' •■♦ Chicago. jL hi^"* 4 ' 5 Queen Helena to-day, on be- Jls**H I'feri C. Griseom. the former p» i !-t<* ETI Aafcas£a4 °i" to Italy, the picture cntfrft?* Mr Hale of the village built jj, '^'Patronage of the Queen after th*> t^i^* ear tiiQuake. Queen Helena was *«T vZ "** 1h - Painting and will for- **' thanka to Mr. Gr&com. -° S *OCK ANIMAL TRAINER TORN. ti> ri «. Srit ■•!*•*** accident among the a.' ? ° f Ul<L Boetoek Arena, In Dream ttr^Jf^' bland, happened yesterday af- SJ*; wh en Peter Taylor, an English -w^«f lions, rtolar bears and wolves, Cl£ tet ar:n torn from the elbow to ♦ * Tist Taylor was giving his first per **rtu* in tfais OW"UO'. and MM animals j^ *"* • bat temper. Just as the cshibi- Ifclsr j " lJurhes '- I lioness, rushed at a. **eU ' ar ' d lh< * 18 became en tiS: ** a furious encounter. Taylor .^»ea isto the midst cf the Jlphtinjc ani j^-- A * Jf to resent the interference. tht^fff ln sf) o? the bear and lea; at •o^' * ntr - Tayjor was dragged along the JaifceJT o**0 ** waa «ae»ed by Heinrich 16 going ON TO-DAY sSST^? 1o t! "* American Mu«euiii of •*"■■ taetc t» V^ 1 ; 1"™1 "™ of H» National Association _*«nuiactur«r«, V.aJdorf- Astoria, ail ■ u »* L^ fs * rt ca3 A<!v«-r»J*las AesQCla /s-.. M ecJ <*«or. a/trrnoon. ISF •***• PwwJlstfe CoamJt ia- r^ , * c: - H * ! '- e^nins. ,-.. "ee»«r. 8 "lF.* £ "1" 1 dinner '••■!.. '»:••: Dem -'I Fu. } kj . !.-. *"•>• <!>' •'^■ l . M: ir ri * v - cf Columbia Ur.Ker lt «*etiZ i tle i? ra c * HaJJej--. Comtt.*' isUacet c «- f Xcw MiJluw Academy, of KING EDWARDS WILL Secrecy Maintained ConcQrning Dispositions of Monarchs. • 'Oorrristrt. mo. by the Bm,twoo<s cwnpeny ) Nothing MMkJ miU ever b9b 9 known con cerning: the testamentary dispositions of Edward VII. Th* courts of probate have, no power over the will of the sovereign, nor l? there any lesraJ machinery by which pro- 1 bate can be granted. Therefore the public has no means of ascertaining Its contents. "• bo great a gossip as Charles Greville. , author of the famous -Memoirs," was un | able to obtain any information regarding the wills of George IV. and William IV. I despite his being the secretary and chief clerk or their Privy Council. Only on> royal English will has -ever been made public. It was that of Henry VIII. j But It related to the disposition of the j crown, rather than to his private property. ; After his marriage with Lady Jane Sey j mour he secured an act of Parliament authorizing him to dispose of the crown, cither by letters patent "or by his last will, made .in writing, and signed under his hand, to such person or persons, in posses sion or remainder, and after such order or ; condition m he should judge expedient.' : The will was made and deposited in the registry of the Prerogative Court of the Archbishopric of Canterbury, and its pro vision?, devising the crown, in default of issue of his children— Edward. Mary and Elizabeth— to the v grandchildren of his younger sister, are fully set out in Fuller's "Church History of Britain." In I*o* Prime Minister Pitt secured the enactment by Parliament of a measure known as the "private property of sover eign" act. authorizing the King. his heirs and successors, "by any instrument under his or their royal sign manual, attested by two witnesses, or by his or their last will and testament in writing, duly signed by him and attested by witnesses," to "give or devise any lands, property, etc., purchased : out of moneys issued and applied for the use of the privy purse." or with moneys "not appropriated to any public service." A section of this act declares that all moneys for the privy purse, or not appropriated to any public service or effects, which shall not come to his majesty in right of the crewn, shall be deemed personal estate, and subject to disposition by- his will in writing. Still another clause of the same act dispenses with the necessity of publica tion of the terms of the will. To what extent the provisions of the will of a monarch receive execution de pends largely on the good will of his suc cessor, and it is a matter of historic record that when, after the death of George I. the Archbishop of Canterbury handed to his sen. George 11, the deceased monarch's will, . by the terms of which he had made enor- I mous bequests to his German sultana, the j Duchess of Kcndal, and to other equally i unsavory favorites, "the new King consigned I it to the flames. It is only within the last ; two years that through the unearthing of j some documents in the British Museum In- i formation was obtained (subsequently sub- | stantiated by official records in Germany) I that the King had not destroyed his fath er's will until he had submitted it to his ministers- of the crown in England and in Hanover and had obtained their approval of its destruction as a shameful and alto gether disgraceful document, calculated to injure the dynasty. Other rulers are understood to have acted in much the same way when confronted by anal'-'jrou?: testamentary dispositions on ihe part of their predecessors on the throne, and those who suffer thereby have virtually no means of redress. It is only now and then that a little day !ip);t is let by chance into^he mystery of ■^■luP, as, for instance; when unsuc cessful attempts were made by the revenue ofli.'ials of England to