GUARANTEE Yo-efl* Vhtxj Back If Yon Want It St* ?SaCtorioJ Pex-a, Fsrat Corurssa. Xo\. 1.XXV.... No. 24,Wi. IVhu iurft Siritmttf WEATHER rAiri TO-DAY; pROBABf.T r>.F.err. Ti.rn TO MM It HOW i H. Bh WINDS. Yrtterdar'? Temperature?! nisi., es i laser, 47. Full report on Pria* 19. First to Last?the Truth: News - Editorials - Advertisements rss I? i.|i?rislil. I ?IV M? The I ni..in. \.lot...n THURSDAY, APRIL 21 IW5. * * PRICE ONE CENT irk. Jeraar City ea<5 Hol?eaes? hi City at yew York, News? _ IMI-Hlinii; TWO CENTS). GERMANY GETS VEILED REB?KE IN ?. S. NOTE Impugning Motives of American Government Politelv Referred To. STRICT NEUTRALITY ALWAYS OBSERVhL B?rri?torff Told He Has Referred to Subjects "Hardly Appropri? ate" for Him to Discuss. B .*t??u 1 Washington, Arml 21. Eiprawlrag ?atjrft that ^i-ihassador von Bsrnsterll B?d ?up! yea language in the recent aaaaj - fl to the United States jfov arpr.fnt reranling tha shipment of, arm?, WB eh might be construed as im sasgnti ? of this povcr asjat, * to-day handed to the ( Gsnr.an Embassy fully and completely, and, in the hope of the administration, finally disposes o ' th* question of the sth'.ei of the position of the I'nited ?tstts ir. this respect. There ll th? ?up?restion of a rebuke glto in tl I intimation that the em psifT * ?random failed to acknowl? edge tha* the United States povornment lad made serious efforts to obtain a modiiea*. on ?? the British Orders in Cour.ci? governing the foodstuffs situa? tion. This attempt, according to the not?, ?? hot refret is txprc- " ambassador did not dterr. it worthy of mention in modifica? tion of the impressions set forth. The note is couched in politest Eng lUh There is not a word whiich is t-t . ? ?'. Interpretation cf buns: construed as recognizing tho otTf-* character of the embassy mer- .in. but at the same time be ^,t9.: earned a re? buke ;- De taken tP Im u of the Kaiser. The i hrtiseolocy of the nate shows dearlv ;ts authorship. President Wil ?" wrote the final draft on rpewriter. He did not dic " his study. Reiterate* American Policy. the posit ion of the Arnei '. several -, u i th regard to ths iutiea ?? itiona of the na fon It insists that ?rs with the bel o? Europe, be un or the Ten? ths I'nited States has policy of strict to the ? ..*.iona! ??il na war. ? yed in the Ger ? from * to Ger mary s i ? temationally le? gal ic that " ?iindum al? tern ? Th? ri te of rebuke in communi? es! German A ? into I "there ere other cir m iio refer which to be -. be ' ? Sta'.e- ernment of Ger : I.\t of Ihe Note. Thi ? tc follows: Exc? thought? ful considera! on to your excellency'?! tote < inclosing a m.-m eranri e date, in which jcur ? this y rd to trade let*? en 1 snd Gei essay, .vire? ment tri! ti on of ami ? ? -o the nations now st war with tlormany. "I B that J am somewhat it a leas I terprel j our ex? celler ? There are i onnect ed **?? which xpected your ex 1 make re are o'her drcun h you do refer which supposed to be ? t?*eer. I St??es ? nmenl of (?er niany. ? i??n 1'eclincd. ?y, therefore, of reran . ren?es to the i y the go*rern tntnt ? ?th n ,-ai.l trade from this ?snntry gorernment of Orea* i. "- m? :? .-. mr.ro fully the "w-sl ?. you desire to call cur stti . no! as an invitation todisi cy ? |. *J*ir* ted t?. you that ire ri . 2*,*ni ho made a MbJ*r' m with s third goT "????nt, ? ? ot ho fully in isrsai not hi ? gnitant of the reasons ?or the tours? pursued. f "' ?" that I am iusti whal you d?sira ?V-"" of the J,08!t!,,: nmenl in n T?. *th ' . tu'U'rul power. 1,. Ifi' I course ol pol * ?' -iti th.- mainte j*nct' ' I am particular '> anxirji?. thai vaii* ? v/.?11....e... .V...1J ,. *rx ror excellency should th??'," light I 1 ad ?t Um ... cllpet'. abundantly .,'?"? ?ju*. I am, of coins.-, perfectly *????*???? again. ' B. ?.ikkI Palta Impugned. "Thi me the more naces ... .... i..v ?>??^?v urtra ?av ? ,' '" '''' because, I regrat to ltnCT ' wh:<-'l> your exeel 1U *?* ' "' .-our memorandum is an? ' l?d as im lut "' '" ' ",,<,(J - I'* ln rnp performance ol iti duties ? neutral i tllik(. .* t.,r granted that . " ?uch implication was intended, hut '?so .vaicnt that your excellency ? ion. v!"