tax certain" moneys which Alexander 111 and also Alexander II had left on deposit in London banks. Indeed, most of the Immense fortune which Alexander II left to his morpanatir wife. P:irn.ess Yourieffska. and her children was bequeathed in this fashion; that is to say, aft»r betas deposited ir. London 1 in order • vent any attempt by his successor. Alexander 111. to withhold the property from her. ( New King's Queer Prerogative. King George, by virtue of his accession to j | the crown of England, has become invest ; ed, like all his predecessors on the .throne ! since the reign of James I. with the monop- ; '• oly of printing the so-called "authorized I version" of the Bible and of the "Book of Common Prayer"; that is to say. of the liturgy. Licenses are granted* In his. name to the Oxford and Cambridge University I pi esses and to certain societies, such as '•■ the British and Foreign Bible Society, to ! print and publish the Bible and prayer book. But ti'i- can only be done with his ! permission, and were he to will it he could by a mere decree put a stop to the printing of every Anglican Bible and prayerbook in the United Kingdom. In ordinary circum stances copyright privileges do not extend beyond forty-two years, or for the life of the author and seven years following, whichever may be th*' longer. But here is a copyright which has existed for cen turies, and its continuation can best be ex plained by the legal fiction that the sov ereign never die? and that the so-called j "demise of the crown" merely consists of : the transfer of the royal authority from ;■M person to another. Thus, any firm of ! publishers or individuals taking upon them selves to print and issue a Bible or liturgy of the Church of England without having duly ordained the sanction of the crown would be liable to all the pains and penal ties provided for the infraction of the copy right laws. King George has also become endowed with the monopoly of printing all the acts of Parliament, proclamations and orders of Council— that is to say. decrees of the Privy Council— this right he farms out to a couple of publishers, who are known as "the Kings printer*." Many Clocks of Edward VII. It is probable that among the souvenirs which Queen Alexandra and George V will distribute arsons the members of the en tourage, the friends and attendants of the late King, clocks will figure largely. If Ed ward VII had one hobby more than any other it was that of collecting clocks, and at the time of his death he must have had several thousand In his possession. He had inherited a large number of them from his mother. Queen Victoria, and these, added to ! his own very large -collection, to which fee continued to add from th«* time of his ac cession until his demise, must have ren- d ered him the largest individual owner of clocks in »ii*- United Kingdom. At Windsor ! Castle alono there are between fifteen hun dred • ■«! two thousand, while Buckingham Palace, St. James's Palace. Sandrtngham ; and Balmoral were simply full of them. I Some of them are of great historical ! value, such as, for instance, one at Wind ! sor. Ktven as a present by Henry VIII fo | Queen Anne Holeyn on her wedding day. It is only four inches deep and ten inches ; hiph. formerly belonged v, Horace Walpole, and was purchased by the late Queen Vic toria when his effects mm sold at Straw ' berry Hill for about Jf»O. This love token of Ensland's Bluebeard monarch remains i the same after — four centuries. The clock :ill «oes Strictly speaking, it should have stopped forever when Queen Anne I w »<. sent to the scaffold after four years of marriace. The weights are beautifully en ved .. H jg*' and a true levers' knot on {L, one and "H. A." alone oh Hie other. The rhief curioeity in the way of clocks at Buckinebam Palace is the negroes'* head clock made by lupine, whom Voltaire be- Cil»n<r* and tnffajred to establish a watch : manufactory near Geneva. In this clock the hour numerals are shown in one of tee [nesres^'e twinkling eyes, and those of Ihe^ NEW-YORK DAILY TRTBT'XE. MONDAY. MAT 16. 191 ft minutes In the other. It* stands two feet five and * half Inches high, the head and bust being in ormolu, with magnificent dec orative features. :- ;^> ; i Lord Waliscourt Has No Vote. Lord "Wallseourt. whose ancestral home, Ardfry CasUe, In County Galtray, has just been partly destroyed by fire, is in the singular position of being wholly without a franchise. Althcrujth he^ figures in all the ! standard "Peerages" and official works of | reference as Lord Wallscourt. served as such in the Coldstream Guards, is received as such nt court, and exercises magisterial prerogatives under tho crown as deputy lieutenant of the County of Galway. under the name of Lord Wallscourt, yet he has not established his position in the roll of Irish peers. 1 He is, therefore, not eligible to vote in the election of representative peers, or to himself become a candidate for elec tion to the House of Lords, while he is. on account of the presumption. of his peerage, prevented from voting as a commoner. • Thia peculiar condition of affairs is due to the unique character of the patent by which the barony of Wallseourt -was created on July 31, IMS. It was bestowed on Joseph Henry Blake, of Ardfry, where his ancestors had been established since 1612, "with remainder in default of Is*ua male of his body, to the heirs male of the body of his father." Strictly speaking, the barony should have been conferred on Joseph Henry Blake's father, who was still alive and -who was a power in. the County of Gal way. But he was a Roman Catholic, and by the laws then in existence was as such precluded from any office or honor. His eldest son was a convert to Anglicanism. Some say he became a Protestant in order to be able to obtain the peerage, and his conversion was not regarded as real. He died three, years later, during the lifetime of his father, and without issue. From the time of his demise until that of his father, three or four years afterward, the barony remained in suspense, and was considered by many as having become extinct. After old "Squire Blake's death, however, the eldest son of Lord Wallscourfs young est brother. Captain Ignatius Blake, who had died in 1797— that is to say, prior to the creation of the peerage— was induced by his relatives to assume his uncle's title as second Lord Wallscourt. He, too, died without issue, and then, in 1816. the son of another brother of the ! first Lord "Walls court assumed the barony, the present peer being his son. When the patent wag made out, in 1800, the Duke of Portland, then Lord Lieuten ant of Ireland, and r'r.e famous Lord Castle reagh, afterward Marquis of Londonderry, both protested strongly against the tenor and wording of the document, realizing that its validity would be called into question. But the Blakes Insisted on having it just co, and as they were all-powerful in Gal way, where their support was needed by the crown, their wishes were complied "with. The. very fact that neither Lord Walls court, ncr yet "his father before hlin. should ever have sought to establish their status, constitutes In itself an admission of their own doubts and fears as to the value of their peerage. The present Lord Wal'.scourt's eldest son and heir, the Hon. Charles William Blake, married in I^7 the Irish born widow of a certain Joseph Boisset. and the union at tracted much attention at the. time, owing to the fact that the fascinating bride kept a tobacco shop in the Putney district of London. MARQUISE DE FOXTDNOY. PUBLICITY WORKS CURE Man and Wife Forget Quarrel as Reporter Scents a "Story." Does the panacea of all domestic un happiness lie in publicity? This question waa made pertinent last night at the West IZM street police station, when IJeutonant McCann, presiding behind the desk, posed as= an adjuster of domestic difficulties. While thf police officer was rummaging about in his more or less limited store of experience, the knotty problem was solved in a most unexpected manner. It was shortly after 6 O'clock when -Mc- Cann was startled out of the prevaiiln?; bucolic calm that settles ovor Washington Heights of a Sunday by the appearance be fore the desk of a man and woman, both dressed in the height of fashion. The man told MfCann that h.' and his wife had just dined at a restaurant In Riversid- Drive, where they had become entangled in a auarrel. He then decided, he said, to pack uo and desert his wife, who, he explained, refused to be deserted. Now. he wanted to know, could the lieutenant help him out in hie purposed escape. No, the lieutenant rould not, he vowed; to which the man said he would go right then and there. At this his wffe stepped alongside and announced that she would foiiow him. It was at this juncture that publicity worked a cure. A reporter, coming into th" station house, eyed the couple and then whispered in the lieutenant's ear. The re porter then stepped toward the man and asked him his name, address, business and other personal details, and wound up by saying that he wanted to print a story for the morning paper. "My word, no!" said the man. who then took his wife in his arms, kissed her and hurried through the door fo the street. Every one in the station house wore a wide grin. "DONE WITH PITTSBUBG" Henry Phipps's Chicago Investment Causes That Inference To Be Drawn. [By Telegraph to Th« Tribune. ] Pittsburs. May 15— Information that Henry Phipps, who for the last fifteen years has lived in London, has invested $800,000 in property in Chicago and will later put up a $3,000,000 building convinces Pitts ' bursars that Mr. Phipps intends to make good his recent threat to invest no more money in Pittsburg. The recent license court at Pittsburg again refused to issue a license for the sale of liquor in the- Fulton Cafe, in Mr Phippp's $1,000,000 building. which further angered Mr. Phipps On complaint of tha police eighteen months ago the license for the caf« was revoked Recently Mr. Phipps is said to have announced that he was '■done with Pittsburg." . PRIZES BEGGING AT CORNELL Four Not To Be Awarded Because of Lack of Competition. Ithaca, N. V.. May 15. — Four out of about ten literary prizes at Cornell will not i»« awarded this year on account of lack «>f competition. This Is on unprecedented situation. The prises for which there are bo contestants are: Gullford essay prize ($150), which was won last year by a son of Representative J. Sloat Fassett; Corso.i French prize, a * 50 medal; German prise of $100. and a 9104 prize for the best poem, offered by J. M. Morrison, of this city. THE TRIBUNE FRESH AIR FUND. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. Edward B. Hjirkn.«n $.''oo 00 Mrs. Stephen v Harknes. ... MOW Part of the Easter collection of th 1 (Sndav school of t!.<: South ' ■'"*" Rational Church. Uro.,*!:-.,, thwart Jam-s Armstrong, ir.asurer . . . . J. <•<. v " Kate Babeoc* '..--i.'a Conn. , CO 00 i.oU%£* Circle of Kins'a imußhfer*. * v*" U V M>« Caroltae ; M Ward. f hE-w^ IS i * Hi srert ..-■•••• ■■ • * iUU UJ fe'.V^r ifirthdav offering of the primary ,^s rf Hi? Sunday .ehool of the First , t"too«h of Madison, N .; £S£T>£ XT. Hn,, !rn J2M ra-iKAsi-iifii • hl ;: rtr thrnu«h VM» C- C^m j^'SSiigi: : :;:::.:::::.: [mm REFORMER OF JUDAISM Centenary of Geiger. the German Theologian, Commemorated. PRAISED BY EMINENT PUPIL Dr. Felix Adler in Address at New Synagogue Pictures Burdens of Orthodoxy. Dr. Felix Adler, head o? th« Ethical Culture Society, showed his impatience with orthodox Judaism in the pulpit of the Free I Synagogue, in 81st street, between Colum ' bus and Amsterdam avenues, yesterday morning Sn the course of an address on "Abraham Geiger, the Pathfinder of Re form Judaism in Germany," or, as? he phrased it, "The Geologist of Judaism." Yesterday's service was in commemoration i of the 'centenary of Geiger. "It has come about that orthodoxy is cluttered with so many commandments that even to remember them is a burden," said Dr. Adler. "The orthodox Jew is not content with attending religious service om-e a week and having prayers at home: he is haunted by his religion; it pursues him during the day and far into the night. He rises at midnight to utter a benediction. He is weighted with prayer, with gesticula tion, with washing his hands before meals. As for the Ja-ly— the woman in the kitchen —oh, such trouble in the kitchen!" Loud laughter greeted Dr. Adler as he pictured the gestures of the orthodox Jew at prayer, his manner of laving his hands before meal?, and the gesticulation of de spair with which he emphasized the diffi culties of the Jewish housewife sinoere^y desirous of observing the Mosai- dietary laws. The Democratization of Judaism. Dr. Adler studied theology in Germany under Geiger, whom he described as "a broad minded, liberal soul." He said Oeiger never doubted that Judaism was the true religion. He could not see Judaism debouching into the ocean of universal ism, but he saw a universal religion be coming Jewish. "Living, as he did, in the midst, of anti- Semitism," said Dr. Adler. "he recognised orthodoxy as trre democratization of Juda ism, and he. did not accept, as hypocrites do. the New Testament interpretation of certain men who intellectually had no place there. He pointed out that their aim was to place the people on a level with the priests, to make of the Jews a people of priesxs, upon whom the Mosaic law im posed certain duties and prerogatives. The Pharisees, fueling that these laws were too sacred to be abolished, made them general, thus bringing about the condition that he ridiculed. "But." continued Dr. Adler after the laughter had subsided, "Geigsr was not satisfied with this sweeping verdict against orthodoxy. His was not the judgment of the man in the street. He recognized that it contained noble elements, and the task of life was to separate the precious from the worthless— the spirit from the form. "The failure of his life was that he never indicated the new form. He merely indi cated that a new form was. - permissible. To Geiger the Bible was not a b<?ok, but a literature; to him the Bible was not sacred; only certain best words in it were, sacred. Lack of Jewish Self- Respect. "It is the fault of men like Geiger, in that they did not indicate the new form, that the reform movement in Germany is to-day such a lifeless thing. But what he did had an historic basis, and therein he differed from the man in the street, who throws off his religion without any other reason than that . it has become inconven ient, that it has become an Impediment. The man in the street does -not reason. He does things unthinkingly and without knowing why. Much of # the aversion to the Jew existing to-day is 'due to the lack of Jewish racial self-respect. This lack of self-respect is due to the fact that the Jew knows so little about himself and his race." Previously Dr. Adler had said that the Jew was a mystery, not only to the out sider, but to himself. The usual Christian concept of the Jew, he said, is the one so vividly described in the story of "The Wan dering Jew. " the cobbler who would not permit Jesus to rest, and upon whom the curse of wandering has been laid until Jesus has returned to earth again. Dr. Ad ler explained that the Jew did not look upon himself as a wanderer, but. sus tained by an indomitable pride and an over whelming ambition, looked forward to the hour of triumph. He has been wide awake, but segregated. Even in the days of Moses he was by himself; the Jews were a lonely people. . ' . Dr. Stephen S. Wise, minister of the Free Synagogue, preceded Dr. Adler in the pul pit and finished a short address by saying that Geiger was "a seeker after and a speaker of truth ; therefore he was a foe of all untruth and opposed to the dead hand of orthodoxy." PEARY LECTURES IN ROME King and Duke of the Abruzzi Con gratulate Explorer. Rome. May 