* Undel C#rtl ",: that I cannot be too explicit .n < 'Mill. '??ii ?i? page I ???liiinii 3 750,000 British at Front in Belgium and France Figures Given Out by Lloyd George After War Office Refuses Information?Division in Cabinet Revealed by Asquith's Speech. London. Ar-nl 21. In discussing the wer equipment question la the Hou??' of Commons to-day. Mr. Lloyd George. Chancellor of the Exchequer, an? nounced that ?A-hile Great Britain had started tn the war on the essui | that the expeditionary force would con? sist of six division? the country now had more than six time? that number of men In France. The thirty-six di? visions mentioned hy the rhancellor of the Exchequer would give n total of 710,00(1 men. Tho!?e divisions, he said, were ade? quately supplied, fend 'every man who had dropped had been replaced. It was one of the most magnificent pieces of organisation ever performed, and noth? ing like it. he said, had ever been done before by anv country A few hours earlier to-day sn at? tempt made In the House to ob? tain the official figures of Great Britain's land forces and the result of recruiting met with a definite refusal from the War Office. Harold J. Ten i nant. Parliamentary Under Secretary for War, stated that the government [ had no Intention of disclosing the strength of the British army in the field or In training, as It considered that such disclosure would be detrU mental to the public interest. Lloyd George Reassuring. Tbe political situation, involving a division of opinion in the Cabinet on the much discussed question of the pres?ir.g need of war supplies, revealed | in the Newcastle speech of Premier Asquith laat night, when he denied the military operations were being ham? pered by a chortage in the manufacture of munitions, was further complicated to-day, when Mr. Lloyd George sud dcnlv changed from I ? t attl , tude by telling the House of (ommons ; that though Great Britain was supply BOY SLAYER PUTS VICTIM IN BARROW Wheels Body About?S a i r? Automobile Caused Death. Taterson, N. .T.. April 21. -After Pub? lic School 0 closed this afternoon, (ieorge Everitt, Dine years old, asked 1 his chum, Michael Quant, one year ' younger, to Join him in a baseball gam.'. As they ran down Knicker Avenue to 439, waere the Everitt? live, George said: "Let's go to the attic a minute. I've got to nil some boxes with salt for my mother." Haif an hour la'.-r Mr-. Samuel Ross, of 860 Knickerbocker Avenue, met young Evei ring along nush ii.g a wheelbarrow, in which lay his playmate's body, limp and life. "An auto hit Mike and I'm wheelin' him to Su Jo eph's Hospital," . ge, panting from his exertions. Bending over the wheelbarrow, Mrs. Boss noticed a bullet hole in the Quant buy's forehead over the left eye. While rig for un ambulance George left his burden and ran home. The hospital surgeon said that death had probably been inatantani Not until he had the police bewil? dered with conflicting stories did young Everitt admit that he shot his j.al while they were playing with a pistol which they found in the attic. He a rolled in the custody of his lather, ... H. Everitt, a silk worker, to appear in court to-morrow morning. The accident's victim was the BOD 0? Henry T. (juai.t, who lives el 806 Buf? fs ' A Detective William Lord found George hiding in hi home and brought him to Police Headquarter.-. At tir.'t he was -. how the ahoot ppened. He finally said thai hi end Mich .- gether after schoo closed and that he hud left h . run home after a slice of bread and butter. "When 1 came back to play," he s.-ud, at the pol vho were gril mir him, "I found him lying in the gutter. Some uuto must have lut him. I had got my wheelbar? row ?. ' ng him to the hi : met the a im ii " after giving thi-< informi I an to yawn an i gavi that he would ? He stayed awake long enough, how s more details wh:. police think COme rearer the truth. He said that he took Michael up to help hi boxes ?.ib salt and cany them down . kitchen. While they wei ..,i.i\ into the contente of ? hag ? M chael ? ?bel over In the co "'What', in that old satchel' he asked. "r'irsi I told him 'twas none of hin bus.' ? ; told him that he'd betti r be cs because my father's pistol was in it. ? .1 tilling the boxes and I ?i the ladder. Just as I was it. 1 found Michael lying on the floor. So I cat m (low n the ladder an e wheelbarrow to wl ? el his home." At thia point in the queationing ? ut sound aeleep, leav? ing the police convinced that there was :.,'!? 