15— Commander Robert "E. Peary's lecture was given to-day before the Geographical Society Kins: Victor Em manuel and the Duke of the Abruzzi. the latter coming from Venice; Marquis d! San Giuliano. Minister of Foreign Affairs, and many distinguished persons were present. Commander Peary made an introductory address in English, and his lecture, which had been translated into Italian, was then read by the secretary of the society In it the American explorer paid a graceful trib ute to the Duke- of the Abruzzi. At the conclusion of the lecture the King and the duke congratulated the commander warmly- Marquis Cappell'. president of the Geo graphical Society, gave a luncheon in honor of tht) explorer, which also was attended by Mrs. Peary HONOR MEMORY OF VETERANS. Two hundred members of the Veteran Association of the 7th v RegimenV attended the annual memorial services yesterday at St. Thomas's Church. SSd street and Fifth avenue. The Rev. Dr. Claudius Roome. chaplain of the veterans, preached the ser mon. Colonel Daniel Appleton and Major Walter Schuyler, who are members of the association, were among the active mem bers .of the regiment present. The most impressive part of the services was the sounding of taps by the regimental bugler after the names of the thirty-six members who died in the last year had been called. The "church was filled almost to its ca pacity. JUDGE JOHN S. KEYES DEAD. Boston, May 15.— Judge John S. Keyea. <>: the Central Middlesex District Court and a member of the IfSSßlllillllSllß delegation to the Chicago convention that nominated Lincoln in ISSO. died at the Massachusetts General Hospital to-night, at the age 'of eighty-eight years. He waa the oldest sur viving member of the state Senate, and had held many public offices. Ho leaves a widow and a son. AMERICANS GUESTS OF FRENCH. Toulon. France, May 15— The officer* of the American armored cruiser New York were the guests of Admiral de Jonquierea and the Officers of th« French squadron at a I. til given on the battleship Patrie last nisht. NEWSPAPER OFFICE BURNED. Niagara Kails, N. V.. May i- — The office of -The Niagara Falls Gazette" was burned last nijht. The plan! and equipment wa* valued at $100,000. the lons being about half that amount. THEATRE WAR HOLDS STAGE Professional Circles Look Upon It as Blow to Syndicate. The action of a number/ rf prominent theatrkal manager." in resigning from the National Theatrical Producing Managers' Association, as an incident in the moveiji<=n? for the "open door" policy which the fflaependents are fighting to establish in booking attractions in the theatres throughout the country, was the principal topic or discussion in theatrical circles yes terday. Representatives of the National Theatre Owners' Association, which waa re cently organized with John Cort as presi dent as a vehicle in which to carry the bookings of the independents of the various circuits, declared yesterday that they con trolled approximately sixteen hundred the atres from coast to coast. an<l that the dis solution of the so-called syndicate was practically accomplished. A statement issued from the Tfflce of Mr. Cort last night declared that he and hi» associates felt assured of success in the or ganization's determined fight to induce all producing managers to play their attrac tions independently, and that it waa expect ed within a few days several of the promi nent producers who heretofore have been aligned with the opposition would come into the fold of the new organization. •'Theatregoers throughout the count, y can feel assured of an almost entirely new line of attractions the coming season." the statement continued, "as the National The atre Owners" Association is absolutely in dependent of all factions, and many stars and plays— distinctly New York successes of the last two years— will visit the vast territory controlled by the organization, from which they have been barred by the policy that has existed in the manipulation of theatrical affairs in the past." The remaining members ctf the National Theatrical Producing Managers' Associa tion are allies of the Shuberts, who now will be reinstated in that organization, all the members of which, it is said. Intend to withdraw their bookings from the syndi cate and book their attractions indepen dently in the future. FETE WILL CLOSE FAIR Player Folk in Virginia Eecl — Last Night Bargains. The closing of the Actors" Fund Fair to night will be filled with the real carnival spirit unless the plans of the management go awry. It is planned to wind up with a picturesque Virginia reel, in which all the stage folk will participate. The fair will be kept open until after midnight, s»o that all the actors and actresses in the city may come and join in the final frolic. Many^of the men and women are expected to come in costume. Some of the managers an nounced yesterday that they would endeavor to cut their performances from fifteen min utes to half an hour, so that the audiences and the players could attend the closing of the fete. Although the buying has been fairly heavy during the week, more than J50.000 worth of goods still remain to b« disposed of. Everything of a salable nature left after 11 o'clock will be auctioned off for what it will bring.. Leading actors will be the auctioreers