0? the Story lo be told. De Lord, for inatanee, had found the pistol had been placed back m stehe! after 'he shooting, One chamber was . mpty. In view of this 1 evidence, it seemed improbable that hot himself. George'a full eonfeaaion came after hi.? refreahing nap. "1 . but I didn't mean to," he said calmly. "We were both playing with the pistol. I pointed it at Michael, and otT it went before 1 knew what had happened, I didn't mean to kill him." As f.,r as toe police could learn the lads were on th.e beat of term-, and had m. grievance which might furnish a motive for the shooting. I ing her allies as well as her own army I w-ith munitions there was ?till a large reserve. The chr.nccllor of th" Exchequer, I ho wer er, said nothing to indicate a] I lessening of the necessity for a I II larger output, although the factories, ; he showed, turned out nearly trwi nty | , times as manv war supplies last month ', ns in September. Much advrrsp criticism his been ; nror' c.i by Premier Aaejuith'i speech nt Newcaatle. Everybody '?ant? toi rgree with Mr. Asqu'?h arid to believe him rieht, but the trouble is that if he la ri? ith< members of the ! Cabine' '..,-' Larl Kitchener ; and Lloyd G orgi have been wrong. ! If the Premier's speech was a well con-1 i sidered utterance, apparently the gov erntnent is hopelessly split on a vital point In the Commons to-day Mi. As-, 1 qulib's speech was criticised aa "empty" and "containing no vital sag gertlon for dealing with the present situation " Statements Contrasted. The ne.vspnpers contrasted Kitchen? er. Lloyd George and Aiquith in paral l lei columns r.s follows: Kitchener "The output is not equal to our necessities. The supply of war material i? causing me very serious ? anxiety. The progress in equipment1 i has been very seriously hampered by failure to obtain sufficient labor." I loyd George "Wp require an in ! Creaso, r.n.l an enormous increase, in j shells, rifles and all other munitions ! and equipment. Excessive drinking is I interfering seriously with that output." ; Asquith I saw a statement the other : day that the operations not only of ? our army but also of those of our i allies an- being crippled -or, at any rate, hampered by our failure to pro? vide necessary ammunition. I say there , is not a word of truth in that state- . i ment." The Edinburgh "Scotsman" says: ] 1 "It is poaaible there may be some ' subtle means of reconciling Mr. As quith's disclaimer with the affirmations of Mr. Lloj d (..orge and Karl Kitch but In the plain and obvious meaning of the words they are in flat contradiction and the l'rime Minister Continued on puse 4 rt.ltimn 2 COWBOY IN CIRCUS" KILLED BY MOUNT Otto Kline Falls During Performance in Garden ?Dies in Hospital. Otto Kline, peerless cowboy and win? ner of riding trophies in many fron? tier day sports, fell from his black ' mare Kitty while doing a difficult vaulting trick in Barnum & Bailey's circus performance yesterday after? noon. He died at Bellevue Hospital lBst night of a compound fracture of the skull. So quickly was the injured cider re moved from Madison Square Garden that few in the audience knew of the nt. Persons who watched Kittv, er, knew that something had gone wrong. After her rider's hand had slipped from the saddle-horn the mare walked slowly around the ring, neighing softly. "Kitty knew that Otto had per formi t. ick," said ( y Cnmp ton, I. xas McCloud, Buster Trow and ? owboys who were with their pal when' he died. "He was the life of the ? ?'I! all miss him like Kitty Such comment was linked with an? other, spoken with added sadness. "It 1 will be tough to break the news to wife when she comes in Satur? day," was heard again and again at the Garden before last night's perform snee. S.x months ago when Kline was do? ing dare-devil riding stunts in a small rn town he met Tina Buche, a singer with the Crackerjack burlesque troop. It was love at first sight, say the -, m?! Tina followed Otto to Pittsburgh, where they were married ? month ago. After the circus settled down in its New York home he wrote for ins wife to join him this week. Kline's act was included with other riding tricks near the end of the circus programme. One of his specialties wa to graap the horn of the saddle with one hand and vault gracefully back and forth over Kitty'.