at the various booths, among them Francis Wilson, William H. Crane, De Wolf Hopper. Charles Cherry. Cyril Scott, Wilton Lackaye. G. P. Hunt ley, Raymond Hitchcock, Fred Stone. Dave Montgomery, Donald Brian. Jack Barry more-and H. B. Warner. There have been many requests to keep the fair open another day or two, but Charles Burnham f the general manager, said it was his determination to close to-night. "The women and men, too, who have so pluckily remained on duty from noon until midnight all during the week are tired out." he said, "and I am determined - that the fair end to-morrow night, for the workers cannot stand the strain longer.' ' THEATRICAL NOTES. The musical comedy. "Three Twins," be gins a limited engagement thi3 evening it the New York Theatre. Governor GH christ of Florida, Miss Elizabeth Fleming, who christened the battleship Florida, and the other members of the party which came to attend the launching, will be the guests of honor at to-nights performance. Clif ton Crawford will have appeared in "Three Twins" one thousand times before the end of the present engagement. Rehearsals for the all star production of "The Mikado," under the management of the Shuberts and T*illlam A. Brady, will begin this morning at the Casino Theatre, under the direction of Joseph Herbert and Will iam Wilson. Mr. Herbert was the Ko-Kj in the original production of the opera in this country, and played the title role dur ing the first New York run of the piece at the Union Square Theatre. The management of the Columbia Thea tre announced yesterday that on May 3" Hurtig & Peamon's Bowery Burlesquer* would play a return engagement at that theatre, presenting a burlesque on "Ma dame X" under the name of "Madame Xcuse Me." Frank Dupre is the author of the burlesque. Hurtig A Seamon will pro vide a replica of the scenery now on view at the New Amsterdam Theatre. Hammerstein's roof garden will open on May 30, and as the special feature a bur lesque on "Madame X" called "Madame 10" will be presented by Re<lini and Arthur, as sisted by a large company. Mile. Polaini, "the ugliest woman in (fee world," has been unable to obtain her release from contract? calling for her appearance abroad, and will not appear at the roof garden until the week of Jun^ 6. There will be a comet party on the roof of the Casino Theatre after Wednesday night's performartc of "The Chocolate Sci dier," invitations having beer extended to all th» players under th» management of -he Shuberta. Lew Fields, William A. Brady, Liebler & Co., Fred C. Whitney and Danle! V". Arthur who are now in th» city NEW U, OF P. PROFESSOR. Philadelphia, May 15— Professor Ellery Cory Stowell. a graduate of George Wash ington University. Washington, has been appointed to fill the vacancy caused in the staff of the University of Pennsylvania by the resignation of Professor Chester Lloyd Jones. His title will be assistant professor of political science. NEW YORK FROM THE SUBURBS. A prominent churchman from the West had occasion recently to visit New York and stop a few days. Writing of his expe riences to' his wife at home, he said: "Now York is a great city, but * do wish I had come bere before I was converted." H,> In a brother by nature to the Meniphian who left a Keely institute after a week's treatment for fear that he would be cured. — Nashville American. New York society women are fasting for the i»urpo6« of reducing their weight anil improving their health. It will be a ter rible blow to the proprietors of jsome of the high class restaurants if this sort of thinp become* the latest fashion. — Chicago Kt.vord-Herald. When the operatic stars sane in the federal prison in Atlanta many of New York's prominent financier** were In at tendance. They had nothing better in eight.— Birmingham (Ala.) Age-Hera!.!. The "d District Of New York has paid $3.1M,(i,'.7 47 as its tihare of the corporation tux No wonder It doubts the constitution ality of th« law Indianapolis News. A play has bee » found that was too touch for New York. Wonder what it couhl have been?— Omaha Bee. Mayor Oaynor calls attention to the fact that he, too, split rails in his youth. He remarks, also, that the fence* he built still stand. Now for new fence*.— Boston Advertiser. v v ; „, \\> see nathrne »tr»nire in the fact that a man lost ?2,-100 in a New Yerlr hotel. It i« one <>f th« cardinal principles of New York hostlerles to separate a man. from, his Philadelphia Inquirer. SEEK -WILL OF PEOPLE" Civic Alliance Makes Start with HelD of Senator Owen. . With the heip of Senator Robert M. Owen. of. Oklahoma, the American Civic Alliance endeavored to learn something yes terday concerning the "will of the people. ' and after an afternoon full of fiery oratory the net result itemed to be that the gather ing which half filled, the Columbia Theatre learned the views of N. Lafayette-Savay and Henry Frank: . If. Lafayette-Bavay carries the t^jle* of "chairman board of governors' and "for- j mer president American Civic Alliance." and following Mr. Frank's name on tne ; programme were the explanatory phrases, "secretary general. American Civic Alii- ; ance," and "lecturer and author." "Cliff" Gordon and "Bobby" North wer* j also on the programme, but the extent of, tneir views was conveyed to the audience ; through the