- back as the hlnrk mare tore around the ring at top speed. waa 4wenty-eight years old. His home was in NaprafsMHO, 111. He had been in the show business for ten years. His tirst appearance with Bar? num and Bailey was two years ago. I.n-t year, having obtained a leave of t . he went to Canada, where he i ,,,??? ,?,.,,? h"nohs in the famous stampede day riding, at Winnipeg. I Cheyenne'a frontier day contests had siso made him champion, and he had won medals at Pcnorcton, "re., and Denver, Col. Luring his riding career he had been associated with such .shown as the 101 Ranch, Atizona Joe, Buffalo Bill, and . P0ST0FFIC? LOSES BI?)DLE INVITATIONS One Thousand Who Hoped To Be Guests at Wedding Reassured ; by Substitute Notice. I- I ??rSSCl to Tlie Trllmtif ) Philadelphia, Anril 21. Hundreds of ; prominent in Philadelphia so? ar ho had expected invitations to the wedding of Cordelia Biddle and Angier Buchanan Duke, of New York, ? the wealthy tobacco man, which will take ph.ee here next Wedneaday, felt they had been slighted when they did nol receive the invitations. were reaaaured to-day when the-, lie? ved formal printed announcc from Mr. and lira, A. J. Drexel Bid.lie, parents of Miss Bid.lie, that the invitations had been rna.led April 8, but that a great nun.b,-r of them had been loaf m the Philadelphia postoffice. More 'hau 1,000 of the several thou sand invitations went aatray, and se : .. .- complication ? among thi n an ! friends of both familias were nar? rowly averted by the timely discovery | ' of the trouble by the Biddies. i POLICE ARREST FIFTY-FOUR IN RAID ON QUACKS Close Dozen Institutes and Museums Where Foreign ers Were Deluded. MANY ARE: HELD ON NUISANCE CHARGE Labor Department, County Mcd ical Society and Detectives Work in Concert to End Evil. Fifty-four prisoners were taken yes? terday and more than a dozen so called medical institutos closed in a series of raids by fifty detectives. In charge Of Inspector Paurot The ar? rests followed conferences between rep? resentatives of the State Department of Labor, the New York County Medi? cal Society, tho District Attorney's of? fice and the police. Promptly at 3:.'lo o'clock yesterdny afternoon the plain clothes men marched up to tho institutes in vari? ous parts of the city, closed the exits and soon retained with twenty prison? ers to Police Headquarters, where they were arraigned before Thief Magis trate William McAdoo. Within a few hours twelve other men were arrested. Tho arrests came as the culmination of two irvestigations carried on simul? taneously by the Medical Society and the Lrbo. Department's Burean of In? dustries and Immign-tion. Nine men Wars put to work by tin? former, and several patrolmen were detailed to in? vestigate the doctors who advertised they could cure every ?ailment. This action followed many complaints from newly arrived foreigners, who asserted they had been robbed by physicians. Patrolmen Po.se as III. Inspector Faurot assigned six men to make a thorough investigation. All were pronounced in excellent health by Dr. McNeil, of the Health Depart? ment, an?1 then sent the rounds of the doctors, who diagnosed their cases and said they were affected with disease. Later other patrolmen were sent to ob? tain contributory evidence. Mrs. Marian Clarke, chief investigator for the De? partment of Labor, also had men at work along the same lines, and George W. Whiteside, attorney for the M?di? se! Society, and his assistant, William S. Shaterian, took ehargo of the work for that organization. Yesterday's captures brought to light the startling fact that unlicensed physicians have posed as doctors, diag? nosed cases of ignorant foreigners and prescribed for their treatment. Included in the prisoners was Dr. Henry J. Schierson, who has conducted an