medium of vaudeville aongs, *oj they could scarcely, be counted in the re- j suit of the meeting, which ivas advertised as • "mass meeting, under the auspices of the American Civic Alliance, to Inaugurate a movement for ascertaining the wiil of the : people." The advertisement stated further that. ; though admission was free, one might se cure tickets from the alliance in advance "or take the chance of being admitted without ticket if there was room," but it appeared j that one was really not taking any chance ; to speak of by coming without a ticket. Senator Owen could not really be set' down as a part of the movement to ascer- j tain the will of the people either, because, he delivered an address which dealt almost exclusively with a description of the will of j the insurgents in Congress snd their feel- , ings and impressions. He admitted frankly ; that he was speaking from the outside on the insurgent matter, too, because he said! he himself was not an insurgent. "I did not have to insurge," he explained: ! "I was always against corrupt politics and against everything" that was corrupt." Insurgency he denned as a rebellion . against machine politic*, and he inferred thai machine politics -was in the main cor rupt politics. Also, said the Senator, it took a great deal of courage for "a Republi can in Congress to be an insurgent. H» wanted to do what he could to help the people to rule, he said, and he advocated as means to that end the direct nomination of j United States Senators and the commission plan of municipal government, as practised ta I>es Moines. Iowa; the initiative and j referendum and the recall. X. Ivafayette-Savay bemoaned the present j condition of municipal politics throughout j the country, and assured the small but at- J tentive audience that "the fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars, but in our selves, that we are underlings." Henry Clews, the president .of the Alli ance, acted as chairman, and told the audi ence in his opening remarks that the Alli ance planned to begin a movement for as certaining the will of the people upon the problems of government now agitating this nation by means of a series of non-partisan ; popular assemblies throughout the country. , GIFTS TO CATHOLIC BODIES University of Washington to Receive $50,000 from R. Huncheon's Estate. La Porte, Ind., May 15.— The will of Rich ard Huncheon, who died last week, was admitted to probate yesterday, and by its terms a number of Catholic institutions throughout the United States -will receive more than HOO.OOO. A number of 'relatives who are wealthy are given small sums. Among the bequests are $50,000 to the Cath olic University at Washington, amounts varying from $200 to $1,000 to hospitals at La. Porte. South Bend. Michigan City and Lafayette, Ind.; $4,000 each to orphan asy lums at Seneca. N. V.. Lafayette and Fort Wayne, Ind.; $3,000 each to the orphanage at Vlncennes. Ind.. Diocesan School at Fort Wayne and St. Joseph's Training School, at Indianapolis; $2,000 to the Mission House at Brookland, Wash.; $4,000 each to the Little Sisters of the Poor and Sisters of th© Good Shepherd, at Indianapolis; $50) to the leper colony at White Castle. La- ; $4,000 each for th© Home for the Blind, at Jersey City, and the Epiphany Apostolic College at Wallbrook. Baltimore. Huncheon owned' a large amount of land and mad© a great aeal of money as a mine operator at Denver. At one time he was master mechanic of the Panhandle Rail road. THE WEATHER REPORT Official Record and Forecast.— Washing tor.. May 15- Pressure is low in the plains states an<i the Rocky Mountain regton. with two prin cipal centres of depression, one ov-r Southeast Colorado and the other ov#r the Dakotas. the latter with a rlsins; tendency. On both sides pressure 1* quite high and within the limits o* the low area there were general, though mostly light, rains, and also some enow on the eastern edges of the high pressure area in Southern Montana and Northern Wyoming. East af the Mississippi River and In the extreme W«et th* weather was generally fair. Low temperatures continue except in the Pa cific states and the extreme Southwest, although it is somewhat warmer than on Saturday east of the Mississippi River. It Is decidedly colder in the plateau region and the Northwest, and there wen» more frosts Sunday morning over the northern districts east of the Mississippi There will be rain or »r.ow Monday in the Northwest and the central FTrky Mountain re gion and rain in the centra! plains states, tn* w«st Gulf states, the Missouri. Mississippi ana lower Ohio valleys and the north portion of the east Gulf states, extending Monday ni*t" or Tuesday into th» uppT lake an'l wsi-.n lewer lake |— trm. th» upper Ohio Valley an<i the west portions of the middle an.l moth A' lantic states. In the extrem- West and »'■"'-'" the Atlantic coast the weather will be fair Mon day followed by increasing cloud Tuesia.. in the latter district. It will be cooler M«nday in the extreme Southwest and comparatively low temperatures will continue generally elsewhere except in the Pacific state*. The winds along: the New England coast will be llcht and variable, becoming south. middle Atlantic coast, light southeast to south: south AtUntic coast, light to moderate northeast £ — -»■ east Gulf coast, moderate and mostly "utheaTt to south; west Gulf coast moderate to hrtKk southeast to south: on the lower lakes, light s«Hh: upper lakes, moderate southeast, becoming variable by Tuesday. , Steamers departing Monday for European ports ■will have lisht to moderate variable «lnds with partly cloudy weather to the Grand Banks. Forecast for Special Localities.