establishment at S15 Madison Ave? nue, where he was arrested. Accord? ing to Mr. Whiteside. he is the largest operator of alleged institutes in the I'nited State? and his offices extend throughout the country. Other impor? tant proprietors of "museums" in this city who came within the police drag? net wore Dr. William B. Hunt and Dr. Franklin P. Hannon. The persems who caused the arrests yesterday told of the methods em? ploy? il by some oi the prisoners. Hand Dills and pamphlets ?rere distributed, giving the impression to foreigners that they could obtain free consulta? tion. When they visited the museums, however, they learned they would have to pay for that service, as well as pay? ing for treatment. The amount de? pended upon how much money the pa? tient had. Made Sure of Money. It was even shown yesterday that in some of the establishments persons went through the patients' slothing while they were being examined, re? porting to the doctor just how much money the visitors had, and if there were any bankbooks in their DOC Mrs. Clarke said after the hearing yesterday that she estimated $500.000 as a conservative sum made each year by the quack doctors in this city. "It is perfectly amazing," she went on, "how much money persons will pay them to bo cured of what they are told are diseases. Commissioner of La? bor Janus M. Lynch is enthusiastic over the eruaade ere have been en? gaged in, and v.e have already more than 14,000 names collected from the records of one doctor alone." Investigator? at the courtroom yes? terday told of experiences they have found in their work, which will proba? bly bo retold when the doctors are brought to trial. A vial of radium water, ordinarily sold at $x, was bought by one man for $.100. A box of pills for a seven weeks' old baby was purchased at another place for the same Mim. al other person, imagining ho had an ailment, went to one of the institutes. Here he tras told the cost of treatment for his disease would amount to $150. He protested he had only half that sum in a bii'ik. Be was induced to sign a check for $??., the initial cost, which tho doctor had raised to $7'., drawing all his -avings. There will be introduced in evidence at the trials a check for $200 given to one of the best known of the prisoners by a man in th?' last Mages of tuber culosis. Ho was informell that he could be eared for $500, and gave the Continuel! on page ?1, rolumn 8 MAYOR MITCHEL IN A SIGNED ARTICLE Which will be published in next Sunday's Tribune ex? plains his pay-as-you-go policy, by which he is striving to lift the city from the rut of debt accumulation. This is the most important official contribution the Mayor has made to any publication. Every taxpayer should read it. GET ACQUAINTED WITH . THE GRAPHIC SECTION That Beautiful New Supplement of The Sunday Tribune. Order from Your Newsdealer To-day Barnes and Murphy Were Allies, Traded Votes to Make a Senator, Both Tought Hughes, Says Colonel ^4ssl s???a????MHCi???V???^^ William M. Ivins, who so far has found no flaw in the Colonel'i verbal armor. MEASURE PASSED ; TO KILL FAKE'AD! Mills Bill Now Goes I Governor?Merchants' Body Backs It. (Fmm a Staff VnrrrtrinrAr-.t nt TV Tr : ; - Albany, April 2L The Assembly I day passed Senator Option I? Mills's b I to prohibit misleading advertisemer bv a vote of 92 to 2$. Assemblymi Charles K. Kice, jr., who handled tl measure in the lower house, said it w defeated when it came up before b cnuse the members misunderstood i provisions. He read the following tel Kram, sen*, by the Merchante' Associi tion of New York to Speaker Swec Majority Leader Hinnian and himself: "We urge in the strongest possibi miinner that the Mills Senate Bill 1,71 on Assembly table, bo taken up an passed, By reason of defects in th present law the public is constantly d( fraude.1 by false statements in the fort of signs, pouters, circulars, etc., an honest merchants are harassed an harmed by this unscrupulous competi tion. "The Mills bill would effectivel check this practice. It has been con sidered with great care by the bes business men of this city, and simila legislation has been urged for severa years past. No merchant, honest il motive and practice, can object to it In the interest of honesty and busines; morals wo urge its passage." The bill now goes to Governor Whit man, who, it is believed, will sign it The only members to speak against i | in the Assembly were Joseph Stein barf, Progressive, and Frank Aranow Democrat The bill makes It a misdemeanor tc use deceptive or misleading statement? in advertising in any form whatever The penalty is a fine of not less than | $25 nor more than $1,000, or imprison? ment of not more than one year, or I both. MUST RELY ON MERE MAN Boston Suffragists Have to Organize Male Committees. 1. M?Sf?4?a tu T..' Tri'un?.] Ho-ton, April 21. The women who have boon lighting for and against the ?suffrage amendment to the constitu? tion will have to organize male politi? cal committees to collect and expend their money.?, unless the Legislature it to let down the bars. That is the effect of a ruling handed down yesterday by Attorney General ?\twill. The law now provides that political committees shall consist of at least five voters, and must have a treasurer and other officers. As far as can be learned, members of women suffrage and anti-suffrage organizations have been collecting their own money and spending it without these male com-1 mittees. BART DUNN FOUND IN N.J. SANATORIA Fugitive Politician, Coi victed in Road Case, Arrested?Is 111. Hj Telegraph to T>.i? Tribun?.' N'yack, N. Y.. April 21. Bart Dur who for nearly a year had eluded t officials of Rockjand County, was t day taken into custody at a sanatonu in New Jersey, and a New Jersey c ficer i? now standing guard at the be side of the Tammany politician ai road builder, who professes to be sei ously ill. Dunn was located by Assistant Di trict Attorney Haas and Under Sheri Theodore De Noyelles, who learned fro an affidavit filed by Dunn that he wi st the Bancroft Sanatorium, Butle N\ J. Early this morning the Rocklan County officials went to Hutler, wher after consulting with the county prosi cutor, at Morristown, they were pei mitted to enter the sanatorium an place Dunn under arrest. Tho man, who in 1912 was convicte of highway frauds in Rockland Count and sentenced to ten months on Blaci well's Island and to pay a line of $50? was, according to the supenntender of the sanatorium, in a very seriou condition, and permission to remov him to Rockland County was refused. Prosecutor Rood was again turned t for assistance, and upon nis advice Mi Haas secured commitment papers an served them upon Dunn, who was for mally placed under arrest charged witl being a fugitive from justice. In December, U'12, Dunn was con victed of having defrauded the stat on highway contracta in Rocklam County. At the same time Joseph J Fogarty, a state inspector of road work was also convicted. Fogarty is nov serving his time. Pending an appeal to the Appellat Division, Dunn was released on bail ii the sum of $5,000. The higher court affirmed the judgment of conviction and when Dunn failed to surrende himself to the authorities Justici Tompkins ordered that the bail bond o $5,000 be forfeited. Dunn carried his case to the Cour of Appeal?, but still refused to delivei himself to custody. A few days ago the Court of Appeal! was asked to dismiss Dunn's appeal The court ordered that unless Dunr tiled an affidavit stating his place ol abode and his reasons for secluding himself the appeal be dismissed. Th* order had the desired effect, and when the Tammany leader in the 17th As? sembly District recovers his health he will be sent to jail. LAST VIEW OF MORGAN ART Purchasers to Begin Taking It from Museum To-day. The public had its last view yester? day, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, of the Morgan loan collection of period furniture and sculpture which was purchased last week by the Duveen Brothers. Edward Robinson, director of the Museum, said yesterday that the collection as an exhibit would be closed after last night, and that he understood the Duveens would begin removing it this morning. Some of the twenty-four pieces com? prising the most important in this col? lection, which cost the Duveens, it is said, between S'l.OoO.OOO and $4,000.000, are to be installed