— For the Dis trict of Columbia and Eastern Pennsylvania, cloudy and slightly warmer to-day; Tuesday showers: light east to southeast winds. For Delaware, and New Jersey, cloudy to-day: showers Tuesday af Tuesday night; light to moderate east to southeast winds. For Eastern New York, cloudy to-day; show ers Tuesday or Tuesday nl«ht in smith portion, partly cloudy in north; light east to southeast » For' Xew Enptand. cloudy t«v-rtay: Tuesday For N>w Knajland. r!'<udv t»vday; Tues^ay Increasing cloudiness: li«ht to moderate variable winds, becoming southeast For Western Pennsylvania, ln<-rea»tn«; cloudi n*!>s to-day, shower* o-night or Tuesday, mod erate east to aouth-wlnds. For Western New York, cloudy. to-day; Tues day shower*, moderate south wind?. • Observations of United States weather bu reaus, taken at S p. m. yesterday, follow: rity. Temperature. Weather. Albany • Si Ooudy Atlantic City 82 Cloudy- Ro»ton •"" • 'louily Buffalo ■'•-■ ri-nr Chicago SS fJorfrfy Cincinnati f -'- riou<Jy New Orleans 72 (Near Pt. • i>ls M Rain Washington 52 Clear Local Official Record.— The following oCIcU! record from th« Weather Bureau shows the ehangres In th* temperature for the laat twenty-four hours. In comparison with the corresponding date of la«t y«ar: 1000. 1910 { . 1003. ma Sam 66. 48 6p. m . . 7:'. SO « a. m ** 44} B p. m ST ST 0 a. m H.H 4»tl p. m «7 U 12 m IS .'iTirjp.-ru M — 4pm 79 60| Highest temperature yesterday. Aft decrees; lov«at. 44. avarag*. .=>-; average (or corre •ponding «iate Jast year. T-t. *verag* or cor respondtap date last thirty-three- years. 59. Local fowcaat: *Bft-<!av. cloudy; Tu«adav or Tuesday ntfbt, shawars. light to moderate •ail to tomtit**- wlb<Jv GUSTAV H. SCHWAB BETTER Suffers a Nervous Breakdown as Result of Overwork. »tav H. Schwab. reprtteiitattv* •■ »;£• America of the North German I.!- yd Line. has suffered from a nervous breakdown, a»d is at present recuperating in th« country. Mr. Schwab, beside^ his arduous duties as head of the steaxnship"Jtn- in thl» coun try. is interested in woollen raannfaetorfK* anM is connected with various civic organi zations and philanthropic enterprises. Hie manifold activities, added to the fact that Mrs. Schwab ha» been 111 for some time, brought on Insomnia, and the* steeples* nights combined with busy days «ertoua!y affected his nervous system. His physi cians prescribed complete rest and quiet. About five weeks ago he left his ■•Fit at the office and spent some time at his coun try home in Scarborough, but later he west to the home of his brother, who is a Tal* professor, at New Haven. Mrs. Schwab and other members ef th* family were at Palm Beach, and. at th* re quest of the patient himself, they werw not . ! Informed of the serious condition of Mr. \ Schwab until their return to th* city ea j Saturday. - So alarming were the reports concerning Mr. Schwab's condition that Dr. E. G. Jane way, his physician, at the request of the family, who were, being deluged by per sistent Inquiries, gave out the •M? miss; statement : "Mr. Schwab has, as the result of ever work and consequent nervous fatigue, been advised to take a complete rest from busi ness in the country for a time. This he Is now doing, and as a result he t3 already showing considerable Improvement." MARRIED. WARD LOTT-On May 5. 1910. at St. Paars Church. New Ha van Conn., fey •>• T«ecar. - R»v. J. -. wolf* Perry. Jr.. Katharine I*, dausater of Gertrude B. sad th« lat* At»*a*a I.oft. of Brook'vn. to Henry S. Wart, o* N«» York. Notices of marriage* *nd deaths rnoti tm accompanied by foil name and address. DIED Jones. S. BoacM Ruthsrfonl. ■WiHUsi I* Knauer. Max. • Byersoc. David A. McKay, John C. JONES— Dr. S. E-ach Jones, In th« 6;th ymt of h!» a?«. on Friday. May 13. 19X0. at bta late re»ld«nc<». No. BBS Park BT« . Jfew Tor* City. Funeral •*rvtr»» * t'ntvi»r«t-r Place Churrh .«10tb »' I •"! Monday at 10 a 13. Kindly omit flowers. Interment at Tarry town. * K.Vat-er-. Suddenly, on May IS. Mas Knaaw. £erv!ce» The Funeral Church. No. 341 T\'ett 23-! *:. (Frank E.. Campbell Building). Suailay. 2:3 a M'KAT — At Wfcire Plains. N. T.. on May U. 1010. John Edwards McKay, at his residence. No. 11 Rtdse View aye. Funeral Monday^at ' 10 a m from St. John's Church. Whit* Plains. Washington (D. C) papers please copy. ;>'^ }' RUTHERFORIV-On May 12. tTIIJUtHi LyaU Rutherford Services Th« F;r.»ra: Church. !fo. 241 West 23<1 be (Campbell Building). Sunday. 1 p. m. RYEKSON At N>warSl X. J.. en May 14. 1310. Colon*! David Aust«n Ryerson. r.l Morrtstawr.. N. J- Funeral service and latsrment at Pompton. N. J., on Tuesday. THE WOODLAW> Is readily accessible by Harlem train fI'USI Grand Central Station. Webster and .TerouM «■»;-. nue trolleys and by carriage. Lots $150 na. Telephone 4885 Gramercy for Book at M«tr» a? recreaentaMvo. Office. 20 East 23d St.. New York CUT. UNDERTAKERS. FRANK M. 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