in specially prepared galleries in the Duveen building, at Fifth Avenue and Fifty-sixth Street. Other specimens are to be sent to Paris to be renovated by experts dur? ing the summer months and returned to the New York house in the fall. "I Acted in Pursuance of What I Regarded as the Highest Duty of Citizenship," Roosevelt Declares in Defence. LEGISLATORS ONLY PAWNS OF BOSSES Tells How Barnes and Platt Demanded Right to Make Appointments and with Murphy's Aid Dictated Legislation and Ruled Government By ROBERT B. PECK. ?Syracuse, N. Y., April 21.?"I did it In purauanco of what i regarded ' as the highest duty of citizenship." This is the motive Colonel Roosevelt gava In court to-day In defence} ', of the $50,000 libel suit brought by William Barnes, and of the statement on which the suit is based. It was the motive that kindled his eye? ac ha told of his turbulent term at Albany, and the motive that held the Juror? rigid in their seats when the Colonel followed it with this: "I intended to state there was corruption and rottenness In the et&te government, and that it is due to dominance of methods in political life typified by Mr. Barnes and Mr. Murphy, and by the way in which ths two machines had worked together when their interest? were in common and adverse to the interests of the public." Roosevelt Quotes from the Bosses The?e are some of the statements made by Theodore Roosevelt as a witness for himself: That Barnes said no one could be appointed Speaker who did not agree to carry out the wishes of the organization and Mr. Platt. That Barnes ?aid you couldn't have party system without bosses. That Barnes resented being called a pat -image broker. That Barnes arranged that Mur? phy should have a free hand In the election of I'nited States Senator In 1911. That Franklin Roosevelt had pro? tested at conditions in Albany, where legislators were only pawns who moved as the bosses directed. That Barnes wrote to him: 'The Idea of getting rid of bosses Is ab? surd, so long as you have party government." That Barnes told him the Reoub lican and Democratic organ**.... ? ; were in sympathy and would joir. in defeating legislation tjiey oppj'.vi backed by Governor Hughes. That in making the statement on hich the libel suit was Brought he "did it in pursuance of what he re arded as the highest duty of citi? zenship." CAN OPENER USED ON CANNERIES BILL "Emergency" Measure. Sup? posedly Dead, Resurrected Af? ter Sweet Sounds Requiem. (From s PtafT Cornarxiritent ?if The Tribune I Albany, April 21. -The Assembly Rules Committee, for some reason not explained, to-night reported out the amended cannery bill after it was con? sidered dead. The action of the com? mittee is considered an affront to Gov? ernor Whitman, who Is opposed to the I bill. This bill, the last of the so-called S cannery bills, as amended, provided that women and children might be em? ployed seventy-two hours a week dur i ing "emergencies." It came up to-day S on order of third reading. Just as it was reached Speaker Sweet said: "All bill? recommitted from now on ! will he killed by the Committee on ? Rules." Hamilton Fish, jr., moved to roeom I mit the canneries bill. "All those m favor of recommitting the canneries bill will say 'Aye,' " said Speaker Sweet, who roared out the last . word, and just whether the Assembly ' sent up a cheer or a roar of ayes none could swear to. When quiet was restored Speaker i Sweet said; "The bill is killed I mean j recommittpil." A few hours afterward it was report? ed out. | The Stoddard aldermanic gerryman? der bill for New York City, Backed by the New York Republican organization, was passed in the Assembly, being taken up after it had been beaten on the motion of its introducer. It re , (lucen the number of uldormanic dis? trict from seventy-three to sixty-one, i and it is said will enable the Republi ! cans to control the board for the first i time in years. Democrats fought the bill, declaring the proposed division of districts worse 1 than now. Minority Leader Smith ob? jected to making the apportionment according to the number of registered voters rather than by the entire popu? lation. a AMERICAN AIRMAN KILLED William Thaw, Relative of Harry, Was in French Army. Paris, April 21.?A report has been received here that William Thaw, an American aviator serving with the French army, has been killed near Verdun. The report has not been con Arated. However, a postcard, dated the 17th, sent by him to a friend, showed that he was m good health on that ?date. i - William Thaw was a nephew of i Harry K Thaw. He volunteered in the I foreign legion of the French array. ? It was the climax of his Ions; day on ' the stand, a day In which he told as : much and a little more than the law? yers permitted of the way New York State was governed. The arch political rebel of the century seemed to feel, once he got Into the swing of his nar? rative, that he was telling a story that was bigger than he was. His intensity, his vigor, demsnded a Roosevelt for its proper telling. And it was properly told. Not ell the i vigilance of William M. Ivins In the Interests of Mr. llames could shake tho conviction that rang in the hard bitten sentences of the narrator. Wait? ing patiently for his opportunities, Colonel Roosevelt swung on th? jury and told them that they were the pawns of pawns; that the men whom their votes put in the Legislature were themselves the meanost instruments ! of the state's real nilers. Colonel More Cautious. Though no less vehement, Colcnsl Roosevelt was much more cautious than yesterday. It was his day, and he intended to make the most of >t. Although Justice Andrews's ruling re? garding the admission of testimony on subjects not included In the pleading ' went against him, the witness, by adroit interjections of "he told me," ' got many a body blow home. Thus, in describing a conversation ! between Mr. Harnes and William Losb, ' when tho latter wanted to know In 1911 whether Barnes would not support an independent Democrat aa candidate for i United States Senator, the Celonel ! flung this into the jurymen's fo:es: "Mr. Barnes said no; his agreement with Mr. Murphy was that Mr. Murphy ': was to have a free hand In the election ; of United States Senator." Franklin D. Roosevelt the Celonel ; quoted trenchantly as follows: "Legis? lators are only figureheads, or pawns, i which are moved exactly as the bosses behind them pull the strings." The Colonel's fingers fluttered sug? gestively, in the manner of one plan? ning a chess move. Again the powerful fingers clutched the air like talons, in? dicating the grip in which tho bosses held their men. Nor were the handy quotations the only means the subtle witne?s used to ease his information Into the Jurors' minds. "This influence extends not merely to such businesses as printing, but to businesses of the worst," he started to say, when prompt objection by Mr. Ivins brought the Colonel up with a round turn. Undismayed, he turned guilelessly to Justice Andrews and in? quired: "I can't say whet Mr. Loeb said to me regarding the relation be? tween crooked politics and gambling?" With due solemnity the court In? formed him that he could not, and Co'onel Roosevelt turned sadly to the jurors, who, of course, had heard every word. Colonel Names His Sources. An to tho sources of his Information, Colonel Roosevelt mentioned Mr. Barnes, William Loeb, John A. Hen r.essy, William Sulzer, State Senetore Davenport, Newcomb and llinman, Franklin D. Roosevelt, the representa? tive of the Bayno committee, and arti? cles by C. J. Connelly and the late James Crerlrr.an. His exp?riences as Governor with William Barnes supplied the Colonel with much information. The lste Sen? ator Platt was brought in more than once, the wily Colonel explaining that certain conversations with Barnes were continuations of others with Senator Platt. Several times he began an in? cendiary announcement with: "Sens tor Platt called me to the old Fifth Avenue Hotel. I told Mr. Barnes." Almost pathetic was the Colonel's description of his final break with Mr. Barnes. It was at the Lincoln Day dinner of the ReDublican Club, in ItrlO, ' and Colonel Roosevtl', srme.1 with a lettat written Dy Thurlow Weed, Barnes's grandfather, to Abraham Lin? coln, served his ultimatum upon the Republican leader. ? In lauifuage so vigorous, as to pre